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Standards Preview 10.1
Students relate the moral and
ethical principles in ancient
Greek and Roman philosophy, in
Judaism, and in Christianity to
the development of Western
political thought.
Chapter Focus Question
What are the main
historical sources of the
democratic tradition?
Focus Question
What ideas arose in ancient
Greece that contributed to the
development of democratic
values in the modern world?
The Rise of Greek City-States
Geography & Power
City-state – political unit made up of a city and the
surrounding lands
Importance of city-states
Geographical features
Governing the City-States, 750-500 B.C.
Monarchy – king or queen exercise central power
Aristocracy – small ruling noble landowners
Changes in warfare
The Rise of Greek City-States
Sparta: A Nation of Soldiers
Sparta – military state
Monarchy
2 kings, council of elders, assembly of citizens, five ephors
Citizenship – native born Spartan men over age 30
State-owned slaves
System of strict control over people’s lives
Emphasis on military virtues and discipline, fitness and health
Beginning of military training for boys at age 8
Prohibition against trade, travel, or mixing with other city-states
Scornful of wealth
Women expected to obey men; allowed to own property
The Rise of Greek City-States
Athens: A Limited Democracy
Athens – development of democracy
Glorification of individual
Movement toward Democracy (government by the people);
limited citizenship; rise of tyrants
Wealth and power of aristocracy
Participation in government by male citizens
Slaves with no political rights or personal freedom
Military training and broad education for boys
Trade with other city-states
Limited rights for women
The Rise of Greek City-States
Athens: Rulers & Philosophers
Solon – reformed Athens to ensure greater fairness &
justice, 594 B.C.
Opened offices to more citizens
Gave Athenian assembly more say in decisions
Tyrants – leaders who gain power by force
Pisistratus, 546 B.C.
Seized power by force
Gave farmers and poor citizens a greater voice
Weakened the aristocracy
The Rise of Greek City-States
Athens: Rulers & Philosophers
Tyrants (cont)
Cleisthenes & Legislature (lawmaking body)
Broadened the role of ordinary citizens in government
Set up the Council of 500
Made the assembly a genuine legislature
The Rise of Greek City-States
What process took city-states from monarch to
aristocracy and, in Athens, to democracy?
Defenders of the king (noble landowners) gradually
took power for themselves (aristocracy)
Military changes increased the power of the middle
class (Iron weapons replaced bronze)
Athens – leaders gave ordinary citizens control over
government
The Persian Wars
500 B.C. – Athens is “Top Dog”
Persians, Asia Minor
490 B.C. – Battle of Marathon
Use of geography
480 B.C. – Battle of Thermopylae
How did the Greeks meet the threat of invasion by the
Persians?
Athens in the Age of Pericles
Pericles, Athenian Statesman
Led a thriving economy and more democratic
government
Believed all male citizens – regardless of wealth or
social class – should take part in government
Stressed the rights and duties of individuals as citizens
of a democracy
Expressed the earliest and greatest democratic ideals in
his Funeral Oration
Athens in the Age of Pericles
Political Life
Direct Democracy
Jury – a panel of citizens who have the authority to
make the final judgment in a trial
The Funeral Oration
Power rested in the hands “not of a minority but of the
whole people”
Rights & duties of the individual
Athens in the Age of Pericles
Economic & Cultural Life
Rebuild what the Persians had destroyed
Create jobs
Honor gods with temples & festivals
The Peloponnesian War
Sparta vs. Athens (27 years)
What progress did the Greeks under Pericles make
toward democratic government?
Greek Philosophers
Philosophers = lovers of wisdom
Moral & Ethical Principles
Idea of goodness
Standards of human behavior
Sophists – questioned accepted ideas
(Athens)
Greek Philosophers
Socrates & Citizenship
Socrates – critic of the Sophists, Athenian
stonemason & philosopher
“What is the greatest good”
Socratic method – seek truth & self-knowledge
Questioned his fellow citizens about their
beliefs
Believed the unexamined life was not worth
living
Plato – student of Socrates
Greek Philosophers
Plato & Reason
Distrust of democracy
Reason led to knowledge
Republic – describes an ideal state
Workers – produce the necessities of life
Soldiers – defend the state
Philosophers - rule
Greek Philosophers
Aristotle and the Rule of Law
Aristotle – Plato’s most famous student
Politics – rulers must be subject to the law
What did Socrates, Plato, and
Aristotle think of democracy?
