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?
Voices of Early Modern Japan: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life during the Age of the Shoguns
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?
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VOICES OF AN ERA
? ? Copyright 2012 by ABC-CLIO, LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome : contemporary accounts of daily life / David Matz, editor. p. cm. -- (Voices of an era)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-313-38738-8 (hardcopy : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-0-313-38739-5 (ebook)
1. Civilization, Classical--Sources. 2. Greece--Civilization--To 146 B. C. --Sources. 3. Rome--Civilization-- Sources. I. Matz, David.
DE59. V64 2012
938--dc23 2011043429
ISBN: 978-0-313-38738-8 EISBN: 978-0-313-38739-5
16 15 14 13 12 1 2 3 4 5
This book is also available on the World Wide Web as an eBook. Visit www. abc-clio. com for details.
Greenwood
An Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC
ABC-CLIO, LLC
130 Cremona Drive, P. O. Box 1911 Santa Barbara, California 93116-1911
This book is printed on acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America
? CONTENTS
Preface vii Chronology xxi
Domestic Life 1
1. Growing Up in Sparta Was No Picnic 3
2. A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family 7
3. Even in Ancient Rome, the Dog Was Man's--and Woman's--Best Friend 13
4. A Prearranged Marriage 17
5. An Extremely Devoted Wife 21
Education 25
6. Plutarch's Prescription for a Child's Education 27
7. Socrates and Protagoras Discuss Issues in Education 31
8. Funding for Roman Schools 37
9. Spare the Rod, and Other Educational Precepts of Quintilian 41
Employment 47
10. Pay It Back! Apollodorus and His Day in Court 49
11. Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon 55
12. Cicero Advises His Son on a Right and Proper Career 61
13. The Sky Is No Longer the Limit: Diocletian's Cap on Wages and Prices 65
Food and Clothing 69
14. Plutarch and Friends Talk Dirty (Laundry) 71
15. After a Long Day of Marching or Fighting, What Did the Homeric Heroes Eat? 75
16. Spinning Thread and Making Clothing 79
17. Controlling Appetite and Curbing Weight Gain 83
Health Care 87
18. Hippocrates and the Ethics of the Medical Profession 89
19. A Medical Miracle Man Who Declined to Give an Encore Performance 93
v
Contents
vi
20. How to Obtain Good Health, and Keep It 97
21. How the Mind Can Heal the Body 101
Housing 107
22. Vitruvius's Description of an Elegant Home 109
23. A Husband and Wife Discuss Their Domicile: A Place for Everything
and Everything in Its Place 113
24. You Take Your Life in Your Hands if You Live in Rome 117
25. Ah! At Last I Can Live Like a Human Being! 125
Intellectual Life 131
26. An Intellectual on Trial 133
27. An Intellectual Who Invented Many Ingenious Devices 137
28. An Intellectual Defends the Study of Literature 141
29. An Intellectual Pays Tribute to His Uncle's Literary Output 147
Politics 151
30. Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City
of Tiresome Politicians 153
31. Women in Politics? In Ancient Athens? 159
32. Homegrown Terrorism? 165
33. The Women of Rome Refuse to Back Down 173
Religion 179
34. Squabbling among the Gods Was a Major Headache for Zeus 181
35. King Croesus Consults--and Bribes? --the Delphic Oracle 185
36. Julius Caesar Becomes a God 189
37. Job Description for a Vestal Virgin 193
Safety
197
38. A Case of Assault and Battery 199
39. Women? Taking Over the Acropolis? 205
40. A Tribune Speaks, a Riot Ensues 211
41. Everybody Talks about the Weather, but No One Does Anything about It 217
Sports and Games 221
42. The Goddess Was on His Side 223
43. The (Ancient) World's Greatest Athlete 229
44. "Put Me In, Coach": A Famous Athletic Trainer 235
45. The Resume of Ancient Rome's Superstar Charioteer 239
Biographical Sketches of Important Individuals Mentioned in Text 245 Glossary 251 Bibliography 253 Index 257
PREFACE
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life contains 45 original documents dealing with various aspects of day-to-day life in the Greco-Roman world. The starting point for the collection is the Trojan War, ca. 1200 BCE; the time span stretches all the way to the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian, in the early fourth century CE, thus encompassing some 1,500 years of human experience in these two foundational civilizations. This time period continues to attract the interest of modern audiences; witness, for example, the recent box-office success of movies like Troy, Gladiator, and 300. Furthermore, the ancient world lives among us and around us virtually everywhere; it is difficult to walk the streets of any downtown American city without seeing the influence of Greek temple archi- tecture in modern buildings: facades displaying pediments, triglyphs, metopes, with Corinthian, Doric, or Ionic columns holding up the roofs. Even our currency has gotten into the act. The architect who designed the famous Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C. , was greatly influenced by his knowledge of ancient Greek architecture, and anyone who wishes to see a rendering of this monument need only fish around in his/her pocket for a penny, or wallet for a five-dollar bill. Much of our American culture--from architecture to legal codes and systems to sports (think Olympic Games) to government to language to mathematics to philosophy--owes its inspiration, even its existence, to a Greek or Roman predecessor.
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
If we wish to truly understand history, it is necessary to delve into the writings of people who "lived it," those who participated in the events of their times, or at least witnessed these events. People like the Greek poet Pindar (518-438 BCE), who could arguably be called the western world's first sportswriter, a man who traveled to the great athletic meetings of his time, including the Olympics, and wrote poetry glorifying the victorious athletes. Or people like the Athenian philosopher Socrates (ca. 469-399 BCE), who eloquently served as his own defense lawyer and argued his own case in one of the most famous trials in the annals of western jurisprudence. Or people like Pliny the Younger (62-114 CE), a sophisticated Roman gentleman, who had seen what the rivers of Italy could do when swollen by flood- waters, and wrote about the ways in which flood victims dealt with the unwelcome devas- tation caused by the onrushing water.
? ? vii
Preface
These documents take us behind the scenes of the "grandeur that was Greece" and the "glory that was Rome," and illustrate how people not only coped with the frustrations that came with everyday living, but also reaped the rewards and enjoyed the pleasures of being a part of two of the greatest civilizations in history.
ORGANIZATION OF SECTIONS
The 45 documents are divided among 11 chapter headings, which are representative of many of the major aspects of daily life. The chapter headings, which appear in the volume in alphabetical order, are domestic life, education, employment, food and clothing, health care, housing, intellectual life, politics, religion, safety, and sports. The documents are taken from a wide variety of Greek and Roman authors, in a wide variety of literary genres: plays, poems, letters, biographies, histories, and satires. Some of the documents describe everyday events and situations to which many a modern reader will probably relate: a dispute between father and son over the son's spending habits; the characteristics of a beloved family pet; the best way to do the weekly laundry; how to efficiently organize clothing and furniture in one's home; and controlling appetite and avoiding weight gain. Other documents take on weightier topics: conspiratorial threats against the government, construction of public buildings, and the credibility of oracles.
Each document is preceded by an introduction and a section entitled "Keep in Mind As You Read. " As the wording of the rubric suggests, the entries here will offer important back- ground information with which the reader may not be familiar. Then follows the document itself, usually between 350 and 700 words in length, with some words in boldface type. These will be explained in "definition fact boxes" located next to the document. Some (but not all) of the documents will be accompanied by short "sidebars," which contain addi- tional information intended to supplement the content of the document itself. The "Aftermath" section functions as an epilogue to the document: What happened next? What consequences or developments occurred as a result of the events described in the docu- ment? Next come two series of questions: in the "Ask Yourself" category, the reader will be invited to think further about the document and reflect upon questions pertaining to its con- tent. The "Topics to Consider" section often offers suggestions for further research, on topics related to the document. In both of the "questions" sections, the reader will often be asked to think of examples from the modern world that might parallel the events or situations presented in the documents. Finally, suggestions for additional reading, including websites, appear under the "Further Information" rubric.
OTHER FEATURES
The volume contains a brief survey of Greek and Roman civilization, followed by an intro- duction to the nature and use of primary documents, including some information about how to read an ancient text intelligently. The business of putting pen to paper--or fingertips to keyboard--to construct a book, or an essay, or a poem, or a play can often be tricky, and not only in modern times. Ancient authors, too, confronted the challenges of the writing profession, and we will hear from some of them on this matter, including Thucydides, Livy, Plutarch, and others.
Additionally, there is a section featuring brief biographies of the authors of the original documents, as well as a chronological summary.
