ABSTRACT

Argos and the Argolid, first published in 1972, presents a study of the history and achievements of the Argives, who have hitherto been largely neglected: partly because Classical Argos is overshadowed by the legends of an earlier millennium, and partly because many of her monuments and records have been lost.

Richard Tomlinson describes the region, and considers the relationship between the Argives who claimed Dorian descent and those whose ancestors were in all probability the inhabitants of the region during the Bronze Age. In particular, he emphasises the Argives’ role as a ‘third force’ in mainland Greek history, where they challenged the supremacy of the Spartans in Peloponnesian affairs.

This thorough treatment is intended to correct the usual bias in favour of the better documented affairs of Athens and Sparta. It includes an assessment of Argive military and political organisation, and of their contribution to the arts of Ancient Greece.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

part 1|43 pages

The Land

chapter 1|8 pages

The Argolid

chapter 2|33 pages

The towns

part 2|124 pages

The History of Argos

chapter 3|7 pages

The creation of Dorian Argos

chapter 5|3 pages

The Dorian settlement

chapter 6|12 pages

Argos in the ninth and eighth centuries

chapter 7|8 pages

Pheidon of Argos

chapter 9|9 pages

479–461

chapter 10|6 pages

461–451

chapter 11|10 pages

451–404

chapter 12|16 pages

404–370 1

chapter 13|5 pages

370–336

chapter 14|17 pages

Argos in Hellenistic times

chapter 15|8 pages

The intervention of Rome

chapter 16|1 pages

Epilogue

part 3|89 pages

The Argive State and its Achievement

chapter 17|12 pages

Military organization

chapter 18|5 pages

Political development to the fifth century

chapter 19|8 pages

The Argive democracy

chapter 20|21 pages

Religious cults of the Argolid

chapter 21|41 pages

The arts in the Argolid