Greek Historiography
   Blackwell Introductions to the Classical World
   This series will provide concise introductions to classical culture in the broadest sense. Written by the most distinguished scholars in the field, these books survey key authors, periods and topics for students and
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   Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz
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   Daniel Hooley
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   Charles W. Hedrick, Jr.
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   Barry B. Powell
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   Richard Rutherford
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   Thomas Habinek
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   Katherine Callen King
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   Julia Haig Gaisser
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   R. Alden Smith
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   Katharina Volk
   Roman Historiography
   Andreas Mehl, translated by Hans‐Friedrich Mueller
   Greek Historiography
   Thomas F. Scanlon
   Greek Historiography
   Thomas F. Scanlon
   This edition first published 2015
   © 2015 Thomas F. Scanlon
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   Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data
   Scanlon, Thomas Francis, author.
   Greek historiography / Thomas F. Scanlon.
   pages cm
   Includes bibliographical references and index.
   ISBN 978-1-4051-4522-0 (cloth)
   1. Greece–Historiography. I. Title.
   DF211.S33 2015
   938.0072–dc23
   2015006681
   A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
   Cover image: Roman statue of Clio, 2nd century, Museo Pio-Clementino, Rome.
   Photo: Marie-Lan Nguyen 2006, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Clio_Pio-
   Clementino_Inv291.jpg
   Set in 10.5/13pt Galliard by SPi Global, Pondicherry, India
   1 2015
   Contents
   Preface vi
   Abbreviations ix
   Chapter 1: Origins and Early Forms of Greek Historiography
   1
   Chapter 2: Herodotus and the Limits of Happiness:
   Beyond Epic, Lyric, and Logography
   26
   Chapter 3: Thucydides on the Ends of Power
   69
   Chapter 4: Xenophon on Leadership and Moral Authority
   126
   Chapter 5: History and Rhetoric in Fourth‐Century Historians
   160
   Chapter 6: Diversity and Innovation in the Hellenistic Era
   190
   Chapter 7: Polybius on the Supremacy of a Balanced State
   202
   Chapter 8: Greek Historians in the Roman Era
   237
   Chapter 9: Concluding Observations on Greek Historical Writing 276
   Further Reading
   291
   Index Locorum
   300
   Index 317
   Preface
   This books aims to provide an introduction to Greek historical writing
   across its evolution over about three quarters of a millennium, from about 500 bc to ad 240. The work begins with an overview of the “logographers,” – that is, local “storytellers” prior to Herodotus, such as Hecataeus and others; then it moves to a closer discussion of the major figures of Herodotus and Thucydides, chronicling the major upheavals, internal
   and external, of city-states in the classical era. Next it surveys the perspectives of exiled authors in the much different times of Xenophon and
   Polybius and ends with an overview of later figures who wrote in Greek
   during the Roman era: Fabius Pictor, Posidonius, and Diodorus Siculus
   in the late republic; Nicolaus of Damascus and Dionysius in the Augustan age; Josephus, Appian, and Arrian in the first and second centuries ad; and finally Dio Cassius and Herodian in the early third century ad. Few modern overviews have included the authors of the Roman era after
   Polybius, who constitute a rich illustration of the possibilities realized by the genre. Collectively, all these historians and their works raise questions about the definition of historical writing. These questions are addressed as they arise, and more comparatively in a concluding chapter.
   In line with the whole series, this approach aims to be accessible to students and to interested general readers with little specialist background, and yet to offer, both to that audience and to more advanced students
   and scholars, some useful observations on the field. Greater attention is given to writers whose texts are extensively preserved, are available in good translations, and enjoy modern discussions in English; but the
   important but fragmentarily preserved authors are also discussed (see the bibliography at the end of each chapter and the Further Reading chapter at the end of the book).
   The study of Greek historical writing – what is called “historiography” –
   differs from the direct study of Greek history by focusing on the literary
   Preface
   vii
   aspects of the historical texts, their narratives and themes, and less on the absolute veracity of their accounts. Historiography treats historical writing as a form of literature, and one that furnished a connected narrative of events within the chosen topic. Along the way, we look at the general
   structure of the major narratives, their use of prefaces, digress
ions and speeches, and direct authorial comments. This study moves chronologically through the centuries, seeking to trace lines of continuity and innovation in each author and giving some suggestions as to how each one
   relates to his predecessors. Each chapter aims to situate the works it presents in their time and culture, specifically through a discussion of the life of the each author, the structure of his work, and its debt to other literary and philosophical phenomena.
