Transcript Chapter 5
CHAPTER 5
Classical Greece
Early Greece
Civilization developed
as early as 3000BCE
2 cultures developed:
Minoans & Mycenaeans
Minoans developed in
Crete
Minoan ships sailed the
Aegean Sea
Minoan colonies popped
up on Aegean islands
Minoan Life
Solidly constructed buildings:
Private
rooms
Basic plumbing
Brightly colored artwork
Paintings
of ships tell us they were tied to the sea:
Sailing, trade, fishing
Others show dangerous games
Leaping over bulls
Minoan culture ended suddenly
Crete volcano?
Mycenaean States
Small kingdoms
Often fought with each other
First Greeks: first to speak Greek
Traded with Minoans
Copied Minoan writing
Lion’s Gate
Showed
strength
Trojan War: Truth or Fiction?
Famines, invasion, end of trade: Dark Age
Greek civilization almost disappeared
The Dark Age
For more than 300 years, Greece was left in
confusion
By 800s BCEs life was stable enough for a new
society to emerge
Because
of Rugged terrain, travel and communication
between city-states was difficult
Each formed its own form of government, laws and
customs
Life in a Polis
Polis was the center of daily life for Greeks
Greeks
were fiercely loyal to their polis
Did not think of themselves as Greeks
Built around an
Usually
housed temples to gods
Below acropolis was public spaces like
Life in a Polis
Shops, houses, more temples surrounded the
AGORA
Gymnasiums, training grounds, public baths for
athletes
Sturdy Wall surrounded Polis
Outside of wall were fields where city food was
grown
Sparta
One of mightiest city states
Not typical
Located on Peloponnesus
(large peninsula)
Over time, seized control over other towns around it
Turned conquered people into
Worked on farms so citizens did not have to perform
manual labor
Spartans free to train for war!
War Society
Emphasis on war not created out of fondness for
fighting
Seen as tool to keep order in society
Response to HELOTS outnumbering Spartans 7-1
Demanded strength and toughness from birth
Boys and girls alike
If found unhealthy: baby left in wilderness to die
Trained as soldiers from young age
At end of training sent into wilderness with no food or tools
War Society
At age 20, boys became
HOPLITES: FOOT SOLDIERS
Remained in army for 10 years
Women played important role
Trained
in gymnastics
Fit to bear strong children
Right to own property
The Gods of Olympus
12 most influential of the hundreds of Greek gods
Lived together on Mount Olympus
Not perfect
Zeus & Hera fought ALL The time
Poseidon was quick to anger
Each polis claimed one god/goddess as its special
protector
Corinth: Apollo
Athens: Athena
Sacred Locations
Delphi
Priestesses
of Apollo received visions of the future
Olympia
Every
4 years held the Olympic Games
Competed for the honor/attention of the gods
Myths and Heroes
Stories about heroes taught Greeks where they
came from and what people they should be
Hercules: son of Zeus
God like strength
Theseus,
Athenian prince, killed the Minotaur of Crete
Heroes killed monsters, made discoveries, founded
cities, talked to gods
Olympian Gods
Perseus & the Helm of
Darkness
Holding Medusa’s
head
Florence, Italy
Athenian Democracy
Athens was the world’s FIRST DEMOCRACY!
With the development of democracy around 500
BCE, Athens entered its classical age
Draco Solon
Greece had been ruled by kings, then aristocrats
Most citizens were poor, and the income gap led to
conflict
Draco reformed the city’s laws
Only
way to end unrest is harsh punishment
Only made unrest worse
590s BCE, Solon overturned Draco’s harshest laws
Outlawed
slavery
Encouraged trade
Solon’s biggest change
All Athenian men allowed to take part in the
assembly that governed the city and sit on
juries
First step to democracy!
Peisistratus: Beloved Tyrant
541 BCE Peisistratus seized power as a
Athenians liked that he pushed aristocrats
out of office
FATHER OF DEMOCRACY
Cleisthenes later took over Athens
Broke up power of noble families by dividing
Athens into 10 tribes based on where people
lived
These tribes (not families) were basis for
elections
Each
500
tribe elected 50 men to serve on council of
Athenian Democracy
Only free male Athenians, 20+, with military
training could vote
300s: only 10% could participate in running the
city
Those that could take part were expected to do so
fully
Vote
in ALL elections
Serve in office if elected
Serve in juries
Serve in military during war
Athenian Democracy
Three main bodies:
Assembly – all eligible people
Made all the laws and important decisions
Council of 500: write the laws to be voted on
Courts: members chosen from Assembly
The Persian Wars
Roots lay in Ionia
(Asia Minor, or Turkey)
Ionia fell to Persians in
500 BCE
Ionian Greeks rebelled
in 499 BCE
Asked other Greeks for
help
Athens among poleis that
sent help
Persians put down revolt
st
1
Persian Invasion
King Darius not happy:
Persians,
especiallysurprised,
with Athenscounterattacked
Planned to take revenge on
More
Ionian Greeks
allies closed in on
sides
490 BCE: sent tens of thousands
to
Marathon
Persians
Retreated!
Athenians caught Persians
Athenian
ran 26
unloading Messenger
from their ships
miles
to
Athens
to
announce
Charged with a
Greek Victory
Died upon arrival
Battle of Thermopylae
Battle of Salamis
Delian League
After the Persian Wars, Athens and other city-states
joined together to protect each other from further
invasions
Treasury
was on island of Delos – thus Delian league
Athens controlled the ships and the money
If a polis tried to leave the Delian league Athens
would use their military might to force them back in
The Acropolis & The Parthenon
Athens took money from the Delian league to rebuild after
the Persian Wars, angering other poleis
Weren’t
strong enough to stop them
Athens started rebuilding with the Parthenon
Temple
to Athena
Commissioned by Pericles
Pericles was a skilled speaker, politician, and patron of the
arts
Introduced
payment for working in government
Encouraged Athenians to spread democracy to other poleis
Peloponnesian War
AS the leader of the Delian League, Athens was the richest
and mightiest polis in Greece
This brought Athens many enemies, the greatest rival being
Sparta!
Sparta wanted to lessen Athens’ influence over Greece
Peloponnesian War
Delian League
Athens
Strength:
Navy
Peloponnesian League
Sparta
Strength:
Army
Tensions led to War which went back and forth for years
Peloponnesian War
429 BCE: Athens was struck with a plague killing thousands
(including Pericles)
421 BCE: Truce was called
415 BCE: Athens attacked a Spartan ally,
This
time Sparta took to the Sea – and Won!
404 BCE: Athens surrendered, but Sparta was left tired &
broke
Later,
Sparta fell to Thebes
340 BCE: A cycle of warfare led to Macedonia (a Greek
speaking kingdom in the North) to taking over