1980
DOI: 10.2307/630737
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The freedom of the Greeks of Asia: on the Origins of a Concept and the Creation of a Slogan

Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to discover the origins of a political catchphrase, ‘the freedom of the Greeks of Asia’. The opening section presents and analyses first the evidence of Herodotus for the period from the Lydian conquest to the Mycale campaign, then that of Diodorus, where extant, for the same events. The contrasting usage of these two authors poses the question: when did the Greeks of Asia first come to be regularly thought of as a corporate body? That question is studied in the second section thro… Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The first variant form of Panhellenism is distinguished, above all, by its focus on defence rather than attack: the freedom and well-being of Greece still needs to be sethon saved Greece from 'the day of slavery' (δούλιον ἐ ͂ μαρ: IG I 3 503/4, A.I, line 2 = FGE XXa, line 4); the Greeks who fought in 480 and 479 are praised for 'rescuing the cities from hateful slavery' (δουλοσύνας στυγερᾶς ῥυσάμενοι πόλιας: D. S. XI.33.2 = FGE XVIIb, line 4); see further Mitchell 2007: 10-11, and, on the wider context of the association of Greek identity with freedom (and Persian with slavery) in this period, Raaflaub 2004: 59-89. 11 On freedom propaganda (especially as applied to the Asia Minor Greeks) in the Classical Period see Seager & Tuplin 1980; in the Hellenistic period, Seager 1981; on its use in Greek politics in the Roman period, Dmitriev 2011. 12 Note in particular the complaints of the Mytileneans at Thuc.…”
Section: Panhellenism Without Persiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first variant form of Panhellenism is distinguished, above all, by its focus on defence rather than attack: the freedom and well-being of Greece still needs to be sethon saved Greece from 'the day of slavery' (δούλιον ἐ ͂ μαρ: IG I 3 503/4, A.I, line 2 = FGE XXa, line 4); the Greeks who fought in 480 and 479 are praised for 'rescuing the cities from hateful slavery' (δουλοσύνας στυγερᾶς ῥυσάμενοι πόλιας: D. S. XI.33.2 = FGE XVIIb, line 4); see further Mitchell 2007: 10-11, and, on the wider context of the association of Greek identity with freedom (and Persian with slavery) in this period, Raaflaub 2004: 59-89. 11 On freedom propaganda (especially as applied to the Asia Minor Greeks) in the Classical Period see Seager & Tuplin 1980; in the Hellenistic period, Seager 1981; on its use in Greek politics in the Roman period, Dmitriev 2011. 12 Note in particular the complaints of the Mytileneans at Thuc.…”
Section: Panhellenism Without Persiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That much is evinced, for example, by the 23rd century BCE mass rebellion of the Sumerians against the Akkadian ‘Sargon’ (literally ‘the legitimate king’), whom they deemed a ‘foreign ruler’ (Westenholz : 39). Likewise, in the early fourth century BCE, ‘the Greeks of Asia first came to be consistently thought of as a unit, and their freedom to be regularly exploited as a slogan’ against foreign invaders (Seager and Tuplin : 141). Ancient Jews and Greeks had not only engendered a sense of collectivity, augmented by beliefs and practices, but developed historical narratives of sacrifice, homeland and chosenness/mission (Grosby ; Roshwald ).…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%