Chapter 5 Ancient Greece
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Transcript Chapter 5 Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece
Chapter 5
Geography
• Land & islands, many miles of coastline,
inlets, bays, deep harbors
• Seas – Aegean, Mediterranean, Ionian
• Poor resources on land (couldn’t farm)
• Led to increased sea travel, trade, imports
Geography
• Land - very mountainous (Mt. Olympus)
• Difficult to unite under one government,
divided the people, became fiercely
independent (city-states)
• Climate – moderate (Mediterranean)
temperature, led to outdoor activities –
shopping, civic meetings, athletics,
interaction
First Greeks
• Minoans from Crete
• Wealthy traders,
large homes, fancy
clothes, jewelry
• Ended by
earthquake,
volcano, tidal wave?
Mycenaeans
• Mycenae – built on steep
hills
• Fortified with stone walls,
bronze age
• Farmers, traders, warriors
• Trojan War (1200 BCE)
• Greek kings attacked Troy
in Asia Minor
• Greek’s wife, Helen, stolen
by Trojan man
• Archaeological evidence
that this was true
Dorians
• 1200 BCE – 800 BCE
• Mycenaean civilization
collapsed
• From North of Greece
came with iron weapons
• Little skill, less
advanced
• Trade and progress at a
stand still
• Skill of writing lost
• Dark Ages
Homer
• Blind poet
• Depended on spoken word (bards –
storytellers)
• Wrote long epics – ideals of heroism,
excellence , courage, honor
• Interested in individuals; heroes compete for
glory
• The Iliad and The Odyssey (750 BCE) about
the Trojan War
Early Greek Leaders
• Draco – 621 BC - codified Athenian laws
provided severe punishments ; written laws
mean judges can’t show favoritism or make
up laws; (“draconian” = harsh or severe)
• Solon – 594 BC – reduced land
mortgages/debt, freed people enslaved for
debt, allowed male citizens to serve on juries,
granted commoners right to vote in Assembly
Leaders cont.
• Cleisthenes – 508 BC – expanded democracy
by extending citizenship; began practice of
ostracism – banishing any citizen deemed
dangerous to the state
• Pericles – 461 BC – popular leader; opened
government to all men, paid salaries to public
officials – The Age of Pericles or The Golden
Age – height of democracy; art, science,
trade, manufacturing thrived
Types of governments in Greece
• Monarchy – one-man rule (king)
• Aristocracy – rule by a small group of
nobles
• Oligarchy – rule by few
• Tyranny – rule by one man who seized
power, favored by some people (unlike
today’s definition)
• Democracy – rule by the people
Drawbacks of Athenian Democracy
• Direct – more fair but all had to vote
personally (5,000 – 7,000)
• Could this work today?
• Women had few rights and opportunities
• Slavery played major role
• Orators (speakers) often used forceful
and coercive language rather than logic
to sway voters. Today?
Athens
Polis - city-state (basic political unit)
Acropolis – hill, central meeting place
Agora – below hill, open place for meetings
Citizens - those who took part in govt.
Hoplites – heavily armed infantry soldiers
Phalanx – marching formation shoulder to shoulder
Ruins of Ancient Sparta
http://www.history.com/videos/dec
onstructing-history-the-acropolis
Athens cont.
Democratic society
The Assembly was the major political
body
All male citizens belonged; all were
equal & had freedom of speech
Jury system for court cases
Had to educate sons - participate in
govt.
2 years military service at age 18
SPARTA
Military society & aristocracy
Harsh life
Invaded other cities to fulfill needs;
greatest warriors in Greece
If a child was born sickly or deformed,
they were left in hills to die
Sparta
Sparta, a preview:
http://www.history.com/videos/spartans
At age 7, boys were sent to military; at 60
they could retire; girls got rigorous physical
training also
Women were strong and fit to become
mothers
Suspicious of new ideas - NO CHANGE
Sparta lagged far behind other cities in
economic development
Deconstructing History: The Spartans
http://www.history.com/topics/ancienthistory/sparta/videos/deconstructinghistory-spartans
Acropolis
Temple Athena Nike
Temple of Olympian Zeus
Sanctuary of Athena at Delphi
Amphitheater of Epidaurus
Persian Wars
• 499 BC Persians control largest empire
• Persians want revenge for Greek support of
Ionian revolt (Greeks burned capital)
• Darius attacks Greece at (1) MARATHON
• Greeks outnumbered but win battle
• Pheidippides ran from Marathon to Athens
(26 miles) to announce victory – died;
modern day “marathon”
• Minor defeat for Persia but showed they
could be beaten; raised morale
Greek hoplite (soldier)-6th c. BC
Persian Wars
480 BC-Xerxes, son of Darius,
invades
Sparta leads the Greeks (united)
To delay Persia, the Spartans
slow them at (2) THERMOPYLAE
(a mountain pass)
Persian War cont.
Greeks lose (betrayed) & Athens burned;
all Spartans die
Spartans: Implements of Death
http://www.history.com/topics/ancienthistory/sparta/videos/spartansimplements-of-death
Greeks lure Persian navy into the shallow
waters of (3) SALAMIS - Greeks victorious
(4) PLATAEA – war finally ends
What were those 4 battles again?
• Marathon – Victory!
– Outnumbered like crazy, running man dead,
boosted morale – We can do this!
• Thermopylae – Loss
– 300 Spartans dead but ultimate Greek
victory saves democracy
• Salamis - Victory!
– Navy (Themistocles outsmarts Persians)
• Plataea – Victory!
