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Where events and literature converge: a master chronology of ancient Greece. It clarifies Greece's tangled timeline. Henry Fynes Clinton's Fasti Hellenici - The Civil and Literary Chronology of Greece (Volume I) organises civic events and literary datings into a single, disciplined reference. Precise yet readable, it lays out ancient Greek chronology with the kind of ordered patience that lets readers follow political change alongside poetic and philosophical production. As a classical history reference it serves students, interested readers and collectors alike, and is especially valuable for anyone studying 5th century BC Greece, where synchronising wars, magistracies and literary production matters. Its systematic tables and cross-references make complex sequences intelligible, aiding both casual inquiry and advanced Greek civilisation study; scholars tracing Greek literary chronology will find the collations indispensable. Clear indexes, methodical cross-references and attention to source provenance make this a practical tool for tracing historical timelines in Greece and for situating authors within the civil history of Greece. Historically, Clinton's labour remains a touchstone: his systematic correlation of dates and texts helped set standards for later hellenic studies resources and for what a Greek history compendium can accomplish. Its patient method, assembling civic magistracies, treaties, inscriptions and literary datings side by side, gives readers a robust framework for resolving chronological puzzles and for contextualising works of drama, philosophy and history within civic life. Useful to historians and scholars yet approachable for those browsing classical literature, Volume I is equally at home in an academic research collection or on the shelf of a classic-literature collector who values provenance and precision; collectors who favour Oxford classical texts will recognise its sober scholarship. As both a hellenic studies resource and a practical tool for Greek civilisation study, it rewards short reading sessions and long research projects alike. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.