screwyoumarvel: (Steve - laughing)
screwyoumarvel ([personal profile] screwyoumarvel) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2010-01-07 11:59 pm
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Battles That Changed History, Second Period, Friday 1/8

"Good morning," Steve said to his class as soon as the clock struck ten. He began handing around copies of the syllabus as he spoke. "Nuts and bolts first. I'm Steve Rogers, and this is Battles that Changed History. If you're in the wrong class, you can leave now. This class will be focusing on Earth's Western civilizations; if that does not cover you, we won't be touching on your history, so I don't want to hear anything about my leaving some major battle that happened in another galaxy out. We're going to be trying to get through enough this semester without broadening our scope. Now, as you can see, the front part of the class is going to be a little heavy, but once we get out of the classical period, it'll lighten up a little. And last, but certainly not least, if you'd like to be a TA, please see me after class.

"So, first things first, I'm going to make you do what everyone's made you do this week and introduce yourselves. Name, grade, why you're in this class. We'll start with you," he said, picking a student at random.

Once everyone had introduced themselves, Steve clapped his hands to get their attention, then turned to the board and rolled up the projector screen covering it to reveal a meticulously drawn diagram of the Battle of Marathon before passing out a fairly comprehensive handout. "490 BC. Twenty-five hundred years ago. Marathon, Greece. Persia had pretty much taken over whatever it wanted to up until that point, and now it wanted Greece. Marathon was a good place for a battle; flat, plus you could land ships. The combatants, according to Herodotus: nine or ten thousand Athenians, with a thousand Plataeans, against the Persian invasion force, anywhere between twenty thousand to one hundred thousand infantry, because good luck getting an accurate count of those kind of numbers when they're not standing still, plus a thousand cavalry, plus six hundred ships. The Greeks won, via the use of phalanx-style fighting--" Steve paused to write 'phalanx' on the board. "The phalanx was one of the most important innovations of ancient warfare, by the way, but more on it later--and a double envelopment strategy, as shown here." He pointed to the diagram. "They routed the flanks, then swept into the center. Final casualties were given as one hundred ninety-two Athenians and eleven Plataeans, and sixty-four hundred Persians. Plus seven Persian ships were captured.

"Legend has it that immediately following the battle, an Athenian messenger headed back to Athens, twenty-six miles away, to let them know of the victory. It was the first time the Persian army had ever been defeated, after all. It was important. This man had just fought a battle, and he ran full-out all the way. He reached the agora, the central marketplace of the city, said one word, 'Nike,' or 'victory,' and died of exhaustion. In modern times we commemorate his feat with the race known as the marathon, and Nike is a type of shoe. And now you know.

"So, how did this battle change history? It showed the Greeks that the Persians could be defeated, for one thing, and eventually they did win the First Greco-Persian War and drive the Persians off, gaining time to regroup. It also cemented Athens' status as supreme among the Greek city-states, and strengthened Athens' fledgling democracy, the first in the world. And democracy would, eventually, become very important indeed. What I want to hear from you is how it could have gone differently, and what you think that might have meant in the long run, given what you know thus far."

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] weetinyreese.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:08 am (UTC)(link)
Kyle Reese

Re: Introductions

[identity profile] weetinyreese.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:09 am (UTC)(link)
"Kyle Reese, Junior, to learn more about battles that made a difference."

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] guardianborn.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:25 am (UTC)(link)
Rose Hathaway

Re: OOC

[identity profile] ancientbschamp.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:25 am (UTC)(link)
*GIGGLEFITS*

I apologize in advance for Gabrielle.

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] ancientbschamp.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
Gabrielle

Re: Introductions

[identity profile] guardianborn.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
"I'm Rose Hathaway, Senior," she said. "I want to learn tactics and strategies from history to apply them later if necessary.

Re: Introductions

[identity profile] ancientbschamp.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:31 am (UTC)(link)
"I'm Gabrielle," she began, and you might all want to sit down and relax because this wasn't going to be a terse kind of introduction. "I'm a sophomore. As a bard and as a companion to the Warrior Princess, the former-but-now-reformed Destroyer of Nations, I feel it's in my best interest to take this class, to see how history recorded events, because I've noticed a disturbing trend in the facts getting awfully distorted over time and I'd like to find out why."

Look, if you thought this was going to be a time-causality headache, you clearly hadn't had a brush with Gabrielle's very . . . unique version of the world. It was hard to have a time-causality headache when time made no sense.

Re: During the Lecture

[identity profile] ancientbschamp.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 06:33 am (UTC)(link)
Gabrielle was frowning a lot, and taking very careful notes, because this battle hadn't actually happened yet for her; she was belatedly realizing this might be an issue all semester. Oops.

. . . not that it'd make a bit of difference one way or another how many notes she took. Catch up to her in a year or so and she'd tell you this class and every history textbook she could find in the library had gotten it all backwards. That would, of course, be entirely debatable, but . . .

Re: Sign In

[personal profile] bitchprince 2010-01-08 06:40 am (UTC)(link)
Arthur Pendragon
notmyownage: (*is seriously pissed off*)

Re: Sign In

[personal profile] notmyownage 2010-01-08 08:27 am (UTC)(link)
Claudia Donovan
notmyownage: (*goes "uhhhh"*)

Re: Introductions

[personal profile] notmyownage 2010-01-08 08:29 am (UTC)(link)
"Claudia Donovan, Sophomore, and my case worker signed me up for classes? So you'd really have to ask her."
notmyownage: (*goes "hmph"*)

Re: Discussion

[personal profile] notmyownage 2010-01-08 08:32 am (UTC)(link)
". . . Well, the obvious answer is that Persia coulda won, right? Which could have trounced the Greeks and democracy and altered the whole course of Western civilization." Claudia wasn't going to think to hard about exactly how it would do that.

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] imcalledandros.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 09:47 am (UTC)(link)
Andros

Re: Talk to the Teacher

[personal profile] bitchprince 2010-01-08 09:55 am (UTC)(link)
"Sir? Would you have a moment?"

He could be respectful.

Re: Introductions

[personal profile] bitchprince 2010-01-08 09:56 am (UTC)(link)
"I am Arthur Pendragon," Arthur announced, "Senior, and I enjoy studying historical tactics. They might be of use where I'm from."

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] morpherboy.livejournal.com 2010-01-08 10:33 am (UTC)(link)
Marco

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