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Classical antiquity

Classical antiquity, also known as the classical era, classical period, classical age, or simply antiquity,[1] is the period of cultural European history between the 8th century BC and the 5th century AD[note 1] comprising the interwoven civilizations of ancient Greece and ancient Rome known together as the Greco-Roman world, centered on the Mediterranean Basin. It is the period during which ancient Greece and ancient Rome flourished and had major influence throughout much of Europe, North Africa, and West Asia.[2][3]

The Parthenon is one of the most recognizable symbols of the classical era, exemplifying ancient Greek culture.
The Colosseum, a prominent symbol of the Roman classical era and culture

Conventionally, it is often considered to begin with the earliest-recorded Epic Greek poetry of Homer (8th–7th-century BC) and ends with the end of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD. Such a wide span of history and territory covers many disparate cultures and periods. Classical antiquity may also refer to an idealized vision among later people of what was, in Edgar Allan Poe's words, "the glory that was Greece, and the grandeur that was Rome".[4]

The culture of the ancient Greeks, together with some influences from the ancient Near East, was the basis of art,[5] philosophy, society, and education in the Mediterranean and Near East until the Roman imperial period. The Romans preserved, imitated, and spread this culture throughout Europe, until they were able to compete with it.[6][7] This Greco-Roman cultural foundation has been immensely influential on the language, politics, law, educational systems, philosophy, science, warfare, literature, historiography, ethics, rhetoric, art and architecture of both the Western, and through it, the modern world.[8]

Surviving fragments of classical culture helped produce a revival beginning during the 14th century which later came to be known as the Renaissance, and various neo-classical revivals occurred during the 18th and 19th centuries.[9][10]

History edit

Western Roman EmpireRoman EmpireRoman RepublicRoman KingdomEastern Roman EmpireRoman GreeceHellenistic GreeceClassical GreeceArchaic Greece
Compact timeline of classical antiquity.

Archaic period (c. 8th to c. 6th centuries BC) edit

The earliest period of classical antiquity occurs during a time of gradual resurgence of historical sources after the Late Bronze Age collapse. The 8th and 7th centuries BC are still largely protohistorical, with the earliest Greek alphabetic inscriptions appearing during the first half of the 8th century. The legendary poet Homer is usually assumed to have lived during the 8th or 7th century BC, and his lifetime is often considered as the beginning of classical antiquity. During the same period is the traditional date for the establishment of the Ancient Olympic Games, in 776 BC.

Phoenicians, Carthaginians and Assyrians edit

 
Map of Phoenician (in yellow) and Greek colonies (in red) about 8th to 6th century BC.

The Phoenicians originally expanded from ports in Canaan, by the 8th century dominating trade in the Mediterranean. Carthage was founded in 814 BC, and the Carthaginians by 700 BC had established strongholds in Sicily, Italy and Sardinia, which created conflicts of interest with Etruria. A stele found in Kition, Cyprus commemorates the victory of King Sargon II in 709 BC over the seven kings of the island, marking an important part of the transfer of Cyprus from Tyrian rule to the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[11][12][13][14]

Greece edit

The Archaic period followed the Greek Dark Ages, and saw significant advancements in political theory, and the beginnings of democracy, philosophy, theatre, poetry, as well as the revitalization of the written language (which had been lost during the Dark Ages).

In pottery, the Archaic period sees the development of the Orientalizing style, which signals a shift from the geometric style of the later Dark Ages and the accumulation of influences derived from Egypt, Phoenicia and Syria.

Pottery styles associated with the later part of the Archaic age are the black-figure pottery, which originated in Corinth during the 7th-century BC and its successor, the red-figure style, developed by the Andokides Painter in about 530 BC.

Greek colonies edit
 
Greek territories and colonies during the Archaic period (750–550 BC)

Greek colonisation refers to the expansion of Archaic Greeks, particularly during the 8th–6th centuries BC, across the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea.

The Archaic expansion differed from the Iron Age migrations of the Greek Dark Ages, in that it consisted of organised direction (see oikistes) away from the originating metropolis rather than the simplistic movement of tribes, which characterised the aforementioned earlier migrations. Many colonies, or apoikia (Greek: ἀποικία, transl. "home away from home"), that were founded during this period eventually evolved into strong Greek city-states, functioning independently of their metropolis.

Iron Age Italy edit

 
Etruscan civilization in north of Italy, 800 BC.

The Etruscans had established political control in the region by the late 7th-century BC, forming the aristocratic and monarchial elite. The Etruscans apparently lost power in the area by the late 6th-century BC, and at this time, the Italic tribes reinvented their government by creating republics, with greater restraints on the ability of individual rulers to exercise power.[15]

Roman kingdom edit

According to legend, Rome was founded on 21 April 753 BC by twin descendants of the Trojan prince Aeneas, Romulus and Remus.[16] As the city was bereft of women, legend says that the Latins invited the Sabines to a festival and stole their unmarried maidens, resulting the integration of Latins and Sabines.[17]

Archaeological evidence indeed shows first traces of settlement at the Roman Forum in the mid-8th century BC, though settlements on the Palatine Hill may date back to the 10th century BC.[18][19]

According to legend, the seventh and final king of Rome was Tarquinius Superbus. As the son of Tarquinius Priscus and the son-in-law of Servius Tullius, Superbus was of Etruscan birth. It was during his reign that the Etruscans reached their apex of power. Superbus removed and destroyed all the Sabine shrines and altars from the Tarpeian Rock, enraging the people of Rome. The people came to object to his rule when he failed to recognize the rape of Lucretia, a patrician Roman, by his own son. Lucretia's kinsman, Lucius Junius Brutus (ancestor to Marcus Brutus), summoned the Senate and had Superbus and the monarchy expelled from Rome in 510 BC. After Superbus' expulsion, the Senate in 509 BC voted to never again allow the rule of a king and reformed Rome into a republican government.

Classical Greece (5th to 4th centuries BC) edit

 
Delian League ("Athenian Empire"), just before the Peloponnesian War in 431 BC.

The classical period of Ancient Greece corresponds to most of the 5th and 4th centuries BC, in particular, from the end of the Athenian tyranny in 510 BC to the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC. In 510, Spartan troops helped the Athenians overthrow the tyrant Hippias, son of Peisistratos. Cleomenes I, king of Sparta, established a pro-Spartan oligarchy conducted by Isagoras.

The Greco-Persian Wars (499–449 BC), concluded by the Peace of Callias ended with not only the liberation of Greece, Macedon, Thrace, and Ionia from Persian rule, but also with the dominance of Athens in the Delian League, which resulted in conflict with Sparta and the Peloponnesian League, resulting in the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC), ending with a Spartan victory.

Greece began the 4th century with Spartan hegemony, but by 395 BC the Spartan rulers dismissed Lysander from office, and Sparta lost its naval supremacy. Athens, Argos, Thebes and Corinth, the latter two of which were formerly Spartan allies, challenged Spartan dominance in the Corinthian War, which ended inconclusively in 387 BC. Later, in 371 BC, the Theban generals Epaminondas and Pelopidas won a victory at the Battle of Leuctra. The result of this battle was the end of Spartan supremacy and the establishment of Theban hegemony. Thebes sought to maintain its dominance until it was finally ended by the increasing power of Macedon in 346 BC.

