Early Greece - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Early Greece

Description:

Early Greece * The mythology can be found, http://www.greekfoodanddrink.com/culture/mythology/LegendsMinotaur.htm. The tale roughly translates, the god Poseidon sent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:181
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 64
Provided by: Stephani320
Category:
Tags: early | evil | greece | history | most | women

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Early Greece


1
Early Greece
2
Minoan Civilization
  • Sir Arthur Evans discovered ancient ruins on the
    island of Crete in 1878.
  • He named the civilization after the legendary
    tale of King Minos and the Minotaur.
  • The Minoans were advanced in many ways, one
    included the use of indoor plumbing.

3
Minoans Cont.
  • On the island of Crete the palace of Knossos,
    there is a palace with frescos depicting
  • Sailing
  • Fishing
  • Trade
  • Bull Jumping
  • Women Priests

4
Minoan Language
  • Linear A was the language the Minoans used
    however, scholars cannot translate it.
  • This is the reason why the Minoan Civilization
    still remains to be a great mystery to historians
    and archeologists.
  • Michael Ventris deciphered Linear B, and it is
    the earliest form of Greek.
  • Linear B is associated with the Mycenaean
    Civilization.

5
A Mysterious Disappearance
  • After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is
    reduced to ruins.
  • On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano
    erupted causing world wide upheaval. According
    to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or
    7.
  • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of
    Atlantis.
  • There also may be a connection to the Biblical
    Exodus in Egypt.
  • The civilization lingered until about 1400-1250
    BC, until the Mycenaeans conquered what was left
    of the Minoan civilization.

6
Mycenaeans Civilization
  • Historians consider the Mycenaeans the first
    Greeks, because they spoke a form of the Greek
    language.
  • While the Mycenaeans copied many aspects of the
    Minoans they were sharply different.
  • They were more war-like
  • Trojan War in Homers Iliad (Trojan Horse)
  • Powerful Kings dominated city-states
  • Built monuments like the Lions Gate

7
Downfall to Dark Ages
  • Many theories exist on why the Mycenaeans failed,
    but some include
  • Drought and Famine
  • Invasion by the Sea Peoples
  • Collapse of Trade
  • The Greek Dark Ages (1200 800 BC)
  • Decrease in population
  • Towns and cities were abandoned
  • Writing and Trade ceased

8
The Emergence of Greek City-States
9
Geography of Greece
  • Greece is mountainous!
  • Greek communities often times developed
    independently because of the mountains, thus they
    were diverse
  • As a result, they had their own government, laws,
    and customs.

10
Greek Polis
  • Around 800 BC, Greece stabilized!
  • Polis- City State
  • Each polis was unique, and developed separately.
  • Acropolis- a walled high area containing
    fortifications and temples and located in the
    center of a polis
  • Agora- an open area that served as a meeting
    place market in early Greek city-states
  • Agoraphobia- fear of open spaces.
  • The two major city-states were Athens and Sparta.

11
Athens was the first democracy.
  • Democracy type of government where people vote.
  • Athens was a direct democracy where people vote
    on everything. However, only citizens could vote
  • Breakdown of Athenian Social Structure

12
Sparta
  • Sparta was an oligarchy rule by the few!
  • Sparta was ruled by two kings
  • Helots outnumbered Spartans 7 to 1! This was the
    main reason for the strict war-like society
  • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure

13
Sparta
  • Sparta was an isolated city-state that was
    culturally and politically different from Athens.
  • Great military, army feared by other nations.
  • Fighting Machines!
  • During the Peloponnesian War Sparta sacked Athens.

14
Greek Military
  • This is a hoplite, a Greek infantry soldier.
  • Hoplites were middle class freemen who had to pay
    for their own weapon and shield.

15
Greek Military Phalanx
  • Soldiers get in a tight box. They each have a
    large shield and a 9 foot long spear.
  • Was used in the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC.
    The Athenians defeated the Persians with this
    tactic.

