The Battle of Mantinea 362 B.C.: Epaminondas, Thebes, and the Limits of Tactical Victory - Paperback
The Battle of Mantinea 362 B.C.: Epaminondas, Thebes, and the Limits of Tactical Victory - Paperback
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by Antonios Athenaeus (Author)
Victory at Mantinea did not reshape Greece. It revealed the limits of power.
In 362 B.C., the Greek world stood exhausted after decades of war. Sparta had fallen from supremacy. Athens sought recovery. Thebes, under Epaminondas, had risen through tactical innovation and bold leadership. Mantinea became the final test of that ascendancy.
This book examines the Battle of Mantinea not simply as a clash of hoplite phalanxes, but as a decisive operational moment in the struggle for dominance in classical Greece. It analyzes the political fragmentation of the Greek world, the coalition aligned against Thebes, and the strategic pressures that forced confrontation.
At the center stands Epaminondas - architect of the oblique order and master of force concentration. His deepened left wing, concealed maneuver, and decisive massing of combat power are examined as elements of a coherent battlefield doctrine. The coalition response, the cavalry engagements, and the stabilization attempts of the allied line are assessed with tactical precision.
Mantinea demonstrates a crucial military principle: tactical brilliance does not automatically translate into strategic success. Though the Theban assault shattered the enemy line, the death of Epaminondas transformed victory into strategic uncertainty. Greece did not gain a hegemon. It entered a vacuum.
Drawing on ancient sources including Xenophon and Diodorus, this study reconstructs the battle with clarity and discipline. The volume includes:
- A full political and strategic background of late Classical Greece
- Order of battle and force composition
- Step-by-step battlefield reconstruction
- Tactical diagrams and deployment analysis
- Chronological timeline of the Theban ascendancy
- Operational and strategic lessons relevant to modern military thought
Written for readers of military history, strategy, and classical warfare, this volume moves beyond romantic narrative to examine how leadership, structure, and decision-making shape the outcome of war.
Mantinea was not the triumph of Thebes.
It was the end of the classical balance of power.
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