Greek Philosophers
Plato
Student of Socrates
Set up his own school in
Athens
Believed reason led to
genuine knowledge
Described his vision of
an ideal state in The
Republic
Rejected Athenian
democracy
Believed the state should
regulate citizens’ lives
Aristotle
Was Plato’s most famous student
Tutor to Alexander the Great
Favored a constitutional
government ruled by the middle
class
Believed the city-state re presented
the best form of human
community
Believed good conduct meant
pursuing the “golden mean”
Promoted reason as the guiding
force for learning
Set up a school for the study of all
branches of knowledge
Alexander and the Hellenistic Age
Conquest of Persia
The Legacy of Alexander
Hellenistic civilization – combination of eastern and
western cultures
Greek, Persian, Egyptian, and Indian
Stoicism – Zeno, calmly accept whatever life brought
How did the ideas of the ancient Greeks
spread beyond Greece during the
Hellenistic age?
The Greek Roots of Democracy
Focus Question
What ideas arose in ancient Greece that
contributed to the development of
democratic values in the modern world?
Direct democracy
A legislative assembly of citizens
Juries staffed by citizens
Moral & ethical principles
Equality
Rule of Law
Chapter Focus Question
How did the government
of Rome develop into an
empire?
Establishing a Republic
Republic – “thing of the people”
How does a republic differ from a monarchy or an
aristocracy of nobles?
Is everyone in a republic considered equal?
How did the Laws of the Twelve Tables help the plebeians?
How did the tribunes serve as a check on the power of
government?
Establishing a Republic
Geography & Unification
Etruscan Rule
800 B.C. – Tiber River
Herders & Farmers
Rome = city on the seven hills
Etruscan king
Establishing a Republic
A New Government
509 BC – Etruscan monarchy ends
Republic – “thing of the people”
Senate – most powerful body
Consuls – supervised the business of government and
commanded Rome’s armies
Dictator – ruler who has complete control over a
government
Cincinnatus
Roman Senate
Establishing a Republic
Common People Demand Equality
Patrician – landholding upper class
Plebian – common people
Law of the Twelve Tables, 450 BC
Course Syllabus
Tribunes – plebeians rights to elect their own officials
Veto – block
How did the Roman Republic differ from government under the
Etruscans?
From Republic to Empire
Roman Expansion
How did continual warfare affect the plebeians?
How did the rise of professional armies affect Rome?
Some historians have said that the Roman empire
really began with Julius Caesar. Do you agree?
How did the Roman republic become an empire?
From Republic to Empire
Continuing Conquest
Carthage – city state on the northern coast of Africa
Punic Wars
Spain – Egypt
Mediterranean “Our Sea” or mare nostrum
Economic & Social Effects
Tiberius & Gaius Gracchus
Distribute land to poor farmers
Public funds to feed the poor
From Republic to Empire
Julius Caesar’s Rise to Power
Julius Caesar – military commander
Dictator – absolute ruler of Rome
Reforms
Public works to employ the jobless
Public land given to the poor
Citizenship
SAVE THE REPUPLIC
From Republic to Empire
From Republic to Empire
Emperor Augustus Caesar
Augustus Caesar – Caesar’s grand-nephew
Roman Empire
Civil service enforced the law
Jobs were awarded according to talent
Self-government of cities & provinces
Pax Romana
Roman Peace
How did the Roman republic become an empire?
From Republic to Empire
Roman Law
Justice through the law
Describe a situation in which a person receives justice
How does the law relate to justice?
Roman law developed & grew along with the republic and empire
Two Systems
Civil Law – applied only to Roman citizens
Law of Nations – laws of nature by using the human ability to
reason, applied to all people
What was the difference between civil law and the law of nations?
Roman Law
Key Principles
Accused person presume
innocent until proven guilty
Accused had the right to face
the accuser and offer a defense
against the charge
Guilt “clearer than daylight”
through evidence
Judges – interpret the laws &
make fair decisions
Roman Law
Justinian’s Code
Byzantine empire
Justinian – Byzantine emperor best remembered for his
reform of the Roman law code
Body of Civil Law AKA: Justinian’s Code
How did Justinian’s Code improve the state of Roman law?
