Modern ideas about European identity have to a significant extent informed the historiography of the Hellenistic World. Thus, the Seleukid Empire (c. 211-64/3) has been rendered a product of "Classical" civilization, an "Oriental" state, and of course an empire "between East and West". In these simplifications, Greece is usually seen in opposition to a more or less amorphous (Near) East, where the latter has recently been presented as essentially static through the emphasis on the "continuity" of indigenous "traditions" during the Hellenistic period. The West by contrast is conceptualized as either more dynamic and more advanced than the East, or as intrusive, suppressive and colonialist. This paper reviews the various ways in which a moder...