1 / 39

Ancient Greece

Ancient Greece. Geographic Features. Part of the Balkan Peninsula Eastern Med./Aegean Sea Divisions between Attica & Peloponnesus Crete, 1000’s of islands Mountainous & rocky Natural divider Limits agriculture Sheep & goats Olives & grapes. The Minoans. 2600-1100 BCE

kskinner
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

  2. Geographic Features • Part of the Balkan Peninsula • Eastern Med./Aegean Sea • Divisions between Attica & Peloponnesus • Crete, 1000’s of islands • Mountainous & rocky • Natural divider • Limits agriculture • Sheep & goats • Olives & grapes

  3. The Minoans • 2600-1100 BCE • 1600-1500, Golden Age • Named for King Minos • Crete • Capitol, Knossos • Discovered by Sir Arthur Evans • Merchant Seafarers • Influences in Mainland Greece, Egypt, & the Levant • Borrowed from neighbors • Bull worship, Minotaur • Women’s social status

  4. Continued • Disappearance • 1400 BCE • Theratic volcanic eruption on Santorini • Plague of Darkness in Egypt • Earthquakes/Tsunamis • “Atlantis” • Maybe have become the “Sea People” • Replaced by the Mycenaean Culture

  5. Mycenaean Culture • Indo-European people group • Greek speaking culture • “Linear B” writing • Dominates Aegean Sea from 1400-1200 BCE • Rise of City-State civilization • Seafaring/exploration, odds with neighbors • Troy, Trojan War- 1250 • Replaced by the Dorians • 1100-900 BC, “Greek Dark Ages” • Abandonment of cities, collapse of the “Bronze Age”

  6. History Meets Legend • Troy • City-State in Modern Turkey • Controlled vital Black Sea trade routes • Legendary fighting over Helen of Troy • 1870’s-Amateur archeologist Heinrich Schliemann • Discovers site, “Priam’s Treasures” • Signs of fighting & burning • Sent to Germany, stolen by Soviets after WWII

  7. Continued • Homer • App. 750 BCE • Blind poet and bard • Odyssey & Illiad • Heroic tales revolving around Trojan War & aftermath • Reflects life during Greek Dark Ages • Odysseus the swineherd • Existence questioned

  8. The Trojan War of Myth • Begins with a Beauty Pageant • Aphrodite, Hera, & Athena • Paris chosen as judge • Promised most beautiful woman, Helen • Two sides • Greeks • Menelaus (Helen’s husband), Agamemnon, Ajax, Achilles, Odysseus, & Clytaemestra (Helen’s sister) • Trojans • Priam (King of Troy), Hecuba (Priam’s queen), Hector, Cassandra, Laocoon, Aeneus

  9. The Greek Dark Ages • Barbarian Dorian invaders • Greek speaking • Violent • Loss of learning and culture • Indigenous populations face a choice • Flee to Ionia, Aeolia, or Doris • Hide in the mountains • Become enslaved

  10. Return of Greek Culture • Rise of the “Polis” • Greek word for city • City-State reappears • Borrowed from previous cultures & neighbors • Ionian Greeks begin using Phoenician alphabet • Colonial Exploits • Spain, Italy, Egypt • Known as the Archaic Period

  11. The City-State • Central admin. center/Surrounding Region • Hallmarks • Fortifications • Agora • Acropolis • Entertainment venues • Temples • Small population, freemen • Responsibility to the State

  12. Continued • Kingships arise w/ noble support • Aristocracy eventually seizes control • “Aristos”, the best • Military power and money • Iron weapons • Developed highly trained citizen soldiers • Phalanx • Increase in trade sees rise of Merchant class • Formation of an oligarchy

  13. Sparta • Largest of Greek city-states • Over 5000 square miles of territory • Settled by Dorian in Peloponnesus • Enslaved local population- Helots • Strict social order • Infanticide the norm • Development of soldier/mother culture

  14. Continued • Governance • 2 Kings • Council of Elders • Citizen Council • 5 Ephors (daily maintenance) • Male Citizens • Age 7, begin training • Age 20, could marry/must live in barrack • Age 30, could join Assembly • Always connected to military life

  15. Continued • Female Citizens • Rigorous exercises & preparation for motherhood • Submission to male authority • Distinctions • Could inherit property • Open access to society • Isolationist mentality • Limit on travel, trade, & wealth

  16. Athens • Leadership moves from kingship to democracy • Participation limited to land holding males • Discontented populace • Rise of Solon (638-558) • 594, voted in as Archon (magistrate) • Reforms • Ended debt slavery • Opened government positions • Granted citizenship to foreigners • People’s Assembly gains stronger voice • Increased trade in olive oil and wine • Success limited

  17. Rise of the Tyrants • Gained power by force • Members of the aristocracy • Appealed to populace to support rise • Limited success with reforms • 546 BCE • Monetary and land aid for farmers • State sponsored building projects • 507 BCE • Greater citizen involvement w/ Council of 500 • Rise of a legislative body

  18. The Olympic Games • Celebration of Zeus • 776 BCE, the First • Athletic events • Olympia, Greece • Open to all eligible males • Representative of City-States • Olympic Truce • Lauded as heroes • Olive leaf wreaths or crowns • Political tools • Ended in 393 CE • Theodosius I

  19. Cultural Unit • Religion • Polytheistic • Mt. Olympus, Zeus • Oracle of Delphi • Cultural Superiority • Felt non-Greeks were barbarians • This feeling helped unify Greece against a new Eastern threat

