'The eyesore of Aigina' : anti-Athenian attitudes in Greek, Hellenistic and Roman history /
by Powell, Anton; Meïdanē, Katerina S; Buraselis, Kostas.
Material type: BookSeries: Description: xiii, 258 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.ISBN: 9781905125593; 1905125593.Subject(s): Politics and governmentDDC classification: 938 JAM 1997 A103 Or. Summary: Our ideas about ancient Athens are constructed very largely from the writings of Athenian authors. Relatively rare are our sources for how others--whether Greeks, Asiatics or Romans--saw Athens from the outside. Yet we can see that not only did many across the Mediterranean world resist the political power of Athens in countless wars over several centuries, but that there existed an intriguing variety of anti-Athenian ideologies. This volume traces negative thinking about Athens from the late archaic period to Roman times. It challenges the easy modern supposition that Athens was generally seen as the cultural emblem of Greece, and casts light on the thinking of ancient peoples who--nowadays--tend to exist in Athens' shadow.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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សៀវភៅភាសាអង់គ្លេស | Library Block A A103 | 938 JAM 1997 A103 Or. (Browse shelf) | Available | |
សៀវភៅភាសាអង់គ្លេស | Library Block A | 938 JAM 1997 A103 Or. (Browse shelf) | Available |
Browsing Library Block A Shelves , Shelving location: A103 Close shelf browser
915 CHA 1996 A103 Or. Tokyo, a cultural guide to Japan's capital city / | 915 STO 1992 A103 Or. The Japan vacation planner : | 917 NOO 1968 A103 Or. The pump house gang | 938 JAM 1997 A103 Or. 'The eyesore of Aigina' : | 939 HOU 2002 A103 Or. Mysteries of the snake goddess : | 940 ALL 1999 A103 Or. The silent men : | 940 ALL 2005 A103 Or. Quinn's Post, Anzac, Gallipoli / |
Our ideas about ancient Athens are constructed very largely from the writings of Athenian authors. Relatively rare are our sources for how others--whether Greeks, Asiatics or Romans--saw Athens from the outside. Yet we can see that not only did many across the Mediterranean world resist the political power of Athens in countless wars over several centuries, but that there existed an intriguing variety of anti-Athenian ideologies. This volume traces negative thinking about Athens from the late archaic period to Roman times. It challenges the easy modern supposition that Athens was generally seen as the cultural emblem of Greece, and casts light on the thinking of ancient peoples who--nowadays--tend to exist in Athens' shadow.
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