WHAP Review Unit 2 Classical Civilization 600 BCE
WHAP Review: Unit 2 Classical Civilization 600 BCE – 600 CE
Classical Civilizations
How were Classical civilizations different from Ancient civilizations? Larger and more powerful – empires More complex cultures – world religions, advanced art and literature Written records (more and better) – introduction of phonetic alphabets More complex long-distance trade More contact between nomads and sedentary people
Greece Political 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Minoans Mycenaeans “Dark Ages” (conquest by the Dorians) Persian Wars Classical Greece (Delian League) Peloponnesian War Hellenistic Greece (Alexander the Great) City-states (a. k. a. polis) -Athens (aristocracy democracy); Age of Pericles -Sparta (oligarchy) Economic City-states set up colonies around the Mediterranean Religious Mythology Social Women more equal in Sparta, helots in Sparta (conquered people = serfs) Intellectual Law code (Solon), Democracy (Cleisthenes), Philosophy (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle), Artistic Drama (tragedy and comedy), sculpture, Literature (Homer) Near (Geography) Mediterranean, sea travel/trade very important, mountainous terrain isolated city-states Secularism (more focused on the natural world)
Persia (a. k. a. Achaemenid Empire) Political 1. Cyrus the Great (founded) 2. Darius I (expanded) 3. Xerxes (Persian Wars) Highly organized administration of the empire: Satraps (Governors), Royal Road Conquered by Alexander the Great Economic Standardized taxes and currency (first standardized coins), center of trade routes Religious Zoroastrianism (first monotheistic religion… kind of? ) Social Tolerance Intellectual Artistic Near Turkey and surrounding southwest Asia, capital: Persepolis
Rome Political 1. Etruscans 2. Roman Republic – Senate, 2 consuls, tribunes (plebeian reps) Punic Wars vs. Carthage 3. Triumvirates First: Caesar, Pompey, some other guy Second: Octavian, Antony, some other guy 4. Roman Empire Augustus (Octavian), Diocletian (divided) Economic Farming, taxes, trade Religious Polytheistic Social Two main classes: patricians (aristocrats) and plebeians (commoners), Intellectual Law of the Twelve Tables, Artistic Virgil (Poet, The Aeneid) Near (Geography) Mediterranean, Alexander’s empire (including Persia and Egypt), Germanic invasions from the north Christianity (Constantine)
Classical China Qin Dynasty Political Economic Han Dynasty Legalism Confucianism Shi Huangdi Strong, nonhereditary bureaucracy (like the Romans) – civil examination system Standardized currency, built roads Urban empire ruling a peasant population, silk, expansion of trade Religious Confucianism + Daoism + Buddhism (later) Social Standardized laws Scholar-gentry at top, women’s status highest than any other dynasty Intellectual Standardized written language, burned books, anti-Confucianism Interest in scientific experimentation Artistic Near (Geography) Growth of artisans Great Wall of China Expanded China
Classical India Vedic Age Political Aryan invasion Maurya Gupta Ashoka Chandra Gupta Buddhism Hinduism Caste system Little overarching organization, politically fragmented Economic Religious Hinduism Buddhism founded by Siddhartha Gautama Social Caste system based on varna (skin color) Intellectual Vedas (religious texts) Upanishads (Brahman and basic beliefs of Hinduism) Artistic Near (Geography) “Golden Age of Hindu culture” Ruled most of India Ruled north India
Trade Networks Silk Road Indian Ocean Trade Saharan Trade Location China to Rome Red Sea to Africa to India/southwester Mediterranean n China What is traded? Silk (duh), fruits/grains/spice s, ideas (Christianity and Buddhism) Spices, pottery, ivory Salt, gold Traders Pastoral nomads on horses (using stirrups) Ships (using the lateen sail), harnessing monsoon winds Caravans on camels
Compare/Contrast: Fall of Great Empires Similarities Attacks by nomadic groups Internal problems Interdependence Differences Rome – does not retain cultural identity (like China, India) – because Christianity came too late to be the “glue”? (China – Confucianism, India – Hinduism)
Compare/Contrast: Rome and Han China Similarities Huge empires with long borders to defend Nonhereditary bureaucracy Economies based on agriculture but with urban capital Homogenous core controls diverse population Differences Slavery less prominent in Han Confucianism provides “glue” (Christianity too late)
CCOT – Mediterranean (600 BCE – 600 CE) Change Political Center of power shifts from Greece to Rome Decentralized city states > empire Religion: polytheism > monotheism Continuity Trade – sea trade in Greece, Silk Road in Rome Conflict with external forces Greeks vs. Persians and Macedonians Romans vs. Carthage and Germanic tribes
The Discobolus of Myron, 450 BCE
Possible Documents “Our purpose is to grant both to the Christians and to all others full authority to follow whatever worship each person has desired, whereby whatsoever Divinity dwells in heaven may be benevolent and propitious to us, and to all who are placed under our authority. ” Edict of Milan, 313 CE
- Slides: 17