The story of Pausanias, the general who defeated the Persians invading Greece and changed the course of history.
Weaving together ancient sources, Daniel Ogden tells the gripping story of the enigmatic and controversial Spartan regent to an underage king. Pausanias (ca. 505ca. 467 BCE) would never have come to power had the Persians not annihilated the Greek forces at Thermopylae in 480 BCE, killing his uncle Leonidas. The next year, Greek forces under the new regents command crushed the Persians at the decisive Battle of Plataea. It was a brilliant victory for Pausanias, but his heroic reputation swiftly declined. He was accused of tyrannical ambition, treachery, rape, and murder and came to a grisly and ghostly end, starved to death in Spartas Temple of Athena.
In this meticulously researched bookthe first full-length biography of Pausanias in EnglishOgden searches for the truth behind the ancient stories. Was Pausanias merely misunderstood and misrepresented, or was he an egotist in thrall to his own success? Despite Pausaniass dark demise, Ogden hails his greatest achievement: by defeating the Persians he ensured the future of Classical Greek culture and the development of Western civilization as we know it.
Group
Books (first-hand)
Author
Ogden, Daniel
Title
Modellers Airguide. Volume 41: U.S Air Force Martin B-57 Canberra
Details
Text in English. 194 pages.
State
new
Subtitle
From Victor to Traitor
Yale University Press 47 Bedford Square London WC1B 3DP Vereinigtes Königreich