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Victor Davis Hanson (born September 5, 1953 September 5, 1953 in Fowler, California) is an American conservative commentator, classicist and military historian.

He is most famous for his theory on the "Western (Greco-Roman) Way of War". Also known for his esoteric but illuminating application of his experience as a farmer to Ancient Military History.
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!!His works contain examples of:

* BadassArmy: Every...Single..."Western"...Army. Apparently.
* BigBadassBattleSequence: He really does know how to describe battles well.
* CallThatAFormation: Averted. Hoplites fight in formation. Get it?
* CombatByChampion: Hoplite battles were like this on a gigantic scale according to Hanson; a ritualistic way for farmers to settle their quarrels quickly and get back home. They involved whole armies though.
* DeterminedHomesteader: Hoplites. Plus the author.
* DoNotDoThisCoolThing: Greek wars were really, really, horrible. Got it? Except it is hard to describe ten-thousand big hairy guys with spears, shields and armor, crashing into each other without making it sound really, really, cool.
* FourStarBadass: Lots naturally. Especially the authors hero, Epaminondas.
* HomeGuard: Citizen-hoplites who Hanson thinks are really cool. Most Greek city-states were defended by this. Easy on taxes and you only have to turn out once or twice a year. Sparta was rather [[TheSpartanWay different]].
* HonorBeforeReason: According to the author, it was impossible for an invader to actually destroy a cities agricultural economy because of the actual difficulty in destroying crops. The real reason they came out to fight was because their homes were [[OccupiersOutOfOurCountry held hostage]]. The author actually tested this on his own grapevines.
* LandOfOneCity: Greek city states.
* PoliceState: Sparta
* TheRepublic: Athens and Thebes
* SlaveLiberation: The Theban invasion of Sparta which was intended to encourage this.
* TheSpartanWay: Deconstructed. Hanson dislikes Spartans, and also notes their military flaws.
* WarIsGlorious: Not supposed to be the intention but one can't help but think this on reading Hanson.
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