fbpx
Wikipedia

Polybius

Polybius (/pəˈlɪbiəs/; Greek: Πολύβιος, Polýbios; c. 200 – c. 118 BC) was a Greek historian of the middle Hellenistic period. He is noted for his work The Histories, a universal history documenting the rise of Rome in the Mediterranean in the third and second centuries BC. It covered the period of 264–146 BC, recording in detail events in Italy, Iberia, Greece, Macedonia, Syria, Egypt and Africa, and documented the Punic Wars and Macedonian Wars among many others.

Polybius
The stele of Kleitor depicting Polybius, Hellenistic art, 2nd century BC, Museum of Roman Civilization[1]
Bornc. 200 BC
Diedc. 118 BC (aged approx. 82)
NationalityGreek
OccupationHistorian
Notable workThe Histories (events of the Roman Republic, 220–146 BC)
Main interests
History, philosophy of history
Notable ideas
Anacyclosis

Polybius's Histories is important not only for being the only Hellenistic historical work to survive in any substantial form, but also for its analysis of constitutional change and the mixed constitution. Polybius's discussion of the separation of powers in government, of checks and balances to limit power, and his introduction of "the people", all influenced Montesquieu's The Spirit of the Laws, John Locke's Two Treatises of Government, and the framers of the United States Constitution.[2]

The leading expert on Polybius for nearly a century was F. W. Walbank (1909–2008), who published studies related to him for 50 years, including a long commentary of his Histories and a biography.[3]

Early life edit

Polybius was born around 200 BC in Megalopolis, Arcadia, Greece when it was an active member of the Achaean League. The town was revived, along with other Achaean states, a century before he was born.[4]

Polybius's father, Lycortas, was a prominent, land-owning politician and member of the governing class who became strategos (commanding general) of the Achaean League.[5] Consequently, Polybius was able to observe first hand during his first 30 years the political and military affairs of Megalopolis, gaining experience as a statesman.[6] In his early years, he accompanied his father while travelling as ambassador.[7] He developed an interest in horse riding and hunting, diversions that later commended him to his Roman captors.

In 182 BC, he was given the honour of carrying the funeral urn of Philopoemen, one of the most eminent Achaean politicians of his generation. In either 170 BC or 169 BC, Polybius was elected hipparchus (cavalry officer) and was due to assist Rome militarily during the Third Macedonian War, although this never came about.[7] This office was the second highest position of the Achaean League and often presaged election to the annual strategia (chief generalship). Polybius's political career was cut short in 168 BC, however; as a consequence of the final defeat of the Antigonid kingdom in the Third Macedonian War, 1,000 Achaeans (including Polybius) with suspect allegiances were interned in Rome and its surrounding area.

Personal experiences edit

Polybius's father, Lycortas, was a prominent advocate of neutrality during the Roman war against Perseus of Macedon in 171-168 BC. Lycortas attracted the suspicion of the Romans, and Polybius subsequently was one of the 1,000 Achaean nobles who were transported to Rome as hostages in 167 BC, and was detained there for 17 years. In Rome, by virtue of his high culture, Polybius was admitted to the most distinguished houses, in particular to that of Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus, the conqueror in the Third Macedonian War, who entrusted Polybius with the education of his sons, Fabius and Scipio Aemilianus (who had been adopted by the eldest son of Scipio Africanus). Polybius remained on cordial terms with his former pupil Scipio Aemilianus and was among the members of the Scipionic Circle.

When Scipio defeated the Carthaginians in the Third Punic War, Polybius remained his counsellor. The Achaean hostages were released in 150 BC, and Polybius was granted leave to return home, but the next year he went on campaign with Scipio Aemilianus to Africa, and was present at the Sack of Carthage in 146, which he later described. Following the destruction of Carthage, Polybius likely journeyed along the Atlantic coast of Africa, as well as Spain.

After the destruction of Corinth in the same year, Polybius returned to Greece, making use of his Roman connections to lighten the conditions there. Polybius was charged with the difficult task of organizing the new form of government in the Greek cities, and in this office he gained great recognition.

At Rome edit

In the succeeding years, Polybius resided in Rome, completing his historical work while occasionally undertaking long journeys through the Mediterranean countries in the furtherance of his history, in particular with the aim of obtaining firsthand knowledge of historical sites. He apparently interviewed veterans to clarify details of the events he was recording and was similarly given access to archival material. Little is known of Polybius's later life; he most likely accompanied Scipio to Spain, acting as his military advisor during the Numantine War.

He later wrote about this war in a lost monograph. Polybius probably returned to Greece later in his life, as evidenced by the many existent inscriptions and statues of him there. The last event mentioned in his Histories seems to be the construction of the Via Domitia in southern France in 118 BC, which suggests the writings of Pseudo-Lucian may have some grounding in fact when they state, "[Polybius] fell from his horse while riding up from the country, fell ill as a result and died at the age of eighty-two".

The Histories edit

The Histories is a universal history which describes and explains the rise of the Roman Republic as a global power in the ancient Mediterranean world. The work documents in detail political and military affairs across the Hellenistic Mediterranean between 264 and 146 BC, and in its later books includes eyewitness accounts of the sack of Carthage and Corinth in 146 BC, and the Roman annexation of mainland Greece after the Achaean War.[8]

While Polybius's Histories covers the period from 264 BC to 146 BC, it mainly focuses on the years 221 BC to 146 BC, detailing Rome's rise to supremacy in the Mediterranean by overcoming their geopolitical rivals: Carthage, Macedonia, and the Seleucid empire. Books I-II are The Histories' introduction, describing events in Italy and Greece before 221/0 BC, including the First Punic War, Rome's wars with the Gauls, the rise of the Achaean League (Polybius's own constitution), and the re-establishment of Macedonian power in Greece under Antigonus III Doson and Philip V of Macedon.[9] Books III-XXXIX describe in detail political and military affairs in the leading Mediterranean states, including affairs in ancient Rome and ancient Carthage, ancient Greece and ancient Macedonia, and the Seleucid empire and Egypt, explaining their increasing "συμπλοκή" (symplokē) or interconnectedness and how they each contributed to Rome's rise to dominance. Unfortunately, only books I-V survive in full; the rest are in varying states of fragmentation.

