Saturday, October 27, 2007

WEEK VI: PRIMARY SOURCES

Primary sources are available as electronic documents on the Boğaziçi Library web site.

1. Seneca, The Apocolocynthosis, "The Apocolocythonsis of the Divine Claudius"
2. Plutarch, Moralia,"The education of Children"
3. Plotinus, The Enneads, “Happiness”

Friday, October 26, 2007

FILM

There will be a film projection next Friday, 2 November 2007, at 17:00 in Garanti Kultur Merkezi.
The title of the movie is: Gladiator (dir. Ridley Scott, 2000)
If you miss this screening, you may also borrow the film from the Mithat Alam Film Center.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

RICE AGRICULTURE, COMMUNAL LIFE AND THE CONFUCIAN STATE IN CHINA - SELÇUK ESENBEL

October 24, 2007
Lecture Outline

l. Geography and Climate
2. Rice Agriculture
3. Communal Life
4. Chinese Imperial State and World View
5. Age of Philosophy and Confucius
6. The Two Handles of Government
7. The Solution or Non Solution of Tao
8 The Dynastic Cycle of the Mandate of Heaven

Vocabulary and Dates
Rice Agriculture and Communal Life in Asian History

Huang Ho, Yellow River
Yangtze River
Intensive Labor Agriculture
Irrigation
Communal Life
Mutual Responsibility and Social Harmony



Chinese Imperial State and World View

QIN DYNASTY


Shih Huangdi The First Emperor known as the Tiger of Qin
256 b. C. Founding of the Qin (Chin) Dynasty 221-207 B. C. Short lived due to harsh rule.
The Great Wall, The Steppe Nomads (Hsiung Nu/Xiungnu)
Bureaucracy Principle, anti-aristocratic.
Xian, the first imperial capital of the Qin
The Army of the First Emperor, The Mausoleum of the First Emperor
The Terra Cotta Statues of the Army


HAN DYNASTY

Han Dynasty 3rd century B. C.-3rd Century A. D. (202 B. C. 220 A. D. ) Comparable to the Roman Empire. Tradition of Imperium. Middle Kingdom. Diplomacy: China as Older Brother to rest of nations who are Younger Brothers.
Confucian Philosophy softens Imperial State Practice.
Ssu Ma Chien, the first Historian of China, Shih chih, The Record of the Grand Historian


Age of Philosophy 6th Century B. C. in China, Greece, and Age of Religious Ferment India the Buddha at the same time!
Confucius, Kongze, 551-479 B. C.
Cultivated Gentleman
11 Main Dynasties follow Chinese Imperial State Tradition of Confucian Philosophy from the Qin all the way to 1911 Chinese Nationalist Revolution that destroyed the dynastic tradition.
Rites and Ceremonies
State Examinations
Forbidden City
The Tomb of Mao Zedong along the Temple of Heaven Axis attests to Dynastic tradition symbolism.

Two Handles of Government: Rewards and Punishments
Legalism, Han Fei ze

Taoism, Lao ze
No government is the best government. Non Being as ideal. Nature as source of Harmony.

Mandate of Heaven
Mencius
Heaven as power based on principle of Nature and Humanity.

The Forbidden City and the Tomb of Mao Zedong


THE PERSIAN EMPIRE AND THE ALEXANDRIAN LEGACY IN ASIA: THE GOLDEN AGE OF GRECO-INDIAN BUDDHIST CIVILIZATION


October 26, 2007
Lecture Outline

l. The Birth of the Buddhist Message of Enlightenment
2. Alexander the Great’s Conquest of the Persian Empire
3. The Seleucids of South Anatolia and the Mauryan Empire of India
4. Bactria the Land of the Synthesis
5. The Golden Age of Buddhist Kushan Nobles

Vocabulary and Dates

Siddharta Gautama of the Sakyamuni clan in Nepal, Buddha
Bodhi Tree
Nirvana
Sanskrit
4 Noble Thruths
8 Fold Path
Hinduism, Caste, Brahmin
Buddhism

Alexander the Great 338-323 B. C.
Cyrus the Great, Darius, Xerxes of the Persian Empire
Founding of Persian Empire 550 B. C. in Anatolia and Thrace
Persian Wars 500-449 B. C. Greek Victory, Athenian Democracy
Herodotus of Halicarnassus, Historia
Hindu Kush, Hyber Pass, Punjabi warriors, Indus Valley


Hyber Pass

Alexander’s Conquest of Persia 333 B. C.
Post Alexander local kingdoms: Orientalized Greeks of the Hellenistic Age
Seleucid, Anatolia, Mesopotamia
Antinogid, Greece, Macedonia
Ptolemy, Egypt, Cleopatra, Anthony, Julius Caesar, she commits suicide 31 B. C.
Bactria, Central Asia, Pakistan and Afganistan today.

