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Cyropaedia

Autor Xenophon
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 ian 2018
Cyropaedia: The Education of Cyrus by Xenophon. The Cyropaedia is a largely fictional biography of Cyrus the Great, written around 370 BC by the Athenian gentleman-soldier, and student of Socrates, Xenophon of Athens. Aspects of it would become a model for medieval writers of the genre known as mirrors for princes. In turn it was a strong influence upon the most well-known but atypical of these, Machiavelli's The Prince, which was an important influence in the rejection of medieval political thinking, and the development of modern politics. A very few words may suffice by way of introduction to this translation of the Cyropaedia. Professor Jowett, whose Plato represents the high-water mark of classical translation, has given us the following reminders: "An English translation ought to be idiomatic and interesting, not only to the scholar, but also to the unlearned reader. It should read as an original work, and should also be the most faithful transcript which can be made of the language from which the translation is taken, consistently with the first requirement of all, that it be English. The excellence of a translation will consist, not merely in the faithful rendering of words, or in the composition of a sentence only, or yet of a single paragraph, but in the colour and style of the whole work."
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783732620975
ISBN-10: 3732620972
Pagini: 252
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Outlook Verlag

Notă biografică

Geboren am um 430 v.Chr. Attika; gestorben am nach 355 v.Chr.. Nach 410 v.Chr. schloß sich Xenophon an Sokrates an. 401 v. Chr. nahm er als »Schlachtenbummler« am Zug des jüngeren Kyros gegen den Perserkönig Artaxerxes II. teil. Nach dem Tode des Kyros bei Kunaxa am Euphrat wurden die griechischen Offiziere von dem persischen Satrapen Tissaphernes ermordet; die führerlos gewordenen 10.000 griechischen Söldner leitete Xenophon durch Armenien ans Schwarze Meer und von dort an den Hellespont. 396 begleitete er den Spartanerkönig Agesilaos erst nach Kleinasien und dann gegen die mit Athen verbündeten Thebaner. Nach der Schlacht bei Koroneia (394) aus Athen verbannt, ließ sich Xenophon in Skillus bei Olympia nieder, das er nach 371 v.Chr. wieder verlassen mußte. Den Rest seines Lebens hat er wohl in Korinth verbracht, obwohl die Verbannung vermutlich schon 368/67 v.Chr. aufgehoben wurde.