What lasting principles of law did Romans develop?
Greco-Roman Civilization
What is Greco-Roman civilization?
Why didn’t Greco-Roman civilization disappear when
the western Roman empire collapsed?
Do you think Greco-Roman ideas survive today in our
culture?
What cultures contributed to Greco-Roman
civilization?
Greco-Roman Civilization
Roman Culture
Greek art, literature, philosophy, and scientific genius = height
of cultural achievement
Greco-Roman civilization – blending of Greek, Hellenistic, and
Roman traditions
Philosophy
Importance of duty
Well-being of all people
Preserving Greco-Roman Ideas
Muslim scholars
Chapter Focus Question
How did the government of Rome develop
into an empire?
Rome started as a city-state controlled by an aristocracy and
led by a king
Romans overthrew this monarch and established a republic
that expanded into neighboring lands
Roman expansion created strains in Roman society that
eventually led to civil wars and a powerful dictatorship
The republic waned as powerful rulers continue to expand
their realm, creating an empire
Principles of Judaism
Focus Question: What
moral and
ethical principles lie at the core
of the Jewish religion?
63 B.C. Pompey & Jerusalem
Capital of the independent Jewish state of
Judea
Polytheistic vs. Monotheistic
The Ancient Israelites
Hebrews or Israelites (people of Israel)
Torah – sacred religious text
Abraham – founder of the Israelite nation
2000 B.C. – Mesopotamia
Canaan
Famine forced migration to Egypt
Moses – Israelite led the escape from Egypt
The Ancient Israelites
1000 B.C. – Israelites est. kingdom – Israel
David – unites a single nation
Solomon – Jerusalem, capital
Price of ambition
High Taxes & Forced Labor
Split in the kingdom
The Ancient Israelites
Rulers of the Israelites
Egyptians – enslaved the Israelites
Assyrians (722 B.C.)
Babylonians & exile
586 B.C. – Nebuchadnezzar destroys the
great temple
Persians – Cyrus frees Israelites from
captivity
Judea = Jews
Rebuild Solomon’s temple
The Ancient Israelites
What role did migration play in the history
of the Israelites?
Series of migrations
Abraham’s journey to Canaan
Famine & migration to Egypt
Exodus (Moses) from Egypt
Babylonian captivity
God’s Covenant With the Israelites
One God – Monotheistic
Belief in one God as supreme
God’s Promise (Covenant)
Protect the Israelites and provide them a
homeland
People of Israel would remain faithful
and obedient to God
God’s Covenant With the Israelites
The Torah “instruction”
Five Books – early account of the Israelites
God’s teachings – moral standard
Oral Torah – unwritten laws
How did the Jews’ beliefs differ from those
of other nearby peoples?
Monotheistic
Covenant with God to obey God’s laws
Teachings on Law and Morality
The Ten Commandments
Mount Sinai & Moses
1-4 religious duties (Sabbath)
Holy day for rest and worship
5-10 rules for individual conduct
toward other people
“Honor your father and mother”
Teachings on Law and Morality
The Seven Universal Laws
Set of rules that applied to all people
Basic human rights in international
law
Teachings on Law and Morality
An Ethical Worldview
Responsibility to obey God’s laws vs.
freedom to make individual moral choices
Prophets – spiritual leaders who interpreted
God’s will and emerged to remind the Jews
of their duties
Ethics – moral standards of behavior
Political Equality – equality before the law
Democratic Concept – The Rule of Law
Teachings on Law and Morality
What is the source of basic moral laws
that Jews must obey?
Ten Commandments
Found in the Torah’s Book of Exodus
The Scattering of the Jews
Diaspora – scattering of the Jews
586 B.C. – Babylonian Captivity
Land of Israel
Center of their culture and religion
How did the scattering of the Jewish
people begin?
Babylonian Captivity
Not all Jews chose to return to Judea
Principles of Judaism
Focus Question: What
moral and
ethical principles lie at the core
of the Jewish religion?
Ten Commandments
Responsibility to obey God’s laws
Equality before the law
The Rise of Christianity
Focus Question
How did Christianity develop
from Judaism into a powerful,
independent religion?
