The History of Greece from Its Earliest Beginnings to the Hellenistic Age. John Bagnell Bury

The History of Greece from Its Earliest Beginnings to the Hellenistic Age - John Bagnell Bury


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       John Bagnell Bury

      The History of Greece from Its Earliest Beginnings to the Hellenistic Age

      3rd millennium B.C. - 146 B.C.

      Published by

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       [email protected]

      2019 OK Publishing

      EAN 4064066051556

      Table of Contents

       Introduction

       Greece and the Aegean

       The Heroic and the Greek Dark Ages

       The Beginnings of Greece and the Heroic Age

       The Expansion of Greece

       Archaic Greece

       Growth of Sparta - Fall of the Aristocracies

       The Union of Attica and the Foundation of the Athenian Democracy

       Growth of Athens in the Sixth Century

       The Advance of Persia to the Aegean

       Classical Greece

       The Perils of Greece - the Persian and Punic Invasions

       The Foundation of the Athenian Empire

       The Athenian Empire Under the Guidance of Pericles

       The Decline and Downfall of the Athenian Empire

       The Spartan Supremacy and the Persian War

       The Revival of Athens and Her Second League

       The Hegemony of Thebes

       The Syracusan Empire and the Struggle With Carthage

       Macedonian Hegemony

       The Rise of Macedonia

       The Conquest of Persia

       The Conquest of the Far East

       The Hellenistic Age

      Introduction

       Table of Contents

      Greece and the Aegean

       Table of Contents

      The rivers and valleys, the mountains, bays, and islands of Greece will become familiar, as our story unfolds itself, and we need not enter here into any minute description. But it is useful at the very outset to grasp some general features which went to make the history of the Greeks what it was, and what otherwise it could not have been. The character of their history is so intimately connected with the character of their dwelling-places that we cannot conceive it apart from their land and seas.

      Of Spain, Italy, and Illyricum, the three massy promontories of which southern Europe consists, Illyricum in the east would have closely resembled Spain in the west, if it had stopped short at the north of Thessaly and if its offshoot Greece had been sunk beneath the waters. It would then have been no more than a huge block of solid land, at one corner almost touching the shores of Asia, as Spain almost touches the shores of Africa. But Greece, its southern continuation, has totally different natural features, which distinguish it alike from Spain the solid square and Italy the solid wedge, and make the eastern basin of the Mediterranean strikingly unlike the western. Greece gives the impression of a group of nesses and islands. Yet in truth it might have been as solid and unbroken a block of continent, on its own smaller scale, as the massive promontory from which it juts. Greece may be described as a mountainous headland broken across the middle into two parts by a huge rift, and with its whole eastern side split into fragments. We can trace the ribs of the framework, which a convulsion of nature bent and shivered, for the service, as it turned out, of the human race. The mountains which form Thessaly’s eastern barrier, Olympus, Ossa, and Pelion; the mountains of the long island of Euboea; and the string of islands which seem to hang to Euboea as a sort of tail, should have formed a perpetual mountainous chain—the rocky eastern coast of a solid promontory. Again, the ridges of Pindus which divide Thessaly from Epirus find their prolongation in the heights of Tymphrestus and Corax, and then, in an oblique south-eastward line, deflected from its natural direction, the chain is continued in Parnassus, Helicon, and Cithaeron, in the hills of Attica, and in the islands which would be part of Attica, if Attica had not dipped beneath the waters. In the same way the mountains of the Peloponnesus are a continuation of the mountains of Epirus. Thus restoring the framework in our imagination and raising the dry-land from the sea, we reconstruct, as the Greece that might have been, a lozenge of land, ribbed with chains of hills stretching south-eastward far out into the Aegean. If nature had given the Greeks a land like this, their history would have been entirely changed; and by imagining it we are helped to understand how much they owed to the accidents of nature. In a land of capes and deep bays and islands it was determined that waterways should be the ways of their expansion. They were driven as it were into the arms of the sea.

      The most striking feature of continental Greece is the deep gulf which has cleft it asunder into two parts. The southern half ought to have been an island—as its Greek name, “the island of Pelops”, suggests—but it holds on to the continent by a narrow bridge of land at the eastern extremity of the great cleft. Now this physical feature had the utmost significance for the history of Greece; and its significance may be viewed in three ways,


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