Course Description: The classical period in Greece will always be remembered for its awe-inspiring innovations in political systems, art, literature and philosophy. Therefore Democratic Athens cannot help but be at the center of the course, but we will also try to understand the context of Greece's classical achievements: how the independent city state (polis) evolved, what role Persia and the Near East played in this development, and the conditions that led to the imperialistic decline of the independent city state. Particular attention will be paid to the first written histories, Herodotus' and Thucydides', that not only chronicle the period lucidly, but also create a new type of political discourse. Archaeological evidence will also be explored in conjunction with the historical narratives.
Requirements: The following will be required of all students taking the course:
Grading:
Schedule:
1. (August 27) Introduction to the Course.
2. (August 29) Review of Civilization Before Greece [read
Saggs on reserve]
3. (August 31) Review of Greece before the Classical Period [read
Scarre/Fagan]
4. (September 3) Review of the Period's Dateline[read Burn chapters 7, 8, 9]
5. (September 5) Overview of Classical Period [read Burn chapters 11,12,13]
6. (September 7) Test on Background Information
7. (September 10) Lecture: What is a Greek Polis?
(photos)
8. (September 12) Life in Archaic Greece: Hesiod's Works and Days [read Hesiod on reserve]
9. (September 14) Homer and the Polis [read Raaflaub on reserve]
10. (September 17) Lecture: Greek Colonization
(photos)
11. (September 19) Early Hellenic Unity from tribes to pan-Hellenic games [read "Morgan" on reserve]
12. (September 21) Greek Battle: the Hoplite Formation [read Hanson on reserve]
13. (September 24) Greek Tyrants and Aristocrats [read Herodotus: Pisistratus 1.55-65/pp. 23-8; Polycrates and
Periander 3.39-56/pp. 187-195, 3.120-8/pp. 222-6; Cleisthenes of Sicyon 5.66-8/pp. 335-6, 6.125-31/pp. 404-8]
14. (September 26) The End of Tyranny in Athens [read Herodotus 5.55-76/pp. 331-9]
15. (September 28) The Achaemenid (Persian) Empire [read Cook on reserve]
16. (October 1) Persians and Ionians [read Herodotus 1.141-70/pp. 64-75, 4.88-119/pp. 270-80, 5.98-126/pp. 351-9]
17. (October 3) Persian War: Marathon and Thermopylae [read Herodotus 6.97-117/pp. 394-403, 7.172-228/pp. 476-95]
18. (October 5) Persian War: Battle of Salamis and Plataea [read Herodotus 7.138-43/pp. 460-4, 8.74-112/pp. 525-40, 9.25-81/pp. 563-87]
19. (October 8) Greek view of Persia after wars [read Aeschylus' Persians]
20. (October 10) Review for Midterm
21. (October 12) Midterm
22. (October 17) Lecture: Naval Warfare
23. (October 19) Athenian Democracy [read Aristotle's Athenian Constitution on reserve]
24. (October 22) Sparta [read "Sparta" on reserve]
25. (October 24) The Peloponnesian War: Pericles' Funeral Oration [read Thucydides pp. 136-64]
26. (October 26) The Revolt of Mytilene [read Thucydides pp. 194-223]
27. (October 29) Athenian Demagogues: Cleon [read Aristophanes
Knights on reserve]
28. (October 31) Athenian Expansion: The Melian Dialogue [read Thucydides pp. 400-8; 35-49 (Thuc.'s introduction)]
29. (November 2) Athenian Expansion II: The Sicilian Expedition [read Thucydides pp. 409-29]
30. (November 5) Athenian Legal System [read Aristophanes' Wasps on reserve]
31. (November 7) Democracy Overthrown: the 400 in Athens [read Thucydides pp. 562-599]
32. (November 9) {PROJECT DUE} Lecture: Greek Architecture and Engineering (photos)
33. (November 12) Democracy and Imperialism reviewed: Athens' own view [read Euripides "Trojan Women" on reserve]
34. (November 14) Democracy and Imperialism reviewed II: Epigraphical Evidence [read
Fornara on reserve]
35. (November 16) Democracy and Imperialism reviewed III: the contemporary Greek view [read
Pseudo-Xenophon on reserve]
36. (November 19) The Life of a Greek Mercenary [read
Xenophon on reserve]
37. (November 26) Lecture: The Fall of Spartan Hegemony
38. (November 28) Lecture: Fall of Thebes and the Rise of Macedon
39. (November 30) Philip II of Macedon in Athens' Eyes [read
Demosthenes' Olynthiacs]
40. (December 3) Lecture: the Fate of the Polis under Hellenistic Kings
41. (December 5) Conclusion
42. (December 7) Review for Final Exam
43. (December 18, 2 PM) FINAL EXAM
Texts:
Attendance: Since class participation is a significant graded percentage of this course, each class a student misses will detract from this grade. Several absences will not do permanent damage, but more than 8 (out of 42 meetings -- i.e. almost 20%) will be serious.
Honor Policy: Like any academic work at UR all work done for this course falls under the honor code. If you have any doubt what constitutes "unauthorized assistance," please come and talk to the instructor before trying it.
N.B. The instructor does not allow make up tests under any circumstances, nor does he accept late work.
last modified 7-12-07