Three discursive books on politics, historiography and geography break up the historical narrative:

  • In Book VI, Polybius outlines his famous theory of the "cycle of constitutions" (the anacyclosis) and describes the political, military, and moral institutions that allowed the Romans to defeat their rivals in the Mediterranean. Polybius concludes that the Romans are the pre-eminent power because they currently have customs and institutions which balance and check the negative impulses of their people and promote a deep desire for noble acts, a love of virtue, piety towards parents and elders, and a fear of the gods (deisidaimonia).
  • In Book XII, Polybius discusses how to write history and criticises the historical accounts of numerous previous historians, including Timaeus for his account of the same period of history. He asserts Timaeus' point of view is inaccurate, invalid, and biased in favour of Rome. Christian Habicht considered his criticism of Timaeus to be spiteful and biased,[10] However, Polybius's Histories is also useful in analyzing the different Hellenistic versions of history and of use as a more credible illustration of events during the Hellenistic period.
  • Book XXXIV discussed geographical matters and the importance of geography in a historical account and in a stateman's education. Unfortunately, this book has been almost entirely lost.

Sources edit

Polybius held that historians should, if possible, only chronicle events whose participants the historian was able to interview,[11] and was among the first to champion the notion of factual integrity in historical writing. In the twelfth volume of his Histories, Polybius defines the historian's job as the analysis of documentation, the review of relevant geographical information, and political experience. In Polybius's time, the profession of a historian required political experience (which aided in differentiating between fact and fiction) and familiarity with the geography surrounding one's subject matter to supply an accurate version of events.

Polybius himself exemplified these principles as he was well travelled and possessed political and military experience. He consulted and used written sources providing essential material for the period between 264 BC to 220 BC, including, for instance, treaty documents between Rome and Carthage in the First Punic War, the history of the Greek historian Phylarchus, and the Memoirs of the Achaean politician, Aratus of Sicyon. When addressing events after 220 BC, he continued to examine treaty documents, the writings of Greek and Roman historians and statesmen, eye-witness accounts and Macedonian court informants to acquire credible sources of information, although rarely did he name his sources (see, exceptionally, Theopompus).

As historian edit

Polybius wrote several works, most of which are lost. His earliest work was a biography of the Greek statesman Philopoemen; this work was later used as a source by Plutarch when composing his Parallel Lives; however, the original Polybian text is lost. In addition, Polybius wrote an extensive treatise entitled Tactics, which may have detailed Roman and Greek military tactics. Small parts of this work may survive in his major Histories, but the work itself is lost, as well. Another missing work was a historical monograph on the events of the Numantine War. The largest Polybian work was, of course, his Histories, of which only the first five books survive entirely intact, along with a large portion of the sixth book and fragments of the rest. Along with Cato the Elder (234–149 BC), he can be considered one of the founding fathers of Roman historiography.

Livy made reference to and uses Polybius's Histories as source material in his own narrative. Polybius was among the first historians to attempt to present history as a sequence of causes and effects, based upon a careful examination and criticism of tradition. He narrated his history based upon first-hand knowledge. The Histories capture the varied elements of the story of human behavior: nationalism, xenophobia, duplicitous politics, war, brutality, loyalty, valour, intelligence, reason and resourcefulness.

Aside from the narrative of the historical events, Polybius also included three books of digressions. Book 34 was entirely devoted to questions of geography and included some trenchant criticisms of Eratosthenes, whom he accused of passing on popular preconceptions or laodogmatika. Book 12 was a disquisition on the writing of history, citing extensive passages of lost historians, such as Callisthenes and Theopompus. Most influential was Book 6, which describes Roman political, military, and moral institutions, which he considered key to Rome's success; it presented Rome as having a mixed constitution in which monarchical, aristocratic and popular elements existed in stable equilibrium. This enabled Rome to escape, for the time being, the cycle of eternal revolutions (anacyclosis) faced by those with singular constitutions (i.e. many of the Greeks and the Macedonians). While Polybius was not the first to advance this view, his account provides the most cogent illustration of the ideal for later political theorists.

A key theme of The Histories is good leadership, and Polybius dedicates considerable time to outlining how the good statesman should be rational, knowledgeable, virtuous and composed. The character of the Polybian statesman is exemplified in that of Philip II, who Polybius believed exhibited both excellent military prowess and skill, as well as proficient ability in diplomacy and moral leadership.[12] His beliefs about Philip's character led Polybius to reject the historian Theopompus' description of Philip's private, drunken debauchery. For Polybius, it was inconceivable that such an able and effective statesman could have had an immoral and unrestrained private life as described by Theopompus.[13] The consequences of bad leadership are also highlighted throughout the Histories. Polybius saw, for instance, the character and leadership of the later Philip V of Macedon, one of Rome's leading adversaries in the Greek East, as the opposite of his earlier exemplary namesake. Philip V became increasingly tyrannical, irrational and impious following brilliant military and political success in his youth; this resulted, Polybius believed, in his abandonment by his Greek allies and his eventual defeat by Rome in 197 BC.[14]

Other important themes running throughout The Histories include the role of Fortune in the affairs of nations, how a leader might weather bravely these changes of fortune with dignity,[15] the educational value of history and how it should demonstrate cause and effect (or apodeiktike) to provide lessons for statesmen, and that historians should be "men of action" to gain appropriate experience so as to understand how political and military affairs are likely to pan out (pragmatikoi).

Polybius is considered by some to be the successor of Thucydides in terms of objectivity and critical reasoning, and the forefather of scholarly, painstaking historical research in the modern scientific sense. According to this view, his work sets forth the course of history's occurrences with clearness, penetration, sound judgment, and, among the circumstances affecting the outcomes, he lays special emphasis on geographical conditions. Modern historians are especially impressed with the manner in which Polybius used his sources, particularly documentary evidence as well as his citation and quotation of sources. Furthermore, there is some admiration of Polybius's meditation on the nature of historiography in Book 12. His work belongs, therefore, amongst the greatest productions of ancient historical writing. The writer of the Oxford Companion to Classical Literature (1937) praises him for his "earnest devotion to truth" and his systematic pursuit of causation.

It has long been acknowledged that Polybius's writings are prone to a certain hagiographic tone when writing of his friends, such as Scipio, and subject to a vindictive tone when detailing the exploits of his enemies, such as Callicrates, the Achaean statesman responsible for his Roman exile.[16]

As a hostage in Rome, then as client to the Scipios, and after 146 BC, a collaborator with Roman rule, Polybius was probably in no position to freely express any negative opinions of Rome. Peter Green advises that Polybius was chronicling Roman history for a Greek audience, to justify what he believed to be the inevitability of Roman rule. Nonetheless, Green considers Polybius's Histories the best source for the era they cover. For Ronald Mellor, Polybius was a loyal partisan of Scipio, intent on vilifying his patron's opponents.[17] Adrian Goldsworthy, while using Polybius as a source for Scipio's generalship, notes Polybius's underlying and overt bias in Scipio's favour. H. Ormerod considers that Polybius cannot be regarded as an 'altogether unprejudiced witness' in relation to his bêtes noires; the Aetolians, the Carthaginians and the Cretans.[18] Other historians perceive considerable negative bias in Polybius's account of Crete;[19] on the other hand, Hansen notes that the same work, along with passages from Strabo and Scylax,[20] proved a reliable guide in the eventual rediscovery of the lost city of Kydonia.[21]

Cryptography edit

Polybius was responsible for a useful tool in telegraphy that allowed letters to be easily signaled using a numerical system, called "the Polybius square," mentioned in Hist. X.45.6 ff..[22] This idea also lends itself to cryptographic manipulation and steganography. Modern implementations of the Polybius square, at least in Western European languages such as English, Spanish, French, German and Italian, generally use the Roman alphabet in which those languages are written. However, Polybius himself was writing in Greek, and would have implemented his cipher square in the Greek alphabet. Both versions are shown here.

