Degree | Type | Year | Semester |
---|---|---|---|
2500241 Archaeology | FB | 1 | 1 |
Any Ancient History textbook published in the last 10 years can be a good starting point for the subject.
This course will analyze the main political and social processes of ancient civilizations. It will explain how the main political and social models that emerged throughout Antiquity were generated and developed. To achieve our goal we will study the political and social models of the Near Eastern and Greco-Roman worlds.
1.- The Ancient History. Discipline and chronological limits.
2.- The origins of the ancient states: Mesopotamia and Egypt in the third and second millennium.
3.- Geopolitical changes in the Ancient Near East in the first millennium.
4.- The birth of the Greek world. The pólis. Sparta and Athens.
5.- From the Medical Wars to the Peloponnesian War.
6.- The Hellenism: Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic kingdoms.
7.- The origins of Rome. The monarchy.
8.- The Roman Republic and the conquest of the Mediterranean.
9.- The crisis of the Roman Republic.
10.- The High Empire. From Augustus to the Severan dynasty.
11.- The Low Empire. From the crisis of the third century AD at the fall of the Western Roman Empire.
- Attendance to the lectures led by the teacher.
- Attendance to classroom practice sessions led by the teacher.
- Visits to museums/sites.
- Comprehensive reading of texts and interpretation of cartographies, graphics, tables, and archaeological documents.
- Carrying out reviews, works, and analytical comments.
- Personal study.
The teaching methodology and the evaluation proposed in the guide may undergo some modification subject to the onsite teaching restrictions imposed by health authorities.
Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.
Title | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
Type: Directed | |||
Lectures | 41 | 1.64 | 6, 4, 5 |
Type: Supervised | |||
Classroom practices | 13 | 0.52 | 1, 2 |
Type: Autonomous | |||
Study of the course documents, and commentary of sources and maps | 79 | 3.16 | 1, 6, 4, 2, 3, 7 |
The evaluation of the subject will be based on the following specific exercises:
1.- Continuous Evaluation (50%): critique and commentary of texts. It is expected to commission two continuous assessment practices to be delivered throughout the course, which will consist of critical commentary of texts (and other documents).
2.- Exam (50%): exam-test (20%) + final exam (questions to be developed) (30%).
On carrying out each evaluation activity, lecturers will inform students (on Moodle) of the procedures to be followed for reviewing all grades awarded, and the date on which such a review will take place.
Students will obtain a “Not assessed/Not submitted” course grade unless they have submitted more than 40% of the assessment items.
In the event of a student committing any irregularity that may lead to a significant variation in the grade awarded to an assessment activity, the student will be given a zero for this activity, regardless of any disciplinary process that may take place. In the event of several irregularities in assessment activities of the same subject, the student will be given a zero as the final grade for this subject.
The teaching methodology and the evaluation proposed in the guide may undergo some modification subject to the onsite teaching restrictions imposed by health authorities.
In the event that tests or exams cannot be taken onsite, they will be adapted to an online format made available through the UAB’s virtual tools (original weighting will be maintained). Homework, activities and class participation will be carried out through forums, wikis and/or discussion on Teams, etc. Lecturers will ensure that students are able to access these virtual tools, or will offer them feasible alternatives.
Title | Weighting | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Assesment in process | 50 % | 14 | 0.56 | 1, 2, 3, 7 |
Final assesment | 50 % | 3 | 0.12 | 6, 4, 5 |
ALVAR, J. et alii (1994), Manual de Història Universal. 2 Història Antigua, Historia 16. Madrid.
BRADLEY, K. (1998), Esclavitud y sociedad en Roma, Península, Barcelona.
BRAVO, G. (1994), Història del mundo antiguo. Una introducción crítica, Alianza Editorial, Madrid.
CHRISTOL, M., NONY, D. (1992), De los orígenes de Roma a las invasiones bárbaras, Akal, Madrid.
CORNELL, T.J. (1999), Los orígenes de Roma. C, 1000-264 a.C., Crítica, Barcelona.
CRAWFORD, M., (1981), La República romana, Taurus, Madrid.
DOMINGUEZ MONEDERO, A. et alii (1999), Historia del mundo clásico a través de sus textos. 1- Grecia, Alianza Editorial, Madrid.
FORNIS, C., (2003), Esparta. Historia, sociedad y cultura de un mito historiográfico, Crítica, Barcelona.
GARCIA MORENO, L. et alii (1999), Historia del mundo clásico a través de sus textos. 2- Roma, Alianza Editorial, Madrid.
GARNSEY, P., SALLER, R. (1991), El Imperio romano. Economía, sociedad y cultura, Crítica, Barcelona.
GIARDINA, A. (ed.) (1991), El hombre romano, Alianza Editorial, Madrid.
LIVERANI, Mario, (1995), El Antiguo Oriente: historia, sociedad y economía, Crítica, Barcelona.
LÓPEZ BARJA, P., F.J. LOMAS, (2004), Historia de Roma, Akal, Madrid.
PÉREZ LARGACHA, A. (2006), Historia antigua de Egipto y del Próximo Oriente, Akal, Madrid.
ROUZÉ, F., AMOURETTI, M.C. (1987), El mundo griego antiguo, Akal, Madrid.
SANMARTÍN, J., SERRANO, J.M. (1998), Historia antigua del Próximo Oriente: Mesopotamia y Egipto, Akal, Madrid.
None.