Description

A brilliant, fascinating portrait of the intellectual tradition of Greek writers and thinkers during the Age of Rome.

In 146 BC, Greece yielded to the military might of the Roman Republic; sixty years later, when Athens and other Greek city-states rebelled against Rome, the Roman general Lucius Cornelius Sulla destroyed the city of Socrates and Plato, laying waste to the famous Academy where Aristotle had studied. However, the traditions of Greek cultural life continued to flourish during the centuries of Roman rule that followed—in the lives and work of a distinguished array of philosophers, doctors, scientists, geographers, and theologians.

Charles Freeman's accounts of such luminaries as the physician Galen, the geographer Ptolemy, and the philosopher Plotinus are interwoven with contextual "interludes" that showcase a sequence of unjustly neglected and richly influential lives. A cultural history on an epic scale, The Children of Athena presents the story of a rich and vibrant tradition of Greek intellectual inquiry across a period of more than five hundred years, from the second century BC to the start of the fifth century AD.

About the author(s)

Charles Freeman is an expert on the ancient world and its legacy. He has worked on archaeological digs on the continents surrounding the Mediterranean. Freeman is the author of numerous books over the past decades, including The Closing of the Western Mind and A New History of Early Christianity. He lives in Britain.

Reviews

"Children of Athena is an absorbing romp through Greek (and Roman) history, full of learning and interest, which is just what the book's manifold subjects deserve." 

The Critic

"Charles Freeman’s The Children of Athena is an ambitious and readable attempt to persuade you to have a go at some Epictetus, Lucian or Arrian. Mr. Freeman’s book can be seen as a splendidly old-fashioned project: an attempt to recover the Classical tradition as it might have appeared to Ficino, Erasmus or Montaigne before 19th-century taste decreed that only 'early' Greek texts were worth reading. The Children of Athena offers a kaleidoscopic survey of Greek intellectual life across five centuries. Mr. Freeman has filled a real gap. Although there have been excellent scholarly books on Greek literature and thought under the Roman empire, I know of no other survey of intellectual life in the imperial Greek world accessible to the nonspecialist reader."

 

The Wall Street Journal

"An enjoyable, very readable book that refreshes our knowledge of those twenty important Greek thinkers but also reminds us that empires can reap a rich reward from tolerance and respect of older traditions."

Classics for All (UK)

"Historian Freeman offers an enlightening survey of the Greek intellectual tradition during the Roman Empire. It adds up to a lively series of character portraits that shed light on the history of ideas."

Publishers Weekly