Title: Classical Mediterranean
1Classical Mediterranean
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3Mediterranean Traditions
- Persian
- Greek / Hellenistic
- Roman
4Persian 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
5The Persian Empire
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7Zoroastrianism
- 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)
8Civilization 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..
9Greece
- 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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11Sparta 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
12Greece and Greek Colonies,c. 431 B.C.E.
13The 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
14Alexanders Empire and the Hellenistic World, c.
323 B.C.E.
15Greek (Hellenistic) Civilization in
Mediterranean, 240 BCE
16Patterns 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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19Greek 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
20Greek and Roman Political Institutions
- Rome
- Balance
- Senate dominated by aristocrats
- Consuls
- Dictator
21Greek 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
22Greek and Roman Political Institutions
- Roles of Government
- Public works
- Help to unite empire
- Maintaining law courts, police power
- Official religion
23Religion 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
24Religion and Culture
- Philosophy
- Provided a system of ethical behavior
- Aristotle, Cicero
- Stressed balance
- Stoics stress inner life
25Religion 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
26Religion and Culture
- The Arts
- Drama comedy and tragedy
- Balance between virtue and emotions
- Sophocles Oedipus the King
- Epics, the Iliad, Odyssey
- Architecture
- Roman engineering
27Economy 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
28Economy and Society in the Mediterranean
- Slavery
- From conquest
- Becomes a motive for expansion
- Technological innovation in farming lacking
- Unfavorable trade balance with eastern Asia
29Economy and Society in the Mediterranean
- Family
- Patriarchal
- Women have economic role
- Some women active in commerce
- Women could own property
30A Complex Legacy
- What Survived?
- Enduring ideas
- No polities
- Direct and indirect
- Consciously imitated, revived
- Mingled with Middle Eastern legacy
31Global 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
32 - Detailed info on Roman politics
33Roman 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
34Expansion 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
35The 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.
36The 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.
37Roman Civilization
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