‘To be magnanimous and grateful’: The Entanglement of Cities and Empires in the Hellenistic Aegean

Publication date

2021-02

Authors

Strootman, RORCID 0000-0002-1642-0048ISNI 0000000036416527

Editors

Gygax, Marc Domingo
Zuiderhoek, Arjan

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

In the Hellenistic period, cities were the cornerstones of imperial rule. Cities were the loci for the acquisition of capital and manpower, and imperial agents (philoi) were recruited for a large part among Greek civic elites. This chapter departs from the dual premise that premodern empires are negotiated enterprises and that they are often networks of interaction rather than territorial states. The relentless competition between three rival superpowers in the Hellenistic Aegean – the Seleukid, Ptolemaic and Antigonid Empires – gave cities a good bargaining position vis-à-vis these empires. The fact that the imperial courts were dominated by philoi from the Aegean poleis moreover meant that these cities held a central and privileged place in Hellenistic imperialism, and benefited greatly from it. Royal benefactions structured imperial-local interactions. They were instrumental in a complex of reciprocal gift-exchange between empires and cities. Empires most of all needed capital, loyalty and military support. As kings were usually short of funds, the gifts by which they hoped to win the support of cities against their rivals often came in the form of immaterial benefactions like the granting of privileges and the protection of civic autonomy.

Keywords

Ancient History, Ancient Greece, Hellenistic World, Hellenistic kingship, Polis, Cities, Seleucid Empire, Ptolemaic Empire, Taverne

Citation

Strootman, R 2021, ‘To be magnanimous and grateful’ : The Entanglement of Cities and Empires in the Hellenistic Aegean. in M D Gygax & A Zuiderhoek (eds), Benefactors and the Polis : Origins and Development of the Public Gift in the Greek Cities from the Homeric World to Late Antiquity. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 137-178. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108895859.007