During the reign of Philip II, (359–336 BC), Macedon expanded into the territory of the Paeonians, the Thracians and the Illyrians. Philip's son, Alexander the Great, (356–323 BC) managed to briefly extend Macedonian power not only over the central Greek city-states but also to the Persian Empire, including Egypt and lands as far east as the fringes of India. The classical Greek period conventionally ends at the death of Alexander in 323 BC and the fragmentation of his empire, which was at this time divided among the Diadochi.

Hellenistic period (323–146 BC) edit

Greece began the Hellenistic period with the increasing power of Macedon and the conquests of Alexander the Great. Greek became the lingua franca far beyond Greece itself, and Hellenistic culture interacted with the cultures of Persia, the Kingdom of Israel and Kingdom of Judah, Central Asia and Egypt. Significant advances were made in the sciences (geography, astronomy, mathematics, etc.), notably with the followers of Aristotle (Aristotelianism).

The Hellenistic period ended with the increase of the Roman Republic to a super-regional power during the 2nd century BC and the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC.

Roman Republic (5th to 1st centuries BC) edit

 
The extent of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire in 218 BC (dark red), 133 BC (light red), 44 BC (orange), 14 AD (yellow), after 14 AD (green), and maximum extension under Trajan 117 (light green).

The Republican period of Ancient Rome began with the overthrow of the Monarchy c. 509 BC and lasted more than 450 years until its subversion through a series of civil wars, into the Principate form of government and the Imperial period. During the half millennium of the Republic, Rome increased from a regional power of the Latium to the dominant force in Italy and beyond. The unification of Italy by the Romans was a gradual process, brought about by a series of conflicts of the 4th and 3rd centuries, the Samnite Wars, Latin War, and Pyrrhic War. Roman victory in the Punic Wars and Macedonian Wars established Rome as a super-regional power by the 2nd century BC, followed by the acquisition of Greece and Asia Minor. This tremendous increase of power was accompanied by economic instability and social unrest, resulting in the Catiline conspiracy, the Social War and the First Triumvirate, and finally the transformation to the Roman Empire during the latter half of the 1st century BC.

Roman Empire (1st century BC to 5th century AD) edit

 
The extent of the Roman Empire under Trajan,  AD 117.

The precise end of the Republic is disputed by modern historians;[note 2] Roman citizens of the time did not recognize that the Republic had ceased to exist. The early Julio-Claudian Emperors maintained that the res publica still existed, albeit protected by their extraordinary powers, and would eventually return to its earlier Republican form. The Roman state continued to term itself a res publica as long as it continued to use Latin as its official language.

Rome acquired imperial character de facto from the 130s BC with the acquisition of Cisalpine Gaul, Illyria, Greece and Hispania, and definitely with the addition of Iudaea, Asia Minor and Gaul during the 1st century BC. At the time of the empire's maximal extension during the reign of Trajan (AD 117), Rome controlled the entire Mediterranean as well as Gaul, parts of Germania and Britannia, the Balkans, Dacia, Asia Minor, the Caucasus, and Mesopotamia.

Culturally, the Roman Empire was significantly Hellenized, but also incorporated syncretic "eastern" traditions, such as Mithraism, Gnosticism, and most notably Christianity.

Classical Rome had vast differences within their family life compared to the Greeks. Fathers had great power over their children, and husbands over their wives. In fact, the word family, familia in Latin, actually referred to those who were subject to the authority of a male head of household. This included non-related members such as slaves and servants. By marriage, both men and women shared property. Divorce was allowed first during the first century BC and could be done by either man or woman.[20]

Late antiquity (4th to 6th centuries AD) edit

 
The Western and Eastern Roman Empires by 476.

The Roman Empire began to weaken as a result of the crisis of the third century. During Late antiquity Christianity became increasingly popular, finally ousting the Roman imperial cult with the Theodosian decrees of 393. Successive invasions of Germanic tribes finalized the weakening of the Western Roman Empire during the 5th century, while the Eastern Roman Empire persisted throughout the Middle Ages, in a state called Romania by its citizens, and designated the Byzantine Empire by later historians. Hellenistic philosophy was succeeded by continued development of Platonism and Epicureanism, with Neoplatonism in due course influencing the theology of the Christian Church Fathers.

Many writers have attempted to name a specific date for the symbolic "end" of antiquity, with the most prominent dates being the deposing of the last Western Roman Emperor in 476,[21][22] the closing of the last Platonic Academy in Athens by the Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I in 529,[23] and the conquest of much of the Mediterranean by the new Muslim faith from 634 to 718.[24] These Muslim conquests, of Syria (637), Egypt (639), Cyprus (654), North Africa (665), Hispania (718), Southern Gaul (720), Crete (820), and Sicily (827), Malta (870), as well as the sieges of the Eastern Roman capital (first in 674–78 and then in 717–18) severed the economic, cultural, and political links that had traditionally united the classical cultures around the Mediterranean, ending antiquity (see Pirenne Thesis).[24]

 
The Byzantine Empire in 650 after the Arabs conquered the provinces of Syria and Egypt. At the same time early Slavs settled in the Balkans.

The original Roman Senate continued to express decrees into the late 6th century, and the last Eastern Roman emperor to use Latin as the language of his court in Constantinople was emperor Maurice, who reigned until 602. The overthrow of Maurice by his mutinying Danube army commanded by Phocas resulted in the Slavic invasion of the Balkans and the weakening of Balkan and Greek urban culture (resulting in the flight of Balkan Latin speakers to the mountains, see Origin of the Romanians), and also provoked the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628 in which all the great eastern cities except Constantinople were lost. The resulting turmoil did not end until the Muslim conquests of the 7th century finalized the irreversible loss of all the largest Eastern Roman imperial cities besides the capital itself. The emperor Heraclius in Constantinople, who reigned during this period, conducted his court in Greek, not Latin, though Greek had always been an administrative language of the eastern Roman regions. Eastern-Western associations weakened with the ending of the Byzantine Papacy.

The Eastern Roman empire's capital city Constantinople remained the only unconquered large urban site of the original Roman empire, as well as being the largest city in Europe. Yet many classical books, sculptures, and technologies survived there along with classical Roman cuisine and scholarly traditions, well into the Middle Ages, when much of it was "rediscovered" by visiting Western crusaders. Indeed, the inhabitants of Constantinople continued to refer to themselves as Romans, as did their eventual conquerors in 1453, the Ottomans (see Romaioi and Rûm.) The classical scholarship and culture that was still preserved in Constantinople were brought by refugees fleeing its conquest in 1453 and helped to begin the Renaissance (see Greek scholars in the Renaissance).

Ultimately, it was a slow, complex, and graduated change of the socio-economic structure in European history that resulted in the changeover between classical antiquity and medieval society and no specific date can truly exemplify that.

