1 / 74

OBJECTIVES

OBJECTIVES. Learn how people lived in Ancient Sparta Discover some results of the Persian invasion of Greece Understand the conflicts that the Athenian empire faced. KEY TERMS. Sparta – a city state in ancient Greece

cady
Download Presentation

OBJECTIVES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OBJECTIVES • Learn how people lived in Ancient Sparta • Discover some results of the Persian invasion of Greece • Understand the conflicts that the Athenian empire faced

  2. KEY TERMS • Sparta – a city state in ancient Greece • Helots – in ancient Sparta, the term for slaves who were owned by the state • Peloponnesian War – war fought between Athens and Sparta in ancient Greece; almost every other Greek city-state was involved in the war • Plague – a wide-spread disease • Blockage – an action take to isolate the enemy and cut off its supplies

  3. EARLY SPARTA • In early days, Sparta similar to other Greek cities • In 600 B.C. wars inside/outside of the city led to changes in government and life • Changed Sparta into powerful war machine • Established one rule – Always put city’s needs above your own

  4. LIVING IN SPARTA • Life in Athens free and open • Life for citizens of Sparta the opposite - harsh, cruel • Spartans tough, silent, grim • Only area in which Sparta matched Athens was in army, military realms

  5. EARLY SPARTA • Early in history, Spartans conquered land around their city • Turned the conquered people into helots – slaves owned by the city-states • Helots farmed all Spartan land • Spartans free to wage war • However, helots far outnumbered Spartans

  6. EARLY SPARTA • However, helots far outnumbered Spartans • In fear of revolt, Spartans turned city into armed camp and treated helots harshly

  7. GROWING UP IN SPARTA • Life at the hands of the government • Only healthy children raised • Wanted only healthy adults in society

  8. The Glory of Ancient Greece Athens and Sparta Chapter 7 – Section 2

  9. GROWING UP MALE • At age 7, boys left home to live in barracks with other boys and begin military training • Training continued for next 13 years • By age 12, boys had spent long hours practicing with swords/spears • Owned one cloak and slept on thin mat

  10. GROWING UP MALE • Through rigid discipline, boys became superior soldiers • When 20 years old, young men officially became soldiers and remained soldiers until 60 years old

  11. GROWING UP MALE • At age 30, men took place in assembly – council consisting of all male citizens born in Sparta • Council approved decisions made by the council of elders, who, in turn, acted as advisors to the king

  12. GROWING UP FEMALE • Girls also trained and competed in wrestling/spear throwing • Girls not expected to become soldiers • However, Spartans believed that strong/healthy girls would grow into strong/healthy women who would bore strong/healthy children • So, unlike other Greek women, Spartan women trained to exercise and build up strength

  13. GROWING UP FEMALE • Spartan women had somewhat better life than other Greek city-state women • Allowed to own land, take part in business • However, like Athenian women, had to obey males (fathers, husbands, brothers) • Because men busy at war, women took on running farms & estates

  14. SPARTAN ATTITUDES • Spartans did not mingle with other Greeks • Not permitted to travel • Looked down upon those desiring wealth/engaged in trade • Lacked interest in arts • However, Spartan warriors known for skill & bravery

  15. SPARTAN ATTITUDES • However, Spartan warriors known for skill & bravery • Spartan fighting force played key role in Greek wars against Persians who lived across Aegean Sea, east of Greece

  16. SPARTAN WARRIORS

  17. THE PERSIANS INVADE • Most Greek history tell of wars Greeks fought amongst themselves • However in 400 B.C., Greeks put aside their differences, joined forces to defend their peninsula against Persia.

