ABSTRACT

Violence had long been central to the experience of Hellenistic Greek cities and to their civic discourses. This volume asks how these discourses were shaped and how they functioned within the particular cultural constructs of the Hellenistic world. It was a period in which warfare became more professionalised, and wars increasingly ubiquitous. The period also saw major changes in political structures that led to political and cultural experimentation and transformation in which the political and cultural heritage of the classical city-state encountered the new political principles and cosmopolitan cultures of Hellenism. Finally, and in a similar way, it saw expanded opportunities for cultural transfer in cities through (re)constructions of urban space. Violence thus entered the city through external military and political shocks, as well as within emerging social hierarchies and civic institutions. Such factors also inflected economic activity, religious practices and rituals, and the artistic, literary and philosophical life of the polis.

chapter 1|20 pages

‘War is the father and king of all’

Discourses, experiences, and theories of Hellenistic violence

chapter 3|19 pages

Ideology of war and expansion?

A study of the education of young men in Hellenistic gymnasia 1

chapter 4|20 pages

Poleis on the brink

Violence and Greek public finances in Ps.-Aristotle’s Oikonomika II

chapter 5|22 pages

Kings and gods

Divine narratives in Hellenistic violence

chapter 6|16 pages

Violence in the dark

Emotional impact, representation, response

chapter 7|21 pages

Compassion and violence in Hellenistic New Comedy

The case of Terence’s Self-Tormentor

chapter 9|17 pages

‘A pleasure to gaze on great conflicts’

Violence and Epicurean philosophy

chapter 11|17 pages

Violence in an erotic landscape

Catullus, Caesar, and the borders of empire and existence (carm. 11) 1