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History
Test #1
53
History
Undergraduate 1
10/17/2011

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Cards

Term
Code of Hammurabi
Definition
A collection of 282 laws. Written by Hammurabi for the lands of Mesopotamia. Penalties for criminal offenses were severe and varied according to the social class of the victim.
Term
Amenhotep IV (Akhenaten)
Definition
Amenhotep Iv changed his name to Akhenaten which means Servant of Aten (Egymptain god of the sun disk). He closed the temples of other gods and lessened the power of the priests. His steps within the Egyptain religion were soon undone by his successor the boy-pharoh Tutankhamen. Who put things back to the way they were by restoring the old gods and returning the government to Thebes.
Term
Cyrus the Great
Definition
Became leader of the Persians,united them and went on the offensive against Medes in 550 B.C. A ruler who was rare for his day, He was compassionate and wise. He died in 530 B.C.
Term
Xerxes
Definition
Persian king who massed a gigantic army of 150,000 troops and seven hundred naval ships against the greeks. He was defeated by the Greeks in 490 B.C. and again in 480 B.C.
Term
Delian League
Definition
Dominated by the Athenians from the beginning. It's main headquarters was on the island of Delos, sacred to the Ionian Greeks. This group was a collection of all the Greek states that combined to destroy the persians in a war which the greeks won in 469 B.C.
Term
Age of Pericles
Definition
Athenians favored new imperial policy when an aristocrat named Pericles began to play an important role in politics. He tried to expand democracy at home while severing it's ties with Sparta and expanding it's new empire abroad. The height of Athenian power and the culmination of it's brilliance as a civilization.
Term
Thucydides
Definition
A greek historian, which modern historians consider the greatest of the ancient world. Was an Athenian who participated in the Peloponnesian war. Had been elected a general but a defeat in battle sent him into exile.
Term
Aeschylus
Definition
The first tragedian whose plays are known to us. He wrote ninety tragedies, only seven have survived.
Term
Sophocles
Definition
Great Athenian playwright whose most famous play is "Oepidus the King". His plays were also tragedies.
Term
Euripides
Definition
Outstanding Athenian Playwright. His plots were more complexed than others. His most famous one is Bacchae.
Term
Sophists
Definition
A group of philosophical teachers in the fifth century who argued that understanding the universe was beyond the human mind. Their thing they stressed to learn the most was rhetoric (the art of persuasive speaking)
Term
Socrates
Definition
Was a stoneman-son but his true love was philosophy. He taught a number of pupils but his most famous was Plato. He developed the Socratic method of teaching which employs a question-answer technique to lead pupils to see things for themselves using their own reason.
Term
Plato
Definition
Socrate's most famous pupil. Considered by many to be the greatest philosopher of Western Civilization. He wrote many things unlike his teacher which modern day historians use to tell who he was. Opened a school in Athens known as the Academy.
Term
Aristotle
Definition
One of Plato's pupils who studied at the academy for 20 years. He later became the tutor for Alexander the Great.
Term
Alexander the Great
Definition
Was only twenty when he became king of Macedonia. In the next twelve years, he achieved so much that he has ever since been called Alexander the great. He went on many campaigns to expand the Macedonian empire. He died at the age of thirty two. He achieved his father's dream of taking over the persian empire. He claimed to be a descendant of Heracles, the greek hero who came to be worshiped as a god.
Term
Archimedes
Definition
One of the most famous scientists of the Hellenistic period.
Term
Epicurus
Definition
The founder of Epicureanism. He established a school in Athens near the end of the fourth century B.C. He did not deny that there were gods but he did not believe that they played any active role in the world. His idea was happiness was the goal of life.
Term
Epicureanism
Definition
A belief in a doctrine of "pleasure" and the pursuit of a life filled with happiness. Gods: The gods created the world and they now have no affect on the world. We control our own destiny/fate. Death: Don't worry with death because you are living and once your dead it is no longer a worry because your dead...
Term
Stoicism
Definition
Stoicism eventually overshadowed Epicureanism. It became the most popular philosophy of the Hellenistic world and continued in the Roman empire as well. It was also the belief of lifelong happiness but thought it should be achieved through the supreme good, and through virtue, which meant living in harmony with divine will.
Term
Zeno
Definition
A teacher who came to Athens and began to teach in a public colonade know as the Painted Portico(the Stoa Poikile-hence the name Stoicism)
Term
Rome
Definition
A great city of the early world. According to Roman legend, was founded by the twin brothers Romulus and Remus in 753 B.C. Of course, the Romans invented this story to provide a noble ancestry for their city.
Term
Hannibal
Definition
Term
Plautus
Definition
Roman playwright who used plots from Greek New Comedy for his own plays.
