Chapter 4
Classical Civilization in the Mediterranean: Greece and Rome
- Introduction
- Mediterranean culture
- Greece slowed Persian empire, set up a few colonies, but…
- Rome known for empire
- New institutions/values that would remain in western culture
- “our own” Classical past
- U.S. Constitution
- buildings in the U.S.
- founders of the philosophical tradition
- Socratic method
- Greco-Roman history
- more dynamic, but less successful
* We can clearly recognize the connections and our own debt without adhering to the notion that the Mediterranean world somehow dominated the classical period. - Complicated – passed through two centers
- Rome preserved many of Greek achievements
- more dynamic, but less successful
- Rome vs. Greece
- Mighty empire vs. inept/Greek city-states
- Mastered engineering vs. scientific thought
- western Europe – Greco Roman vs. Eastern Europe – Greek influence
- Shared
- political ideas
- common religion
- artistic styles
- economic structures
- Mediterranean culture
- The Persian Tradition
- 550 BCE Cyrus the Great – massive Persian Empire across Middle East
- Tolerant of local customs
- Advanced iron technology
- Zoroastrianism
- artistic lifestyle
- Conquered by Alexander the Great
- Persian language and culture survived into the 20th century
- 550 BCE Cyrus the Great – massive Persian Empire across Middle East
- Patters of Greek and Roman History
- Greece
- Crete – showed Egyptian influence by 2000
- Monumental architecture
- 1400 Mycenae – kingdom Trojan War
- Indo-Europeans destroyed until 800 – Dark Ages
- Rise from 800-600 strong city-states
- tyrant or aristocratic council
- divided by mountains
- unified government difficult
- trade developed
- written language came from Phoenician alphabet
- regular celebrations
- athletic competitions – Olympic games
- Sparta/Athens rose to the top
- Sparta – military tradition dominated slves
- Athens – commercial state, slaves, artistic/intellectual leadership
- 5th century – Democracy in Athens
- Pericles - most famous political figure
- No official position, but influence/negotiation
- each citizen participated
- eventually Spartan/Athenian war weakens both sides
- Peloponnesian Wars – weakened Greece
- Philip II of Macedon came down and took over
- Alexander the Great then kept going to Persia
- 13 years of conquests – 33
- Successor kingdoms ruled for centuries
- Hellenistic period – Greek art/culture merges
- Trade flourished
- Scientific centers – Alexandria
- Greece decline, but legacy carries on
- Peloponnesian Wars – weakened Greece
- Pericles - most famous political figure
- Crete – showed Egyptian influence by 2000
- Rome
- Started under control of monarchy in 800 – defeated in 509
- Roman republic expanded
- Always fear of invaders, keep extending boundaries
- Across Sicily, conflict with Carthage
- Leads to Punic Wars – 3 of them
- Bloody defeat by Hannibal – through Gaul
- 3rd Punic War – salted fields – agriculture
- Leads to Punic Wars – 3 of them
- Republic replaced by powerful generals
- Caesar first to “Cross the Rubicon” – 45 BCE
- August Caesar takes over in 27 BCE – after rivalry following assassinat
- Pax Romana – basic structure for Roman Empire
- Until 180 CE Marcus Aurelius – peace to Medit. World
- Empire expanded to Britain
- Pax Romana – basic structure for Roman Empire
- Gradual fall until 476 when invaders took over
- economic deterioration – trade loss
- population loss – declining birth rates
- government less effective – couldn’t take care of empire
- unable to take over more land to finance empire
- too spread out – undefendable
- Diocletian Reforms
- Constantine – 313 adopts Christianity
- After the fall
- Governments became local in Western Europe – can’t control/order
- Roman armies needed foreign recruits – why are we fighting again?
