Author(s):
|
Morris, Ian |
URL:
|
http://www.princeton.edu/~pswpc/pdfs/morris/120508.pdf |
Format:
|
Article |
Publisher:
|
Department of Classics, Princeton University |
Publication City:
|
Princeton |
Date:
|
2005 |
Source:
|
Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics |
"In this paper I raise three questions: (1) How, and how much, did the Athenian Empire change Greek society? (2) Why did the Athenian Empire (or a competitor state) not become a multiethnic empire like Persia or Rome? (3) In the long run, how much did the Athenian Empire’s failure matter? I conclude: (1) The Athenian Empire increased the tempo of state formation in classical Greece and is best understood as an example of state formation not imperialism. (2) Counterfactual analysis suggests that Athens failed to become the capital of a multi-city state because of human error, and as late as 406 BC the most predictable outcome was that Athens would emerge as capital of an Ionian state. (3) Not much."
Permalink: |
http://etana.org/node/8891 |