"This book brings together a gallery of fascinating personalities, a group of Greek intellectuals--controversialists, scientists, and scholars--to elucidate the role they each played in the discourse and intellectual life of the Roman Empire and beyond. The varied contribution of these famous individuals places them, without doubt, in the center of Roman intellectual life and explains the long-lasting influence they have had on European literature, science, and scholarship. Freeman brings them to life so they can resonate amongst us and show off the height of their achievements once more. A much needed reminder of the wonders of late antiquity and the birth of European scholarship."--Christos Nifadopoulos, PhD, Cambridge University
"Too often we ask what the Romans did for us--but this important and beautifully written book reminds us to ask what the Greeks did for the Romans--and for us in turn! This is a banquet of delightful insight, important ideas and colorful characters." --Michael Scott, Professor of Classics, University of Warwick, author of Ancient Worlds: An Epic History of East and West
"A study of the significance of a neglected epoch in Greek cultural history. This book satisfyingly fulfills its promise of highlighting intellectual landmarks and hidden continuities. Well-informed, rewarding analysis of an unjustly overlooked period and its intellectual legacy."--Kirkus Reviews
"This is a much-needed book. The astounding brilliance of Greek writers of the Classical period, the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, is well known. But Greek learning did not end with the end of the Classical period. Freeman demonstrates the extraordinary richness and the variety of the work being done by the Greek intellectuals of the Roman empire. Chapters are devoted to sketches of the most important writers, their environments, and their work. We meet orators, philosophers, historians, geographers, astronomers, a travel writer, a medical botanist, physicians, a satirist, polymaths with various interests, and Christian scholars. Gradually a picture emerges of the magnificence--and the lasting importance--of work being done by the Greek intellectuals of the Roman empire."--Robin Waterfield, author of Plato of Athens: A Life in Philosophy
"Historian Freeman offers an enlightening survey of the Greek intellectual tradition during the Roman Empire. It adds up to a lively series of character portraits that shed light on the history of ideas."--Publishers Weekly
"An enjoyable, very readable book that refreshes our knowledge of those twenty important Greek thinkers but also reminds us that empires can reap a rich reward from tolerance and respect of older traditions."--Classics for All (UK)
Praise for Charles Freeman's The Closing of the Western Mind: "A fascinating account."-- "The Atlanta Journal-Constitution"
"Enjoyable and illuminating. Clearly and plausibly argued. Full of fascinating detail." - The Boston Globe "Entertaining. An excellent and readable account of the development of Christian doctrine."-- "The New York Times Book Review"
"Freeman is a well-known scholar of ancient Greece and Rome, and in this provocatively titled work he directs his encyclopedic knowledge of the classical world at its relationship with early Christianity. His exploration of early Christian attitudes is simply too impressively erudite to dismiss or to set down." - Booklist "Engrossingly readable and very thoughtful. Freeman draws our attention to myriad small but significant phenomena. His fine book is both a searching look at the past and a salutary and cautionary reminder for us in our difficult present."-- "The New York Sun"
"Charles Freeman's latest effusion of cultural history is a paean of tributes to ancient Hellenic intellection. Freeman sportingly and illuminatingly engages with a wide variety of styles of thought and expression, from epideictic oratory and satire--via historiography and mathematics--to philosophy proper. Sophisticated Greek culture did not only take firm hold of the Greeks' Roman conquerors' imaginations: thanks to Byzantium and the Renaissance, it engages us still to this day."--Paul Cartledge, author of Thebes: The Forgotten City of Ancient Greece