The Spartan Regime_ Its Character, Origins, and Grand Strategy - Paul Anthony Rahe
Conquest 65 guide the process by which what is known is filtered. Some events, supportive of the pretensions of those who welcom ...
66 Conquest not a substantial proportion of them are, in fact, at least distantly related by blood. Time and time again, in rece ...
Conquest 67 proud and systematic refusal of trust. Denys Page was less well-schooled in social and anthropological theory than M ...
68 Conquest Argolid in the northeastern Peloponnesus, Laconia in the southeast, and Mes- senia in the southwest as well.^12 The ...
Conquest 69 In short, there is no explanation for what we can surmise from the avail- able evidence more economic than the one o ...
70 Conquest it would have had to be the case that there were no childless kings and no cases of disputed paternity in the tenth, ...
Conquest 71 years old when the son mentioned on it was born. In ordinary times, such a presumption would be implausible. In a ti ...
72 Conquest Were it not for his cautionary words, we would be inclined to judge on the basis of the physical remains that Athens ...
Conquest 73 that the Amyclaeans were at some point admitted to Lacedaemon’s Spartiate ruling order. On this question, the epigra ...
74 Conquest that, as a polity, Lacedaemon was the product of an amalgamation of two small neighboring communities hitherto at od ...
Conquest 75 communities were purportedly founded by Sparta as colonies; others, which are attested archaeologically as early as ...
76 Conquest work their own land for the benefit of their Spartan overlords.^32 It is perhaps to this Alcamenes that we should cr ...
Conquest 77 ing colonies abroad, and everything that we know of the period suggests that it was a time when the population of He ...
Map 3. Sparta in the Mediterranean ...
Conquest 79 arrive from Lemnos and Imbros, are allowed to settle at Amyclae, and subse- quently revolt; then, they are made to j ...
80 Conquest seized the Stenyklaros plain in Messenia, they were prepared to exclude even the native-born. A Military Revolution ...
Conquest 81 invariably dismount and fight on foot. There are indications in his text sug- gesting an awareness on their part of ...
82 Conquest asks why “all men look on us as if we were gods” and why “we are awarded a great estate by the banks of Xanthos, wit ...
Conquest 83 We do not know precisely when hoplite protocols of this sort were first introduced; and, given the never-ending flui ...
84 Conquest nor by the greaves, cuirass, or corslet he may have worn—though these all formed part of the standard hoplite panopl ...
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