Excerpt from The History of Greece, Vol. 4 of 8
History of Athens from the conclusion of the Peloponnesian War and the establishment of the Supreme Council of thirty, commonly called The Thirty Tyrants, to the restoration of the Democracy by Thrasybulus.
Recapitulatory Synopsis of the Peloponnesian War. - Deficiency of the Greeks in political Science. - Condition of Slaves meliorated by the Peloponnesian War.
In the long and complicated war, which it has been the business of the preceding chapters to relate, the reader would in vain look for campaigns upon the extensive scale of Hannibal's in Italy, Caesar's in various parts of the ancient world, or many in modern Europe. It was not a war between two great states, but between two confederacies of small states, with intermingled territories. The objects of attack and defence were thus numerous and scattered. The Laced?monian confederacy, strong in disciplined numbers, was deficient in pecuniary resources; while the very purpose of Athens, defensive war, restrained her operations to a correspondency with those of her enemies.
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