1 2 3 4 5
1 A B C D E
2 F G H I/J K
3 L M N O P
4 Q R S T U
5 V W X Y Z
1 2 3 4 5
1 A B Γ Δ E
2 Z H Θ I K
3 Λ M N Ξ O
4 Π P Σ T Y
5 Φ X Ψ Ω

In the Polybius square, letters of the alphabet were arranged left to right, top to bottom in a 5 × 5 square. When used with the 26-letter Latin alphabet two letters, usually I and J, are combined. When used with the Greek alphabet, which has exactly one fewer letters than there are spaces (or code points) in the square, the final "5,5" code point encodes the spaces in between words. Alternatively, it can denote the end of a sentence or paragraph when writing in continuous script.

Five numbers are then aligned on the outside top of the square, and five numbers on the left side of the square vertically. Usually these numbers were arranged 1 through 5. By cross-referencing the two numbers along the grid of the square, a letter could be deduced.

In The Histories, Polybius specifies how this cypher could be used in fire signals, where long-range messages could be sent by means of torches raised and lowered to signify the column and row of each letter. This was a great leap forward from previous fire signaling, which could send prearranged codes only (such as, 'if we light the fire, it means that the enemy has arrived').

Other writings of scientific interest include detailed discussions of the machines Archimedes created for the defense of Syracuse against the Romans, where Polybius praises the 'old man' and his engineering in the highest terms, and an analysis of the usefulness of astronomy to generals (both in the Histories).

Influence edit

 
Marcus Tullius Cicero

Polybius was considered a poor stylist by Dionysius of Halicarnassus, writing of Polybius's history that "no one has the endurance to reach [its] end".[23] Nevertheless, clearly he was widely read by Romans and Greeks alike. He is quoted extensively by Strabo writing in the 1st century BC and Athenaeus in the 3rd century AD.

His emphasis on explaining causes of events, rather than just recounting events, influenced the historian Sempronius Asellio. Polybius is mentioned by Cicero and mined for information by Diodorus, Livy, Plutarch and Arrian. Much of the text that survives today from the later books of The Histories was preserved in Byzantine anthologies.

 
Montesquieu

His works reappeared in the West first in Renaissance Florence. Polybius gained a following in Italy, and although poor Latin translations hampered proper scholarship on his works, they contributed to the city's historical and political discourse. Niccolò Machiavelli in his Discourses on Livy evinces familiarity with Polybius. Vernacular translations in French, German, Italian and English first appeared during the 16th century.[24] Consequently, in the late 16th century, Polybius's works found a greater reading audience among the learned public. Study of the correspondence of such men as Isaac Casaubon, Jacques Auguste de Thou, William Camden and Paolo Sarpi reveals a growing interest in Polybius's works and thought during the period. Despite the existence of both printed editions in the vernacular and increased scholarly interest, however, Polybius remained an "historian's historian", not much read by the public at large.[25]

Printings of his work in the vernacular remained few in number—seven in French, five in English (John Dryden provided an enthusiastic preface to Sir Henry Sheers' edition of 1693) and five in Italian.[26] Polybius's political analysis has influenced republican thinkers from Cicero to Charles de Montesquieu to the Founding Fathers of the United States.[27] John Adams, for example, considered him one of the most important teachers of constitutional theory. Since the Age of Enlightenment, Polybius has in general held appeal to those interested in Hellenistic Greece and early Republican Rome, while his political and military writings have lost influence in academia. More recently, thorough work on the Greek text of Polybius, and his historical technique, has increased the academic understanding and appreciation of him as a historian.

According to Edward Tufte, he was also a major source for Charles Joseph Minard's figurative map of Hannibal's overland journey into Italy during the Second Punic War.[28]

In his Meditations On Hunting, Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset calls Polybius "one of the few great minds that the turbid human species has managed to produce", and says the damage to the Histories is "without question one of the gravest losses that we have suffered in our Greco-Roman heritage".

The Italian version of his name, Polibio, was used as a male first name—for example, the composer Polibio Fumagalli—though it never became very common.

The University of Pennsylvania has an intellectual society, the Polybian Society, which is named in his honor and serves as a non-partisan forum for discussing societal issues and policy.

Editions and translations edit

  • Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Usher, S. (ed. and trans.) Critical Essays, Volume II. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985.
  • Polybii Historiae, editionem a Ludovico Dindorfi curatam, retractavit Theodorus Büttner-Wobst, Lipsiae in aedibus B. G. Teubneri, vol. 1, vol. 2, vol. 3, vol. 4, vol. 5, 1882–1904.
  • Polybius (1922–1927). Polybius: The Histories. The Loeb Classical Library (in Ancient Greek, English, and Latin). Translated by Paton, W.R. London; New York: William Heinemann; G.P. Putnam's Sone.
    • —— (1922A). Polybius. Vol. I. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-99142-7. Loeb Number L128; Books I-II.
    • —— (1922B). Polybius. Vol. II. ISBN 0-674-99152-4. Loeb Number L137; Books III-IV.
    • —— (1923). Polybius. Vol. III. ISBN 0-674-99153-2. Loeb Number L138; Books V-VIII.
    • —— (1925). Polybius. Vol. IV. ISBN 0-674-99175-3. Loeb Number L159; Books IX-XV.
    • —— (1926). Polybius. Vol. V. ISBN 0-674-99176-1. Loeb Number L160; Books XVI-XXVII.
    • —— (1927). Polybius. Vol. VI. ISBN 0-674-99178-8. Loeb Number L161; Books XXVIII-XXXIX.
  • Polybius (2012). Polybius: The Histories. The Loeb Classical Library (in Ancient Greek, English, and Latin). Translated by Paton, W.R. Chicago: University of Chicago (LacusCurtius).
  • The Histories or The Rise of the Roman Empire by Polybius:
  • At "LacusCurtius": Short introduction to the life and work of Polybius
  • 1670 edition of Polybius's works vol.1 at the Internet archive
  • 1670 edition of Polybius's works vol.2 at the Internet archive
  • Polybius: "The Rise Of The Roman Empire", Penguin, 1979.
  • "Books 1–5 of History. Ethiopian Story. Book 8: From the Departure of the Divine Marcus" featuring Book I-V of The Histories, digitized, from the World Digital Library

