in History, Literature

Reading Rome (Mommsen, 1.1-2)

This all started, as most resolutions do, as a ridiculously ambitious plan that got far out of hand. I was going to read Grote (I have the first 11 of the 12 volume Everyman’s edition), Mommsen, and Gibbon, as well as several major and important works on specialized and lesser known topics (e.g., Gruen on Rome and the Hellenistic world, Bury’s History of the Later Roman Empire, and Vasiliev’s History of the Byzantine Empire).

At some point as I worked toward mapping this all out (all while ignoring real, pressing work) I realized that I would be better served by focusing on a few classics in a more or less connected narrative, and this project was born. It’s less ambitious, but ambitious enough. Laura Gibbs came along and made sure that my resolution would have to stick by putting in a lot of work, collecting the necessary volumes from Google Books, creating a calendar of readings, and making her own blog on the subject. I’ll be using print editions most of the way, but can read any of the books on my computer (and even my phone–if I want to squint), thanks to Laura.

I’d love to see some more commitment, and more blogs in response to what everyone is reading. We already have a few commitments in the comments to the original post. Any more takers?

Roman History Notes: Mommsen 1.1

Mommsen rightly notes the importance of the Mediterranean sea, which both separates and connects a continuum of successive, dominant cultures which he sets as landmarks of Mediterranean antiquity by the token of their chief cities:

  1. Thebes (Egyptian)
  2. Carthage (Phoenician, which he calls Syrian)
  3. Athens (Greek, which he calls Hellene, a term I wish we would adopt)
  4. Rome (Italiian)


View Ancient Mediterranean Cultures in a larger map

These people were distinct and each had an enormous impact in one phase of history, but Mommsen wants us to know that we are in a different phase of culture, and the implication is that ours will end as these did.

Some time is spent defining Italy, which is what Mommsen really has in mind when he says Rome, and he always thinks of it as a kind of mirror of Greece. Sicily is its Peloponnesus. While Greece looks east, Italy looks west: Epirus and Acarnania, on Greece’s west coast, were as significant as Apulia and Messapia on Italy’s east coast, just as Attica and Macedonia in the Greek east were as important and Etruria, Latium, and Apulia in the Italian west. He notes that the two nations were so close, yet so far, and while this is true geographically, he will show how true it was culturally as well.

Roman History Notes: Mommsen 1.2

I’m struck here by Mommsen’s pretense to scientific scholarly rigor–e.g., his protests against making judgments on racial origins but rather sticking to the historian’s task–while retaining some hints, if not overt references, to archaic notions of racial difference. He talks of savages, and cultures less capable of culture. His examples are entirely non-Indo-European (and almost entirely non-white). One may say that in this regard Mommsen was a product of his time, but protest as he might, the undercurrent is there and should be kept in mind.

Much of the material here is focused on Indo-European (which he calls in the language of his time Indo-Germanic) language and culture, and what he calls Graeco-Italian culture. I can’t imagine this being comprehensible to most readers, but with a background in classical languages and in linguistics I found the reading mostly interesting, but perhaps better treated briefly with the bulk of the discussion relegated to an appendix. Don’t be put off by this lengthy discussion (which will be especially difficult if you can’t read Greek characters). While one may quibble with the details, and may disagree with how closely he aligns the languages, the basic point is a compelling one that survives scrutiny.

(I should note that his antique terminology for language groups, etc., can be jarring for anyone acquainted with the subject and misleading for others. It may be best to read through this section lightly, to get the general impression.)

He uses countless examples of linguistic connections between (and disconnects from) the various languages and their common parents to establish both the affinities and differences between the Greeks and Italians. In cultural development, derived from linguistic analysis, the two branches seem to descend from a common parent: they share terms used in agriculture, religion, and war to such a degree that they markedly differ from other cultures which branched off earlier.

They developed their common religion differently, as they did their common patriarchal culture, and one of the primary differences which Mommsen notes is the shift each shows regarding the individual and society. Greek culture, he says, emphasizes the individual and personal liberty (consider the gods, and even personal names), while Roman culture emphasizes the collective and one’s obligation to it (consider the same).

  1. Dennis, this is super – I am really grateful to you for getting this started. History is not exactly my thing, but over the past 10 years or so I have accumulated a lot of questions about the history of Rome (esp. the later periods) that I think will be answered by reading these books, and I am going to benefit so much from doing this together with you and anyone else who joins in. I added a link to your blog posts tagged with Reading Rome to the sidebar of my blog, and hopefully some other people will join in. I think this would definitely be worth an announcement on LatinTeach if you want to do that.

    About books on the phone, I actually managed to read some of Mommsen on my iPhone (well, my Touch – same as iPhone without the phone) – and it was very doable. I’m sure that will vary from book to book, but the narrow column layout of that printed book made it easy to read with GoodReader, annotatable, etc. Quite amazing!

    Thanks for the great GoogleMap here! Being able to include images in these posts makes it a lot of fun – I added some pictures of the Alban Hills in my posts, since that area is still not hyperurbanized the way modern Rome is. All the map and image resources available online would have pleased Mommsen so much, I imagine.

    I appreciated your comments about Mommsen being the product of his times – that is something I am still trying to gauge, although every once in a while, it sure can be jarring. Take for example, his comments about the Dravidian cultures of south India: “In India, in like manner, the Indo-Germanic settlers were preceded by a dark-colored population less suspecptible of culture” (p. 8). Ouch. He also has a triumphalist nation-based idea of history, with every people striving to become a nation, a nation that dominates other nations… and woe betide any peoples that do not become nations (as Americans, who took our national land from other peoples by brute force in recent history, this should cut deep and really give us pause). Even more radically, I wonder what Mommsen would think of the historical researches of someone like Jared Diamond who shows the disastrous and catastrophic consequences of the shift from hunting-gathering to agriculture. Or, even better, what he would think of Robert Sawyer’s “Neanderthal Parallex” science fiction novels (which I highly recommend for any science fiction readers out there!), where Sawyer imagines an alternate earth history where the Neanderthals did not disappear, and did not abandon their lives as hunter-gatherers, but built up a scientific civilization AS hunter-gatherers, without nation states.

    One thing I am really looking forward to in our project is seeing in which ways our three authors are VARIOUSLY the product of their times. I think you were exactly right in your choice of reading these authors who see it as their duty to present an authorial “synthesis” that they are taking individual responsibility for, rather than a more scholarly and analytic style whereby the authors often erase themselves, replacing their individual identity with the collective scholarly identity manifested in heaps of footnotes, citations, etc.

    I am really enjoying this project. Hopefully I’ll be able to keep up; I’m going to try to get a little ahead this week before things get really crazy for me next week. :-)

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