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Social Challenges Social Challenges
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Logistics and Technological Innovation Logistics and Technological Innovation
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Leadership, Valor, Masculinity Leadership, Valor, Masculinity
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Emotional Challenges and Dramas Emotional Challenges and Dramas
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Bibliography Bibliography
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20 Greeks Under Siege: Challenges, Experiences, and Emotions
Get accessAngelos Chaniotis is Professor of Ancient History and Classics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (2010–). His research focuses on Hellenistic history, the cultural and social history of the Roman East, Greek religion, and historical aspects in the study of emotions. He is senior editor of the Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum (1997–) and responsible for the publication of the inscriptions of Aphrodisias (1995–). His most recent books include War in the Hellenistic World: A Social and Cultural History (Oxford 2005) and Theatricality and Public Life in the Hellenistic World (in Greek, Iraklion 2009).
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Published:28 January 2013
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Abstract
This chapter deals with the significance of siege, not primarily as a phenomenon of ancient military tactics and warfare, but of cultural and social history, concentrating on the challenges it presented for political and military leaders, technological innovators, and authors seeking to instruct and to please. Sieges were common in Greek warfare. Many had no impact on the entire city but only the fortified citadel or the fort of a garrison. They have also constituted a challenge for the emotions of men and women, mortals and gods, those who experienced them, and those who found pleasure in writing or reading narratives about them. The contribution of scientists to the art of siege is considered. The advance of the “art of siege” and the dramatic improvement of fortifications went hand in hand with the introduction of a new genre of technical literature.
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