Lives of Eminent Commanders

Lives of Eminent Commanders
Title Lives of Eminent Commanders PDF eBook
Author Cornelius Nepos
Publisher Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages 122
Release 2015-12-05
Genre History
ISBN 9781519697516

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Cornelius Nepos' Lives of Eminent Commanders is a collection of short biographies on the most famous generals of antiquity, including Hannibal, Hamilcar, Miltiades, and more.

Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders

Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders
Title Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders PDF eBook
Author George Robert Gleig
Publisher
Total Pages 386
Release 1831
Genre Military biography
ISBN

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Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders

Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders
Title Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders PDF eBook
Author G. R. GLEIG
Publisher
Total Pages 376
Release 1832
Genre
ISBN

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Cornelius Nepos

Cornelius Nepos
Title Cornelius Nepos PDF eBook
Author Cornelius Nepos
Publisher
Total Pages 420
Release 1854
Genre
ISBN

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Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders: John Duke of Marlborough (con't). Charles Mordaunt, Earl of Peterborough. Major-General James Wolfe

Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders: John Duke of Marlborough (con't). Charles Mordaunt, Earl of Peterborough. Major-General James Wolfe
Title Lives of the Most Eminent British Military Commanders: John Duke of Marlborough (con't). Charles Mordaunt, Earl of Peterborough. Major-General James Wolfe PDF eBook
Author George Robert Gleig
Publisher
Total Pages 400
Release 1832
Genre Generals
ISBN

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Latin Manuscripts

Latin Manuscripts
Title Latin Manuscripts PDF eBook
Author Harold Whetstone Johnston
Publisher
Total Pages 182
Release 1897
Genre Books
ISBN

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The Corinthian War, 395–387 BC

The Corinthian War, 395–387 BC
Title The Corinthian War, 395–387 BC PDF eBook
Author Jeffrey Smith
Publisher Pen and Sword Military
Total Pages 209
Release 2024-03-30
Genre History
ISBN 1399072226

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At the end of the Peloponnesian War in 404 BC, Sparta reigned supreme in Greece. Having vanquished their rival Athens and quickly dismantled the wealthy and powerful Athenian Empire, Sparta set its sights on dominating the Mediterranean world and had begun a successful invasion of the vast Persian Empire under their legendary king Agesilaus II. But with their victory over Athens came the inheritance of governing Athens’s empire - and Sparta desperately lacked both a cogent vision of empire and the essential economic and trade infrastructure to survive in the role of hegemon. Sparta’s overextension of empire compounded with internal political conflict to antagonize the rest of Greece with heavy-fisted and uneven interventionism. Soon the unlikely confederacy of Athens, Corinth, Thebes, Argos, and Persia united against Sparta in a war that, despite a Spartan victory, had devastating ramifications for their empire. The Corinthian War (395 - 387 BC) was a fascinating entanglement of clashing empires, complex diplomatic alliances and betrayals, and political fissures erupting after centuries of tension. Situated between the great Peloponnesian War and the Theban-Spartan War, the Corinthian War is often overlooked or understood as an aftershock of the civil war Greece had just endured. But the Corinthian War was instead a seminal conflict that reshaped the Greek world, illustrating the limits of Sparta’s newfound imperial experiment as they grappled with their own internal cultural conflicts and charted the rise - and fall - of their newfound hegemony and the future of Greece.