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Ancient Greece

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Title: Ancient Greece


1
Ancient Greece
  • The Emergence of Western Intellectual Thought

2
First of all, why study the ancient Greeks and
Romans?
  • It is primarily from the Greeks and Romans that
    we, as westerners, received our basic
    understanding of science, mathematics, religion,
    and socio-political philosophy, developed our
    legal framework, organized our cities, educated
    our young, and began advanced medical practices.
  • The modern novel, as well as comic books, have as
    their origins the ultra-heroic and fantastic
    characters found in Hellenistic literature.
  • We, as a people, owe our world view to that of
    the ancient Greeks and Romans, both cosmopolitan,
    global economic and military superpowers whose
    distinctive worldview provide them with a sense
    of world citizenship.

3
Greek Mythology and Early History
  • The specifics of ancient Greeces earliest
    origins are lost in a unique blend of mythology
    and epic history a recounting of oral tradition
    captured in tales of heroism, trials, and
    tribulation
  • A series of ever-changing bards tales that both
    entertain and serve to educate the public.
  • Among the best surviving examples of such
    histories are the works by Homer The Iliad
    and the Odyssey

4
  • Not to be born is best, when all is reckoned, But
    when man has seen the light of day
  • The next best thing by far is to go back
  • Where he came from, and as quick as he can.
  • Once youth is past, with all its follies,
  • Every affliction comes on him,
  • Envy, confrontation, conflict, battle,
    blood,
  • And last of all, old age lies in wait to
    besiege him,
  • Humiliated, cantankerous,
  • Friendless, sick and weak,
  • Worst evil of all.
  • -- Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus

5
In the beginning . . .
  • Greeks are descended from Indo-European peoples
    who begin to populate southern Europe 12 15000
    years ago
  • Their specific origins are obscure, shrouded in
    myth and pre-history
  • They began to settle the peninsular land mass
    during the 8th millennium BCE and did so in a
    series of waves each one accompanied by the
    violent displacement of previous settlements
    and ending with the Dorian migration around 1100
    BCE

6
The Origins of Man
  • The ancient Greeks (from the word Graeci) held
    many and various views as to the origins of
    mankind, however, they almost universally
    accepted the fact that Greece itself was the
    center of the universe and that mankind
    originated there.
  • One thought was that man was autochthon, gegenes,
    an aborigine species that sprang from the earth
    as did the legendary men of Cadmus who rose from
    dragons teeth sown in the ground or that of Zeus
    changing ants into men.
  • Another popular and somewhat familiar creation
    myth has Prometheus create man from blocks of clay

7
Greek Cosmology
  • The Greek world view was shaped in part by the
    various tribal migrations and displacements, as
    well as, geography.
  • The Greek peninsula is small, approximately
    45,000 sq. miles or roughly the size of the
    modern state of Louisiana. It is rugged with an
    east-west mountain chain across its northern
    section and a north-south series of mountains
    down its spine in the lower part of the
    peninsula. These mountains at 8 10,000 ft
    serve to isolate the population into pockets of
    habitation along the few river systems, high
    plains, and coastal lowlands. The coastline
    itself is rocky, uninviting with foreboding high
    cliffs, occasionally offering some well-protected
    natural harbors

8
  • Each village, eventually each major urban center
    ( gr. Polis, poleis, pl), believed in its own
    legendary and mythical beginnings, established
    its own festivals, rituals, and means of worship.
  • Each community appropriated its own gods as did
    its citizens. The mythical heroes of ancient
    Greece descended from gods and many of its most
    prominent citizens made similar claims.
  • Even Plato, philosopher and rationalist, claimed
    that his parents descended from the sea-god
    Poseidon, and further claimed that the god Apollo
    had visited his mothers bed and that he was the
    product of that union

9
  • To the Greeks, gods and men were of the same
    race, the gods only being immortal and possessing
    a more extreme range of human characteristics and
    emotion.
  • While the gods could be benevolent, often times
    they were vindictive, envious, subject to fits of
    rage, and often amoral.
  • Other than the gods, the Greeks believed in the
    Fates, the inescapable force of nature which
    ultimately determined mans lifespan on earth
  • Here too, we have the legend of the Flood that
    destroyed mankind and a second story of creation
    or re-creation that predates the written
    biblical account and may have influenced the
    writers of the Noah story.

