Skip to content

At the moment we can only deliver in the UK. Click here to visit Cambridge.org for international orders.

  • Bestsellers
  • Latest releases
  • Offers
  • Events

    Cart

    Your cart is empty

    The Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 5, The Fifth Century BC 2nd Edition

    Author(s): Edited by David M. Lewis, John Boardman, J. K. Davies, M. Ostwald

    ISBN: 9780521233477
    Publication Date: 26/03/1992
    Pages: 620
    Format: Hardback
    Sale price£222.00 GBP

    Quantity

    Pickup available at Cambridge University Press Bookshop

    Usually ready in 24 hours

    The Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 5, The Fifth Century BC 2nd Edition

    The Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 5, The Fifth Century BC 2nd Edition

    Cambridge University Press Bookshop

    Pickup available, Usually ready in 24 hours

    1-2 Trinity Street
    Cambridge CB2 1SZ
    United Kingdom

    +441223333333

    🚚 Please note we can only ship within the UK.

    FREE delivery on books (excluding sale).

    Delivery for other items is £1.50 - £4.50, calculated at checkout.

    T&Cs apply.

    Free click & collect on all orders.

    The fifth century BC was not only the first Classic age of European civilisation. It was the first and last period before the Romans in which great political and military power was located in the same place as cultural importance. This volume therefore is more narrowly focused geographically than its predecessors and successors, and hardly strays beyond Greece. Athens is at the centre of the picture, both politically and culturally, but events and achievements elsewhere are assessed as carefully as the nature of our sources allows. Two series of narrative chapters, one on the growth of the Athenian empire and the development of Athenian democracy, the other on the Peloponnesian War which brought them down, are divided by a series of studies in which the artistic and literary achievements of the fifth century are described. This new edition has been completely replanned and rewritten in order to reflect the advances in scholarship and changes in perspective which have been taking place in the sixty years since the publication of its predecessor.