? ? ? ? viii
INTRODUCTION: GREEK AND ROMAN CIVILIZATION Greeks
The story of ancient Greek civilization probably could be said to have begun with the Minoans and Myceneans, or perhaps even before that, but for our purposes, the Trojan War serves as the starting point. The final days of this terrible conflict (ca. 1200- 1190 BCE) between the Greeks and Trojans is chronicled in one of the most famous works of western literature, Homer's Iliad. (See Document 42: "The Goddess Was on His Side") We owe much of what we know of the earliest times of Greek culture, language, political organization, military matters, and much more to this famous epic poem.
Historians generally believe that Greece gradually declined into a dark age for several centuries after the Trojan War, reemerging again in the eighth century BCE. Many famous polises, or city-states, came to prominence in the years to follow, but none was more impor- tant than Athens. Much of what we associate with the "ancient Greeks," or "ancient Greek civilization," was in actuality happening in Athens. Perhaps the first clearly recognizable individual in the city's glorious history was the lawgiver Solon, whose year in the spotlight was 594 BCE. The city was in crisis, on the brink of anarchy, and it was then that an extraor- dinary decision was made: to concentrate all legislative power in the hands of one person, who would have complete freedom to rewrite, create, or abolish any laws, regulations, or cus- toms that he thought would lead Athens out of its desperate situation. Since Solon had already established a rock-solid reputation for fairness, honesty, and incorruptibility, coupled with a peerless ability as a legislator and a politician, he was the one chosen for the job. After some hesitation, he accepted, and during his one-year term, he single-handedly transformed Athens from a city in chaos to a city on the move. Even today, the word "solon" remains with us, a term applied to a wise and conscientious lawgiver.
Toward the end of Solon's century, another famous, albeit poorly attested, legislator by the name of Cleisthenes took center stage in Athenian politics. Cleisthenes is often credited with originating two of the most noteworthy aspects of the emergent Athenian democracy: isonomia, a word meaning "equal rights" and one of the basic requirements of any democ- racy; and ostracism (see Document 30: "Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City of Tiresome Politicians"), a formal procedure whereby an overly ambitious or unscrupulous politician could literally be voted out of Athens, and into a 10-year exile.
The high point of Athenian democracy--and culture, and literature, and art, and drama, and architecture, and philosophy, and economic power, and international leader- ship--found its fullest expression under the leadership of perhaps the greatest statesman/ orator ever to grace its halls of power: Pericles. By virtue of his unprecedented electoral suc- cess (he was voted one of the ten strategoi, or military generals, 15 consecutive times), Pericles dominated the domestic political scene in Athens in the 440s and 430s BCE; during that time, he spearheaded a tremendous surge in the construction of beautiful and expensive buildings. The most famous of these was undoubtedly the magnificent Parthenon, con- structed atop the Acropolis; estimated cost: 5,000 talents, perhaps equivalent to $1. 5 billion, more than even the new Yankee Stadium in the Bronx cost. (See Document 11: "Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon. ")
But it was not only the building program that marked out Pericles's administration for greatness. Many noted philosophers, playwrights, and poets--some of the most gifted and famous ever--flourished in Periclean Athens. Two of these, the comic playwright Aristophanes and the philosopher Socrates (through Plato), contributed documents to this
Preface
? ? ix
Preface
x
volume. (For Aristophanes, see Document 2: "A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family. " For Socrates/Plato, see Document 26: "An Intellectual on Trial")
Unfortunately, this Athenian Golden Age was derailed by the disastrous Peloponnesian War, a terrible conflict between the two superpowers of the time, Athens and its longtime rival polis Sparta. The war began in 431 BCE, and dragged on for 27 long years, finally coming to an end in 404. And while it certainly did not destroy Athenian life or civilization--Athens continued to be a cultural, intellectual, and educational center of the ancient world--the Greeks were never again to reach the heights which they attained under the leadership of Pericles.
Historians refer to the next major period as the Hellenistic Age, spanning from 323 to 30 BCE. Between the Golden Age of Athens and the dawn of the Hellenistic Age lived one of history's most compelling figures, Alexander the Great. He traveled widely with his army, perhaps as far as India and Afghanistan, everywhere conquering the opposition and laying the foundations--whether consciously or not--for the continued spreading of Greek cul- ture, one of the defining characteristics of the Hellenistic period that followed.
But by the end of the second century BCE, the power of Rome, too, was spreading, and beyond the Italian peninsula to which it had been largely confined up to this time. In 146 BCE, the Romans conquered Corinth, the last major Greek city not under their control. As a consequence, they annexed Greece as a province, and although the Hellenistic influence continued, it was now clear that the ancient Mediterranean world had a new superpower.
Romans
Ironically, it might be said that Roman civilization began with the Trojan War. Despite the overwhelming Greek victory in that conflict, a few Trojans managed to escape the carn- age on the night when the Greek army swarmed into Troy and destroyed the city. One of these few Trojan survivors was Aeneas. He, along with a small band of similarly fortunate stragglers, slipped out of the burning city, commandeered ships, and set sail for points unknown. After numerous hardships and disappointments, they made their way to Italy, where they landed and attempted to establish a permanent home. They met with some resis- tance to the plan from the indigenous peoples, but after a series of confrontations and bat- tles, they overcame this opposition and settled in Italy, not too far from the future location of Rome. Aeneas was their leader, and later Romans always regarded him as their progenitor, the founder of the Roman race.
But the actual construction of the city of Rome was to come long after Aeneas, over 400 years later, when a young man named Romulus, with a handful of allies, built the walls and foundations for the city. Romulus became its first king; the date was 753 BCE.
Romulus was followed by six more kings. In 509, the last of these, Tarquinius Superbus, was expelled in a coup, and not only he; the monarchy went out with him, replaced by a republican form of government. The Roman Republic lasted for nearly 500 years before it, too, fell by the wayside, superseded by one-man rule, the Roman Empire. The empire sur- vived for another 500 years before finally falling in 476 CE.
In those 1,200 years of Roman history, one of the most serious external threats they faced was posed by the Carthaginian general Hannibal (ca. 247-183 BCE). Rome had had a long and confrontational history with the Carthaginians, and this ongoing mutual hostility exploded into a major war, the Second Punic War, 218-201. The Romans ultimately emerged victorious, but the devastation from the war (much of which was fought on the Italian peninsula) had a major social and economic impact on subsequent Roman history.
Many of the soldiers who fought for Rome in this war were conscripted farmers, and when they returned to their farms after the war--if they survived--they discovered to their dismay that their lands had been amalgamated into large ranches called latifundia, owned in many cases by absentee land speculators in Rome. With nowhere else to go, many drifted into the cities, where conditions, unfortunately, were no better. The cycle of poverty, unem- ployment, and homelessness continued to worsen for decades after the Second Punic War, until Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus appeared on the scene.
In the campaign season of 134 BCE, Gracchus decided to seek the office of tribune; if elected, he would become a tribune for the year 133. During the campaign, he made speech after speech in which he promised to initiate land reform, a proposition that must have seemed dangerously revolutionary to those who occupied and owned the latifundia. Much to the undoubted frustration of the landowners, Gracchus was indeed elected, and soon after taking office, he made good on his campaign promise. After some initial opposition, he was successful in transforming his land reform bill into law.
Although the wealthy landowners certainly could not have been pleased by this turn of events, they were able to restrain their angry feelings, knowing that within a year, Gracchus would no longer be a problem: political offices in the Roman Republic were for one-year terms only, with no formal provision for reelection. But when Gracchus made the stunning announcement toward the end of 133 that he intended to run once again for the tribunate, it was more than his opponents could bear.
The campaign was a rough one, with violence and threats of violence rampant. Tiberius Gracchus was a superb public speaker, well versed in the ways of inciting a crowd with his emotion-laden oratory. During one of his campaign rallies, a scuffle broke out; it soon esca- lated into a full-fledged riot in which several hundred people were injured or killed. One of the casualties was Gracchus himself. The biographer Plutarch writes that this was the first time in Roman history in which Roman blood was shed in a civil dispute, and most modern historians look back at the year 133 as a turning point in the fortunes of the Roman Republic.
The events of that fateful year foreshadowed similar troubles to come, on a far larger scale, in the next century. Demagogues, rogue generals, revolutionaries--all took center stage at one time or another in the first century BCE. Perhaps the outstanding figure of the time was the great Gaius Julius Caesar, who painstakingly worked his way up the political ladder, finally achieving election to the top spot in the Roman Republic, the office of consul, for 59 BCE.
Browne, editors
Voices of Early Modern Japan: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life during the Age of the Shoguns
Constantine Vaporis, editor
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome
Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life
David Matz
VOICES OF AN ERA
? ? Copyright 2012 by ABC-CLIO, LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome : contemporary accounts of daily life / David Matz, editor. p. cm. -- (Voices of an era)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-313-38738-8 (hardcopy : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-0-313-38739-5 (ebook)
1. Civilization, Classical--Sources. 2. Greece--Civilization--To 146 B. C. --Sources. 3. Rome--Civilization-- Sources. I. Matz, David.
