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Archaic

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Title: Archaic


1
Archaic Classical and Hellenistic Greece
2
From early beginnings to long lasting legacy
  • Indo-Europeans move into region conflict and
    geography creates separate city-states joined by
    a common culture (language, religion and
    heritage)
  • Join together in leagues during the Golden Age
  • Culture spread by Alexander the Great during
    Hellenistic Era
  • Eventually absorbed into the Roman Empire

3
Greeks came together at the Olympics
4
Eras in Development of Greek Civilization
  • Minoan Civilization-
  • 2000-1400BC flourished on Island of Crete.Great
    trading power..
  • Myceneans (Achaeans)- 2000 BC E
  • nvaded Greece from the north. They built on the
    achievements of the Minoans.
  • Around 1250 BC they banded together under the
    leadership of the king of Mycenae to attack troy,
    a rival power. Troy controlled trading routes
    between the Aegean and Black seas. This war is
    told in Homers Iliad and the Odyssey. Composed
    about 750 BC According to Iliad Paris, a Trojan
    prince kidnaped Helen wife of the King of Sparta.
    The Spartan King and his brother Agamemnon, of
    Mycenae involved all of Greece in the effort to
    rescue Helen. After ten years of war Troy
    destroyed and drove the Trojans into exile.
    Heinrich Schliemann excavated a site in
    northwestern Asia Minor which is accepted as the
    ancient city of Troy. Found nine cities had been
    built at different times on the same spot.
    charred wood and destruction convinced him that
    this was the layer of Troy.
  • Dorians came down from the north.
  • Settled further to the south on the Pelopennisus
    Peninsula. Conquered many of the regions
    occupied by the Myceneans. The art of writing
    was lost during this time. This period is called
    the Dark Age
  • Age of the City States
  • Small city states or monarchies formed instead of
    a great empire. Golden Age of Greece
  • Delian League - Persian and Peloponesian Wars
    create a new era of differing alliances in the
    Aegean Sea. Trade provided wealth and some
    stablity. Also known as Classical Greece.
  • Hellenistic Greece
  • Persian occupation after the conquest of Greece
    by the Macedonian, Alexander the Great. Greek
    civilization spread throughout the world but
    mixed with other civilizations and changed.
  • Roman - Greco Civilization
  • Roman occupation after the conquest of Greece by
    the Romans.

5
Archaic Greece 1650 BC - 700 BC
6
Crete Minoan Civilization(Palace at Knossos)
7
Minoan Civilization
8
Fresco bull leaping
9
Knossos Minoan Civilization
10
The Mask of Agamemnon
11
The Mycenaean Civilization
12
Geographic Influences
  • Many islands in the Aegean Sea were close
    together.
  • This made trade and cultural exchange easier.
  • Short mountain ranges divided the country.
  • They prevented the development of a sense of
    Greek unity.
  • The Greeks could not produce enough food for
    their own needs.
  • They had to become traders.
  • The long coastline brought every part of the
    mainland close to the sea.
  • Greeks became fishermen, sailors and traders.

13
Homer The Heroic /Homeric Age Dark Age
14
Bronze Age Greece
15
"Hellenic" (Classical) Greece 700 BC - 324 BC
16
Greek City States
  • Hellos

17
Greece changes Geographically
18
Characteristics of all Greek city states
  • Small Size
  • Small population
  • An original polis (acropolis or high up place)
  • A public meeting place called an agora
  • This is how we identified whether or not it was a
    Greek city state.

19
Factors that brought them together and Factors
that kept them apart
  • Rugged Mountains separating the valleys
  • Rivalries between city-states
  • separate legal systems
  • independent calendars, money, weights and
    measures
  • Fierce spirit of independence
  • Common Language, Religion, and festivals
  • Co-operative supervision of certain temples
  • Belief that the Greeks were descended from the
    same ancestors

20
Greek Philosophy
  • Popular government - is the idea that people
    could and should rule themselves rather than be
    ruled by others.
  • This is the foundation of Greek Democracy but is
    not really a type of government.
  • It is more of a philosophy

21
Greek Systems of Government
  • Monarchy- is a government by a royal family-in
    ancient Greece a King. established a dynasty.
  • Autocracy- (rule by one person who has total
    control over all others)
  • Aristocracy- (government ruled by the wealthy or
    upper class) was comprised of the nobility, or
    landowning class that ruled the city-state.
  • Oligarchy - absolute rule by a few
  • Tyranny - (Tyrant) seized power, gaining popular
    support by promising to defend the poor from the
    aristocracy.
  • Democracy- the council of citizens helped form
    laws and limited the power of rulers.
  • Theocracy- government in which the clergy rules
    or in which a god is the civil ruler.

