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- Introduction
- Rome as bridge between Mediterranean and Ancient Near East
- A distinctive civilization
- The "mission" of the Romans
- Early Italy and the Roman Monarchy
- Geographical influences
- Rich enough to be attractive
- Difficult to defend
- The Etruscans
- Non-Indo-Europeans
- Etruscan Confederacy
- The Etruscan legacy
- The arch and vault
- A religion based on the worship of gods in human form
- Women participated in public life
- Gladiatorial combat
- Centered urban life around massive stone temples
- Greek settlements and influences
- Greeks arrive as early as 8th century B.C.E.
- Greek alphabet
- The pantheon of the gods
- The Rise of Rome
- Entered Italy between 2000 and 1000 B.C.E.
- Rome "founded" as early as the 10th century B.C.E.
- The Tiber River
- The "Latin Right"
- Commercium (regarding contracts)
- Connubium (regarding intermarriage)
- Migratio (regarding migration) and transfer of citizenship
- Early government
- The Rape of Lucretia
- The Etruscan king Tarquin the Proud is overthrown (510 B.C.E.)
- The Early Republic
- Constant warfare
- Etruscan territories to the north
- Greek poleis in the south
- Accommodating conquered populations
- Did not impose heavy burdens on conquered peoples
- Conquered people had to contribute soldiers to the Roman army
- Extending the "Latin Right"
- The government of the early Republic
- Slow political evolution
- Substituted two consuls for the king
- Consuls had full executive and judicial authority
- Each consul could veto the other
- Senate had control over public funds
- Patricians and Plebeians
- Patrician wealth, power and influence
- Plebeian grievances
- The "Struggle of the Orders"
- The tribunes
- The "Law of the Twelve Tables"
- Published the laws
- Perpetuated ancient customs
- The concilium plebis
- Slow shift to an aristocracy of wealth rather than birth
- The equestrians
- Men who had wealth and influence but chose business over politics
- Some became equestrians but underwrote political careers of relatives
- Was the Roman Republic democratic?
- Culture, Religion and Morality
- Limited education -- fathers taught sons (sports, practical arts, military virtue)
- Chief occupations -- war and agriculture
- Religion
- Roman gods -- Greek gods
- Jupiter/Zeus, Neptune/Poseidon, Venus/Aphrodite
- Reverence of ancestors
- "Household gods"
- Religion tied up with political life
- The Roman priesthood
- Served as priests and politicians
- Roman morality: patriotism, duty, masculine self-control, respect for authority
- Primary duty to Rome and to family
- The Fateful Wars with Carthage
- The Punic Wars
- The First Punic War (264-241 B.C.E.)
- Roman fear of Carthaginian expansion
- Carthage cedes Sicily to Rome
- Rome seizes Corsica and Sardinia
- The Second Punic War (218-202 B.C.E.)
- Carthaginian expansion in Spain
- Rome declares war
- Hannibal (247-182 B.C.E.)
- The victory of Scipio Africanus
- Carthage abandons all territory save Carthage
- The Third Punic War (149-146 B.C.E.)
- "Carthage must be destroyed"
- Romans massacre Carthaginians
- Territorial expansion
- Increase in Roman territory (Sicily, North Africa, and Spain)
- Policy of westward expansion
- Greece and Macedon become Roman provinces (146 B.C.E.)
- Society and Culture in the Late Republic
- Transformations
- New wealth poured into Rome
- Increasing social and economic inequality
- Small farmers leave he land for the cities
- Economic and Social Changes
- Slavery
- Increase in slave population
- 200,000 Greek and Carthaginian slaves by end of 2nd century B.C.E.
- Using slaves as agricultural laborers
- No transition to industrialism
- No incentive for technological initiative
- Equestrians make contact with Eastern markets
- Operated mines, built roads, collected taxes, principal moneylenders
- Family Life and the Status of Women
- Introduction of "free marriage"
- New rules for divorce
- wives gained greater legal independence
- Upper class Romans adopt Greek customs
- Latin and Greek language
- Epicureanism and Stoicism
- Lucretius (98-55 B.C.E.)