DE59. V64 2012
938--dc23 2011043429
ISBN: 978-0-313-38738-8 EISBN: 978-0-313-38739-5
16 15 14 13 12 1 2 3 4 5
This book is also available on the World Wide Web as an eBook. Visit www. abc-clio. com for details.
Greenwood
An Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC
ABC-CLIO, LLC
130 Cremona Drive, P. O. Box 1911 Santa Barbara, California 93116-1911
This book is printed on acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America
? CONTENTS
Preface vii Chronology xxi
Domestic Life 1
1. Growing Up in Sparta Was No Picnic 3
2. A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family 7
3. Even in Ancient Rome, the Dog Was Man's--and Woman's--Best Friend 13
4. A Prearranged Marriage 17
5. An Extremely Devoted Wife 21
Education 25
6. Plutarch's Prescription for a Child's Education 27
7. Socrates and Protagoras Discuss Issues in Education 31
8. Funding for Roman Schools 37
9. Spare the Rod, and Other Educational Precepts of Quintilian 41
Employment 47
10. Pay It Back! Apollodorus and His Day in Court 49
11. Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon 55
12. Cicero Advises His Son on a Right and Proper Career 61
13. The Sky Is No Longer the Limit: Diocletian's Cap on Wages and Prices 65
Food and Clothing 69
14. Plutarch and Friends Talk Dirty (Laundry) 71
15. After a Long Day of Marching or Fighting, What Did the Homeric Heroes Eat? 75
16. Spinning Thread and Making Clothing 79
17. Controlling Appetite and Curbing Weight Gain 83
Health Care 87
18. Hippocrates and the Ethics of the Medical Profession 89
19. A Medical Miracle Man Who Declined to Give an Encore Performance 93
v
Contents
vi
20. How to Obtain Good Health, and Keep It 97
21. How the Mind Can Heal the Body 101
Housing 107
22. Vitruvius's Description of an Elegant Home 109
23. A Husband and Wife Discuss Their Domicile: A Place for Everything
and Everything in Its Place 113
24. You Take Your Life in Your Hands if You Live in Rome 117
25. Ah! At Last I Can Live Like a Human Being! 125
Intellectual Life 131
26. An Intellectual on Trial 133
27. An Intellectual Who Invented Many Ingenious Devices 137
28. An Intellectual Defends the Study of Literature 141
29. An Intellectual Pays Tribute to His Uncle's Literary Output 147
Politics 151
30. Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City
of Tiresome Politicians 153
31. Women in Politics? In Ancient Athens? 159
32. Homegrown Terrorism? 165
33. The Women of Rome Refuse to Back Down 173
Religion 179
34. Squabbling among the Gods Was a Major Headache for Zeus 181
35. King Croesus Consults--and Bribes? --the Delphic Oracle 185
36. Julius Caesar Becomes a God 189
37. Job Description for a Vestal Virgin 193
Safety
197
38. A Case of Assault and Battery 199
39. Women? Taking Over the Acropolis? 205
40. A Tribune Speaks, a Riot Ensues 211
41. Everybody Talks about the Weather, but No One Does Anything about It 217
Sports and Games 221
42. The Goddess Was on His Side 223
43. The (Ancient) World's Greatest Athlete 229
44. "Put Me In, Coach": A Famous Athletic Trainer 235
45. The Resume of Ancient Rome's Superstar Charioteer 239
Biographical Sketches of Important Individuals Mentioned in Text 245 Glossary 251 Bibliography 253 Index 257
PREFACE
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life contains 45 original documents dealing with various aspects of day-to-day life in the Greco-Roman world. The starting point for the collection is the Trojan War, ca. 1200 BCE; the time span stretches all the way to the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian, in the early fourth century CE, thus encompassing some 1,500 years of human experience in these two foundational civilizations. This time period continues to attract the interest of modern audiences; witness, for example, the recent box-office success of movies like Troy, Gladiator, and 300. Furthermore, the ancient world lives among us and around us virtually everywhere; it is difficult to walk the streets of any downtown American city without seeing the influence of Greek temple archi- tecture in modern buildings: facades displaying pediments, triglyphs, metopes, with Corinthian, Doric, or Ionic columns holding up the roofs. Even our currency has gotten into the act. The architect who designed the famous Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C. , was greatly influenced by his knowledge of ancient Greek architecture, and anyone who wishes to see a rendering of this monument need only fish around in his/her pocket for a penny, or wallet for a five-dollar bill. Much of our American culture--from architecture to legal codes and systems to sports (think Olympic Games) to government to language to mathematics to philosophy--owes its inspiration, even its existence, to a Greek or Roman predecessor.
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
If we wish to truly understand history, it is necessary to delve into the writings of people who "lived it," those who participated in the events of their times, or at least witnessed these events. People like the Greek poet Pindar (518-438 BCE), who could arguably be called the western world's first sportswriter, a man who traveled to the great athletic meetings of his time, including the Olympics, and wrote poetry glorifying the victorious athletes. Or people like the Athenian philosopher Socrates (ca. 469-399 BCE), who eloquently served as his own defense lawyer and argued his own case in one of the most famous trials in the annals of western jurisprudence. Or people like Pliny the Younger (62-114 CE), a sophisticated Roman gentleman, who had seen what the rivers of Italy could do when swollen by flood- waters, and wrote about the ways in which flood victims dealt with the unwelcome devas- tation caused by the onrushing water.
? ? vii
Preface
These documents take us behind the scenes of the "grandeur that was Greece" and the "glory that was Rome," and illustrate how people not only coped with the frustrations that came with everyday living, but also reaped the rewards and enjoyed the pleasures of being a part of two of the greatest civilizations in history.
ORGANIZATION OF SECTIONS
The 45 documents are divided among 11 chapter headings, which are representative of many of the major aspects of daily life. The chapter headings, which appear in the volume in alphabetical order, are domestic life, education, employment, food and clothing, health care, housing, intellectual life, politics, religion, safety, and sports. The documents are taken from a wide variety of Greek and Roman authors, in a wide variety of literary genres: plays, poems, letters, biographies, histories, and satires. Some of the documents describe everyday events and situations to which many a modern reader will probably relate: a dispute between father and son over the son's spending habits; the characteristics of a beloved family pet; the best way to do the weekly laundry; how to efficiently organize clothing and furniture in one's home; and controlling appetite and avoiding weight gain. Other documents take on weightier topics: conspiratorial threats against the government, construction of public buildings, and the credibility of oracles.
Each document is preceded by an introduction and a section entitled "Keep in Mind As You Read. " As the wording of the rubric suggests, the entries here will offer important back- ground information with which the reader may not be familiar. Then follows the document itself, usually between 350 and 700 words in length, with some words in boldface type. These will be explained in "definition fact boxes" located next to the document. Some (but not all) of the documents will be accompanied by short "sidebars," which contain addi- tional information intended to supplement the content of the document itself. The "Aftermath" section functions as an epilogue to the document: What happened next? What consequences or developments occurred as a result of the events described in the docu- ment? Next come two series of questions: in the "Ask Yourself" category, the reader will be invited to think further about the document and reflect upon questions pertaining to its con- tent. The "Topics to Consider" section often offers suggestions for further research, on topics related to the document. In both of the "questions" sections, the reader will often be asked to think of examples from the modern world that might parallel the events or situations presented in the documents. Finally, suggestions for additional reading, including websites, appear under the "Further Information" rubric.
OTHER FEATURES
The volume contains a brief survey of Greek and Roman civilization, followed by an intro- duction to the nature and use of primary documents, including some information about how to read an ancient text intelligently. The business of putting pen to paper--or fingertips to keyboard--to construct a book, or an essay, or a poem, or a play can often be tricky, and not only in modern times. Ancient authors, too, confronted the challenges of the writing profession, and we will hear from some of them on this matter, including Thucydides, Livy, Plutarch, and others.
Additionally, there is a section featuring brief biographies of the authors of the original documents, as well as a chronological summary.
? ? ? ? viii
INTRODUCTION: GREEK AND ROMAN CIVILIZATION Greeks
The story of ancient Greek civilization probably could be said to have begun with the Minoans and Myceneans, or perhaps even before that, but for our purposes, the Trojan War serves as the starting point. The final days of this terrible conflict (ca. 1200- 1190 BCE) between the Greeks and Trojans is chronicled in one of the most famous works of western literature, Homer's Iliad. (See Document 42: "The Goddess Was on His Side") We owe much of what we know of the earliest times of Greek culture, language, political organization, military matters, and much more to this famous epic poem.