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ John Ma. (2013). Statues and Cities: Honorific Portraits and Civic Identity in the Hellenistic World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966891-5, pp 281-282.
  2. ^ "Polybius and the Founding Fathers: The separation of powers".
  3. ^ Gibson & Harrison: Polybius, pp. 1–5.
  4. ^ Marincola, John (2017). On Writing History from Herodotus to Herodian. Penguin UK. ISBN 9780141393582.
  5. ^ "Titus Livius (Livy), The History of Rome, Book 39, chapter 35". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-02.
  6. ^ Walbank, F. W. (2014). Philip V of Macedon. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 278. ISBN 9781107630604.
  7. ^ a b Sorek, Susan (2012). Ancient Historians: A Student Handbook. Continuum. p. 76. ISBN 9781441111357.
  8. ^ Polybius (~150 B.C.). The Rise of the Roman Republic. Translated by Ian Scott-Kilvert (1979). Penguin Books. London, England.
  9. ^ Nicholson, Emma (2023). Philip V of Macedon in Polybius's Histories. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192866769., pp. 3, 34-58, 107-118
  10. ^ Athens from Alexander to Antony by Christian Habicht p119
  11. ^ Farrington, Scott Thomas (February 2015). "A Likely Story: Rhetoric and the Determination of Truth in Polybius's Histories." Histos 9: 29-66. (p. 40): "Polybius begins his history proper with the 140th Olympiad because accounts of the remote past amount to hearsay and do not allow for safe judgements (διαλήψεις) and assertions (ἀποφάσεις) regarding the course of events.... he can relate events he saw himself, or he can use the testimony of eyewitnesses. ([footnote 34:] Pol. 4.2.2: ἐξ οὗ συµβαίνει τοῖς µὲν αὐτοὺς ἡµᾶς παραγεγονέναι, τὰ δὲ παρὰ τῶν ἑωρακότων ἀκηκοέναι.)" [archive URLs: (full text), (abstract & journal citation)]
  12. ^ Plb.5.9-12 and Nicholson, Emma (2023). Philip V of Macedon in Polybius's Histories. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192866769., pp. 291-295
  13. ^ Plb. 8.9.3-4
  14. ^ Nicholson, Emma (2023). Philip V of Macedon in Polybius's Histories. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192866769., pp. 59-100, 184-227
  15. ^ Plb. 1.1.1-2
  16. ^ Peter Green, Alexander to Actium
  17. ^ Ronald J. Mellor, The Historians of Ancient Rome
  18. ^ H. Ormerod, Piracy in the Ancient World, p.141
  19. ^ Mogens Herman Hansen 1995, Sources for the Ancient Greek City-State: Symposium, August 24–27, 1994, Kgl. Danske, Videnskabernes Selskab, 376 pages ISBN 87-7304-267-6
  20. ^ Robert Pashley, Travels in Crete, 1837, J. Murray
  21. ^ "C. Michael Hogan, Cydonia, Modern Antiquarian, January 23, 2008". Themodernantiquarian.com. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  22. ^ Nicholson, Emma (7 March 2016). "Polybius (1), Greek historian, c. 200–c. 118 BCE". Polybius (1), Greek historian, Oxford Classical Dictionary. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5172. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 2023-04-26.
  23. ^ Comp. 4
  24. ^ Polybius; Frank W. Walbank; Ian Scott-Kilvert (1979). The Rise of the Roman Empire. Penguin Classics. ISBN 0-14-044362-2.
  25. ^ Burke, Peter (1966). "A Survey of the Popularity of Ancient Historians, 1450-1700". History and Theory. History and Theory, Vol. 5, No. 2. 5 (2): 135–152 [141]. doi:10.2307/2504511. JSTOR 2504511.
  26. ^ Burke, Peter (1966). "A Survey of the Popularity of Ancient Historians, 1450-1700". History and Theory. History and Theory, Vol. 5, No. 2. 5 (2): 135–152 [139]. doi:10.2307/2504511. JSTOR 2504511.
  27. ^ Marshall Davies Lloyd, Polybius and the Founding Fathers: the separation of powers, Sept. 22, 1998.
  28. ^ "Minard's figurative map of Hannibal's war". Edwardtufte.com. Retrieved 2010-02-28.

Sources edit

Ancient sources edit

  • Titus Livius of Patavium (Livy), libri XXI — XLV
  • Pseudo-Lucian Makrobioi
  • Paulus Orosius libri VII of Histories against Pagans

Modern sources edit

  • Champion, Craige B. (2004) Cultural Politics in Polybius's Histories. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.
  • Davidson, James: 'Polybius' in Feldherr, Andrew ed. The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Historians (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
  • Derow, Peter S. 1979. "Polybius, Rome, and the East." Journal of Roman Studies 69:1–15.
  • Eckstein, Arthur M. (1995) Moral Vision in the Histories of Polybius. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.
  • Farrington, Scott Thomas. 2015. "A Likely Story: Rhetoric and the Determination of Truth in Polybius' Histories. Histos: The On-Line Journal of Ancient Historiography 9: 29–66.
  • Gibson, Bruce & Harrison, Thomas (editors): Polybius and his World: Essays in Memory of F.W. Walbank, (Oxford, 2013).
  • McGing, Brian C. (2010) Polybius: The Histories. Oxford Approaches to Classical Literature. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Momigliano, Arnaldo M.: Sesto Contributo alla Storia degli Studi Classici e del Mondo Antico (Rome, 1980).
    • —— Vol. V (1974) "The Historian's Skin", 77–88 (Momigliano Bibliography no. 531)
    • —— Vol. VI (1973) "Polibio, Posidonio e l'imperialismo Romano", 89 (Momigliano Bibliography no. 525) (original publication: Atti della Accademia delle Scienze di Torino, 107, 1972–73, 693–707).
  • Moore, John M (1965) The Manuscript Tradition of Polybius (Cambridge University Press).
  • Moore, Daniel Walker (2020) Polybius: Experience and the Lessons of History (Brill, Leiden).
  • Nicholson, Emma (2022). "Polybius (1), Greek historian, c. 200–c. 118 BCE". Oxford Classical Dictionary. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5172. ISBN 9780199381135.
  • Nicholson, Emma (2023). Philip V of Macedon in Polybius' Histories: Politics, History, and Fiction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5172. ISBN 9780199381135.
  • Pausch, Dennis (2014) "Livy Reading Polybius: Adapting Greek Narrative to Roman History." In Defining Greek Narrative. Edited by Douglas L. Cairns & Ruth Scodel, 279–297. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Sacks, Kenneth S. (1981) Polybius on the Writing of History. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.
  • Schepens, Guido, and Jan Bollansée, eds. 2005. The Shadow of Polybius: Intertextuality as a Research Tool in Greek Historiography. Leuven, Belgium: Peeters.
  • Walbank, Frank W.:
    • —— Philip V of Macedon, the Hare Prize Essay 1939 (Cambridge University Press, 1940)
    • —— A Historical Commentary on Polybius (Oxford University Press)
      • Vol. I (1957) Commentary on Books I–VI
      • Vol. II (1967) Commentary on Books VII–XVIII
      • Vol. III (1979) Commentary on Books XIX–XL
    • —— (1972) Polybius (University of California Press).
    • ___ (2002) Polybius, Rome and the Hellenistic World: Essays and Reflections (Cambridge University Press).

