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Title: Ancient Greece: Athens


1
Ancient Greece Athens Sparta
2
Introduction
3
YOU ARE AN ATHENIAN!
  • Be courteous. You have been superbly educated in
    the arts and the sciences, and trained to be
    extremely productive and capable in times of
    peace or war. You are an achiever. Until age 6 or
    7, you were taught at home by your mother, or by
    a male slave. From age 7-14, you attended a day
    school in the neighborhood where you memorized
    Homeric poetry and learned to play that
    magnificent instrument, the lyre. You learned
    drama, public speaking, reading, writing, math,
    and perhaps even how to play the flute. You
    attended four years of higher school, and learned
    more about math and science and government. At
    18, you attended military school for two
    additional years! You are proud to be an
    Athenian! Famed for its literature, poetry,
    drama, theatre, schools, buildings, government,
    and intellectual superiority, you have no doubt
    that your polis, Athens, is clearly the shining
    star of all the Greek city-states.

4
Ancient Greece ATHENS
5
Athens Education
  • In ancient Athens, boys started going to
    school at about the age of six or seven. They had
    to go to three different schools one for sport,
    one for music, and one for things like reading
    and writing. If they could afford it, a family
    also had a special slave called a paidagogos who
    would accompany their sons to all of their
    schools, making sure that they were safe, that
    they turned up and that they behaved. Paidagogoi
    might also help the boys with their work. If
    there was more than one boy in the family, then
    they would share one paidagogos between them.
    These special kinds of teachers were often very
    good friends to the boys they looked after.
  • The Three Kinds of Schools
  • Boys did physical education at the palaistra an
    open field. Men trained there at the same time.
    You had to take all your clothes off to do any
    sport. At the palaistra, boys learnt javelin,
    discus, long jump, running, boxing and wrestling.
  • In music lessons, boys mostly learnt the lyre,
    which is like a small harp. They were also taught
    how to sing along with the lyre.
  • At their third school, boys learnt to read and
    write and to do arithmetic. They also studied
    literature, learning passages from poets like
    Homer off by heart. The poetry was mostly
    selected to teach the boys about right and wrong.
    Sometimes boys were also taught drawing and
    painting. The teachers could be very strict
    students who misbehaved were hit with sandals!

6
Athenian Education continued
  • School Rules
  • All of the ancient Greek schools were private and
    the parents had to pay fees. Parents decided how
    long their sons should stay at school, and that
    sometimes depended on how much money they had.
    There were no laws which said that boys had to be
    educated for a set number of years, and some
    people received no education at all. Other people
    only went to one or two of the three schools. The
    Greeks didn't agree on which school was the most
    important.
  • Further Education
  • If a young man wanted to continue his education,
    and if he could afford it, then he might go to a
    philosophical school such as the Academy set up
    by Plato or the Lyceum set up by Aristotle. These
    schools were sort of like universities. If the
    young man wanted to learn more practical skills
    he could go to a teacher, often a sophist, who
    would teach him to make speeches and debate.
    These were useful skills if you wanted to get
    into Athenian politics. Alternatively, you could
    go to a school of medicine to become a doctor.
    Some boys from poorer families went on to learn a
    trade, often from their fathers.
  • Did Girls go to School?
  • Athenian girls were not as well educated as boys.
    Some of them were taught by their mothers at
    home, others seem to have gone to special girls'
    schools. Some girls may have learnt to read and
    write, but they were probably mostly taught how
    to do housework.
  • Definitions
  • Sophist a "wise man" who can teach people how to
    argue for anything, whether it's right or wrong.

7
Athenian Society politIcs
  • Aristocrats
  • oligarchic governments (from oligarchy meaning
    government by a few). These few were the
    aristocrats of the city-state.
  • From the 6th Century BC Athens had developed into
    a democracy (from the Greek demokratia where
    demos means people and kratein means to rule).
  • Pericles, Athens' leading statesman in the 5th
    Century BC said (according to the historian
    Thucydides). "Our constitution is called a
    democracy because power is in the hands not of a
    minority but of the whole people."
  • Citizens
  • An Athenian citizen was the male child of
    Athenian parents. Out of a population of
    approximately 315,500 in 431 BC, 172,000 were
    citizens. Women were not included. All classes
    could take part in government. The lowest class,
    in particular benefited from the new democracy
    and were thus very supportive of it.
  • Metics
  • Metics numbered approximately 28,500 in Athens in
    431 BC. They were resident aliens with no
    political rights. They were not allowed to own
    land and could not obtain citizenship. Although
    not possessing political rights, metics enjoyed
    similar privileges to citizens in some areas.