10
  • The gods demonstrated their concern for the
    Greeks in many ways. According to various
    legends it was the Greeks who received, before
    all other nations, the gift of viticulture
    (pruning), small grains, such as, wheat and rye,
    the olive tree, the fig tree, the first ivy , and
    the bean a native plant of Greece. In
    mythology, it was Prometheus who gave to man (the
    Greeks) the gift of fire.
  • The cultural history of the Greeks also lays
    claim to several inventions as first being Greek
    Argo, the first ship to sail the sea in
    Sparta, Myles (the Greek word for miller) had
    invented the first mill but, the Athenians lay
    claim for teaching men how to use fire
  • The Greeks readily conceded that the more banal
    inventions of human toil were acquired from
    others the trumpet, helmet, and shield from
    Lydia the war chariot and geometry they received
    from Egypt draperies from Libya the alphabet
    from Phoenicia and, the sundial and division of
    the day from Babylon

11
Greek Socio-political Life
  • As early fortified villages grew in size and
    population, larger urban centers formed. These
    autonomous communities, known as poleis, became
    for the Greeks the embodiment of the State, the
    religious, and economic center.
  • Citizens, normally adult males, determined the
    communal course of action in all affairs. Women
    and children, although citizens, had no political
    voice or legal rights. Slaves were not
    considered citizens and had no rights or voice.
  • At the heart of the polis was the agora or
    marketplace, it was the place to see and be seen
    and was a central focus in the lives of the
    communitys elite. The agora was the place where
    reputations were made or broken, deals and
    alliances arranged, and business conducted.

12
  • The Greeks were very curious about the cosmos and
    the world in which they lived. They struggled
    with questions of their existence and sought
    rational explanations for things around them.
    They made great strides in mathematics, i.e., the
    Pythagorean Theorem (a² b² c²), construction
    and architecture, metal fabrication, and ship
    building.
  • In philosophy, we continue to study Socrates,
    Plato, and Aristotle while literature students
    struggle through The Theban Plays, the works of
    Homer, and Sophocles Oedipus Tyrannus.
    Historians continue to garner more from the works
    of Herodotus (Historias) and Thucydides, whose
    history of the Peloponnesian War remains the
    seminal work of that disastrous affair.

13
The Golden Age of Athens, 420 365 B.C.E.
  • The idea of the Golden Age is as mythical as are
    the early legends of Greece. It is an invention
    of the 18th Century Enlightenment and the 19th
    Century Victorian Age in Great Britain in which
    the Greek revival took place
  • Despite all of the advances in art and philosophy
    that are admired today, ancient Greece was still
    largely a violent and dangerous place to live.
    When not at war with each other, the various
    Greek tribes fought against other external
    forces the Persians, the Egyptians, the
    Carthaginians, and ultimately, Rome. Not until
    Phillip of Macedonia finally united the
    individual Greek states in 338 B.C.E. were the
    Greeks ever united

14
  • Displaced by war, famine, excess population and
    natural calamities, the Greeks began to inhabit
    the areas surrounding them and colonized southern
    Italy, Sicily, the Ionian coast of the Anatolian
    Peninsula, the area adjacent to the Black Sea,
    and the numerous islands of the Aegean Sea.
  • These colonizers established their colonies along
    the lines of their particular polis of origin.
    At these fringes of the Greek world they came
    into contact with other peoples, cultures, and
    traditions. They established a growing network
    of trade and political alliances, subjugating
    some and, in turn, being subjugated by others.

15
Greek Family Life
  • For the elite upper classes family life was
    decidedly different than it was for the commoner.
    Monogamy was hardly ever practiced by the
    nobility who married repeatedly to establish
    important social and political alliances.
  • Disgruntled wives would often plot against or
    murder their philandering husbands and their
    offspring.
  • Infanticide was routinely practiced with the
    noted exception of the first-born male child.
  • Both men and women practiced homosexuality
    although it was more common for males than
    females (See Sapphos, author of lesbian poetry
    in ancient Greece). The Greeks practiced
    pedophilia, the body of a ten year-old boy would
    be a sought after sexual conquest in their
    society.
  • Greeks had an obsession with youth and living in
    the moment. Even older Spartans, who served
    actively in the military to age sixty, would dye
    their hair for a more youthful appearance.

