The narrative art of Herodotus' Histories has always been greatly admired, but it has never received an in-depth and systematic analysis. This commentary lays bare the role of the narrator and his effective handling of time, focalization, and speech in all the famous and much-loved episodes, from Croesus, via the Ionian Revolt, to the climax of Xerxes' expedition against Greece. In paying close attention to the various ways in which Herodotus structures his story, it offers crucial help to get a grip on the at first sight bewildering structure of this long text. The detailed analysis of Herodotus' narration shows how his masterful adoption and expansion of the epic toolbox endowed the new genre of historiography with the same authority as its illustrious predecessor. The commentary is suitable for all readers of Herodotus' Greek text: students, teachers, and scholars.
Preface; List of abbreviations; Introduction; Commentary; Part I. Opening: 1. Introduction of Croesus; 2. Candaules and Gyges; 3. Arion and the dolphin; 4. Croesus and solon; 5. Croesus, Atys and Adrastus; 6. Croesus and the oracles; 7. The capture of Croesus; 8. Cyrus' youth and accession to the throne; 9. Cyrus' death; Part II: 10. Helen in Egypt; 11. Rhampsinitus and the thief; Part III: 12. The madness of Cambyses; 13. Polycrates and his ring; 14. Periander and his son Lycophron; 15. The death of Cambyses; 16. Darius' accession to the throne; 17. Darius and Democedes; Part IV. 18. The Ionians at the Ister; Part V: 19. Darius' summons of Histiaeus; 20. The start of the Ionian revolt; 21. Aristagoras in Sparta; 22. Aristagoras in Athens; 23. Socles on Cypselus and Periander; 24. The burning of Sardis; 25. The death of Aristagoras; Part VI. 26. The death of Histiaeus and the end of the Ionian revolt; 27. Mardonius' failed expedition against Greece; 28. Marathon; 29. Alcmeon, Megacles; Part VII: 30. Xerxes' decision to attack Greece; 31. Xerxes' conversation with Artabanus at Abydus; 32. Xerxes' conversation with Demaratus at Doriscus; 33. Herodotus' encomium of Athens; 34. (Fourth) Persian catalogue; 35. Thermopylae; Part VIII: 36. Artemisium; 37. Salamis; Part IX. 38. Plataea; 39. Concluding episodes; Appendix: Summary of the histories; Bibliography; Indexes.
Height:
Width:
Spine:
Weight:0.00