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Cargando... La guerra por el imperio de Alejandro Magno (2011)por Robin Waterfield
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Does what it says on the cover - tells the story of all the squabbling over Alexander the Great's empire. ( ) Having enjoyed Robin Waterfield's last book about Xenophon's march, I eagerly picked up his new book about one of the neglected topics of Greek history. While books about Alexander the Great are legion, the books that treat the decades that follow often are only directed at professional audiences. Waterfield's book caters for an intermediate audience. A certain familiarity with the region's geography and history is required to enjoy the book. The military events are also a bit underplayed. I love how the author manages to enrich the story by slipping in cultural information about the era mostly in skippable parts near a chapter end. To help the reader to make sense out of the multitude of characters and locations, Waterfield offers maps, a time line and genealogies of the important families. What helped my understanding, however, is a cheat sheet who was in control in Egypt, Greece, Macedonia, Asia Minor (Turkey), Mesopotamia/Persia and the East. The dominant players in the center never managed to crush the (allied) actors at the margin. A certain lack of strategic thinking and fickleness often led the diadochi to break off highly successful ventures to direct their attention to side shows. Following a strategic directive (such as WWII's Europe first) might have preserved an Alexandrian Empire, which in turn might have offered more resistance to the Roman challenge. The best character in the story is Ptolemy. Not only did he sensibly concentrate on establishing a defensible territory in Egypt. He built up a strong navy and he kidnapped the body of Alexander the Great. Highly recommended. This book filled a yawning gap in my knowledge of the period between Alexander’s defeat of the Persians in 333 BCE, and the essentially Judea-centric history of the 2nd century BCE’s Ptolemies and – more importantly – the Seleucids, and their oppression of the Judean religion which led up to the Maccabean revolt in 167 BCE. Of course one knew the bare outlines; that Alexander had died in 323 having just completed his conquest of India, and that his generals then fought it out to decide who was getting what. I did not even realize that the word Diadokhoi meant successors; I thought it was something to do with there being twelve of them. Somehow or other, I knew, Ptolemy ended up with Egypt, and Seleucus with Syria and Babylonia, - but the rest ? I had heard of the one-eyed Antigonus who seemed to have ruled in Asia Minor, but Greece, Macedon, Cyprus, etc were unknowns until the Romans showed up in the second century BCE. The second function of this book was to dispel any romantic illusions – good history usually does that – about Alexander, this young king who created the first true world-spanning empire, and then died before he could enjoy it – “those whom the gods love..” etc. He was a formidable general and his record of conquest is true; but conquest was all it was; he had not created anything like an empire out of it – which was why it was so easily torn apart once he was gone (it might have done so any way even if he had lived – which would have somewhat spoiled his story). Alexander – like most of his contemporaries – was hard drinking (which may have contributed to his untimely demise) and, by modern standards, cruel and treacherous. He would think nothing of having a friend or ally killed, if it served his purpose or represented any potential competition to his dominance. He had adopted the Eastern style of absolutism, rather than the more ostensibly collegial Greek/Macedonian style. Alexander’s plans for the future – inso far as they are known to history - involved only more conquest ; his goals – and those of his successors - did not encompass the “spread of Greek/Hellenistic culture” around the world. The fact that that happened in the years after his death was an unintended consequence of there being so many Greek and Macedonian soldiers – together with their wives and children - scattered around the world between the Aegean and India. Initially, they were there as part of conquering armies, and to man garrisons; then they stayed and peopled the cities that these garrisons became. These colonialist spoke their own language, imported their own architecture, their gymnasia and theater, etc because they wanted to feel at home away from home. Nothing was intended for the benefit of the locals; however, inevitably over time, there was a trickle-down effect, and the process we know as Hellenization was underway. This book pauses periodically from its main theme, the 40 years of war that followed Alexander’s death, to insert a number of parenthetic commentaries on important societal, religious and cultural trends – such as the spread of Hellenism - that occurred during the period. Not only do they make for a very welcome break from this account of unbridled ambition, treachery and slaughter, but they are highly informative and insightful. For example, I had unquestionably accepted the proposition that it was the Greeks who had introduced the emphasis on individuality into the East, which led to the development of the idea of the imortality of the soul, and caused changes in burial practice among Jews. I learned here that individuality was not a concept of Classical Greece, which emphasized the collegial nature of civic endeavour. It was only – post Alexander – when previously independent city-states became absorbed in kingdoms or empires, and the local citizenry lost control of their own polities, that the emphasis – in art, statuary, drama and in religion – shifted away from the communal to the individual. As for the main theme itself – the 6 wars that were waged during this period – the author deals with these in a very engaging and direct fashion. The names – of places and protagonists – and the relationships between them, are bewildering; the author provides a good set of maps and a list of the dramatis personae; reference to these while reading is essential, if the reader wants to make any sense of the various twists and turns of the plot. So, as well as an informative and enjoyable reading experience, this is also a valuable reference book.
"Mr. Waterfield also scores with a number of well-placed interludes summarizing Hellenistic developments in social life, literature, art, economics, philosophy and religion."
"Dividing the spoils" revives the memory of Alexander's Successors, whose fame has been dimmed only because they stand in his enormous shadow. In fact, Alexander left things in a mess at the time of his death, with no guaranteed succession, no administration in place suitable for such an enormous realm, and huge untamed areas both bordering and within his 'empire'. The Successors consolidated the Conqueror's gains. Their competing ambitions, however, meant that consolidation inevitably led to the break-up of the empire. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)938.070922History and Geography Ancient World Greece to 323 Greece to 323 Macedonian Supremacy (362-323 BC)Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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