Ancient Greece: Philosophy, Democracy, and Endless War — Fexingo History
In 416 BCE, during a lull in the Peloponnesian War, Athens sent a fleet to the tiny neutral island of Melos. What followed was not a battle but a negotiation — and Thucydides preserved it as the Melian Dialogue, one of the most chilling texts in Western history. This episode examines the raw exchange between Athenian envoys and Melian leaders: the Athenians argue that might makes right, that justice only applies between equals, and that the Melians must submit or be destroyed. The Melians appeal to fairness, to the gods, and to Spartan aid. In the end, Athens besieged the island, executed all men of military age, and enslaved the women and children. We explore the historical context — Melos was a Spartan colony but had remained neutral — and the philosophical questions the dialogue raises about democracy, empire, and moral hypocrisy. We also discuss the debate among historians: did Thucydides invent the speeches? And what does the Melian Dialogue tell us about Athens at its imperial peak, the same city that produced the Parthenon and the tragedies of Euripides? #MelianDialogue #Thucydides #Athens #Melos #PeloponnesianWar #AncientGreece #AthenianEmpire #Realpolitik #MightMakesRight #HistoryofWar #Sparta #Alcibiades #416BCE #GreekHistory #Imperialism #DemocracyAndEmpire #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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