Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium
This volume is unique in addressing a key aspect of ancient warfare across a broad chronological and cultural span, focusing on generalship from Archaic Greece to the Byzantine Empire in the twelfth century AD. Across this broad span, it explores a range of ideas on how to be a successful general, showing how the art of generalship – a profession that has been occupied variously by the political elite, the mercenary soldier and the eunuch – evolved and adapted to shifting notions of how a good military leader should act.
Highlighting developments and continuities in this age-old profession across the Graeco-Roman world, this volume brings together the latest research on generalship from both established and new voices. The chapters examine both ideals of generalship and specific examples of generals, considering the principles underpinning the roles they played and the qualities desired in them. They discuss in particular the intersection between military and political roles, the addresses delivered by generals to their troops, the virtue of courage and the commemoration of victory as well as defeat. In addition, contributors consider cross-cultural comparisons of generalship, with specific chapters devoted to Persian, Arab and Chinese views.

1140788175
Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium
This volume is unique in addressing a key aspect of ancient warfare across a broad chronological and cultural span, focusing on generalship from Archaic Greece to the Byzantine Empire in the twelfth century AD. Across this broad span, it explores a range of ideas on how to be a successful general, showing how the art of generalship – a profession that has been occupied variously by the political elite, the mercenary soldier and the eunuch – evolved and adapted to shifting notions of how a good military leader should act.
Highlighting developments and continuities in this age-old profession across the Graeco-Roman world, this volume brings together the latest research on generalship from both established and new voices. The chapters examine both ideals of generalship and specific examples of generals, considering the principles underpinning the roles they played and the qualities desired in them. They discuss in particular the intersection between military and political roles, the addresses delivered by generals to their troops, the virtue of courage and the commemoration of victory as well as defeat. In addition, contributors consider cross-cultural comparisons of generalship, with specific chapters devoted to Persian, Arab and Chinese views.

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Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium

Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium

Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium

Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium

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Overview

This volume is unique in addressing a key aspect of ancient warfare across a broad chronological and cultural span, focusing on generalship from Archaic Greece to the Byzantine Empire in the twelfth century AD. Across this broad span, it explores a range of ideas on how to be a successful general, showing how the art of generalship – a profession that has been occupied variously by the political elite, the mercenary soldier and the eunuch – evolved and adapted to shifting notions of how a good military leader should act.
Highlighting developments and continuities in this age-old profession across the Graeco-Roman world, this volume brings together the latest research on generalship from both established and new voices. The chapters examine both ideals of generalship and specific examples of generals, considering the principles underpinning the roles they played and the qualities desired in them. They discuss in particular the intersection between military and political roles, the addresses delivered by generals to their troops, the virtue of courage and the commemoration of victory as well as defeat. In addition, contributors consider cross-cultural comparisons of generalship, with specific chapters devoted to Persian, Arab and Chinese views.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474459945
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 03/08/2022
Pages: 376
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Shaun Tougher is Professor of Late Roman and Byzantine History at Cardiff University, where he has taught since 1997. His research interests lie in the political and social history of the later Roman and Byzantine empires, especially the Emperor Julian, eunuchs and the Macedonian Dynasty. His recent publications include The Roman Castrati: Eunuchs in the Roman Empire (Bloomsbury, 2021), The Sons of Constantine, AD 337–361: In the Shadows of Constantine and Julian (co-edited with Nicholas Baker-Brian, Palgrave Macmillan, 2020) and The Emperor in the Byzantine World (ed., Routledge, 2019).

Richard Evans taught at the University of South Africa and Cardiff University. In recent years he has been Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Biblical and Ancient Studies, University of South Africa. His research interests have encompassed much of the political and military history of Greece, the Roman Republic and especially Syracuse. He has also published on the histories of Sybaris, Asia Minor and Pergamum, and the works of Diodorus Siculus and Herodotus. Recent publications include: Ancient Syracuse: From Foundation to Fourth Century Collapse (Routledge, 2016) and A History of Pergamum: Beyond Hellenistic Kingship (Bloomsbury, 2012).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of ContributorsAbbreviations

Introduction: Generalship in Ancient Greece, Rome and Byzantium - Richard Evans and Shaun Tougher

1. Kings, Tyrants and Bandy-Legged Men: Generalship in Archaic Greece - Cezary Kucewicz

2. Commemorating Thermopylae: The andreia of Glorious Defeat as a Literary Construct - Richard Evans

3. Plato on Military and Political Leadership - Nicholas Rockwell

4. Reconstructing Early Seleucid Generalship, 301-222 BC - Alex McAuley

5. Generalship and Knowledge in the Middle Roman Republic - Michael Taylor

6. Command Assessment in the Bellum Gallicum: Fortuna and Caesar - David Nolan

7. Remembering P. Quinctilius Varus: Opposing Perspectives on the Memory and Memorialization of the Failed General in the Annales of Tacitus - Daniel Crosby

8. Decius and the Battle near Abritus - David Potter

9. Ammianus and the Heroic Mode of Generalship in the Fourth Century AD - Conor Whately

10. The Fine Line between Courage and Fear in the Vandal War - Michael Stewart

11. The Generalship of John Troglita – Art in Artifice - Martine de Marre

12. The Best of Men: Cross-Cultural Command in the 630s AD - Eve MacDonald

13. Tian Yue Marshals His Tropes: Public Persuasion and the Character of Military Leadership in Late Tang China - David A. Graff

14. The Ideal of the Roman General in Byzantium: The Reception of Onasander’s Strategikos in Byzantine Military Literature - Philip Rance

15. Generalship and Gender in Byzantium: Non-Campaigning Emperors and Eunuch Generals in the Age of the Macedonian Dynasty - Shaun Tougher

16. The Politics of War: Virtue, Tyche, Persuasion, and the Byzantine General - Dimitris Krallis

EpilogueBibliographyIndex

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