Beyond the Boundaries of Fantasia: An ancient imagining of the future of leadershipMain Menuhow to enjoy this albumYou Can Go Your Own WayI Know What Boys LikeSocrates' Last StandThe Song Remains the SameSpirits in the Material WorldA Political Thriller (c. 63 BCE)Born to Run"Caesar gained glory by giving, helping, and forgiving...Cato, on the contrary, preferred to be, rather than to seem, virtuous." - Sallust, Bellum Catilinae 54Golden YearsStranger than FictionMoney TalksHe Will Rock YouGetting to Know YouWho Runs the World? Girls!Meet the New BossI'm Every WomancreditsProject244106e9d2bdcdebde02dbbf69f852d44930279dSunoikisis leadership group
Leonidas at the "Gates of Fire"
12016-07-08T11:32:39-07:00Jim Capreedy2980309841d98e7063392af4569ce2f4b4907060887640The Battle of Thermopylae, Ancient and Modern thoughts on Sparta's Leaderimage_header2016-07-28T21:57:42-07:00Jim Capreedy2980309841d98e7063392af4569ce2f4b4907060
"Come and Get 'em"
Historical Background:In the year 480 BCE, King Xerxes led his army into Greece from the north. His land troops were aided by his fleet and altogether, numbered possibly more than 250,000 troops. Although the Greeks were not yet unified nor in agreement about how to defend Greece, the Spartans were given the command of the collective Greek army and marched to the pass at Thermopylae with a force of 300 Spartans and about 5,000 other Greeks. For the first 2 days of fighting, they held off the Persian forces but on the 3rd day, the Persians found a route around the pass; surrounded, the Spartans fought to their deaths while the remaining Greek forces escaped south to prepare to defend their lands.