26
Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Chapter Four:

The Roman Legacy

Culture and Values, 7th Ed.Cunningham and Reich

Page 2: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich
Page 3: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

The Importance of Rome

Cultural achievements Assimilation of influences

Role of music

Historical division:Monarchy/ Etruscan Age (753-510 B.C.E.)

Republican Rome (509-31 B.C.E.)

Imperial Rome (31 B.C.E. - C.E. 476)

Page 4: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

The Etruscans and Their Art

Rome founded in mid-8th c. by Latins

Etruscans gained control by 616 B.C.E.Urban centers, engineering

Social, leisure activities

Trade, expansion

Etruscan ArtPrimitive but sophisticated, natural focus

Value emotion over intellectual appeal

Page 5: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

The Bride & Bridegroom or Married Couple

Page 6: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

[Image 4.2]

Capitoline She-Wolf

Page 7: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

[Image 4.3]

Apollo of Veii

Page 8: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

[Image 4.4]Wall painting from the Tomb of Hunting and Fishing

Page 9: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich
Page 10: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich
Page 11: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Republican Rome

Etruscan expulsion in 510 B.C.E.

New governmentConsuls, Senate, Patricians/Plebeians

Political equality / Balance of PowerHortensian Law

Increasing power / expansion

Social and political unrest civil war

Page 12: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

[Image 4.6]

The Roman Forum

Page 13: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Literary Developments During the Republic

Ennius (239-169 B.C.E.)Annals

Tragedies adapted from Greek models

Plautus (254-184 B.C.E.) and Terence (185-159 B.C.E.)

Roman adaptations of Greek comedies

Catullus (80-54 B.C.E.)Roman lyric poetry

Influenced by Sappho

Page 14: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Quintus Ennius

Page 15: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Plautus

Page 16: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Catullus

Page 17: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Literary Developments During the Republic

Julius Caesar (100-44 B.C.E.)Commentaries

Assassinated on March 15, 44 B.C.E.

Marcus Tullius CiceroLawyer, orator

Epistolary legacy

Page 18: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Ciceronian RhetoricAlliteration

Allusion

Analogy

Antithesis

Crescendo

Climax

Hyperbole

Juxtaposition

Metaphor

Onomatopoeia

Oxymoron

Personification

Simile

Page 19: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Roman Philosophy and Law

Epicureanism

Founded by Epicurus (341-271 B.C.E.)

Extolled by Lucretius (99-55 B.C.E.)Intellectual and rational vs. self-indulgent

On the Nature of Things

Gods play no part in human affairs

Pleasure and calm composure

Page 20: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Roman Philosophy and Law

StoicismWorld governed by Reason

Role of Divine Providence

Roman StoicsSeneca

Epictetus

Marcus Aurelius

Page 21: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Roman Philosophy and Law

Julius Caesar’s Ius Civile

Law of the Twelve Tablets

Justinian’s Corpus Iuris Civilis

Roman science of lawLegal experts

Natural justice

Page 22: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Republican Art and Architecture

Roman portraitureRealistic details

Express outer appearance and inner character

Propagandistic

Architecture as political mediumPublic buildings for glory of leaders

Page 23: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

[Image 4.7]

Bust of Cicero

Page 24: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Imperial Rome (31 B.C.E. - C.E. 476)

Julius Caesar assassinated 44 B.C.E.

Battle of Actium (31 B.C.E.)Octavian vs. Mark Antony

Octavian inaugurated as Augustus (27 B.C.E.)

Vast, multiethnic empire

Emperor, bureaucracy, civil service

Roman army

Page 25: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Publius Virgilius Maro (Virgil)

Page 26: Chapter Four: The Roman Legacy Culture and Values, 7 th Ed. Cunningham and Reich

Augustan Literature: Vergil

Roman art promoted Augustan worldviewOfficial, public, served state purposes

Vergil’s AeneidTribute to Rome and Augustus

National epic of Rome

Human destiny and personal responsibility

Eclogues (Bucolics) and Georgics