- On the Nature of Things
- Removing the fear of the supernatural
- Matter is a combination of atoms
- Everything is the product of mechanical evolution
- "Peace and a pure heart"
- Stoicism
- Introduced around 140 B.C.E.
- Cicero (106-43 B.C.E.)
- "Father of Roman eloquence"
- Tranquility of the mind is the highest good
- Indifference to pain and sorrow
- Bringing the best of Greek philosophy to Rome
- Religion
- Spread of Eastern mystery cults
- A more emotional religion
- Egyptian cult of Osiris (Serapis)
- Great Mother (Egypt)
- Mithraism (Persia)
- The Social Struggles of the Late Republic (146-30 B.C.E.)
- Disorder, war, assassinations, and insurrections
- Spartacus slave uprising (73-71 B.C.E.)
- Tiberius Graachus (168-133 B.C.E.)
- Proposed land grants to landless
- Proposed law restricting size of estate to be owned by each citizen
- The murder of Tiberius
- Gaius Graachus (159-123 B.C.E.)
- Enacted laws for the less-privileged
- Stabilized price of grain in Rome
- Suggested full citizenship to Italian allies
- The murder of Gaius
- The Aristocratic Reaction
- Marius (157-86 B.C.E.)
- Elected consul in 107 BCE, re-elected six times
- Abolished property qualification for the army
- Army became more loyal to him than to the Republic
- Sulla (138-78 B.C.E.)
- Appointed dictator (82 B.C.E.)
- Exterminated his opponents
- Extended the power of the Senate
- Pompey (106-48 B.C.E.)
- Espoused cause of the people
- Elected consul (52) by the Senate
- Julius Caesar (c. 100-44 B.C.E.)
- The Rubicon
- Destroys the forces of Pompey at Pharselus (48)
- Cleopatra and Egypt
- Dictator for ten years (46) -- then declares himself dictator for life
- Death of Caesar -- Ides of March (44 B.C.E.)
- Treated the Republic with contempt
- The "Julian" calendar
- Realized the importance of territory in northern Europe (Gaul, Britain)
- The Principate and Early Empire (27 B.C.E.-180 C.E.)
- Octavian (64 B.C.E.-14 C.E.)
- Joined forces with Marc Antony and Marcus Ledipus
- Murder of Cicero
- Crushing the "republican" opposition
- Brutus and Cassius punished
- The Battle of Actium (31 B.C.E.)
- The Augustan system of government
- Senate votes (27) Octavian as emperor -- calls him Augustus ("worthy of honor")
- Augustus rules as princeps ("first citizen")
- Republican institutions intact but power resides with Augustus
- Controls the army, freely determined all government policy
- Achievements
- New coinage system
- Public services
- Abolished the "farming out" of the collection of taxes
- Defender of traditional values
- Augustus to Trajan
- Continued expansion
- Holds northern border at the Rhine and Danube
- The Roman Peace (Pax Romana)
- Tiberius (14-37) and Claudius (41-54)
- Nero (54-68) and Domitian (81-96)
- The "Five Good Emperors"
- Nerva (96-98)
- Trajan (98-117)
- Hadrian (117-138)
- Antoninus Pious (136-171)
- Marcus Aurelius (161-180)
- Romanization and Assimilation
- Pax Romana was not universal
- Roman massacres in Britain and Judea
- Assimilating the residents of conquered territories
- The spread of Roman cultural forms (amphitheaters, baths, paved roads)
- Rights of citizenship
- Borders and frontiers
- Culture and Life in the period of the Principate
- Exponents of Stoicism
- Seneca (4 B.C.E.-65 C.E.) and Epictetus (c. 60-120 C.E.)
- True happiness can be found by surrendering to the benevolent order of the cosmos
- Preached the ideal of virtue for virtue's sake
- Urged obedience to conscience
- The cosmos was divine -- ruled by Providence
- Marcus Aurelius (121-180 C.E.)
