RedWine
09-30-2006, 12:53 PM
From East Against West: The First Encounter: The Life of Themistocles (PublishAmerica, 2005) by Dmitry V Shlapentokh, translated from the Russian by Ludmila Prednewa. Book description: "The United States is possibly the last Western empire that has tried to impose the global predominance of the West. It was assumed in the beginning of the war in the Middle East that American success was predestined and that this encounter would be similar to the first Greek and Persian War in 5 B.C. It is from this prospective that historians have approached the event. This book challenges this assumption. The great Persians had a much greater chance for victory than the Greeks. It was just luck and the genius of a few Greek politicians that saved the West." Dr. Shlapentokh is Associate Professor of History, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, at Indiana University, South Bend.
This is a history of a man, one of countless billions, who has lived and died on this planet. This is the history of Themistocles – the history of a politician who lived in Greece 2500 years ago. He is of importance to us, for it is he who first leads his Greeks against the Persians; it is he who leads the first democracy against the first truly global despotic empire. Thus, it was a war not only of personal triumph, but of the triumph of democracy against the regime of despotism. In the views of Western historians (and it was they who dominated the field), the Greeks could not but be victorious, for democracy and political liberties were viewed to be not just as a goal in itself, not just as the bright future of humanity, but as prerequisite for political might itself. Therefore, the Greeks’ victory was inevitable, and therefore too, Themistocles’ personal misfortune was to be no more than a personal tragedy. This work suggests a different interpretation of events.
http://img245.imageshack.us/img245/3491/141375691301ss500sclzzzzzzzv1108773130we6.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The Despotic State: the beginning and the end of history
Historians, who observed the victory of the Greeks, had a tendency to pre-ordain the Greeks’ victory. In their view, the Persian Empire was doomed in the confrontation with the democratic Greece. The Persians were doomed in the same way as the Soviet Union was doomed in its confrontation with the democratic West in general, and with the United States in particular. The Persian Empire, in this vision, was similar to the Soviet Union – it was huge, but it was actually a colossus standing on feet of clay. Several reasons may be given for weakness of the Persian Empire. One need only begin with the numerous nationalities encompassed within the empire, grumbling under the Persian despotic ruler and ready for revolt. And in any case, these were people who made for poor military material. Persian economy was also underdeveloped and their elite were ossified in their habits and views. It was not surprising that the Persian military machine was huge, but obsolete in its weapons and strategy. And the smaller but mobile Greek forces had crushed them with the same ease with which American and British Special Forces had decimated the rank and file of the Taliban or Iraquis – the courageous but primitive Asiatics. A close and unbiased look reveals a different picture of the Persian Empire – as well organized from both a political and social, and economic point of view. The empire had exercised a remarkable level of ethnic and political tolerance and one could state that most of the subjects of the king lived as well or possibly even better, than the people who lived in most of the Greek states. Based on this solid economic and political foundation, the Persians had created an army which was not only huge, but in many ways advanced. Certainly it had its shortcomings, but it also had advantages which overshadowed these shortcomings.
Fathers of the Nations
Persians were not despotic rulers as the word ‘despot’ is usually understood. One of the preconceived ideas which has dominated the West, is the assumption that Persians were ruled by Kings who ruled without any restraint. ‘Despotism’ here implied arbitrariness – the image of a tyrannical ruler who used his absolute power to please himself and his cronies. The image here is of an ‘oriental ruler’, one which can be directly related to the image of the ruler of Stalinist Russia (USSR) where Stalin was seen by some historians as just such a brutal maniacal ruler with an obsession with power for the sake of power. This was not the case with the Persian monarchy. With their broad tolerance towards the peoples of different cultural and religious traditions, the Persians brought about a revolution in the art of building empires. Here they stand in sharp contrast to the Assyrians--the first builders of a global empire. Assyrians were great and brutal warriors who broadly resorted to the practice of mass deportation of various ethnic groups. It was part of Assyrian strategy to uproot the conquered people and to send them from their native land. This strategy would become quite prevalent in Stalin’s USSR in the future. Assyrians also regarded brutal force as the only way of dealing with the conquered people, and their rulers saw the conquered peoples just as objects for exploitation and plunder. The story was a different one with Persian kings.
The King had a strong sense of mission and did not regard his rule merely as personal aggrandizement. There was, in him, a strong sense of mission and responsibility, in which the building of the empire in concert with the various ethnic groups was an essential element. “The king’s rule was legalistic, not arbitrary. The monarch was clearly bound to the acknowledged obligations entered into with his vassals, obligations that modified his rule. Darius ruled with authority but was also bound to duties and his own sovereign undertakings; his state of affairs reflected the cosmic order, for the eternal Zarathustrian law of Righteousness retained primacy. In turn, the ruling imperial power of the king necessitated his vassals’ loyalty and obligation to him.” (Balcer, 135)
The King regarded the maintaining of the internal order of his empire as the major responsibility of his rule. By insisting on the preservation of internal peace and stability, he was not a modern totalitarian, who insisted on the absolute homogeneity of all segments of the state. The Persian empire was based on the incorporation of the tradition of all its various peoples; it was based on the idea of toleration for various cultures (Balcer, p. 53). By the toleration of the various ethnic and cultural traditions of the empire, the Persians had maintained a particular type of “multiculturalism” that stood in sharp contrast to the Greek tradition, which often implied that those who were not Greeks were simply “barbarians.” This tolerance and respect for other cultures could be seen among all Persian rulers.