Seleucus of Anatolia and Chandara Gupta of Maurya Dynasty in India
305 B. D. Seleucus defeated by Chandara’s army of elephants in the jungles of the Ganges valley.
Peace Treaty cedes Central Asia east of Kabul to India

Megasthenes, ambassador of Seleucos to court of Chandara Gupta in Pataliputra (Patna).
Wrote the Indica, the first book on India in a European language
Women warriors, secret service spying organization, wooden city walls.
Kautilya, political advisor wrote Arthashastra, Mirror of Princes, genre picked up by Persians and transmitted to the Near East and Europe.

Bindusara, son of Chandara, requests figs, wine, and philosopher from the Seleucid king. Obliged but Greeks reply they do not trade in philosophers!

Ashoka, Grandson of Chandara, 268-232 B. D. converted to Buddhism religion of the masses.
Ashoka pillars have Sanskrit and Greek writings declaring faith.

Bactria the land of the synthesis between East and West
Demetrius (originally Seleucid too) crosses Hindu Kush, conquers north Punjab (Pakistan) and establishes Bactrian Kingdom, capital, Taxila, Gandara region, 182 B. C.
Ruled Afganistan, Pakistan of today.

Bactrian Coins

Prince Menander, brother of Demetrius, mother is Indian!, represents synthesis.
Converts to Buddhism, name changes to Milinda, in Sanskrit.
Discussions of religious enlightenment with Indian monk Nagasara
Becomes sacred canonical text of Buddhism to this day
Milindapandra (Dialoque of Milinda) written in Greek genre of Dialogue but in Sanskrit.
Translated later to Chinese and Japanese.

Golden Age of Buddhist Kushan Nomads 1-300 A. D.
Han dynasty defeats nomads the Yueh chi nomad tribe migrates to West. Conquers Bactria in 150 B. D. devastates Greek rule forever.
Kushan dynasty emerges 150 years later with cultural synthesis.

Kushan King Kanishka mints coins Bactrian style 75 A. Ac.

Begram, Hadde, Gandara, Surh Kotal villages in Afganistan have Kushan monasteries with Greek Buddhist sculptors who make first generation of Buddha statues!
Ay Hanim site in North Afganistan, Alexandria city, Demeter/Kibele scene in Copper plate,



1. Greek Athlete
2.Heracles and the Buddha
3.Buddhist Sea Nymphs



1.Gandara Buddha
2.
Kushan Monk
3.
Kushan Prince


Cultural Legacy : Ishtemi Kagan settles Turks of 6th century in same area out of which the Seljuks of Oguz emerge and convert to Islam.

Monday, October 22, 2007

ANCIENT SOUTH ASIA: THE INDUS VALLEY AND HARAPPAN CIVILIZATIONS (MELTEM TOKSÖZ)



The Indus Valley Civilization was one of the world's first great urban civilizations that flourished in the vast river plains of what are now Pakistan and western India

Urban Civilization of two cities, Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa with grid-plans and alleys connecting to major streets and both public and private drainage.

These cities of the period 2500-1500 BC, approximately the same time as the early city-states of Egypt and Mesopotamia, are referred to as Harappan Culture or Indus Civilization.

Spreading over a vast geography from high mountains to coastal regions, large cities and smaller towns grew up along the major trade routes as administrative and ritual center.

Major excavations were begun at the larger sites, Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, in the 1920s and numerous excavations at smaller sites have broadened our understanding of this unique culture.

Some characteristics:

Well planned cities and towns built on massive mud brick platforms

Grid plan of streets and lanes oriented north-south and east-west

No community temple but fire altars in private homes and neighborhood centers

Terra cota figurines of women

No evidence of military ability and/or weaponry

Two storied housing complete with bath facilities and a drainage system

Granaries and industrial complexes that suggest some level of state control of economic resources and production.