- More fatalistic, less hopeful
- Immortality was not peace
- People should live nobly
- Resign yourself with dignity to suffering and pain
- Literature
- The Golden Age -- extolling the virtues of Rome
- Virgil (70-19 B.C.E.) -- the Ecologues and the Aeneid
- Horace (65-8 B.C.E.) -- the Odes
- Livy (59 B.C.E.-17 C.E.) -- History of Rome
- Ovid (43 B.C.E.-17 C.E.) -- the Metamorphosis
- The Silver Age -- self-conscious artifice
- Petronius (fl. 1st century C.E.)
- Apuleius (fl. 2nd century C.E.) -- The Golden Ass
- Juvenal (c. 55-140 C.E.) -- the Satires
- Tacitus (c. 55-120 C.E.) -- Germania and Historiae
- Art and Architecture
- Art imported from conquered territories
- The wealthy wanted art for their homes -- as the demand increased, the Romans relied on copies
- Grand public architecture to delicate wall paintings
- The Pantheon and the Colosseum
- Engineering feats
- Roads and bridges
- Aqueducts
- Sewage systems
- Aristocratic Women Under the Principiate
- Important roles played by upper-class women
- Independent status from their husbands
- The very wealthy
- Could own property
- Invest in commercial ventures
- They could not hold public office
- They could act as priestesses and civic patrons
- Some were educated in the liberal arts
- Sexual freedom
- Gladiatorial Combats
- Most visible sign of Rome, yet the most distasteful
- The "Circus"
- Attended by commoners and aristocrats
- Roman Law
- Product of the Principiate
- Wider field of jurisdiction
- Augustus appoints eminent jurists to deliver opinions on certain legal issues
- Three branches
- Civil law -- the law of Rome and its citizens (both written and unwritten)
- Law of the peoples -- early international law
- Natural law -- a product of nature and of philosophy
- The economy of Italy during the Principiate
- Manufacturing increased
- Mass production of pottery, textiles, metal and glassware
- Merchants carried goods throughout the empire
- Signs of strain
- Upper class luxury
- Diminishing number of slaves
- Labor shortages on the latifundia
- Small farmers (colonni) tied to large agricultural estates
- Unfavorable balance of trade
- The Crisis of the Third Century (180-284)
- Commodus (161-192)
- Both accommodated and terrified the Senate
- Few men of talent would work for him
- Alienated the army and the Senate
- Fought as a gladiator in the Colosseum
- Strangled by his wrestling coach
- The Severan Dynasty
- Septimius Severus (145-211)
- Controlled the army
- Eliminated the rights of the Senate
- Ruled as a military dictator
- Cheapened Roman citizenship
- Imperial women keep the dynasty and empire together
- The "barracks emperors"
- 26 emperors between 235 and 284
- The height of the third-century crisis
- Political chaos and civil wars
- Interruption of agriculture and trade
- Nearly confiscatory taxation of civilians
- Advance of Rome's external enemies: Germans, Persians and Goths
- Neoplatonism
- The third century produced an overwhelming sense of anxiety
- Plotinus (204-270)
- Everything that exists proceeds from the divine
- The stream of emanations
- Matter is despised as the symbol of evil and darkness
- Mysticism
- Human soul through its union with matter is separated from its divine source
- Highest goal is the mystical reunion with the divine
- Asceticism
- The Roman Rule in the West: A Balance Sheet
- Explaining the decline and fall of Rome
- Political failures
- Lack of a clear law of succession
- Civil war
- Lack of constitutional means for reform
- Violence
- Economic crisis
- Slavery and manpower shortage
- Little technological advance
- Wealth concentrated in the hands of few families
- Undermining of civic ideals
- Roman achievements
- A long-lasting empire
- Created systems of communication, trade, and travel
- The Roman economy
- The Roman political system
- Extending the franchise to outsiders
- Conclusion
- A standard of comparison: ancient and modern
- Architecture
- Roman law
- Sculpture
- The transmission of Greek civilization to the West
- The cultural inheritance
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