A Culture of Freedom: Ancient Greece and the Origins of Europe

A Culture of Freedom: Ancient Greece and the Origins of Europe

A Culture of Freedom: Ancient Greece and the Origins of Europe

A Culture of Freedom: Ancient Greece and the Origins of Europe

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Overview

Christian Meier is one of Europe's preeminent authorities on the classical world. A Culture of Freedom marks the apex of his lifelong research on ancient Greek culture. Beginning with a section on medieval and modern Europe's enormous inheritance of Greek institutions and ideas, the book moves on to chronicle the rise of Greek civilization from the Bronze Age to the Greco-Persian wars. Throughout, the author provides fresh insight into the "Greek miracle," as he illuminates the well-known features of Greek culture--from epic and lyric poetry to warfare, athletics, philosophy, religion, and democracy. What made these achievements possible and so enduring? Meier argues that across the whole range of human experience--in politics and philosophy no less than in war, sport, and religion--there was one common denominator among the ancient Greeks: an attempt to find compromise, balance, and understanding in the face of problems others usually solved by means of power. A Culture of Freedom is an original and learned portrait of a civilization that still captivates and inspires.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199912193
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 10/25/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Christian Meier, Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at the University of Munich, is the author of Caesar: A Biography, Athens: A Portrait of the City in Its Golden Age, and From Athens to Auschwitz: The Uses of History.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Kurt Raaflaub List of Maps List of Figures PART I. The Question of Beginnings 1. A Most Unusual Case I: The Appropriation of Antiquity by Medieval and Modern Europe 2. The Challenge of Freedom 3. A Most Unusual Case II: The Early Conditions of the Formation of Medieval and Early Modern Culture 4. The Constitution of Europe as a Continent 5. Greeks and Persians I: Freedom and Rule-Atossa's Dream 6. Europe and Asia in Antiquity 7. Antiquity as European Prehistory or Early History PART II. The Rise of the World of Poleis 8. A Post-Mycenaean New Beginning: Origins of Greek Particularity 9. The Dawn of an Era: The Eighth Century BC 10. The Greeks and the Orient 11. Colonization 12. Homer and Hesiod 13. Gods and Priests 14. Crisis and Consolidation: The Seventh and Sixth Centuries BC 15. Polis Individualism and the Pan-Hellenic Context: The Agonistic Impulse 16. The Diversity of the Poleis: Sparta and Other Cities 17. The Wars 18 Polis Structure: Public Sphere and Institutions 19. Crisis: Aristocratic Rivalries, Social Conflict, Tyrannies 20. Lyric Poetry, the Symposium, and a Reorientation towards Virtue 21. The Beginnings of Political Thought: The 'Middling Class' 22. The Beginnings of Philosophy and Science 23. Athens's Path towards Isonomia and its Rise to Power 24. The Aegean World around 500 bc: Greeks and Persians Outlook Epilogue Glossary Sources and Further Reading Index
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