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Polybius at Wikiquote
  •   Works by or about Polybius at Wikisource
  • Works by Polybius at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Polybius at Perseus Digital Library
  • Works by or about Polybius at Internet Archive

polybius, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, Πολύβιος, polýbios, greek, historian, middle, hellenistic, period, noted, work, histories, universal, history, documenting, rise, rome, mediterranean, third, second, centuries, covered, period, recording, detail, e. For other uses see Polybius disambiguation Polybius p e ˈ l ɪ b i e s Greek Polybios Polybios c 200 c 118 BC was a Greek historian of the middle Hellenistic period He is noted for his work The Histories a universal history documenting the rise of Rome in the Mediterranean in the third and second centuries BC It covered the period of 264 146 BC recording in detail events in Italy Iberia Greece Macedonia Syria Egypt and Africa and documented the Punic Wars and Macedonian Wars among many others PolybiusThe stele of Kleitor depicting Polybius Hellenistic art 2nd century BC Museum of Roman Civilization 1 Bornc 200 BCMegalopolis ArcadiaDiedc 118 BC aged approx 82 Roman GreeceNationalityGreekOccupationHistorianNotable workThe Histories events of the Roman Republic 220 146 BC Main interestsHistory philosophy of historyNotable ideasAnacyclosisPolybius s Histories is important not only for being the only Hellenistic historical work to survive in any substantial form but also for its analysis of constitutional change and the mixed constitution Polybius s discussion of the separation of powers in government of checks and balances to limit power and his introduction of the people all influenced Montesquieu s The Spirit of the Laws John Locke s Two Treatises of Government and the framers of the United States Constitution 2 The leading expert on Polybius for nearly a century was F W Walbank 1909 2008 who published studies related to him for 50 years including a long commentary of his Histories and a biography 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal experiences 3 At Rome 4 The Histories 4 1 Sources 5 As historian 6 Cryptography 7 Influence 8 Editions and translations 9 See also 10 Notes and references 11 Sources 11 1 Ancient sources 11 2 Modern sources 12 External linksEarly life editPolybius was born around 200 BC in Megalopolis Arcadia Greece when it was an active member of the Achaean League The town was revived along with other Achaean states a century before he was born 4 Polybius s father Lycortas was a prominent land owning politician and member of the governing class who became strategos commanding general of the Achaean League 5 Consequently Polybius was able to observe first hand during his first 30 years the political and military affairs of Megalopolis gaining experience as a statesman 6 In his early years he accompanied his father while travelling as ambassador 7 He developed an interest in horse riding and hunting diversions that later commended him to his Roman captors In 182 BC he was given the honour of carrying the funeral urn of Philopoemen one of the most eminent Achaean politicians of his generation In either 170 BC or 169 BC Polybius was elected hipparchus cavalry officer and was due to assist Rome militarily during the Third Macedonian War although this never came about 7 This office was the second highest position of the Achaean League and often presaged election to the annual strategia chief generalship Polybius s political career was cut short in 168 BC however as a consequence of the final defeat of the Antigonid kingdom in the Third Macedonian War 1 000 Achaeans including Polybius with suspect allegiances were interned in Rome and its surrounding area Personal experiences editPolybius s father Lycortas was a prominent advocate of neutrality during the Roman war against Perseus of Macedon in 171 168 BC Lycortas attracted the suspicion of the Romans and Polybius subsequently was one of the 1 000 Achaean nobles who were transported to Rome as hostages in 167 BC and was detained there for 17 years In Rome by virtue of his high culture Polybius was admitted to the most distinguished houses in particular to that of Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus the conqueror in the Third Macedonian War who entrusted Polybius with the education of his sons Fabius and Scipio Aemilianus who had been adopted by the eldest son of Scipio Africanus Polybius remained on cordial terms with his former pupil Scipio Aemilianus and was among the members of the Scipionic Circle When Scipio defeated the Carthaginians in the Third Punic War Polybius remained his counsellor The Achaean hostages were released in 150 BC and Polybius was granted leave to return home but the next year he went on campaign with Scipio Aemilianus to Africa and was present at the Sack of Carthage in 146 which he later described Following the destruction of Carthage Polybius likely journeyed along the Atlantic coast of Africa as well as Spain After the destruction of Corinth in the same year Polybius returned to Greece making use of his Roman connections to lighten the conditions there Polybius was charged with the difficult task of organizing the new form of government in the Greek cities and in this office he gained great recognition At Rome editIn the succeeding years Polybius resided in Rome completing his historical work while occasionally undertaking long journeys through the Mediterranean countries in the furtherance of his history in particular with the aim of obtaining firsthand knowledge of historical sites He apparently interviewed veterans to clarify details of the events he was recording and was similarly given access to archival material Little is known of Polybius s later life he most likely accompanied Scipio to Spain acting as his military advisor during the Numantine War He later wrote about this war in a lost monograph Polybius probably returned to Greece later in his life as evidenced by the many existent inscriptions and statues of him there The last event mentioned in his Histories seems to be the construction of the Via Domitia in southern France in 118 BC which suggests the writings of Pseudo Lucian may have some grounding in fact when they state Polybius fell from his horse while riding up from the country fell ill as a result and died at the age of eighty two The Histories editMain article The Histories Polybius The Histories is a universal history which describes and explains the rise of the Roman Republic as a global power in the ancient Mediterranean world The work documents in detail political and military affairs across the Hellenistic Mediterranean between 264 and 146 BC and in its later books includes eyewitness accounts of the sack of Carthage and Corinth in 146 BC and the Roman annexation of mainland Greece after the Achaean War 8 While Polybius s Histories covers the period from 264 BC to 146 BC it mainly focuses on the years 221 BC to 146 BC detailing Rome s rise to supremacy in the Mediterranean by overcoming their geopolitical rivals Carthage Macedonia and the Seleucid empire Books I II are The Histories introduction describing events in Italy and Greece before 221 0 BC including the First Punic War Rome s wars with the Gauls the rise of the Achaean League Polybius s own constitution and the re establishment of Macedonian power in Greece under Antigonus III Doson and Philip V of Macedon 9 Books III XXXIX describe in detail political and military affairs in the leading Mediterranean states including affairs in ancient Rome