Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T12:18:36.340Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The constitution of Theramenes1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

G. H. Stevenson
Affiliation:
University College, Oxford

Extract

There can be little doubt that, as Eduard Schwartz points out, the problem of the political sympathies of Thucydides can only be properly approached if it is remembered that his history in its present form was revised and possibly rewritten after the end of the Peloponnesian War. He was living in an atmosphere of défaitisme. Many of his contemporaries tended to glorify Sparta and her institutions, and to regard Athenian imperialism as a disastrous mistake. As a man of the older generation Thucydides felt it his duty to counteract this tendency by drawing attention to the real idealism which had inspired the Machtpolitik of the Periclean age, and by pointing to the benefits which the rule of Athens had conferred on the Greek world. The Preface to Book I may be regarded as a veiled apologia for the Athenian Empire, which had secured for Greece the freedom of intercourse which the writer holds to be essential alike for economic prosperity and for cultural development. Similarly the contrasts which Thucydides draws between the Athenian and the Spartan character, and the glorification of Athens which is the main subject of the Funeral Oration are inspired by the hope that the disillusioned Greeks of the early fourth century might come to realise that the ideals of Pericles and other Athenian imperialists had been not sordid but noble, and that Greece as a whole had derived benefits from the rule of Athens.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1936

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

2 Das Geschichtswerk des Thukydides, p. 238.

3 Thuc. VI. 89.

4 VI. 39. . Cf. Arist., Pol. III. 1281bGoogle Scholar.

5 VIII. 89.

6 VIII. 97.

7 VIII. 65.

8 VI. 282.

9 Gr. Gesch. III. 1499Google Scholar.

10 V. 335.

11 Sb. Berl. 1935, 34 ff.Google Scholar

12 Cf. the demand of Alcibiades (VIII. 86) .

13 Forschungen, II. 434Google Scholar.

14 CAH V. 331.

15 Gr. Staatskunde, 76.

16 [Lysias] xx. 2.

17 Op. cit. pp. 35–47.

18 VIII. 67.

19 CAH V. 331.

20 Cary, in JHS 1913, 6Google Scholar.

21 Ferguson, W. S. in Mélanges Glotz, I. 360 f.Google Scholar

22 RhMus 68, 211 f.Google Scholar

23 II. 311 f.

24 RhMus 68, 202 fGoogle Scholar.; cf. Bursians Jahresb. 218, III. 59Google Scholar.

25 JHS 1913, 14 ff.Google Scholar

26 Hermes, 57, 613 f.Google Scholar

27 CAH V. 338.

28 Gr. Staatskunde, 906.

29 [Xen.] Ἀθ. πολ I. 3. .

30 V. 38.

31 Hell. Ox. XI.

32 VIII. 97.

33 Ἀθ. πολ. 38. 3.

34 De Myst. 96. .

35 Cl Phil XXI. i, 72–5Google Scholar; cf. Mélanges Glotz, I. 349. f.Google Scholar

36 IG I2. 297.

37 I owe this point to Mr. Wade-Gery.