D. Graham J. Shipley, The Early Hellenistic Peloponnese: Politics, Economies, and Networks 338-197 BC. pp. xxxii+355, 1 ill., 9 maps, 7 tables. 2018. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 2018978-0-521-87369-7, hardback $120.

David K. Pettegrew
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Abstract

The ‘decline’ of the polis in the late Classical and early Hellenistic periods numbers among the stock elements of historical narratives of ancient Greece. In the conventional rendition baked into old textbook descriptions of Greek civilization, the aftermath of the Peloponnesian War marked the end of a golden age as city-states devolved into a downward cycle of power play, hegemonic contest, and warfare that ended only with the conquests of Philip II and Alexander. The polis thereafter lost its autonomy, political directive, and ideological essence. As one popular textbook of western civilization put it recently: ‘With the advent of Macedonian control, once-independent poleis became subject cities whose proud political traditions were no longer relevant.’ This picture of decline, decay, and irrelevance remains common today despite a range of recent scholarship reappraising the early Hellenistic period in Greece.
在古典晚期和希腊化早期,城邦的“衰落”是古希腊历史叙事的重要元素之一。按照旧教科书对希腊文明的传统描述,伯罗奔尼撒战争的后果标志着一个黄金时代的结束,城邦陷入了权力游戏、霸权竞争和战争的恶性循环,直到菲利普二世和亚历山大的征服才结束。城邦从此失去了它的自主性、政治指导性和意识形态的本质。正如一本流行的西方文明教科书最近所写的那样:“随着马其顿人的控制,曾经独立的城邦变成了臣服城市,它们引以为傲的政治传统不再重要。”尽管最近一些学者重新评估了希腊早期的希腊化时期,但这种衰落、衰败和无关紧要的图景在今天仍然很普遍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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