‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’

<p style="text-align:justify;"> This paper explores the function of geographical and historical patterning in Diodorus’ work, in particular parallels between Sicily and mainland Greece created both through explicit plotting of events and through intratextual and intertextual echoes....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rood, T
Format: Journal article
Published: Newcastle University 2018
_version_ 1826295292315566080
author Rood, T
author_facet Rood, T
author_sort Rood, T
collection OXFORD
description <p style="text-align:justify;"> This paper explores the function of geographical and historical patterning in Diodorus’ work, in particular parallels between Sicily and mainland Greece created both through explicit plotting of events and through intratextual and intertextual echoes. It examines how Diodorus relates two Sicilian leaders, Agathocles and Dion, to Alexander and Philip of Macedon; how he creates links between Agesilaus’ invasion of Asia and Dionysius I’s conflict with Carthage; and how he picks up Thucydides’ Sicilian narrative in his account of Gelon’s victory over Carthage. The paper also explores and questions the language of East and West that scholars have applied in speaking of links between mainland Greece and Sicily. </p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T03:58:47Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:c3ca8c98-d801-458a-8a51-f6322c5558c2
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T03:58:47Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Newcastle University
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:c3ca8c98-d801-458a-8a51-f6322c5558c22022-03-27T06:19:01Z‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c3ca8c98-d801-458a-8a51-f6322c5558c2Symplectic Elements at OxfordNewcastle University2018Rood, T <p style="text-align:justify;"> This paper explores the function of geographical and historical patterning in Diodorus’ work, in particular parallels between Sicily and mainland Greece created both through explicit plotting of events and through intratextual and intertextual echoes. It examines how Diodorus relates two Sicilian leaders, Agathocles and Dion, to Alexander and Philip of Macedon; how he creates links between Agesilaus’ invasion of Asia and Dionysius I’s conflict with Carthage; and how he picks up Thucydides’ Sicilian narrative in his account of Gelon’s victory over Carthage. The paper also explores and questions the language of East and West that scholars have applied in speaking of links between mainland Greece and Sicily. </p>
spellingShingle Rood, T
‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’
title ‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’
title_full ‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’
title_fullStr ‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’
title_full_unstemmed ‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’
title_short ‘Geographical and Historical Patterning in Diodorus Siculus’
title_sort geographical and historical patterning in diodorus siculus
work_keys_str_mv AT roodt geographicalandhistoricalpatterningindiodorussiculus