Course Description: Since throughout the Hellenistic period of the Mediterranean and Near East people collectively worshipped the cult of powerful individuals, it seems appropriate to approach this time and place by studying individuals. From Alexander the Great to Gaius Octavius (alias Augustus) we are presented with an astonishing string of megalomaniacal imperialists. It is only in this context that Rome's meteoric rise to prominence becomes comprehensible, and in this context that we can understand the decline of republican values that left autocratic rule of the whole empire in the hands of Alexander's highly self-conscious imitator, Julius Caesar. Therefore this course will concentrate on three topics: the tactics and careers of the most powerful and influential individuals; the biographical historiography arising around them; and the historical forces that led to and sustained such an autocratic period.
Requirements: The following will be required of all students taking the course:
Grading:
Schedule:
1. (August 23) Introduction to the Course (Intro Photos).
2. (August 25) Review of Mediterranean Geography (comparative maps) [read Walbank chapters 2 and 3]
3. (August 27) Review of Civilization Before Greece [read Walbank chapters 6, 8 and 11]
4. (August 30) Review Greek History [read Beard chapters 1-3]
5. (September 1) Review of Hellenistic/Roman History [read Beard chapters 4-6]
6. (September 3) Lecture: Philip of Macedon and his Precedents
7. (September 6) Test on Background Information
8. (September 8) Greek Historiography: the tradition of historical self-consciousness from Herodotus to Polybius [read the prefaces to Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon's Cyropaedia, and Polybius on Blackboard]
9. (September 10) Demosthenes, Isocrates and the Greek Debate on Macedonian imperialism [read Demosthenes' Second Philippic and Isocrates' To Philip on Blackboard]
10. (September 13) Alexander the Great: consolidation of power [read Plutarch's life of Alexander]
11. (September 15) Alexander the Great: military campaigns [lecture]
12. (September 17) Alexander the Great: tactics [read Engels on Blackboard]
13. (September 20) Alexander the Great: world "Hellenization" [prepare to discuss the Hellenistic dream of unification (see esp. Walbank pp. 60-78; 209-226 and Plutarch's life of Alexander]
14. (September 22) Alexander the Great: "corruption" and death [read Arrian on Blackboard]
15. (September 24) Alexander’s Followers: Eumenes [read Plutarch's Eumenes]
16. (September 27) Alexander's Followers: Demetrius [read Plutarch's Demetrius]
17. (September 29) Alexander’s Followers: Agis [read Plutarch's Agis]
18. (October 1) Lecture: Ethnicity in the Hellenistic Period
19. (October 4) Antiochus and Conflict with the Jews: read 2 Macabees
20. (October 6) Review for Midterm
21. (October 8) Midterm Exam
22. (October 13) Origins of Rome [read Livy from beginning to the death of Tullus -- pp. 29-69 in the Penguin, and Dionysius Halicarnassus on Blackboard]
23. (October 15) Lucretia and the Birth of the Republic [read Livy to the end of book one -- pp. 69-104 in the Penguin]
24. (October 18) Camillus and the Second Founding of Rome [read Plutarch's life of Camillus]
25. (October 20) Rome and its early Allies: the Latin Revolt [read Livy 8.1-14 on Blackboard]
26. (October 22) Lecture: Roman Origins and Myth
27. (October 25) Pyrrhic War [read Livy's epitome 12-14 on Blackboard and Plutarch's Pyrrhus]
28. (October 27) Marcellus and the Assault of Syracuse [read Plutarch's Marcellus]
29. (October 29) Lecture: Hellenistic Scientific Achievements (photos)
30. (November 1) Flamininus and Roman Greece [read Plutarch's Flamininus]
31. (November 3) The Gracchi, Land Reform, and Violence [read Plutarch's Tiberius Gracchus]
32. (November 5) Lecture: Summary of the Roman Constitution and its Development
33. (November 8) {PROJECT DUE} Lecture: Marius and Military Reform
34. (November 10) Sulla Rebuilds the Republic [read Plutarch's Sulla]
35. (November 12) Lecture: Pompey and Maius Imperium
36. (November 15) Caesar, Dicatator for Life [read Caesar and Suetonius' Suetonius' Life of Caesar ]
37. (November 17) Marc Antony and the Civil War [read Plutarch's Marc Antony]
38. (November 19) Cleopatra and the End of Macedonian Rule in Egypt [read Horace Odes 1.37]
39. (November 22) Lecture: Gaius Octavius and a New Peace (photos)
40. (November 29) The Breakdown of the Roman Republic and dawn of the empire (lecture/discussion)
41. (December 1) Review for Final Exam (optional)
42. (December 3) Study Day (no class)
43. (December 10) Final Exam (2 PM)
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 9-2-2021