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Chapter 4 - Ancient Greece - Notes

The document provides an overview of Ancient Greek history and culture. It summarizes the rise and fall of early Greek civilizations like the Minoans and Mycenaeans. It then describes the development of Greek city-states and the influential civilizations of Sparta and Athens. The document also discusses Greece's conflicts with Persia, the growth of Athenian power under Pericles, and the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. Finally, it outlines the conquests of Alexander the Great and the spread of Hellenistic culture throughout the Mediterranean world under his empire.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
370 views9 pages

Chapter 4 - Ancient Greece - Notes

The document provides an overview of Ancient Greek history and culture. It summarizes the rise and fall of early Greek civilizations like the Minoans and Mycenaeans. It then describes the development of Greek city-states and the influential civilizations of Sparta and Athens. The document also discusses Greece's conflicts with Persia, the growth of Athenian power under Pericles, and the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. Finally, it outlines the conquests of Alexander the Great and the spread of Hellenistic culture throughout the Mediterranean world under his empire.

Uploaded by

Anmol Sharma
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 4 – Ancient Greece – Notes

Section 1 – The First Greek Civilizations

Geography
 Mountainous area resulted in an Independent people with own ways of life
 Surrounded by the sea = Seafaring people

Minoans
 Named by Arthur Evans after Minos, King of Crete
 Civilization established in the Bronze Age
 Sea trading people
 Destroyed by either a natural disaster or invaders
 Knossos was the central city of Minoan civilization

Palace of Knossos
 Royal seat of the kings
 Rooms brightly decorated
 Elaborate building that included:
 living rooms for the royal family
 Workshops for making vases & jewelry

The first Greek State: Mycenae


 Discovered by Heinrich Schliemann in 1870
 Ruled by powerful monarchies who lived in a fortified palace center
 Led by Warrior Kings
 Prided themselves on heroic deeds in battle

The Fall of Mycenae


 Weakened by earthquakes and internal struggle & fighting
 400 year Dark Age – few written records

Homer
 Epic Poems
o Illiad--story of the Trojan War
o Odyssey return of Odysseus

Trojan War 1200 BC – Achilles


 The capture of Troy by the Greeks, according to Homer, was accomplished by a trick
using the Trojan horse

Arete
 Greek ideal of excellence and virtue
Chapter 4 Section 2 – The Greek City-States
Greek City-State - Polis
 By 750 BC the Polis becomes the central focus of Greek life
 Town, city, or village & the countryside
 Where people met for political, social, & religious activities
Acropolis – fortified hill in center of the city
Agora – marketplace
Hoplite soldiers – heavily armed infantry or foot soldiers
Phalanx
 Block formation
 Soldiers went into battle by marching shoulder to shoulder
Tyrants
 Seized the government by force- took land from the rich & gave to the poor
 Gained & kept power by hiring soldiers
 Fell out of favor because contradicted the Greek rule of law
Sparta and Athens
Sparta
 Conquered their neighbors, the Laconians & the Messenians
 These people became known as helots (Greek word for “capture”)
 Became a military state to ensure control over the helots
 From childhood boys are trained to be soldiers
Spartan = “highly self-disciplined”
 men served a lifetime in the military (age 20-60)
 lives were rigidly organized & tightly controlled
Spartan Woman
 power over the household
 they enjoyed more rights and freedoms than Athenian women
 expected to exercise & remain fit to bear children
 expected husbands & sons to be brave

Spartan Values
 duty, strength and discipline over all
 discouraged from studying philosophy, literature & arts – might lead to new thoughts
Spartan Government
 Oligarchy – 2 Kings
 Ephors – 5 elected men
 Council of Elders
Daily Life in Classical Athens
 Boys were taught reading, writing, math, music, and physical education
 Education ended at age 18 when officially became a citizen

