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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
Burkhard Meissner (Helmut Schmidt University)
저널정보
한국서양고전학회 서양고전학연구 서양고전학연구 제40권
발행연도
2010.6
수록면
57 - 82 (26page)

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초록· 키워드

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This papers is about Greeks and pirates; this way of putting it could be seen as somehow misleading: It could be understood as Greeks against pirates or as Greeks as pirates. As we shall see, the relationship between Greeks and pirates is an ambivalent one, and the ambivalent nature of the ancient Greeks’ relations to pirates and piracy are probably no exception: Generally, the Greek world regarded pirates as something exotic, as outsiders. However: Although conceptualized under the perspective of an dissociating and disparaging ideology, which, reduced to literary topoi and handed down in discontinuous waves, still influences modern pictures of adventurous piracy, pirates were always part of the Greek world.
To describe the ambivalent nature of Greek piracy, we will start with literary pirates (1), proceed to how pirates were commonly conceived of (2) before we shortly look at Homeric (3), classical (4) and hellenistic piracy (5). In regard to what pirates actually did it will be noticed that this was not so different from what pirates do nowadays: mainly kidnapping people to exact ransom money.

목차

1. Literary Pirates
2. Pirates, Thieves, Robbers: Common notions
3. Homeric Pirates
4. Classical Pirates
5. Late classical and hellenistic pirates
The story of Heracleitos
Piracy and politics in the Greek Social War
Hellenistic Pirates: What did they do, where did they operate, when did they attack?
Rome’s Interventions
Summary
Further Reading:

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