Oswyn Murray

Early Greece


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       for

      J.A.H.M.

      O.M.

      A.E.M.

      M.P.M.

      R.J.M.

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       VI. The Orientalizing Period

       VII. Colonization

       VIII. Warfare and the New Morality

       IX. Tyranny

       X. Sparta and the Hoplite State

       XI. Athens and Social Justice

       XII. Life Styles: the Aristocracy

       XIII. Life Styles: the Economy

       XIV. The Coming of the Persians

       XV. The Leadership of Greece: Sparta and Athens

       XVI. The Great Persian War

       Maps

       Plate Section

       Date chart

       Primary sources

       Further reading

       General index

       About the Author

       Also by the Author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

      No justification is needed for a new history of the ancient world; modern scholarship and new discoveries have changed our picture in important ways, and it is time for the results to be made available to the general reader. But the Fontana History of the Ancient World attempts not only to present an up-to-date account. In the study of the distant past, the chief difficulties are the comparative lack of evidence and the special problems of interpreting it; this in turn makes it both possible and desirable for the more important evidence to be presented to the reader and discussed, so that he may see for himself the methods used in reconstructing the past, and judge for himself their success.

      The series aims, therefore, to give an outline account of each period that it deals with and, at the same time, to present as much as possible of the evidence for that account. Selected documents with discussions of them are integrated into the narrative, and often form the basis of it; when interpretations are controversial the arguments are presented to the reader. In addition, each volume has a general survey of the types of evidence available for each period and ends with detailed suggestions for further reading. The series will, it is hoped, equip the reader to follow up his own interests and enthusiasms, having gained some understanding of the limits within which the historian must work.

      Oswyn Murray

      Fellow and Tutor in Ancient History,

      Balliol College, Oxford

      General Editor

       1 Trade and warfare

       a The site of Pithecusae (Ischia)

       b Bronze armour from the Warrior Grave at Argos

       c Corinthian helmet of Miltiades

       2 Commemorative pottery

       a Panathenaic prize vase

       b Geometric funerary vase from Athens