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Hans Beck

    Hans Beck specializes in the history and culture of the ancient Greek world, with a thematic focus on federalism, polis governance, and notions of the local. His research also extends to the study of the political culture of ancient Rome, the exercise of aristocratic rule in antiquity, and ancient historiography. He offers deep analysis into the societal structures and political systems of antiquity.

    Alfred Seiland. Imperium Romanum Opus Magnum
    Burgserenade
    Geschichtskulturelle Transformationen
    Kunststoff - Verarbeitung
    Ethnos and koinon
    Localism and the Ancient Greek City-State
    • 2020

      Localism and the Ancient Greek City-State

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Focusing on localism and the origins of the Greek City-State, this history explores the dynamic evolution of ancient Greece from the 8th century BCE onwards. It examines how conquest and connectivity fostered a greater global presence, prompting a need to define local identities. The author utilizes a diverse array of sources, including rare texts and archaeological evidence, to create detailed case studies on the interactions between major cities like Athens and local communities such as Miletus and Ithaca, highlighting the tensions that arose from these relationships.

      Localism and the Ancient Greek City-State
    • 2019

      The ethnic turn has led to a paradigm shift in Classics and Ancient History. In Greek history, it toppled the traditional view that the various ethnos states of the Classical and Hellenistic periods drew on a remote pedigree of tribal togetherness. Instead, it appears that those leagues were built on essentially changing, flexible, and relatively late constructions of regional identities that took shape most often only in the Archaic period. The implications are far-reaching. They impact the conception of an ethnos' political organization; and they spill over into the study of external relations. It has been posited that in their conduct of foreign policy, ethne often resorted to a federal program. Did ethne emulate each other, and did they inspire others to adopt a federal organization? More recently, it was argued that their foreign policy was charged with ethnicized attitudes. Did the idea of ethnic togetherness generally influence foreign policy? And, did everyone subscribe to the same blueprint of ethnicized arguments? The contributions to this volume explore the lived and often contradictory experience between tribal belonging and political integration.

      Ethnos and koinon