Chapter 6 Golden Age
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Transcript Chapter 6 Golden Age
Greece’s Golden and
Hellenistic Ages
Arts of the Golden Age:
Architecture
Athens was the center of culture in Greece’s Golden Age
Acropolis was the center of the original city state
Parthenon was the finest example of Greece Architecture
• white marble temple built in honor of Athena
• Series of columns surrounded the structure
• Athena statue was 38 ft high, made of ivory and gold
The Arts of the Golden Age:
Painting
Greek Vases illustrate
everyday life and
mythological events
Originally adopted styles
from Egypt
Began with painting animals
then human figures
The Arts of the Golden Age:
Sculpture
Used Mathematical proportions to make sculptures looks
lifelike
Myron sculpted The Disc Thrower
Phidias sculpted Athena and Zeus
• Zeus statue was considered one of the seven wonders
of the world
Praxiteles
• Sculpted figures that were lifelike & natural in form and
size
• Expressed the Greek admiration for the beauty of the
human body
The Nature of Greek Art:
Simplicity and Balance
Glorified human beings
• Reflected ideals of beauty and strength
Symbolized pride in the city state
• Art meant for public enjoyment
• Honored and thanked the gods
Beliefs in harmony, balance, order, and moderation
Combining beauty and usefulness
Rise of Philosophy
Rise of Philosophy
Study of basic questioning of
reality and human existence
Nature is based on natural laws
and truths
Discover truth through reasoning
Known as cosmologists- studied
the nature of the universe
Democritus- developed the
atomic theory
Socrates
Education was the key
to personal growth
Students should THINK
for themselves
Socratic Method used
questions to teach
Socrates
Believed unskilled people should not
hold position of power
Mocked the Sophists
Accused of denying the existence of
Greek Gods
Accused of teachings corrupting the
youth
• Found guilty and executed
Plato
Founded the Academy
for teaching philosophy
Wrote in dialogues or
imaginary discussions
Dealt with government,
education, justice, and
religion
Plato
Theory of Forms
• Believed perfection existed in theory not in reality
Humans consisted of the soul and the body
“Republic”
• Describes Plato’s view of the perfect society
Ideal government was Aristocracy
• not by birth or wealth
• Rulers chosen by wisdom, ability, and high ideas
Aristotle
Believed that logical study led to truth
Collected facts and organized them into systems
• Collected, described, and classified plants and
animals
Ethics
• Tried to learn What brings people to happiness
Poetics
• Analyzed what makes a good or bad play
Believed that monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy
was good forms of government
Math, Medicine, and Science
Pythagoras
• Everything could be
explained by Math
• Developed the Pythagorean
Theorem
• Built on the ideas of the
Egyptians
Math, Medicine, and Science
Greek philosophers
• Did not specialize in any one field of study
• Thought natural world could be explained by the
natural laws
• Thought rules that govern the universe can be
identified, gathered, and observed
Hippocrates
Hippocrates
Hippocrates
Founder of medical science
Wrote between 60-70 medical studies
Based on observation, experiment, & experience
Taught disease comes from natural causes, NOT as
punishment from gods
Rest, Fresh Air, and diet are the best cures
History
Herodotus
• 1st historian of the Western world
• Father of History
• Careful to note “when he seen something”
or “was told something”
Thucydides
• Believed studying the past helps
understand human nature
• Worked to make his findings fair and
accurate
Greek Theater: Drama
Written in poetic form
Male actors with trained voices played women's role
Carved outdoor theaters into hillsides
•
Orchestra is where the actors/chorus performed
Audience relied on the chorus to describe the time
and place
Performed in connection with religious festivals
•
Great Dionysia was Athens major drama competition
Greek Theater: Tragedies
Main character struggles against
fate/events
Heroes punished for displaying Hubris
• Sin of pride
• Offended the gods and doomed the
hero to a tragic end
Aeschylus
• wrote about religion and
relationships between gods and
people
Greek Theater: Tragedies
Sophocles
• Defended many traditional Greek values
• Oedipus Rex was a perfect example of a tragedy
according to Aristotle
Euripides
• Questioned old beliefs and ideas…(Socrates)
• Trojan Woman showed the pain and misery of war
Greek Theater: Comedies
Originated at Great Dionysia Festival
Included both tragic and humorous figures
Main characters solved the problems
Aristophanes
• Clouds- pokes fun at Socrates for
theories about education
• Used comedy to make people think
about the cause and effect of war
Philip II of Macedon
King of Macedon from 359-336
Gained power by recruiting his
own army
Organized army into Phalanxes
Goals
• Restore order in Macedon
• Win control of Greece
Philip II of Macedon
Philip II of Macedon
Demosthenes
• Greatest Athenian orator
• led uprising against Philip II
rule
Philip II defeated Thebes and
Athens to unit all of Greece
Assassinated in 336 B.C.
Alexander the Great
Succeeded King Philip at
20yrs of age
Received both classical and
military training
Ultimate goal was to conquer
the known world
Empire reached from Greece
to the Indus River
Alexander's Empire
Hellenistic World
Alexander purposely spread Greek culture
Kept empire together by governing with Persians,
Greeks, and Macedonians
Created a new “Greek-like” way of life known as
Hellenistic culture
• Combination of Greek, Mediterranean, and Asian
cultures
Infighting tore apart Alexander’s Empire
Learning and Commerce
Spread of the Greek culture helped the “middle
ranks” thrive
Alexander built many cities during conquest
Old values faded; New Value brought freedoms
• Women appeared more often in public & received
new rights regarding property
More people considered to be “Greek”
Religion
Kings in Egypt and Asia
• encouraged practice of ruler worship
• Provided people with sense of civic duty
Mystery Religions
• Cults introduced worshipers to secret teachings
• Secrets of life after death and immortality
Philosophy
Cynicism
•
Live simple and naturally
Skepticism
•
Universe is always changing, all knowledge is uncertain
Stoicism
•
•
Divine reason directs the world
Greatly influenced Roman and Christian thinking
Epicureanism
•
•
Limit desires
Epicurus taught to seek pleasure & avoid pain
Science:
Math and Physics
Euclid
• showed how geometric
statements flowed
logically from one another
• Elements is the basis of
many Geometry books
Archimedes
• Calculated the value of pi
• Invented the Archimedes
Screw
Science: Medicine
Hellenistic doctors learned from the Egyptian art of
embalming to examine and catalog the parts of the
human body
Studied bodies of executed criminals
Herophilus
• Concluded that the brain is the center of the
nervous system
Science: Astronomy and
Geography
Used principles of geometry to track the stars
Aristarchus believed the earth and the planets moved
around the sun
Geographers knew the earth was round
Eratosthenes calculated the distance around the earth