
A meticulous record of the bitter clash between Athens and Sparta unfolds through the eyes of a participant who once commanded the Athenian fleet. The narrator gathers testimony, personal observation, and careful cross‑examination to separate rumor from fact, offering a clear, unembellished view of the early battles, sieges, and diplomatic maneuvers that set the war in motion. Readers are drawn into the tense atmosphere of city‑states on the brink, feeling the weight of decisions made in council chambers and on the battlefield alike.
Beyond the raw chronology, the work probes deeper questions of power, pride, and the fragile nature of democracy under strain. By insisting on evidence and reasoned analysis, the author lays the groundwork for modern historiography, showing how collective memory can be shaped by perspective yet still strive toward truth. Listeners will discover why this ancient account remains a vital lens for understanding political conflict and human behavior.
Language
fi
Duration
~20 hours (1167K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-09-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-460–-395
Best known for his gripping account of the Peloponnesian War, this Athenian historian helped shape the way people write about politics, power, and conflict. His work is admired for its sharp eye, careful method, and refusal to settle for easy explanations.
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