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ANCIENT GREECE

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Title: ANCIENT GREECE


1
ANCIENT GREECE
  • Prepared by Anita Billeter
  • Palmdale School District
  • with funding from
  • Jordan Fundamentals Grant
  • Keeping History Alive Grant

2
THE EARLY GREEKS
3
GEOGRAPHY
4
THE LAND AROUND THE SEA
  • The area in which the ancient Greeks lived
    centered on the Aegean Sea.
  • Greece was ideally located for sea trade, and the
    sea became the Greeks link to other peoples,
    products, and ideas.
  • Most people in ancient Greece were farmers,
    growing grapes, olives, wheat and barley.

5
EARLY CIVILIZATIONS
  • The Minoans developed a system of writing,
    carried on rich trade, and were master builders.
  • The Mycenaeans learned from the Minoans and
    became the dominant civilization in the Aegean
    region.
  • From about 1100 B.C. to 800 B.C. Greece was in a
    decline called the Dark Age, when trade stopped
    and written language disappeared.

6
THE RISE OF THE CITY STATES
  • During the Dark Age, Greeces population
    increased and isolated villages grew into cities.
  • City-states were independent, self-governing
    units that included the territory around the
    city.
  • As the city-states grew, they began to fight over
    boundaries and other things, and some Greeks left
    to found new city-states.

7
ATHENS A CITY-STATE
8
THE EVOLUTION OF DEMOCRACY
  • The Athenians developed a form of government that
    enabled citizens to make decisions, called a
    democracy.
  • Tyrants taught citizens that by uniting behind a
    leader, they could gain the power to make
    changes.
  • Citizens in Athens proposed new laws, voted on
    laws, and served on juries.
  • Several other city-states in Greece also
    developed democracies, but Athens version was
    the most successful.

9
CITIZENSHIP IN ATHENS
  • Citizenship was limited to men over the age of
    18, and usually to those men whose fathers had
    been citizens.
  • Wives, children, unmarried women, foreigners, and
    slaves were not citizens, though they were
    protected by Athenian law.

10
THE ECONOMY OF ATHENS
  • Most Athenians were farmers, with just enough
    land to support their families.
  • As Athens became an international trading center,
    the barter system changed to the use of coins.
  • Wealthy Athenians were expected to contribute
    large amounts of money to government projects,
    and this kept money flowing throughout the
    city-state.

11
ANCIENT GREEK CULTURE
12
THE FAMILY OF GREEK GODS
  • The Greeks believed their gods controlled both
    the natural and human world.
  • All Greeks worshipped Zeus and his family of
    gods, each of whom had a specific role with
    particular duties and powers.
  • The Greeks built sacred places called sanctuaries
    to honor their gods.

13
SANCTUARIES TO THE GODS
  • The Greeks used sanctuaries to make sacrifices to
    specific gods.
  • Some sanctuaries were also places where oracles,
    or predictions of the future, were told.
  • The Greeks also honored their gods and goddesses
    by holding religious festivals.

14
GREEK DRAMA
  • Greek Plays were written and performed twice a
    year at festivals in Athens honoring Dionysus.
  • Most of the plays were about Greek gods or
    heroes, combining religion and history with
    entertainment.
  • Plays were either tragedies, in which the hero
    was ruined by a character flaw, or comedies,
    which made fun of a variety of topics.

15
A TALE OF TWO CITY-STATES
16
SPARTA AND ATHENS
  • The Spartans built a strong army because they
    feared slave uprisings from the many slaves they
    owned.
  • Unlike Athens, Spartas government was an
    oligarchy, with power remaining in the hands of a
    few families.
  • Spartas emphasis on maintaining a strong army
    shaped its economy.

17
EDUCATION IN SPARTA AND ATHENS
  • Spartan education focuses on physical skills and
    military training and began at an early age.
  • Wealthy Athenian education included reading,
    writing, arithmetic, poetry, music, and dance, as
    well as athletics.
  • In both city-states, formal education was
    reserved for boys.