8
Athenian Society Politics continued
  • Slaves
  • Slaves made up the lowest class of the
    population. There were about 70,000 in Athens in
    431 BC. They could be owned privately or by the
    state.
  • Slaves came from a variety of sources some were
    prisoners of war, others were unwanted children
    who had been exposed and left to die, children or
    men who had been sold into slavery for debt and
    still others were children who had been born into
    slavery.
  • Women
  • The status of a woman was determined by her
    class.

9
Athenian Economics Occupations
  • MALES
  • Athenian politicians.
  • Doctors.
  • Some boys from poorer families went on to learn a
    trade, often from their fathers.
  • WOMEN Archaeological and written evidence gives
    us information about the different occupations of
    women
  • priestesses were most respected
  • hetairai (female companions) had the greatest
    social freedom
  • women from the "better classes" have been
    depicted on pottery as sharing affectionate
    moments with their husbands and children
  • middle-class women were occasionally able to go
    out to religious festivals
  • there is little evidence on lower-class women.
  • Written evidence seems to point to women being
    expected to keep a low profile and become
    proficient in spinning, weaving and household
    activities.
  • Athenian women had no political rights, very few
    legal rights, limited social contact and could
    not even choose their husband. However, it would
    appear that they could show independence or
    spirit when the occasion arose, e.g. fifth
    century playwrights such as Sophocles,
    Aristophanes and Euripides present their heroines
    as assertive, independent and intelligent women.
  • SLAVES
  • Privately owned slaves worked in the better class
    houses where many held positions of trust. These
    slaves were better treated than the state owned
    slaves.
  • State owned slaves worked on the roads, in the
    dockyards, in the mint and on public buildings.
    The lowest class of slaves worked in the silver
    mines.
  • METICS

10
Athenian Culture
  • PoetryHomer featured people trying to live up to
    standards of courage and honor. Pindar wrote
    poems that honored sports heroes. Sappho wrote of
    friendship and love.
  • DramaPoems evolved to songs and finally to drama
    when Thespis broke away and spoke lines on his
    own. Plays were a big deal to the Athenians. On
    opening day even prisoners were let out to
    attend.
  • TragediesThe Greek tragedies were plays that
    showed dignity in the face of trouble. They
    showed how noble people could be. The Universe
    was governed by fate or destiny in these plays.
    People who were too stubborn or proud would be
    punished by destiny. Aeshylus, Sophocles, and
    Euriopides wrote some of the great tragedies.
  • ComediesThe comedies of Aristophanes and others
    were satires of politics and current events.
    History The Athenians were the first to examine
    history with a critical eye. Herodutus and
    Thucydides were some of the historians of the
    day. Artists and Architects Paintings and
    sculptures showed the ideal person. The Athenians
    tried to make structures fit with natural
    surroundings. Notice how the Parthenon seems to
    grow up out of the rocks.

11
Athenian Culture Continued
  • PhilosophyPhilosophy is the love of wisdom. The
    Greek philosophers started with deep-seeded
    questions such as "Why are humans here?" and
    "How far is the universe?" Greeks looked for
    rational ways to explain the natural world. They
    believed in natural laws, many of which were
    wrong.
  • PythagorusPythagorus believed the universe was
    arranged according to natural laws. He discovered
    the Pythagorean Theorem, the relationship between
    the sides of a right triangle.
  • HypocritesHypocrites started a medical school
    and taught people to find the reason for
    illnesses. He separated medicine from magic.
  • Socrates 469-399 BCSocrates never wrote anything
    down. He believed that it was more important to
    gain knowledge of human beings than to
    investigate nature. He thought that one should
    get knowledge from reason, not emotions. "The
    unexamined life is not worth living." He taught
    by having discussions in which the truth of every
    statement was questioned. Socrates was killed for
    his ideas.
  • Plato 427 - 347 BCPlato was a student of
    Socrates. He believed that laws must serve the
    best interests of everyone. He blamed democracy
    for the troubles in Greece because too few had
    the brains to govern wisely. Plato wanted
    philosopher kings.
  • Aristotle 384 - 322 BCAristotle studied
    everything (plants, animals, and astronomy). He
    was the founder of science and biology. Aristotle
    analyzed speech to see what made for effective
    speeches.

12
GREECE - Geography
  • The geography of ancient Greece had much to do
    with how it developed. Isolated communities
    developed their own systems. The water was all
    around them. Much of the land was hilly. The
    Persians were to their east and Rome to their
    west.

