The Hoplite Debate | Men of Bronze: Hoplite Warfare in Ancient Greece | Princeton Scholarship Online (2024)

Men of Bronze: Hoplite Warfare in Ancient Greece

Donald Kagan (ed.), Gregory F. Viggiano (ed.)

Published:

2013

Online ISBN:

9781400846306

Print ISBN:

9780691143019

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Men of Bronze: Hoplite Warfare in Ancient Greece

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Pages

1–56

  • Published:

    June 2013

Cite

Kagan, Donald, and Gregory F. Viggiano (eds), 'The Hoplite Debate', in Donald Kagan, and Gregory F. Viggiano (eds), Men of Bronze: Hoplite Warfare in Ancient Greece (Princeton, NJ, 2013; online edn, Princeton Scholarship Online, 19 Oct. 2017), https://doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691143019.003.0001, accessed 28 June 2024.

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Abstract

This chapter takes a more detailed look into the hoplite debate. It shows how modern historians of ancient Greece have come to develop a grand narrative. This “orthodoxy” explains the rise of the early polis in terms of a dramatic change or “revolution” in arms, armor, and tactics; the military revolution became a driving force behind the emergence of the characteristic political and social structures of the Greek state. A central part of the thesis is that the change in fighting style was directly related to recent innovations in arms and armor. Second, the phalanx depended on the weight and the cohesion of heavily armed men who employed “shock” tactics in brief but decisive battles. Third, it has been critical to identify the greatest number of hoplites with a middling group within the polis, which had the wealth to provide its own arms. Fourth, this middling group transformed Greek values.

Keywords: hoplite debate, hoplite orthodoxy, ancient Greece, polis, Greek values, Greek state, phalanx, hoplites, modern historians

Subject

Ancient History (Non-Classical, to 500 CE)

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