1 / 14

Revision

Revision. Some help. Slavery. Born into it Exposed as a baby Prisoner of war Sold by parents Captured by pirates. Legal differences . Could only give evidence under torture. Mining. Laurion silver mines Dark narrow shafts Often collapsed High death rate

bailey
Download Presentation

Revision

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. Revision Some help

  2. Slavery • Born into it • Exposed as a baby • Prisoner of war • Sold by parents • Captured by pirates

  3. Legal differences • Could only give evidence under torture

  4. Mining • Laurion silver mines • Dark narrow shafts • Often collapsed • High death rate • Poisonous fumes from smelting • No contact with families – lived in barracks • Kneeling or lying flat to dig seams

  5. ‘Positives’ • Formally accepted into oikos – ceremonies • Some could take part in family worship • Some legal protection – only master could beat them and he was considered polluted by the Gods if he killed one! • Some responsible for running businesses/paidogogos • Could be given money and buy freedom • Could seek asylum and complain about master

  6. Housing • Design and function of rooms • Cooking • Working • Showing belief in gods • Furniture (not much, portable, stored away, couches as beds, 3 legged, handmade in wood, few cupboards, many things on walls, special chair for spinning, loom)

  7. Good and bad • Good • Cool • Spacious (little furniture) • Mosaics/paintings • Courtyard • Bad • Easy for burglars! • Poor toilet facs • Uncomfortable furniture • No running water • Segregation of women • Few windows • Couldn’t hang clothes

  8. Life of a Spartan woman • PE • Dancing/singing/poetry/lyre • Exercised during pregnancy • No sons/husbands at home – barracks • Wives often ‘shared’ • No legal or political rights • No careers • Had a respected role in society

  9. Krypteia • Spartan secret police • Murder helots capable of leadership • Frighten/intimidate other helots • Keep helots under control • Accustomed Spartans to killing • Learned basic survival skills

  10. Spartan education Describe it Good and bad points?

  11. The life of Athenian women • Produce children (esp. boys) • Look after children • Educate girls • Oversee house and slaves • Keep accounts • Spinning and weaving – clothes • Poor – collect water, jobs like market stalls and washing

  12. Love and marriage • Arranged by men • Bride has little say (often didn’t meet groom until the day!) • Father and groom exchanged oaths • Brides father paid dowry • Groom symbolically ‘dragged’ bride from father • Bride could not return home – shown by burning of chariot axle

  13. Life of Athenian women • Good and bad • Regarded as a burden (hence dowries) • No formal education or legal rights • Confined to home • Little social life • Tolerate adultery (but not her own!) • Divorce difficult • Under control of kyrios • Could visit friends/festivals with chaperone • If dutiful was valued • Trusted to educate daughters • Trusted to run household

  14. Essays • Education • Sophists • Important subjects • Good and bad • Spartan army and male lifestyle • Hoplites • Reasons for success • Good and bad of Spartan adult male life

More Related