22
Geographic and historical influences in the
development of Greek city states
  • Sparta was located on the Peloponnesus Peninsula,
    an area that was good for growing grain but did
    not provide the protection of an acropolis.
  • The ruling class of citizens of Sparta was small
    in numbers compared with the slaves, or helots.
  • Due in part to a constant fear of outside
    invaders and of inside slave revolts, the Spartan
    aristocracy empathized military strength and
    uniformity.
  • The government controlled all phases of life for
    both citizens and slaves.
  • By doing so, art, literature, philosophy, and
    science were present only as they supported the
    military and only in a practical nature.
    Military might, as shown by strength, courage,
    endurance, and cleverness, along with devotion to
    Sparta were the most important values.
  • Individual freedoms were sacrificed.

23
4 Reformers/Tyrants
  • Draco
  • Solon
  • Pisistratus
  • Cleisthenes

24
Evolution of the system to a democracy
  • Draco
  • Wrote harsh code of laws
  • Solon
  • Canceled debts of the poor
  • Set up a court of appeals for citizens
  • Stopped debt slavery
  • CLEISTHENES
  • Determined that all male citizens over age 20
    could be in the Assembly
  • Set up the Council of 500
  • PISISTRATUS
  • Created a following among lower classes
  • Exiled nobles who disagreed with his policies

25
Athenian Government
  • In early times ruled by kings
  • Later, the aristocracy, selected representatives
    called archons
  • Merchants later replaced some of the nobility
  • Finally, the four reformers (tyrannts) and we
    have Periclean democracy

26
Spartan social stratification
  • Privileged rules class spartiates
  • About 10 of population
  • Descendants of Dorian invaders
  • Small landholders, tradesmen, artisans perioeci
  • Native prior to Dorian invasion
  • Enjoyed rights of citizenship only in their own
    home communities
  • Between 10 15 of population
  • Attached to the soil and provide auxiliary
    military service helots
  • Could become citizens and enter the perioeci
    class for military bravery
  • Slaves

27
Spartan Government
  • First the Council of Old which had to have
    approval of the popular assembly of spartiates
    over 30 years of age
  • Later, 5 ephors ruled

28
Athenian social classes
  • Nobility
  • Merchants, Artisans
  • Peasant
  • Slaves common Athenian practice to free their
    slaves
  • Metics foreigners allowed to live in Athens but
    could not become citizens

29
Citizen Rights
  • a) access to courts
  • b) no enslavement (but the very creation of
    citizen class makes the distinction that other
    people are slaves - that's what makes citizenship
    a privilege)
  • c) religious and cultural participation
  • d) death penalty was rare
  • e) becoming a citizen was nearly impossible
  • f) citizen duties - taxes, military service

30
Solon, The Lawgiver
Some wicked men are rich, some good men poor,But
I would rather trust in what's secureOur virtue
sticks with us and makes us strong,But money
changes owners all day long
31
"Hellenic" (Classical) Greece 700 BC - 324 BC
continued
32
Characteristics of Greek Art(mostly Athenian)
  • Expressed ideals of harmony, balance, order and
    moderation.
  • Glorified humans
  • Combined beauty and usefulness
  • Symbolized pride of people in their city-states

33
Golden Mean
  • Nothing in excess, everything in moderation

34
Architecture
  • Doric
  • Ionic
  • Corinthian

35
Architecture
  • Doric
  • Ionic
  • Corinthian

36
Architecture
  • Doric
  • Ionic
  • Corinthian

37
Black Figure Style
Red Figure Style
38
Practical but beautiful
39
The Classical Greek Ideal
40
Hellenic to Hellenistic Era
  • Greece has an archaic era
  • Minoans
  • Myceneans
  • Dorians
  • Age of the City-states
  • Greek Persian Wars bring them together under
    Athenian rule to defeat the Persians
  • Golden Age of Greece
  • Hellenistic Era
  • Greek values and way of life spread by Alexander
    the Great

41
ATHENS
Golden Age
Today
42
Greeks become teachers of men
  • Great Philosophers (SPA)
  • Socrates Know thyself (This above all else
    to thine own self be true, William Shakespeare,
    Hamlet, act I scene iii, lines 78-80)
  • Also An unexamined life (mind) is not worth
    living
  • Plato Academy in Athens and student of Socrates
  • The Republic
  • Philosopher Kings
  • Theory of forms (The Cave)
  • Aristotle
  • His logic is the core of deductive inference
  • Every A is B or No A is B
  • Some A is B Not every A is B
  • Major Term becomes the subject of the conclusion
    as the Major premise
  • Negatives and positives are a factor
  • Golden Age of Greece to the Hellenistic Era then
    ...
  • Greece absorbed into the Roman Empire and the
    Greeks teach the Romans
  • Later the de Medicis of Florence rediscover the
    teachings and treasures of the Greeks and use
    them to form modern Europe