The soil was not very good for agriculture.
There are a lot of mountains which made travel
very difficult. However, what Greece does have
is a lot of coastline. There is not one part of
Greece that is more than 40 miles from the coast.
Beaches are beautiful and plentiful in Greece.
For this reason, there were many sailors in Greek
history. Fishing was (and is) common as well as
trade. Also, Greece is in a very unstable
environment. There are many volcanoes and
earthquakes are common due to the tectonic plates
in the earth beneath the Greece landscape.
13
ATHENS
ATHENS
14
YOU ARE A SPARTAN!
  • Be proud! You have endured unbelievable pain and
    hardship to become a superior Spartan soldier and
    citizen! Taken away from your parents at age 7,
    you lived a harsh and often brutal life in the
    soldiers barracks. You were beaten by older
    children who started fights to help make you
    tough and strong. You were often were whipped in
    front of groups of other Spartans, including your
    parents, but never cried out in pain. You were
    given very little food, but encouraged to steal
    food, instead. If caught stealing, you were
    beaten. To avoid severe pain, you learned to be
    cunning, to lie, to cheat, to steal, and how to
    get away with it! Some of you are members of the
    Spartan secret police and enjoy spying on slaves.
    If you find a slave who is showing signs of
    leadership, you have orders to kill them
    immediately. You are fierce, capable, and proud
    of your strength. You know you are superior and
    are delighted to be Spartan!

15
ANCIENT GREECE SPARTA
16
Sparta Education
  • In Sparta, life was very different. There,
    education was mostly aimed at creating good
    soldiers, because every male citizen had to serve
    in the army for most of his life. Citizen boys
    had to leave home and join the army at the age of
    only seven. They were forced to live a hard life
    all together in barracks with only a mat on the
    floor for a bed. They were only allowed one cloak
    each year to wear and they were not allowed to
    have shoes. They were encouraged to steal food so
    that they would be able to steal when they were
    on campaign with the army. But if they got caught
    stealing food, they would be beaten. Sometimes,
    they were beaten just in order to toughen them
    up. They were also taught basic reading and
    writing and to play music, but physical education
    was considered the most important thing.
  • Citizen girls also received a state education in
    Sparta. They lived in special girls' barracks. We
    do not know whether these were as harsh as the
    boys' barracks. Much of their education was also
    physical education, as it was believed that it
    was necessary for mothers to be strong in order
    for them to have strong children. But it was also
    considered important to teach girls music and
    dancing.

17
Sparta Society and Politics
  • Every stage of Spartan life was planned. They
    wanted strong, fearless warriors. Men were
    trained to be warriors. Sickly babies were left
    outside to die. People had to bring newborn
    babies to the government for the government to
    decide if the baby lived or died. From ages seven
    to thirty men were required to be in the
    military. They were taught discipline,
    strengthened their bodies, learned bravery and
    endured pain (barefoot in winter, broken bones,
    etc.). Death in battle was the highest honor,
    they were taught to never give up.
  • Spartans were expected to marry by age 20, but
    the polis was more important than family. At a
    Spartan Marriage a woman's hair was cropped and
    she dressed like a boy. The ceremony was followed
    by a simulated rape. The couple did not live
    together he continued to live in the boys' dorm,
    and ate in messes with other men.
  • Polis gave aristocrats land, and helots to farm
    it. Men retired at 60, but most continued helping
    the government or taught in military schools.
    Women managed farms and households. They had to
    be healthy to produce good warriors so they
    wrestled, boxed, and raced against men. Women had
    more freedoms than in other societies.

18
Sparta Society and Politicscontinued
  • Oligarchy, a council of old men and five
    magistrates. Two kings had special military
    powers. The Spartans became a society of brave
    warriors, but too one sided.
  • In the 8th century BC, the Spartans conquered the
    "helots" (farm laborers). The helots worked for
    the polis, not for the landowners. Since the
    helots outnumbered the Spartans 10 to 1, the
    Spartans built a powerful army to guard against
    an uprising.

19
Sparta - Economics Occupations
  • Military Warriors
  • Sparta remained agricultural and there was no
    commercial class. They never used money, only an
    iron currency for internal use.

20
Sparta Culture
  • They did not develop arts, trading, literature,
    etc. They all dressed the same and ate at
    communal masses. Spartans had one goal - to be
    militarily strong. They were very much into
    sports. Tried to stay isolated (didnt like the
    army to be away because they feared the helots
    would rebel.)

21
Sparta Geography
  • Area of 3200 square miles.

SPARTA
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