This volume presents the contributions to a symposium held on May 9th, 2009 at the Humanities Center at Harvard University that focused on the question of how peace and interstate stability were established and maintained in archaic and classical Greece. In this context, different perspectives and approaches, ranging from pragmatic political goals and the definition and interpretation of key terms such as eirene to the underlying norms and their relevance for the realpolitik, were discussed. The articles in this volume shed new light on the various political instruments that the Greeks developed and employed to avoid war and to keep and organize peace. They focus on the analysis of commonly accepted terms that provided the basis for a settl...
This articles presents the salient exopolitical ideas and acts of the Greeks in their Golden Age at ...
Greece, Macedon and Persia contains a collection of papers related to the history and historiography...
This article investigates the theoretical assumptions and implications of De Ste. Croix’s approach t...
This volume presents the contributions to a symposium held on May 9th, 2009 at the Humanities Center...
Looking at Classical warfare from the perspective of the non-belligerents, Robert A. Bauslaugh bring...
This chapter focuses on the wide range of approaches adopted by Greek cities, from end of Peloponnes...
This thesis demonstrates the existence of rules concerning noncombatancy (legal inviolability in int...
The Corinthian War was closed in 386 B.C. by the first koinè eiréne, that prima facie promised to ca...
Alexander Fuks 1917-1978 / Moshe Amit -- Appeals to the past in classical Athens / P.J. Rhodes -- In...
After having been for decades the province of a relatively small group of scholars, the Hellenistic ...
In this chapter, the author suggests that in Greece in the fourth century BCE something quite close ...
When I first began to contemplate the question of mechanisms for regional peace among the Greek citi...
It was once said that “if Sparta and Rome perished, what state can hope to endure forever?” (J. J. R...
We explore the emergence of formal institutions of majority rule in archaic Greece from a historical...
© Cambridge University Press 2008 and 2009. This chapter considers the evolution of Graeco-Persian d...
This articles presents the salient exopolitical ideas and acts of the Greeks in their Golden Age at ...
Greece, Macedon and Persia contains a collection of papers related to the history and historiography...
This article investigates the theoretical assumptions and implications of De Ste. Croix’s approach t...
This volume presents the contributions to a symposium held on May 9th, 2009 at the Humanities Center...
Looking at Classical warfare from the perspective of the non-belligerents, Robert A. Bauslaugh bring...
This chapter focuses on the wide range of approaches adopted by Greek cities, from end of Peloponnes...
This thesis demonstrates the existence of rules concerning noncombatancy (legal inviolability in int...
The Corinthian War was closed in 386 B.C. by the first koinè eiréne, that prima facie promised to ca...
Alexander Fuks 1917-1978 / Moshe Amit -- Appeals to the past in classical Athens / P.J. Rhodes -- In...
After having been for decades the province of a relatively small group of scholars, the Hellenistic ...
In this chapter, the author suggests that in Greece in the fourth century BCE something quite close ...
When I first began to contemplate the question of mechanisms for regional peace among the Greek citi...
It was once said that “if Sparta and Rome perished, what state can hope to endure forever?” (J. J. R...
We explore the emergence of formal institutions of majority rule in archaic Greece from a historical...
© Cambridge University Press 2008 and 2009. This chapter considers the evolution of Graeco-Persian d...
This articles presents the salient exopolitical ideas and acts of the Greeks in their Golden Age at ...
Greece, Macedon and Persia contains a collection of papers related to the history and historiography...
This article investigates the theoretical assumptions and implications of De Ste. Croix’s approach t...