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This essay aims to present a new perspective on the political history of Hellas from the end of Persia's invasions to the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War by examining the expedition of Athens to Egypt (460–454 BCE), its motivation, failure, and impact on Athens' grand strategy. Guided by Thucydides' account, studies of this period have often focused on how Athens, growing into a self-assertive power, threatened Sparta's dominant position within Hellas through its relentless pursuit of power, making a major war with Sparta inevitable. This study criticises this interpretation, showing that it obscures the fact that Athens' foreign strategical vision following the Persian invasions did not directly evolve into a competition with Sparta for hegemony within Hellas. Athens' ambition lay in dominating the Eastern Mediterranean, with the Egyptian expedition representing the culmination of its offensive in the region. Only by considering how the failure of this enterprise affected Athens' grand strategy and the power constellation in Hellas can the entangled journey to the Peloponnesian War be properly reconstructed. Thus, this essay proposes a reconsideration of the prevailing theme of the war's inevitability, urging a review of its relevance.
Bee Yun (Mon,) studied this question.