HERODOTUS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

HERODOTUS

Description:

First portion explores the historical background of the war while the remainder ... the Roman Empire from the reign of Tiberius (14 AD) to the death of Nero (68 AD) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1307
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: ChrisG165
Category:
Tags: herodotus | nero

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: HERODOTUS


1
HERODOTUS
  • The Histories
  • Story of the Greek wars against Persia in the
    third decade of the 5th century BC
  • First portion explores the historical background
    of the war while the remainder recounts the
    details of the Persian expedition against Greece

2
THUCYDIDES
  • Wrote The Peloponnesian War
  • Account of the struggle between Athens and Sparta
    during the last 30 years of the 5th century BC

3
POLYBIUS
  • Greek Second Century BC
  • Insisted that a historian must travel to see the
    sites, participate in public events, and utilize
    public records
  • Wrote Universal History
  • About Romes expansion over the Mediterranean
    world
  • Intended to be practical instruction and equip
    readers to better act in the future

4
SALLUST
  • Late first century BC
  • Wrote from an outsiders point of view about
    affairs of state
  • Took leaders to task for their mistakes and
    misdeeds and warned of the effects of decadence
    and decay

5
TITUS LIVY
  • Wrote History of Rome
  • Early years of first century AD
  • 142 volumes
  • Emphasized the role of civic virtue in the
    expansion of the Roman Republic
  • Never held public office and devoted his life to
    research and writing

6
JULIUS CAESAR
  • Wrote Commentaries
  • Firsthand account of his military exploits
    against the Gauls, Germans, and Britons in the
    middle of the first century BC
  • Established a stylistic model for Latin prose and
    also a new literary genre
  • Not as much interested in character and
    personality as he was in action

7
TACITUS
  • Most notable work was Annales of Imperial Rome
  • Written around 100 AD
  • Described affairs of the Roman Empire from the
    reign of Tiberius (14 AD) to the death of Nero
    (68 AD)
  • Commended public virtue and condemned immorality
    and evil, especially the excesses of the emperors
    and the self-serving cliques around them

8
EUSEBIUS OF CAESARA
  • Wrote History of the Church
  • Tried to demonstrate how all previous history led
    to the triumph of Christianity
  • Argued that the traditions of Christianity
    stretched backward in time to a glorious past
    before the Greeks

9
SAINT AUGUSTINE
  • Wrote City of God
  • In response to Alarics sack of Rome in 410 AD
  • Led to charges that Christians had led people
    away from old gods and that the gods had now
    taken their revenge
  • He absolved Christians from blame by showing that
    similar catastrophes had happened before
    Christianity
  • Also developed new and unique approach to
    universal history

10
ST. AUGUSTINES APPROACH TO THE PAST
  • History has a purpose
  • History moves in a straight line towards a
    specific end point (the Day of Judgment)
  • The end point of the historical process is good
    and therefore the movement of history represents
    progress
  • God is the external force propelling the
    historical process
  • Humans can find out aspects of this process by
    using their intellect
  • To understand history, humans must comprehend the
    Divine revelations contained in the Bible
  • Humans are active agents, though often unwitting
    ones, in the development of history

11
PROCOPIUS
  • Byzantine writer of 6th century AD
  • Major works were History of Wars and The Secret
    History
  • Well versed in classic Greek historiography
  • Very high quality of writing
  • But he may not be especially trustworthy

12
VENERABLE BEDE
  • One of the most learned men of the early Middle
    Ages
  • Wrote An Ecclesiastical History of the English
    People
  • First reliable description of early Britain
  • Had a high regard for valid sources

13
OTTO OF FRESING
  • Nephew of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa
  • Became bishop of Salzburg
  • Wrote The Deeds of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa
  • Laudatory political biography of his uncle
  • Wrote Chronicle or History of Two Cities
  • Universal history modeled on work of St.
    Augustine

14
MATTHEW PARIS
  • An English monk of 13th century
  • Wrote Great Chronicle
  • Began with an edited version of Flowers of
    History
  • Written earlier by Roger of Wendover
  • Rest of book described events in England and
    elsewhere after 1236
  • Including Western Europe, the Papal States, the
    Byzantine Empire, the Holy Land, and Russia
  • Paid special attention to politics and
    international intrigue

15
JEAN FROISSART
  • Wrote Chronicles
  • 14th century
  • Wrote with a self-conscious detachment and tried
    to tell the truth
  • Assumed God played a role in human affairs but
    worked hard to obtain accurate information

16
SUMMARY
  • Medieval historians modified the Greek approach
    by putting the supernatural back into history
  • By the 14th century, such writings became
    formalistic and repetitive
  • Medieval chroniclers lacked the intellectual and
    methodological means to employ original sources
    and recover their meaning and significance.
  • They instead depended on the veracity of their
    predecessors
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com