Seals made of stone and engraved with symbols and animal motifs. The most common animal on the seals is a mythical unicorn. Seals of animals with inscription used for administrative purposes.

No burial ground and no temple

The use of elaborate ornaments, sculpture and terra cotta figurines

Seals and writing, decorated pottery and new ritual objects are unifying cultural symbols of the Harappan phase.

Great Bath and Granary

A distinctive form of writing Undeciphered pictography of 400 signs

Some kind of centralized state, extensive town planning

Same period with the Egyptian and Sumerian civilizations

Recent excavations and reexamination

  1. revealing another possible site for a temple. Tree temple
  2. revealing fire altars as public ritual sites, indicating precursors to Hinduism and Zoroastrianism.
  3. revealing personal icons, indicating precursors to personal devotion and meditation as in Hinduism and Buddhism
  4. a particular icon that indicates “priest king” and thus clan structure

UNRESOLVED QUESTIONS

  1. Why did this sophisticated civilization not spread beyond the Indus valley?
  2. Why did the cities undergo decline?

WEEK V: PRIMARY SOURCES

Primary sources are available as electronic documents on the Boğaziçi Library web site.

1. Lao Tzu, The Classic of the Way and of Virtue
2. Confucius, K’ung fu-tzu, (469-399 B. C. ) Analect


Monday, October 15, 2007

WEEK IV: PRIMARY SOURCES

Primary sources are available as electronic documents on the Boğaziçi Library web site.

1-Homer, the Odyssey, "The King Nestor Remembers",
2- Thucidydes, The Peloponessian War, Book II, Chapter VI, "Funeral Oration of Pericles",
3- Aristotle, "Virtues and Vices"

Thursday, October 11, 2007

MONOTHEISM AND THE JUDAIC TRADITION IN THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST (VANGELIS KECHRIOTIS)

October 10, 2007




The Babylonian Empire:

Amorite King Hamurabi in 1792 BC turned Babylon from a fragile town to a powerful kingdom. He was the first to recognize that power need not rely on brut force.

Diplomacy and cunningness.

He created the Old Babylonian Empire that stretched from Persian Gulf into Assyria.

Sumerian traditions were maintained.

Babylonian scientists extended the Sumerian work in astronomy and maths.

The Babylonians expanded commerce and a common cultural zone based on the growing use of writing and a shared language.

A new government strength expressed in the legal system and public buildings.



Roots of monotheism:


Hamurabi elevated the local deity Marduk to the dominant god of the Empire even if old deities were not eliminated. Thus he united diverse populations under one god.

A god that through order (as opposed to the Sumerian God of chaos) helped the predict and control the environment. Hamurabi’s legacy kept the kingdom alive for two more centuries and its influence was immense in forming kingship in the Near East.


HAMURABİ

The Hebrews

A Semitic people influenced by Babylonian civilization settled about 1600 BCE migrating from Mesopotamia.

Some moved into Egypt where they lived as a subject people. Moses, on the 13th c. led them to Palestine to a promised land.

First clear record in the 11th c. when they emerge with a self-conscious culture.

The Hebrew religion:

In Hebrew history, the passage to monotheism was limited at first as only one group believed in Yahweh.

Even if it is attributed to Moses, monotheism most probably is connected with the Levites, a tribe with unique claims in priestly authority and enjoyed higher literacy among the Hebrews.

The House of David politically united all Hebrews in Jerusalem in the 10th c.

Early leaders emphasized a strong creator God as most powerful among other divinities for prayer and loyalty.

This divinity through the prophets urged Jews to abandon the worship of other gods and receive the Torah (a holy law).

Keeping the law would ensure divine protection and guidance. Hence the Jews regarded themselves the chosen people. Until the 10th c. they worshiped gods even of the neighbors Cannaites such as god El. Even Solomon, son of David, included altars of Astar in his temple.

Prophets were messengers, both political and religious figures who helped the Hebrews survive as a people.

It was against the threat of the Assyrian god Assur that prophets professed monotheism.

Even prophet Jeremaih who taught in the 7th c, preached against foreign cults.