43
Piraeus Athens Port City
44
Persian Wars499 BCE 480 BCE
45
Persian Wars
  • Marathon (490 BCE)- 26 miles from Athens
  • Thermopylae (480 BCE)- 300 Spartans at the
    mountain pass
  • Salamis (480 BCE)- Athenian navy victorious

46
Golden Age of Pericles460 BCE 429 BCE
47
Great Athenian Philosophers
  • Socrates - Know thyself! - question everything
    - only the pursuit of goodness brings
    happiness.
  • Plato - The Academy - the world of the FORMS -
    The Republic ? philosopher-king
  • Aristotle - the Lyceum - Golden Mean
    everything in moderation - Logic - Scientific
    method.

48
Socrates (470BCE-399 BCE)
  • He wrote nothing, but was a skilled debater.
  • He opposed the moral relativism and skepticism of
    many of the sophists.
  • He used the method of rational debate to seek
    essential definitions of truth, beauty, justice,
    goodness, and virtue.
  • The oracle at Delphi pronounced him the wisest of
    all.
  • He was executed by his fellow Athenians for
    impiety and for corrupting the young.

49
Plato
  • The Allegory of the Cave
  • The Republic
  • There is a higher world of
  • eternal, unchanging Forms that has always
    existed.
  • These Forms make up reality and only a trained
    mind can understand them.
  • What we see is but a reflection of that reality,
    a shadow of the true Form.
  • Government works best when divided into three
    groups.
  • At the top are philosopher-kings who must rule
    with wisdom and inspiration.
  • Warriors encompass the second group, and the
    third includes everyone else.
  • Finally, men and women should have equal access
    to positions.

50
Athens The Arts Sciences
  • DRAMA (tragedians)- Aeschylus- Sophocles-
    Euripides
  • THE SCIENCES- Pythagoras
  • - Democritus said all matter made up of small
    atoms. - Hippocrates known Father of Medicine
    with Hippocratic Oath

51
Acropolis
52
The Acropolis Today
53
The Parthenon
54
The Agora
  • Center of Greece society
  • Brings them together within the city state
  • Starts as the market place and becomes the center
    of democracy

55
SPARTA
56
Delian and Archeon Leagues
  • 499 BCE beginning of Persian wars which lasted
    throughout the 5th century resulting in a
    unification of the Greek city states under first
    Athenian hegemony
  • The predominant influence, as of a state, region,
    or group, over another or others.
  • then under Sparta influence finally ending with
    the defeat of both and Thebes controlling before
    the ascension of Macedonia throughout the Agean
    Sea

57
Peloponnesian Wars
58
Macedonia Under Philip II
59
Hellenistic Greece
  • 324 BCE 100 BCE

60
Alexander the Great
61
Alexander the Greats Empire
62
Alexander the Great in Persia
63
Formation of Greek hoplites
64
The Hellenization of Asia
65
Pergamum A Hellenistic City
66
Economy of the Hellenistic World
67
Hellenistic Philosophers
  • Cynics founder is Diogenes
  • ignore social conventions avoid luxuries.
  • citizens of the world.
  • live a humble, simple life
  • Epicurians founder is Epicurus
  • avoid pain seek pleasure
  • all excess leads to pain!
  • politics should be avoided

68
Hellenistic Philosophers
  • Stoics founder is Zeno
  • nature is the expansion of divine will
  • concept of natural law.
  • get involved in politics, not for personal gain,
    but to perform virtuous acts for the good of all
  • true happiness is found ingreat achievements

69
Hellenism Arts Sciences
  • Scientists / Mathematicians- Heliocentric
    theory- Euclid ? geometry
  • - Archimedes ? pulley
  • Hellenistic Art- more realistic less ideal
    than Hellenic art.- showed individual emotions,
    wrinkles and age

70
Division of Alexanders Empire
71
Roman-Greco society
  • Following the Battle of Corinth in 146 BCE Greece
    became under the political influence of Rome
    while Rome and many of its aristocracy became
    under the cultural and intellectual influence of
    Greece
  • Many generals and emperors attended the Greek
    Olympics and studied Greek science and philosophy
  • Greek teachers were brought to Roman provinces to
    tutor Roman children and adults
  • Galen, the named Roman accredited with great
    medical advancements in anatomy, studied even
    into the 19th century, was from Greek provinces
  • The Aeneid, the great epic story of the Roman
    civilization, written by Virgil in the reign of
    Augustus, has as its main character Aeneas who is
    first introduced in Homers Illiad. Aeneas
    travels from Troy to Rome.
  • Greece is later absorbed into the Byzantine
    Empire and later the Ottoman Empire, retaining
    its language and cultural heritage but losing
    regaining its autonomy until the 19th century.
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