Massive Review - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Massive Review

Description:

Pre-Socratics: Heraclitus, Thales, Anaximander, Aesop (fables), et al ... Pyrrhus in S. Italy (Pyrrhic victory) Punic Wars (with Carthage) 3 wars ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:71
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: Daniel2
Category:
Tags: aesop | fables | massive | review

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Massive Review


1
Massive Review
  • Legacy of Greece
  • Hellenistic Diffusion
  • Rise of Rome

2
The Legacy of Greece
  • Developers of
  • Philosophy
  • Science
  • History
  • Drama
  • Classical sculpture
  • Architecture
  • Politics
  • Why?

3
Geography
  • Rocky, mountainous, infertile, no great rivers,
    lots of harbors and islands make Greece difficult
    to centrally control and contribute to Polis as
    main unit of governance.

4
Minoans and Mycenaeans
  • By 1650 BCE, Mycenaeans settled in Peloponnesus
    and Minoans in Crete
  • Not a lot known about either
  • Minoans developed Linear A (still not cracked)
    and Linear B gt Greek
  • Mycenaeans conquered Minoans around 1450 BCE and
    expanded through area unchallenged until 1300 BCE

5
Dark Ages
  • Between 1300 and 800 BCE, one kingdom after
    another falls, probably to infighting
  • Chaos spreads, civilization all but lost
  • Greeks flee all through Aegean Sea (Greek Lake)
    seeking stability

6
Homer Hesiod
  • Blind Homer authors 800BCE, written much later
  • Iliad and Odyssey tell PART OF THE STORY of the
    Trojan War.
  • Iliad is about RAGE
  • Odyssey is about acquisition of wisdom
  • Flawed characters, larger than life gt tragic
    heroes
  • Hesiod
  • Theogony traces the origins of the Gods
  • Works and Days More myths of ancient Greece

7
Polis or City-State
  • A city and its surrounding countryside
  • Fiercely independent
  • Citizenship (males only) hard to join
  • Few joined federations and were thus pretty
    unstable, but serious communities
  • Some democratically ruled
  • Size varied by geography
  • No standing army, hoplites
  • Agora, center of polis government and market

8
Lyric Age 800-500BCE
  • Domination by Athens, Sparta and Thebes
  • Spread of culture across entire Mediterranean
    trade and colonies
  • Rebirth of literacy and culture
  • Archilochus and Sappho early poets
  • Archilochus was a soldier-poet
  • Sappho was bisexual, erotic poetess

9
Athens
  • Bounced between tyrants and democracy
  • Acropolis, a hill in Athens with many temples
    including the Parthenon, crown architectural
    jewel of Athens, continues to be built through
    Classical Period
  • Solon early law giver, steered toward democracy
  • Demoscitizens (males) are sovereign
  • Early democratic experience taught that a large
    group of people could run the state

10
Sparta
  • On the Peloponnese
  • War with Messenia forged Spartan identity
    mother to son, Return with your shield or on
    it.
  • Military values for entire society.
  • Later adoptees of stoicism

11
Classical Period 500-338
  • Begins with Persian War
  • Growth of Athenian Empire
  • Pericles, 494-429
  • Peloponnesian War
  • History, drama, philosophy, architecture
    flourished
  • Ends with Philip conquering Athens

12
Persian War
  • Persia tries to re-take the Anatolian/
    Lydian/Turkish coast
  • Is ultimately defeated by combined Greek forces
  • Documented by Herodotus

13
Athenian Empire
  • Starts with forming the Delian League
  • Athens (biggest fish) takes over League
  • Creates fear and mistrust in both allies and
    neighbors eventually resulting in Peloponnesian
    War
  • Pericles oversees much of Classical Athens

14
Peloponnesian War, 431-404 BCE
  • Primarily driven by fear of Athens
  • Goes on for over 25 years
  • Spartans lay siege to Athens, plague kills
    thousands
  • Alcibiades shamelessly plays both sides,
    eventually leading Athens in defeat

15
Birth of Modern History
  • Herodotus on Persian War
  • Thucydides on Peloponnesian War
  • Both extensively interview people who witnessed
    the events
  • Writings are still original source documents
    read today

16
Drama
  • Tragedy
  • Sophocles Oedipus Antigone
  • Euripides Medea
  • Aeschylus The Oresteia Trilogy about Agamemnons
    family
  • Comedy
  • Aristophanes Lysistrata, The Frogs
  • Knew each other and competed at annual religious
    festivals
  • Became model for Romans, Shakespeare

