20710435 - ISTITUZIONI GRECHE L.M.

At the end of the course the student will know in depth some important Greek institutions (both public and private, from the archaic to the Roman period), which will have been analyzed through literary, epigraphic, archaeological and iconographic sources.
The student will also learn different skills, useful for verifying the results of another's research and conducting one in first person: he/she will be able to access to the main databases of Greek literary texts and inscriptions and to use some indispensable bibliographic research tools. Both in oral and written communication he/she will have further developed his/her ability to use the specific terminology of the ancient Greek history.
teacher profile | teaching materials

Programme

The course aims to offer: a) a general introduction to the hellenistic world; (b) a presentation of some institutions of the hellenistic poleis; (c) the analysis of some relationships between different political subjects in the hellenistic era; (d) the analysis of some aspects of the social life in the hellenistic times; (e) reading, contextualization and historical-critical analysis of some literary texts and epigraphs; (f) an introduction to the main databases of Greek literary texts and inscriptions and to the most important bibliographic research tools.

Core Documentation

A) M. Mari (a cura di), L’età ellenistica. Società, politica, cultura, Roma, Carocci Editore, 2019 (entire volume).
B) J. Ma, “Peer Polity Interaction in the Hellenistic Age”, P&P, 180, 9-40.
C) Essays by John Ma, Riet van Bremen, Patrice Baker, David Potter, Angelos Chaniotis in A. Erskine (ed.), A Companion to the Hellenistic World, Oxford 2003.
D) L. Moretti, La scuola, il ginnasio, l’efebia, in R. Bianchi Bandinelli (dir.), Storia e civiltà dei Greci, 8. La società ellenistica. Economia, diritto, religione, Milano 1977, 469-490.
E) Chr. Müller, “Oligarchy and the Hellenistic City”, in H. Börm – N. Luraghi (eds.), The Polis in the Hellenistic World, Stuttgart, F. Steiner Verlag, 2018, 27-52.
F) Material provided by the teacher.


Type of delivery of the course

Frontal lessons and practical training.

Attendance

Optative, but highly recommended.

Type of evaluation

Oral. Still during the course, each student will present an oral report on an argument related to the topics covered by the lessons, and selected by the teacher. On the same argument, each student will also have to prepare a written paper, which will have to be informative and complete, and written according to the rules for scientific texts (the teacher will provide guidance); the student will find independently reference bibliography. The paper must be delivered at least ten days before the examination. The exam will consist of a discussion about the paper delivered by the student and will test the knowledge of the course contents (i.e. knowledge of the handbook and of the other recommended essays, in-depth and punctual knowledge of the texts, inscriptions and images discussed during the course). The student will have to be able to proceed to historical commentary, correct reading, translation, grammatical and syntactic analysis of the literary and epigraphic texts in Greek language discussed during the course.