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European Culture

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Title: European Culture


1
European Culture
  • -- An Introduction

2
d. Contending Schools of Thoughts
  • Sophists, who were teachers of the art of
    arguing. The most eminent of them was Protagoras,
    born about 500 B.C., who wrote a book On the
    Gods. He is chiefly noted for his doctrine that
    man is the measure of all the things.
  • In the 4th century B.C., four schools of
    philosoph-
  • ers often argued with each other. They were the
    Cynics, the Sceptics, the Epicureans and the
    Stoics.
  • The Cynics, leader named Diogenes, he
    rejected all the conventions, and advocated
    self-sufficiency

3
  • and extreme simplicity in life. He lived by begg-
  • Ing. He proclaimed his brotherhood, not only with
    the whole human race, but also with animals. On
    the other hand, he had no patience with the rich
    and powerful.
  • The Sceptics followed Pyrrhon , who held that
    not all knowledge was attainable. He and his
    followers doubted the truth of what others
    accepted as true.
  • The Epicureans were disciples of Epicurus,
    who believed pleasure to be the highest good in
    life, but by pleasure he meant, not sensual

4
  • enjoyment, but freedom from pain and emotion-
  • al upheaval. Epicurus was a materialist, he
    believed the world consisted of atoms.
  • Opposed to the Epicureans were the Stoics.
  • To them, the most important thing in life was not
    pleasure, but duty. This developed into the
    theory that one should endure hardship and
    misfortune with courage. The chief Stoic was Zeno.

5
e. Science
  • We have seen that many Greek philosophers were at
    the same time scientists. Thus Plato was a
    mathematician and Aristotle contribut-
  • ed to Zoology.
  • Two men may be mentioned for what they did to
    push science forward. They are Euclid and
    Archimedes. Euclid is well-known for his
    Elements, a textbook of geometry. Archimedes
  • did important work not only in geometry, but also
    in arithmetic, mechanics, and hydrostatics.

6
8.Art, Architecture, Sculpture and poetry
  • a. Art
  • Greek art is a visual proof of Greek civiliza-
  • tion.
  • b. Architecture
  • The most important temple is Parthenon.
  • Greek architecture can be grouped into three
    types the Doric style which is also called the
    masculine style the Ionic style which is also
    called the feminine style and a later style that
    is called the Corinthian.

7
  • c. Sculpture
  • The earliest Greek sculptures were those of
    Gods. Stiff, lifeless---- the beauty of internal
    structure. Famous sculptures i. Discus
    Thrower ii.Venus de Milo iii.Laocoon group
  • d. Pottery
  • The flourishing of the Greek pottery was a
    result of domestic needs, needs for foreign
    trade. Black-figure and red-figure paintings.
  • 9. Impact
  • a. Spirit of Innovation b. Supreme Achievement
  • c. Lasting Effect

8
Roman Culture
  • 1.Romans and Greeks
  • The Romans had a lot in common with the Greeks.
    Both peoples had traditions rooted in the idea of
    the citizen-assembly, hostile to monarchy and to
    servility. Their regions were alike enough for
    most of their deities to be readily identified.
    Their languages worked in similar ways, and were
    ultimately related, both being members of
    Indo-European language family which stretches
    from Bangladesh to Iceland.

9
  • There was one big difference. The Romans built up
    a vast empire, the Greeks didnt.
  • 2.Roman History
  • Pax Romana The year 27B.C. divided the history
    of Rome into two periods before then, Rome had
    been a republic in that year, Octavius took
    supreme power as emperor with the title of
    Augustus. Two centuries later, the Roman Empire
    reached its greatest extent, encircling the
    Mediterranean, reaching Scotland in the north and
    spreading into Armenia and Mesopotamia in the
    east. The emperors

10
  • relied on a strong army--the famous Roman legions
    - and an efficient bureaucracy to exert their
    rule, which was facilitated by a well-developed
    system of roads. Thus the Romans enjoyed a long
    period of peace lasting two hundred years, a
    remarkable phenomenon in history known as the Pax
    Romana.
  • 3. Latin Literature
  • a.Prose
  • Marcus Tullius Cicero (??? . ?? .???)
  • Julius Caesar (???? .??)

11
  • b. Poetry
    (???)
  • Lucretius (????On the Nature of Things
  • Virgil (???) Aeneid (????)
  • 4. Architecture, Painting and Sculpture
  • Architecture
  • The Pantheon
  • Pont du Gard
  • The Colosseum
  • b. Painting
  • c. Sculpture
  • i. Constantine the Great (about AD 274-337),
    Roman emperor (306-37), the first Roman ruler to
    be converted to Christianity. He was the founder
    of Constantinople (present-day Istanbul), which
    remained the capital of the Eastern Roman
    (Byzantine) Empire until 1453.

12
  • ii. Spoils from the Temple in Jerusalem
  • iii. She-wolf

13
Division TwoThe Bible and Christianity
  • I. The Old Testament
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14
  • Focus In
  • ?Among all the religions by which people seek to
    worship, Christianity is by far the most
    influential in the West.
  • ?Both Judaism and Christianity originated in
    Palestinethe hub of migration and trade routes,
    which led to exchange of ideas over wide areas.
  • ?Some 3800 years ago the ancestors of the Jews
    the Hebrews wandered through the deserts of the
    Middle East.

15
  • ?About 1300 B.C., the Hebrews came to settle in
    Palestine, known as Canaan at that time, and
    formed small kingdoms.
  • ?The king of the Hebrews was handed down orally
    from one generation to another in the form of
    folktales and stories, which were recorded later
    in the Old Testament.
  • ?The Bible is a collection of religious writings
    comprising two parts the Old Testament and the
    New Testament.
  • ?The Old Testament consists of 39 books, the
    oldest and most important of which are the first
    five books, called Pentateuch.

16
  • ?When the Hebrews left the desert and entered the
    mountainous Sinai, Moses climbed to the top of
    the mountain to receive God message from, which
    came to be known as Adam, Eve, the Ten
    Commandments.
  • ?Chronologically Amos is the earliest prophet in
    the Old Testament.
  • ?In Babylon in the 6th century B.C., the Hebrews,
    now known as Jews, formed synagogues to practise
    their religion.
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