pezhetairoi
06-24-2008, 01:39
While we cannot doubt the veracity of the tactics used in the Retreat of the Ten Thousand, I have read, in the introduction to the Penguin edition of Anabasis (written by someone whose name I forget), among other places, that the actual role played by Xenophon in all this has been overstated, that he wrote this in reaction to another piece written by another fellow Greek Retreater (don't have the book here in the office, will fill in his name when I get home), in which he did not figure very much at all.
There have been sources, as I understand, further suggesting the possibility Anabasis was an Apology written by Xenophon to glorify himself, namely the Oxyrhynchus Historian/fragments. Reading about this has pretty much shaken my world since I had grown accustomed to thinking of Xenophon as this heroic genius who pretty much was the most creative general before Alexandros, as well as possibly part of his inspiration.
What's the current academic consensus on this? Did Xenophon really do all that, or was that really actually Cheirisophos, or the ghost of Kleandros, or is the jury still out?
There have been sources, as I understand, further suggesting the possibility Anabasis was an Apology written by Xenophon to glorify himself, namely the Oxyrhynchus Historian/fragments. Reading about this has pretty much shaken my world since I had grown accustomed to thinking of Xenophon as this heroic genius who pretty much was the most creative general before Alexandros, as well as possibly part of his inspiration.
What's the current academic consensus on this? Did Xenophon really do all that, or was that really actually Cheirisophos, or the ghost of Kleandros, or is the jury still out?