Already from 8th c. Hebrew monotheism contributed to Western religious thought.

i)Yehwah was not part of nature or humanlike, thus he could be conceived in abstract terms,
ii) Yehwah had appointed humans to be the rulers of nature by divine mandate,
iii) Yehwah implemented universalizing ethical rules and moral behavior as in the case of Noah and the ten commandments and,
iv) Yehwah put forth ritualistic demands such as abstaining from labor on the 7th day.
v) Yehwah had a power far different from the traditional Gods of the Middle East and Egypt. A divinity orderly and just and people knew what to expect.

For the Hebrews, religion was a system of life, not simply rituals and ceremonies.

Divine law was spelled out in the Torah and other writings from 9th to 2nd c. BCE.

Moral duty did not bind Hebrews in their relations with foreigners though.
After Solomon’s death the ten northern tribes abstained from the cultic activities in Jerusalem and they were eventually eliminated by the Assyrians, 20.000 of them captured, the famous lost ten tribes.

The southern kingdom of Judah survived as an Assyrian vassal state.

Hebrew prophets:

Amos and Hosea, before the fall to the Assyrians in 722, Isaiah and Jeremiah before Judah’s fall in 522 to Chaldeans, Ezekiel and second Isaiah who prophesized by the waters of Babylon.

Three doctrines: i) absolute monotheism, ii) Yehwah is a god of righteousness ii) Yehwah demands ethical behavior from his Hebrew people above all, not ritual and sacrifice.

The Hebrew religion:

The Hebrews saw God’s guidance on all of human history. Eventually all peoples would be led by God.

But God’s special pact was with the Hebrews and there was no attempt on converting others.

Thus, moral duty did not bind Hebrews in their relations with foreigners.

Due to this limitation the people and their faith survived but it remained a minority.

Influence on Christianity and Islam.




The Persian Empire:

In the sixth c. B.C., the Persians emerge into history under prince Cyrus, who became the king of all Persians in 549.

Cyrus took Babylon without a fight in 539. The Chaldean Empire was dissolved. The Hebrews were free to return to Palestine.

Darius ruled in 521-486. He divided the Empire into satrapies that enjoyed certain autonomy. He allowed subject peoples their local institutions while imposing a common currency.

Zoroastrianism:

Buddhism, Judaism and Zoroastrianism were the known religions.

Zaratustra or Zoroaster, the first really theologian in history, developing a full religious system. A universal religion.

One supreme god in the universe, Ahura-Mazda, the ‘wise lord’, who embodied light, truth and righteousness. Ahriman was the counter-deity, treacherous, malignant, leading the forces of evil. The struggle between good and evil.

It was a personal religion as opposed to public religions related to politics. However, it was made important for the Persian rule and its tolerance, since it advocated that individuals are free to chose to sin or not. Those who lived honestly would be rewarded in afterlife, the others would be punished.

Similarities to Judaism and Christianity.

Besides influence on Judaism and Christianity, it also affected Greeks encouraging them to think of religion in more universalistic and personal terms.

ANCIENT GREEK CIVILIZATION - VANGELIS KECHRIOTIS


The Greek City and Democracy (15 Oct. Monday)

Economy and Material Culture in the Greek City (17 Oct. Wednesday)


Ancient Greek cities

The emergence of the city-state

Greek achievements would be impossible without the eastern cultures.

Human dignity, individual liberty, participatory government, artistic innovation, scientific investigation, constitutional experimentation, confidence in the creative powers of human mind.

Today’s democracy, equality, justice, freedom are not what the Greeks meant.

Dark ages, 1150-800, decline, 90% depopulation

Many of the inhabitants of the mainland fled to the highland of southern Greece or across the sea to Cyprus and the coast of Asia Minor.

All this had been connected to the arrival of Dorians from the north, a population with military competence. It is now claimed though that the system had already collapsed before.

Tension between Dorian speaking and Attic-speaking populations would always pertain.

Initially, rare contacts with other communities. Equality between the heads of the households.

Homeric epics, 800, after the introduction of the phoenician alphabet.

Until 8th c., aristocrats, ’the best men’, their authority relying on their superior qualities.

Wealth was not enough, singer of songs, doer of deeds, winner of battles, favored by Gods.

Description of heroic ideals, competition between elites, the population is absent.

Greeks already in 1000 had started again trading long-distance. Pottery more sophisticated.

Starting from 9th c. more contact with Near East traditions, sea-faring as described in Odyssey.

