Frank L. Holt here delivers three books in one. First, this is the first thorough study of the history of Hellenistic Bactria since Tarn's The Greeks in Bactria and India of 1938.
The written sources for the history of Bactria in this period are wretched; Holt prints every scrap of them in an appendix, and they come to no more than fifteen pages. That is how the second topic of this book emerges as tremendously important. The best sources for Hellenistic Bactria are archaeological, and they include a magnificent trove of coins. Holt presents this material, providing an up-to-date full catalogue of known Bactrian coinage and illustrating twenty-three coins.
Third, Holt is exquisitely careful, at every step of his argument, to explain how his inferences and conclusions are derived - how the analysis of material remains can be projected into narrative.
Thundering Zeus uses an innovative, interdisciplinary approach to resolve one of the greatest puzzles in all of Hellenistic history. This book explores the remarkable rise of a Greek-ruled kingdom in ancient Bactria (modern Afghanistan) during the third century B.C. Diodotus I and II, whose dynasty emblazoned its coins with the dynamic image of Thundering Zeus, led this historic movement by breaking free of the Seleucid Empire and building a strong independent state in Central Asia. The chronology and crises that defined their reigns have been established here for the first time, and Frank Holt sets this new history into the larger context of Hellenistic studies.
The best sources for understanding Hellenistic Bactria are archaeological, and they include a magnificent trove of coins. In addition to giving a history of Bactria, Thundering Zeus provides a catalog of these coins, as well as an introduction to the study of numismatics itself. Holt presents this fascinating material with the precision and acuity of a specialist and with the delight of an admirer, providing an up-to-date full catalog of known Diodotid coinage, and illustrating twenty-three coins.
This succinct, energetic narrative thunders across the history of Hellenistic Bactria, exhuming coins, kingdoms, and customs as it goes. The result is a book that is both a history and a history of discovery, with much to offer those interested in ancient texts, archaeology, and coins.