shelley
trouble maker
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2003
- Messages
- 618
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2003
hey, is anyone else doing augustus and te julio-claudians? or Rome from Augustua to Titus or Agrippina? I'm being to feel really alone out here!!!
Its an easy topic, thats why.Originally posted by tash
yeah we're doing augustus to titus and augustus and the julio claudians. i think there are quite a lot of people doing either of them
Just reading the different books by the authors are all that is really needed to get into band 6 though.Originally posted by Wiggum
It's hard to be the top though, you need to know so much more than what the course requires you to.
But you get that extensive by reading the different authors. Say Wiggum, do you go to Sydney Boys?Originally posted by Wiggum
True, but i still think that it requires you to have a vastly extensive knowledge about your personality/society/historical period not just by reading different authors.
Who are the best authors to read? I read 'Oxford History Of The Roman World', but not much of it was relevant.. Possibly that Tacitus character? (I was going to borrow The Annals next time I go to the library..)Originally posted by Wiggum
True, but i still think that it requires you to have a vastly extensive knowledge about your personality/society/historical period not just by reading different authors.
Don't worry, I don't feel insulted. I plan to borrow 'The Annals' from the library later today anyways.. The most annoying thing of all was that my Ancient teacher tried discouraging me from reading it..Grr.. But nevertheless, better to read it late than never right? (I'm worried about my classmates then, who don't even know who Tacitus is. Ooops.)Originally posted by Andronicus
"Possibly that Tacitus character"?
Not to insult you Gregor Samsa, but if you haven't read Tacitus, then you really don't have the info you need for the Imperial Rome topic. Look, I do Extension 1 History aswell as Ancient (and Modern) and we did Augustus & the Julio-Claudians, Imperial Rome and in Extension we did Tacitus the historian.
These 3 topics overlap perfectly, so it's like doing the same topic 3 times over from different perspectives - which is why they are so easy (plus Imperial Rome isn't even a bloody proper topic - it's so easy and basic, and not even an essay question in the HSC - it's short answer...)
My point: READ TACITUS, because if you haven't, then you are really disadvantaging yourself - he is the best ancient historian on the topic (better than Seutonius) - although, his chapter on Gaius is missing, as his writings on the execution of Sejanus by Tiberius... anyway...
The Michael Grant translation is good...