   The discussion of each major extant work also offers a sequential
   reading of that narrative. This feature is unlike what one finds in many introductions to historical writing; but it is important here for several reasons. The readings are a guide to the main “story” of the history through the often complex thicket of names and places, a way to trace consecu-tively the chief themes and interests of an author (one inspiration here is Connor 1984). Along the way we pay special attention to the themes of
   “human nature” and “power” – concepts that were, admittedly, quite
   fluid and debatable for the ancients as they are for us today; but these themes appear in virtually every author surveyed, with different meanings and usages. Other major themes such as divine forces, leadership, causation, and the portrayal of the “barbarians” also feature throughout our discussion. Not all are, however, universal across all ancient historians, and we also examine themes that belong to the particular time and social context of each author, for example Greek unity for Herodotus, the dangers of rhetoric for Thucydides, and the relationship between a superpower
   and its dependents for Polybius.
   It is the ancient construction of themes for each narrative that is of
   special interest here, since each historian’s work is an attempt to make sense of the chaotic events of public life, of individual decisions made with reason or emotion, and of collective judgment and actions dictated by the same human faculties. Historians thereby also hope to be didactic and pragmatically useful. Polybius offered one version of the utility of history in his preface:
   The study of History is in the truest sense an education, and a training for political life; and that the most instructive, or rather the only, method of learning to bear with dignity the vicissitudes of fortune is to recall the catastrophes of others. (Plb. 1.1, translated by Shuckburgh)
   viii Preface
   This book hopes to communicate the enthusiasm I felt as a young student of Thucydides, entranced as I was by his stark descriptions of power
   politics, which resonate so disturbingly across the ages. I had already been (and remain) enthralled by Greek and Roman poetry. But the subjective
   and literary aspects of historical writing, as well as their striking, modern relevance, were a revelation concerning how much supposedly objective
   reporting today still requires an ever vigilant, critical analysis.
   Sincere gratitude is owed to the team at Wiley Blackwell for their
   encouragement, patience, and hard work, most especially to Sophie
   Gibson, Haze Humbert, Ben Thatcher, Allison Kostka, and Manuela
   Tecusan. The original reviewers and the development reviewers for the
   press gave excellent suggestions. Ingrid de Haas has done superb work as my research assistant. The University of California, Riverside has been very supportive with sabbatical leave and research funds for this project.
   Input from students in my courses and seminars on historical writing has, over the years, guided me greatly in formulating the needs for this project.
   As always, Wendy Raschke has been a source of great intellectual and
   personal support. To her the work is dedicated with gratitude beyond
   words.
   The translator’s name is always indicated immediately after the citation at the end of a quoted passage, for example “Th. 1.21.1, Lattimore.”
   Passages not marked in this way are my own translations.
   Bibliography
   Connor, W. R. 1984. Thucydides. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
   Abbreviations
   Acus. Acusilaus
   ad l.
   ad locum
   Androt. Androtion
   Antich.
   Antiochus of Syracuse
   Apollod. Apollodorus,
   Bibliotheca ( Library)
   App. Appian
   BC
   Bella civilia ( Civil Wars)
   Praef. Praefatio ( Preface)
   A.R.
   Apollonius of Rhodus
   Arg.
   Argonautica
   Ar. Aristophanes
   Pax
   Pax ( Peace)
   Arist. Aristotle
   EN
   Ethica Nicomachea ( Nicomachean Ethics)
   Po.
   Poetica ( Poetics)
   Rh.
   Rhetorica ( Rhetoric)
   Arr. Arrian
   An.
   Alexandri anabasis
   Ath.
   Athenaeus of Naucratis, Deipnosophistae ( Philosophers at
   Dinner)
   BNJ
   Brill’s New Jacoby, edited by Ian Worthington (2006–13;
   also at http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/browse/brill‐
   s‐new‐jacoby).
   c.
   circa
   cf.
   confer
   Callisth. Callisthenes of Olynthus
   Cic. Cicero
   QFr
   Epistulae ad Quintum fratrem ( Letters to His Brother
   Quintus)
   x AbbreviAtions
   Cleidem. Cleidemus
   D.C.
   Dio Cassius, Historia Romana ( Roman History)
   D.H.
   Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Antiquitates Romanae
   ( Roman Antiquities) (traditionally cited without title)
   Comp.