Historians generally believe that Greece gradually declined into a dark age for several centuries after the Trojan War, reemerging again in the eighth century BCE. Many famous polises, or city-states, came to prominence in the years to follow, but none was more impor- tant than Athens. Much of what we associate with the "ancient Greeks," or "ancient Greek civilization," was in actuality happening in Athens. Perhaps the first clearly recognizable individual in the city's glorious history was the lawgiver Solon, whose year in the spotlight was 594 BCE. The city was in crisis, on the brink of anarchy, and it was then that an extraor- dinary decision was made: to concentrate all legislative power in the hands of one person, who would have complete freedom to rewrite, create, or abolish any laws, regulations, or cus- toms that he thought would lead Athens out of its desperate situation. Since Solon had already established a rock-solid reputation for fairness, honesty, and incorruptibility, coupled with a peerless ability as a legislator and a politician, he was the one chosen for the job. After some hesitation, he accepted, and during his one-year term, he single-handedly transformed Athens from a city in chaos to a city on the move. Even today, the word "solon" remains with us, a term applied to a wise and conscientious lawgiver.
Toward the end of Solon's century, another famous, albeit poorly attested, legislator by the name of Cleisthenes took center stage in Athenian politics. Cleisthenes is often credited with originating two of the most noteworthy aspects of the emergent Athenian democracy: isonomia, a word meaning "equal rights" and one of the basic requirements of any democ- racy; and ostracism (see Document 30: "Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City of Tiresome Politicians"), a formal procedure whereby an overly ambitious or unscrupulous politician could literally be voted out of Athens, and into a 10-year exile.
The high point of Athenian democracy--and culture, and literature, and art, and drama, and architecture, and philosophy, and economic power, and international leader- ship--found its fullest expression under the leadership of perhaps the greatest statesman/ orator ever to grace its halls of power: Pericles. By virtue of his unprecedented electoral suc- cess (he was voted one of the ten strategoi, or military generals, 15 consecutive times), Pericles dominated the domestic political scene in Athens in the 440s and 430s BCE; during that time, he spearheaded a tremendous surge in the construction of beautiful and expensive buildings. The most famous of these was undoubtedly the magnificent Parthenon, con- structed atop the Acropolis; estimated cost: 5,000 talents, perhaps equivalent to $1. 5 billion, more than even the new Yankee Stadium in the Bronx cost. (See Document 11: "Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon. ")
But it was not only the building program that marked out Pericles's administration for greatness. Many noted philosophers, playwrights, and poets--some of the most gifted and famous ever--flourished in Periclean Athens. Two of these, the comic playwright Aristophanes and the philosopher Socrates (through Plato), contributed documents to this
Preface
? ? ix
Preface
x
volume. (For Aristophanes, see Document 2: "A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family. " For Socrates/Plato, see Document 26: "An Intellectual on Trial")
Unfortunately, this Athenian Golden Age was derailed by the disastrous Peloponnesian War, a terrible conflict between the two superpowers of the time, Athens and its longtime rival polis Sparta. The war began in 431 BCE, and dragged on for 27 long years, finally coming to an end in 404. And while it certainly did not destroy Athenian life or civilization--Athens continued to be a cultural, intellectual, and educational center of the ancient world--the Greeks were never again to reach the heights which they attained under the leadership of Pericles.
Historians refer to the next major period as the Hellenistic Age, spanning from 323 to 30 BCE. Between the Golden Age of Athens and the dawn of the Hellenistic Age lived one of history's most compelling figures, Alexander the Great. He traveled widely with his army, perhaps as far as India and Afghanistan, everywhere conquering the opposition and laying the foundations--whether consciously or not--for the continued spreading of Greek cul- ture, one of the defining characteristics of the Hellenistic period that followed.
But by the end of the second century BCE, the power of Rome, too, was spreading, and beyond the Italian peninsula to which it had been largely confined up to this time. In 146 BCE, the Romans conquered Corinth, the last major Greek city not under their control. As a consequence, they annexed Greece as a province, and although the Hellenistic influence continued, it was now clear that the ancient Mediterranean world had a new superpower.
Romans
Ironically, it might be said that Roman civilization began with the Trojan War. Despite the overwhelming Greek victory in that conflict, a few Trojans managed to escape the carn- age on the night when the Greek army swarmed into Troy and destroyed the city. One of these few Trojan survivors was Aeneas. He, along with a small band of similarly fortunate stragglers, slipped out of the burning city, commandeered ships, and set sail for points unknown. After numerous hardships and disappointments, they made their way to Italy, where they landed and attempted to establish a permanent home. They met with some resis- tance to the plan from the indigenous peoples, but after a series of confrontations and bat- tles, they overcame this opposition and settled in Italy, not too far from the future location of Rome. Aeneas was their leader, and later Romans always regarded him as their progenitor, the founder of the Roman race.
But the actual construction of the city of Rome was to come long after Aeneas, over 400 years later, when a young man named Romulus, with a handful of allies, built the walls and foundations for the city. Romulus became its first king; the date was 753 BCE.
Romulus was followed by six more kings. In 509, the last of these, Tarquinius Superbus, was expelled in a coup, and not only he; the monarchy went out with him, replaced by a republican form of government. The Roman Republic lasted for nearly 500 years before it, too, fell by the wayside, superseded by one-man rule, the Roman Empire. The empire sur- vived for another 500 years before finally falling in 476 CE.
In those 1,200 years of Roman history, one of the most serious external threats they faced was posed by the Carthaginian general Hannibal (ca. 247-183 BCE). Rome had had a long and confrontational history with the Carthaginians, and this ongoing mutual hostility exploded into a major war, the Second Punic War, 218-201. The Romans ultimately emerged victorious, but the devastation from the war (much of which was fought on the Italian peninsula) had a major social and economic impact on subsequent Roman history.
Many of the soldiers who fought for Rome in this war were conscripted farmers, and when they returned to their farms after the war--if they survived--they discovered to their dismay that their lands had been amalgamated into large ranches called latifundia, owned in many cases by absentee land speculators in Rome. With nowhere else to go, many drifted into the cities, where conditions, unfortunately, were no better. The cycle of poverty, unem- ployment, and homelessness continued to worsen for decades after the Second Punic War, until Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus appeared on the scene.
In the campaign season of 134 BCE, Gracchus decided to seek the office of tribune; if elected, he would become a tribune for the year 133. During the campaign, he made speech after speech in which he promised to initiate land reform, a proposition that must have seemed dangerously revolutionary to those who occupied and owned the latifundia. Much to the undoubted frustration of the landowners, Gracchus was indeed elected, and soon after taking office, he made good on his campaign promise. After some initial opposition, he was successful in transforming his land reform bill into law.
Although the wealthy landowners certainly could not have been pleased by this turn of events, they were able to restrain their angry feelings, knowing that within a year, Gracchus would no longer be a problem: political offices in the Roman Republic were for one-year terms only, with no formal provision for reelection. But when Gracchus made the stunning announcement toward the end of 133 that he intended to run once again for the tribunate, it was more than his opponents could bear.
The campaign was a rough one, with violence and threats of violence rampant. Tiberius Gracchus was a superb public speaker, well versed in the ways of inciting a crowd with his emotion-laden oratory. During one of his campaign rallies, a scuffle broke out; it soon esca- lated into a full-fledged riot in which several hundred people were injured or killed. One of the casualties was Gracchus himself. The biographer Plutarch writes that this was the first time in Roman history in which Roman blood was shed in a civil dispute, and most modern historians look back at the year 133 as a turning point in the fortunes of the Roman Republic.
The events of that fateful year foreshadowed similar troubles to come, on a far larger scale, in the next century. Demagogues, rogue generals, revolutionaries--all took center stage at one time or another in the first century BCE. Perhaps the outstanding figure of the time was the great Gaius Julius Caesar, who painstakingly worked his way up the political ladder, finally achieving election to the top spot in the Roman Republic, the office of consul, for 59 BCE. But his true goal seemed to have been the acquisition of a large and prestigious province to govern after his year as the consul. Caesar was a man who usually got what he wanted, and the fulfillment of his postconsular ambitions certainly fit with this pattern. He was granted the governorship of the sprawling province of Gaul, modern France, which he ruled for an unprecedented eight years--most governorships lasted a maximum of three years. In that time, he was bent on conquest and acquisition, in Spain, Germany, and England as well as in Gaul. During that extended stay in the province, he had molded a battle-toughened army, one that was fearless, relentless, and most importantly, utterly loyal to Caesar.
Not surprisingly, Caesar's activities in Gaul occasioned no little uneasiness back in Rome, and there were many who feared that he might use his powerful army to attack the city itself and perhaps install Caesar as a king or a dictator. To prevent such a calamity from happening, in 50 BCE, the politicians in Rome demanded that Caesar return home to give an accounting of his Gallic activities and an explanation of his plans for the future.