16
Greeks were Polytheistic!
17
The Golden Age of Greece
18
A Revolt leads to War!
  • Persia wants all of Greece in their possession.
  • Certain Greek city-states in Ionia have come
    under Persian rule. Growing tensions erupt into
    a revolt. The revolt leads to a war of epic
    proportions between Greece and Persia.

19
Where is Persia?
20
The Beginnings of the Persian War (490 479 BC)
  • The cause of the Persian Wars started with the
    Ionian Revolt in started the war in 499 BC.
    Athens sent troops to support the cause!
  • The Persian put down the revolt easily, but the
    actions of Athens angered King Darius.
  • It took several years to get the full Persian
    army gathered, but he sent them to Greece in the
    year of 490 BC.

21
The Major Battles of the Persian War
  • The First Invasion
  • Battle of Marathon (490 BC) Persians landed on
    the shores at Marathon, and the Greeks heard of
    this and rushed to meet the Persians.
  • Greeks used the military tactic, the phalanx.
  • Victory for Greeks!
  • Significance of Marathon
  • Greeks fight off a clearly more powerful enemy,
    and after this Greece becomes a dominant power in
    the ancient world.

22
Why does the phalanx work so well?
23
The Major Battles of the Persian War cont
  • The Second Invasion- In 486 BC Darius died but in
    480 BC, Xerxes (Darius son) sent more powerful
    force by land.
  • Battle of Thermopylae (480 BC) Victory for
    Persians
  • Delayed by Spartans
  • Athens captured burned
  • Battle of Salamis
  • Themistocles tricks Xerxes into leading his ships
    into the narrow straight of Salamis. Persian
    ships are to big and are slow to maneuver.
  • Persians defeated by Athenian navy
  • Battle of Plataea (479 BC) Persian army defeated
    at Plataea

24
Aftermath of the Persian War
  • Persia wasnt as much of a threat to the Greeks,
    but the Delian League was created just as a
    safe-guard.
  • Delian League was a band of city-states that
    sought to maintain defense against Persia.
  • Treasury was on the Island of Delos
  • Athens starts growing more powerful because it
    was the lead city-state in the league.
  • Athens begins to conquer neighboring city-states
  • Treasury money used to rebuild Athens, at the
    other city-states displeasure.
  • 30 years peace, agreement made by all Greek
    city-states. (This doesnt last long!)

25
Makings of a Greek Civil War!
  • As Athens overstepped its bounds on numerous
    occasions.
  • Built Long Walls
  • Used treasury money to rebuild city
  • Forced Delian League membership
  • Sparta headed the Peloponnesian League, and
    tension mounted once again. Only this time the
    Greeks were battling each other.

26
The Peloponnesian War (431- 404 BC)
  • First Phase
  • Athenian advantage Large Athenian Naval Fleet
  • Sea Battle Advantage
  • Spartan advantage Honed warrior society
  • Land Battle Advantage

27
Athenian Long Walls
28
The Plague Emerges in Athens
  • Pericles, a skilled politician came up with the
    idea to retreat within the city walls of Athens.
  • Unfortunately, sanitation problems grew in the
    city and many people started showing signs of
    illness.
  • Pericles dies from this mysterious illness
  • Athens is crippled, and a truce was formed in 421
    BC.

29
The End of the Peloponnesian War
  • Second Phase Athens strengthens and fights
    Sparta at the naval Battle of Aegospotami.
  • Athens losses 90 of ships
  • Sparta cuts trade lines and Athens cant recover
    from this deadly blow
  • Significance
  • Athens never regains former glory of the Golden
    Age.
  • Allows a Macedonian king to gain importance, and
    Phillip II of Macedon will conquer all of Greece.

