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Did the ancient Greeks know of collective tyranny?

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2005
4330.pdf (135.4Kb)
Authors
Jordović, Ivan
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
The significance of the question as to whether the ancient Greeks had the notion of collective tyranny results not only from the fact that the answer may help us understand the evolution of Greek political thought, but also from the fact that the study of the oppressive regimes whose exact nature was open to controversy should not consider them only in terms of oligarchy or tyranny, since contemporary attitudes to such regimes were often powerfully influenced by stereotypes. For that reason this study focuses on the notion of dynasties and shows that it, not identical but very similar to the modern notion of collective tyranny, was known to the Greeks.
Source:
Balcanica, 2005, 36, 17-33

DOI: 10.2298/BALC0536017J

ISSN: 0350-7653

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URI
http://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/4219
Collections
  • Balcanica
Institution
Балканолошки институт САНУ / Institute for Balkan Studies SASA
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jordović, Ivan
PY  - 2005
UR  - http://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/4219
AB  - The significance of the question as to whether the ancient Greeks had the notion of collective tyranny results not only from the fact that the answer may help us understand the evolution of Greek political thought, but also from the fact that the study of the oppressive regimes whose exact nature was open to controversy should not consider them only in terms of oligarchy or tyranny, since contemporary attitudes to such regimes were often powerfully influenced by stereotypes. For that reason this study focuses on the notion of dynasties and shows that it, not identical but very similar to the modern notion of collective tyranny, was known to the Greeks.
T2  - Balcanica
T1  - Did the ancient Greeks know of collective tyranny?
SP  - 17
EP  - 33
IS  - 36
DO  - 10.2298/BALC0536017J
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jordović, Ivan",
year = "2005",
url = "http://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/4219",
abstract = "The significance of the question as to whether the ancient Greeks had the notion of collective tyranny results not only from the fact that the answer may help us understand the evolution of Greek political thought, but also from the fact that the study of the oppressive regimes whose exact nature was open to controversy should not consider them only in terms of oligarchy or tyranny, since contemporary attitudes to such regimes were often powerfully influenced by stereotypes. For that reason this study focuses on the notion of dynasties and shows that it, not identical but very similar to the modern notion of collective tyranny, was known to the Greeks.",
journal = "Balcanica",
title = "Did the ancient Greeks know of collective tyranny?",
pages = "17-33",
number = "36",
doi = "10.2298/BALC0536017J"
}
Jordović I. Did the ancient Greeks know of collective tyranny?. Balcanica. 2005;(36):17-33
,& Jordović, I. (2005). Did the ancient Greeks know of collective tyranny?.
Balcanica, null(36), 17-33. 
https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC0536017J
Jordović Ivan, "Did the ancient Greeks know of collective tyranny?" null, no. 36 (2005):17-33,
https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC0536017J .

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