Jesus – founder of Christianity
Pax Romana & Rome
Jesus of Nazareth
Gospel – “good news”
Information about the life of Jesus
Early Life
4 B.C. Bethlehem (Nazareth)
Mary & Joseph
King David of Israel
“the Son of the Most High God”
Messiah – the savior sent by God to lead the
Jews to freedom
If some Jews believed that Jesus was the messiah but
the Jewish leaders did not, what might happen?
Jesus of Nazareth
Ministry
Apostles – close followers of Jesus “a
person sent forth”
Message of Jesus
God’s love and the need for justice,
morality, and helping others
Emphasized the importance of
forgiveness
Jesus of Nazareth
Death & Resurrection
Jesus was a threat to Roman authorities
Jesus arrested and crucified
Disciples confused – dead or alive?
Carry teachings to “all nations” and then
ascended into heave
Jesus of Nazareth
What roles did love, justice, and service
play in the teachings of Jesus
Central role
Emphasized God’s love and told people
to love God and to “love your neighbor
as yourself ”
Encouraged people to love their enemies
Christianity Spreads
Break from Judaism
Christians – followers of Jesus Christ
Christ – Greek for “the anointed one” another
word for messiah
Peter & Rome
Paul – key figure in the spread of Christianity
Helped separate Christianity from Judaism by attempting
to convert non-Jews
Set up many Christian churches throughout the
Mediterranean
Christianity Spreads
A New Covenant
New covenant helps distinguish Christianity from
Judaism
Writings of the New Testament went beyond observance
of God’s law to focus on faith in Jesus Christ
Persecution
Tolerance – acceptance
Rome & varied religious traditions
Scapegoats for social/economic ills
Martyrs
Christianity Spreads
Jesus welcomed all people
Comfort found in message of love
Belief in equality & dignity of all
Better life beyond the grave
Christianity spread throughout the Roman empire
Greek philosophy appeals to educated Romans
Missionaries & extensive system of Roman roads
Writings in Greek & Latin (understood by many people)
Christianity Spreads
Triumph, 313 A.D.
Emperor Constantine and the Edict of Milan
Freedom of worship
What factors contributed to the spread of Christianity?
Jewish roots of Christianity attracted Jews
Ethical principles attracted common people
Missionaries like Paul spread Jesus’ message to Jews and
Gentiles
Paul and others incorporated Greek ideas into the religion,
which appealed to educated Romans
The Christian Church
Middle Ages
Christian Church most powerful force in Europe
Leaders of early Christian Church
Role of Women
Clergy – people authorized to perform religious
ceremonies
Priests & Bishops
Patriarchs (leading bishops) of the most important
cities in the Roman empire
Pope
The Christian Church
Split between Eastern and Western Churches (1054)
Patriarch of Rome (pope) claimed authority over the
other patriarchs, who rejected his claim
Eastern – Orthodox Church
Western – Roman Catholic Church
Only way to avoid eternal suffering was sacraments
Roman Catholic Church gains secular power in
Europe
Officials owned large tracts of land
Held high government positions
The Christian Church
Spread of Learning
Conflict between faith and reason
Aristotle taught the use of reason to discover basic
truths
Christians accept many ideas on faith
Thomas Aquinas – Christian scholar
Faith and reason exist in harmony
The Christian Church
How did the Christian church exert control
over Europeans in the Middle Ages?
Church officials owned large tracts of land
Served in high government positions
Church controlled people’s spiritual lives =
absolute power over religious matters, its laws, and
its system of courts
The Judeo-Christian Tradition
Shared elements of Judaism, Christianity & Muslims
Honor Abraham, Moses, and the prophets
Teach the ethical world-view developed by the Israelites
Judeo-Christian tradition becomes influential in the west
Christianity incorporated much of Judaism
Christian missionaries spread Christianity throughout Europe
Christian Church became a powerful spiritual and secular force
Europeans carried their religion with them when they settled in the
Americas
Judeo-Christian & Democratic Tradition
Jewish and Christian Bible’s moral and ethical principles form the
basis for many democratic ideals such as equality and human rights
The Judeo-Christian Tradition
Where did the principles of the Judeo-Christian tradition
come from?
