Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Greek Impact in Asia Minor 400–250 BCE
View through CrossRef
Until the end of the fourth century BCE the impact of Greek culture in Asia Minor was limited. Lykians, Karians, and Lydians offered alternatives to Hellenism and preserved their own languages until the end of the fourth century BCE. However, by 250 BCE these Anatolian languages ceased to be used in public or private documents, and polis organization became normative. After the overthrow of the Persian Empire the autonomy of Greek cities became the highest political objective. Greek civic decrees in the early Hellenistic period emphasized that democratic legitimacy depended on quorate citizen votes, the Greek language became the only medium for official public communication, and the native populations maintained their identity and independence by adopting polis organization. Between 400 and 250 BCE these populations did not merely absorb Greek cultural influence but underwent the encompassing experience of becoming Greek.
Title: The Greek Impact in Asia Minor 400–250 BCE
Description:
Until the end of the fourth century BCE the impact of Greek culture in Asia Minor was limited.
Lykians, Karians, and Lydians offered alternatives to Hellenism and preserved their own languages until the end of the fourth century BCE.
However, by 250 BCE these Anatolian languages ceased to be used in public or private documents, and polis organization became normative.
After the overthrow of the Persian Empire the autonomy of Greek cities became the highest political objective.
Greek civic decrees in the early Hellenistic period emphasized that democratic legitimacy depended on quorate citizen votes, the Greek language became the only medium for official public communication, and the native populations maintained their identity and independence by adopting polis organization.
Between 400 and 250 BCE these populations did not merely absorb Greek cultural influence but underwent the encompassing experience of becoming Greek.
Related Results
Alexander the Great and Democracy in the Hellenistic World
Alexander the Great and Democracy in the Hellenistic World
This chapter looks at how Alexander the Great was remembered by democratic regimes in both Athens and Asia Minor in the early Hellenistic period. It argues that while Alexander’s r...
The Returning Hero
The Returning Hero
This interdisciplinary book, which takes its origin from an international conference held in Oxford, brings together experts in ancient Greek (and Roman) history, literature, archa...
From Pre-Makkabaean Judaea to Hekatomnid Karia and Back Again
From Pre-Makkabaean Judaea to Hekatomnid Karia and Back Again
This chapter analyses the adaptation of Greek cultural and political practices in two distinct environments: fourth-century Karia and second-century Judaea. Both regions see a mark...
Women’s Roles in Asia
Women’s Roles in Asia
This insightful book examines women's lives across Asia, challenging typical stereotypes and providing a fresh look at the changing role of women in various regions of the vast con...
Conflict Resolution in Asia
Conflict Resolution in Asia
Conflict Resolution in Asia: Mediation and Other Cultural Models is an exploration of human interaction, conflict, and conflict resolution in the incredibly diverse region that con...
Athanasios Souliotis-Nikolaidis and Greek Irredentism
Athanasios Souliotis-Nikolaidis and Greek Irredentism
Athanasios Souliotis-Nikolaidis (1878–1945) was a Greek military officer, undercover agent, author, and politician who in Greece today is not as well-known as he should be. Inasmuc...
Drawing the Greek Vase
Drawing the Greek Vase
Abstract
How have two-dimensional images of ancient Greek vases shaped modern perceptions of these artefacts and of the classical past? This is the first scholarly v...
Asia Looks Seaward
Asia Looks Seaward
Asia is headed toward an uncertain and potentially volatile future in the maritime arena. The two rising Asian powers, China and India, dependent as they are on seaborne commerce f...

