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A Commentary on Thucydides: Volume II: Books IV-V. 24



This is a commentary on Thucydides' book IV-V. 24, which covers the years 425-421 BC. The commentary is written by Simon Hornblower, and it is the first time that the Greek passages have been translated into English. The commentary is valuable because it allows readers who do not know Greek to understand the detail of Thucydides' thought and subject-matter. The commentary also includes a full inde... more details
Key Features:
  • Provides an English translation of the Greek text
  • Includes a commentary that explains the detail of Thucydides' thought and subject-matter
  • Includes a full index


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Features
Author Simon Hornblower
Format Paperback
ISBN 9780199276257
Publication Date 06/01/2005
Publisher Oxford University Press
Description
This is a commentary on Thucydides' book IV-V. 24, which covers the years 425-421 BC. The commentary is written by Simon Hornblower, and it is the first time that the Greek passages have been translated into English. The commentary is valuable because it allows readers who do not know Greek to understand the detail of Thucydides' thought and subject-matter. The commentary also includes a full index.

This is the second volume of a three-volume historical and literary commentary of the eight books of Thucydides, the great fifth-century BC historian of the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. Books IV-V. 24 cover the years 425-421 BC and contain the Pylos-Spakteria narrative, the Delion Campaign, and Brasidas' operations in the north of Greece. This volume ends with the Peace of Nikias and the alliance between Athens and Sparta. A valuable feature of this volume is the full thematic introduction which discusses such topics as Thucydides and Herodotus, Thucydides' presentation of Brasidas, Thucydides and kinship, speech - direct and indirect - in IV-V. 24, Thucydides and epigraphy (including personal names), IV-V. 24 as a work of art: innovative or merely incomplete? Thucydides intended his work to be `an everlasting possession' and the continuing importance of his work is undisputed. Simon Hornblower's commentary, by translating every passage of Greek commented on, for the first time allows readers with little or no Greek to appreciate the detail of Thucydides' thought and subject-matter. A full index is provided at the end of the volume.
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