  20. The Persian Wars • Threat ended decades of infighting • Persian expansion brings Ionian Greeks under their control • Mid-6th Century • 499- Ionian Revolt led by city of Miletus • Appealed for Athenian aid • Greek defeat

  21. Continue • 490- Darius I lands troops at Marathon • Retaliation for Athenian aid at Miletus • Outnumbered Greeks defeat Persians • 204 Greek deaths to 6400 Persians • Athenian leader Themistocles urges building a navy • Darius’ son, Xerxes returns in 480 • Unification of Athens & Sparta • Battle of Thermopylae • King Leonidas of Sparta, 300 Spartans • Greek Defeat

  22. Persian Foes • Darius I or the Great, 550-486 • Led Persia at Imperial Height • Iron fisted ruler • Improved infrastructure, created Satraps • Xerxes I or the Great, 519-465 • Son of Darius, traditional husband of Esther • Built pontoon bridge connecting Asia & Greece • Famous of “whipping the sea” • Assassinated by his own bodyguard, Artabanus

  23. Continued • Persian forces march to Athens • Sack/burn an empty city • Citizens evacuated to Salamis • Battle of Salamis • Greek navy defeats Persian forces • Persians pushed out of Greek territory

  24. Rise of the DelianLeague • 478 BCE • Greek sense of uniqueness lead to alliance • Based on the island of Delos • Athens becomes power base • Seizes control of treasury • Moves money to Parthenon • Used alliance finances to rebuild city/expand navy • Used forces to keep members in line • Rise of the “Athenian Empire”

  25. Pericles • 494-429 BCE • Democratic reformer • Saw importance of citizen participation • Responsible for the movement of the Treasury • Companion of a foreign woman, Aspasia • Athens becomes cultural & artistic center

  26. Peloponnesian War • Anti-Athenian sentiments sees rise of Peloponnesian League • 431, Athens vs. Sparta • 27 year conflict • Geography helps Spartan cause • Inland city prevents Athenian naval attack • Sparta attacks Athens • Refugee influx leads to outbreak of plague • Claims life of Pericles

  27. Continued • Aided by Persia, Athens is defeated in 404 • Greek influence continues through region declines in importance • Rise of a new power in the North • Macedonia

  28. Rise of Macedonia • Philip II • Admirer of Greek culture • Takes throne in 359 • Considered practically barbaric by Greeks • At least 7 wives • Employed Aristotle as tutor for his children • Brings Greece under Macedonian influence • 338- Assassinated by his bodyguard

  29. Continued • Alexander • Claims throne after Philip’s death, age 20 • Mother Olympius moves him to the throne • Accomplished solider, popular • Sights on Persia, launched invasion in 334 • Worked his way across 2000 mile Persian Empire • Ended campaign in India, 326 • Troops pushing to return • Returned to capitol of Babylon having never lost a battle

  30. Dies at age 32 of fever • Natural causes or poison? • Declining health and mourning of death of companion, Hephaestion • Empire divided among heirs and generals • Cassador takes Greece • Seleucus I Necator in Persia • Ptolomy I Sotar in Egypt

  31. Legacy of Alexander • Spread of Hellenism from Greece to India • 12 cities established in his name • Alexandria, Egypt • Cultural center • Vital trade hub • Marvels • Pharos- 440 foot tall lighthouse • Library of Alexandria • Changes for Women • Educational opportunities open • Political influence • Wives- Roxana, Stateira II, & Parysatis II • Cleopatra VII of Egypt

  32. Greek Culture • Philosophy • “Lovers of Wisdom” • Obsession w/ reason & rhetoric • The art of skillful speaking • Conflicted w/ established ideas (religion) • Socrates, 470-399 • Critic of the Sophists • Professional teachers • Socratic method of questioning & analysis

  33. Seen as threat to Athenian youth • At 70 tried and found guilty • Corrupting the youth • Executed by poison • Plato, 428-347 • Student of Socrates • “The Republic” • Rejected democracy • State should dictate • Society of workers, soldiers, ruling educated elite • Sought use of talented women • Promoted communal living

  34. Aristotle, 384-322 • Student of Plato • Concerned w/ mob rule in democracy • Promoted a single ruler of virtue • “The Golden Mean” • Est. the Lyceum • Basis of modern universities • Zeno, 490-430 • Stoicism • Accept what life gives you, felt all people were morally equal • Epicurus • Epicurean philosophy of leading of life of simple pleasure • Good/pleasure vs. Bad/pain

  35. Greek Literary • Poetry • Homer’s epics, Sappho’s love & beauty, & Pindar’s victorious athletes • Drama • Theatres a part of any Greek city • Plays meant to be preformed only once • Tragedies • Tied to religion • Presented moral and social issues • Weaknesses in the human condition • Ex. Aeschylus, Sophocles, & Euripides

  36. Comedies • Mock the everyday/satire of politics • Ex. Aristophanes • Mathematics & Astronomy • Pythagoras- formula for right triangle side calculation • Euclid- father of modern geometry • Aristarchus- theory that solar system was heliocentric • Eratosthenes- calculated circumference of the Earth

  37. Other Greek Achievements • Herodotus- Father of history/historical writing • Hippocrates- Studied causes and cures of illnesses, Hippocratic Oath • Archimedes- Mastered the lever the pulley

More Related