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Xenophon’s March

Into The Lair Of The Persian Lion

Contributors

By John Prevas

Formats and Prices

Price

$35.00

Price

$45.00 CAD

Format

Format:

  1. Hardcover $35.00 $45.00 CAD
  2. ebook $23.99 $30.99 CAD

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around January 4, 2002. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

The year is 403 B.C. The Athenian philosopher Xenophon finds himself with an army of Greeks marching to what is now Turkey. Their mission: to aid the Persian pretender Cyrus in a war against his brother Artaxerxes. At a great battle, Cyrus is killed and his army destroyed—except for the Greeks holding his right flank. Xenophon and the Greeks are now stranded in the heart of the Persian Empire, outnumbered a hundred to one. The story of Xenophon’s march to escape the Persian noose is an intensely personal and human tale, replete with clashes of arms and desperate hardships. It is also the tale of two civilizations at mortal odds with each other. With their turbulent mix of anarchy and democracy, Xenophon’s men resembled a mobile Greek city, cutting both a military and a cultural slash through the Persian Empire. Though Xenophon’s journey would end badly, his experience in the East would prove invaluable for those who followed, for sixty years later, the Greeks would return to Persia under Alexander. John Prevas brings this epoch-shaping story to life with a compelling narrative vivified by his personal retracing of much of the route trod by Xenophon and his men in one of history’s great adventures.

On Sale
Jan 4, 2002
Page Count
256 pages
Publisher
Da Capo
ISBN-13
9780306811173

John Prevas

About the Author

John Prevas is a New York Times bestselling author whose first book, Hannibal Crosses the Alps, ignited the debate among academics over which pass Hannibal used — a debate which continues today. He has been featured in a documentary about Hannibal filmed in the Alps by the BBC and has spoken on Hannibal as a leadership figure to United Nations ambassadors, the Smithsonian Institute, the Hoover Institute at Stanford University, the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, and at Forbes CEO conferences. Prevas has appeared on the History Channel, CNN, CNN International, NPR, C-Span’s Book TV, and Fox Television.

Learn more about this author