Lectern
The Peloponnesian War
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History

The Peloponnesian War

Kenneth W. Harl

Lectures
36
Per lecture
30 min
Total
~18 hrs
Source
The Great Courses

The Peloponnesian War pitted Athens and its allies against a league of city-states headed by Sparta. The ancient Greek historian Thucydides captured this drama with matchless insight in his classic eyewitness account of what was arguably the greatest war in the history of the world up to that time. These 36 half-hour lectures draw on Thucydides' classic account as well as other ancient sources to give you a full picture of the Greek world in uneasy peace and then all-out war in the late 5th century B.C. Professor Harl plunges you into the thick of politics, military strategy, economics, and technology. You will feel the ancient Greek world come alive as you explore the war debates at Athens and Sparta, the devastating plagues that swept through Athens, the Revolt of Mytilene, the Battle of Pylos, the disastrous Athenian and Spartan expedition to Sicily against Spartan allies. You'll experience the thick of action and consider lively scholarly debates that continue to this day. Unlike earlier great wars, the Peloponnesian War was not a conflict between kings, but between citizens from different city-states who shared the same language, gods, and festivals. Citizen assemblies decided questions of war - voting on their own fates, since they were the ones who had to do the fighting. One of the most remarkable aspects of this era is that culture flourished side-by-side with the politics of war - that, even as Athenian citizens were honoring Aristophanes' mocking antiwar play, The Acharnians, by giving it first prize in a drama competition, they were debating with equal ardor whether to continue the war, and deciding overwhelmingly to do so.

Reviews (1)

A absolute wonderful course, probably the best course I have listend to. This was a combination of the content and presentation. It has the space to go deeper than a survey style course so you get a proper dive into classical Greece by way of the Pelloponesian war. Kenneth W. Harl is an enthusiatic lecturer and this comes through clearly in this lecture series - you can hear it in his voice when talking about Alcibiades of the Athenian tragedy on Sicily. I paired this course with reading Thucydides and found this a very enriching combination, the course provides plenty of content you would not get from the text alone.