From Publishers Weekly
Bagnall (
The Punic Wars, 2005), a former British army chief of the general staff, completed this rigorous study of ancient Greece's 27-year civil war just before his death in 2002. A seminal event in ancient history, the Peloponnesian War pitted the two great Greek rivals, democratic Athens and authoritarian Sparta, in what Bagnall calls "a fearful, self-destructive war." The conflict, precipitated by Athens' lust for Greek hegemony, quickly settled into a stalemate—"an elephant versus a whale"—because neither Sparta, a land power, nor Athens, a naval power, had a clear strategy for victory. Sparta and her allies finally prevailed by severing Athens' supply lines and starving the city-state into submission. In dense prose, Bagnall captures the Greeks' self-destructive madness. Though the action occasionally slows, Bagnall is at his best when painting in-depth portraits of the major players, like Pericles, and when dissecting the endless battles in far-flung theaters from Asia Minor to Sicily. He concludes with a brief survey of the lessons learned and their contemporary relevance. While much of this ground has been covered, students and enthusiasts of ancient Greece and military history will welcome this excellent perspective on a watershed event.
(Aug.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
For 27 years (431-404 B.C.E.) mainland Greece, the coast of Asia Minor, and large parts of the central Mediterranean were ravaged as alliances headed by Athens and Sparta engaged in a nearly suicidal conflict. All of the major city-states of the mainland took part, and the so-called overseas Greeks in Sicily were sucked in. The Persians, still smarting from their defeats earlier in the century, constantly meddled in and manipulated both sides. Bagnall, who ended his military career as chief of general staff in London, died in 2002 just after completing this work, which is essentially a military history of the war, giving short shrift to culture and politics. Bagnall devotes almost half of the book to the Persian wars that preceded the Peloponnesian War. Once he gets down to that struggle, he provides a cogent and easily decipherable account of a complex and often confusing conflict. Specialists in military history will find this work particularly useful, but lay readers with a general knowledge of classical history will also find it a worthwhile read.
Jay FreemanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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