17
Philosophy
  • Pre-Socratics Heraclitus, Thales, Anaximander,
    Aesop (fables), et al
  • Hippocrates Oath-First do no harm
  • Socrates The truth-seeker, dialogs, executed for
    being a corrupting youth/being a nuisance
  • Plato Documented Socrates. Wrote The Republic, a
    utopian model
  • Aristotle Deduced taxonomy of everything, laid
    out the universe of knowledge

18
Final Act
  • Sparta humbles Athens
  • Sparta strives to take over
  • Thebans put Sparta down
  • Totally exhausted, Philip of Macedon takes over

19
Hellenistic Diffusion
  • Philip assassinated 2 years after conquering
    Greece
  • Alexander succeeds, conquers and spreads Greek
    culture across the world
  • Dies at 32 in Persia
  • Empire split into three soon thereafter
  • Seleucid, Ptolemaic (Egyptian) and Macedonian

20
Spread of Hellenism
  • Roads, mail stations unite empire
  • Greek cities with Greek garrisons, Greek
    administrators and Greek culture oversee
    everything
  • Polis/monarchy conflicts
  • Culture arts, architecture, language, etc.
    spreads, but local identities not subverted
    (e.g., Jews)
  • Greek brain-drain fear of local talent leave
    stagnation opening for Romans

21
Economic Scope
  • Forged one, broad commercial network
  • One currency
  • Protected commerce
  • Seaways drove navigation, mapmaking
  • Slaves important
  • Industry few breakthroughs
  • Agriculture text booksgtscientific approach

22
Religion
  • Greek cults, mostly civic or social, not
    passionately believed in, not politically imposed
  • Mystery religions, highly secretive, initiations,
    Tyche or fate-focused e.g., Cult of Isis

23
Philosophy
  • 3 major schools, each with adherents
  • Cynics (Diogenes, Get out of my sun) Joy of
    the simple life
  • Epicureans (Epicurus) Pleasure is chief good
  • Stoics (Zeno) Importance of deeds well done. The
    stoic plays a part, but does not change the play.
    Natural Law. Roman adoption.

24
Science
  • Academic, applied to weapons
  • Earth revolves around sun, circumference of earth
  • Archimedes catapults, levers, screw, compound
    pulley, math, floating bodies
  • Euclidean geometry
  • Botany
  • Medicine anatomy, surgery, drugs

25
Rise of Rome
  • Geographically ideally suited to take over
    Mediterranean
  • In middle
  • Bridging Sea to Africa
  • Better agriculture than Greece
  • Sheltered by mountains, near and far
  • Sea access to everything
  • Tiber provided water

26
Etruscans, Italians Rome
  • Etruscans neighbors to north, more culturally
    advanced. Conquered Rome and civilized them,
    Found Rome a collection of villages and made it a
    city.
  • Romulus Remus (wolf-raised) founded Rome in
    Mid-8th Century BCE myth
  • Begins to grow through sixth century

27
Conquest of Italy 509-290 BCE
  • Early history vague, til Livy (59BC17AD)
  • Rome ejects Etruscans in 509 BCE, republic
  • Period of war/diplomacy, built alliances with
    Italic tribes Cincinnatus, a stoic
    dictator-general
  • Slow stewady progress until Gauls/Celts sack Rome
    in 390 BCE
  • Rebuilt and conquer south Italy
  • Extend treaties, citizenship quasi citizenship

28
The Roman State
  • The Senate, noble elders who council the consuls
    and other magistrates. Senate sat year after year
    while magistrates changed every year.
  • As empire grew, former magistrates (consuls and
    praetors) governed provinces
  • Roman law jus civilegtjus gentiumgtjus naturale
  • Patrician (aristocracy)/Plebian (hoi polloi)
    struggles. Plebs literally walk out of Rome and
    army until rights are met. More victories won
    until all were equal under the law, yielding a
    stronger Rome.

29
Overseas Conquest
  • Did not deliberately set out to rule
  • In west, conquered, in east patrons
  • Pyrrhus in S. Italy (Pyrrhic victory)
  • Punic Wars (with Carthage)
  • 3 wars
  • 1st fighting over Sicily
  • 2nd, Hannibal and elephants almost win
  • 3rd in Africa

30
Old Values and New/Greek
  • Sallust world is conquered, Romans soft
  • Cato old values, paterfamilias
  • Slaves impact economics
  • Scipio Greek values, art, lit, drama, bathing,
    dinner. Civility, urbanity

31
Late Republic (133-31 BCE)
  • Republic not adequate to run an empire
  • Roman generals commanded armies that were THEIRS.
    A temptation burden
  • Farms, slaves, urban migration, slums
  • Armies become professional, careers
  • Generals start seeking political power
  • Julius Caesar takes All Gaul then Rome
  • Assassinated, great nephew Octavian/Augustus
    becomes emperor after beating Mark Antony and
    Cleopatra

32
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com