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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
February 2025
Print publication year:
2025
Online ISBN:
9781009490979

Book description

At the end of the fifth century BC, the Peloponnesian War resulted in Athens' shattering defeat by Sparta. Taking advantage of the debacle, a commission of thirty Athenians abolished the democratic institutions that for a century had governed the political life of the city and precipitated a year-long civil war. By autumn 403 BC, democracy was restored. Inspired by the model of the ancient chorus, this strikingly innovative book interprets a crucial moment in classical history through the prism of ten remarkable individuals and the shifting groups which formed around them. The former include more familiar names like the multifaceted Sokrates, the oligarch Kritias and the rhetorician Lysias, but also lesser-known figures like the scribe Nikomachos, the former slave Gerys and the priestess Lysimakhe. What leads a community to tear itself apart, even disintegrate, then rebuild itself? This question, explored through profound reflection on the past, echoes our tormented present.

Reviews

‘In Athens 403BC Azoulay and Ismard have produced a superb study of the critical period defined by the brief ascendancy and rapid fall of the Thirty in the aftermath of Athens' defeat in 403 BC. This is an original study with a distinctive voice and a compelling thesis.'

Jeremy McInerney - University OF Pennsylvania

‘Homonoia (Unanimity) and Diallage (Reconciliation) were 5th-century BCE Athenian democratic catchwords but they still resonate today, as perhaps never before. How timely then is this brilliant collaborative investigation of plurality, polyphony and dissonance in the world's first democracy. Let me only add my voice to the chorus of praise that is its due.'

Paul Cartledge - University of Cambridge

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Contents

  • Athens, 403 BC
    pp i-i
  • Reviews
    pp ii-ii
  • Classical Scholarship in Translation - Series page
    pp iii-iv
  • Athens, 403 BC - Title page
    pp v-v
  • A Democracy in Crisis?
  • Copyright page
    pp vi-vi
  • Dedication
    pp vii-viii
  • Contents
    pp ix-xi
  • Figures
    pp xii-xii
  • Foreword
    pp xiii-xxvi
  • Acknowledgments
    pp xxvii-xxviii
  • Chronology
    pp xxix-xxx
  • Introduction
    pp 1-30
  • Toward a Choral History
  • Chapter 1 - Critias and the Oligarchs
    pp 31-70
  • Chapter 2 - Thrasybulus and the Democratic Resistance
    pp 71-95
  • Chapter 3 - Archinus or the Victory of the ‘Moderates’
    pp 96-137
  • Chapter 4 - Socrates and the Voices of Neutrality
    pp 138-165
  • Chapter 5 - Lysimache
    pp 166-187
  • The Priestess of Athena and Her Doubles
  • Chapter 6 - Eutherus and the Precarious Workers
    pp 188-203
  • Chapter 7 - Hegeso or the Family Torn Asunder
    pp 204-220
  • Chapter 8 - Gerys and the World of the Merchant Agora
    pp 221-234
  • Chapter 9 - Nicomachus and the Servants of the City
    pp 235-250
  • Chapter 10 - Lysias, a Multifaceted Man
    pp 251-296
  • Conclusion
    pp 297-328
  • The City in Chorus
  • Bibliography
    pp 329-354
  • Index
    pp 355-358

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