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Nicholas Hammond (historian)

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Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond (November 14, 1907March 24, 2001) was a British historian — teaching at Cambridge and Bristol — who specialized in ancient Greece and Macedonia in particular. He was known for his works about Alexander the Great and for suggesting the relationship of Vergina with Aegae, the ancient Macedonian royal city, before the archaeological discoveries. During the Second World War, Hammond participated in the Greek Resistance as a member of the British Military Mission.

Books

  • Alexander the Great. King, Commander, and Statesman
  • Oxford Classical Dictionary (second edition)
  • The Genius of Alexander the Great
  • The end of Mycenaean Civilization and Dark Age: the literary tradition
  • Philip of Macedon

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Nicholas Hammond (historian) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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