Cornell University Press
The Archidamian War
About this book
"The Archidamian War remains sober, judicious, and comprehensive. There is nothing else like it available in English―certainly nothing that takes all the modern scholarship into account.... But perhaps the most valuable achievement of the book is its carefully reasoned demolition of Thucydides's view―warmly embraced by too many scholars―that Pericles's war strategy was justifiable."
— Peter Green ― Times Literary Supplement
This book, the second volume in Donald Kagan's tetralogy about the Peloponnesian War, is a provocative and tightly argued history of the first ten years of the war. Taking a chronological approach that allows him to present at each stage the choices that were open to both sides in the conflict, Kagan focuses on political, economic, diplomatic, and military developments. He evaluates the strategies used by both sides and reconsiders the roles played by several key individuals.
Author / Editor information
Donald Kagan is Sterling Professor of Classics and History at Yale University.
Reviews
The temptation to acclaim Kagan's four volumes as the foremost work of history produced in North America in the twentieth century is vivid.... Here is an achievement that not only honors the criteria of dispassion and of unstinting scruple which mark the best of modern historicism but honors its readers. To read Kagan's 'History of the Peloponnesian War' at the present hour is to be almost unbearably tested.
---A profound analysis of the relation of strategy to politics, a sympathetic but searching critique of Thucydides' masterpiece, and a trenchant assessment of the voluminous modern literature on the war.
---The Archidamian War remains sober, judicious, and comprehensive. There is nothing else like it available in English—certainly nothing that takes all the modern scholarship into account.... But perhaps the most valuable achievement of the book is its carefully reasoned demolition of Thucydides's view—warmly embraced by too many scholars—that Pericles's war strategy was justifiable.
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Frontmatter
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Preface
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Contents
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Maps
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Abbreviations and Short Titles
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1. Plans and Resources
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2. The First Year of the War
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3. The Plague and Its Consequences
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4. The Third Year of the War: Phormio
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5. The Revolt at Lesbos
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6. Sicily and Corcyra
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7. Demosthenes
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8. Pylos and Sphacteria
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9. Megara and Delium
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10. The Coming of Peace
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Conclusions
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Appendix A: Pericles and Athenian Income
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Appendix B: Pericles' Last Speech
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Bibliography
369 -
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General Index
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Index of Modern Authors
386 -
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Index of Ancient Authors and Inscriptions
388