The Greek city : from Homer to Alexander

書誌事項

The Greek city : from Homer to Alexander

edited by Oswyn Murray and Simon Price

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1990

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 20

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注記

Bibliography: p. 23-25

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The origins, development and nature of the classical Greek city-state or "polis" are as much a central concern in this as in previous generations. This book offers a series of 14 studies representing the different methodological approaches currently being practised, in order to provide an introduction to the state of the art. The focus of the study is on the autonomous Greek "polis" from its origins in the "Dark Age" until the point at which it was transformed into a basis for world civilization by the conquests of Alexander the Great, and the subsequent expansion of "polis" institutions throughout the Middle East. The urbanization of the Italian peninsula is now regarded as an integral part of the earlier process and an essay from the new school of Italian urban archaeology is included together with an essay on mobility and the "polis". Recent interest on the relationship between landscape and city is met by contributions dealing specifically with this area as is recent work on the relationship between public and private spheres in the institutions of the "polis". The collection is opened with an introduction to the phenomenon of the "polis" and closed with a discussion of its decline.

目次

  • Cities of reason, Oswyn Murray
  • the city in Mediterranean history: mobility and the "polis", Nicholas Purcell
  • military organization and social structure in archaic Etruria, Bruno D'Ago. The geography of the city: ancient landscapes, Oliver Rackham
  • survey archaeology and the rural landscape of the Greek city, Anthony Snodgrass
  • the size and resources of Greek cities, Lucia Nixon and Simon Price
  • private space and the Greek city, Michael Jameson. The institutions of the city: saving the city, Emily Kearns. The decline of the city: doomed to extinction - the "polis" as an evolutionary dead-end, W.G. Runciman.

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