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Classical Mediterranean

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Title: Classical Mediterranean


1
Classical Mediterranean
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Mediterranean Traditions
  • Persian
  • Greek / Hellenistic
  • Roman

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Persian Empire (Achaemenid)550 BCE - 330 BCE
  • Established by Cyrus the Great, great King
    Darius, capital at Persepolis
  • Modern day Iran/Afghanistan/Pakistan regions
  • Neighbor and rival of Greek city states (Persian
    wars 500-450 BCE)
  • Political Styles
  • Tolerance for other cultures
  • Authoritarianism
  • Infrastructure, especially roads
  • Bureaucracy
  • Advanced iron technology
  • Unique artistic style
  • Zoroastrianism
  • Overthrown by Alexander the Great
  • Later Sassanid Empire (227 CE 600s CE) during
    Roman period preserves Persian culture

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The Persian Empire
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Zoroastrianism
  • Monotheistic religion (the first? Judaism 1200s
    BCE)
  • Emerged as early as 1700 BCE, codified by
    Zoroaster/Zarathustra (c. 630-550 BCE)
  • Gathas sacred literature
  • Ahuramazda creator and benevolent deity
  • Angra Mainyu (evil spirit)
  • Magi religious priests
  • Cosmic struggle between good and evil, humanity
    punished or rewarded in afterlife for their
    actions
  • Religious justification for political rule
    (somewhat similar to Mandate of Heaven)

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Civilization in Mediterranean Region
  • Greeks began with city-states due to geography
    (mountains coast)
  • Oceanic trade on Mediterranean Sea connected the
    region
  • Both Greece and Rome created empires based on
    conquest..

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Greece
  • Phoenecian cultural influences (alphabet,
    seafaring)
  • Mycenaen Kingdom (1400 BCE)
  • Culture preserved in Homers epics Iliad
    Odyssey
  • Greek city-states (polis) develop 800-600 BCE
  • Mountains coastlines help fragment Greece
    prevent political unity
  • Trade, commerce, and connections b/n city-states
    helps develop a common Greek culture (similar
    language, alphabet, religion, customs, Olympic
    Games, etc.)

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Sparta vs- Athens
  • Sparta military aristocracy conquers and
    controls neighboring regions (slavery)
  • Athens commercial, diverse, also used slaves,
    artistic and intellectual achievements, limited
    democracy allowed adult male citizens to select
    officials and pass laws (Pericles 400s BCE)
  • Persian wars (common enemy) 500s-450 BCE
  • Peloponnesian Wars (431-404 BCE) b/n Athens and
    Sparta

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Greece and Greek Colonies,c. 431 B.C.E.
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The Hellenistic Period
  • Phillip II of the northern kingdom of Macedon
    conquered Athens and Sparta and gained control of
    the Greek peninsula (330s BCE)
  • His son Alexander (the Great) extended the
    empire as far as the borders of India
  • Alexander died young and his empire was divided
    into several Hellenistic Kingdoms for the next
    few centuries.
  • Greek culture spread throughout the Mediterranean
    world and Middle East during this Hellenistic
    Era

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Alexanders Empire and the Hellenistic World, c.
323 B.C.E.
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Greek (Hellenistic) Civilization in
Mediterranean, 240 BCE
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Patterns of Greek and Roman History
  • Rome
  • Roman Republic from 509 B.C.E.
  • Military emphasis
  • Punic Wars, against Carthage (264-146 B.C.E.)
  • Empire
  • Julius Caesar victory over rivals, 45 B.C.E.
  • Augustus Caesar, rules from 27 B.C.E.
  • Empire strong to about 180 C.E.
  • Renewed vigor under Diocletian, Constantine

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Greek and Roman Political Institutions
  • Greece The Polis
  • Athens - direct democracy the assembly
  • Lottery for positions
  • Citizen body a minority of the population
  • Most city states were oligarchies
  • Aristocratic assemblies
  • Sparta

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Greek and Roman Political Institutions
  • Rome
  • Balance
  • Senate dominated by aristocrats
  • Consuls
  • Dictator

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Greek and Roman Political Institutions
  • Political Theory in Ancient Greece and Rome
  • Duties of citizens, political ethics, oratory
  • Participation stressed
  • Comparison of the merits of different forms
  • Romans developed law code
  • Twelve Tables, by 450 B.C.E.
  • Law comes to take the place of fathers
  • Spread of code to empire, and citizenship

