Transcript Chapter 1
Chapter 4
The Civilization
of the Greeks:
Colonization
Polis
A bust of Pericles
Greek City- States 750-500BCE
Figure 4-1 p94
Polis - The Greek City-States
(c. 750–c. 500 B.C.E.)
Greek Polis or city-state began to emerge and increase
in power
1. “Tyranny” rule by a non hereditary ruler
. Oligarchy “rule by a few” as in Sparta
3. “Democracy” Rule by the people” as in Athens
Heart of Polis: the Acropolis
Agora - Trading centers emerged
300 independent city-stated developed by 600 BCE
Polis – community of people
Patriarchal
Political rights - Men
No political rights
women & children
Slaves & resident aliens
Greek Way of War
Hopilites
Phalanx
Colonization
Factors that led to Colonization
Greek Diaspora (750 – 550 BCE)
Disparity of wealth
Over population
Development of trade
Colonies
Southern Italy and France
Eastern Spain
Northern Africa
Tyrants & Oligarchies
II. The Greek City-States
(c. 750–c. 500 B.C.E.)
E. Athens
1. The Reforms of Solon
2. The Reforms of Cleisthenes
F. Foreign Influence on Early Greek
Culture
Classic period, 4-5 BCE
Athens emerged as center of activity
Established limited democracy by the end of the
6th C
Limited to free, land owning, Athenian males
Women’s roles increasingly restricted
Represent an extreme
Sparta’s
political system comprised of a Oligarchy and
dual monarchy
Women had not formal roles in governance
Maintained powerful, traditional roles in the community
Sparta to 500 BCE
Militaristic, totalitarian State
Democratic for small ruling minority
Oligarchy (rule by aristocracy) for the majority
Every Spartan a professional soldier
Conquered neighbors and made them Helots (state
slaves)
Infanticide – sick or deformed babies
Sons taken from families at age 7
Girls raised to produce warrior sons
Daily Life in Classical Athens
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Sons of native born- a citizen
Slaves and allies no citizenship
1 of every 6 was a citizen
Social strains
150,000 people, 43,000 of which were adult males
who exercised political power
Economy based on agriculture and trade
Family the central institution
Women kept under strict control
Male homosexuality a prominent feature
Athenian Society
Majority: Women, slaves, resident aliens not citizens
25% of Athens population slaves
Homosexuality common – rites of initiation between
adult men and prepubescent boys
Women
Legally property of fathers, husbands
Arranged marriages
Infanticide of girls
Moral and sexual double standard
Interpretations
Feminist historians concluded the culture
was misogynistic
Exaltation of masculinity at the root of
constant militarism and warfare of Greek
society
Gender Relationships
Greeks believed only true friendship was
possible among equals
Sought relationships with men – sexual
Even if they held their marriage in high
esteem
Drinking vases, used in male drinking
parties, glorified phallus
Misogynistic Voices
Poet Hesoid
Poem Works and Days
Pessimistic reflection of a farmer’s life, bemoans
men’s need of women to procreate and survive
Poem Theogony
Creation story of the gods
Hostilities between the genders for generations
Result in a shift of power from female to male
Culminates in the Reign of Zeus
Both works tell the story of the creation of Pandora, the
firs woman, created by Zeus to be an evil for men
Re-emergence of Writing
Writing and use of coins re-emerged
Capitalization became a major part of life
by 5t BCE
Transformed oral society of early Greece
Writing used as aid for memory and
developing as a reference tool
Major shift in thinking from a oral to a written
society
How do people remember or know anything
Who are those people who have a monopoly on a
system not available to most
III. The High Point of Greek
Civilization: Classical Greece
A. The Challenge of Persia
B. The Growth of an Athenian Empire in
the Age of Pericles
C. The Great Peloponnesian War and the
Decline of the Greek States
Plato
Recognized prejudices against women
spoke on behalf of equality and equal opportunity
though he believed men were generally more
talented
Revolutionary thinking for his time – not the norm
Aristotle
believed that the courage of a man was
shown in commanding and of a women in
obeying
silence is a woman’s glory
Peloponnesian Wars
Following allied victory against the
Persian Empire
Athens emerged as a imperialist
expansionist state igniting war with other
polities
30 year war
Intense political and military turmoil
The Great Peloponnesian War
and the Decline of the Greek
States (431-404 B.C.E.)
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Sparta League Vs. Athenian Empire
Plague in 429, B.C.E., takes Pericles:
hurts Athens
Sparta builds Navy and destroys
Athen’s fleet
Surrender of Athens, 404 B.C
Effects of the wars: Anarchy &
economic depression under Sparta
Classical Literature
Hughs:
How does the literature and artwork from
this period characterize women’s status
and roles in society?
Hellenistic Period
Following Athens defeat and Sparta’s
domination
First half of 4th C BCE
Periodic wars against Persians
Periodic wars between city-states
Empire of Alexander the
great
Philip II declared king, consolidated power in
Macedonia.(359 – 336 BCE)
338 won a decisive Battle gaining control of Greece
Power vacuum came a new force from the kingdom
of Macedon on the northern borders of Greece.
Macedonian conquests were followed by 3 centuries
in which Greek culture spread widely in Egypt and
far into western Asia
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III. The High Point of Greek
Civilization: Classical Greece
D. The Culture of Classical Greece
1. The Writing of History
2. Greek Drama
3. The Arts: The Classical Ideal
4. The Greek Love of Wisdom
E. Greek Religion
F. Life in Classical Athens
1. Economy and Lifestyle
2. Family and Relationships
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IV. The Rise of Macedonia and
the Conquests of Alexander
A. Alexander the Great
1. Alexander’s Conquests
2. The Legacy: Was Alexander Great?
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Figure 4-2 p114
V. The World of the Hellenistic
Kingdoms
A. Hellenistic Monarchies
1. The Seleucid Kingdom and India
B. Political Institutions
C. Hellenistic Cities
D. The Importance of Trade
V. The World of the Hellenistic
Kingdoms
E. Social Life: New Opportunities for
Women
F. Culture in the Hellenistic World
1. New Directions in Literature and Art
2. A Golden Age of Science
3. Philosophy: New Schools of Thought
4. Religion in the Hellenistic World
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Figure 4-3 p117
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