Social stratification became more pronounced. Successful traders could use their wealth to increase their political and social standing.

Dramatic population growth, rivalry, need for resources, 8th-7th colonialism.

Archaic Greece, prelude to the classical period, but not so inferior to that.

Colony is independent with ties to its mother city, but no political obligations.

Several hundreds of them from the Black Sea to western Mediterranean. Magna Graecia in Italy. By the end of 4th c. more Greeks lived there than in Greece proper.

The motivation was to establish commercial bonds with a broader network.

It intensified their contacts with other cultures, which sharpened their awareness of a common Hellenic identity.

This did not result to political cooperation.

Greeks had little esteem for political associations adding to linguistic differences. Ionian-Dorian.

Yet pan-Hellenic cult sites were recognized.

Oracle at Delphi. Unintelligible answers of legendary Pythia, translated by the priests.

Pan-Hellenic festivals, Olympic Games, major athletic competitions, 776 BCE. Only Greeks participated. Victory entailed social and political power in the polis.

The creation of polis. Blend of state and local practice. Asty, surrounded by chora (land). which might support several villages, even towns. The vast majority of the citizens were farmers, who came to participate in asty affairs.

Synoikismos was the first form of polis, accomplished through cooperation or conquest.

Was polis the outcome of the urban development around a temple (pheonician tradition) or temples were created afterwards? Athens- Athena.

Changes in warfare. In the dark ages, military power lay with the elite, common foot soldier played a secondary role.

The introduction of hoplite tactics brought aristocratic monopoly to an end. Soldiers armed with sword or spear and protected by a round shield. A breast-plate, a helmet, wrist guards and leg guards. They stood shoulder to shoulder forming a phallanx. Impenetrable wall of armor.

The ability to stay together. It is introduced firstly in the early 7th using as a model the tactics of the Assyrians.

The result was a social and political revolution. Those farmers who could afford an armor became a new ‘hoplite class’. They claimed political participation, equality and justice.

But disgruntled aristocrats might have equally contributed. 7th and 6th aristocrats dominated the polis. Conflicts between aristocratic families, new laws and dispatching of colonial expeditions part of these conflicts. Serving as a magistrate in a polis was a non-salaried duty that only the rich could afford.

The aristocrats claimed a distinct lifestyle, symposiums became a feature of aristocratic male life in the polis.

Respectable women were excluded from them as by any other aspect of political life.

Aristocratic homosexuality was regulated by social custom. Commonly a man in his thirties would have a teenager as a lover, forming an intimate bond of friendship and political support.

Plato claimed that this was the only true love.

Disenchanted aristocrats used the hoplites.

The tension between aristocrats gave rise to tyranny. A word borrowed from the Lydians means someone who seizes power by force.

Would be tyrant appealed to the hoplite class and satisfied their demands to retain power, broadening the right of political participation, and giving them judicial guarantees.

Once these guarantees provided, the continuation of tyranny became an obstacle to the demos, the power of the people.

Athens

Considered themselves indigenous people. It emerges from the Dark Ages initially as an agricultural economy, but soon due to its location turned to trade.

Landed aristocracy was in power until the 6th c. and monopolized the office of the archon. Nine of theme presided over civil, military, judicial, religious functions. They served a term of one year, after which they became lifetime members of Areus Pagus Council, a kind of ‘high court’. In the course of 7th c. social divisions emerged as many fell into debt slavery.

In 621 the aristocrat Drakon set new laws. His attempt fails and both aristocrats and hoplites assigned the task in 594 to Solon who had made a fortune as a merchant.

Solon forbade debt slavery; he spurred crash-crop economy and the urban industries necessary to make Athens a commercial power.

He set up courts where citizens served as jury. A new political system based on property, a non-aristocrat could also achieve prominence.

He established vouli where the population was represented. Eventually, the citizen’s assembly, the ekklesia where all free men participated.

After a brief aristocratic counterrevolution, the aristocrat Cleisthenis was supported by demos as an archon in 508-507.

He reorganized the countryside population into 10 voting tribes which eliminated economic tension.

He introduced ostracism, for the demos to protect itself from tyrants.



1.Akropolis
2.
Drawing reproducing the golden-ivory statue of Athena standing within Parthenon

3.The complex of Karyatis maidens from the temple of victorious Athena 421-405 BCE.