18
ALLIES AGAINST PERSIA
  • Although quite different, Athens and Sparta
    joined to fight against Persia.
  • After several losses, the Greeks finally defeated
    the Persians at sea, and a year later, on land.

19
THE GOLDEN AGE OF ATHENS
20
THE AGE OF PERICLES
  • Pericles was Athens most outstanding leader
    during its Golden Age.
  • Pericles worked to protect Athens, to make it
    beautiful, and to strengthen democracy.
  • During the Golden Age, Athens was a center for
    art, literature, and ideas.

21
LIFE IN A CITIZEN FAMILY
  • Men spent time debating issues, selling wares,
    serving as jurors in the Assembly, and exercising
    in outdoor gymnasiums.
  • Women spent time weaving clothes, preparing food,
    and caring for children.
  • In the evenings, men either socialized with each
    other, or attended plays or religious festivals
    with their wives.

22
LIFE FOR NONCITIZENS
  • Metics were foreigners who were allowed to attend
    theater and religious festivals, and use the law
    courts.
  • Slaves had no legal rights in Athens, but some
    were paid for their work and a few bought their
    freedom.
  • In contrast to other slaves in Athens, those who
    worked in the silver mines labored under terrible
    conditions.

23
THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR
24
ATHENS AND SPARTA
  • Concerned about an increasingly powerful Athens,
    Sparta declared war in 431B.C.
  • A plague which killed many in Athens, including
    Pericles, and Spartas yearly destruction of food
    supplies, greatly weakened Athens.
  • Still, it took 27 years of yearly battles, before
    Athens surrendered to Sparta in 404B.C.

25
END OF THE GOLDEN AGE
  • After their defeat by Sparta, Athenian democracy
    was weakened.
  • Socrates was an important teacher and philosopher
    challenged his students to examine their own
    beliefs by asking questions.
  • Athenian leaders believed Socrates was
    encouraging students to challenge government
    authority, so they tried him and sentenced him to
    die.

26
ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND HIS INFLUENCE
27
THE RISE OF MACEDONIA
  • King Philip turned Macedonia into a military
    power by creating a full-time professional army
    and developing new weapons and battle plans.
  • Philip defeated the Greek armies and became ruler
    of Greece in 338B.C.
  • Philip reorganized the Greek army, combined it
    with his Macedonian troops, and set out to
    conquer Persia.

28
ALEXANDERS CONQUESTS
  • Though only 20, Alexander took firm control of
    his fathers kingdom.
  • With his troops, Alexander began a 20,000-mile
    journey of conquest.

29
THE SPREAD OF GREEK CULTURE
  • As Alexander conquered lands, he established
    colonies and cities modeled after Greek cities,
    and left Greeks to rule the conquered lands.
  • During the Hellenistic Age, the center of Greek
    culture shifted from Athens to Alexandria.
  • Alexandrias library became the largest in the
    western world, lasting seven centuries.

30
AFTER ALEXANDER
  • After Alexanders death in 323B.C., Greek culture
    still united the empire, but politically it broke
    apart.
  • Alexanders generals divided the empire and
    fought each other for control.
  • Eventually three generals and regions emerged as
    the strongest.

31
CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE GREEKS
32
GREEK ARTS
  • The Greeks are known for their lyric poetry, epic
    poetry, and plays both tragedies and comedies.
  • Painters and sculptors throughout history have
    learned from Greek art and sculpture.
  • The Greeks examined and wrote about the past
    critically and our word history comes from a
    Greek word.

33
GREEK IDEAS
  • Greek philosophers developed ways of seeking
    knowledge and asking questions that are still
    used today.
  • Greek scientists believed they could understand
    the workings of the world, and made important
    discoveries in astronomy, medicine, and
    mathematics.
  • In addition to achievements in the arts and
    sciences, the Greeks ideas about democracy and
    government have also influenced Western
    civilization.
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