War lay at the heart of life in the classical world, from conflicts between tribes or states to internal or civil wars. Battles were resolved by violent face-to-face encounters: war was a very personal experience. At the same time, warfare and its conduct often had significant and wide-reaching economic, social, or political consequences. The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World offers a critical examination of war and organized violence. The volume's introduction begins with the ancient sources for the writing of war, preceded by broad surveys of warfare in ancient Greece and Rome. Also included herein are chapters analyzing new finds in battlefield archaeology and how the environment affected the ancient practice of war. A second section is comprised of broad narratives of classical societies at war, covering the expanse from classical Greece through to the later Roman Empire. Part III contains thematic discussions that examine closely the nature of battle: what soldiers experienced as they fought; the challenges of conducting war at sea; how the wounded were treated. A final section offers six exemplary case studies, including analyses of the Peloponnesian War, the Second Punic War, and Rome's war with Sasanid Persia. The handbook closes with an epilogue that explores the legacy of classical warfare. Authored by experts in classics, ancient history, and archaeology, this handbook presents a vibrant map of the field of classical warfare studies.
ABBREVIATIONS AND SPELLING NORMS
EMPERORS FROM AUGUSTUS TO HERACLIUS
Chapter 1. War and Warfare in Ancient Greece
Chapter 2. War and Warfare in Ancient Rome
Chapter 3. Writers on War - Part I Greece: Winning Ways in Warfare
Chapter 4. Writers on War - Part II Rome: A Story of Conflict
Chapter 5. The Archaeology of War
Chapter 6. Warfare and Environment in the Ancient World
Chapter 7. The Classical Greek Experience
Chapter 8. The Three Thousand: Alexander’s Infantry Guard
Chapter 9. The Hellenistic World at War: Stagnation or Development?
Chapter 10. War and Society in Greece
Chapter 12. Imperial Rome at War
Chapter 13. War and Society in the Roman Empire
Chapter 15. Treating the Sick and Wounded
Chapter 16. Keeping Military Discipline
Chapter 17. The Business of War: Mercenaries
Chapter 18. Logistics: Sinews of War
Chapter 20. Arms and Armor - Part I Arming Greeks for Battle
Chapter 21. Arms and Armor - Part II Arming Romans for Battle
Chapter 22. Greeks Under Siege: Challenges, Experiences, and Emotions
Chapter 23. Generalship: Leadership and Command
Chapter 24. Finding the Enemy: Military Intelligence
Chapter 25. War and the Horse - Part I Horses for War: Breeding and Keeping a Warhorse
Chapter 26. War and the Horse - Part II The Development and Training of Cavalry in Greece and Rome
Chapter 27. Greek Rituals of War
Chapter 28. Roman Rituals of War
Chapter 29. Fighting the Other - Part I Greeks and Achaemenid Persians
Chapter 30. Fighting the Other - Part II The Germanic and Danubian Transfrontier Peoples
Chapter 31. Fighting the Other - Part III Military and Society in Sasanian Iran
Chapter 32. The Athenian Expedition to Sicily
Chapter 33. The Peloponnesian War and Its Sieges
Chapter 34. Epaminondas at Leuctra, 371 B.C.
Chapter 35. Demetrius “the Besieger” and Hellenistic Warfare
Chapter 36. The Second Punic War
Chapter 37. Roman Warfare with Sasanian Persia
Epilogue: The Legacy of War in the Classical World