The Geography and Early People of Ancient Greece
Download
Report
Transcript The Geography and Early People of Ancient Greece
The
The Geography
Geography and
and Early
Early
People
People of
of Ancient
Ancient Greece
Greece
The Geography of Greece
• Greece is very
mountainous
– Separated the
different citystates from one
another
• Had many
peninsulas
– 2 main ones
• Peloponnesus
• Balkan
• Had many
different
waterways
–
–
–
–
Seas
Straits
Islands
Harbors
The Geography of Greece
Europe
Black Sea
Macedonia
• Dardanelles
– Strait that
connects
Aegean
Sea to the
Black Sea
Asia Minor/ Anatolia
– Strait- thin
area of
water
connecting
two other
waterways
Mediterranean Sea
Greek Geography Information
• Greece was ¾ covered in mountains
– Left little land for regular farming
– Forced to grow/harvest other products;
• Olives, grapes, seafood, etc.
• Mountains force Greeks to use seas
– Increased their sailing abilities
– Increased their necessity to trade by sea
• Travel to areas like Italy, Egypt, Phoenicia
Effect of Geography on Greece
• Effected Greece economically
– Limited farmable (arable) land for crops
– Forces them to depend on the seas
• Also forces them to colonize other lands to farm
• Effected Greece socially
– All were Greek, but they were not unified
• Saw themselves as separate peoples
– Spartans, Athenians, Ionians, Mycenaeans
– Mountains separated each different group
• Effected Greece politically
– Each area created its own rules, government,
and citizenship
– Government styles of the time include:
• Monarchy, Tyranny, Democracy, Oligarchy
Early People of Greece
• Minoans on island of Crete
– Bull jumping ceremonies and pottery
• Indo-Europeans spread into
Greece
– Mycenaeans settled around 2000BC
• Name came from city - Mycenae
– Mycenae included city of Athens
• Ruled by kings (known as a monarchy)
• Mycenaeans fight Troy in Trojan
War
– Fought over Helen of Troy
– Mycenaeans win when they use the
Trojan Horse
Early People of Greece
• Dorians move into area after
Mycenaeans
– Far less advanced than earlier groups
– Following the Dorians, Greek broke into
city-states
Homer and the Illiad & Odyssey
• Homer – famous writer of epic poems
– Thought to have been blind
– One of the most famous writers in history
• Writes the Illiad and the Odyssey
– Tells the stories of the travels of characters to and
from the Trojan War
– Incorporates numerous gods and goddesses
– Showed the incorporation of Greek mythology into
the daily lives of the Greek people
Greek
Greek Religion
Religion and
and Mythology
Mythology
• Greek religion was polytheistic and
practiced by all Greeks
– Believed in many different gods/goddesses
• Greek mythology had 3 purposes
– Explaining natural phenomena
• Storms, thunder, lightning, etc. happening in
nature
– Explaining human qualities
• Speed, knowledge, strength, sight, etc.
– Explaining life events
• Births, deaths, marriages, etc.
Greek Religion and Mythology
• Symbols and representations of gods
spread to Rome and can still be seen today
in everyday life
– Literature, art, monuments, politics and
architecture
Early Cities of Greece
• Early Greek cities focused on two ideas
– Promoting civic participation
• Getting people involved in the decisions of the city
– Promoting a commercial (business) life
• Getting people to trade products and ideas
• Greek city-states known as the polis
– Polis- was a city and surrounding countryside
• Example- Washington DC and its suburbs
– Agora- city center- like a business district
– Acropolis- fortified (protected) area of city
• Not all cities had these
• Some cities built their agora in their acropolis
Uses of areas of the Greek Polis
• The Agora
– Used for discussion and trade
– Men would meet for food, clothes, ideas
– Women were rarely seen in the agora
• The Acropolis
– Used for protection and a sign of power
– Made it easy to see oncoming attackers
– Provided a place for royalty, women and
children to hide during times of war
View from BOTTOM of
Acropolis
Acropolis
View from TOP of Acropolis
Amphitheater
for Acropolis
Area
Early
Citystates
• Examples
of agoras
– Athens
agora (L)
– Destroyed
agora (R)
Modern Example of a Polis
CITY CENTER
(AGORA)
Could be acropolis
AND agora, doesn’t
have to though
Surrounding Land
(COUNTRYSIDE)
All Blue area and Agora
makes up POLIS
Processing- Find the Polis
• Locate the 2 areas that would be
considered a polis. How can you tell?
The Famous Athenian Acropolis
• A fortified hilltop for protection
– Walls are actually the mountain its located on (marble)