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11. The comic Pericles
-
James McGlew
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Contributors viii
- Abbreviations x
- Figures and Tables xiii
- 1. Introduction 1
-
Part I The making of tyranny
- 2. Kingship and tyranny in archaic Rome 17
- 3. Ducetius and fifth-century Sicilian tyranny 33
- 4. Adfectatio regni in the Roman Republic 49
- 5. Money and the Great Man in the fourth century BC: military power, aristocratic connections and mercenary service 65
- 6. From Agathocles to Hieron II: the birth and development of basileia in Hellenistic Sicily 77
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Part II Tyranny and politics
- 7. Tyrants and the polis: migration, identity and urban development in Sicily 95
- 8. Synchronicity: the local and the panhellenic within Sicilian tyranny 119
- 9. Alexander of Pherae: infelix tyrant 135
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Part III The ideology of tyranny
- 10. Pindar and kingship theory 151
- 11. The comic Pericles 164
- 12. Tyrannical oligarchs at Athens 178
- 13. Plutarch and the Sicilian tyrants 188
- 14. Reckoning with tyranny: Greek thoughts on Caesar in Cicero’s Letters to Atticus in early 49 197
-
Part IV The limits of tyranny
- 15. The violence of the Thirty Tyrants 213
- 16. The politics of Persian autocracy, 424–334 BC 224
- 17. Sulla the weak tyrant 238
- Bibliography 250
- Index 278
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Contributors viii
- Abbreviations x
- Figures and Tables xiii
- 1. Introduction 1
-
Part I The making of tyranny
- 2. Kingship and tyranny in archaic Rome 17
- 3. Ducetius and fifth-century Sicilian tyranny 33
- 4. Adfectatio regni in the Roman Republic 49
- 5. Money and the Great Man in the fourth century BC: military power, aristocratic connections and mercenary service 65
- 6. From Agathocles to Hieron II: the birth and development of basileia in Hellenistic Sicily 77
-
Part II Tyranny and politics
- 7. Tyrants and the polis: migration, identity and urban development in Sicily 95
- 8. Synchronicity: the local and the panhellenic within Sicilian tyranny 119
- 9. Alexander of Pherae: infelix tyrant 135
-
Part III The ideology of tyranny
- 10. Pindar and kingship theory 151
- 11. The comic Pericles 164
- 12. Tyrannical oligarchs at Athens 178
- 13. Plutarch and the Sicilian tyrants 188
- 14. Reckoning with tyranny: Greek thoughts on Caesar in Cicero’s Letters to Atticus in early 49 197
-
Part IV The limits of tyranny
- 15. The violence of the Thirty Tyrants 213
- 16. The politics of Persian autocracy, 424–334 BC 224
- 17. Sulla the weak tyrant 238
- Bibliography 250
- Index 278