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  The Power of Individual and Community in Ancient Athens And Beyond
Essays in Honour of John K. Davies. Edited by Zosia Archibald and Jan Haywood
ISBN 978-1-910589-73-1 .h/b.2019 illus. pp. xxvii + 336.
 

The pioneering ideas of John Kenyon Davies, one of the most significant Ancient Historians of the past half century, are celebrated in this collection of essays. A distinguished cast of contributors, who include Alain Bresson, Nick Fisher, Edward Harris, John Prag, Robin Osborne, and Sally Humphreys, focus tightly on the nexus of socio-political and economic problems that have preoccupied Davies since the publication of his defining work Athenian Propertied Families in 1971. The scope of Davies’ interest has ranged widely in conceptual and chronological, as well as geographical terms, and the essays here reflect many of his long-term concerns with the writing of Greek history, its methods and materials.

The editors

ZOSIA ARCHIBALD is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Archaeology, Classics, and Egyptology, University of Liverpool. She is Chair of the Committee for Archaeology, British School at Athens. She was British Director of the Pistiros Project in central Bulgaria (1995-2013), and is co-Director of the Olynthos Project, Chalkidike, Greece (2014- 2019). She has co-edited three volumes of papers on Hellenistic economies, is the author of Ancient Economies of the Northern Aegean (2013), and of the chapter on Macedonia in the forthcoming Oxford History of the Archaic Greek World.

JAN HAYWOOD is Lecturer in Classical Studies at The Open University (UK). His research includes ancient Greek historiography, divination, and the ancient and modern reception of the Trojan War tradition. He is author (with Naoíse Mac Sweeney) of Homer’s Iliad and the Trojan War: Dialogues on Tradition (Bloomsbury, 2018), and is preparing a monograph Herodotus and his Sources. Jan Haywood is also Reviews Editor for the Journal

 

The contributors

Zosia Halina Archibald, Alain Bresson, Nick Fisher, Edward M. Harris, Jan Haywood, Sally Humphreys, Stephen Lambert, Manuela Mari, Krzysztof Nawotka, Robin Osborne, A. J. N. W. Prag (with J. H. Musgrave and R. A. H Neave), P. J. Rhodes

 

 

Contents

Preface - Zosia Archibald and Jan Haywood

1. Imaginary propertied families: kinship in epic poetry - S. C. Humphreys

2. ‘Charis, sweetest of gods’: wealth and reciprocity in Classical Athens - Nick Fisher

3. Herodotus and the social contexts of memory in Ancient Greece: the individual historian and his community - Edward M. Harris

4. From Croesus to Pausanias: tragic individuals in early Greek historiography - Jan Haywood

5. Euergetism and the public economy of Classical Athens: the initiative of the deme - Robin Osborne

6. The priesthoods of the Eteoboutadai - Stephen Lambert

7. Tegeas from Torone and some truths about ancient markets - Zosia Halina Archibald

8. At the roots of a revolution. Land ownership, citizenship and military service in Macedonia before and after Philip II - Manuela Mari

9. A twenty-first century Philippic - A. J. N. W. Prag with J. H. Musgrave and R. A. H. Neave

10. Apollo, the tutelary god of the Seleucids, and Demodamas of Miletus - Krzysztof Nawotka

11. From Xerxes to Mithridates: kings, coins and economic life at Kelainai-Apameia - Alain Bresson

12. John Davies, Greek historian - P. J. Rhodes

Bibliography

Index of sources

General Index

 

Classical Review 2020, 153-6.

"Despite delays, the volume is a fitting antidoron to a scholar who combines an intense and minute attention to individual pieces of evidence (literary, epigraphic, numismatic and archaeological) with a preoccupation to integrate their information in reconstructing the wider picture of ancient Greek society." Ilias N. Arnaoutoglou,