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Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life
David Matz
VOICES OF AN ERA
? ? Copyright 2012 by ABC-CLIO, LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome : contemporary accounts of daily life / David Matz, editor. p. cm. -- (Voices of an era)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-313-38738-8 (hardcopy : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-0-313-38739-5 (ebook)
1. Civilization, Classical--Sources. 2. Greece--Civilization--To 146 B. C. --Sources. 3. Rome--Civilization-- Sources. I. Matz, David.
DE59. V64 2012
938--dc23 2011043429
ISBN: 978-0-313-38738-8 EISBN: 978-0-313-38739-5
16 15 14 13 12 1 2 3 4 5
This book is also available on the World Wide Web as an eBook. Visit www. abc-clio. com for details.
Greenwood
An Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC
ABC-CLIO, LLC
130 Cremona Drive, P. O. Box 1911 Santa Barbara, California 93116-1911
This book is printed on acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America
? CONTENTS
Preface vii Chronology xxi
Domestic Life 1
1. Growing Up in Sparta Was No Picnic 3
2. A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family 7
3. Even in Ancient Rome, the Dog Was Man's--and Woman's--Best Friend 13
4. A Prearranged Marriage 17
5. An Extremely Devoted Wife 21
Education 25
6. Plutarch's Prescription for a Child's Education 27
7. Socrates and Protagoras Discuss Issues in Education 31
8. Funding for Roman Schools 37
9. Spare the Rod, and Other Educational Precepts of Quintilian 41
Employment 47
10. Pay It Back! Apollodorus and His Day in Court 49
11. Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon 55
12. Cicero Advises His Son on a Right and Proper Career 61
13. The Sky Is No Longer the Limit: Diocletian's Cap on Wages and Prices 65
Food and Clothing 69
14. Plutarch and Friends Talk Dirty (Laundry) 71
15. After a Long Day of Marching or Fighting, What Did the Homeric Heroes Eat? 75
16. Spinning Thread and Making Clothing 79
17. Controlling Appetite and Curbing Weight Gain 83
Health Care 87
18. Hippocrates and the Ethics of the Medical Profession 89
19. A Medical Miracle Man Who Declined to Give an Encore Performance 93
v
Contents
vi
20. How to Obtain Good Health, and Keep It 97
21. How the Mind Can Heal the Body 101
Housing 107
22. Vitruvius's Description of an Elegant Home 109
23. A Husband and Wife Discuss Their Domicile: A Place for Everything
and Everything in Its Place 113
24. You Take Your Life in Your Hands if You Live in Rome 117
25. Ah! At Last I Can Live Like a Human Being! 125
Intellectual Life 131
26. An Intellectual on Trial 133
27. An Intellectual Who Invented Many Ingenious Devices 137
28. An Intellectual Defends the Study of Literature 141
29. An Intellectual Pays Tribute to His Uncle's Literary Output 147
Politics 151
30. Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City
of Tiresome Politicians 153
31. Women in Politics? In Ancient Athens? 159
32. Homegrown Terrorism? 165
33. The Women of Rome Refuse to Back Down 173
Religion 179
34. Squabbling among the Gods Was a Major Headache for Zeus 181
35. King Croesus Consults--and Bribes? --the Delphic Oracle 185
36. Julius Caesar Becomes a God 189
37. Job Description for a Vestal Virgin 193
Safety
197
38. A Case of Assault and Battery 199
39. Women? Taking Over the Acropolis? 205
40. A Tribune Speaks, a Riot Ensues 211
41. Everybody Talks about the Weather, but No One Does Anything about It 217
Sports and Games 221
42. The Goddess Was on His Side 223
43. The (Ancient) World's Greatest Athlete 229
44. "Put Me In, Coach": A Famous Athletic Trainer 235
45. The Resume of Ancient Rome's Superstar Charioteer 239
Biographical Sketches of Important Individuals Mentioned in Text 245 Glossary 251 Bibliography 253 Index 257
PREFACE
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life contains 45 original documents dealing with various aspects of day-to-day life in the Greco-Roman world. The starting point for the collection is the Trojan War, ca. 1200 BCE; the time span stretches all the way to the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian, in the early fourth century CE, thus encompassing some 1,500 years of human experience in these two foundational civilizations. This time period continues to attract the interest of modern audiences; witness, for example, the recent box-office success of movies like Troy, Gladiator, and 300. Furthermore, the ancient world lives among us and around us virtually everywhere; it is difficult to walk the streets of any downtown American city without seeing the influence of Greek temple archi- tecture in modern buildings: facades displaying pediments, triglyphs, metopes, with Corinthian, Doric, or Ionic columns holding up the roofs. Even our currency has gotten into the act. The architect who designed the famous Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C. , was greatly influenced by his knowledge of ancient Greek architecture, and anyone who wishes to see a rendering of this monument need only fish around in his/her pocket for a penny, or wallet for a five-dollar bill. Much of our American culture--from architecture to legal codes and systems to sports (think Olympic Games) to government to language to mathematics to philosophy--owes its inspiration, even its existence, to a Greek or Roman predecessor.
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
If we wish to truly understand history, it is necessary to delve into the writings of people who "lived it," those who participated in the events of their times, or at least witnessed these events. People like the Greek poet Pindar (518-438 BCE), who could arguably be called the western world's first sportswriter, a man who traveled to the great athletic meetings of his time, including the Olympics, and wrote poetry glorifying the victorious athletes. Or people like the Athenian philosopher Socrates (ca. 469-399 BCE), who eloquently served as his own defense lawyer and argued his own case in one of the most famous trials in the annals of western jurisprudence. Or people like Pliny the Younger (62-114 CE), a sophisticated Roman gentleman, who had seen what the rivers of Italy could do when swollen by flood- waters, and wrote about the ways in which flood victims dealt with the unwelcome devas- tation caused by the onrushing water.
? ? vii
Preface
These documents take us behind the scenes of the "grandeur that was Greece" and the "glory that was Rome," and illustrate how people not only coped with the frustrations that came with everyday living, but also reaped the rewards and enjoyed the pleasures of being a part of two of the greatest civilizations in history.
ORGANIZATION OF SECTIONS
The 45 documents are divided among 11 chapter headings, which are representative of many of the major aspects of daily life. The chapter headings, which appear in the volume in alphabetical order, are domestic life, education, employment, food and clothing, health care, housing, intellectual life, politics, religion, safety, and sports. The documents are taken from a wide variety of Greek and Roman authors, in a wide variety of literary genres: plays, poems, letters, biographies, histories, and satires. Some of the documents describe everyday events and situations to which many a modern reader will probably relate: a dispute between father and son over the son's spending habits; the characteristics of a beloved family pet; the best way to do the weekly laundry; how to efficiently organize clothing and furniture in one's home; and controlling appetite and avoiding weight gain. Other documents take on weightier topics: conspiratorial threats against the government, construction of public buildings, and the credibility of oracles.
Each document is preceded by an introduction and a section entitled "Keep in Mind As You Read. " As the wording of the rubric suggests, the entries here will offer important back- ground information with which the reader may not be familiar. Then follows the document itself, usually between 350 and 700 words in length, with some words in boldface type. These will be explained in "definition fact boxes" located next to the document. Some (but not all) of the documents will be accompanied by short "sidebars," which contain addi- tional information intended to supplement the content of the document itself. The "Aftermath" section functions as an epilogue to the document: What happened next? What consequences or developments occurred as a result of the events described in the docu- ment? Next come two series of questions: in the "Ask Yourself" category, the reader will be invited to think further about the document and reflect upon questions pertaining to its con- tent. The "Topics to Consider" section often offers suggestions for further research, on topics related to the document. In both of the "questions" sections, the reader will often be asked to think of examples from the modern world that might parallel the events or situations presented in the documents. Finally, suggestions for additional reading, including websites, appear under the "Further Information" rubric.
OTHER FEATURES
The volume contains a brief survey of Greek and Roman civilization, followed by an intro- duction to the nature and use of primary documents, including some information about how to read an ancient text intelligently. The business of putting pen to paper--or fingertips to keyboard--to construct a book, or an essay, or a poem, or a play can often be tricky, and not only in modern times. Ancient authors, too, confronted the challenges of the writing profession, and we will hear from some of them on this matter, including Thucydides, Livy, Plutarch, and others.
Additionally, there is a section featuring brief biographies of the authors of the original documents, as well as a chronological summary.
? ? ? ? viii
INTRODUCTION: GREEK AND ROMAN CIVILIZATION Greeks
The story of ancient Greek civilization probably could be said to have begun with the Minoans and Myceneans, or perhaps even before that, but for our purposes, the Trojan War serves as the starting point. The final days of this terrible conflict (ca. 1200- 1190 BCE) between the Greeks and Trojans is chronicled in one of the most famous works of western literature, Homer's Iliad. (See Document 42: "The Goddess Was on His Side") We owe much of what we know of the earliest times of Greek culture, language, political organization, military matters, and much more to this famous epic poem.
