Greeks Bearing Gifts: The Public Use of Private Relationships in the Greek World, 435-323 BC

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, 2002 M05 2 - 248 pages
Using models from social anthropology as its basis, this book looks at the role of personal relationships in classical Greece and their bearing on interstate politics. It begins with a discussion of what friendship meant in the Greek world of the classical period, and then shows how the models for friendship in the private sphere were mirrored in the public sphere at both domestic and interstate level. As well as relations between Greeks (in particular those in Athens and Sparta), Dr Mitchell looks at Greek relations with those on the margins of the Greek world, particularly the state of Macedon, and with neighbouring non-Greeks such as the Thracians and the Persians. She finds that these other cultures did not always have the same understanding of what friendship was, and that this led to misunderstandings and difficulties in the relations between non-Greeks and Greeks.
 

Contents

Philia and political activity
41
Sparta
73
Athens
90
Persia and the Greeks III
111
Athenians and Thracians
134
Philip and the Greeks
148
Alexander
167
Friendship and ideology
178
Magistrates with connections
192
Notes on magistrates for the years 435323 BC
202
Bibliography
217
Indexes
234
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information