Classical History

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Classical History’

43
Boudica Clay Lane

British sympathy for Roman imperial progress evaporated when officials began asset-stripping the country.

In AD 60, corrupt Roman officialdom pushed the dowager queen of the Iceni, in what is now Norfolk, too far. But Britain’s military Governor, Gaius Suetonius Paulinus, was far away in Anglesey (dealing, as he supposed, with the last British resistance) when he learnt of it.

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44
St George the Triumphant Martyr Clay Lane

One of the Emperor Galerius’s most trusted generals openly defied him.

At the end of the 3rd century, Christians of the pagan Roman Empire were comparatively free: they built churches, founded schools, and established networks of charity and goodwill that the authorities both envied and feared. One Emperor sent in the army to nip the flower in the bud, but George, one of his most senior military commanders, would have no part in it.

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45
‘Stand out of my Sunshine!’ Plutarch

Alexander the Great dropped a hint to his sycophantic entourage.

In 336 BC, the young Alexander, son of Philip II of Macedon, was just beginning his astonishing rise to be King of all Greece and Asia. Like all great men, he was surrounded by tittering hangers-on; one wonders if they quite got the hint he gave them here.

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46
Alcibiades Clay Lane

In the populist democracy of 5th-century BC Athens, heroes fell as quickly as they rose.

After Pericles died, the Peloponnesian War with Sparta (431-404 BC) was carried on by other leaders in the radical democracy of Athens, including his nephew Alcibiades, and Nicias. Fighting a war and pleasing a people that brooked no failure in their heroes was not an easy matter.

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47
Pericles and the Fickle Public of Athens Clay Lane

The leader of 5th-century BC Athens lavished public money on the city and its adoring citizens, and wherever he led they followed.

The story of Pericles, the 5th-century BC Athenian leader, is one of personal magnetism and a matchless cultural legacy, and also a warning. Democracy should give us the freedom to demand more of ourselves. If we use it merely to demand more from politicians, we corrupt ourselves and them too.

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48
The Battle of Marathon Clay Lane

Remembered as the inspiration of the famous Olympic road race, but much more important than that.

The Battle of Marathon is remembered today chiefly as the inspiration for the modern road race. But its real significance was that it kept Greece from being asset-stripped by Persia, and so helped to save Western civilization.

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