Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

PUBLIC FINANCE AND WAR IN ANCIENT GREECE

View through CrossRef
Before the Persian Wars the Greeks did not rely on public finance to fight each other. Their hoplites armed and fed themselves. But in the confrontation with Persia this private funding of war proved to be inadequate. The liberation of the Greek states beyond the Balkans required the destruction of Persia's sea power. In 478bcAthens agreed to lead an alliance to do just this. It already had Greece's largest fleet. But each campaign of this ongoing war would need tens of thousands of sailors and would go on for months. No single Greek city-state could pay for such campaigns. The alliance thus agreed to adopt the Persian method for funding war: its members would pay a fixed amount of tribute annually. This enabled Athens to force Persia out of the Dardanelles and Ionia. But the Athenians also realized that their military power depended on tribute, and so they tightened their control of its payers. In so doing they turned the alliance into an empire.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: PUBLIC FINANCE AND WAR IN ANCIENT GREECE
Description:
Before the Persian Wars the Greeks did not rely on public finance to fight each other.
Their hoplites armed and fed themselves.
But in the confrontation with Persia this private funding of war proved to be inadequate.
The liberation of the Greek states beyond the Balkans required the destruction of Persia's sea power.
In 478bcAthens agreed to lead an alliance to do just this.
It already had Greece's largest fleet.
But each campaign of this ongoing war would need tens of thousands of sailors and would go on for months.
No single Greek city-state could pay for such campaigns.
The alliance thus agreed to adopt the Persian method for funding war: its members would pay a fixed amount of tribute annually.
This enabled Athens to force Persia out of the Dardanelles and Ionia.
But the Athenians also realized that their military power depended on tribute, and so they tightened their control of its payers.
In so doing they turned the alliance into an empire.

Related Results

In utero undernourishment during WWII: Effects on height and weight of young adult women
In utero undernourishment during WWII: Effects on height and weight of young adult women
Under marginal nutritional conditions, growth in utero is related to subsequent growth and adult height. The aim of this research is to compare the young adult body size of women g...
An Analysis Framework to Study the Effects of Green Finance on Sustainable Smart Cities
An Analysis Framework to Study the Effects of Green Finance on Sustainable Smart Cities
Despite the fact that many countries around the world have adopted green growth as their strategy for economic development and those studies have investigated the factors that infl...
The Post-World War II World Order and the Unresolved Cultural Legacies of the Korean War
The Post-World War II World Order and the Unresolved Cultural Legacies of the Korean War
The Korean War has never had a notable place in American culture. A crop of recent scholarship by Korean American scholars queries the reasons for this absence of the Korean War's ...
Statues, History, and Identity: How Bad Public History Statues Wrong
Statues, History, and Identity: How Bad Public History Statues Wrong
AbstractThere has recently been a focus on the question of statue removalism. This concerns what to do with public history statues that honor or otherwise celebrate ethically bad h...
Spinning War and Peace: Foreign Relations and Public Relations on the Eve of World War II
Spinning War and Peace: Foreign Relations and Public Relations on the Eve of World War II
The eve of World War II saw the development of direct connections between public relations experts and issues of foreign affairs in the United States. Public relations professional...
The musical legacy of the 1918 Finnish Civil War on YouTube
The musical legacy of the 1918 Finnish Civil War on YouTube
Conflicts such as wars, rebellions and revolutions often give rise to songs that pass on from one generation to another. This applies also to the bloody 1918 Finnish Civil War, whi...
Everyday War: Sylvia Townsend Warner and Virginia Woolf in World War II
Everyday War: Sylvia Townsend Warner and Virginia Woolf in World War II
For Britons during World War II, war was in the air, in the form of bombing raids, but also on the air, in the form of news and propaganda on the radio. “Everyday War” shows how Vi...

Back to Top