Athenian Women - Role of Women


 Strictly controlled -confined to the house
 Always had a male guardian
 Could not own property
 Learned to read & play instruments, but not given a formal education
Government
 Ruled by Aristocrats
 Economic problems = political turmoil
 Farmers sold into slavery
 Athens verged on Civil War
Solon – reform-minded aristocrat
Solon’s Reforms
 Cancelled all debts
 Freed slaves
 Would not take land from rich & give to poor
Internal Strife = Tyranny
 Pisistratus seized power in 560 BC
 Gave aristocrats’ land to the poor to gain their favor
 Succeed by his son & Athenians rebelled against him
Cleisthenes’s Reforms
 Gained power in 508 BC
 Created a council of 500 – Citizen’s Assembly
 Basis of Athenian democracy
 Laid the foundation democracy we know today
Types of Government
Monarchy
 Ruled by a single king
 Rule is hereditary
 Some rulers claim divine right
 Practiced in Mycenae
Oligarchy
 Ruled by a few group of citizens
 Rule is based on wealth
 Practiced in Sparta
Aristocracy
 Ruled by nobility
 Rule is hereditary & based on land ownership
 Social status & wealth supports authority
 Practiced in Athens
Democracy
 Ruled by citizens
 Rule is based on citizenship
 Majority rule decides the vote
 Practiced in Athen
Chapter 4 - Section 3 – Classical Greece
First Persian War
 Athens aids Greek Colonies against Persia
 Persian ruler Darius seeks revenge & invades at Marathon
 Defeated by Athens
 Pheidippides ran from Marathon to Athens
Second Persian War
 Xerxes (Son of Darius) invades with 180,000 men and thousands of warships
 Thermopylae – Greeks hold off the Persian army
 300 Greek soldiers were especially brave even though they were outnumbered
The Athenian Empire
Delian League
 Defensive alliance against the Persians
 Attacked the Persian Empire until liberated all the Greek states
 Headquarters was moved from Delo to Athens
Age of Pericles 461-429 BC - Height of Athenian power and brilliance
Direct Democracy
 People participate directly in government decisions through mass meetings
 Every male citizen voted
 Meetings held every 10 days
 The assembly passed all laws & elected public officials
Ostracism
 Athenians practice this in order to protect themselves from overly ambitious
polititions
Great Peloponnesian War
 431 – 405 B.C.
 Greek world divided: Athens vs. Sparta
 During 2nd year of the war – plague breaks out in overcrowded Athens, killing
Pericles and 1/3 of the people
 Fought for 25 more years until the Athenian fleet was destroyed at Aegospotami
 Athens loses 27,000 men and fleet
Sparta wins!
 404 BC--Athens surrenders
 Athens stripped of walls, fleet, colonies and confidence
 Both sides exhausted, Sparta also declined
 Petty internal wars over next 66 years caused them to ignore Macedonia to the north
 This would lead to Greece’s demise as an independent nation
Chapter 4 – Section 4 – The Culture of Classical Greece
Greek Religion
 Mt. Olympus- Home of the Greek gods
 Polytheistic
 Did not focus on morality
 12 chief gods and goddesses
 Oracle
 Festivals / rituals- were used to encourage the gods to be generous
The Olympics – 776 BC
Architecture
 search for perfect forms
 Based on ideals of reason, moderation, balance, and harmony in all things
 Most important form was the temples dedicated to gods or goddesses
 Parthenon
Greek Sculpture
 Lifelike nude statues showed ideal form of beauty
 Polyclitus – sculptor who wrote systematic rules for proportions that can produce an
ideal human form
Drama
 Tragedy – hero with a tragic flaw
 Oedipus Rex
 Written by Sophocles
 The Oracle of Apollo foretells how Oedipus will kill his father and marry his
mother
Comedyy
 Satire
Philosophy
 An organized system of thought
 “love of wisdom”
 Basic assumption:
o universe is orderly and subject to unchanging laws
o people understand those laws through logic and reasoning
Sophists
 Traveling teachers
 Forget the gods, concentrate on improving yourself
 No universal truths
Socrates – “The unexamined life is not worth living”
 Socratic Method
o Question-and-answer format to lead pupils to see things for themselves by
using their own reason
 Questioning authority = trouble
 399 BC tried for corrupting the youth of Athens
 Sentenced to die by drinking hemlock
Plato – “How do we know what is real?”
 Student of Socrates
 Greatest philosopher of all time
 Believed individuals could not achieve a good life unless they lived in a just and
rational state
 Ideal forms make up reality
 Expressed hi ideas in a book titled The Republic
 Established a school called the Academy
Aristotle
 Student at the Academy for 20 years
 Did not accept Plato’s theory of ideal forms
 Believed in analyzing through observation and investigation (scientific method)
 Favored constitutional government

Inventor of the syllogism


All men are mortal
A is to B
Socrates is a man
as C is to A
Therefore C is B
Socrates is ________

Herodotus
 wrote History of the Persian Wars
 “Father of History”

Thucydides
 Wrote History of the Peloponnesian War
 Considered the greatest historian of the ancient world
Chapter 4 – Section 5 - Alexander and the Hellenistic Kingdoms

Philip II
 Conquers Greece at Chaeronea 338 BC
 Murdered

Alexander the Great – son of Philip II


 20 when crowned
 Aristotle tutors him in Greek culture
 Inspired by Homer
 Great General-never lost a battle
 Brutal
 Brave and lucky

35,000 Greeks defeat 40,000 Persians at Granicus River

Major Battles at:


 Granicus
 Issus

Alexander adopts Persian ways--unites Persia with Greece


 200 miles into India
 Army refuses to go on, turns back
 Alex dies at 33 with no heir

Alexander’s Legacy
 70 new cities
 Created the Hellenistic Era
 Ended era of the Polis

Empire divided into 4 Kingdoms:


 Macedonia
 Egypt
 Pergamum
 Syria

The Spread of Hellenistic Culture


 It was an age that saw the expansion of Greek language and Greek ideas to the non
Greek world.
 Hellenism became the core of Western Civilization
 Greeks flocked to the new empire
 Greek language united the region
Hellenism: blend of Greek and local cultures – means “to imitate the Greeks”

Alexandria, Egypt
 Became greatest city of the age
 Lighthouse--one of the 7 Wonders of the World
 Library (first research library)
 Glass tomb of Alexander
 University, Zoo, museum

Science and Technology


 Ptolemy--earth is center of universe--main authority for science for 1,000 years
 Eratosthenes—Determined that the earth was round and calculated its circumference
(24,675 miles)
 Euclid—Wrote the Elements. It was a textbook on plane geometry

Philosophy and Art

Stoicism--Zeno
 Divine power controls the universe
 Natural harmony
 Control of desires=ethical life
 Believed happiness could only be found when people gained an inner peace by living
in harmony with God.

Epicureanism—Epicurus
 Gods rule, but no interest in humans
 Only reality is what we perceive with our senses
 Happiness comes from freedom from turmoil and worry.
 Happiness was the goal of life, and could be achieved through the pursuit of pleasure.

Art--away from classical idealism toward realism and drama

Hellenism dominated the Mediterranean and SW Asia for 1,000 years

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