This is a history of a man, one of countless billions, who has lived and died on this planet. This is the history of Themistocles – the history of a politician who lived in Greece 2500 years ago. He is of importance to us, for it is he who first leads his Greeks against the Persians; it is he who leads the first democracy against the first truly global despotic empire. Thus, it was a war not only of personal triumph, but of the triumph of democracy against the regime of despotism. In the views of Western historians (and it was they who dominated the field), the Greeks could not but be victorious, for democracy and political liberties were viewed to be not just as a goal in itself, not just as the bright future of humanity, but as prerequisite for political might itself. Therefore, the Greeks’ victory was inevitable, and therefore too, Themistocles’ personal misfortune was to be no more than a personal tragedy. This work suggests a different interpretation of events.
http://img245.imageshack.us/img245/3491/141375691301ss500sclzzzzzzzv1108773130we6.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The Despotic State: the beginning and the end of history
Historians, who observed the victory of the Greeks, had a tendency to pre-ordain the Greeks’ victory. In their view, the Persian Empire was doomed in the confrontation with the democratic Greece. The Persians were doomed in the same way as the Soviet Union was doomed in its confrontation with the democratic West in general, and with the United States in particular. The Persian Empire, in this vision, was similar to the Soviet Union – it was huge, but it was actually a colossus standing on feet of clay. Several reasons may be given for weakness of the Persian Empire. One need only begin with the numerous nationalities encompassed within the empire, grumbling under the Persian despotic ruler and ready for revolt. And in any case, these were people who made for poor military material. Persian economy was also underdeveloped and their elite were ossified in their habits and views. It was not surprising that the Persian military machine was huge, but obsolete in its weapons and strategy. And the smaller but mobile Greek forces had crushed them with the same ease with which American and British Special Forces had decimated the rank and file of the Taliban or Iraquis – the courageous but primitive Asiatics. A close and unbiased look reveals a different picture of the Persian Empire – as well organized from both a political and social, and economic point of view. The empire had exercised a remarkable level of ethnic and political tolerance and one could state that most of the subjects of the king lived as well or possibly even better, than the people who lived in most of the Greek states. Based on this solid economic and political foundation, the Persians had created an army which was not only huge, but in many ways advanced. Certainly it had its shortcomings, but it also had advantages which overshadowed these shortcomings.
Fathers of the Nations
Persians were not despotic rulers as the word ‘despot’ is usually understood. One of the preconceived ideas which has dominated the West, is the assumption that Persians were ruled by Kings who ruled without any restraint. ‘Despotism’ here implied arbitrariness – the image of a tyrannical ruler who used his absolute power to please himself and his cronies. The image here is of an ‘oriental ruler’, one which can be directly related to the image of the ruler of Stalinist Russia (USSR) where Stalin was seen by some historians as just such a brutal maniacal ruler with an obsession with power for the sake of power. This was not the case with the Persian monarchy. With their broad tolerance towards the peoples of different cultural and religious traditions, the Persians brought about a revolution in the art of building empires. Here they stand in sharp contrast to the Assyrians--the first builders of a global empire. Assyrians were great and brutal warriors who broadly resorted to the practice of mass deportation of various ethnic groups. It was part of Assyrian strategy to uproot the conquered people and to send them from their native land. This strategy would become quite prevalent in Stalin’s USSR in the future. Assyrians also regarded brutal force as the only way of dealing with the conquered people, and their rulers saw the conquered peoples just as objects for exploitation and plunder. The story was a different one with Persian kings.
The King had a strong sense of mission and did not regard his rule merely as personal aggrandizement. There was, in him, a strong sense of mission and responsibility, in which the building of the empire in concert with the various ethnic groups was an essential element. “The king’s rule was legalistic, not arbitrary. The monarch was clearly bound to the acknowledged obligations entered into with his vassals, obligations that modified his rule. Darius ruled with authority but was also bound to duties and his own sovereign undertakings; his state of affairs reflected the cosmic order, for the eternal Zarathustrian law of Righteousness retained primacy. In turn, the ruling imperial power of the king necessitated his vassals’ loyalty and obligation to him.” (Balcer, 135)
The King regarded the maintaining of the internal order of his empire as the major responsibility of his rule. By insisting on the preservation of internal peace and stability, he was not a modern totalitarian, who insisted on the absolute homogeneity of all segments of the state. The Persian empire was based on the incorporation of the tradition of all its various peoples; it was based on the idea of toleration for various cultures (Balcer, p. 53). By the toleration of the various ethnic and cultural traditions of the empire, the Persians had maintained a particular type of “multiculturalism” that stood in sharp contrast to the Greek tradition, which often implied that those who were not Greeks were simply “barbarians.” This tolerance and respect for other cultures could be seen among all Persian rulers.