20. The Peloponnesian War, Part II (cont.)

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Uploaded by on Nov 20, 2008

Introduction to Ancient Greek History (CLCV 205)

In this lecture, Professor Kagan examines Pericles as a general. First, he describes Pericles' strategy of war and then he evaluates this strategy. According to Professor Kagan, Pericles' strategy was characterized by being both defensive and rational. It was defensive, because the Athenians did not engage the Spartans in a traditional hoplite battle, and it was rational, because Pericles assumed that the Spartans would cease fighting when they realized that the Athenians did not have to fight a land battle, since they had a walled city and a navy. On its surface, this strategy seems reasonable, but Professor Kagan points out that there were two flaws. First, the Athenians did not have an offensive plan: that is, a plan to deter the Spartans from quitting the war. Second, Pericles failed to realize that war is not always rational.

00:00 - Chapter 1. Pericles and His Strategy
16:27 - Chapter 2. Modern Scholars' Views on Pericles
26:04 - Chapter 3. Criticism of Pericles as a Military Leader
40:54 - Chapter 4. Pericles' Other Obstacles
53:47 - Chapter 5. Question and Answer

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Fall 2007.

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