Political revivalism edit

In politics, the late Roman conception of the Empire as a universal state, commanded by one supreme divinely appointed ruler, united with Christianity as a universal religion likewise headed by a supreme patriarch, proved very influential, even after the disappearance of imperial authority in the west. This tendency reached its maximum when Charlemagne was crowned "Roman Emperor" in the year 800, an act which resulted in the formation of the Holy Roman Empire. The notion that an emperor is a monarch who outranks a king dates from this period. In this political ideal, there would always be a Roman Empire, a state the jurisdiction of which extended through the entire civilized western world.

That model continued to exist in Constantinople for the entirety of the Middle Ages, where the Byzantine Emperor was considered the sovereign of the entire Christian world. The Patriarch of Constantinople was the Empire's highest-ranked cleric, but even he was subordinate to the emperor, who was "God's Vicegerent on Earth". The Greek-speaking Byzantines and their descendants continued to call themselves "Romioi" until the creation of a new Greek state in 1832.

After the capture of Constantinople in 1453, the Russian Czars (a title derived from Caesar) claimed the Byzantine legacy as the champion of Orthodoxy; Moscow was described as the "Third Rome," and the Czars ruled as divinely appointed Emperors into the 20th century.

Despite the fact that the Western Roman secular authority disappeared entirely in Europe, it still left traces. The Papacy and the Catholic Church in particular maintained Latin language, culture, and literacy for centuries; to this day the popes are termed Pontifex Maximus which during the classical period was a title belonging to the emperor, and the ideal of Christendom continued the legacy of a united European civilization even after its political unity had ended.

The political idea of an Emperor in the West to match the Emperor in the East continued after the Western Roman Empire's collapse; it was revived by the coronation of Charlemagne in 800; the self-described Holy Roman Empire ruled central Europe until 1806.

The Renaissance idea that the classical Roman virtues had been lost as a result of medievalism was especially powerful in European politics of the 18th and 19th centuries. Reverence for Roman republicanism was strong among the Founding Fathers of the United States and the Latin American revolutionaries; the Americans described their new government as a republic (from res publica) and gave it a Senate and a President (another Latin term), rather than use available English terms like commonwealth or parliament.

Similarly in Revolutionary and Napoleonic France, republicanism and Roman martial virtues were promoted by the state, as can be seen in the architecture of the Panthéon, the Arc de Triomphe, and the paintings of Jacques-Louis David. During the revolution, France transitioned from kingdom to republic to dictatorship to Empire (complete with Imperial Eagles) that the Romans had experienced centuries earlier.

Cultural legacy edit

 
Plato and Aristotle walking and disputing. Detail from Raphael's The School of Athens (1509–1511).

Classical antiquity is a general term for a long period of cultural history. Such a wide sampling of history and territory covers many rather disparate cultures and periods. "Classical antiquity" often refers to an idealized vision of later people, of what was, in Edgar Allan Poe's words, "the glory that was Greece, the grandeur that was Rome!" During the 18th and 19th centuries AD, reverence for classical antiquity was much greater in Europe and the United States than it is now. Respect for the ancient people of Greece and Rome affected politics, philosophy, sculpture, literature, theatre, education, architecture, and sexuality.

Epic poetry in Latin continued to be written and circulated well into the 19th century. John Milton and even Arthur Rimbaud received their first poetic educations in Latin. Genres like epic poetry, pastoral verse, and the frequent use of characters and themes from Greek mythology affected Western literature greatly. In architecture, there have been several Greek Revivals, which seem more inspired in retrospect by Roman architecture than Greek. Washington, DC has many large marble buildings with facades made to look like Greek temples, with columns constructed in the classical orders of architecture.

The philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas was derived largely from that of Aristotle, despite the intervening change in religion from Hellenic Polytheism to Christianity.[25] Greek and Roman authorities such as Hippocrates and Galen formed the basis of the practice of medicine even longer than Greek thought prevailed in philosophy. In the French theater, playwrights such as Molière and Racine wrote plays on mythological or classical historical subjects and subjected them to the strict rules of the classical unities derived from Aristotle's Poetics. The desire to dance in a manner allegedly similar to the manner of the ancient Greeks caused Isadora Duncan to create her brand of ballet.

