1 / 26

ANCIENT GREECE

ANCIENT GREECE. First people to move into Greece came from Turkey around 3000 BC Remained a primitive Neolithic people without any signs of civilization Ultimately came into contact with civilization that had developed on nearby island of Crete. MINOAN CIVILIZATION. Located on Crete

kaitlin
Download Presentation

ANCIENT GREECE

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. ANCIENT GREECE First people to move into Greece came from Turkey around 3000 BC Remained a primitive Neolithic people without any signs of civilization Ultimately came into contact with civilization that had developed on nearby island of Crete

  2. MINOAN CIVILIZATION • Located on Crete • Developed civilization in response to contact with Egypt • Merchants • Established trade contacts with Mycenaeans • Destroyed in 1500 BC (combination of manmade and natural disasters)

  3. MYCENAEAN CIVILIZATION • Mainland Greece • Small city-states in southern and central Greece • Ruled by chieftains • Stone fortifications • Main economic activity was piracy • Warriors • Incessant fighting among themselves • Destroyed by invasions of Dorians, Ionians, and others • Plunge Greece into “Dark Age” • 1100-800 BC

  4. END OF THE DARK AGE I • Population Pressure • Many Greeks left the mainland and settled elsewhere • Islands in Aegean Sea • Coast of Turkey and Black Sea • Southern Italy and France • Eastern and southern coasts of Spain • Coast of North Africa • Greek colonists always retained ties to the Greek mainland and kept their Greek identity • Remained “Greek” in a cultural sense no matter where they lived

  5. END OF DARK AGE II • With the establishment of worldwide network of colonies, Dark Age came to an end • Greeks rediscovered trade • Also rediscovered writing • Adopted Phoenician alphabet and modified it to fit their spoken language • Also evolved new form of political organization • The Polis

  6. THE POLIS • Product of a long and complicated process of evolution that had occurred during the Dark Age • Based on the city-state • No kings • Governed by assemblies made up of men who were eligible for military service • Greek soldiers had to arm and equip themselves so assemblies were made up of men wealthy enough to do this • Also governed by spokesmen selected from and by these assemblies

  7. ATHENIAN “DEMOCRACY” • Athens: only 30,000 out of a total population of approx. 200,000 were “free citizens” • WHO WAS EXCLUDED FROM CITIZENSHIP? • Women • Slaves • Residents not born in Athens • Lower classes who could not afford military service

  8. GREAT PERSIAN WAR • Response to Athenian aid to rebellion in Ionia in 499 BC • Started by Darius I in 490 BC and continued by his son, Xerxes (until 479 BC) • Three invasion attempts of mainland Greece • Greece won • More familiar with terrain • Fighting for their homes • City-states united together to face Persian threat

  9. ANCIENT ATHENS • Delian League (former military alliance transformed into an empire) • Pericles • Drew on resources of empire to transform city into the most beautiful city of the ancient world • Golden Age • Trade boomed • Work was plentiful • City was an exciting place to live

  10. SPARTAN SOCIETY • All Life Devoted to the Military • Babies inspected for defects • Boys taken from mothers at age 7 for 14 years military training • Spend entire adult life in army • All civilian worked performed by helots • Created Peloponnesian League

  11. PELOPONNESIAN WAR • Between Athens and Sparta • Lasted 25 years (431-404 BC) • Caused massive destruction and loss of life throughout Greek world • Sparta technically won but it was an empty victory—both Athens and Sparta exhausted • Did the Greeks learn anything from this horrible experience? • No !!!!

  12. MACEDONIAN CONQUEST • Philip II, “King and Warrior Lord” of Macedonia, invades Greece in 338 BC and conquers entire peninsula • Murdered two years later • In the middle of planning “war of revenge” against the Persian Empire • Succeeded by his 21-year old son, Alexander (the Great) • Not only continued his father’s plan but also went beyond Philip’s wildest dreams to create the largest empire the world had ever seen • Encompassed all the land between Greece and the middle of India

  13. ALEXANDER THE GREAT’S EMPIRE

  14. ALEXANDER THE GREAT • Enormous intellectual and military talents • Enormous ego and powerful vindictive streak • Intelligence and talent plus insatiable desire for glory and cutthroat ruthlessness = conquest of known world

  15. ALEXANDER’S CONQUESTS • 334 BC—invaded and conquered Persian Empire • Then invaded and conquered Central Asia • Then invaded India • Met fierce resistance • Retaliated with slaughter of civilians and destruction of property • Established new cities along route of conquest to protect supply and communications lines

  16. THE END • Troops mutiny in central India • Alexander punishes them by marching them back home through a desert • Stops temporarily at Babylon in 324 BC • Dies suddenly in 323 BC at age 32

  17. THE SUCCESSOR KINGDOMS • Civil war erupts after Alexander’s death • Empire is ultimately split into three parts among his former generals • Ptolemy (Egypt) • Selecus (most of old Persian Empire) • Antigonus Gonatus (Macedonia and Greece) • Known as the “successor kingdoms” • Period known as the Hellenistic Age

  18. GREEK LITERATURE • ILLIAD AND ODYSSEY • Composed by Homer • Deal with the wars of the Mycenaneans and their attack on Troy • Include many famous characters: Achilles, Odysseus, Agamenon and many gods • Characters not portrayed in black and white terms—even heroes have personality flaws. Sophisticated portrayal of characters

  19. GREEK POETS • SAPPHO(female poet from Lesbos) • Only fragments of her poetry survive • Great descriptive beauty and insight into human relationships • PINDAR • Developed the eulogy—long poems praising the lives and exploits of famous individuals

  20. GREEK THEATER • Invented tragedy and comedy • Wore masks and used chorus • Plots derived from mythology • Sophocles---Oedipus the King • Euripides—The Trojan Women • Aristophanes—The Clouds

  21. SOCRATES AND PLATO • Philosopher: “lover of wisdom” • Interested in fundamental questions about the human condition– what is justice; what is good; what is beauty • Used rigorous logic and demanding question-and-answer form of inquiry • Attempted to find absolute answers (universally valid answers that apply to all people, at all times, and in all places

  22. ARISTOTLE • Interested in same questions as Socrates and Plato • Differed in method • Argued that a person should gather evidence on a topic, analyze that evidence, and then base conclusions on that analysis • Example: Politics

  23. GREEK SCIENCE • PYTHAGORAS • Mathematician • Formula for the square of a right angle triangle • HIPPOCRATES • Father of modern medicine • Rejected supernatural explanations for illness • Theory of “bodily humours” (blood, water, black bile, yellow bile) • Hippocratic Oath

  24. PARTHENON Acropolis

  25. HELLENISTIC CIVILIZATION • Realistic Sculpture • Individualistic philosophies (Skepticism, Stoicism, Cynicism, Epicureanism) • Advances in science

  26. AN IMPORTANT SHIFT • Center of intellectual/cultural achievement moved to cities of successor kingdoms (Alexandria) • Fusion of Greek and Middle Eastern civilization =Hellenism

More Related