Historians generally believe that Greece gradually declined into a dark age for several centuries after the Trojan War, reemerging again in the eighth century BCE. Many famous polises, or city-states, came to prominence in the years to follow, but none was more impor- tant than Athens. Much of what we associate with the "ancient Greeks," or "ancient Greek civilization," was in actuality happening in Athens. Perhaps the first clearly recognizable individual in the city's glorious history was the lawgiver Solon, whose year in the spotlight was 594 BCE. The city was in crisis, on the brink of anarchy, and it was then that an extraor- dinary decision was made: to concentrate all legislative power in the hands of one person, who would have complete freedom to rewrite, create, or abolish any laws, regulations, or cus- toms that he thought would lead Athens out of its desperate situation. Since Solon had already established a rock-solid reputation for fairness, honesty, and incorruptibility, coupled with a peerless ability as a legislator and a politician, he was the one chosen for the job. After some hesitation, he accepted, and during his one-year term, he single-handedly transformed Athens from a city in chaos to a city on the move. Even today, the word "solon" remains with us, a term applied to a wise and conscientious lawgiver.
Toward the end of Solon's century, another famous, albeit poorly attested, legislator by the name of Cleisthenes took center stage in Athenian politics. Cleisthenes is often credited with originating two of the most noteworthy aspects of the emergent Athenian democracy: isonomia, a word meaning "equal rights" and one of the basic requirements of any democ- racy; and ostracism (see Document 30: "Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City of Tiresome Politicians"), a formal procedure whereby an overly ambitious or unscrupulous politician could literally be voted out of Athens, and into a 10-year exile.
The high point of Athenian democracy--and culture, and literature, and art, and drama, and architecture, and philosophy, and economic power, and international leader- ship--found its fullest expression under the leadership of perhaps the greatest statesman/ orator ever to grace its halls of power: Pericles. By virtue of his unprecedented electoral suc- cess (he was voted one of the ten strategoi, or military generals, 15 consecutive times), Pericles dominated the domestic political scene in Athens in the 440s and 430s BCE; during that time, he spearheaded a tremendous surge in the construction of beautiful and expensive buildings. The most famous of these was undoubtedly the magnificent Parthenon, con- structed atop the Acropolis; estimated cost: 5,000 talents, perhaps equivalent to $1. 5 billion, more than even the new Yankee Stadium in the Bronx cost. (See Document 11: "Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon. ")
But it was not only the building program that marked out Pericles's administration for greatness. Many noted philosophers, playwrights, and poets--some of the most gifted and famous ever--flourished in Periclean Athens. Two of these, the comic playwright Aristophanes and the philosopher Socrates (through Plato), contributed documents to this
Preface
? ? ix
Preface
x
volume. (For Aristophanes, see Document 2: "A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family. " For Socrates/Plato, see Document 26: "An Intellectual on Trial")
Unfortunately, this Athenian Golden Age was derailed by the disastrous Peloponnesian War, a terrible conflict between the two superpowers of the time, Athens and its longtime rival polis Sparta. The war began in 431 BCE, and dragged on for 27 long years, finally coming to an end in 404. And while it certainly did not destroy Athenian life or civilization--Athens continued to be a cultural, intellectual, and educational center of the ancient world--the Greeks were never again to reach the heights which they attained under the leadership of Pericles.
Historians refer to the next major period as the Hellenistic Age, spanning from 323 to 30 BCE. Between the Golden Age of Athens and the dawn of the Hellenistic Age lived one of history's most compelling figures, Alexander the Great. He traveled widely with his army, perhaps as far as India and Afghanistan, everywhere conquering the opposition and laying the foundations--whether consciously or not--for the continued spreading of Greek cul- ture, one of the defining characteristics of the Hellenistic period that followed.
But by the end of the second century BCE, the power of Rome, too, was spreading, and beyond the Italian peninsula to which it had been largely confined up to this time. In 146 BCE, the Romans conquered Corinth, the last major Greek city not under their control. As a consequence, they annexed Greece as a province, and although the Hellenistic influence continued, it was now clear that the ancient Mediterranean world had a new superpower.
Romans
Ironically, it might be said that Roman civilization began with the Trojan War. Despite the overwhelming Greek victory in that conflict, a few Trojans managed to escape the carn- age on the night when the Greek army swarmed into Troy and destroyed the city. One of these few Trojan survivors was Aeneas. He, along with a small band of similarly fortunate stragglers, slipped out of the burning city, commandeered ships, and set sail for points unknown. After numerous hardships and disappointments, they made their way to Italy, where they landed and attempted to establish a permanent home. They met with some resis- tance to the plan from the indigenous peoples, but after a series of confrontations and bat- tles, they overcame this opposition and settled in Italy, not too far from the future location of Rome. Aeneas was their leader, and later Romans always regarded him as their progenitor, the founder of the Roman race.
But the actual construction of the city of Rome was to come long after Aeneas, over 400 years later, when a young man named Romulus, with a handful of allies, built the walls and foundations for the city. Romulus became its first king; the date was 753 BCE.
Romulus was followed by six more kings. In 509, the last of these, Tarquinius Superbus, was expelled in a coup, and not only he; the monarchy went out with him, replaced by a republican form of government. The Roman Republic lasted for nearly 500 years before it, too, fell by the wayside, superseded by one-man rule, the Roman Empire. The empire sur- vived for another 500 years before finally falling in 476 CE.
In those 1,200 years of Roman history, one of the most serious external threats they faced was posed by the Carthaginian general Hannibal (ca. 247-183 BCE). Rome had had a long and confrontational history with the Carthaginians, and this ongoing mutual hostility exploded into a major war, the Second Punic War, 218-201. The Romans ultimately emerged victorious, but the devastation from the war (much of which was fought on the Italian peninsula) had a major social and economic impact on subsequent Roman history.
Many of the soldiers who fought for Rome in this war were conscripted farmers, and when they returned to their farms after the war--if they survived--they discovered to their dismay that their lands had been amalgamated into large ranches called latifundia, owned in many cases by absentee land speculators in Rome. With nowhere else to go, many drifted into the cities, where conditions, unfortunately, were no better. The cycle of poverty, unem- ployment, and homelessness continued to worsen for decades after the Second Punic War, until Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus appeared on the scene.
In the campaign season of 134 BCE, Gracchus decided to seek the office of tribune; if elected, he would become a tribune for the year 133. During the campaign, he made speech after speech in which he promised to initiate land reform, a proposition that must have seemed dangerously revolutionary to those who occupied and owned the latifundia. Much to the undoubted frustration of the landowners, Gracchus was indeed elected, and soon after taking office, he made good on his campaign promise. After some initial opposition, he was successful in transforming his land reform bill into law.
Although the wealthy landowners certainly could not have been pleased by this turn of events, they were able to restrain their angry feelings, knowing that within a year, Gracchus would no longer be a problem: political offices in the Roman Republic were for one-year terms only, with no formal provision for reelection. But when Gracchus made the stunning announcement toward the end of 133 that he intended to run once again for the tribunate, it was more than his opponents could bear.
The campaign was a rough one, with violence and threats of violence rampant. Tiberius Gracchus was a superb public speaker, well versed in the ways of inciting a crowd with his emotion-laden oratory. During one of his campaign rallies, a scuffle broke out; it soon esca- lated into a full-fledged riot in which several hundred people were injured or killed. One of the casualties was Gracchus himself. The biographer Plutarch writes that this was the first time in Roman history in which Roman blood was shed in a civil dispute, and most modern historians look back at the year 133 as a turning point in the fortunes of the Roman Republic.
The events of that fateful year foreshadowed similar troubles to come, on a far larger scale, in the next century. Demagogues, rogue generals, revolutionaries--all took center stage at one time or another in the first century BCE. Perhaps the outstanding figure of the time was the great Gaius Julius Caesar, who painstakingly worked his way up the political ladder, finally achieving election to the top spot in the Roman Republic, the office of consul, for 59 BCE.
Browne, editors
Voices of Early Modern Japan: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life during the Age of the Shoguns
Constantine Vaporis, editor
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome
Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life
David Matz
VOICES OF AN ERA
? ? Copyright 2012 by ABC-CLIO, LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome : contemporary accounts of daily life / David Matz, editor. p. cm. -- (Voices of an era)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-313-38738-8 (hardcopy : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-0-313-38739-5 (ebook)
1. Civilization, Classical--Sources. 2. Greece--Civilization--To 146 B. C. --Sources. 3. Rome--Civilization-- Sources. I. Matz, David.
