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E-book
Author Nudell, Joshua P., author

Title Accustomed to obedience? : Classical Ionia and the Aegean World, 480-294 BCE / Joshua P. Nudell
Published Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, [2023]
©2023

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Description 1 online resource (xvi, 270 pages) : maps
Contents List of Maps -- Abbreviations -- Prologue: The Land of Ionia -- Orienting toward Athens and the Aegean System: 480-454 -- Under the Athenian Empire: 454-412 -- Contempt for Athenian Hegemony: 411-401 -- Centered on the Periphery: 401/0-386 -- A Region Divided: 386-336 -- Free, at Last?: 336-323 -- Facing a New Hellenistic World: 323-294 -- The Ornaments of Ionia: Temple Construction and Commercial Prosperity -- Epilogue -- Appendix 1: Whither the Ionian League? -- Appendix 2: Greeks and Non-Greeks in Classical Ionia -- Appendix 3: Long Ago the Milesians Were Powerful -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary Many histories of Ancient Greece center their stories on Athens, but what would that history look like if they didn't? There is another way to tell this story, one that situates Greek history in terms of the relationships between smaller Greek cities and in contact with the wider Mediterranean. In this book, author Joshua P. Nudell offers a new history of the period from the Persian wars to wars that followed the death of Alexander the Great, from the perspective of Ionia. While recent scholarship has increasingly treated Greece through the lenses of regional, polis, and local interaction, there has not yet been a dedicated study of Classical Ionia. This book fills this clear gap in the literature while offering Ionia as a prism through which to better understand Classical Greece. This book offers a clear and accessible narrative of the period between the Persian Wars and the wars of the early Hellenistic period, two nominal liberations of the region. The volume complements existing histories of Classical Greece. Close inspection reveals that the Ionians were active partners in the imperial endeavor, even as imperial competition constrained local decision-making and exacerbated local and regional tensions. At the same time, the book offers interventions on critical issues related to Ionia such as the Athenian conquest of Samos, rhetoric about the freedom of the Greeks, the relationship between Ionian temple construction and economic activity, the status of the Panionion, Ionian poleis and their relationship with local communities beyond the circle of the dodecapolis, and the importance of historical memory to our understanding of ancient Greece. The result is a picture of an Aegean world that is more complex and less beholden narratives that give primacy to the imperial actors at the expense of local developments
Bibliography Includes bibliographcal references (pages 229-264) and index
Notes This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-NoDerivatives https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
Subject History / Ancient / Greece.
History.
History / Europe / Greece.
HISTORY / General
SUBJECT Ionia (Turkey and Greece) -- History
Greece -- History -- To 146 B.C. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85057074
Greece -- History, Military -- To 146 B.C. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh00001511
Subject Greece
Genre/Form History
Military history
Form Electronic book
Author Michigan Publishing (University of Michigan), publisher.
ISBN 047290387X
9780472903870