Timeline edit

See also edit

Regions during classical antiquity

Notes edit

  1. ^ The precise end date of this period is disputed, with estimates ranging from the 3rd-8th centuries AD. Traditionally, it is given as the late 5th century AD.
  2. ^ The precise event which signaled the transition of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire is a matter of interpretation. Historians have proposed the appointment of Julius Caesar as perpetual dictator (February 44 BC), the Battle of Actium (2 September 31 BC), and the Roman Senate's grant of Octavian's extraordinary powers by the first settlement (16 January  27 BC), as candidates for the defining event.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Gruen, E. (2010). Rethinking the Other in Antiquity. Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9781400836550. ISBN 9781400836550.
  2. ^ McLaughlin, Raoul (11 September 2014). The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean: The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa, Arabia and India. Pen & Sword. ISBN 9781473840959.
  3. ^ McLaughlin, Raoul (11 November 2016). The Roman Empire and the Silk Routes: The Ancient World Economy & the Empires of Parthia, Central Asia & Han China. Pen & Sword. ISBN 9781473889811.
  4. ^ Poe EA (1845). "To Helen#Revised 1845 version".
  5. ^ Helga von Heintze [de]: Römische Kunst (Roman art). In: Walter-Herwig Schuchhardt (1960): Bildende Kunst I (Archäologie) (Visual arts I – archaeology). Das Fischer Lexikon [de]. S. Fischer Verlag. p. 192. "Bestimmend blieb (...) der italisch-römische Geist, der sich der entlehnten Formen nur bediente. (...) Ohne [die] Begegnung [mit der griechischen Formenwelt, author's note] hätte der italisch-römische Geist sich wohl kaum in künstlerischen Schöpfungen ausdrücken können und wäre nicht über die Ansätze, die wir in den Kanopen von Chiusi (...), der kapitolinischen Wölfin (...), dem Krieger von Capestrano (...) erhalten haben, hinausgekommen. Auch die gleichermaßen realistische wie unkünstlerische Auffassung der Porträts im 2. und 1. J[ahr]h[undert] v[or] Chr[istus] konnte sich nur unter dem Einfluß griechischer Formen ändern." ("Determinant remained the Italic-Roman spirit, that just availed itself of the borrowed forms. (...) Without having come across [the world of the Greek forms], the Italic–Roman spirit would hardly have been able to express itself in works of art and would not have got beyond the starts that are preserved in the canopic jars of Chiusi, the Capitoline Wolf, the Warrior of Capestrano. Also the likewise realistic and inartistic conception and production of the portraits in the second and the first centuries BC could only change under the influence of Greek forms.")
  6. ^ Der Große Brockhaus. 1. vol.: A-Beo. Eberhard Brockhaus, Wiesbaden 1953, p. 315. "Ihre dankbarsten und verständnisvollsten Schüler aber fand die hellenistische Kultur in den Römern; sie wurden Mäzene, Nachahmer und schließlich Konkurrenten, indem sie die eigene Sprache wetteifernd neben die griechische setzten: so wurde die antike Kultur zweisprachig, griechisch und lateinisch. Das System dieser griechisch-hellenistisch-römischen Kultur, das sich in der römischen Kaiserzeit abschließend gestaltete, enthielt, neben Elementen des Orients, die griechische Wissenschaft und Philosophie, Dichtung, Geschichtsschreibung, Rhetorik und bildende Kunst." ("The Hellenistic culture but found its most thankful and its most understanding disciples in the Romans; they became patrons, imitators, and finally rivals, when they competitively set the own language beside the Greek: thus, the antique culture became bilingual, Greek and Latin. The system of this Greco-Latin culture, that assumed its definitive shape in the Roman imperial period, contained, amongst elements of the Orient, the Greek science and philosophy, poetry, historiography, rhetoric and visual arts.")
  7. ^ Veit Valentin: Weltgeschichte – Völker, Männer, Ideen (History of the world – peoples, men, ideas). Allert de Lange [de], Amsterdam 1939, p. 113. "Es ist ein merkwürdiges Schauspiel – dieser Kampf eines bewussten Römertums gegen die geriebene Gewandtheit des Hellenismus: der römische Geschmack wehrt sich und verbohrt sich trotzig in sich selbst, aber es fällt ihm nicht genug ein, er kann nicht über seine Grenzen weg; was die Griechen bieten, hat soviel Reiz und Bequemlichkeit. In der bildenden Kunst und in der Philosophie gab das Römertum zuerst den Kampf um seine Selbständigkeit auf – Bilden um des Bildes willen, Forschen und Grübeln, theoretische Wahrheitssuche und Spekulation lagen ihm durchaus nicht." ("It is a strange spectacle: this fight of a conscious Roman striving against the wily ingenuity of Hellenism. The Roman taste offers resistance, defiantly goes mad about itself, but there does not come enough into its mind, it is not able to overcome its limits; there is so much charm and so much comfort in what the Greeks afford. In visual arts and philosophy, Romanism first abandoned the struggle for its independence – forming for the sake of the form, poring and investigation, theoretical speculation and hunt for truth were by no means in its line.")
  8. ^ "Traces of Ancient Rome in the Modern World". education.nationalgeographic.org. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  9. ^ "Neoclassical architecture | Definition, Characteristics, Examples, & Facts | Britannica". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 June 2023. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  10. ^ "Classical / Classical Revival / Neo-Classical: an architectural style guide". architecture.com. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  11. ^ "The Esarhaddon Prism / Library of Ashurbanipal". British Museum.
  12. ^ Yon, M., Malbran-Labat, F. 1995: "La stèle de Sargon II à Chypre", in A. Caubet (ed.), Khorsabad, le Palais de Sargon II, Roi d'Assyrie, Paris, 159–179.
  13. ^ Radner, K. 2010: "The Stele of Sargon II of Assyria at Kition: A focus for an emerging Cypriot identity?", in R. Rollinger, B. Gufler, M. Lang, I. Madreiter (eds), Interkulturalität in der Alten Welt: Vorderasien, Hellas, Ägypten und die vielfältigen Ebenen des Kontakts, Wiesbaden, 429–449.
  14. ^ "The Cypriot rulers as client kings of the Assyrian empire". The many kingdoms of Cyprus. 5 November 2012. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  15. ^ Ancient Rome and the Roman Empire by Michael Kerrigan. Dorling Kindersley, London: 2001. ISBN 0-7894-8153-7. p. 12.
  16. ^ Adkins, Lesley; Adkins, Roy (1998). Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0195123326.
  17. ^ Myths and Legends – Rome, the Wolf, and Mars 29 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 8 March 2007.
  18. ^ Matyszak, Philip (2003). Chronicle of the Roman Republic: The Rulers of Ancient Rome from Romulus to Augustus. Thames & Hudson. p. 19. ISBN 978-0500051214.
  19. ^ Duiker, William; Spielvogel, Jackson (2001). World History (Third ed.). Wadsworth. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-534-57168-9.
  20. ^ Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. (6 July 2010). Gender in History Global Perspectives (2nd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-8995-8.
  21. ^ Clare, I. S. (1906). Library of universal history: containing a record of the human race from the earliest historical period to the present time; embracing a general survey of the progress of mankind in national and social life, civil government, religion, literature, science and art. New York: Union Book. p. 1519 (cf., Ancient history, as we have already seen, ended with the fall of the Western Roman Empire; [...])
  22. ^ United Center for Research and Training in History. (1973). Bulgarian historical review. Sofia: Pub. House of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences]. p. 43. (cf. ... in the history of Europe, which marks both the end of ancient history and the beginning of the Middle Ages, is the fall of the Western Roman Empire.)
  23. ^ Hadas, Moses (1950). A History of Greek Literature. Columbia University Press. p. 273 of 331. ISBN 0-231-01767-7.
  24. ^ a b Henri Pirenne (1937). Mohammed and Charlemagne 8 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine English translation by Bernard Miall, 1939. From Internet Archive. The thesis was originally discussed in an article published in Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire 1 (1922), pp. 77–86.
  25. ^ Blair, Peter. . The Dartmouth Apologia. Archived from the original on 13 September 2013. Retrieved 18 December 2013.

Sources edit

  • Grinin L. E. Early State in the Classical World: Statehood and Ancient Democracy. In Grinin L. E. et al. (eds.) Hierarchy and Power in the History of civilizations: Ancient and Medieval Cultures (pp. 31–84). Moscow: URSS, 2008.

Further reading edit

  • Boatwright, Mary T., Daniel J. Gargola, and Richard J. A. Talbert. 2004. The Romans: From village to empire. New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press
  • Bugh, Glenn. R., ed. 2006. The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic world. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Burkert, Walter. 1992. The Orientalizing revolution: The Near Eastern influence on Greek culture in the early Archaic age. Translated by Margaret E. Pinder and Walter Burkert. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ. Press.
  • Erskine, Andrew, ed. 2003. A companion to the Hellenistic world. Malden, MA, and Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Flower, Harriet I. 2004. The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Green, Peter. 1990. Alexander to Actium: The historical evolution of the Hellenistic age. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.
  • Hornblower, Simon. 1983. The Greek world 479–323 BC. London and New York: Methuen.
  • Kallendorf, Craig W., ed. 2007. A Companion to the Classical Tradition. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
  • Kinzl, Konrad, ed. 2006. A Companion to the Classical Greek world. Oxford and Malden, MA: Blackwell.
  • Murray, Oswyn. 1993. Early Greece. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ. Press.
  • Potter, David S. 2006. A companion to the Roman Empire. Malden, MA: Blackwell
  • Rhodes, Peter J. 2006. A history of the Classical Greek world: 478–323 BC. Blackwell History of the Ancient World. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
  • Rosenstein, Nathan S., and Robert Morstein-Marx, eds. 2006. A companion to the Roman Republic. Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Shapiro, H. Alan, ed. 2007. The Cambridge Companion to Archaic Greece. Cambridge Companions to the Ancient World. Cambridge, UK, and New York: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Shipley, Graham. 2000. The Greek world after Alexander 323–30 BC. London: Routledge.
  • Walbank, Frank W. 1993. The Hellenistic world. Revised ed. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ. Press.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Classical antiquity at Wikimedia Commons

