From Classical to Contemporary
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Transcript From Classical to Contemporary
Establishing the Republic
HUM 2051: Civilization I
Fall 2010
Dr. Perdigao
October 8-13, 2010
Transference
Shared cultures—Roman names to Greek gods—but, more significantly, crosscultural contact
Zeus
Jupiter: father
Hera
Juno: queen
Athena
Minerva: wisdom
Aphrodite
Venus: love
Hades
Pluto: underworld
Hermes
Mercury: trade; messenger
Poseidon
Neptune sea
Ares
Mars: war
Hephaestus
Vulcan: fire; blacksmith
Key Virtues
Patria potestas (“father’s power”) in Roman family
Virtue (virtus); dignity (dignitas); fame (fama), competition for political
power and privilege (Perry 120)
Piety toward gods and family, friends, and state
Mos maiorum (the way of the elders)
Virtus (virtue): courage, strength, loyalty—but also moral purity
Faithfulness (fides)
Changing of the Guard
Foundation of the Republic to counter mythological beginnings (509 BCE),
begins with overthrow of Etruscan monarchy by landowning aristocrats
(patricians); Empire in 27 BCE with Octavian (Augustus) as first Roman
emperor after 500 years of republican self-government (Perry 118)
Inheritances from Etruscans—road construction, sanitation, hydraulic
engineering (Perry 118)
Rome—republic at end of sixth century BCE (509 BCE) with landowning
aristocrats (patricians) overthrowing Etruscan king
Struggle of the Orders—conflict between patricians and commoners
(plebeians); government—consuls, Centuriate Assembly, popular assembly
controlled by nobility, and Senate; plebeians won right to own assembly,
the Plebeian Assembly and later Tribal Assembly (119-120)
Foundations
Twelve Tables as first Roman code of laws in 450 BCE (Perry 120)
287 BCE Tribal Assembly gives full civil equality and legal protection to
plebeians although upper class remains in power (Perry 120); class struggle
remains for two hundred years
146 BCE—Rome as dominant state in Mediterranean world: uniting Italian
peninsula; war with Carthage where Rome emerges as ruler of western
Mediterranean; subjugation of Hellenistic states, contact with Greek
civilizations (Perry 122)
Evolution of Forms
Carthage—North African city founded by Phoenicians in 800 BCE,
commercial center (Perry 123)
Wars with Carthage—264-121 BCE—Punic Wars (First Punic War 264-241
BCE, Carthage surrenders Sicily to Rome, Rome later seizes Corsica and
Sardinia; Second Punic War 218-201 BCE)
Hannibal (247-183 BCE) leading Carthaginian army; after Hannibal’s win
at Cannae, Rome’s “worst days”; Hannibal eventually defeated by Scipio
Africanas in 202 BCE in battle of Zama to end Second Punic War (Perry
123-124)
Second Punic War—Rome as greatest power in western Mediterranean;
Philip V of Macedonia joins Hannibal—Rome starts First Macedonian
War, wins in 205 BCE (Perry 124)
Roman imperialism—Third Punic War in 146 BCE to annihilate Carthage
(Perry 125)
Developments
Hellenization—adoption of Greek culture (Perry 125) with Greeks
coming to Rome
Contact with Greek culture—Formation of Roman culture—science,
philosophy, medicine, geography, history, poetry, drama, oratory
(Perry 128)
Plautus’ plays—modeled on Greeks’, with Greek characters, settings,
style of dress; Catullus as lyric poet; Lucretius, Roman Epicurean
philosopher; Cicero, orator
Marius as consul in 107 BCE (Perry 134), Sulla in control in struggle
with Mithridates, but Marius’ supporters return command to Marius;
after Marius’ death, Sulla becomes dictator
First Triumvirate in 60 BCE, Pompey, Crassus, and Julius Caesar,
Caesar crossing the Rubicon, civil war in Republic, dictator for ten
years
The Next Chapter
Temporary dictatorship made lifelong office
44 BCE—March 15—aristocrats assassinate Caesar, including general and
orator Brutus (Perry 136)
Mark Antony and Lepidus join Octavian to defeat Brutus and Cassius;
Antony and Octavian fight for control of Rome, Octavian defeats Antony
and Cleopatra to emerge master of Rome and then first Roman emperor
(Perry 137)
Move from republican institutions to dictatorship (Perry 136); expansion
and disintegration
Next era—Octavian—move to peace as Augustus (backdrop for Virgil’s
text)