Amazon.com Review
Ancient Athens is remembered today as the cradle of a civilization that stands as an ideal of the reasoned life, as the source of radical transformations of thought that remain with us today in ideas of citizenship, freedom, political organization, and social obligation. Christian Meier gently reminds us, however, that in this context, Athens was a collective of landed citizens numbering fewer than 150,000 individuals spanning four generations in the 6th and 5th centuries B.C.
Meier's sweeping narrative begins with the decisive Athenian victory at the battle of Salamis, when a hastily assembled fleet held off the much mightier navy of the Persian emperor, Xerxes. It was in war, Meier suggests, that Athens first came to see itself as a place unlike any other. When they were not battling Persians, Athenians often fought neighboring city-states over, say, who would have the right to host a round of Olympic games or control shipping lanes. (The Athenians, quipped Thucydides, "were born into the world to take no rest themselves and to give none to others.") The Athenian penchant for fighting with their neighbors--and, when neighbors were otherwise occupied, amongst themselves--led to the city-state's decline at the end of the Peloponnesian War in 404 B.C., when Meier's saga draws to a close.
Meier brings a flair for storytelling to his thoroughgoing portrait of Athens's shining moment, with a cast of characters strong on well-known figures like Solon, Alcibiades, Euripides, and Socrates. Meier also writes with self-effacing modesty, noting that his is but one interpretation among many and that history that, as his does, "obeys the law of narrative sequence [is] the most time-honored perspective for curtailing understanding." Yet Athens does nothing of the sort, offering instead a fine overview of the complexities of Athenian life from which every reader of classical history will profit. --Gregory McNamee
From Publishers Weekly
Meier gets his massive study of Athens off to a marvelous start. It is 480 B.C., and the entire population of the city, around 100,000 people, have left everything behind in their race for the harbor, hoping to escape the approaching Persians and board ships to the island of Salamis, and safety. Defeated by the Greeks in a brilliant naval maneuver, the Persians head home, allowing the uninterrupted evolution of the peculiar "Greek way" democracy. "There are very few instances in history when so much was at stake in a single battle," writes Meier, a professor of ancient history at the University of Munich. Without the Greek victory at Salamis, he asks, "would there have been the incentive for such amazing growth of rational thought?" His answer is yes, and his book explains why. Following the battle of Salamis, east and west were no longer points on a compass, but two different worlds. Although the Persians allowed Greek culture to thrive in Asia Minor, it was the Greek peninsula with its difficult terrain and patchwork of small city-states that gave birth to a people stubborn and independent enough to reinvent the rules of world history. This remarkable age lasted about four generations, and even though their achievements changed history, the Greeks had lost their grip on major political power by the turn of the next century. Meier's re-creation of this era is thorough, compelling and greatly aided by the Kimbers' scholarly yet accessible translation. He succeeds in his stated goal of writing history as if it were a literary endeavor, creating a clear, indelible picture of a fascinating era. Editor, Stephen Hubbell.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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