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The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BC

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Click here to buy  The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BC  by Philip Souza. The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BC
by Philip Souza
Sales Rank: 198367
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Features
  • Cover Type: Paperback with 96 pages
  • Published by: Osprey Publishing November 13, 2002
  • Written in: English
  • ISBN 10 Number: 1841763578
  • ISBN 13 Number: 978-1841763576
  • Book Dimensions: 9.7 x 6.5 x 0.3 inches
  • Weighs: 12 ounces

    Book Description
    It is a testament to the fascination of the subject that even today the events of the Peloponnesian War are studied for what they can teach about diplomacy, strategy and tactics. This book reveals the darker side of Classical Greek civilization. From the horrific effects of overcrowding and the plague on the population of Athens, to the vicious civil strife that often erupted in cities allied with Athens or Sparta, this volume offers vivid and at times disturbing insights into the impact of warfare on the people who are celebrated as the founders of Western civilization.

    Publisher Description
    This unique series studies every major war in history looking at all the aspects of war, from how it felt to be a soldier to the lasting impact of the conflict on the world around it.

    Reader Reviews
    Dr. Philip de Souza, a lecturer on Greek and Roman classics at University College in Dublin, has summarized the Peloponnesian War in Osprey's Essential Histories volume #27. The Peloponnesian War remains an enduring favorite primarily due to the landmark effort by the first great historian, Thucydides, who wrote a detailed account of the conflict. Given this advantage, Dr. de Souza is able to construct a solid and uncontroversial summary of the war. This summary will be useful to modern students who lack the time or will to plow through the original Thucydides. However, this volume is less than fully satisfying for several reasons. Anyone who has read Thucydides a few times will not get much new out of this volume. Further, the author has chosen to devote less than one-third of the volume to the war itself, which reduces the value for anyone attempting to study the actual military operations. Better maps, a glossary and information on oft-neglected topics like the war economies of Athens and Sparta would have made this a much better volume. The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BC begins with a short introduction, a chronology, a section on the background to the war (the rise of Athens and the First Peloponnesian War), a section on the warring sides, and how the war began. The actual narrative of the war is 29 pages long. Final sections include portrait of a soldier (an Athenian ship captain), politics and culture (democracy and oligarchy in Greece, the role of Persia, and the importance of Athenian art and culture), portrait of a civilian (the Athenian wife of Alcibiades), how the war ended, and conclusions. There are a total of seven maps supporting the text: Athens, a strategic map of Greece, the Battle of Mantinea, Sicily, the Siege of Syracuse, the Battle of Arginousai and the eastern Aegean. Unfortunately, the maps are one of the most disappointing aspects of this volume. The strategic map of Greece is less detailed than the sketch map provided in Penguin translations of Thucydides. The map depicting the Siege of Syracuse is particularly poor since it shows neither dispositions nor key events. A map depicting the key action at Phylos-Sphacteria should have been included. One of the few areas that the author emphasizes that is not apparent in reading the original Thucydides is the tremendous manpower constraints of Sparta. According to Dr. de Souza, Sparta only had about 5-10,000 full citizens capable of bearing arms. Given this limited manpower pool and the constant threat of slave rebellions in Sparta, the Spartans were extremely reluctant to commit large numbers of troops far from home. Instead, the Spartans tended to fight the war as much as possible using allies and mercenaries, often lead by a few capable Spartan officers. When the Spartans were able to capture about 200 Spartans during the Pylos-Spachteria affair, this tiny loss of personnel brought mighty Sparta to the negotiating table. While Athens started the war with about 40,000 able-bodied male citizens, it is estimated that about one-third died or were incapacitated due to the plague that struck the city in the second year of the war. Thus, both sides fought the war under manpower constraints that tended to get worse over time. Dr. de Souza also makes an interesting point about the flimsiness of Sparta's motives in the war and its involvement with the former common enemy, Persia. The author notes that, "in spite of their repeated claims to be fighting in order to liberate the Greeks, the Spartans negotiated a series of treaties with the representatives of King Dareios [of Persia] in which they agreed that those territories in Asia Minor which had formerly been under Persian domination should revert to his control. This included many Greek cities that had joined the Delian League under Athenian leadership in 478 and were now looking to Sparta to free them from Athenian domination." Instead, Sparta was ready to hand over its newfound allies to Persian tyranny in return for financial aid. After the war ended in the defeat of Athens, it was the Persian Empire that enforced the peace, "thus the freedom of the Greeks, that had been the rallying cry at the start of the Peloponnesian War, was guaranteed not by the Spartans, but by the Persian King." Comment | | (Report this)


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  • The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BC
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    Updated on 6-21-2008.
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