A History of My Times

by Xenophon

Other authorsRex Warner (Translator), George Cawkwell (Editor), George Cawkwell (Introduction)
Paperback, 1979

Status

Available

Call number

938.05

Collection

Publication

Penguin Classics (1979), Paperback, 432 pages

Description

Xenophon's History recounts nearly fifty turbulent years of warfare in Greece between 411 and 362 BC. Continuing the story of the Peloponnesian War at the point where Thucydides finished his magisterial history, this is a fascinating chronicle of the conflicts that ultimately led to the decline of Greece, and the wars with both Thebes and the might of Persia. An Athenian by birth, Xenophon became a firm supporter of the Spartan cause, and fought against the Athenians in the battle of Coronea. Combining history and memoir, this is a brilliant account of the triumphs and failures of city-states, and a portrait of Greece at a time of crisis.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Fledgist
Xenophon's history follows on from Thucydides.
LibraryThing member Fledgist
Xenophon's continuation of Thucydides' history of his times.
LibraryThing member Fledgist
Xenophon's continuation of Thucydides.
LibraryThing member mattries37315
Thucydides’ The History of the Peloponnesian War ends suddenly with seven more years to go, one man decided to pick up the history and its aftermath which for centuries many readers were grateful for. A History of My Times by Xenophon sees the end of the Second Peloponnesian War and follows the
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aftermath of that devastating war which saw hegemony move from Sparta to Thebes.

Xenophon begins his history right where Thucydides’ left off and the first two books of the work cover the last seven years of the Peloponnesian War, which saw the return of Alcibiades to the Athenian military and the resultant Athenian naval victories before his second exile and the rise of the Spartan navy that led to the fall of Athens and the establishment of the 30 tyrants allied to Spartan hegemony. The internal politics of Athens took centerstage as the reign of the tyrants resulted in a civil war that saw the restitution of Athenian democracy. Book 3 looks at Spartan politics and the campaign of King Agesilaus to Asia Minor to fight the Persians. Book 4 sees the Persians bribe Sparta’s traditional allies and enemies to unite to attack Spartan hegemony as well as end Agesilaus’ campaign. The resulting Corinthian War continues through Book 5 when both sides accept terms by the Persian King in the so-called “King’s Peace”, however five years later a Spartan general captured the Theban acropolis resulting in Sparta controlling the politics of the city until a band of exiles retakes the city and begins reestablishing the Boeotian League with the resulting Boeotian War. Book 6 sees the end of the Boeotian War and Spartan hegemony with the Battle of Leuctra, which inaugurates the short-lived Theban hegemony. Book 7 sees Sparta and Athens ally to battle Theban hegemony even as the former is convulsed with internal rebellion and outside Peloponnesian resistance allowing Thebes to invade the Spartan homeland. The work ends with the second Battle of Mantinea which was a tactical Theban victory but strategic defeat that saw the end of Theban hegemony with all the major powers of Greece weakened from decades of fighting.

In his introduction of the book, George Cawkwell essentially said this history of Greece by Xenophon was a memoir that was circulated amongst his friends who knew all the details of the events Xenophon was writing about. Meaning that modern-day readers like myself are totally in the dark and basically Cawkwell would have to fill us in with his footnotes thanks to other sources from the era that essentially showed that Xenophon was an Athenian-born Spartan partisan and Agesilaus’ fanboy. Though Xenophon mentioned his adventure with the Ten-Thousand expedition against Artaxerxes II, he does not go into it given he had already written the Anabasis and given full details though it might be a better read then this book.

A History of My Times for centuries was thought to be “the” history of the end of the Peloponnesian War and the early 4th Century B.C., but after other sources came to light it turns out Xenophon left a lot of things out. This does not mean that the book is totally worthless, however it needs to be read critically.
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LibraryThing member riskedom
Though it took me too long to get through the entire work, I thoroughly enjoy Xenophon. This is primarily because, for him history is personal. He is highly involved and this is his greatest strength as a writer though a weakness as a historian. The translator was relentless about pointing out
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Xenophon's omissions which, while sometimes annoying, seemed quite justified for Warner to emphasize. The title could easily have been called the decline of Sparta. It was sometimes sad to see Sparta fare so badly in battle when it was obvious that Xenophon was such a fan of Agesilaus and the Spartan state. It could also could have been called the decline of Greece as well. By the final Mantinean expedition all sides seem so thoroughly bled out that the shadow of Macedonia looms large to the modern reader. At the end there is no hegemon in Greece and this reader longed to know the perspective of the Thebans, Arcadians and Messenians now that neither Athens or Sparta are the dominant powers. I highly recommend Xenophon if you want to experience the period from the end of the Peloponnesian War to just before the rise of Macedonia, even when the source is unabashedly biased.
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Language

Original language

Greek (Ancient)

Original publication date

c. 355 BCE

Physical description

432 p.; 7.7 inches

ISBN

0140441751 / 9780140441758

Local notes

= Hellenica, which covers Greece from 411 to 362 BC, continuing after History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides

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