For students of ancient Greek historiography the Histories of Polybius,
devoted to the important theme of Rome's rise to world power in the
second century B.C., are a unique source of information. The work
contains many references to, and quotations from, forerunners active in
the preceding two and a half centuries, whose works no longer survive.
Because that precious information is freqently couched in highly
polemical terms, with Polybius moulding the evidence in accordance with
his personal views, its value is hard to assess. The fifteen papers in
this volume, delivered to an international conference held at the
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in the Fall of 2001, offer a systematic
investigation into Polybius' many critiques and attempt to assess their
potentially distortive effects. The historian of Megalopolis emerges as
a towering personality who has cast a long shadow over the badly damaged
landscape of Hellenistic historiography.