1 / 18

Reporting Category 2

CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS. Reporting Category 2. Greek Mythology & Religion. Based on POLYTHEISTIC religion Offered explanations of NATURAL phenomenon, HUMAN qualities, and life events Symbols and Images used in Western Literature, Art, and Architecture. Importance of the Persian Wars.

neviah
Download Presentation

Reporting Category 2

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. CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS Reporting Category 2

  2. Greek Mythology & Religion • Based on POLYTHEISTIC religion • Offered explanations of NATURAL phenomenon, HUMAN qualities, and life events • Symbols and Images used in Western Literature, Art, and Architecture

  3. Importance of the Persian Wars • 499-449 B.C.E • Persians Wars united ATHENS and SPARTA against the Persians • Athenian victory at Marathon & Salamis gave Greeks control of Aegean Sea • Athens preserved its independence and continued innovations in government and culture

  4. Importance of the Peloponnesian War • 431-404 B.C.E • Caused in part by competition for control of the Greek world • Athens (Delian League) vs Sparta (Peloponnesian League) • Resulted in the slowing of cultural advance and the weakening of political power.

  5. Golden Age of Athens (Pericles) • Extended Democracy • Rebuilt and Beautified Athens after Persian Wars • One example was the Parthenon • Designed by the sculptor Phidias

  6. Greek Contributions to Western Civilization • Drama: Aeschylus and Sophocles • Poetry: Homer (Illiad and Odyssey) • History: Herodotus & Thucydides • Sculpture: Phidias • Architecture: Columns (3 types) • Science: Archimedes & Hippocrates • Mathematics: Euclid & Pythagoras • Philosophy: Socrates, Plato, & Aristotle

  7. Greek Columns

  8. Macedonia and Hellenistic Culture • Phillip II, King of Macedonia conquered most of GREECE • His son, ALEXANDER THE GREAT, established an empire that stretched from EGYPT to the edge of INDIA • HELLENISTIC Culture: Blending of Greek, Egyptian, Persian, and Indian Cultures by Alexander • Spread of Hellenistic Culture through Trade

  9. Roman Mythology & Religion • Based on POLYTHEISTIC religion • Offered explanations of NATURAL phenomenon, HUMAN qualities, and life events • Symbols and Images used in Western Literature, Art, and Architecture

  10. Punic Wars: Rome vs. Carthage • 264to 146 B.C.E. • War revolved around competition for trade • Three wars resulted in Roman victory, Destruction of Carthage, extended trade & wealth of Rome • During the 2nd Punic War, Hannibal invaded Roman Peninsula and was defeated by Scipio who attacked Carthage.

  11. Roman Empire in the Punic Wars Rome after 1st Punic War Rome after 2nd Punic War Rome after 3rd Punic War

  12. Evolution of an Empire and Spread of Roman Culture • Rome included all of the Mediterranean Basin (Africa, Asia, Europe, & Hellenistic World of the Eastern Mediterranean • Western Europe (Gaul, British Isles)

  13. Decline of the Republic & The Rise of an Empire Decline of the Republic Origin & Evolution of the Roman Empire First Triumvirate (Caesar, Crassus, & Pompey) Julius Caesar: Seizing power, Dictator for Life, Assassination in the Senate Augustus Caesar (Octavian) Civil War, Defeated Marc Antony, 1st Emperor Failure to provide peaceful succession of leaders Spread of Slavery in the Agricultural System Migration of small farmers into the cities (unemployment) Civil War over the power of Julius Caesar Inflation (value of currency goes down, costs of good go up)

  14. Origins & Beliefs of Christianity Origins of christianity Beliefs of christianity Monotheistic Jesus was seen as both the son and incarnation of God Life after Death New Testament of the Bible contains accounts of Jesus’ life and teachings • Had its roots in Judaism • Was led by Jesus of Nazareth • Jesus was proclaimed the Messiah: Son of God • Conflicted with the polytheistic beliefs of the Roman Empire

  15. Spread of Christianity • Message was popular with common people • Early martyrs inspired each other • Carried by apostles (disciples) throughout the Roman Empire • Paul, a Roman Citizen, traveled across the empire using the road system created by the Romans spreading Christianity.

  16. Christianity and the Late Roman Empire • Constantine converted to Christianity & made it legal to practice • Theodosius made Christianity the official religion of Rome • The Church became a source of moral authority • Loyalty to the church was more important that loyalty to the Emperor • Main Unifying force in Western Europe after the fall of Rome.

  17. Contributions of Ancient Rome • Art and Architecture: Pantheon, Colesseum, & the Forum • Technology: Roads, Aqueducts, Arches • Science: Ptolemy • Medicine: Emphasis on Public Health • Language: Latin & influence on Romance Languages • Literature: Virgil’s Aeneid • Religion: Mythology & then Christianity • Law: “Innocent until proven guilty”

  18. Roman Forum Pantheon Aqueducts Colosseum Roman Arches

More Related