   De compositione verborum ( On Literary Composition)
   Pomp.
   Epistula ad Pompeium ( Letter to Pompei)
   Rh.
   Ars rhetorica ( Rhetoric)
   Th.
   De Thucydide ( On Thucydides)
   DK
   Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, edited by H. Diels
   and W. Kranz (6th ed., 1952).
   D.S.
   Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica ( Historical
   Library)
   EK
   Posidonius: The Fragments, edited by L. Edelstein and
   I. G. Kidd (2nd ed., 1988–99).
   Ephor. Ephorus
   fl.
   floruit
   FGrHist
   Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker, edited by
   F. Jacoby et al. (1923–).
   Hdn. Herodian
   Hdt. Herodotus,
   Historiae ( Histories)
   Hecat.
   Hecataeus of Miletus
   Hell.Oxy.
   Hellenica Oxyrhynchia
   Heraclit. Heraclitus
   Hes. Hesiod
   Th.
   Theogonia ( Theogony)
   Hom. Homer
   Il.
   Ilias ( Iliad)
   Od.
   Odyssea ( Odyssey)
   Hor. Horace
   Epist.
   Epistulae ( Letters)
   Isoc. Isocrates,
   Orationes ( Discourses)
   J. Josephus
   AJ
   Antiquitates Judaicae ( Jewish Antiquities)
   Ao.
   Contra Apionem ( Against Apio)
   BJ
   Bellum Judaicum ( Jewish War)
   Vit.
   Vita ( Life)
   Jer. Jerome
   Chron.
   Chronica ( Chronicle)
   Der Kleine Pauly
   Der kleine Pauly: Lexikon der Antike, edited by
   K. Ziegler, W. Sontheimer, and H. Gärtner (1979
   [1964–75])
   AbbreviAtions
   xi
   KRS
   The Presocratic Philosophers, edited and translated by
   G. S. Kirk, J. E. R
aven, and M. Schofield (2nd rev. ed.,
   1983).
   [Longin.] Pseudo‐Longinus
   Subl.
   De sublimitate / Peri hupsous ( On the Sublime)
   LSJ
   A Greek–English Lexicon, compiled by H. G. Liddell
   and R. Scott, revised and augmented by H. S. Jones,
   with the assistance of R. McKenzie (9th ed., 1968)
   Luc. Lucian
   Macr.
   Macrobii ( Long Lives)
   Marcellin. Marcellinus
   Vit. Thuc.
   Vita Thucydidis ( Life of Thucydides)
   Der Neue Pauly
   Der Neue Pauly: Enzyklopaedie der Antike, edited by
   H. Cancik and H. Schneider (1996–)
   New Pauly
   Brill’s New Pauly: Encyclopedia of the Ancient World,
   edited by H. Cancik and H. Schneider (2002–)
   Nic.Dam.
   Nicolaus of Damascus
   OCD
   The Oxford Classical Dictionary, edited by S. Hornblower
   and A. Spawforth (3rd ed., 1996).
   Paus. Pausanias,
   Graeciae descriptio ( Description of Greece)
   Philist.
   Philistus of Syracuse
   Philoch. Philochorus
   Pl. Plato
   Lg.
   Leges ( Laws)
   R.
   Respublica ( Republic)
   Plb. Polybius,
   Historiae ( Histories)
   Plu. Plutarch
   Alex.
   Alexander
   Dio
   Vita Dionis ( Life of Dion)
   Glor. Ath.
   De gloria Athenensium ( On the Athenians’ Fame)
   Mal. Herod. De malignitate Herodoti ( On the Malice of Herodotus) Posidon. Posidonius
   s.v.
   sub verbo
   Sall. Sallust
   Hist.
   Historiae ( Histories)
   sc.
   scilicet
   Sen.
   Seneca the Younger
   Ep.
   Epistulae ( Letters)
   Str. Strabo
   Syll.
   Sylloge inscriptionum Graecarum, edited by W.
   Dittenberger (3rd ed., 1915–24)
   xii AbbreviAtions
   Tac. Tacitus
   Hist.
   Historiae ( Histories)
   Th. Thucydides,
   Historiae ( Histories)
   Theopomp. Theopompus
   V. Vergil
   A.
   Aeneis ( Aeneid)
   X. Xenophon
   An.
   Anabasis
   Hell.
   Hellenica
   Mem.
   Memorabilia
   1
   Origins and Early Forms of Greek
   
 
 Greek Historiography Page 1