Middlebury

HIST 0337

From Alexander to Rome

From Alexander to Rome
At the age of 19, Alexander the Great set out to conquer the world. His successful domination of the eastern Mediterranean led to a new world order known as the Hellenistic Age. Under Alexander's successors, literature, art, and philosophy flourished, but a little more than a century later the Hellenistic Greeks found themselves on a collision course with Rome's expanding republic. This course will investigate the political and cultural history of the Greeks and Romans in this period and consider the forces that created the Graeco-Roman world. Readings include Arrian, the Alexandrian poets, Polybius, Livy, and Plutarch. (This course replaces CLAS/HIST 0338: The Hellenistic World and the Foundations of Graeco-Roman Culture.)
Subject:
History
Department:
History
Division:
Humanities
Requirements Fulfilled:
EUR HIS LIT
Equivalent Courses:
CLAS 0420 *
CLAS 0337

Sections in Spring 2006, School Abroad France (Paris)

Spring 2006

HIST0337A-S06 Lecture (Chaplin)
HIST0337Y-S06 Discussion (Chaplin)
HIST0337Z-S06 Discussion (Chaplin)