The Stalingrad of the ancient world, this is an
immensely readable, brilliant, brutal and vivid history
of the greatest and bloodiest war of ancient Greece. The
Peloponnesian War, fought 2,500 years ago between
oligarchic Sparta and democratic Athens for control of
Greece, is brought spectacularly to life in this
magnificent study. Kagan demonstrates the relevance of
this cataclysmic event to modern times in all its horror
and savagery. As two uncompromising empires fight a war
of survival from diametrically opposing political,
social and cultural positions, the seemingly invincible
glory of Athens crumbles in tragedy. Athenian culture
and politics was unmatched in originality and fertility,
and is still regarded as one of the peak achievements of
Western civilisation. Dramatic poets such as Aeschylus,
Sophocles, Euripides and Aristophanes raised tragedy and
comedy to a level never surpassed; architects and
sculptors were at work on the Acropolis; natural
philosophers like Anaxagoras and Democritus were
exploring the physical world, and philosophers like
Socrates were dissecting the realm of human affairs. All
this was lost to this bloody conflict.In this work of
brilliant scholarship, Kagan illustrates his remarkable
ability to interpret these events as a part of the
universality of human experience. His clear expertise in
both the ancient world and the wars of the 20th-century
are combined with his storytelling gifts to give an
unforgettable portrait of this pivotal war that has
shaped the world as we know it. |
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