DE59. V64 2012
938--dc23 2011043429
ISBN: 978-0-313-38738-8 EISBN: 978-0-313-38739-5
16 15 14 13 12 1 2 3 4 5
This book is also available on the World Wide Web as an eBook. Visit www. abc-clio. com for details.
Greenwood
An Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC
ABC-CLIO, LLC
130 Cremona Drive, P. O. Box 1911 Santa Barbara, California 93116-1911
This book is printed on acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America
? CONTENTS
Preface vii Chronology xxi
Domestic Life 1
1. Growing Up in Sparta Was No Picnic 3
2. A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family 7
3. Even in Ancient Rome, the Dog Was Man's--and Woman's--Best Friend 13
4. A Prearranged Marriage 17
5. An Extremely Devoted Wife 21
Education 25
6. Plutarch's Prescription for a Child's Education 27
7. Socrates and Protagoras Discuss Issues in Education 31
8. Funding for Roman Schools 37
9. Spare the Rod, and Other Educational Precepts of Quintilian 41
Employment 47
10. Pay It Back! Apollodorus and His Day in Court 49
11. Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon 55
12. Cicero Advises His Son on a Right and Proper Career 61
13. The Sky Is No Longer the Limit: Diocletian's Cap on Wages and Prices 65
Food and Clothing 69
14. Plutarch and Friends Talk Dirty (Laundry) 71
15. After a Long Day of Marching or Fighting, What Did the Homeric Heroes Eat? 75
16. Spinning Thread and Making Clothing 79
17. Controlling Appetite and Curbing Weight Gain 83
Health Care 87
18. Hippocrates and the Ethics of the Medical Profession 89
19. A Medical Miracle Man Who Declined to Give an Encore Performance 93
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20. How to Obtain Good Health, and Keep It 97
21. How the Mind Can Heal the Body 101
Housing 107
22. Vitruvius's Description of an Elegant Home 109
23. A Husband and Wife Discuss Their Domicile: A Place for Everything
and Everything in Its Place 113
24. You Take Your Life in Your Hands if You Live in Rome 117
25. Ah! At Last I Can Live Like a Human Being! 125
Intellectual Life 131
26. An Intellectual on Trial 133
27. An Intellectual Who Invented Many Ingenious Devices 137
28. An Intellectual Defends the Study of Literature 141
29. An Intellectual Pays Tribute to His Uncle's Literary Output 147
Politics 151
30. Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City
of Tiresome Politicians 153
31. Women in Politics? In Ancient Athens? 159
32. Homegrown Terrorism? 165
33. The Women of Rome Refuse to Back Down 173
Religion 179
34. Squabbling among the Gods Was a Major Headache for Zeus 181
35. King Croesus Consults--and Bribes? --the Delphic Oracle 185
36. Julius Caesar Becomes a God 189
37. Job Description for a Vestal Virgin 193
Safety
197
38. A Case of Assault and Battery 199
39. Women? Taking Over the Acropolis? 205
40. A Tribune Speaks, a Riot Ensues 211
41. Everybody Talks about the Weather, but No One Does Anything about It 217
Sports and Games 221
42. The Goddess Was on His Side 223
43. The (Ancient) World's Greatest Athlete 229
44. "Put Me In, Coach": A Famous Athletic Trainer 235
45. The Resume of Ancient Rome's Superstar Charioteer 239
Biographical Sketches of Important Individuals Mentioned in Text 245 Glossary 251 Bibliography 253 Index 257
PREFACE
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life contains 45 original documents dealing with various aspects of day-to-day life in the Greco-Roman world. The starting point for the collection is the Trojan War, ca. 1200 BCE; the time span stretches all the way to the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian, in the early fourth century CE, thus encompassing some 1,500 years of human experience in these two foundational civilizations. This time period continues to attract the interest of modern audiences; witness, for example, the recent box-office success of movies like Troy, Gladiator, and 300. Furthermore, the ancient world lives among us and around us virtually everywhere; it is difficult to walk the streets of any downtown American city without seeing the influence of Greek temple archi- tecture in modern buildings: facades displaying pediments, triglyphs, metopes, with Corinthian, Doric, or Ionic columns holding up the roofs. Even our currency has gotten into the act. The architect who designed the famous Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C. , was greatly influenced by his knowledge of ancient Greek architecture, and anyone who wishes to see a rendering of this monument need only fish around in his/her pocket for a penny, or wallet for a five-dollar bill. Much of our American culture--from architecture to legal codes and systems to sports (think Olympic Games) to government to language to mathematics to philosophy--owes its inspiration, even its existence, to a Greek or Roman predecessor.
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
If we wish to truly understand history, it is necessary to delve into the writings of people who "lived it," those who participated in the events of their times, or at least witnessed these events. People like the Greek poet Pindar (518-438 BCE), who could arguably be called the western world's first sportswriter, a man who traveled to the great athletic meetings of his time, including the Olympics, and wrote poetry glorifying the victorious athletes. Or people like the Athenian philosopher Socrates (ca. 469-399 BCE), who eloquently served as his own defense lawyer and argued his own case in one of the most famous trials in the annals of western jurisprudence. Or people like Pliny the Younger (62-114 CE), a sophisticated Roman gentleman, who had seen what the rivers of Italy could do when swollen by flood- waters, and wrote about the ways in which flood victims dealt with the unwelcome devas- tation caused by the onrushing water.
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Preface
These documents take us behind the scenes of the "grandeur that was Greece" and the "glory that was Rome," and illustrate how people not only coped with the frustrations that came with everyday living, but also reaped the rewards and enjoyed the pleasures of being a part of two of the greatest civilizations in history.
ORGANIZATION OF SECTIONS
The 45 documents are divided among 11 chapter headings, which are representative of many of the major aspects of daily life. The chapter headings, which appear in the volume in alphabetical order, are domestic life, education, employment, food and clothing, health care, housing, intellectual life, politics, religion, safety, and sports. The documents are taken from a wide variety of Greek and Roman authors, in a wide variety of literary genres: plays, poems, letters, biographies, histories, and satires. Some of the documents describe everyday events and situations to which many a modern reader will probably relate: a dispute between father and son over the son's spending habits; the characteristics of a beloved family pet; the best way to do the weekly laundry; how to efficiently organize clothing and furniture in one's home; and controlling appetite and avoiding weight gain. Other documents take on weightier topics: conspiratorial threats against the government, construction of public buildings, and the credibility of oracles.
Each document is preceded by an introduction and a section entitled "Keep in Mind As You Read. " As the wording of the rubric suggests, the entries here will offer important back- ground information with which the reader may not be familiar. Then follows the document itself, usually between 350 and 700 words in length, with some words in boldface type. These will be explained in "definition fact boxes" located next to the document. Some (but not all) of the documents will be accompanied by short "sidebars," which contain addi- tional information intended to supplement the content of the document itself. The "Aftermath" section functions as an epilogue to the document: What happened next? What consequences or developments occurred as a result of the events described in the docu- ment? Next come two series of questions: in the "Ask Yourself" category, the reader will be invited to think further about the document and reflect upon questions pertaining to its con- tent. The "Topics to Consider" section often offers suggestions for further research, on topics related to the document. In both of the "questions" sections, the reader will often be asked to think of examples from the modern world that might parallel the events or situations presented in the documents. Finally, suggestions for additional reading, including websites, appear under the "Further Information" rubric.
OTHER FEATURES
The volume contains a brief survey of Greek and Roman civilization, followed by an intro- duction to the nature and use of primary documents, including some information about how to read an ancient text intelligently. The business of putting pen to paper--or fingertips to keyboard--to construct a book, or an essay, or a poem, or a play can often be tricky, and not only in modern times. Ancient authors, too, confronted the challenges of the writing profession, and we will hear from some of them on this matter, including Thucydides, Livy, Plutarch, and others.
Additionally, there is a section featuring brief biographies of the authors of the original documents, as well as a chronological summary.
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INTRODUCTION: GREEK AND ROMAN CIVILIZATION Greeks
The story of ancient Greek civilization probably could be said to have begun with the Minoans and Myceneans, or perhaps even before that, but for our purposes, the Trojan War serves as the starting point. The final days of this terrible conflict (ca. 1200- 1190 BCE) between the Greeks and Trojans is chronicled in one of the most famous works of western literature, Homer's Iliad. (See Document 42: "The Goddess Was on His Side") We owe much of what we know of the earliest times of Greek culture, language, political organization, military matters, and much more to this famous epic poem.
