Greco-Roman: Early Experiments in Participatory Government

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Greco-Roman: Early Experiments in Participatory Government By Cynthia Stokes Brown, Big History Project, adapted by Newsela staff on 10.18.16 Word Count 1,357 A Roman statue of Athena. Photo: Mimmo Jodice/CORBIS, courtesy of Big History Project. Instead of rule by a single person, Athens and Rome developed governments with widespread participation by male elites. These somewhat democratic societies lasted about 170 years in Athens and 480 years in Rome. Present-day Greece, with Athens as its capital, and Italy, with Rome as its capital, are neighbors along the northern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. Their shared history goes back thousands of years. Over the course of many centuries, they became two distinctive societies, with the Romans eventually swallowing the Greeks as part of the Roman Empire. Location On the Greek peninsula, the Greeks occupied the southern shoreline, called Attica. Another group, the Macedonians, inhabited the northern territories. Attica was composed of rocky soil on steep mountains. The Athenians had built their city near the southern coast of Attica. They were lucky to find a large silver deposit near Athens that made them very rich. They used the money to pay for timber from Italy, which they used to build warships and a powerful navy.

The Romans had a more productive site on the western side of the Italian peninsula. They built their city on seven hills by the Tiber River, not at the seashore, but inland 18 miles. Athens and Greece From 1600 to 1100 BCE, Indo-European immigrants called the Mycenaeans occupied the mainland of the Greek peninsula. By 800 BCE small, competing city-states were forming in the mountains of southern Greece. These city-states each contained about 500 to 5,000 male citizens. The total Greek population may have been 2 million to 3 million. The citystates shared a common language and religion. Sparta and Athens were the most powerful city-states in Greece, though their culture and politics were very different. The Spartans conquered their neighbors and forced them to live as slaves. Sparta developed a strict culture based on maintaining an elite military force, with a ruling council of 28 elders. Athens, on the other hand, gave wealthy men full political rights. Even the 10 military generals were elected. Women, children, slaves, and foreigners had no vote, however. So perhaps 10 percent to 12 percent of the estimated 300,000 Athenians were allowed to participate in government. Around 500 BCE, Athens achieved a military victory over the Persian Empire, the largest and wealthiest farming civilization in the world at the time. After their victory, the Athenians enjoyed a golden age of cultural creativity for about 150 years. Under the elected General Pericles, who served in the fifth century BCE, democratic participation was at its highest. Athenian merchants brought knowledge and ideas from Mesopotamia and Egypt. Scientists, philosophers, and playwrights developed and combined cultural traditions that would later spread throughout Europe and serve as a foundation for Western culture.

The Greek city-states never figured out how to live together peacefully with each other, however. Instead, Athens and Sparta fought the Peloponnesian War (431 404 BCE). Athens was defeated and all of the city-states were weakened. In the mid-300s BCE, Macedonia, their neighbor to the north, conquered the Greek cities. When the Macedonian leader, Philip II, was assassinated in 336 BCE, his 20-year-old son, Alexander, took the stage. In 13 amazing years, Alexander conquered enough land to form the largest empire the world had yet seen. Meanwhile, on the Italian peninsula, the Romans developed a powerful farming civilization, one that was not fragmented into city-states. Between 215 and 146 BCE, they gradually conquered the Greek cities in Italy, only to absorb much of Greek culture into their own. Rome and empire Rome began as a merging of small towns on seven hilltops by the Tiber River, halfway down the west coast of the Italian peninsula. A hundred years after the union, in 509 BCE, Roman aristocrats overthrew their king and set up a republic ruled by the elites. The poorer classes, called plebeians, insisted on some protections and participation. The idea of the republic came to include the rule of law, the rights of citizens, and upright moral behavior. As its population grew, Roman rule expanded. Roman armies fought the powerful city of Carthage, across the Mediterranean near modern-day Tunis, Tunisia. After 120 years, they finally won and went on to conquer Greece, Egypt, and the Middle East by 133 BCE. The republican form of government, however, produced intense rivalries among its military leaders. These leaders competed for power with their personal armies. Julius Caesar (100 44 BCE) emerged as the winner of this competition. He conquered vast territories and declared himself dictator for life, ending the republic. Two years later, other members of the Senate stabbed him to death in hopes of restoring the republic. Instead, after 13 more years of civil war, Caesar s adopted son, Octavian, known as Augustus, took power and ruled for 45 years virtually unopposed. The empire reached its height in the first two centuries of the Common Era. From 27 BCE to 180 CE, a time known as the Pax Romana, or "Roman Peace," Roman leaders controlled about 130 million people across an area of about 1.5 million square miles, from a city of 1 million people. Roman roads linked all parts of the empire. Roman law, which featured key concepts such as the principle that the accused are innocent until proven guilty, was in force everywhere.

While the Greeks had focused on philosophy and science, the Romans put their creativity into roads, aqueducts (for carrying water), and law. In a way, though, the Roman Empire was a vehicle for the spread of Greek culture. The Romans honored many gods, renaming the Greek ones and taking them as their own. Roman statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero (106 43 BCE) adopted a version of Stoicism, a Greek philosophy, and Epicetus and Marcus Aurelius further popularized it. The rise of Christianity and the fall of Rome Out of a remote corner of the Roman Empire emerged a small sect that has become one of the most widespread religions of today s world Christianity. The Romans conquered Judea (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) in 6 CE. Jesus, whom Christians consider to be the Son of God, grew up at a time of great tension between the Roman overlords and their Jewish subjects. The Romans allowed Jesus to be crucified in the early 30s CE to prevent rebellion, which they believed he was advocating with his message that the kingdom of God is at hand. Christianity soon spread to non-jewish communities, led by Paul of Tarsus, Anatolia, who preached in the Greek-speaking eastern regions of the Roman Empire. At first, Rome persecuted Christians, but by the third century, Rome had become the center of Church

authority. Christianity appealed to the lower classes, women, and urban populations. In 313, Emperor Constantine legalized Christian worship after he himself had converted to Christianity. By the end of the fourth century, it had become the official state religion. History books used to refer to the fall of Rome in 476 when Germanic General Odovacar became the ruler of the western part of the empire. But the fall was a gradual breaking up, not a sudden collapse. Government control went back to city-states and small territories ruled by princes, bishops, or the pope, with the Roman Catholic Church often disagreeing with state authorities. The common tongue, Latin, evolved into many splinter languages: French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian. Connections and legacies Even after the collapse of the empire, Greek and Roman knowledge managed to live on. Greek thinking influenced cultures throughout the world. The Roman legacy is a bit more concrete. Hundreds of miles of Roman roads still exist, after 20 centuries of use. Emperor Justinian reorganized Roman law with the Code of Justinian, which is still the basis of legal systems in most of Europe. The names of our months also derive from Roman times, carrying the names of their gods and of a couple of their most famous leaders. Perhaps the most important legacy of Greek and Roman civilization is its experiments with male citizen participation in political life. Though these exercises seem short-lived in both societies, the ideas later re-emerged in Europe and the young United States to play a significant role in the shaping of modern governments.