Social Sciences En Politieke En Sociale Wetenschappen
History of International Relations
Summary
Summary History of International Relations Chapter 6 (0-250 CE) (Holslag)
13 views 0 purchase
Course
History of International Relations
Institution
Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)
Book
A Political History of the World
Detailed chapter summary: the level of detail expected in the January 2021 session
I received a 17/20 with this
Structure:
- important points in the given period
- specifics information split by regions
- Each chapter summary ends in a (brief) discussion of the relevant points for each ...
Summary A Political History of the World - History of International Relations (000761)
Summary Europe - 3000 years of history
All for this textbook (33)
Written for
Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)
Social Sciences En Politieke En Sociale Wetenschappen
History of International Relations
All documents for this subject (16)
Seller
Follow
emmamarchal
Reviews received
Content preview
1-250 CE
At the beginning of the first millennium CE: China and Rome remained the largest empires
Rome:
- Power was centered on the control of trade and agriculture on the Med.
- Expansion was its defense.
- Pax Romana: a century of stability for the heart of the empire (Italy)
- The two centuries following Augustus’ ascension: barely any major incidents of violence.
- Foreigners from across the empire paid tribute
- Tripartite world: capital city, the empire, barbaricum
- Its success is argued to have caused the empire’s decadence and moral decline.
- End of the peace: By C3, border defence was increasingly outsourced to barbarian foederati, and
unrest internally.
Similar situation in China:
- Han Emperor Guangwu brought a century of peace after a period of civil war - established the Eastern
Han.
- Demilitarised the empire, abolished slavery, popular reforms.
- The nomadic threat weakened.
- The golden age ended when the barbarians regained strength.
- Han emperors chose retrenchment - using proxies to defend the border (similar to the foederati)
- Major rebellions caused by members of court gaining so much in power that they controlled much of
the Chinese farmland.
- By 220: last Han emperor deposed, fracturing the empire.
==> Border defense issues, barbarian threats and internal unrest contributing to both declines.
In their shadow, lesser powers organized themselves in various ways: sometimes collaborated with the
empires, other times defied them.
A contest for control of the Silk Road between the Kushan Empire, Parthian Empire, Xiongnu.
Sometimes called on Rome or China for support.
The (Eastern) Mediterrean
Rome
- Period of prosperity due to military success. - new imperial tradition
- Record number of colonies
- Augustus propagated the idea that the Romans were the chosen people; patriotism.
- Colonies were an opportunity to externalise the problems of overpopulation and poverty.
- Augustus’ strategy was moderation
- Reduced the army, fixed the frontiers behind protective natural features (the Rhine, the
Sahara, etc. )
- His foreign policy: combo of hardness and softness, conciliation and repression
- But at the same time: fierce punitive campaigns against opposers of the establishment of the Pax
Romana.
- Political organisation
- Appointment of senators, consuls, praetors, officials now required Augustus’ permission
- Picked his own governors for ‘imperial’ provinces.
- Only a few client states - A wanted to exert his power as directly as possible.
- Majority of the army was on the periphery
, - Leaders of defeated tribes needed to prostrate themselves; would get mercy in return for
indemnities and regular taxes, accepting Roman law and sending children as hostages.
- Courier system for information
- Took important decisions himself; senate handled the rest.
- Foreign policy: wanted to stabilise relations with foreign powers
- Peace with Parthians
- BUT: Roman peace was shaky
- Never-ending string of resistance leaders - the Roman army was active at all times.
- Augustus’ successor Tiberius faced challenges
- Insurrections along the Rhine
- Power grab by Praetorian Guard
- Tax revolts in Macedonia and Syria
- ==> Stability gave way to violence
- Most emperors abused their power
- Growing numbers of immigrants
- Emperor Galigula was murdered by the Praetorians
- Short reigns of emperors - average of 6y between 68-249
- Trajan overstretched the empire’s resources: campaigns to Dacia, Parthia, Arabia at high costs
- Hadrian withdrew from Mes, lowered taxes, relied more on local soldiers
- Prosperity continued to decline under subsequent emperors:
- Marcus Aurelius tried to manage the overstretch and to quell border unrest.
- Others were more reckless
- Caracalla: sought world domination, spent heavily on the army; had to debase the
currency
- Abuse of power, corruption, endless wars for enrichment (Cassius Dio)
- Severus: realised the never-ending campaigns could make emperors unpopular.
- Disintegration of public order
- BUT: the empire survived this descent into anarchy.
- Partly because externally nobody could challenge its military power.
- Eg. Parthia was comparatively small
- Guerrilla tactics from tribes at the frontier were curbed.
- Romans had an unmatched capacity for long-range power projection due to their roads, navy,
galleys, ports.
- Were adept at playing tribes off against each other: allowing one to trade freely, excluding
another. One proclaimed an enemy, another a friend.
- Huge inequalities ==> imperial Roman society was inequality permanently pushed to the
limits of acceptability.
- Relations with barbarians (frontier)
- Ambivalent attitudes of barbarians towards the Romans: not wanting to be military
dominated, but also wanting economic benefit.
- Dacians (one of laeger societies on the frontier)
- Were bribed not to cross the Danube. But when there was internal turmoil in Rome,
Dacian kings began to raid across the border.
- Ferocious Roman response: Dacians defeated and incorporated.
- But continued resistance; ultimately forced Emperor Commodus to grant the tribes
greater autonomy.
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller emmamarchal. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $5.98. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.