and ancient Carthage ancient Greece and ancient Macedonia and the Seleucid empire and Egypt explaining their increasing symplokh symploke or interconnectedness and how they each contributed to Rome s rise to dominance Unfortunately only books I V survive in full the rest are in varying states of fragmentation Three discursive books on politics historiography and geography break up the historical narrative In Book VI Polybius outlines his famous theory of the cycle of constitutions the anacyclosis and describes the political military and moral institutions that allowed the Romans to defeat their rivals in the Mediterranean Polybius concludes that the Romans are the pre eminent power because they currently have customs and institutions which balance and check the negative impulses of their people and promote a deep desire for noble acts a love of virtue piety towards parents and elders and a fear of the gods deisidaimonia In Book XII Polybius discusses how to write history and criticises the historical accounts of numerous previous historians including Timaeus for his account of the same period of history He asserts Timaeus point of view is inaccurate invalid and biased in favour of Rome Christian Habicht considered his criticism of Timaeus to be spiteful and biased 10 However Polybius s Histories is also useful in analyzing the different Hellenistic versions of history and of use as a more credible illustration of events during the Hellenistic period Book XXXIV discussed geographical matters and the importance of geography in a historical account and in a stateman s education Unfortunately this book has been almost entirely lost Sources edit Polybius held that historians should if possible only chronicle events whose participants the historian was able to interview 11 and was among the first to champion the notion of factual integrity in historical writing In the twelfth volume of his Histories Polybius defines the historian s job as the analysis of documentation the review of relevant geographical information and political experience In Polybius s time the profession of a historian required political experience which aided in differentiating between fact and fiction and familiarity with the geography surrounding one s subject matter to supply an accurate version of events Polybius himself exemplified these principles as he was well travelled and possessed political and military experience He consulted and used written sources providing essential material for the period between 264 BC to 220 BC including for instance treaty documents between Rome and Carthage in the First Punic War the history of the Greek historian Phylarchus and the Memoirs of the Achaean politician Aratus of Sicyon When addressing events after 220 BC he continued to examine treaty documents the writings of Greek and Roman historians and statesmen eye witness accounts and Macedonian court informants to acquire credible sources of information although rarely did he name his sources see exceptionally Theopompus As historian editPolybius wrote several works most of which are lost His earliest work was a biography of the Greek statesman Philopoemen this work was later used as a source by Plutarch when composing his Parallel Lives however the original Polybian text is lost In addition Polybius wrote an extensive treatise entitled Tactics which may have detailed Roman and Greek military tactics Small parts of this work may survive in his major Histories but the work itself is lost as well Another missing work was a historical monograph on the events of the Numantine War The largest Polybian work was of course his Histories of which only the first five books survive entirely intact along with a large portion of the sixth book and fragments of the rest Along with Cato the Elder 234 149 BC he can be considered one of the founding fathers of Roman historiography Livy made reference to and uses Polybius s Histories as source material in his own narrative Polybius was among the first historians to attempt to present history as a sequence of causes and effects based upon a careful examination and criticism of tradition He narrated his history based upon first hand knowledge The Histories capture the varied elements of the story of human behavior nationalism xenophobia duplicitous politics war brutality loyalty valour intelligence reason and resourcefulness Aside from the narrative of the historical events Polybius also included three books of digressions Book 34 was entirely devoted to questions of geography and included some trenchant criticisms of Eratosthenes whom he accused of passing on popular preconceptions or laodogmatika Book 12 was a disquisition on the writing of history citing extensive passages of lost historians such as Callisthenes and Theopompus Most influential was Book 6 which describes Roman political military and moral institutions which he considered key to Rome s success it presented Rome as having a mixed constitution in which monarchical aristocratic and popular elements existed in stable equilibrium This enabled Rome to escape for the time being the cycle of eternal revolutions anacyclosis faced by those with singular constitutions i e many of the Greeks and the Macedonians While Polybius was not the first to advance this view his account provides the most cogent illustration of the ideal for later political theorists A key theme of The Histories is good leadership and Polybius dedicates considerable time to outlining how the good statesman should be rational knowledgeable virtuous and composed The character of the Polybian statesman is exemplified in that of Philip II who Polybius believed exhibited both excellent military prowess and skill as well as proficient ability in diplomacy and moral leadership 12 His beliefs about Philip s character led Polybius to reject the historian Theopompus description of Philip s private drunken debauchery For Polybius it was inconceivable that such an able and effective statesman could have had an immoral and unrestrained private life as described by Theopompus 13 The consequences of bad leadership are also highlighted throughout the Histories Polybius saw for instance the character and leadership of the later Philip V of Macedon one of Rome s leading adversaries in the Greek East as the opposite of his earlier exemplary namesake Philip V became increasingly tyrannical irrational and impious following brilliant military and political success in his youth this resulted Polybius believed in his abandonment by his Greek allies and his eventual defeat by Rome in 197 BC 14 Other important themes running throughout The Histories include the role of Fortune in the affairs of nations how a leader might weather bravely these changes of fortune with dignity 15 the educational value of history and how it should demonstrate cause and effect or apodeiktike to provide lessons for statesmen and that historians should be men of action to gain appropriate experience so as to understand how political and military affairs are likely to pan out pragmatikoi Polybius is considered by some to be the successor of Thucydides in terms of objectivity and critical reasoning and the forefather of scholarly painstaking historical research in the modern scientific sense According to this view his work sets forth the course of history s occurrences with clearness penetration sound judgment and among the circumstances affecting the outcomes he lays special emphasis on geographical conditions Modern historians are especially impressed with the manner in which Polybius used his sources particularly documentary evidence as well