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Greek and Roman Political Institutions
  • Roles of Government
  • Public works
  • Help to unite empire
  • Maintaining law courts, police power
  • Official religion

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Religion and Culture
  • Religious Values
  • Religion largely concerned with the here and now
  • Mystery religions offered a more spiritual
    approach
  • Division between elite and popular belief

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Religion and Culture
  • Philosophy
  • Provided a system of ethical behavior
  • Aristotle, Cicero
  • Stressed balance
  • Stoics stress inner life

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Religion and Culture
  • Science and Philosophy
  • Socrates encouraged questioning
  • Speculation on the physical world
  • Theories about the universe, the nature of matter
  • Mathematics, especially geometry
  • Hellenistic period
  • More empirical work in physics
  • Euclid, Galen

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Religion and Culture
  • The Arts
  • Drama comedy and tragedy
  • Balance between virtue and emotions
  • Sophocles Oedipus the King
  • Epics, the Iliad, Odyssey
  • Architecture
  • Roman engineering

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Economy and Society in the Mediterranean
  • Agriculture and Trade
  • Constant trend to market farming
  • Led to trade
  • Grain from Egypt
  • Merchants
  • Officially, legally respected
  • Not socially esteemed

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Economy and Society in the Mediterranean
  • Slavery
  • From conquest
  • Becomes a motive for expansion
  • Technological innovation in farming lacking
  • Unfavorable trade balance with eastern Asia

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Economy and Society in the Mediterranean
  • Family
  • Patriarchal
  • Women have economic role
  • Some women active in commerce
  • Women could own property

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A Complex Legacy
  • What Survived?
  • Enduring ideas
  • No polities
  • Direct and indirect
  • Consciously imitated, revived
  • Mingled with Middle Eastern legacy

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Global Connections Persia, Greece, Rome, and the
World
  • Persia
  • Maintained contact between East and West
  • Greece
  • Traders, expansionist
  • Alexander the Great
  • New contacts between Mediterranean, Persia, India
  • Rome
  • Variety of contacts

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  • Detailed info on Roman politics

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Roman Republic Constitution
  • Roman nobility established a republic in 509 BCE
  • Built Roman Forum political and civic center
  • Republican constitution
  • Executive responsibilities in 2 Consuls
  • Held civil military power
  • Consuls elected by assembly of aristocrats
    (patricians)
  • Senate of aristocrats advised Consuls ratified
    decision
  • Most prominent political military leaders
  • Largely controlled Roman public affairs
  • Mostly served interests of the wealthy
  • Plebians (commoners) objected gt class conflict
  • Plebians given more rights in 5th 4th BCE
  • Patricians still dominated Rome
  • Dictator wielded absolute power for 6 months if
    military crisis

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Expansion of the Republic
  • Rome surrounded by invaders
  • Rome first established a large regional state in
    Italy
  • Roman control of entire Italian peninsula (4th
    century BCE)
  • Established military colonies
  • Generous policies toward conquered peoples
  • Taxes, local rule, and trade were established
  • Conflict and conquest in larger Mediterranean
  • Punic wars with Carthaginians (N. Africa)
  • Destroyed Carthage, took slaves, took stuff
  • Conflict with Greeks
  • 5 major wars
  • Controlled most of the Med. By 2nd BCE

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The Failure of the Republic
  • Warfare and territorial expansion undermined the
    foundations of the Roman Republic
  • Wealth and power were increasingly concentrated
    in the hands of the upper classes, resulting in
    the decline of the peasant farmer / soldier
    class.
  • The military became increasingly loyal to their
    commanders, as opposed to the Senate.
  • Some of these generals used their armies to
    increase their own personal power and wealth, at
    the expense of the state.

36
The Formation of the Roman Empire
  • By 31 BCE, Octavian (heir of Julius Caesar), had
    eliminated all rivals and seized power.
  • Known as Augustus, he was the first of the Roman
    Emperors.
  • Subtly concentrated power in his hands, while
    maintaining the appearance of the Republic.
  • Allied himself with the Equities the second
    most powerful group below the Senatorial class.

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Roman Civilization
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