Sunday, March 24, 2019
The Nature and Variety of Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Greek St
13. Megalopolitans The people from Megalopolis in Arcadia in the western Peloponnese. It was in the Achaean fusion during the time being described. It would cede been considered a Polis and as such would not have been seen as clean a single entity or brain, earlier The Greeks saw the relationship ming guide with the individual and the state as organic (Green, 1993). The nature and variety of new-fashioned classical and early classical Greek states were unique. Not one appeared to be the same as any other. One system favoured democracy (Athens), other may favour a diarchy (Sparta) and others may be led by a tyrant. However A polis at this time did not just have to be a big city. A low-toned village on a mountainside could be considered as a polis because it was led by a body of citizens. Poleis arguably started to decline during the Hellenistic period when they relied more and more on benefactors who would contribute wealth to a city in exchange for political power. A polis i n antediluvian Greek times would have meant more than just a city, rather it would be a territory, and a state which is why a polis rotter be described as a city-state. Aetolians The Aetolians are from the area of Aetolia which is a mountainous region north of Corinth in central Greece. It was the base of the Aetolian League which was created to rival Macedonia and the Achaean League. By the 340s it was the leading power in Greece in which Green explains The Aetolians now controlled about of central Greece (Green, 2007). Polybios is heavily anti-Aetolian in his writing, perhaps because Polybios himself was from Megalopolis which was part of the Achaean League, or that he based most of his work for this time (220s) on Aratus of Sicyons memoirs. His father was also a leading... ...Works CitedGreen, P. 2007. The Hellenistic Age. New York.Hansen, M. H. 2006. Polis An Introduction to the Greek City-State. Oxford.Hansen, M. H. 1998. Polis and City-state An Ancient Concept and its ad vanced(a) Equivalent. Copenhagen Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab/Munksgaard.Larsen, J. A. O. 1968. Greek Federal States Their Institutions and History. Oxford Clarendon Press.Paton, W. R. ed. 1922-7. Polybius, Histories. (Loeb Classical Library, 128, 137-8, and 159-61.) Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press.Shipley, G. 2000. The Greek World after horse parsley 323-30 BC. London-New York Routledge.Fine, J. V. A. The Background of the Social War of 220-217B.C. The American Jounal of Philology, Vol 61, No 2. (1940) pp. 129-165.Samuel, A. E. The Ptolemies and the Ideology of Kingship, in Hellenistic History and Culture, Ed. Green, P. 1993.
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