classical, antiquity, journal, classical, antiquity, journal, classical, world, redirects, here, journal, classical, world, journal, classical, redirects, here, period, music, classical, period, music, also, known, classical, classical, period, classical, simp. For the journal see Classical Antiquity journal Classical world redirects here For the journal see Classical World journal Classical era redirects here For the period in music see Classical period music Classical antiquity also known as the classical era classical period classical age or simply antiquity 1 is the period of cultural European history between the 8th century BC and the 5th century AD note 1 comprising the interwoven civilizations of ancient Greece and ancient Rome known together as the Greco Roman world centered on the Mediterranean Basin It is the period during which ancient Greece and ancient Rome flourished and had major influence throughout much of Europe North Africa and West Asia 2 3 The Parthenon is one of the most recognizable symbols of the classical era exemplifying ancient Greek culture The Colosseum a prominent symbol of the Roman classical era and culture Conventionally it is often considered to begin with the earliest recorded Epic Greek poetry of Homer 8th 7th century BC and ends with the end of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD Such a wide span of history and territory covers many disparate cultures and periods Classical antiquity may also refer to an idealized vision among later people of what was in Edgar Allan Poe s words the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome 4 The culture of the ancient Greeks together with some influences from the ancient Near East was the basis of art 5 philosophy society and education in the Mediterranean and Near East until the Roman imperial period The Romans preserved imitated and spread this culture throughout Europe until they were able to compete with it 6 7 This Greco Roman cultural foundation has been immensely influential on the language politics law educational systems philosophy science warfare literature historiography ethics rhetoric art and architecture of both the Western and through it the modern world 8 Surviving fragments of classical culture helped produce a revival beginning during the 14th century which later came to be known as the Renaissance and various neo classical revivals occurred during the 18th and 19th centuries 9 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Archaic period c 8th to c 6th centuries BC 1 1 1 Phoenicians Carthaginians and Assyrians 1 1 2 Greece 1 1 2 1 Greek colonies 1 1 3 Iron Age Italy 1 1 4 Roman kingdom 1 2 Classical Greece 5th to 4th centuries BC 1 3 Hellenistic period 323 146 BC 1 4 Roman Republic 5th to 1st centuries BC 1 5 Roman Empire 1st century BC to 5th century AD 1 6 Late antiquity 4th to 6th centuries AD 2 Political revivalism 3 Cultural legacy 4 Timeline 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editFurther information Timeline of classical antiquityCompact timeline of classical antiquity Archaic period c 8th to c 6th centuries BC edit Further information Iron Age Europe The earliest period of classical antiquity occurs during a time of gradual resurgence of historical sources after the Late Bronze Age collapse The 8th and 7th centuries BC are still largely protohistorical with the earliest Greek alphabetic inscriptions appearing during the first half of the 8th century The legendary poet Homer is usually assumed to have lived during the 8th or 7th century BC and his lifetime is often considered as the beginning of classical antiquity During the same period is the traditional date for the establishment of the Ancient Olympic Games in 776 BC Phoenicians Carthaginians and Assyrians edit nbsp Map of Phoenician in yellow and Greek colonies in red about 8th to 6th century BC Main articles Phoenicia Ancient Carthage and Ancient history of Cyprus The Phoenicians originally expanded from ports in Canaan by the 8th century dominating trade in the Mediterranean Carthage was founded in 814 BC and the Carthaginians by 700 BC had established strongholds in Sicily Italy and Sardinia which created conflicts of interest with Etruria A stele found in Kition Cyprus commemorates the victory of King Sargon II in 709 BC over the seven kings of the island marking an important part of the transfer of Cyprus from Tyrian rule to the Neo Assyrian Empire 11 12 13 14 Greece edit Main article Archaic Greece The Archaic period followed the Greek Dark Ages and saw significant advancements in political theory and the beginnings of democracy philosophy theatre poetry as well as the revitalization of the written language which had been lost during the Dark Ages In pottery the Archaic period sees the development of the Orientalizing style which signals a shift from the geometric style of the later Dark Ages and the accumulation of influences derived from Egypt Phoenicia and Syria Pottery styles associated with the later part of the Archaic age are the black figure pottery which originated in Corinth during the 7th century BC and its successor the red figure style developed by the Andokides Painter in about 530 BC Greek colonies edit This section is an excerpt from Greek colonisation edit nbsp Greek territories and colonies during the Archaic period 750 550 BC Greek colonisation refers to the expansion of Archaic Greeks particularly during the 8th 6th centuries BC across the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea The Archaic expansion differed from the Iron Age migrations of the Greek Dark Ages in that it consisted of organised direction see oikistes away from the originating metropolis rather than the simplistic movement of tribes which characterised the aforementioned earlier migrations Many colonies or apoikia Greek ἀpoikia transl home away from home that were founded during this period eventually evolved into strong Greek city states functioning independently of their metropolis Iron Age Italy edit nbsp Etruscan civilization in north of Italy 800 BC The Etruscans had established political control in the region by the late 7th century BC forming the aristocratic and monarchial elite The Etruscans apparently lost power in the area by the late 6th century BC and at this time the Italic tribes reinvented their government by creating republics with greater restraints on the ability of individual rulers to exercise power 15 Roman kingdom edit Main article Roman Kingdom According to legend Rome was founded on 21 April 753 BC by twin descendants of the Trojan prince Aeneas Romulus and Remus 16 As the city was bereft of women legend says that the Latins invited the Sabines to a festival and stole their unmarried maidens resulting the integration of Latins and Sabines 17 Archaeological evidence indeed shows first traces of settlement at the Roman Forum in the mid 8th century BC though settlements on the Palatine Hill may date back to the 10th century BC 18 19 According to legend the seventh and final king of Rome was Tarquinius Superbus As the son of Tarquinius Priscus and the son in law of Servius Tullius Superbus was of Etruscan birth It was during his reign that the Etruscans reached their apex of power Superbus removed and destroyed all the Sabine shrines and altars from the Tarpeian Rock enraging the people of Rome The people came to object to his rule when he failed to recognize the rape of Lucretia a patrician Roman by his own son Lucretia s kinsman Lucius Junius Brutus ancestor to Marcus Brutus summoned the Senate and had Superbus and the monarchy expelled from Rome in 510 BC After Superbus expulsion the Senate in 509 BC voted to never again allow the rule of a king and reformed Rome into a republican government Classical Greece 5th to 4th centuries BC edit Main article Classical Greece nbsp Delian League Athenian Empire just before the Peloponnesian War in 431 BC The classical period of Ancient Greece corresponds to most of the 5th and 4th centuries BC in particular from the end of the Athenian tyranny in 510 BC to the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC In 510 Spartan troops helped the Athenians overthrow the tyrant Hippias son of Peisistratos Cleomenes I king of Sparta established a pro Spartan oligarchy