  18. EXPANDING PERSIAN EMPIRE • Cyrus the Great had founded the Persian Empire in the mid-500s B.C. • Cyrus and the rulers who followed him extended the original empire • By 520 B.C., Persians had gained control of Greeks colonies on the west coast of Asia Minor

  19. BATTLE AT MARATHON • In 490 B.C, force including thousands of Persians landed in Greece • Persian soldiers gathered at Marathon about 25 miles north of Athens • The Athenians hastily put together small army but Persians outnumbered them 2:1 • For several days, armies stared tensely at each across the plain of Marathon

  20. BATTLE AT MARATHON • Without warning, Athenians rushed Persian who were overwhelmed at furious unexpected attack • By one (probably exaggerated) account, 6,400 Persians and 192 Athenians were killed • However, true that in short time, this time this tiny state had defeated the giant that had come to destroy it

  21. LEGEND OF MARATHON • Stories say that after battle at marathon, Athenians sent fastest runner to tell people of Athenian’s victory. • With chest heaving runner covered the distance to the city and shouted to the people “Rejoice! We have won.” • Then, he dropped dead • Actual distance from marathon to Athens 25 miles; today’s marathons 26 miles in honor of legend

  22. CONFLICT & ATHENIAN EMPIRE • More battles with Persian followed • As common enemy, Persia distracted Greek city-states from fighting one another • Briefly united, Greece drove away Persians

  23. CONFLICT & ATHENIAN EMPIRE • Victory over Persians increased Greeks’ sense of own importance • Thought gods favored them • Athens emerged from war as move powerful city-state • Influence spread over eastern Greece.

  24. CONFLICT & ATHENIAN EMPIRE • Athens joined other city-states in Delian League (name after island of Delos, where leagues treasury kept) • In time, these cities treated more as subordinates to Athens and not like allies • Athens came to dominate league and used it to create its own empire

  25. CONFLICT & ATHENIAN EMPIRE • Ironically, while Athens expanding empire and forcing other city-states to bow to its will, Athens came to champion political freedom at home • Athens did support democratic groups within other city-states, but focus on freedom for its people • Years following Perisan Wars were Golden Age of Athens - Chapter 6

  26. SPARTA AND ATHENS AT WAR • Athens may have been democracy at home but it began to act unfairly toward other city-states. • Early on allies paid tribute to Athens to protect them if Persia caused more trouble • Later, Athens moved treasure from Delos to Athens and used money intended to defend allies, to build Parthenon and finance other projects.

  27. PELOPONNESIAN WAR • People began to fear & resent Athen’s power • Looked to Sparta, who had not joined alliance for protection • To counter Delian League, Sparta formed Peloponnesian League, named after Peloponnesus, the southern Greek peninsula where Sparta located • Sparta and allies fought Athens and allies

  28. Thus began the Peloponnesian War which lasted for 27 years

  29. PELOPONNESIAN WAR • Athens at great disadvantage in war • Sparta, located inland, could not be attacked from the sea • Spartans had to march north to attack Athens by land

  30. PELOPONNESIAN WAR • When Sparta invaded Athens, Pericles let people from surrounding countryside move inside city walls • Overcrowded conditions led to plague • Plague lasted 5 years and killed 1/3 of the people, including Pericles • Power struggle of those who sought to take Pericles’ place resulted in further destabilization of the government.

  31. THE FALL OF ATHENS • Athens never recovered from its loses during the plague • Worse yet, Sparta allied with Persia • In 405 B.C, Spartans and Persians staged blockade to cut off Athens's supplies • Spartans but off harbor for food shipments • Athenians, starved and decimated, surrendered in 404 B.C.

  32. THE FALL OF ATHENS • Athenians, starved and decimated, surrendered in 404 B.C. • Victorious Spartans knocked down wall of Athens • Destroyed navy and empire • Athens never dominated Greek world again

  33. THE SPREAD OF GREEK CULTURE Chapter 7 Section 3

  34. OBJECTIVES • Learn how King Philip of Macedonia came to power and how Alexander the Great built his empire • Understand what role the conquests of Alexander the Great played in spreading Greek culture

  35. Key Terms • Barbarian – person who belongs to a group that others consider wild • Assassinate – to murder for political reasons • Alexander the Great – king of Macedonia; conquered Persia and Egypt and invaded India • Hellenistic – describing Greek history or culture after the death of Alexander the Great, including the three main kingdoms formed by the breakup of Alexander’s empire

More Related