

Angelos Chaniotis, "Age of Conquests: The Greek World from Alexander to Hadrian" (Harvard UP, 2018)
Oct 19, 2025
Angelos Chaniotis is a Professor of Ancient History and Classics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and author of *Age of Conquests*. He dives into the complexities of Hellenistic history and the aftermath of Alexander's empire. Chaniotis argues that Hellenistic culture persisted beyond Cleopatra, with cultural mobility flourishing as artists and athletes gained prominence. He discusses how inscriptions and archaeology reshape our understanding of this era, tracing the tumultuous yet dynamic relationship between the Hellenistic world and Rome.
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Pharos As Symbol Of Hellenistic Reach
- The Pharos of Alexandria symbolizes Hellenistic technological and cultural reach beyond Greece into Egypt.
- Angelos Chaniotis chose it to represent mobility, technology, and the spread of Greek culture.
Cultural Continuity Beyond Cleopatra
- The death of Cleopatra is a political turning point but not a cultural break in Hellenistic developments.
- Chaniotis extends the period to Hadrian because cultural and social trends continue and culminate then.
Inscriptions Unlock Social History
- New archaeological finds, inscriptions, papyri, and coins let historians write social and cultural history, not just political narratives.
- These sources reveal festivals, civic institutions, and everyday life previously invisible in literary texts.