Home / Humanities / History / Ancient Greece & Rome / Athens, 403 BC: A Democracy in Crisis?

Athens, 403 BC: A Democracy in Crisis?

AUTHORS
Price
€48.90
€54.40 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

Free shipping

At the end of the fifth century BC, the Peloponnesian War resulted in Athens' shattering defeat by Sparta. Taking advantage of the debacle, a commission of thirty Athenians abolished the democratic institutions that for a century had governed the political life of the city and precipitated a year-long civil war. By autumn 403 BC, democracy was restored. Inspired by the model of the ancient chorus, this strikingly innovative book interprets a crucial moment in classical history through the prism of ten remarkable individuals and the shifting groups which formed around them. The former include more familiar names like the multifaceted Sokrates, the oligarch Kritias and the rhetorician Lysias, but also lesser-known figures like the scribe Nikomachos, the former slave Gerys and the priestess Lysimakhe. What leads a community to tear itself apart, even disintegrate, then rebuild itself? This question, explored through profound reflection on the past, echoes our tormented present.

  •  
  • Offers a fresh and innovational interpretation of a key event in Athenian political history: the civil war of 404/403 BC and the refoundation of democracy
  • Creative reflections on the past are now seen to have much contemporary resonance
  • Boldly and controversially argues for sustained reflection on the necessary nature of conflict within any democratic regime
Authors: Ismard Paulin, Azoulay Vincent
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 392
ISBN: 9781009490962
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2025

Introduction. Towards a choral history
1. Critias and the oligarchs
2. Thrasybulus and the democratic resistance
3. Archinus or the victory of the 'moderates'
4. Socrates and the voices of neutrality
5. Lysimache: the priestess of Athena and her doubles
6. Eutherus and the precarious workers
7. Hegeso or the family torn asunder
8. Gerys and the world of the merchant agora
9. Nicomachus and the servants of the city
10. Lysias, a multi-faceted man
Conclusion. The city in chorus.

Paulin Ismard is Associate Professor in Greek History at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne.

Vincent Azoulay is assistant professor of ancient Greek history at the Universite Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallee and a leading expert on the politics of classical Greece.

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist