Chapter 4 Review: Suggested References
After the Peloponnesian War, the structure of international relations changed radically in the Greek world as the city-states became secondary in political power to the kingdom of Macedonia, and then to the kingdoms of the Hellenistic period. Long-lasting cultural changes accompanied this political transformation.
*Aristotle. Complete Works. Ed. Jonathan Barnes. 1985.
Briant, Pierre. Alexander the Great and His Empire: A Short Introduction. Trans. Amélie Kuhrt. 2010.
Chaniotis, Angelos. War in the Hellenistic World. 2005.
Collins, John Joseph. Between Athens and Jerusalem: Jewish Identity in the Hellenistic Diaspora. 1999.
Erskine, Andrew, ed. A Companion to the Hellenistic Age. 2003.
Evans, J. A. S. Daily Life in the Hellenistic Age: From Alexander to Cleopatra. 2008.
Martin, Thomas R., and Christopher W. Blackwell. Alexander the Great: The Story of an Ancient Life. 2012.
Mikalson, Jon D. Religion in Hellenistic Athens. 1998.
*Plato. The Collected Dialogues. Ed. Edith Hamilton and Huntington Cairns. 1963.
*Plutarch. The Age of Alexander. Trans. Ian Scott-Kilvert. 1973.
Pollitt, J. J. Art in the Hellenistic Age. 1986.
Ptolemaic Egypt: http:/
Sharples, R. W. Stoics, Epicureans, and Sceptics: An Introduction to Hellenistic Philosophy. 1996.
Shipley, Graham. The Greek World after Alexander 323–30 B.C. 1999.
Snyder, Jane M. The Woman and the Lyre: Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome. 1989.