- Greece
- Greek and Roman Political Institutions
- Introduction
- Politics crucial – polis – Greek city-state – similar to China
- “Good life” included political service, military
- Did not try to administer local regions
- Unlike China, never had single set of political institutions/bureaucracy/emp
- Like India diverse forms
- Monarchy – not preferred – tried to abolish
- Individual strongman – tyranny – quite common – some effective
- Politics crucial – polis – Greek city-state – similar to China
- Greece – demos – the people
- General assemblies – all vote – direct democracy – not a republic
- Executive officers chosen by lot – similar to jury duty
- ½ citizens – slave/foreigners – women excluded > 25% participate
- Negatives of democracy – Peloponnesian Wars
- Lower class citizens want power – recommend stupid military choices
- Most preferred – aristocratic assemblies – aristocracy – rule of the best
- Rome
- Constitution – relied on aristocracy – election of magistrates
- Senate – held executive offices – two consuls shared power – public speaking
- Dictator during emergencies
- Ample political theory – Cicero main guy
- Political ethics
- Duties of citizens
- incorruptible service
- key political skills – oratory
- . Diff. than China – not so much on hierarchy, obedience, bureaucracy
- Roman Empire – preserved Senate – relatively useless
- Local autonomy prevailed – accept times like Jewish rebellion 63 CE
- tolerance local customs, religion
- Strong military organization
- Well-crafted laws – Twelve Tables 450 BCE – restrain upper class
- Rules, not personal whim, should govern people
- regulated property, commerce
- similar to Chinese bureaucratic structure
- Focused on law courts, military force
- Not so much on commerce, but…
- Rome…roads, harbors – military transport, commerce
- Public baths, stadiums – “bread and circuses”
- Supported official religion – civic festivals, but not imposed
- Religions tolerated as long as didn’t conflict with state
- Problem w/ Christianity, state not first
- Religions tolerated as long as didn’t conflict with state
- Key elements
- Localism, political focus, diversity of political systems, aristocracy, law
- Lacked specific individual rights, instability showed system was flawed
- Introduction
- Religion and Culture
- Religion
- Christianity spread, but not a product of Christian/Roman Culture
- Greco-Roman religion – nature > gods and goddesses
- Different names/interacted w/ mortals/whims/soap opera
- Patrons of nature/human activities
- god stories used to illustrate human passions/foibles – literature
- lacked spiritual passion – lower class attracted to “mystery religions” M. East
- Upper class – didn’t allow for method systematic inquiry
- Many thinkers/philosophers searched for explanations/model for ethical behavior
- Aristotle – Golden Mean – balance
- Stoics – moral independence – discipline/personal bravery
- Socrates – question – accused of undermining – poison
- Plato – understand three forms – True, Good, Beautiful
- Importance – human ability to think, not human spirituality
- Similar to Confucianism, but more skeptical and focused on abstract questions
- Rational inquiry
- Few inventions, many theories, classification
- Many theories wrong
- Some geometry, anatomy, incorrect astronomy
- Romans more practical – engineering – roads/aqueducts
- Few inventions, many theories, classification
- Art and literature – far more important
- Official religion inspires artist expression – temples, statues
- Realistic depiction of human form
- Poetry, music, dance – not as preserved
- Drama – comedy and tragedy – trilogy – focused on human flaws
- Sophocles – Oedipus complex
- Not just for upper class
- Romans known more for athletic performances – charioteers/gladiators
- Greek literature – epic tradition – Homer – Iliad/Odyssey – links mythology/history
- Sculpture – heroic/realistic tradition
- Architecture – columns – Doric, Ionic, Corinthian – classical architecture
- Rome – dome/stadium – heavily adorned public buildings/monuments
- Religion
- Economy and Society
- Tendency for large landowners to squeeze out small farmers > feudalism later
- Much tension comes from farmers trying to keep independence, get out of debt
- Difficulty in farming – geography, topography
- Forced olives, grapes – but these need capital, patience – 5 years – landlord
- Commercial agriculture led to need for empire
- Supervised grain trade, public works, storage facilities
- Manufactured products less advanced – exported animals/skins, metals
- Merchants – better in Mediterranean than China, but ambiguous
- Slavery – key component – agriculture – from military expansion
- Free farmers couldn’t compete w/ slave/tenant labor
- Hurt technological innovation – behind India/China in production technology
- Tight family structure – women inferior/dif
- f. laws – not as bad as China, but infanticide
- Not the period of “human race was most happy or prosperous” – idealized in Western world
- Urban achievements not everything
- Tendency for large landowners to squeeze out small farmers > feudalism later
- The Fall of Rome – fell in parts, not all at once
- No central religion
- Classical Mediterranean life not fully carried on
- Global connections
- Outsiders as barbarians
- Alexander the Great expanded
- some Romans saw Greek literature/philosophical focus as a waste of time
- Rome expanded to Germanic tribes – trade/war
- Tolerant of local customs, but built Roman monuments
- Believed there was little to learn from beyond their own borders
- Classical Mediterranean in Comparative Perspective
- China, India, Medit. All have agricultural economy, empires
- Secular Medit. similar to Confucian
- Politics don’t speak of deference, bureaucratic training
- Greeks more into theory
- Each had social hierarchy and laws to justify/protect upper class
- Aristocracy – India – priests, China – bureaucrats, Medit. – aristocrats
- Social mobility
- India’s caste – little
- China – few talented bureaucrats could move up
- Medit. – some non-aristocrats could move up, military
- Lowest class
- India – untouchables
- China – “mean people”
- Medit. – slavery
- Farmers/property important – but scorned manual labor > slavery
- United by different reasons – social unrest, rebellions in all
- India – Hinduism
- Medit. – military force, local authorities
- Chinese – Confucianism – obedience, self-restraint
- China/India more successful in convincing poor of legitimacy of class structure
- Medit. focused on aristocracy, tried to give some political rights to others
- China, India, Medit. All have agricultural economy, empires
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