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Rare and modern books

Trundle, Matthew

GREEK MERCENARIES From the Late Archaic Period to Alexander Fine with no dust jacket

Routledge, 2004

110.00 €

Ancient World Books Bookshop

(Toronto, Ontario, Canada)

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Details

Year of publication
2004
Author
Trundle, Matthew
Publishers
Routledge
Keyword
Military & Army Warfare & Defence Imperialism Greek History, Classical Greek & Roman
Cover description
Fine with no dust jacket
Binding description
Hardcover ISBN 0415338123

Description

224 pages; This book provides a detailed picture of the life of these Greek mercenaries, analyzing who they were and from what section of society they came. It explores their motivations, their relationships and connections, both with each other and those with whom they served, and shows how mercenaries were recruited, paid and maintained. Matthew Trundle reviews a variety of evidence, including Xenophon's detailed account of how over ten thousand Greeks tried and failed to establish the Persian prince Cyrus on his brother's Imperial throne, the fragments of a fourth century play about the first ever soldier of fortune, and inscriptions prohibiting Athenians from taking service with their neighbours. The result is a fresh look at the significance of mercenaries in ancient Greek society, economy and politics, and their part in the process that shaped the great Empire of Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic world.