4.Horsemen from the Panathenea procession, the most glorious celebration in Athens. Part of the frieze on the western side of the Parthenon. 432 BC.


SPARTA

It represented everything that Athens was not, simple, earthly, traditional.

A synoikismos of five villages created the polis. Probably because of that it had a dual monarchy, with two lines of succession.

Neither of the kings was technically superior, something which led to political intrigue.

Spartans believed that Lycurgus, a legendary figure from the heroic Age gave them their laws, Great Rhetra a set of laws that remained unwritten when most other cities had their laws written down.

These reforms militarized Sparta.

Their army was so superior that the Spartans left their city unfortified.

Every full citizen, a Spartan or an equal was a professional soldier of the phalanx.

Whereas Athenian government was democratized to reflect the interests of the people, in Sparta the citizenship was aristocratised.

Sparta consolidated its power when in the early 7th c. conquered Messinia, a wealthy region in the west. Its population was enslaved and became helotes, assigned to worked the land. Thus, Spartans could devote themselves to war.

A society organized for war. At birth every child was examined by the five ephors, the guardians of Great Rhetra. The healthy ones at the age of seven were introduced to the state-run educational system.

Girls and boys together until 12 years old when girls would continue education in letters and boys real military training. At the age of 18 the young man would become full citizen. He could then remain at the barracks until 30. A Spartan could remain in active duty until he saw 60.

The homoerotic culture of the Spartans and the little time they had for a family partly accounts for the population decrease in the 5th c.

All males were member of the assembly, the Apella, that voted for important issues.

Upper government included two kings and the council of elders, where upon completing 60 years any Spartan could apply to be elected for life.

The ephors elected for a year had tremendous powers and controlled the kryptia, secret services.

They lived under constant threat of revolt by the helots whom they took always with them in campaigns and tried not to leave their hometown for long.

Spartans could not engage in commerce and Lycurgus had prohibited coinage, instead heavy metal which were worthless outside Sparta.

These functions were taken up by the perioiki who were dwelling around the city and were in-between citizens and helots. The grew wealth but were excluded from any political right.


The Persian Wars


This experience changed the Greek world immeasurably.

Herodotus the first Greek historian born in Alicarnassus. His account starts with the revolt in Miletos against the Persians in 499-494. The rebels with Athenian and Eretrian help were overwhelmed by the Persians.

Darius realized that mainland Greece would be a threat for his kingdom. He was defeated in Marathon. Themistocles convinced Athenians to build a two hundred warships (trieremes) fleet.

When Xerxes campaigned in 480, Athens, Sparta and others formed the Hellenic League. Defeat at Thermopylae, victory at Salamis. Athenians abandoned their city but used their fleet.


Classical Athens

In the next fifty years, heyday of Athens.

Athens unified the polis who wished to continue the fight against the Persians under the Delian League. Each member would contribute ships or money. However gradually Athens imposed its authority over its allies leading to resentment.

Only one office remained open to traditional voting: strategos. The same person could be elected year after year.

Politics in Athens had changed though, as it was the huge fleet that counted, not the infantry. The 40000 rowers came from those too poor to afford hoplite equipment, the thetes.

Pericles

Pericles dominated as a strategos for thirty years. He moved legislative power from Areus Pagus and Bouli to the Ecclesia.

He made it easier for any citizen to participate by paying a day’s wage for attendance. He launched an ambitious project of public buildings and lavish festivals to honor gods. He became a patron of arts.

Art and Architecture

Black figure’ vases and jugs with cheerful sensuality and vulgar wit.


1. Black-figured pottery, representing a symposium 520 BCE
2. Early classical period, Black figured pottery, The Homeric hero Achilles as he prepares for the campaign.560 BCE


Marble statuaries and sculptured surfaces. Sculptors took human greatness as their theme, most important being the appearance of well-proportioned naturalistic nude.

1.Marble Statuary of ‘Athena in veils’ 470 BCE
2.Detail from a marble statuary where Asklipios and his sons are represented 360 BCE.

It appears between 490-480 for the first time and we can assume that the triumph of Greek ideals of human dignity was related to that.

The ‘classic’ Greek temple emerged gradually but reached its peak with Parthenon, a celebration of power and confidence.

Drama

An innovation that developed out of the chorus that chanted odes to god Dionysus.

