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Chapter 5 The Greek CityStates

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The Greek City-States ... About 2000 BC, the Minoans built the first Greek civilization on the island of Crete ... Greek Drama. Greek Gods ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 5 The Greek CityStates


1
Chapter 5 The Greek City-States
  • Between about 3000 BC and 1000 BC, civilizations
    developed along river valleys in Egypt,
    Mesopotamia, India, and China. Some of the ideas
    and achievements from these early civilizations
    were passed on to the Greeks. In this chapter you
    will learn about early Greek history, the various
    forms of government that the ancient Greeks
    developed, daily life, and major achievements of
    the Greeks.

2
Chapter 5 Section 1Early Greeks and the Rise of
City-States
  • The Story Continues According to legend,
    primitive Greeks called Dorians moved into
  • Asia Minor, Crete, and the Peloponnesus
  • about 1100 B.C. Modern historians now
  • believe the Dorians never really existed.
  • They do know, however, that some invaders
  • did arrive at about this time, and that they
  • influenced the development of certain Greek
    city-states.

3
I. The Sea and the Land
  • Mainland Greece lies on the Balkan peninsula at
    the northeastern end of the Mediterranean Sea

4
I. The Sea and the Land
  • To the east is the Aegean Sea the Ionian Sea
    lies to the west

5
I. The Sea and the Land
  • All of Greece is close to the sea and many
  • Greeks became fishermen, sailors, and traders

6
I. The Sea and the Land
  • People from Egypt and the Fertile Crescent
    brought goods and ideas to Greece

7
I. The Sea and the Land
  • Geography caused the development of separate
    city-states instead of a unified kingdom

8
II. Early Greek Peoples
  • About 2000 BC, the Minoans built the first Greek
    civilization on the island of Crete

9
A. The Minoans
  • The civilization was named after King Minos, who
    built his palace in Knossos

The throne of King Minos, the earliest surviving
throne of the western world
10
A. The Minoans
  • Palaces and fine homes had running water and
    palace walls were covered with frescoes

Fresco found at the Palace of Knossos, with a
representation of the bull-leaping, a kind of
contest, probably religious in character, in
which both men and women took part
Minoan palaces
11
A. The Minoans
  • Many Minoans became sailors and traded for food
    because Cretes soil was poor

Fresco from the Minoan Culture on Thera Circa
1700 BCE
12
A. The Minoans
  • In 1628 BC a volcanic eruption and tsunami
    destroyed settlements and weakened the Minoan
    civilization

13
B. The Mycenaeans
  • Mycenaeans from the mainland controlled Greece
    from 1600 BC to 1200 BC, and conquered Crete
    about 1400 BC

14
B. The Mycenaeans
  • The Mycenaeans grouped themselves into clans led
    by warriors and tribes headed by chiefs

Mycenaean Warrior Krater12th century BC
15
B. The Mycenaeans
  • They built fort-like cities in the Peloponnesus
    and northern Greece and raided the eastern
    Mediterranean

16
B. The Mycenaeans
  • By about 1200 BC earthquakes and war had
    destroyed most of their cities

Ruins of the Mycenaean Acropolis
17
B. The Mycenaeans
  • Their most important contribution to Greek
    civilization was the adopted Minoan writing
    called linear B, used to keep records

18
III. The City-States of Greece
  • From the 800s to 700s BC the independent
    city-state, or polis, arose in Greece

19
III. The City-States of Greece
  • A polis included a fort, the city around it, and
    the surrounding villages that supplied food

Modern Athens
20
III. The City-States of Greece
  • The polis had 3 key aspects its geographic
    territory the community that it represented and
    political independence

21
III. The City-States of Greece
  • The polis represented the center of Greek
    identity and its inhabitants were intensely loyal

22
III. The City-States of Greece
  • City-states covered a small area of land, had
    fewer than 10,000 people, public buildings were
    built on an acropolis, and had an agora

23
III. The City-States of Greece
  • Each city-state had its own government, laws,
    calendar, money, and system of weights and
    measures

Relief showing Democracy placing a wreath on the
head of the Athenian "Demos" (body of the
citizens).
24
III. The City-States of Greece
  • All Greeks spoke the same language and shared
    many religious, cultural, and social
    characteristics

Greek Drama
Greek Gods
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