30
Part Two Greek Achievements
31
Nature of Athenian Democracy
  • Three main bodies
  • Assembly- all citizens eligible to take part in
    government
  • The Council of 500- wrote the laws that would be
    voted on by the Assembly
  • Complex Court Systems- 6,000 people from the
    Assembly would hear trials and sentence
    criminals.
  • The Archon- served as chief of state (9 elected)
  • Head of both the Council of 500 and Assembly,
    elected for one year term

32
Definition of Athenian Citizen
  • Only free men over the age of 30 who completed
    military training.
  • Only about 10 of population could participate in
    government affairs.
  • Vote in all elections
  • Serve in office if elected
  • Serve on juries
  • Serve in military during war

33
Overview of Athenian Democracy
  • Important Aristocrats (Noblemen)
  • Draco- reformed laws
  • He believed that harsh punishment would solve
    unrest. Rich/Poor gap grew!
  • Solon- revised Dracos laws
  • Overturn harshest laws
  • Debt Slavery abolished
  • Allowed ALL men to participate in the Assembly,
    not all can hold office.
  • Peisistratus
  • Tyrant- seized power by force
  • Cleisthenes- created the Council of 500 to break
    up aristocratic family power

34
Greek Philosophy
  • Three Greatest Greek Philosophers
  • Socrates
  • Sought truths about broad concepts such as truth,
    justice, and virtue
  • Plato
  • Most famous work is, the Republic.
  • Timaeus and Critias (speak of Atlantis)
  • Aristotle
  • Used logic and reason to study the natural world.
  • Reason- is clear and ordered thinking
  • Logic- the process of making inferences
  • Taught Alexander the Great

35
Greek Architecture
  • Parthanon
  • Dedicated to Goddess Athena
  • Columns
  • Doric
  • Ionic
  • Corinthian

36
Greek Drama
  • Tragedies, plays that told stories of human
    suffering that usually ended in disaster.
  • Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides
  • Comedies, humorous plays that mocked people or
    customs.
  • Aristophanes

37
Greek Art
  • Statues very lifelike and active.

38
History Science
  • History
  • Herodotus first historian or father of
    history
  • Thucydides showed the need to avoid bias.
  • Medicine
  • Hippocrates the Hippocratic Oath all patients
    must be treated regardless of class

39
Alexander the Great
40
The Rise of Macedonia
  • After the Peloponnesian War between Athens and
    Sparta the two city-states just tried to control
    each other.
  • While fighting continues amongst them a new
    empire called Macedonia is on the rise.
  • King Phillip II begins to establish his power by
    conquering Greece.
  • Phillip is an accomplished assassin and kills off
    other competitors for the throne
  • He is captured by the Thebans 369-367, and learns
    Greek military tactics here.
  • King Phillip the II was the father of Alexander
    the Great.
  • Alexanders mother Olympias dreams of an
    auspicious future for the child in her womb.

41
Greek World in 363 BC
42
Phillips Death
  • After Phillips death Alexander inherits the
    throne at the age of 20.
  • He was taught military tactics by Aristotle.
  • Greece revolts! They no longer want to be ruled
    by Macedonians.
  • Thebes was made example of
  • Alexander crushed its army, and sold the people
    into slavery and burned the city to the ground.

43
Beginnings of an Empire!
  • Alexander wanted all of Persia, and started a
    campaign after he dealt with all Greek revolts.
  • He would find himself at odds with Darius III of
    Persia.

44
Alexanders Army Persian Army
  • Small
  • Well Trained
  • Fiercely Loyal to Alexander
  • Large
  • Disorganized
  • No common language

45
Alexanders Major Battles
  • Battle of the Granicus River, 334 BC.
  • Darius III didnt take Alexander seriously, and
    sent a general in his stead.
  • Alexander came very close to dying in battle, but
    he overcame his injuries to be victorious.
  • Battle of Issus, 333 BC.
  • Darius III now is angered and will confront him
    at the Battle of Issus. However, he still
    doesnt take Alexander seriously, and even brings
    his family to the battle site.
  • Darius loses the battle and flees without his
    family. Alexander captures them as prisoners of
    war, but treats them very well.