16
The Greek Tragedy
  • Life in Greece reflected and, in turn, was
    reflected in the works of the famous dramatists
    Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides
  • The tragedies were performed at times of
    religious festivals and celebrations of the 5th
    and 4th centuries BCE and typically dealt with
    one or more of the following themes
  • The struggle of individual conscience and
    sensibility against the needs of the community
    (polis) and the power of the state
  • Arrogance (hubris) that blinds the strong or
    self-righteous individual to possible misfortune
    and defeat
  • The endless series of bloody revenges triggered
    by mad acts rising from anger and sexual drive
  • Tragedies strip human nature of its protective
    clothing and societies from its pious myths

17
Greek Communal Life
  • At the heart of Greek communal life was the
    Polis, or the city-state. Each citizen
    subordinated themselves to the needs of the
    polis, whether a cave dwelling or urban city.
  • Adult males served the polis in both
    socio-political roles and the military.
  • The surrounding farmers fed the urban population
    in time of peace and served as its infantry in
    time of war
  • The agora served as the community marketplace,
    chamber of commerce, and business development
    center.
  • Warfare was a community activity. The victors
    vanquished the losers by laying waste to their
    lands, fields and polis, slaughtering their
    defeated enemies, men, women, and children, or
    hauling off survivors for use as slaves. If they
    felt generous, they would allow the ruling
    citizens to commit suicide.

18
Persian Wars
  • Ionian Revolt supported by Athens angers Darius
    who brutally puts down the revolt and then
    declares war on Athens which culminates in the
    Battle of Marathon 490 BCE.
  • In 486 BCE, Xerxes begins preparations to renew
    the war against the Greeks. He assembles an
    large army of possibly 150,000 300,000 men,
    although Herodotus claims more than 2 million,
    and a navy of over 700 ships, many of them manned
    by Phoenicians, Egyptians, and Ionian Greeks. In
    a series of land and naval battles, Thermopylae,
    Artemesium, Salamis, and, finally, Plataea in
    480 - 479 BCE, the Persians are defeated.
  • (Nike, gr. victory)

19
The Peloponnesian Wars, 431 -404 BCE
  • Following the Persian Wars, the Greek city-states
    began to align themselves with one of the two
    remaining powerful city-states, Athens, with its
    demos and vast commercial enterprise, and Sparta,
    rich in its martial traditions and presumptive
    invincibility
  • Athens, a naval power and dependent upon trade
    wanted to eliminate any further threat posed by
    the Persians remaining in the Aegean and
    Anatolian Peninsular following the Persian Wars.
    Sparta and her allies had no interest in
    continuing the war against Persia or contributing
    to Athens growing economic prosperity and
    political power
  • During the period of the 440s BCE, the two
    superpowers engaged in a series of conflicts,
    without result, and then hastily agreed to a
    peace proposal that neither could ensure.

20
  • The war itself was conducted in four major phases
    over 27 years. Political in-fighting,
    internecine rivalries, and self-serving motives
    all acted to continue the conflict and prevent a
    suitable resolution during the time
  • The fighting ultimately ended when the Athenian
    navy was destroyed and a Spartan force entered
    Athens after destroying her food production and
    means of replenishment by sea. In addition, the
    Athenian colony in Sicily suffered an out break
    of the plague further reducing Athenian influence
    and resolve.
  • Although the terms of surrender were generous by
    Spartan standards, many of Athens citizens were
    slaughtered or committed suicide

21
Athens and Sparta
  • Athens, under the leadership of Pericles was
    governed by a demos, a body of all male citizens
    over 18 years of age (numbering around 43,000),
    which had the power (gr. kratia) to, among other
    things, legislate, establish treaties, and
    declare war.
  • It was, by the 5th century, a cosmopolitan city
    built around commercial enterprise and
    international trade. Its citizenry consisted of
    predominately lower and upper middle-class
    families, foreigners, and a significant number of
    slaves a total population of 150,000.
  • Athenians produced about 35 of their food
    supply, relying on imports to feed its populace.
    Its Sicilian colony contributed to much of this
    trade.
  • Athens controlled the treasury of the Delian
    League and moved the treasury form Delphi to
    Athens, which gave Athens control over its
    allies, forcing them to remain in the League and
    to pay tribute

22
  • Sparta, located in the southwestern Peloponnesus,
    was an oligarchy a militaristic society whose
    prime function was warfare.
  • A small population, never exceeding 35,000,
    Sparta relied upon conquest to expand its control
    over the Peloponnesus rather than establishing
    external colonies like other states.
  • Spartas conquest of neighboring Messenia in 730
    B.C.E. and subsequent subjugation of its
    population who had been reduced to serfs serving
    the Spartan state a.k.a. helots, from the Greek
    meaning capture
  • At the age of 7, young males were taken from
    their families and moved into military barracks
    where they would be trained in martial arts and
    educated in Spartan ways. Spartans served in the
    army until age 60.
  • Spartan women had more, albeit relatively
    speaking, rights than women in other Greek
    city-states, but they too served the state.
    Their primary function was to raise warriors.

