Chapter 4 - Ancient Greece - Notes
Chapter 4 - Ancient Greece - Notes
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
Homer
Epic Poems
o Illiad--story of the Trojan War
o Odyssey return of Odysseus
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
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’s Legacy
70 new cities
Created the Hellenistic Era
Ended era of the Polis
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
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.