Great Dionysia part of religious and political life.

Aeschylos introduced more than one characters. Well-known legends but it could also have contemporary themes. Sophocles and Euripides

Comedy, Aristophanes, direct political commentary, parody, full of vulgarity and sexual references. Repeatedly dragged into court.

History. Thucydides wrote the history of the Peloponnesian war.

Social relations

Slavery was widespread. While free Athenians debated politics and arts, slaves were in the fields and mines.

But still it was small in scale. Slaves were distributed among families and thus they seldom suffered cruelty since they created bonds with their master. Yet, they were not considered to be entirely human.

For the free citizens, Athens was an exciting place, center of commerce and culture. Some were richer but they were obliged to donate for public festivals.

Gender Relations

The growth of Greek democracy did not lead to greater equality among the sexes.

In the aristocratic world women were greatly estimated but in the democratic one women lived in the shadows.

Legally, wives were the property of their husbands, weddings were arranged, women would stay home and would be involved in presumably inferior occupations at home.

Men apart from homosexuality were allowed to seek for pleasure to household slaves.


The Peloponnesian War

Athenians could have never achieved their projects without the wealth from the allied cities.

The revolts increased until the 440s when eventually the Athenians signed a treaty with the Persians and the Delian League collapsed.

The Peloponnesian League was established by the Spartans and their allies.

The war 431-404 was eventually won by the Spartans with the Persian help. The role of the demagogues who stirred hostility.

By 401, after an interval of tyrannical rule, Athens was again a democracy but a feeble one.

Sparta’s hegemony:

Spartans’s hegemony soon became unpopular. They were not accustomed to that role.

The war demonstrated the limitations of the polis system. The competitive ethos between different Greek polis had proved to be their flaw. It brought a questioning of old certainties; even gods seemed to be challenged.

Philosophical schools:

After the Persian conquest of Asia Minor, Pythagoras and his circle due to distress over loss of freedom, believed that the essence of things were not matter but numbers thus focused on mathematics.

After the Greek victories the increasing power motivated inquiry into how the individual might best act in here and now. The sophists as professional instructors.

Protagoras: ‘man is the measure of all things’.

Socrates argued that absolute standards exist. Reexamination, ‘Socratic questioning’, opposed sophists for employing false reasoning, focused on ethics not on the physical world.

He believed in polis as a positive framework of truth.


Socrates

Greek contribution:


Despite the religious criticism of some intellectuals, the Greeks were neither secularists nor rationalists. Democracy was limited, slavery existent, patriarchy prevalent. Statecraft was based on imperial aggressiveness.

And yet, contrast to the Near East Empires the culture of polis was based on concepts of human dignity, individual achievement and freedom.

Several terms on politics originate there but most importantly paideia which later was replaced by the Roman humanitas.



The Hellenic World: From City State to Empire

October 19, 2007

Vangelis Kechriotis

Hellenistic period

Dissolution of the polis system

Every time a polis was on the brink of establishing a hegemony, a coalition of old enemies would defeat it. Civil wars resulted to social and economic problems.

The Spartans were harsher than the Athenians against their allies and were eventually supported by the Persians, a support which led to a continuous Persian intervention in the Greek affairs until 340.

The old ideas of equality declined since the number of free citizens declined as many poverty-stricken descended into slavery.

Strife between oligarchs and democrats continued throughout the Greek world.

Economy was devastated. Many towns had been repeatedly looted. Agriculture suffered. Many people turned to mercenary service in south Italy or Persia. When these people did not find a job, they terrorized the local population.

Culture in the 4th c. forms a response to the social crisis. In sculpture, instead of the idealized forms of the classical period, realism was promoted, attention to life and movement.

In the drama at that period, there is no social and political commentary any more. The audience looked for entertainment and escape.

Heyday of philosophy

Plato. Socrates’ experience made him reject direct political involvement. Plato’s academy, writing of dialogues. Symposium.

His experience from the Sophists and the decline of his era led to the search of absolute truths. Our world changes, but there is a realm of eternal forms or ideas that only the mind can grasp. Highest is the idea of God. Through our senses we perceive only imperfect copies.

In his Republic, the farmers, artisans, traders would be ruled by an intellectually superior elite the guardians. Those wise among them would be educated and become the philosopher kings. Not property or hereditary title but intelligence.