conducted by Isagoras The Greco Persian Wars 499 449 BC concluded by the Peace of Callias ended with not only the liberation of Greece Macedon Thrace and Ionia from Persian rule but also with the dominance of Athens in the Delian League which resulted in conflict with Sparta and the Peloponnesian League resulting in the Peloponnesian War 431 404 BC ending with a Spartan victory Greece began the 4th century with Spartan hegemony but by 395 BC the Spartan rulers dismissed Lysander from office and Sparta lost its naval supremacy Athens Argos Thebes and Corinth the latter two of which were formerly Spartan allies challenged Spartan dominance in the Corinthian War which ended inconclusively in 387 BC Later in 371 BC the Theban generals Epaminondas and Pelopidas won a victory at the Battle of Leuctra The result of this battle was the end of Spartan supremacy and the establishment of Theban hegemony Thebes sought to maintain its dominance until it was finally ended by the increasing power of Macedon in 346 BC During the reign of Philip II 359 336 BC Macedon expanded into the territory of the Paeonians the Thracians and the Illyrians Philip s son Alexander the Great 356 323 BC managed to briefly extend Macedonian power not only over the central Greek city states but also to the Persian Empire including Egypt and lands as far east as the fringes of India The classical Greek period conventionally ends at the death of Alexander in 323 BC and the fragmentation of his empire which was at this time divided among the Diadochi Hellenistic period 323 146 BC edit Main article Hellenistic period Greece began the Hellenistic period with the increasing power of Macedon and the conquests of Alexander the Great Greek became the lingua franca far beyond Greece itself and Hellenistic culture interacted with the cultures of Persia the Kingdom of Israel and Kingdom of Judah Central Asia and Egypt Significant advances were made in the sciences geography astronomy mathematics etc notably with the followers of Aristotle Aristotelianism The Hellenistic period ended with the increase of the Roman Republic to a super regional power during the 2nd century BC and the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC Roman Republic 5th to 1st centuries BC edit Main article Roman Republic nbsp The extent of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire in 218 BC dark red 133 BC light red 44 BC orange 14 AD yellow after 14 AD green and maximum extension under Trajan 117 light green The Republican period of Ancient Rome began with the overthrow of the Monarchy c 509 BC and lasted more than 450 years until its subversion through a series of civil wars into the Principate form of government and the Imperial period During the half millennium of the Republic Rome increased from a regional power of the Latium to the dominant force in Italy and beyond The unification of Italy by the Romans was a gradual process brought about by a series of conflicts of the 4th and 3rd centuries the Samnite Wars Latin War and Pyrrhic War Roman victory in the Punic Wars and Macedonian Wars established Rome as a super regional power by the 2nd century BC followed by the acquisition of Greece and Asia Minor This tremendous increase of power was accompanied by economic instability and social unrest resulting in the Catiline conspiracy the Social War and the First Triumvirate and finally the transformation to the Roman Empire during the latter half of the 1st century BC Roman Empire 1st century BC to 5th century AD edit Main article Roman Empire nbsp The extent of the Roman Empire under Trajan AD 117 The precise end of the Republic is disputed by modern historians note 2 Roman citizens of the time did not recognize that the Republic had ceased to exist The early Julio Claudian Emperors maintained that the res publica still existed albeit protected by their extraordinary powers and would eventually return to its earlier Republican form The Roman state continued to term itself a res publica as long as it continued to use Latin as its official language Rome acquired imperial character de facto from the 130s BC with the acquisition of Cisalpine Gaul Illyria Greece and Hispania and definitely with the addition of Iudaea Asia Minor and Gaul during the 1st century BC At the time of the empire s maximal extension during the reign of Trajan AD 117 Rome controlled the entire Mediterranean as well as Gaul parts of Germania and Britannia the Balkans Dacia Asia Minor the Caucasus and Mesopotamia Culturally the Roman Empire was significantly Hellenized but also incorporated syncretic eastern traditions such as Mithraism Gnosticism and most notably Christianity Classical Rome had vast differences within their family life compared to the Greeks Fathers had great power over their children and husbands over their wives In fact the word family familia in Latin actually referred to those who were subject to the authority of a male head of household This included non related members such as slaves and servants By marriage both men and women shared property Divorce was allowed first during the first century BC and could be done by either man or woman 20 Late antiquity 4th to 6th centuries AD edit nbsp The Western and Eastern Roman Empires by 476 Main articles Late antiquity Migration period and Fall of the Western Roman Empire The Roman Empire began to weaken as a result of the crisis of the third century During Late antiquity Christianity became increasingly popular finally ousting the Roman imperial cult with the Theodosian decrees of 393 Successive invasions of Germanic tribes finalized the weakening of the Western Roman Empire during the 5th century while the Eastern Roman Empire persisted throughout the Middle Ages in a state called Romania by its citizens and designated the Byzantine Empire by later historians Hellenistic philosophy was succeeded by continued development of Platonism and Epicureanism with Neoplatonism in due course influencing the theology of the Christian Church Fathers Many writers have attempted to name a specific date for the symbolic end of antiquity with the most prominent dates being the deposing of the last Western Roman Emperor in 476 21 22 the closing of the last Platonic Academy in Athens by the Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I in 529 23 and the conquest of much of the Mediterranean by the new Muslim faith from 634 to 718 24 These Muslim conquests of Syria 637 Egypt 639 Cyprus 654 North Africa 665 Hispania 718 Southern Gaul 720 Crete 820 and Sicily 827 Malta 870 as well as the sieges of the Eastern Roman capital first in 674 78 and then in 717 18 severed the economic cultural and political links that had traditionally united the classical cultures around the Mediterranean ending antiquity see Pirenne Thesis 24 nbsp The Byzantine Empire in 650 after the Arabs conquered the provinces of Syria and Egypt At the same time early Slavs settled in the Balkans The original Roman Senate continued to express decrees into the late 6th century and the last Eastern Roman emperor to use Latin as the language of his court in Constantinople was emperor Maurice who reigned until 602 The overthrow of Maurice by his mutinying Danube army commanded by Phocas resulted in the Slavic invasion of the Balkans and the weakening of Balkan and Greek urban culture resulting in the flight of Balkan Latin speakers to the mountains see Origin of the Romanians and also provoked the Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 in which all the great eastern cities except Constantinople were lost The resulting turmoil did not end until the Muslim conquests of the 7th century finalized the irreversible loss of all the largest Eastern Roman imperial cities besides the capital itself The emperor Heraclius in Constantinople who reigned during this period conducted his court in Greek not Latin though Greek had always been an administrative language of the eastern Roman regions Eastern Western associations weakened with the ending of the Byzantine Papacy The Eastern Roman empire s capital city Constantinople remained the only unconquered large urban site of the original Roman empire as well as being the largest city in Europe Yet many classical books sculptures and technologies survived there along