Philip III’s diagramma of 319 BCE - in which he decrees the Greek cities to be free - represented little more than a statement of power shrouded in ideology and propaganda. In so doing, the ordinance becomes a condemnation of the policies that led to a loss of Greek liberty under Alexander and Antipater and more recently by the latter’s son, Cassander, in favor of the original settlement formulated by Philip II, the father of Philip III.
Propaganda Strategies and Political Documents: Philip III’s Diagramma and the Greeks in 319 BC
PODDIGHE, ELISABETTA
2013-01-01
Abstract
Philip III’s diagramma of 319 BCE - in which he decrees the Greek cities to be free - represented little more than a statement of power shrouded in ideology and propaganda. In so doing, the ordinance becomes a condemnation of the policies that led to a loss of Greek liberty under Alexander and Antipater and more recently by the latter’s son, Cassander, in favor of the original settlement formulated by Philip II, the father of Philip III.File in questo prodotto:
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