23
Rise of Western Culture Classical Greece
  • Herodotus (c. 484 -425 B.C.E.) the Father of
    History. His History of the Persian Wars is
    commonly regarded as the first real historical
    work in western civilization, that is a
    systematic analysis of past events. His biased
    writings lauded Athens and presumed the wars to
    be a struggle between freedom (or state freedom)
    and despotism. He also traveled extensively,
    catalogued human behavior and is considered more
    of an anthropologist today.
  • Thucydides (c. 460 c. 400 B.C.E.) a failed
    and exiled Athenian general who participated in
    and wrote extensively about the Peloponnesian
    War. Unconcerned with the influence of the gods
    and fate, Thucydides examined the causes of the
    war in a clear, methodical, objective fashion,
    placing much emphasis on accuracy and the
    precision of his facts, and is considered by
    scholars to be the greatest historian of the
    ancient world

24
  • Classical Greek art is represented primarily
    through both architecture and sculpture.
  • The construction of the Parthenon, built between
    447 432 B.C.E. as a dedication to Athena, the
    patron goddess of Athens, perhaps best represents
    the style and characteristics of fifth century
    Greek architecture in Athens. It typifies both
    the enthusiasm for construction and the defining
    principles of classical architecture the search
    for calm, clarity, and the freedom from
    superfluous details. Greek revival architecture
    dominated the American scene in the 19th century
    and is commonly seen today.
  • In sculpture, the male nude form was the favorite
    subject of the classical Greeks who attempted to
    achieve an idealized form, life-like, yet
    perfected. Polyclitus, a 5th century sculptor
    authored a treatise (Doryphoros) on proportions
    that utilized mathematical ratios found in nature
    that produced the ideal human form, perfected and
    refined the dominant feature of standards in
    classical sculpture

25
Greek Philosophy love and wisdom
  • Early Greek philosophers were concerned about the
    development of critical or rational thought about
    nature and the divine forces operating in nature,
    however, most Greeks had no interest in such
    speculations.
  • By the 5th century, a group of philosophical
    teacher known as Sophists rejected such
    speculations as foolish arguing that
    comprehension of nature was beyond the reach of
    the human mind the improvement of the individual
    was a more worthwhile endeavor, therefore, they
    stressed the study of human behavior.
  • Sophists were wandering educators who sold their
    services as teachers of young men
  • They stressed the importance of rhetoric (or the
    art of persuasive oratory) in winning debates and
    swaying an audience
  • Sophists were typically skeptics who questioned
    traditional values in their society.

26
  • To Sophists there was no absolute right or wrong,
    true wisdom consisted of the ability to perceive
    and pursue ones own self-interests. Is this
    attitude beneficial or harmful to society?
  • Of Greeces city-states, the one most closely
    associated with philosophy is Athens. Socrates,
    Plato, and Aristotle all lived there making
    Athens the center for the development of western
    thought

27
  • Socrates (469 399 B.C.E.) a stonemason whose
    true love was philosophy. He left no writings of
    his own and what we know about him comes
    primarily from his pupils, especially Plato. He
    taught a number of students, however, he took no
    pay believing that the goal of education was to
    improve the individual. His teaching style made
    use of a question-and-answer method that is still
    in use today and is known as the Socratic Method.
  • Socrates believed that all knowledge was within
    each person and critical examination was needed
    to bring that knowledge out. Such was the real
    task of philosophy.
  • His questioning of authority, particularly in the
    aftermath of the Peloponnesian War during a
    climate of intolerance caused Socrates to be
    accused and convicted of corrupting the minds of
    Athens youth a sentence that resulted in his
    death