with classical Roman cuisine and scholarly traditions well into the Middle Ages when much of it was rediscovered by visiting Western crusaders Indeed the inhabitants of Constantinople continued to refer to themselves as Romans as did their eventual conquerors in 1453 the Ottomans see Romaioi and Rum The classical scholarship and culture that was still preserved in Constantinople were brought by refugees fleeing its conquest in 1453 and helped to begin the Renaissance see Greek scholars in the Renaissance Ultimately it was a slow complex and graduated change of the socio economic structure in European history that resulted in the changeover between classical antiquity and medieval society and no specific date can truly exemplify that Political revivalism editFurther information Carolingian Renaissance Ottonian Renaissance Renaissance Classicism and Legacy of the Roman Empire In politics the late Roman conception of the Empire as a universal state commanded by one supreme divinely appointed ruler united with Christianity as a universal religion likewise headed by a supreme patriarch proved very influential even after the disappearance of imperial authority in the west This tendency reached its maximum when Charlemagne was crowned Roman Emperor in the year 800 an act which resulted in the formation of the Holy Roman Empire The notion that an emperor is a monarch who outranks a king dates from this period In this political ideal there would always be a Roman Empire a state the jurisdiction of which extended through the entire civilized western world That model continued to exist in Constantinople for the entirety of the Middle Ages where the Byzantine Emperor was considered the sovereign of the entire Christian world The Patriarch of Constantinople was the Empire s highest ranked cleric but even he was subordinate to the emperor who was God s Vicegerent on Earth The Greek speaking Byzantines and their descendants continued to call themselves Romioi until the creation of a new Greek state in 1832 After the capture of Constantinople in 1453 the Russian Czars a title derived from Caesar claimed the Byzantine legacy as the champion of Orthodoxy Moscow was described as the Third Rome and the Czars ruled as divinely appointed Emperors into the 20th century Despite the fact that the Western Roman secular authority disappeared entirely in Europe it still left traces The Papacy and the Catholic Church in particular maintained Latin language culture and literacy for centuries to this day the popes are termed Pontifex Maximus which during the classical period was a title belonging to the emperor and the ideal of Christendom continued the legacy of a united European civilization even after its political unity had ended The political idea of an Emperor in the West to match the Emperor in the East continued after the Western Roman Empire s collapse it was revived by the coronation of Charlemagne in 800 the self described Holy Roman Empire ruled central Europe until 1806 The Renaissance idea that the classical Roman virtues had been lost as a result of medievalism was especially powerful in European politics of the 18th and 19th centuries Reverence for Roman republicanism was strong among the Founding Fathers of the United States and the Latin American revolutionaries the Americans described their new government as a republic from res publica and gave it a Senate and a President another Latin term rather than use available English terms like commonwealth or parliament Similarly in Revolutionary and Napoleonic France republicanism and Roman martial virtues were promoted by the state as can be seen in the architecture of the Pantheon the Arc de Triomphe and the paintings of Jacques Louis David During the revolution France transitioned from kingdom to republic to dictatorship to Empire complete with Imperial Eagles that the Romans had experienced centuries earlier Cultural legacy editMain articles Classicism and Classical studies nbsp Plato and Aristotle walking and disputing Detail from Raphael s The School of Athens 1509 1511 Classical antiquity is a general term for a long period of cultural history Such a wide sampling of history and territory covers many rather disparate cultures and periods Classical antiquity often refers to an idealized vision of later people of what was in Edgar Allan Poe s words the glory that was Greece the grandeur that was Rome During the 18th and 19th centuries AD reverence for classical antiquity was much greater in Europe and the United States than it is now Respect for the ancient people of Greece and Rome affected politics philosophy sculpture literature theatre education architecture and sexuality Epic poetry in Latin continued to be written and circulated well into the 19th century John Milton and even Arthur Rimbaud received their first poetic educations in Latin Genres like epic poetry pastoral verse and the frequent use of characters and themes from Greek mythology affected Western literature greatly In architecture there have been several Greek Revivals which seem more inspired in retrospect by Roman architecture than Greek Washington DC has many large marble buildings with facades made to look like Greek temples with columns constructed in the classical orders of architecture The philosophy of St Thomas Aquinas was derived largely from that of Aristotle despite the intervening change in religion from Hellenic Polytheism to Christianity 25 Greek and Roman authorities such as Hippocrates and Galen formed the basis of the practice of medicine even longer than Greek thought prevailed in philosophy In the French theater playwrights such as Moliere and Racine wrote plays on mythological or classical historical subjects and subjected them to the strict rules of the classical unities derived from Aristotle s Poetics The desire to dance in a manner allegedly similar to the manner of the ancient Greeks caused Isadora Duncan to create her brand of ballet Timeline editFurther information Timeline of classical antiquitySee also edit nbsp History portal nbsp Ancient Greece portal nbsp Ancient Rome portal Classical architecture Classical tradition Classics Classical education Outline of classical studies Outline of ancient Greece Outline of ancient Rome Post classical history the next period Regions during classical antiquity Hellenistic Greece History of the Balkans Roman Dacia TroyNotes edit The precise end date of this period is disputed with estimates ranging from the 3rd 8th centuries AD Traditionally it is given as the late 5th century AD The precise event which signaled the transition of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire is a matter of interpretation Historians have proposed the appointment of Julius Caesar as perpetual dictator February 44 BC the Battle of Actium 2 September 31 BC and the Roman Senate s grant of Octavian s extraordinary powers by the first settlement 16 January 27 BC as candidates for the defining event References editCitations edit Gruen E 2010 Rethinking the Other in Antiquity Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9781400836550 ISBN 9781400836550 McLaughlin Raoul 11 September 2014 The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa Arabia and India Pen amp Sword ISBN 9781473840959 McLaughlin Raoul 11 November 2016 The Roman Empire and the Silk Routes The Ancient World Economy amp the Empires of Parthia Central Asia amp Han China Pen amp Sword ISBN 9781473889811 Poe EA 1845 To Helen Revised 1845 version Helga von Heintze de Romische Kunst Roman art In Walter Herwig Schuchhardt 1960 Bildende Kunst I Archaologie Visual arts I archaeology Das Fischer Lexikon de S Fischer Verlag p 192 Bestimmend blieb der italisch romische Geist der sich der entlehnten Formen nur bediente Ohne die Begegnung mit der griechischen Formenwelt author s note hatte der italisch romische Geist sich wohl kaum in kunstlerischen Schopfungen ausdrucken konnen und ware nicht uber die Ansatze die wir in den Kanopen von Chiusi der kapitolinischen Wolfin dem Krieger von Capestrano erhalten haben hinausgekommen Auch die gleichermassen realistische wie unkunstlerische Auffassung der Portrats im 2 und 1 J ahr h undert v or Chr istus konnte sich nur unter dem Einfluss griechischer Formen andern Determinant