Elizabeth Irwin
Columbia University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Elizabeth Irwin.
Archive | 2007
Elizabeth Irwin; Emily Greenwood
Placed at the very centre of Herodotus’ work (5.28–6.42), the Ionian Revolt of 499–494 bc plays a pivotal role, both chronologically and causally, linking the Persians’ Eastern campaigns to their invasions of Greece.2 It also represents a crucial moment in Herodotus’ history of the Ionians, which spans the whole work from beginning to end. The Ionians jump-start the Histories, one might say, and they do so because they find themselves at the receiving end of the first known Eastern aggressions against Greeks (1.5.3, 6.2–3). Croesus of Lydia completes ‘the first subjection of Ionia’, as the narrator summarizes at the end of the Croesus logos.3 The second is called ‘enslavement’, when Cyrus defeats Croesus and conquers his possessions.4 And so is the third, which occurs after the failure of the revolt we are examining:
Archive | 2005
Elizabeth Irwin
The Journal of Hellenic Studies | 1998
Elizabeth Irwin
Archive | 2007
Elizabeth Irwin; Emily Greenwood
Archive | 2006
Elizabeth Irwin
Classical World | 2009
Elizabeth Irwin
Archive | 2007
Elizabeth Irwin; Emily Greenwood
Archive | 2007
Elizabeth Irwin; Emily Greenwood
Bulletin of The Institute of Classical Studies | 1999
Elizabeth Irwin
Archive | 2013
Klaus Geus; Elizabeth Irwin; Thomas Poiss