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"Is legendary(ie)"
Founding of Rome by Romulus and Remus
Humble beggings for a proud people
Year one in the Roman calendar |
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"Etruscan"
Roman kick the Etruscans out of Rome
Reminds us that Rome was a republic at first for about 500 years |
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"Horace"
The Punic Wars
1st War - fought evenly
2nd War - Carthaginians led by Hannibal almost conquer Rome
3rd War - Rome obliterates Carthage
Rome conquered both Greece and Carthage but spared Greece and destroyed Carthage |
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"Heaven"
Rome officially becomes and empire
Caesar Augustus ushered in "Pax Romana" = The most glorious period (200 years) of Roman history
Jesus was born during his reign |
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"Ben"
Pax Romana ends with the death of Marcus Aurelius
Rome begins its long gradual decline |
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"Glee"
Constantine legalizes Christianity with the edict of Milan
Christianity becomes a political institution
Christianity goes from being persecuted to becoming Rome's official religion |
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"Phoenix"
The so called "Fall of the Roman Empire"
The last Roman born emperor Romulus Augustus was deposed by a German Cheiftan
Roman ideas continued for centuries
Scholars argue if whether or not Rome actually fell or became something new |
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So called "Greek dark ages"
The greeks moved from the Bronze age to the Iron age
Geometric Style
With the Archaic Period we see Greek culture begin to flourish |
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"Golden Age" or "Age of Pericles"
Starts with the Persian War (479 BC) and ends with the Peloponnesian War (323 BC)
During the late classical greek period philosophy flourished and Alexander the Great rose to power at the end of the Peloponnesian War |
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Hellenization - the cultural impact on the world by the Greeks
Before being conquered by Rome Greece spread it's culture throughout the known world
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The most famous example of the Geometric Style |
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The belief that human reason is the ulitmate source of knowledge of the new world |
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Two examples of the Greek's love affair with philosophy |
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1 - The story of Diogenes and Alexander the Great
2 - The story of the Apostle Paul in Athens |
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Were concerned with the nature and origin of reality |
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Were searching for the "cosmic blueprint" - the rational design of the universe |
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Idealist
Died by drinking hemlock
Best known for the Socratic Method - Know thyself
Rejected the teachings of sophistry - life is meant for gaining success and wealth
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Idealists
Contribution to Western Philosophy - Doctrine of Ideal Forms - which was an idealistic attempt to explain the nature of reality
Plato's major work - Republic - outlined the first utopia
Illustrated the Allegory of the Cave |
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Materialist
Disagreed with his master about the nature of reality since he thought the essence (reality) of a thing resides within the thing itself
Authored Ethics and Poetics |
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A greek life size statue of an athelete |
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Statue of a male servant
Greeks built upon the Egyptian model |
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The Warrior's Leavetaking |
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A vasepainting that depicts the Greek shift away from Egyptian frontality by foreshadowing |
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Post and Lintel Architecture |
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a structure consisting of vertical beams (posts) supporting a horizontal beam (lintel) |
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A temple with a single row of columns
Ex) Pantheon |
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A temple with a double row of columns |
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Different greek architectural orders chronologically ordered |
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Integration of the hero back into society
Ends with marriage and fertility |
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Portrays the alienation of the hero from society
Ends with death of the hero who becomes a kind of scapegoat for the larger community |
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What is essential to a tragedy? |
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The tragic hero
Hero has a tragic flaw
Because of the this the hero is partially responsible for his downfall
The gods punish the hero more serverly than he deserves
The fall is not a complete loss - the hero learns something
By identifying the hero the audience experiences catharsis |
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Psychological impact of drama |
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Written by Sophocles
Model Tragedy |
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An epic written by Vergil
Served as a propagandistic function |
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Selecting or employing individual elements from a variety of sources, systems or styles
Colosseum is a great representation of this |
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Represents the three orders of Greek Architecture |
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Practical
Imperialistic
Individualistic |
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Major roman building projects |
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Aqueducts
Highways
Basilicas
Public Baths |
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Compare/Contrast Greek/Roman Portraiture |
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Greek Portraits - The ideal
Roman Portraits - The Particular
The romans shifted from greek portraiture in order to make their portraits more individualistic
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is a feeling that you cannot control events or prevent unpleasant things from happening, especially when this feeling stops you from making decisions or making an effort |
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