Category: Ancient History

  • Appian’s Roman History: Events Between the Year 133 B.C. and 35 B.C.

    Appian’s Roman History is a collection of five books that describe the events between the year 133 B.C. and 35 B.C. The focus is on the events in the Roman Empire and the struggles that the people of the era had experienced. More specifically, book IV is telling the story of the Second Triumvirate and…

  • The Causes of First Civilizations

    Table of Contents Introduction Economic factors Culture factors Religion factors Conclusion Works Cited Introduction In the course of mankind’s development, there was a period marked by a transition of humans to more massive and universal forms of existence which are generally defined as civilizations. The first springs of civilizations had appeared as early as 6000…

  • King Menes Historical Analysis

    Table of Contents Introduction Success and achievements of King Menes Conclusion References Introduction King Menes as a historical figure in western civilization participated immensely in Egyptian civilization. Egypt consisted of two kingdoms, which were the Upper Egypt, in addition to Lower Egypt. Lower Egypt was symbolized by a cobra, while a lotus signified Upper Egypt.…

  • The Character of Philoctetes

    Table of Contents Exordium Narratio Divisio Confirmatio Confutatio Peroratio Works Cited Exordium Oh, how he rages locked on his island. “I’ll be my own Troy” (Heaney 63) he cries in arrogance, not knowing that he, like the city, is destined to fall. Philoctetes has lost everything, and now only blind hatred guides him, the ghosts…

  • The Life and Influence of Julius Caesar

    Table of Contents Introduction The Way to Power Achievements The Influence of Julius Caesar Works Cited Introduction Gaius Julius Caesar, one of Rome’s iconic leaders, was born in 100 B.C. in Rome, Italy. He was an army general, a politician, a governor, and an administrator. Unlike other influential and wealthy Roman politicians, Caesar was raised…

  • Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

    Table of Contents Introduction The Appeals Conclusion Bibliography Footnotes Introduction Thucydides tells a detailed account of the Peloponnesian War, a major military conflict between Greek Powers. At the source of this war lies the conflict around Corcyra, an emerging naval power. After defeating Corinth’s fleet in a dispute over their shared colony of Epidamnus, it…

  • The Factors Complexity in The Fall of the Roman Empire – Was It Inevitable?

    Table of Contents Introduction Reasons Conclusion Work Cited Introduction The Roman Empire is a post-republican phase in the development of the ancient Roman statehood, a characteristic feature of an autocratic form of government and large territorial possessions in Europe and the Mediterranean. The chronological framework of the existence of the Roman Empire covers the period…

  • Causes and Course of the Peloponnesian War

    The Peloponnesian war took place in the years 431-404 BC, and this was a military conflict in ancient Greece. The two opposing sides were Delian League led by Athens and the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta. It is important to note that contradictions had existed between Athens and Sparta for a long time. To a…

  • Christianity in the Roman Empire

    Christianity began its existence as a small sect and ended up being a major worldwide religion. Its history starts in the Roman Empire, where it managed to survive the cruel persecutions and was legalised by Emperor Constantine I, who has become a Christian himself. The reason for the triumph of Christianity in the Roman Empire…

  • Greek Polis: Researching of Advantages

    At around 1,000 B.C., Greece accumulated significant knowledge from nearby empires and invented a new type of settlement. Polis referred to an independent city-state governed by a set of laws instead of the king’s decisions (Hunt et al. 42). In my opinion, compared to the previous forms of reign, a polis was a more effective…