02: Culture and Society in Ancient Rome
Major eras:
1. Kings
Traditional dates: 753-510 BCE
2. Republic: up to 27 BCE
- clusters of wealthy families
- republican government: city offices, army
- regional wars, alliances
- victories over regional rivals; 90 BCE Roman citizenship across Italian peninsula
- Expansion into Mediterranean and beyond
- Carthaginians (Punic Wars) end 146 BCE
- Rulers of Hellenistic regions in Mediterranean
- Expansion into Celtic regions (Julius Caesar)
3. Principate (eventually: Empire)
“princeps,” “first citizen” (Octavian=Augustus): 27 BCE -19 CE
Cicero’s Rome: crisis and end of republic
What did it mean to be an educated person in ancient Rome?
What issues did Cicero care about?
Some visuals: life in public in Rome
-
- Digitales Forum Romanum
- Digital Latin Forum (archived) Curia Iulia
- Center on Forum:
- Market
- Worship
- Governance: Comitium (Senate, rostra, and more)
- Learning
- News
- Other public buildings: theaters; stadia; baths; other temples.
- Residences insula;
- Conimbriga reconstruction insula Ostia Antica reconstructions;
- domus; L’Abitazione romana
- Infrastructure
- Tax farming
- Estates: Latifundium. Servi; coloni
Learning and Culture
-
- Greeks as models
- Some dates as examples:
Homer 9th or 8th c BCE; Hesiod ca 700; Plato 427-347; Aristotle 384-322 - Record-keeping; literature
- Latin: earliest literature ca 3rd c BCE
- Greek cultural imports
- Greek remains language of scholarship for Romans
- science, philosophy, religious thought in Greek
- Latin: practical subjects
- Gradual development of “serious” literature in Latin
- Education and Literacy
- Greek and Latin
- Private
- Part of life of political positions, public service, wealth
- ideal: leisure time to devote oneself to learning. Otium
- Features:
- Liberal arts: studies befitting a “free person”—someone who will have a career in public service
- Public service, public speaking
- Rhetoric; literature
- Natural philosophy—specialized study
Philosophy and Schools
Athens, Alexandria, other centers
“schools” of philosophy.
-
-
- Traditions
- Specific issues and approaches
- related to notions of religion
- general guides for daily living
- nature and medicine
- speaking well. Sophists
- Examples: Stoics, Platonists, Skeptics
-
Roman era: mix of influences
Cicero (106-43 BCE)
-
-
- Family: wealthy equestrian, from Arpinum (SE of Rome)
- Educated in Rome, Greece; law, rhetoric
- public life: Quaestor, Praetor. Sicily: against Verres. Consul in 63: against Catiline.
- Exile and return
- Proscribed in second triumvirate, Killed fleeing to in Macedonia.
- Wrote throughout career: speeches, Letters. Bring Greek philosophy into a Latin readership.
- De officiis (incipit of 1463 manuscript)
- Writers and Readers
- Manuscripts from ancient Rome: Vergilius Romanus (BAV Cod. Vat. lat. 3867) ; Vergilius Vaticanus (BAV Cod. Vat. lat. 3225); Palatine Vergil (BAV Cod. Pal. lat. 1631)
- First Edition of De Officiis (Mainz, 1465)
- First English Translation (1534)
-
Codex Palimpsestus Vaticanus 5757, the Schedae Vaticanae. The under-writing is a fourth or fifth century Latin uncial copy of Cicero’s De Re Publica (I.xvii.26), once at Bobbio, now in the Vatican; the upper writing is of the eighth century.