
I am so excited to share a project that I've built: the Thucydides Daily Reader.
Starting Tuesday, November 26, 2025, the Thucydides Daily Reader will deliver a daily passage from Thucydides' History of the Peloponnesian War, enriched with modern translation, historical context, and scholarly annotations.
Taking "Thucydides on War" with Marco Cesa at the SAIS Bologna Center was one of the richest intellectual experiences I've experienced. It was truly a gift to immerse myself in the text with such an intelligent and inquiring guide.
For the uninitiated, Thucydides doesn't just chronicle battles—he dissects human nature, the dynamics of power, the fragility of democracy, and the logic of empire.
His insights on fear, honor, interest, and the erosion of moral norms under pressure are as urgently relevant today as they ever have been.
But Thucydides can be intimidating. I remember not even knowing how to pronounce his name—or half of the people and places in the book!
The text is dense, the context unfamiliar, and it's easy to get lost in the details of ancient Greek city-states.
That's why I built this: a daily reader that breaks the History into manageable chunks, pairs Richard Crawley's open-source translation (h/t Project Gutenberg) with a modern rendering, and adds the historical and thematic context you need to truly understand what you're reading.
What you'll find
Daily passages released over 507 days
Side-by-side translations: Crawley's 1910 translation alongside a contemporary version rendered by Claude
Historical context explaining what's happening and why it matters
Thematic organization using Kenneth Waltz's three levels of analysis (see the themes page for more)
Ancient sources connecting Thucydides to Herodotus, Aristotle, Pausanias, and others
RSS feed so you can follow along in your reader of choice (NetNewsWire, Inoreader, Feedly, etc.)
How to follow
Subscribe via RSS: https://thucydides.caseyjr.org/rss.xml
Or visit the site daily: https://thucydides.caseyjr.org
A note on the project
This reader was built using Claude (Anthropic's AI) to generate modern translations and enrichments while preserving scholarly rigor.
Every passage includes references to primary sources and connects to enduring themes in international relations and political theory.
The project is open source and freely available. My hope is that more people will engage with Thucydides—not as a dusty historical artifact, but as a living text that speaks to our present moment.
First passage drops Tuesday!
Good
Noice article 🫶
Wellcome
Great history momentum
https://paragraph.com/@miguelito.eth/introducing-the-thucydides-daily-reader