28
  • Plato (c. 429 327 B.C.E.) one of Socrates most
    famous students is considered by many scholars to
    be the greatest philosopher of the western world.
    Unlike his famous teacher, Plato wrote
    extensively, questioned reality, and arriving at
    the conclusion that a higher world of eternal,
    unchanging ideal Forms had always existed and to
    understand these Forms was to attain the
    knowledge of truth.
  • The Republic is a collection of Platos thoughts
    on government. As a citizen of Athens, he
    distrusted the masses as individuals could not be
    trusted to be ethical, just, or rational. He
    divides the population into three groups the
    ruling elite or philosopher-kings, the warriors
    who protected society, and the masses, those not
    driven by wisdom or courage, they were the
    producers of society, the tradesmen, artisans,
    and farmers. Plato also believed that men and
    women should have equal access to education and
    all positions contrary to popular belief
  • The Academy a school in Athens established by
    Plato to train philosophers. One of his students
    was Aristotle who later tutored Alexander the
    Great

29
  • Aristotle (384 322 B.C.E.) rejected the
    teachings of Platos Ideal Forms and taught the
    analysis and classification of things based on
    thorough research and investigation. His
    interests and writings were wide ranging and
    included topics on ethics, logic, politics,
    poetry, astronomy, geology, biology, and physics.
    He founded the Lyceum, a school to educate young
    men
  • In his political treatise, Politics, Plato also
    questioned the efficiency of the Athenian
    government, but he carefully examined 158
    different forms of constitutional governments and
    determined that constituted good forms monarchy,
    aristocracy, and constitutional government. He
    also recognized that each form had certain
    drawbacks and that a constitutional form was his
    favorite. Platos work influenced the writings
    of 18th century philosophes and enlightenment
    thinkers to include those of the American and
    French Revolutions.
  • With regard to women, Aristotle believed them to
    be inferior to men in all respects an influence
    that persisted well into the 20t h century of the
    modern era.

30
Unification and Conquest
  • Greece in the 4th century BCE was in turmoil
    following the fighting in the Peloponnesian Wars.
  • Macedonia, to the north of Greece, was inhabited
    by rural tribal clans who the Greeks thought to
    be barbarians, but it was in Macedonia that
    Philip II rose to power and would, by treaty and
    warfare, unite all of Greece for the first time
    in 338 B.C.E.
  • Philip united the Greek states into the
    Corinthian League.
  • Philip planned to invade Persia and end Persian
    influence in the Aegean once and for all, but was
    assassinated in 336 B.C.E. on the eve of the
    planned invasion.

31
Alexander the Great
  • Alexander was one of two children born to Philip
    and Olympias and he was estranged to his father
    until late in his fathers military campaign to
    unite Greece
  • At the age of 20, Alexander becomes king of
    Macedonia and leads his army against rival and
    rebelling Greek factions before embarking on an
    invasion of Persia.
  • Between 334 B.C.E. and his death on June 10, 323
    B.C.E., Alexander and his Macedonians conquer
    most to the known world Asia Minor, Egypt,
    Persia, and western India.
  • There are many inconclusive views of Alexander
    which scholars use today to portray him. He
    certainly was a capable military commander, both
    bold and brutal, but also visionary. He was
    distrustful of all but few of his closest
    intimates. He divided the administration of the
    conquered territories and often relied upon local
    leaders to remain loyal, which most did. He
    created opportunities to extend Greek culture,
    language, architecture throughout the empire.

32
The Hellenistic Kingdoms
  • Alexanders death resulted in a power struggle
    amongst his generals and the empire that was
    created so quickly, dissolve even more rapidly.
  • From 323 283 B.C.E., Alexanders generals and
    their sons bickered and fought each other.
    Eventually four Hellenistic monarchies emerged
    the Macedonian kingdom under the Antigonid
    dynasty Syria and Palestine under the Seleucids,
    the Attalid kingdom of western Asia Minor and
    the kingdom of the Ptolemies in Egypt, which
    lasted until 30 B.C.E. and ended with the death
    of Cleopatra resulting in the change of control
    of Egypt to Roman hands.

33
Quiz 3 Identifications
  • Mycenaean(s)
  • Iliad and Odyssey
  • Phalanx
  • Tyrants
  • Oligarchy and democracy
  • Delian League
  • Peloponnesian War
  • Oracle at Delphi
  • Battle at Chaeronea
  • Antigonid, Seleucid, Attalid, and Ptolemaic
    Dynasties
  • Use the instructions for doing identifications
    found on my website to properly complete this
    assignment
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