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Herodotus
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[deleted user]
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Dec 08, 2008 07:05AM
A couple of weeks ago, RA said that his purchase of the new Herodotus was almost sexual. It prompted me to finally start reading my own, more modest copy. I'm loving it, but given that it's not completely accurate historically, I found myself wondering, "Why do we read Herodotus?" I know, I know, why do we read anything, but seriously, if you read Herodotus, why? Frankly, I read it because I want to say I've read it, thinking that that will make me seem somehow less stupid than I actually am. Why do you read it?
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I love Greek history in general, though...the manner in which all the people and cities interact...all that. Universal themes lurk on just about every page.
By the way, in the first ten pages of Herodotus you get a fairly entertaining bitchfest between city states about stealing each other's wives, then a king who wants to show off how hot his wife is to his bodyguard so he lets him see her naked, and she gets PISSED. I won't tell you what happens next.

And I've never read any Herodotus, though based on RA's description I may want to track him down.

http://www.amazon.com/Landmark-Herodo...
I also read the landmark Thucydides...the landmark editions are fantastic.
http://www.amazon.com/Landmark-Thucyd...
Great post, Ginnie. RA, in your new avatar, you look ready to be the next Steve Jobs should his bout with cancer not go so well.

Sally, the Romans pronounced it Kikero. We say Sisero, thanks to the British, who sometimes call him Tully.
I look at the heading and I keep seeing Hero.us like it is a web site.

It was pretty wasn't it, Logan. Speaking of pretty, is Beowulf out on dvd, yet?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QpXMO...
(Oh shit, now I have to go watch the whole thing again 'cause that laughing felt good.)

After recovering his tyranny in this way, Peisistratos married the daughter of Megakles in accordance with their agreement. But since he already had full-grown sons, and the Alkmeonids were said to be under a curse, he did not want his new wife to bear his children, and so had intercourse with her in an indecent way. His wife kept quiet about this at first, but later (I do not know whether she was questioned about it or not), she did tell her mother, who then told her husband. Megakles, responding to what he considered a grave insult by Peisistratos, flew into a terrible rage, and in his fury he ended his hostility with his political enemies and united with them.
Yeah, I just finished the passage about Persian customs. I enjoy how he says that the "most sensible" custom they have basically involves the pimping off of daughters, but that the custom he does not approve of at all is how Persian women, at least once in their lifetimes, have to go to the Temple of Aphrodite and have sex with a complete stranger.
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