The Spartan Regime_ Its Character, Origins, and Grand Strategy - Paul Anthony Rahe

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Author’s Note and Acknowledgments 197


gent pólıs of the archaic age. As the notes to the third chapter of this volume


should make clear, I have attended to the criticism recently directed at Han-


son’s account of hoplite warfare, and, for the most part, I have found it uncon-


vincing. I am persuaded, however, by those among his critics who assert that


gentleman farmers of middling wealth, not rich enough to own horses, came


to be predominant within Hellas in the period covered by this book. What


these scholars forget, however, is that, in a world dominated by aristocrats of


great wealth, the political interests of gentleman farmers who are not similarly


well-born and those of the smallholders singled out for attention by Hanson


largely coincide.


Eugene D. Genovese also served as an inspiration. I first met him in the


late 1970s when I was a beginning assistant professor. Over the years, we be-


came good friends; and, when opportunity knocked, he and his wife Betsey


agreed to be the godparents of my firstborn child. As I have pondered the


helots and the role they played in the history of archaic Sparta, I have returned


again and again to his books—especially, Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves


Made and From Rebellion to Revolution: Afro­American Slave Revolts in the


Making of the Modern World—and to the innumerable conversations that we


had in days gone by concerning slave societies and the regime imperatives


they are driven to embrace.


I would also like to record my debt to Patrick Leigh Fermor. Long ago,


when Peter Green learned that I was interested in the manner in which the


rugged terrain in certain parts of Messenia might have facilitated banditry


and resistance on the part of Lacedaemon’s helots, he suggested that I contact


Paddy, who had learned a thing or two about this sort of resistance while


serving on Crete during the Second World War. In the summer of 1983, I


followed up on this recommendation. Our meeting over a lunch at Paddy’s


home in Kardamyli paved the way for a series of visits, often lasting a week or


more, which took place at irregular intervals over the twenty-three years fol-


lowing that largely liquid repast. On nearly every occasion, our conversations


returned to ancient Sparta; and in 1992, when Republics Ancient and Modern


appeared, Paddy wrote a generous appraisal of it for the Spectator.


I drafted the third and fourth chapters of this book in the summer of


2009, when I was a visiting fellow at the Social Philosophy and Policy Center


at Bowling Green State University, and I am grateful to Ellen Frankel Paul,


Fred D. Miller, Jr., and Jeffrey Paul for hosting me there. On 23 November


2009, thanks to the kind invitation of Heinrich Meier, I was able to test my

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