46
Battle of Issus Map
47
Alexanders Famous Conquests
  • Siege at Tyre
  • Alexander wanted to sacrifice to the Gods for his
    victories, but Tyrians refuse to let him into the
    city.
  • They feared he would take over the city, so they
    would not let him sacrifice an offering at the
    temple.
  • This angers him, and he decides to conquer the
    island.

48
Alexander takes Persia
  • Alexander is able to take Persia, and begin his
    empire.
  • Alexander burns Persepolis Persian capital to
    the ground.
  • He pushes on into India where his campaign turns
    sour.
  • His soldiers are starting to doubt him.

49
(No Transcript)
50
Bucephalus
  • Alexander the Greats horse, and he tamed the
    wild stallion himself.
  • As the story goes the horse was afraid of its own
    shadow, Alexander realized this and made blinders
    for the horse.
  • It died at the Battle of Hydaspes, the last
    battle Alexander would ever fight in.

51
Army Revolts!
  • The soldiers are tired of fighting and want to
    return home to see family and friends.
  • Alexander tries to persuade the army to continue
    on, but the men are ready to return to Macedonia.

52
Alexander becomes sick and dies!
  • Many have debated whether his death was
    intentional or natural.
  • Poison is a possible answer because troops were
    ready to return home.
  • Malaria is another possibility because of the
    climate in India misquotes are present in high
    numbers.

53
No Successor for Alexander
  • The Breakup of Alexanders Empire

54
Hellenistic Greece
55
Alexanders Empire on the year of his death
56
What does mean to be Hellenistic?
  • Hellenistic - The blending of Greek cultures
    with those of Persia, Egypt, and Central Asia
    following the conquests of Alexander the Great.
  • Question to Consider What is an empire? Give the
    definition and explain how Alexander the Greats
    conquests apply.

57
Blending Cultures
  • Best way to encourage cultural exchange is
    through marriage.
  • Alexander married Roxana of Bactria and Stateira
    of Persia.
  • He also did this to legitimize his claims to the
    Persian Empire.
  • Roxana bore Alexander a posthumous son (child
    born after the death of a parent). She named
    the child Alexander IV unfortunately, he never
    reaches adulthood because he was murdered in a
    political plot.

58
Blending Cultures Cont
  • Another great way to gain cultural exchange is
    through trade and education.
  • When Egypt built the city of Alexandria the most
    important achievement was the Library of
    Alexandria, which contained information on
  • Philosophy
  • Literature
  • History
  • Science
  • Medicine

59
Life in the Hellenistic World
  • What was the most significant change in
    Hellenistic society?
  • Recall the main political unit of Greece was
    the city-state.
  • After Alexander conquers much of the known world
    the political unit switches to kingdoms.

60
Hellenistic Achievements
  • Philosophy
  • Cynicism- rejected the ideas of pleasure, wealth,
    and social responsibility. Instead, they should
    live according to nature. Withdrew from society.
  • Many gave away possessions and became vagrants or
    wanderers. They were like homeless people in
    todays society.
  • Epicureans- sought out pleasure, developed close
    friendships with those that shared similar
    beliefs
  • Pleasure- Good
  • Pain- Bad or Evil
  • Stoicism- placed emphasis on reason,
    self-discipline, emotional control, and personal
    morality.

61
Hellenistic Achievements cont
  • Art and Literature
  • Art pieces conveyed emotion and movement.
  • Nike of Samothrace was carved in a flowing style.
  • Literature focuses on everyday lives.

62
Hellenistic Achievements cont
  • Science and Technology
  • Euclid Father of Geometry
  • Formulated many of the ideas about geometry that
    we still use today.
  • Eratosthenes
  • Calculated the size of the Earth
  • Archimedes
  • Great Inventor compound pulley Mechanical
    screw for drawing water

63
this PowerPoint is from http//www.wsfcs.k12.nc.us
/Page/10266
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com