as his citation and quotation of sources Furthermore there is some admiration of Polybius s meditation on the nature of historiography in Book 12 His work belongs therefore amongst the greatest productions of ancient historical writing The writer of the Oxford Companion to Classical Literature 1937 praises him for his earnest devotion to truth and his systematic pursuit of causation It has long been acknowledged that Polybius s writings are prone to a certain hagiographic tone when writing of his friends such as Scipio and subject to a vindictive tone when detailing the exploits of his enemies such as Callicrates the Achaean statesman responsible for his Roman exile 16 As a hostage in Rome then as client to the Scipios and after 146 BC a collaborator with Roman rule Polybius was probably in no position to freely express any negative opinions of Rome Peter Green advises that Polybius was chronicling Roman history for a Greek audience to justify what he believed to be the inevitability of Roman rule Nonetheless Green considers Polybius s Histories the best source for the era they cover For Ronald Mellor Polybius was a loyal partisan of Scipio intent on vilifying his patron s opponents 17 Adrian Goldsworthy while using Polybius as a source for Scipio s generalship notes Polybius s underlying and overt bias in Scipio s favour H Ormerod considers that Polybius cannot be regarded as an altogether unprejudiced witness in relation to his betes noires the Aetolians the Carthaginians and the Cretans 18 Other historians perceive considerable negative bias in Polybius s account of Crete 19 on the other hand Hansen notes that the same work along with passages from Strabo and Scylax 20 proved a reliable guide in the eventual rediscovery of the lost city of Kydonia 21 Cryptography editPolybius was responsible for a useful tool in telegraphy that allowed letters to be easily signaled using a numerical system called the Polybius square mentioned in Hist X 45 6 ff 22 This idea also lends itself to cryptographic manipulation and steganography Modern implementations of the Polybius square at least in Western European languages such as English Spanish French German and Italian generally use the Roman alphabet in which those languages are written However Polybius himself was writing in Greek and would have implemented his cipher square in the Greek alphabet Both versions are shown here 1 2 3 4 51 A B C D E2 F G H I J K3 L M N O P4 Q R S T U5 V W X Y Z1 2 3 4 51 A B G D E2 Z H 8 I K3 L M N 3 O4 P P S T Y5 F X PS WIn the Polybius square letters of the alphabet were arranged left to right top to bottom in a 5 5 square When used with the 26 letter Latin alphabet two letters usually I and J are combined When used with the Greek alphabet which has exactly one fewer letters than there are spaces or code points in the square the final 5 5 code point encodes the spaces in between words Alternatively it can denote the end of a sentence or paragraph when writing in continuous script Five numbers are then aligned on the outside top of the square and five numbers on the left side of the square vertically Usually these numbers were arranged 1 through 5 By cross referencing the two numbers along the grid of the square a letter could be deduced In The Histories Polybius specifies how this cypher could be used in fire signals where long range messages could be sent by means of torches raised and lowered to signify the column and row of each letter This was a great leap forward from previous fire signaling which could send prearranged codes only such as if we light the fire it means that the enemy has arrived Other writings of scientific interest include detailed discussions of the machines Archimedes created for the defense of Syracuse against the Romans where Polybius praises the old man and his engineering in the highest terms and an analysis of the usefulness of astronomy to generals both in the Histories Influence edit nbsp Marcus Tullius CiceroPolybius was considered a poor stylist by Dionysius of Halicarnassus writing of Polybius s history that no one has the endurance to reach its end 23 Nevertheless clearly he was widely read by Romans and Greeks alike He is quoted extensively by Strabo writing in the 1st century BC and Athenaeus in the 3rd century AD His emphasis on explaining causes of events rather than just recounting events influenced the historian Sempronius Asellio Polybius is mentioned by Cicero and mined for information by Diodorus Livy Plutarch and Arrian Much of the text that survives today from the later books of The Histories was preserved in Byzantine anthologies nbsp MontesquieuHis works reappeared in the West first in Renaissance Florence Polybius gained a following in Italy and although poor Latin translations hampered proper scholarship on his works they contributed to the city s historical and political discourse Niccolo Machiavelli in his Discourses on Livy evinces familiarity with Polybius Vernacular translations in French German Italian and English first appeared during the 16th century 24 Consequently in the late 16th century Polybius s works found a greater reading audience among the learned public Study of the correspondence of such men as Isaac Casaubon Jacques Auguste de Thou William Camden and Paolo Sarpi reveals a growing interest in Polybius s works and thought during the period Despite the existence of both printed editions in the vernacular and increased scholarly interest however Polybius remained an historian s historian not much read by the public at large 25 Printings of his work in the vernacular remained few in number seven in French five in English John Dryden provided an enthusiastic preface to Sir Henry Sheers edition of 1693 and five in Italian 26 Polybius s political analysis has influenced republican thinkers from Cicero to Charles de Montesquieu to the Founding Fathers of the United States 27 John Adams for example considered him one of the most important teachers of constitutional theory Since the Age of Enlightenment Polybius has in general held appeal to those interested in Hellenistic Greece and early Republican Rome while his political and military writings have lost influence in academia More recently thorough work on the Greek text of Polybius and his historical technique has increased the academic understanding and appreciation of him as a historian According to Edward Tufte he was also a major source for Charles Joseph Minard s figurative map of Hannibal s overland journey into Italy during the Second Punic War 28 In his Meditations On Hunting Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset calls Polybius one of the few great minds that the turbid human species has managed to produce and says the damage to the Histories is without question one of the gravest losses that we have suffered in our Greco Roman heritage The Italian version of his name Polibio was used as a male first name for example the composer Polibio Fumagalli though it never became very common The University of Pennsylvania has an intellectual society the Polybian Society which is named in his honor and serves as a non partisan forum for discussing societal issues and policy Editions and translations editDionysius of Halicarnassus Usher S ed and trans Critical Essays Volume II Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1985 Polybii Historiae editionem a Ludovico Dindorfi curatam retractavit Theodorus Buttner Wobst Lipsiae in aedibus B G Teubneri vol 1 vol 2 vol 3 vol 4 vol 5 1882 1904 Polybius 1922 1927 Polybius The Histories The Loeb Classical Library in Ancient Greek English and Latin Translated