Term
Terence
Definition
A Roman Playwright who was born in Carthage and brought to Rome as a slave by a Roman Senator who freed him.
Term
Cato
Definition
A Roman praetor(the commander of an army, usually in the field, or the named commander before mustering the army), who hated the thought of greek society intervening with Roman society. Although he hated this he sent his son to learn Greek because it was becoming a necessity in Roman upper class society.
Term
Julius Caesar
Definition
A Roman Emperor who's victories in the civil war made him dictator for life after already being declared dictator in 47 B.C.
Term
Second triumvirate
Definition
Octavian(Julius Caesar's grandnephew)--Mark Antony( Caesar's ally and assistant)--Marcus Lepidus(Commander of Caesar's calvary
Term
Catullus
Definition
A great Roman writer who was not originally from Rome.
Term
Lucretius
Definition
Important poet of the late Roman Republic who followed an old Greek tradition of expounding philosophy in the form of poetry.
Term
Cicero
Definition
Roman writer who brought Oratory(the ability to persuade people in public debate) to perfection. Possibly the greatest prose writer of his time.
Term
The Praetorian Guard
Definition
Roman guard of roughly 9,000 men, had the important task of guarding the person of the princeps. The princeps were the Roman emperors.
Term
Octavian (Augustus)
Definition
In 27 B.C. the senate awarded him the title of Augustus "the Revered one". He established what is sometimes called the principate, which means conveying the idea of a constitutional monarch as coruler with the senate. His time as emperor became known as the age of Augustus. Dominated the Roman empire for 45 years and died in 14 A.D.
Term
Virgil
Definition
The most distinguished poet of the Augustan age. Wrote during the time of the Golden age.
Term
Horace
Definition
A good Augustan poet. Wrote during the golden age.
Term
Ovid
Definition
The last of the great poets of the golden age.
Term
Livy
Definition
The most famous latin prose work was written by the historian her.
Term
Tiberius
Definition
The emperor that took the place of Augustus. Also was his stepson. He was a competent general and an able administrator. served (14-37). Julio-Claudians Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero
Term
Caligula
Definition
The grandnephew of Tiberius. Served as emperor from 37-41. He showed tyrannical behavior. Julio-Claudians Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero
Term
Claudius
Definition
Roman emperor (41-54) A.D. Julio-Claudians Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero
Term
Nero
Definition
Roman emperor (54-68) The end of the Julio-Claudian reign. Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero
Term
Pax Romana
Definition
The Roman peace that lasted about 200 years.
Term
5 good emperors
Definition
  • Nerva (96-98) AD
  • Trajan (98-117) AD
  • Hadrian (117-138) AD
  • Antonius Pius (138-161) AD
  • Marcus Aurelius (161-180) AD
Term
Silver age
Definition
The century and a half after Augustus is often labeled the "silver age". The literary standards of this age were good but just not as good as the golden age ( the age of Augustus).
Term
Seneca
Definition
Tutored Nero and began to run the government during the first five years of Nero's reign. In 65 He was charged with involvement in a conspiracy against Nero and committed suicide at Nero's command.
Term
Tacitus
Definition
The greatest historian of the silver age. His main works consisted of the "Annals and the Histories". Also, he wrote the Germania and the Agricola. He criticized Roman politics and society in his works very subtly to make sure not to get in trouble.
Term
Diocletian
Definition
Was a Roman military leader who rose through the ranks and after someone murdered the previous emperor his men hailed him as ruler of the Roman Empire.
Term
Constantine
Definition
After Diocletian's retirement in 305. Constantine took control of the entire west. 12 years later constantine established himself as sole ruler.
Term
Mesopotoamia
Definition
Home of the sumerian city states (4000 B.C.) Land between the rivers (tigris and Euphrates)
Term
Hammurabi
Definition
King of Babylon (1792-1750 B.C.) He came up with the code of Hammurabi which was a set of 282 laws.
Term
Egypt
Definition
A civilization that thrived off of the river of the Nile. Their empire had natural barriers such as the red sea, the medeteranian sea, the saharah desert, the rapids and waterfalls in the southern nile. They had a pharoh instead of an emperor
Term
Sparta
Definition
An oligarchy and a military state in the greek empire.
Term
Persian war
Definition
The war between Persia and the king Xerxes and Athens and Sparta. The battle of Thermopylea the spartan king and 300 troops fought the persian "immortals".
Term
Hippocrates
Definition
one of the first of his time to relate diseases to something natural in the body rather than blaming it on the gods. Of this time they believed that if there was no medicine or cure for the disease then it was sacred or divine.
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