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Catchy Headlines

Catchy Headlines. Catchy Headlines. Catchy Headlines. Catchy Headlines. Catchy Headlines. Main Page- Geography. Main Page- Geography. Mountainous land Almost completely surrounded by Mediterranean Sea- peninsula Mild winters and long, hot, dry summers. Main Page.

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Catchy Headlines

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  1. Catchy Headlines

  2. Catchy Headlines

  3. Catchy Headlines

  4. Catchy Headlines

  5. Catchy Headlines

  6. Main Page- Geography

  7. Main Page- Geography • Mountainous land • Almost completely surrounded by Mediterranean • Sea- peninsula • Mild winters and long, hot, dry summers

  8. Main Page • Ancient Greeks were seafarers, sailors and fishermen- diet included fish and vegetables • In some places- could grow wheat, olives, barley and grapes • Traded with other countries around the Mediterranean

  9. Main Page- gods and goddesses • What is Greek Mythology? • The people of ancient Greece shared stories called myths about the gods, goddesses, and heroes in which they believed. • Each god or goddess was worshipped as a deity and ruled over certain areas of the Greeks’ lives.

  10. Main Page- gods and goddesses • These exciting stories explained natural phenomena that could not be explained by science in the ancient world. • The 12 most important gods and goddesses lived on Mount Olympus.

  11. Main Page- gods and goddesses Zeus- Leader of the Olympian gods, lord of the sky, rain and lightning. His weapon is a thunderbolt which he hurls at those who displease him.


  12. Main Page- gods and goddesses Brothers and sisters of Zeus Poseidon- God of the sea. His weapon is a trident, which can shake the earth, and shatter any object. Hades- God of the underworld, ruling over the dead. He is also the god of wealth, due to the precious metals mined from the earth. Hades has a helmet that makes him invisible.

  13. Main Page- gods and goddesses Brothers and sisters of Zeus Hera- goddess of marriage and mothers. Married to Zeus. Queen of all gods. Hestia- goddess of the home and hearth.

  14. Main Page- gods and goddesses Other gods Artemis - goddess of the hunt and of the moon. She was Apollo’s twin sister. Apollo- god of light.

  15. Main Page- gods and goddesses Other gods Hermes – messenger of the gods. God of the market. Zeus’ youngest son. Aphrodite- goddess of love and beauty

  16. Main Page- gods and goddesses Other gods Athena - goddess of wisdom; protector of cities. Her symbol is the owl. Ares- god of war. His symbol is the spear.

  17. Main Page Architecture Buildings were first wood and then marble and used large columns. Doric Ionic Corinthian Column Column Column

  18. Main Page Architecture Doric Architecture • The Doric style is rather sturdy and its top (the capital), is plain. • The columns are fluted.

  19. Main Page Architecture Ionic Architecture • The Ionic style is thinner and more elegant. • The capital is decorated with a scroll-like design.

  20. Main Page Architecture Corinthian Architecture • The Corinthian style is seldom used in the Greek world, but often seen on Roman temples. • The capital is very elaborate and decorated with acanthus leaves.

  21. Main Page • City-state- known as a polis or small country • Acropolis- (acro-height) • A fortified area at the top of a hill • Protection in case of an attack • Temples constructed to honor gods and goddesses

  22. Main Page • Parthenon • Built by Pericles in 446 B.C. • Has Doric columns • Built to honor goddess, Athena

  23. Main Page • Citizens- • People who ran each city-state • Treated each other as equals • Had equal rights and responsibilities

  24. Main Page • Citizenship- • Greeks started this idea • Included free and native-born men who owned land • Women and children were citizens, but had not rights

  25. Main Page • Video on Democracy

  26. Influences on Greek culture • Polytheism • Agriculture • Many wars • Fate

  27. GREEK THEATRE

  28. HOW THEATRE BEGAN • 6th Century BC to 2nd Century AD • Rituals honoring Dionysus • Drama Competitions

  29. THEATRES • Amphitheatres • Carved into hillsides for excellent acoustics and sight lines • Seated up to 15,000 people

  30. Theater at Delphi

  31. Theater of Dionysus

  32. THEATRES • Theater at Epidauros

  33. Parts of a Greek theater

  34. The Skene • The skene provided the scenery. • Actors made entrances and exits. • Actors could change costumes and masks behind the skene.

  35. The Actors • Only one to three actors in a play • Had to put on • different masks in order • to play more roles. • Actors were all men. • Masks were necessary to let them play the female roles.

  36. MASKS • Illustrated a character’s emotion • Allowed for quick character changes • Distinguished female characters • Made the actors appear larger • Amplified the actors’ voices

  37. Masks Mask worn in Mask worn in a tragedy worn in a comedy

  38. The Chorus The chorus would stand to the side of the dramatic action and chant their lines together.

  39. Function of the Chorus • To explain the current situation • To bring the audience up to date • To comment on the action • To engage in dialogue with the actors and offer them advice

  40. The Plays • Religious myths • Stories of mortals interacting with gods and goddesses • Stories about kings and queens • Stories about battles

  41. Parts of a Play • Begins with a prologue- a simple speech • Entrance of the chorus • Finally, the major acts or scenes of the play

  42. There were two major types of plays 1. Comedies- funny topics 2. Tragedies- sad and serious topics Plays and Playwrights

  43. Video about Greek Theatre Acoustics in ancient Greek theaters

  44. Greek Theater • http://www.ancientgreece.co.uk/festivals/explore/exp_set.html

  45. Greek Theater Tragedies- Aeschylus and Sophocles only

  46. Sports Section The ancient Greek Olympics were part of a religious festival to honor Zeus, the father of the Greek gods and goddesses.

  47. The games were held in a country site called Olympia. The athletes were all male citizens of the city-states from every corner of the Greek world.

  48. The ancient Olympic Games began in the year 776 BC, when Koroibos, a cook from the nearby city of Elis, won the stadion race, a foot race 600 feet long.

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