Plato

Aristotle, a Plato’s student. Human mind can perceive the universe though the rationality of sense experience.

Objective reality of material objects. A compromise between Platonism and materialism. The universe is teleological.

In his Politics, true happiness can be found in the harmonious relation between individual human mind and the body, using reason. The philosophers were the happiest people.

Plato conceived politics as a means to the pursuit of a supernatural God, Aristotle conceived it as an end in itself. Inferior individuals would be slaves. Women were excluded from polis.

These thinkers saw that something was wrong with the polis and opted for a ‘utopia’.


Aristotle

Macedonian hegemony:

Initially, the royal house was challenged by its own nobility and surrounded by barbaric tribes. Greeks saw the Macedonians as equally barbarians as the Persians.

Philip II by 356 achieved full authority, stabilized northern borders and then defeated the Greek cities.

He developed superior warfare techniques. Mineral resources allowed him to create professional army.

While politicians like Isokrates found in Philip an answer to the Greek fragmenation, others like Demosthenes considered him a ruthless barbarian.

His dream was to reconciliate and ally all Greeks, in order to attack Persia. The Athenians resisted and in Chaeronea in 338 they were defeated. The League of Corinth was founded, where Greek cities would participate in a state of autonomy.

Alexander III or the Great succeeded Philip when the latter was murdered in 336.

A series of battles would lead him dissolve the Persian Empire. In 331, at Gaugamela, today’s northern Iraq, Alexander destroys the Persian army. He proceeded to Bactria, today’s Afghanistan and reached up to the Indus River.

A visionary, a genius and a butcher who wished to transform the world by turning Greek culture from its parochial homeland to a world culture.

He systematically founded Greek style polis along his route. He also forced his officers to get married to local noblewomen. A desire to eliminate ethnic distinctions in the empire, or an attempt to breed a new nobility loyal to himself.


Alexander’s Conquests


Alexander’s Legacy:


Marble Head of Alexander, (Roman Copy)
After Alexander’s death two generations were involved in endless wars to claim the heritage.

Eventually, by 275 three military and political powers had emerged. The style of rule indicates return to the past, especially in the Near East and Egypt, where the successors of Alexander established new cities and revived the concept of divine king.

Ptolemaic Egypt proved to be the most durable and the dynasty used the wealth of the country to patronize sciences and arts. Alexandria, with its museum and library became the center of scholarship, displacing Athens. Cleopatra.

Seleucid Asia. Like the Ptolemaics, the Seleucids merged the Near Eastern tradition of the Mesopotamian subjects and the Greek one of the Hellenized populations of the coast. They built cities that grew to commercial centers such as Antioch.

Antogonid Macedonia and Greece. Macedonian general Antigonus established a rule influenced by Stoic philosophy. Kingship as a servitude rather than a privilege. He did not compete with the other kingdoms, since his resources were limited.

The Greeks were restless and two Leagues were formed, the Aetolian League and the Achean League, calling for freedom from the barbarian Macedonians. They represented a real political unification, with some centralization of governmental function.

Social conditions

The Hellenistic world prosperous through long-distance trade in a network of rapidly growing cities. Money circulation instigated investment.

Greek rulers imported Greek officials and soldiers to control over non-Greek population.

Urban settlements were created from nothing. Alexander founded 70 cities. Alexandria 500.000 population. Before Rome no other city surpassed it. Splendid public buildings but the masses had no share in that brilliant life.

Agriculture still remained the main occupation. However, social instability led to sudden poverty.

Hellenistic Religion

Escapism from political and collective commitments. The new philosophical schools Stoicism, Epicurianism, Skepticism partly replaced worship of local deities.

Ordinary people though embraced a variety of local religions with elaborate rituals. In the Greek-speaking communities ecstatic mysticism attracted even more.

Zoroastrianism (in an extreme form that claimed that everything material is evil) returned in the form of an off-shoot called Mithraism.

Mithras was believed to have lived as human, performed miracles, proclaimed Sunday as sacred day and the 25th December, the birthday of the sun. One of the most popular religions in the Roman world and had influence on Christianity.


(All of the images are taken from "Judith G.Coffin, Robert Stacey, Robert E.Lerner, Standish Meacham, Western Civilizations, New York, London: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002")