remained the Italic Roman spirit that just availed itself of the borrowed forms Without having come across the world of the Greek forms the Italic Roman spirit would hardly have been able to express itself in works of art and would not have got beyond the starts that are preserved in the canopic jars of Chiusi the Capitoline Wolf the Warrior of Capestrano Also the likewise realistic and inartistic conception and production of the portraits in the second and the first centuries BC could only change under the influence of Greek forms Der Grosse Brockhaus 1 vol A Beo Eberhard Brockhaus Wiesbaden 1953 p 315 Ihre dankbarsten und verstandnisvollsten Schuler aber fand die hellenistische Kultur in den Romern sie wurden Mazene Nachahmer und schliesslich Konkurrenten indem sie die eigene Sprache wetteifernd neben die griechische setzten so wurde die antike Kultur zweisprachig griechisch und lateinisch Das System dieser griechisch hellenistisch romischen Kultur das sich in der romischen Kaiserzeit abschliessend gestaltete enthielt neben Elementen des Orients die griechische Wissenschaft und Philosophie Dichtung Geschichtsschreibung Rhetorik und bildende Kunst The Hellenistic culture but found its most thankful and its most understanding disciples in the Romans they became patrons imitators and finally rivals when they competitively set the own language beside the Greek thus the antique culture became bilingual Greek and Latin The system of this Greco Latin culture that assumed its definitive shape in the Roman imperial period contained amongst elements of the Orient the Greek science and philosophy poetry historiography rhetoric and visual arts Veit Valentin Weltgeschichte Volker Manner Ideen History of the world peoples men ideas Allert de Lange de Amsterdam 1939 p 113 Es ist ein merkwurdiges Schauspiel dieser Kampf eines bewussten Romertums gegen die geriebene Gewandtheit des Hellenismus der romische Geschmack wehrt sich und verbohrt sich trotzig in sich selbst aber es fallt ihm nicht genug ein er kann nicht uber seine Grenzen weg was die Griechen bieten hat soviel Reiz und Bequemlichkeit In der bildenden Kunst und in der Philosophie gab das Romertum zuerst den Kampf um seine Selbstandigkeit auf Bilden um des Bildes willen Forschen und Grubeln theoretische Wahrheitssuche und Spekulation lagen ihm durchaus nicht It is a strange spectacle this fight of a conscious Roman striving against the wily ingenuity of Hellenism The Roman taste offers resistance defiantly goes mad about itself but there does not come enough into its mind it is not able to overcome its limits there is so much charm and so much comfort in what the Greeks afford In visual arts and philosophy Romanism first abandoned the struggle for its independence forming for the sake of the form poring and investigation theoretical speculation and hunt for truth were by no means in its line Traces of Ancient Rome in the Modern World education nationalgeographic org Retrieved 30 July 2023 Neoclassical architecture Definition Characteristics Examples amp Facts Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 1 June 2023 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Classical Classical Revival Neo Classical an architectural style guide architecture com Retrieved 30 July 2023 The Esarhaddon Prism Library of Ashurbanipal British Museum Yon M Malbran Labat F 1995 La stele de Sargon II a Chypre in A Caubet ed Khorsabad le Palais de Sargon II Roi d Assyrie Paris 159 179 Radner K 2010 The Stele of Sargon II of Assyria at Kition A focus for an emerging Cypriot identity in R Rollinger B Gufler M Lang I Madreiter eds Interkulturalitat in der Alten Welt Vorderasien Hellas Agypten und die vielfaltigen Ebenen des Kontakts Wiesbaden 429 449 The Cypriot rulers as client kings of the Assyrian empire The many kingdoms of Cyprus 5 November 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2016 Ancient Rome and the Roman Empire by Michael Kerrigan Dorling Kindersley London 2001 ISBN 0 7894 8153 7 p 12 Adkins Lesley Adkins Roy 1998 Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome New York Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0195123326 Myths and Legends Rome the Wolf and Mars Archived 29 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 8 March 2007 Matyszak Philip 2003 Chronicle of the Roman Republic The Rulers of Ancient Rome from Romulus to Augustus Thames amp Hudson p 19 ISBN 978 0500051214 Duiker William Spielvogel Jackson 2001 World History Third ed Wadsworth p 129 ISBN 978 0 534 57168 9 Wiesner Hanks Merry E 6 July 2010 Gender in History Global Perspectives 2nd ed Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 8995 8 Clare I S 1906 Library of universal history containing a record of the human race from the earliest historical period to the present time embracing a general survey of the progress of mankind in national and social life civil government religion literature science and art New York Union Book p 1519 cf Ancient history as we have already seen ended with the fall of the Western Roman Empire United Center for Research and Training in History 1973 Bulgarian historical review Sofia Pub House of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences p 43 cf in the history of Europe which marks both the end of ancient history and the beginning of the Middle Ages is the fall of the Western Roman Empire Hadas Moses 1950 A History of Greek Literature Columbia University Press p 273 of 331 ISBN 0 231 01767 7 a b Henri Pirenne 1937 Mohammed and Charlemagne Archived 8 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine English translation by Bernard Miall 1939 From Internet Archive The thesis was originally discussed in an article published in Revue Belge de Philologie et d Histoire 1 1922 pp 77 86 Blair Peter Reason and Faith The Thought of Thomas AquinasOxford The Dartmouth Apologia Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2013 Sources edit Grinin L E Early State in the Classical World Statehood and Ancient Democracy In Grinin L E et al eds Hierarchy and Power in the History of civilizations Ancient and Medieval Cultures pp 31 84 Moscow URSS 2008 Early State in the Classical WorldFurther reading editBoatwright Mary T Daniel J Gargola and Richard J A Talbert 2004 The Romans From village to empire New York and Oxford Oxford Univ Press Bugh Glenn R ed 2006 The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic world Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press Burkert Walter 1992 The Orientalizing revolution The Near Eastern influence on Greek culture in the early Archaic age Translated by Margaret E Pinder and Walter Burkert Cambridge MA Harvard Univ Press Erskine Andrew ed 2003 A companion to the Hellenistic world Malden MA and Oxford Blackwell Flower Harriet I 2004 The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press Green Peter 1990 Alexander to Actium The historical evolution of the Hellenistic age Berkeley Univ of California Press Hornblower Simon 1983 The Greek world 479 323 BC London and New York Methuen Kallendorf Craig W ed 2007 A Companion to the Classical Tradition Malden MA Blackwell Kinzl Konrad ed 2006 A Companion to the Classical Greek world Oxford and Malden MA Blackwell Murray Oswyn 1993 Early Greece 2nd ed Cambridge MA Harvard Univ Press Potter David S 2006 A companion to the Roman Empire Malden MA Blackwell Rhodes Peter J 2006 A history of the Classical Greek world 478 323 BC Blackwell History of the Ancient World Malden MA Blackwell Rosenstein Nathan S and Robert Morstein Marx eds 2006 A companion to the Roman Republic Oxford Blackwell Shapiro H Alan ed 2007 The Cambridge Companion to Archaic Greece Cambridge Companions to the Ancient World Cambridge UK and New York Cambridge Univ Press Shipley Graham 2000 The Greek world after Alexander 323 30 BC London Routledge Walbank Frank W 1993 The Hellenistic world Revised ed Cambridge MA Harvard Univ Press External links editLibrary resources about Classical antiquity Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries nbsp Media related to Classical antiquity at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Classical antiquity amp oldid 1218195377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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