by Paton W R London New York William Heinemann G P Putnam s Sone 1922A Polybius Vol I Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 99142 7 Loeb Number L128 Books I II 1922B Polybius Vol II ISBN 0 674 99152 4 Loeb Number L137 Books III IV 1923 Polybius Vol III ISBN 0 674 99153 2 Loeb Number L138 Books V VIII 1925 Polybius Vol IV ISBN 0 674 99175 3 Loeb Number L159 Books IX XV 1926 Polybius Vol V ISBN 0 674 99176 1 Loeb Number L160 Books XVI XXVII 1927 Polybius Vol VI ISBN 0 674 99178 8 Loeb Number L161 Books XXVIII XXXIX Polybius 2012 Polybius The Histories The Loeb Classical Library in Ancient Greek English and Latin Translated by Paton W R Chicago University of Chicago LacusCurtius The Histories or The Rise of the Roman Empire by Polybius At Perseus Project English amp Greek version At LacusCurtius Short introduction to the life and work of Polybius 1670 edition of Polybius s works vol 1 at the Internet archive 1670 edition of Polybius s works vol 2 at the Internet archive Polybius The Rise Of The Roman Empire Penguin 1979 Books 1 5 of History Ethiopian Story Book 8 From the Departure of the Divine Marcus featuring Book I V of The Histories digitized from the World Digital LibrarySee also editAnacyclosis Kyklos Polybius square Mixed governmentNotes and references edit John Ma 2013 Statues and Cities Honorific Portraits and Civic Identity in the Hellenistic World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966891 5 pp 281 282 Polybius and the Founding Fathers The separation of powers Gibson amp Harrison Polybius pp 1 5 Marincola John 2017 On Writing History from Herodotus to Herodian Penguin UK ISBN 9780141393582 Titus Livius Livy The History of Rome Book 39 chapter 35 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2016 11 02 Walbank F W 2014 Philip V of Macedon New York Cambridge University Press p 278 ISBN 9781107630604 a b Sorek Susan 2012 Ancient Historians A Student Handbook Continuum p 76 ISBN 9781441111357 Polybius 150 B C The Rise of the Roman Republic Translated by Ian Scott Kilvert 1979 Penguin Books London England Nicholson Emma 2023 Philip V of Macedon in Polybius s Histories Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192866769 pp 3 34 58 107 118 Athens from Alexander to Antony by Christian Habicht p119 Farrington Scott Thomas February 2015 A Likely Story Rhetoric and the Determination of Truth in Polybius s Histories Histos 9 29 66 p 40 Polybius begins his history proper with the 140th Olympiad because accounts of the remote past amount to hearsay and do not allow for safe judgements dialhpseis and assertions ἀpofaseis regarding the course of events he can relate events he saw himself or he can use the testimony of eyewitnesses footnote 34 Pol 4 2 2 ἐ3 oὗ syµbainei toῖs µὲn aὐtoὺs ἡµᾶs paragegonenai tὰ dὲ parὰ tῶn ἑwrakotwn ἀkhkoenai archive URLs 1 full text 2 abstract amp journal citation Plb 5 9 12 and Nicholson Emma 2023 Philip V of Macedon in Polybius s Histories Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192866769 pp 291 295 Plb 8 9 3 4 Nicholson Emma 2023 Philip V of Macedon in Polybius s Histories Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192866769 pp 59 100 184 227 Plb 1 1 1 2 Peter Green Alexander to Actium Ronald J Mellor The Historians of Ancient Rome H Ormerod Piracy in the Ancient World p 141 Mogens Herman Hansen 1995 Sources for the Ancient Greek City State Symposium August 24 27 1994 Kgl Danske Videnskabernes Selskab 376 pages ISBN 87 7304 267 6 Robert Pashley Travels in Crete 1837 J Murray C Michael Hogan Cydonia Modern Antiquarian January 23 2008 Themodernantiquarian com Retrieved 2010 02 28 Nicholson Emma 7 March 2016 Polybius 1 Greek historian c 200 c 118 BCE Polybius 1 Greek historian Oxford Classical Dictionary doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5172 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 2023 04 26 Comp 4 Polybius Frank W Walbank Ian Scott Kilvert 1979 The Rise of the Roman Empire Penguin Classics ISBN 0 14 044362 2 Burke Peter 1966 A Survey of the Popularity of Ancient Historians 1450 1700 History and Theory History and Theory Vol 5 No 2 5 2 135 152 141 doi 10 2307 2504511 JSTOR 2504511 Burke Peter 1966 A Survey of the Popularity of Ancient Historians 1450 1700 History and Theory History and Theory Vol 5 No 2 5 2 135 152 139 doi 10 2307 2504511 JSTOR 2504511 Marshall Davies Lloyd Polybius and the Founding Fathers the separation of powers Sept 22 1998 Minard s figurative map of Hannibal s war Edwardtufte com Retrieved 2010 02 28 Sources editAncient sources edit Titus Livius of Patavium Livy libri XXI XLV Pseudo Lucian Makrobioi Paulus Orosius libri VII of Histories against PagansModern sources edit Champion Craige B 2004 Cultural Politics in Polybius s Histories Berkeley Univ of California Press Davidson James Polybius in Feldherr Andrew ed The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Historians Cambridge University Press 2009 Derow Peter S 1979 Polybius Rome and the East Journal of Roman Studies 69 1 15 Eckstein Arthur M 1995 Moral Vision in the Histories of Polybius Berkeley Univ of California Press Farrington Scott Thomas 2015 A Likely Story Rhetoric and the Determination of Truth in Polybius Histories Histos The On Line Journal of Ancient Historiography 9 29 66 Gibson Bruce amp Harrison Thomas editors Polybius and his World Essays in Memory of F W Walbank Oxford 2013 McGing Brian C 2010 Polybius The Histories Oxford Approaches to Classical Literature Oxford Oxford Univ Press Momigliano Arnaldo M Sesto Contributo alla Storia degli Studi Classici e del Mondo Antico Rome 1980 Vol V 1974 The Historian s Skin 77 88 Momigliano Bibliography no 531 Vol VI 1973 Polibio Posidonio e l imperialismo Romano 89 Momigliano Bibliography no 525 original publication Atti della Accademia delle Scienze di Torino 107 1972 73 693 707 Moore John M 1965 The Manuscript Tradition of Polybius Cambridge University Press Moore Daniel Walker 2020 Polybius Experience and the Lessons of History Brill Leiden Nicholson Emma 2022 Polybius 1 Greek historian c 200 c 118 BCE Oxford Classical Dictionary doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5172 ISBN 9780199381135 Nicholson Emma 2023 Philip V of Macedon in Polybius Histories Politics History and Fiction Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5172 ISBN 9780199381135 Pausch Dennis 2014 Livy Reading Polybius Adapting Greek Narrative to Roman History In Defining Greek Narrative Edited by Douglas L Cairns amp Ruth Scodel 279 297 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Sacks Kenneth S 1981 Polybius on the Writing of History Berkeley Univ of California Press Schepens Guido and Jan Bollansee eds 2005 The Shadow of Polybius Intertextuality as a Research Tool in Greek Historiography Leuven Belgium Peeters Walbank Frank W Philip V of Macedon the Hare Prize Essay 1939 Cambridge University Press 1940 A Historical Commentary on Polybius Oxford University Press Vol I 1957 Commentary on Books I VI Vol II 1967 Commentary on Books VII XVIII Vol III 1979 Commentary on Books XIX XL 1972 Polybius University of California Press 2002 Polybius Rome and the Hellenistic World Essays and Reflections Cambridge University Press External links edit nbsp Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Ἱstoriai nbsp Quotations related to Polybius at Wikiquote nbsp Works by or about Polybius at Wikisource Works by Polybius at Project Gutenberg Works by Polybius at Perseus Digital Library Works by or about Polybius at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polybius amp oldid 1180008502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.