Leonidas & the Spartans hold the
Persians at Thermopylae pass
Battle of Salamis, 480 BC
Thermopylae
Leonidas
Persian War: Turning Point
End of Persian expansion west
Persians don’t conquer Europe
Ushers in the Golden Age of Athens
Classical age begins – art, literature,
commerce flourish
Greek city-states maintain their
independence; Athens dominates
Golden Age of Athens
Pericles led Athens in this period (461 BC)
Delian League – defensive alliance;
Athens led
Peloponnesian League – led by Sparta
Athens stood for all that was the best in
Greek civilization
Deeply committed to democracy;
Assembly
The Agora
Classical Greece
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Writers
Philosophers
Pottery
Democracy
Olympics
Religion
Historians
Sculpture
Architecture
Columns
Philosophy – “Love of Wisdom”
• Socrates – used questioning method
(Socratic method)
– Examine one’s life
– Convicted of corrupting youth; killed (drank
hemlock)
• Plato – Student of Socrates (427-347
BC) started The Academy
– The Republic – first book on political
science (did not favor democracy )
Philosophy cont.
• Aristotle (384-322 BC)
wrote on philosophy,
science, & govt.
• Tutored Alexander the
Great.
• Which one would
have said, “An
unexamined life is not
worth living?”
History
• Herodotus – “father of history” –
described the Persian invasion;
embellished with fable and superstition;
not very accurate
• Thucydides – accurate account of
Peloponnesian War; eyewitness
accounts; facts
Theatre
• Dramas, outdoor amphitheatres
• Tragedies:
– Aeschylus – Agamemnon; Persian Wars;
gods provided justice
– Euripedes – Medea, criticized war,
prejudice, greed
• Comedies:
– Aristophanes – satirized political leaders
Architecture
• Parthenon – most famous; temple to
Athena (Wisdom) atop the Acropolis in
Athens
• Use of columns – Doric, Ionic,
Corinthian (elaborate, curly)
Science and Math
• Pythagoras – important principals of
geometry
• Hippocrates – father of medicine,
attributed disease to natural, not
superstitious causes
– Hippocratic Oath – uphold medical
standards – do no harm
Amphora Vase
The Olympics
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776 BC; held every 4 years; 5 days
Athletes traveled to Mt. Olympus to honor Zeus
Glory in athletic competition
Pentathlon most important event (5) – long
jump, javelin, discus, foot race, wrestling
Men only (naked)
Prize – honor and fame for your city state
Suspended by Romans who had become
Christian; seen as pagan
Reinstated in 1896
Modern Olympics
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S – 1896 – Athens, Greece - 1st modern
W – 2010 -Vancouver, Canada
S – 2012 – London, England
W – 2014 – Sochi. Russia
S – 2016 – Rio de Janiero, Brazil
W – 2018 – Pyeongchang, S. Korea
S – 2020 – Tokyo, Japan
W – 2022 – Beijing, China
Religion – The Greek Gods
• Lived on Mt. Olympus (12)
• Were immortal
• They were “human-like” – fought, had
human emotions (anger, fear, jealousy)
• Oracles to worship the gods
Democracy
• GREECE
• Direct Democracy –
citizens were
members of
legislature
• Citizenship based on
Athenian ancestry
• Women denied
political rights
• Slavery permitted
• U.S.
• Representative
Democracy – citizens
elect representatives
– Republic
• Citizenship based on
American birth or
naturalization
• Women – equal rights
• Slavery prohibited
Peloponnesian War (431 BC - 404 BC)
Series of battles between Athens and Sparta
Sparta eventually wins (military superiority)
Greece weakened over next century by fighting
Growing power to the North, Macedonia goes
unnoticed
End of classical Greece
Alexander the Great
Philip II of Macedonia, Alexander’s father, had
conquered most of Greece by the time of his
death
336 BC-Alexander from Macedonia (north of
Greece) becomes King (age 20)
334 BC - Alexander invades Persian empire &
wins major victory in Asia Minor
Therefore……
• PERSIAN WARS USHER IN
THE GOLDEN AGE
• PELOPPONESIAN WARS
USHER OUT THE GOLDEN
AGE
Alexander the Great
• Conquered Syria, Palestine, Egypt –
founded Alexandria
• 331 BCE – defeated Persians again and
ended Persian rule
• 327 BCE – Wants to reach Indus River –
after 3 years his men have had enough!
• 323 BCE – Dies at age 32
Alexander the Great – Hellenistic Age
• Global view – believed non – Greeks were
equal; encouraged men to marry Persians
• Hellenistic – mix of Greek and Middle Eastern
culture (Indian too)
• Koine Greek – language/dialect spoken during
Alexander’s reign – all the way to India
• Alexandria, Egypt – key city; home to poets,
scholars, writers, scientists, philosophers;
great library
• Built temples, baths, theatres, statues, etc.
Contributions - Hellenistic
• Aristarchus – Proposed that earth
revolved around sun (not widely
supported); sun far larger than earth
• Ptolemy – Earth at center of universe –
INCORRECTLY held for 1,000 years
• Eratosthenes – tried to calculate earth’s
true size; believed earth was round,
computed circumference (geometry)
• Euclid - basis of geometry (Elements)
• Archimedes – pi, lever and pulley
Hellenistic contributions cont.
• Epicurianism (philosophy) – humans
were free to follow self-interest, pursuit
of pleasure and happiness, virtuous
conduct, absence of pain
• Stoicism – founded by Zeno; live in
harmony with god; daily problems
would not disturb you, bear whatever
life offers (stoic)
• Colossus of Rhodes - 100 ft. bronze
statue; toppled by earthquake
Colossus of Rhodes