Πελοποννησιακός Πόλεμος, Τόμος τρίτος by Thucydides

(21 User reviews)   7199
By Helen Allen Posted on Jan 2, 2026
In Category - Parenting
Thucydides, 456? BCE-396 BCE Thucydides, 456? BCE-396 BCE
Greek
Hey, you know that feeling when you think a war is almost over, and then everything gets even worse? That's Book Three of Thucydides' Peloponnesian War. Forget the big battles for a second. This is where the real, ugly mess starts. We're talking about a civil war inside a civil war on the island of Corcyra, where neighbors turn on each other with terrifying brutality. Thucydides shows us what happens when the rules completely break down and words like 'justice' and 'honor' lose all meaning. It's a chilling, masterful autopsy of a society tearing itself apart, and it feels way too familiar. If you want to understand how chaos spreads, start here.
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Thucydides isn't just listing battles. He's building a case for how war changes people. The Peloponnesian War, Volume Three picks up as the massive conflict between Athens and Sparta grinds on. But the most shocking events happen away from the main armies.

The Story

The book covers several years of the war, but its heart is the brutal civil strife on the island of Corcyra (modern Corfu). Athenian and Spartan factions on the island turn against each other. What starts as political rivalry explodes into pure savagery—murder in temples, betrayal of families, and a complete collapse of trust. Thucydides describes this nightmare in stark detail, showing how the larger war infected every corner of Greek life. Alongside this, we see major events like the dramatic Athenian debate over punishing the rebellious city of Mytilene, where the question isn't just about strategy, but about what kind of empire Athens wants to be.

Why You Should Read It

This volume is where Thucydides stops being just a historian and becomes a psychologist of entire societies. The Corcyra episode is a timeless study of what happens under extreme pressure. You'll read descriptions of political rhetoric being twisted to justify anything, and it will ring bells. It's not an easy read—it's often grim—but it's breathtakingly insightful. He makes you feel the tension of the Mytilene debate, where one passionate speech literally saves a city from massacre.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves deep dives into human nature, political strategy, or the messy reality behind history's big headlines. It's for the reader who wants more than dates and kings; it's for the reader who wants to know why things fall apart. If you've ever wondered how societies fracture from within during a crisis, this ancient text has uncomfortable, brilliant answers.



🟢 Public Domain Notice

This work has been identified as being free of known copyright restrictions. Knowledge should be free and accessible.

Edward Torres
2 months ago

Wow.

Logan Rodriguez
1 year ago

Recommended.

William Harris
3 weeks ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

Liam Walker
1 year ago

Essential reading for students of this field.

Deborah Lee
1 year ago

Perfect.

5
5 out of 5 (21 User reviews )

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