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THE WORLD OF THE ANCIENT GREEKS
John Camp and Elizabeth Fisher
Here is their story, told within its historical and cultural framework. The eastern Mediterranean has always been
a point of contact and conflict between East and West, and the book relates how the Greeks interacted, both peaceably
and otherwise, with the surrounding culturesMinoans, Phoenicians, Lydians, Persians, and Romans. Herodotus began
his account of the Persian Wars in the fifth century B.C. by saying that the trouble started 700 years earlier, with
the events leading up to the Trojan War. Over time the struggle surged back and forth across the Aegean: Greece
against Troy, Greek migration and settlement in Asia Minor, Persian invasions of Greece, Alexander's conquest of Asia,
Roman intervention in the Greek world.
The world of the ancient Greeks is presented here in chronological order, from the Bronze Age to the Christian era,
a span of some 3,500 years. Athens plays a large role, but other Greek cities are given much closer attention than
in standard accounts. Individual chapters look at the Greeks and their gods, and Greek art and architecture. The
result is a sweeping and authoritative survey of a culture that made an unparalleled contribution to the rise of
Western civilization.
John Camp is the director of the Agora excavations and the author of
The Athenian Agora, also published by
Thames & Hudson. Elizabeth Fisher is Professor of both Classics and Art History at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland,
Virginia, and has conducted many excavations in Greece and Italy.
ALSO OF INTEREST: ISBN 0-500-05112-7
· 71/2" x 9 5/8"
· 280 illustrations, 90 in color · 224 pages · ARCHAEOLOGY / CLASSICS
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