The Pillars of Hercules

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The Pillars of Hercules Page 48

by David Constantine


  Of course, the West that Alexander would have ventured into was decidedly different than the world that he confronts in Pillars. The minor tweak is that Rome had dealt with the Samnites and consolidated central Italy; the big change is that Athens had won the Peloponnesian War—and not only that, had established an empire across much of the Mediterreanean basin. This isn’t as unlikely as it might sound, since the whole rationale for the Syracusan Expedition was to open up the West to Athens in an attempt to bring unparalleled forces to bear against Sparta5. Peter Green’s Armada from Athens devotes his fascinating second chapter (“Wheat, Timber, Gold”) to documenting the history of Athens’ longstanding interest in exploiting the resources of the West; wondering what might have happened had she harnessed them to create the empire featured in Pillars first occurred to me while reading Green’s volume some years back. It remained only to envision Alcibiades himself as the founder of the real Athenian Empire, and then to sketch out a period of low-intensity conflict between Athens and Persia as backdrop to the latter’s abrupt destruction at the hands of Alexander6. (The real problem with Pillars, of course, is that in such a scenario, a sensible Athens would never have allowed Macedonia to attain great power status in the first place; one is left to assume exceptionally poor leadership on the part of Athens, though in my defense it must be said that it woudn’t be the first empire to be steered by such).

  On the Technology:

  I’ve always felt that steampunk was way too cool to be left to the stodgy old Victorians, but the really intriguing thing about the ancient world is just how much steampunk was in it already. Most people have no idea that the steam engine itself was invented in the first century A.D. by Heron of Alexandria; the problem was it was never put to any practical use. The question of the conditions sufficient and/or necessary for the “take-off” phase of industrialization is far too complex an issue to be dealt with here, and it may well be that the slave-based economies of the ancient world lacked the prerequisites for such industrialization by definition (who needs labor-saving devices when one has all the slaves one needs?).7

  But one sure can have a lot of fun with what they came up with. With the exception of the really crazy stuff (like golems capable of combat), virtually every piece of technology in the book had its roots in some ancient prototype. If you want to get your mind blown (and who doesn’t), check out Michael Lahanas’ excellent website http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Greeks.htm for a comprehensive list of ancient Greek technology, along with lots of cool references and pictures. To be sure, much of the tech on that list (Archimedes’ steam-gun notwithstanding) is more gearpunk8 than steampunk… but the sheer extent of that capability is something that we’re only just now waking up to. When the Antikyhera wreck was first discovered, historians initially scoffed at the idea that the device contained within—which essentially functioned as an analog computer, mirroring the heavens with more than thirty distinct gears—was in fact from the ancient world. Had the device not been uncovered in that wreck, we would have had no way of suspecting it had ever been invented. And when we consider that more than ninety percent of classical learning was lost in the Dark Ages, we can only wonder at what we’ll never find. As always, time has the last word.

  1 Jeanne Reames, “Beyond Renault”, downloaded from http://myweb.unomaha.edu/~mreames/Beyond_Renault/renault.html

  2 A tendency examined by Nicholas Nicastro in the introduction to his novel Empire of Ashes.

  3 Badian, Ernst, “The Death of Parmenio”, Transactions and Proceedings of the American Association, Vol. 91 (1960), pp. 324-338.

  4 See, for example, Nicastro’s Empire of Ashes and Annabel Lyon’s The Golden Mean.

  Interestingly, Thucydides himself never says the Syracusan Expedition was a mistake per se; he just takes issue with how it was carried out. Given it became one of the biggest military blunders of all time, this nuance on his part is worth noting.

  6 Let’s not forget that Periclean Athens had more than a passing interest in relieving Persia of Egypt, launching an expedition against that province only a few years before the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War.

  7 Readers interested in exploring the question further ought to once again consult Peter Green, specifically chapter 27 of his From Alexander to Actium, chapter 27, “Technological Developments”, which speculates at length on factors that straitjacketed the classical economies.

  8 Or clockpunk. Whatever.

  With special thanks to:

  Kristen Dawson

  Mark Williams

  Brian De Groodt

  Erin Sheley

  Marc Haimes

  Peter Watts

  Howard Morhaim

  Tom Doyle

  Gail Carriger

  Mike Brotherton

  Nicola Griffith

  Kelley Eskridge

  Aiden Thompson

  Erin Cashier

  Ilona Gordon

  Jeremy Lassen

  Jason Williams

  Ross Lockhart

  Jenny Rappaport

  Simran Khalsa

  The Beasts

  About The Author

  David Constantine resides in Los Angeles with his not-so-loyal army of cats. Learn more about the War of Athens and Macedonia at www.thepillarsofhercules.com.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Appendix: Building A World That Wasn’t

  About The Author

 

 

 


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