The Bible
The Rise of Christianity
Focus Question
How did Christianity develop from
Judaism into a powerful, independent
religion?
Christianity was spread by missionaries
and had widespread appeal
Christian communities organized a
structured hierarchy, which helped
make the Church a powerful force
Democratic Developments
in England
Focus Question:
How did Parliament emerge
victorious in the struggle for
political power in medieval
England?
Growth of Royal Power
Feudalism – loosely organized system of
rule in which powerful local lords divided
their landholdings among lesser lords
Vassals pledged service & loyalty
Knights – mounted warriors
Peasants/Serfs – lowest
Means of protection & control
King – greatest lord
Growth of Royal Power
King
Vassal
Knights
Peasant
Serf
Growth of Royal Power
Monarchs – equal power of Nobles &
Church
Nobles & Church – courts, taxes, &
armies
Guarded their rights & privileges
Resisted effort by monarchs to increase
royal authority
Growth of Royal Power
Battle of Hastings, 1066
William vs. Harold
William the Conqueror
Required every vassal to swear first
allegiance to him
Built an efficient tax-collecting system
Complete census, 1086
Increased royal wealth & authority
Growth of Royal Power
Henry II, 1154
Broadened the system of royal justice
Expand customs into law
Common Law – a legal system based on
custom and court rulings
Applied to all of England
Jury – “sworn to oath”
Grand jury vs. Trial jury
Growth of Royal Power
What new practices did strong
monarchs introduce in England?
William the Conqueror required vassals to
be loyal to him & he introduced a census
for tax purposes
Henry II set up a justice system that came
to rely on common law & juries
Evolving Traditions of
Government
King John
Oppressive taxes and abuses of power
The Magna Carta
Document that affirms the nobles’ feudal
rights and some rights of townspeople
and the Church
Evolving Traditions of
Government
The Magna Carta, cont.
Limit on King’s power
Listed rights that the king had to respect
Declared that the king had to consult with
Great Council of lords and clergy before
raising taxes
Cornerstone of democratic tradition
Asserted that people had rights
Monarch must obey the law
Evolving Traditions of
Government
Magna Carta makes rule of law a key
principle of government
Great Council evolves into Parliament
Parliament wins the right to approve new
taxes, which limits the power of the
monarch
Evolving Traditions of
Government
Development of Parliament
Great Council = Parliament
House of Lords – Nobles & Clergy
House of Commons – Middle-class
Parliament Gains Strength
“Power of the Purse”
How did the English Parliament limit the
power of the monarch?
Triumph of Parliament
Parliament revolts against Charles I
James I = absolute monarch
Charles I, son of James
Petition of Right
Long Parliament, 1640-1653
The Royal Challenge
Absolute Monarch – a ruler with complete
authority over the government and the lives
of the people he or she governs
Triumph of Parliament
The English Civil War, 1642-1649
Oliver Cromwell – leader of the army
that fought against Charles I
Cromwell’s army defeats the king’s
troops in the English Civil War
Triumph of Parliament
The Commonwealth
The House of Commons abolishes the
monarchy, and Parliament declares
England a republic, known as the
Commonwealth
From Restoration to Glorious Revolution
Created a limited monarchy
Triumph of Parliament
English Bill of Rights
Did not create a democracy, established a
limited monarchy
Constitution or legislative body limits the
monarch’s powers
Parliament and the monarch governed in a
partnership
Triumph of Parliament
Contribution to the development of
democratic tradition
Restated traditional rights of English
citizens
Habeas Corpus – no person could be
held in prison without first being charged
with a specific crime
Principle that a person cannot be held in
prison without first being charged with a
specific crime
Triumph of Parliament
What principles did the English Bill of Rights
establish?
Ensured superiority of Parliament
Required the monarch to summon Parliament regularly
House of Commons “power of the purse”
Prohibited the monarch from interfering in parliamentary
debates or suspending laws
Barred Roman Catholic monarchs
Abolished excessive fines and cruel or unjust punishment
Affirmed the principle of habeas corpus
Democratic Developments
in England
How did Parliament emerge victorious
in the struggle for political power in
medieval England?
Magna Carta
Power of the Purse
Petition of Rights
English Bill of Rights
Chapter 1 Focus Question
What are the main
historical sources of the
democratic tradition?