Historians generally believe that Greece gradually declined into a dark age for several centuries after the Trojan War, reemerging again in the eighth century BCE. Many famous polises, or city-states, came to prominence in the years to follow, but none was more impor- tant than Athens. Much of what we associate with the "ancient Greeks," or "ancient Greek civilization," was in actuality happening in Athens. Perhaps the first clearly recognizable individual in the city's glorious history was the lawgiver Solon, whose year in the spotlight was 594 BCE. The city was in crisis, on the brink of anarchy, and it was then that an extraor- dinary decision was made: to concentrate all legislative power in the hands of one person, who would have complete freedom to rewrite, create, or abolish any laws, regulations, or cus- toms that he thought would lead Athens out of its desperate situation. Since Solon had already established a rock-solid reputation for fairness, honesty, and incorruptibility, coupled with a peerless ability as a legislator and a politician, he was the one chosen for the job. After some hesitation, he accepted, and during his one-year term, he single-handedly transformed Athens from a city in chaos to a city on the move. Even today, the word "solon" remains with us, a term applied to a wise and conscientious lawgiver.
Toward the end of Solon's century, another famous, albeit poorly attested, legislator by the name of Cleisthenes took center stage in Athenian politics. Cleisthenes is often credited with originating two of the most noteworthy aspects of the emergent Athenian democracy: isonomia, a word meaning "equal rights" and one of the basic requirements of any democ- racy; and ostracism (see Document 30: "Out with Him! An Athenian Method of Ridding the City of Tiresome Politicians"), a formal procedure whereby an overly ambitious or unscrupulous politician could literally be voted out of Athens, and into a 10-year exile.
The high point of Athenian democracy--and culture, and literature, and art, and drama, and architecture, and philosophy, and economic power, and international leader- ship--found its fullest expression under the leadership of perhaps the greatest statesman/ orator ever to grace its halls of power: Pericles. By virtue of his unprecedented electoral suc- cess (he was voted one of the ten strategoi, or military generals, 15 consecutive times), Pericles dominated the domestic political scene in Athens in the 440s and 430s BCE; during that time, he spearheaded a tremendous surge in the construction of beautiful and expensive buildings. The most famous of these was undoubtedly the magnificent Parthenon, con- structed atop the Acropolis; estimated cost: 5,000 talents, perhaps equivalent to $1. 5 billion, more than even the new Yankee Stadium in the Bronx cost. (See Document 11: "Workers Needed for Building the Parthenon. ")
But it was not only the building program that marked out Pericles's administration for greatness. Many noted philosophers, playwrights, and poets--some of the most gifted and famous ever--flourished in Periclean Athens. Two of these, the comic playwright Aristophanes and the philosopher Socrates (through Plato), contributed documents to this
Preface
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volume. (For Aristophanes, see Document 2: "A Failure to Launch, in an Athenian Family. " For Socrates/Plato, see Document 26: "An Intellectual on Trial")
Unfortunately, this Athenian Golden Age was derailed by the disastrous Peloponnesian War, a terrible conflict between the two superpowers of the time, Athens and its longtime rival polis Sparta. The war began in 431 BCE, and dragged on for 27 long years, finally coming to an end in 404. And while it certainly did not destroy Athenian life or civilization--Athens continued to be a cultural, intellectual, and educational center of the ancient world--the Greeks were never again to reach the heights which they attained under the leadership of Pericles.
Historians refer to the next major period as the Hellenistic Age, spanning from 323 to 30 BCE. Between the Golden Age of Athens and the dawn of the Hellenistic Age lived one of history's most compelling figures, Alexander the Great. He traveled widely with his army, perhaps as far as India and Afghanistan, everywhere conquering the opposition and laying the foundations--whether consciously or not--for the continued spreading of Greek cul- ture, one of the defining characteristics of the Hellenistic period that followed.
But by the end of the second century BCE, the power of Rome, too, was spreading, and beyond the Italian peninsula to which it had been largely confined up to this time. In 146 BCE, the Romans conquered Corinth, the last major Greek city not under their control. As a consequence, they annexed Greece as a province, and although the Hellenistic influence continued, it was now clear that the ancient Mediterranean world had a new superpower.
Romans
Ironically, it might be said that Roman civilization began with the Trojan War. Despite the overwhelming Greek victory in that conflict, a few Trojans managed to escape the carn- age on the night when the Greek army swarmed into Troy and destroyed the city. One of these few Trojan survivors was Aeneas. He, along with a small band of similarly fortunate stragglers, slipped out of the burning city, commandeered ships, and set sail for points unknown. After numerous hardships and disappointments, they made their way to Italy, where they landed and attempted to establish a permanent home. They met with some resis- tance to the plan from the indigenous peoples, but after a series of confrontations and bat- tles, they overcame this opposition and settled in Italy, not too far from the future location of Rome. Aeneas was their leader, and later Romans always regarded him as their progenitor, the founder of the Roman race.
But the actual construction of the city of Rome was to come long after Aeneas, over 400 years later, when a young man named Romulus, with a handful of allies, built the walls and foundations for the city. Romulus became its first king; the date was 753 BCE.
Romulus was followed by six more kings. In 509, the last of these, Tarquinius Superbus, was expelled in a coup, and not only he; the monarchy went out with him, replaced by a republican form of government. The Roman Republic lasted for nearly 500 years before it, too, fell by the wayside, superseded by one-man rule, the Roman Empire. The empire sur- vived for another 500 years before finally falling in 476 CE.
In those 1,200 years of Roman history, one of the most serious external threats they faced was posed by the Carthaginian general Hannibal (ca. 247-183 BCE). Rome had had a long and confrontational history with the Carthaginians, and this ongoing mutual hostility exploded into a major war, the Second Punic War, 218-201. The Romans ultimately emerged victorious, but the devastation from the war (much of which was fought on the Italian peninsula) had a major social and economic impact on subsequent Roman history.
Many of the soldiers who fought for Rome in this war were conscripted farmers, and when they returned to their farms after the war--if they survived--they discovered to their dismay that their lands had been amalgamated into large ranches called latifundia, owned in many cases by absentee land speculators in Rome. With nowhere else to go, many drifted into the cities, where conditions, unfortunately, were no better. The cycle of poverty, unem- ployment, and homelessness continued to worsen for decades after the Second Punic War, until Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus appeared on the scene.
In the campaign season of 134 BCE, Gracchus decided to seek the office of tribune; if elected, he would become a tribune for the year 133. During the campaign, he made speech after speech in which he promised to initiate land reform, a proposition that must have seemed dangerously revolutionary to those who occupied and owned the latifundia. Much to the undoubted frustration of the landowners, Gracchus was indeed elected, and soon after taking office, he made good on his campaign promise. After some initial opposition, he was successful in transforming his land reform bill into law.
Although the wealthy landowners certainly could not have been pleased by this turn of events, they were able to restrain their angry feelings, knowing that within a year, Gracchus would no longer be a problem: political offices in the Roman Republic were for one-year terms only, with no formal provision for reelection. But when Gracchus made the stunning announcement toward the end of 133 that he intended to run once again for the tribunate, it was more than his opponents could bear.
The campaign was a rough one, with violence and threats of violence rampant. Tiberius Gracchus was a superb public speaker, well versed in the ways of inciting a crowd with his emotion-laden oratory. During one of his campaign rallies, a scuffle broke out; it soon esca- lated into a full-fledged riot in which several hundred people were injured or killed. One of the casualties was Gracchus himself. The biographer Plutarch writes that this was the first time in Roman history in which Roman blood was shed in a civil dispute, and most modern historians look back at the year 133 as a turning point in the fortunes of the Roman Republic.
The events of that fateful year foreshadowed similar troubles to come, on a far larger scale, in the next century. Demagogues, rogue generals, revolutionaries--all took center stage at one time or another in the first century BCE. Perhaps the outstanding figure of the time was the great Gaius Julius Caesar, who painstakingly worked his way up the political ladder, finally achieving election to the top spot in the Roman Republic, the office of consul, for 59 BCE. But his true goal seemed to have been the acquisition of a large and prestigious province to govern after his year as the consul. Caesar was a man who usually got what he wanted, and the fulfillment of his postconsular ambitions certainly fit with this pattern. He was granted the governorship of the sprawling province of Gaul, modern France, which he ruled for an unprecedented eight years--most governorships lasted a maximum of three years. In that time, he was bent on conquest and acquisition, in Spain, Germany, and England as well as in Gaul. During that extended stay in the province, he had molded a battle-toughened army, one that was fearless, relentless, and most importantly, utterly loyal to Caesar.
Not surprisingly, Caesar's activities in Gaul occasioned no little uneasiness back in Rome, and there were many who feared that he might use his powerful army to attack the city itself and perhaps install Caesar as a king or a dictator. To prevent such a calamity from happening, in 50 BCE, the politicians in Rome demanded that Caesar return home to give an accounting of his Gallic activities and an explanation of his plans for the future.