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Early Years: Ancient Greece

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... cont. Mycenaean Politics Mycenaean Society Society,cont. Decline Mycenaeans Dark Age of Ancient Greece: 1100- 750 B.C.E. Dark Age Migrations Dark Age, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Years: Ancient Greece


1
Early Years Ancient Greece
  • 2500 B.C.E. 750 B.C.E.

2
Introduction
  • Greece is the birthplace of the classical world
  • Produced great philosophy, politics and sculpture
  • Origin of democracy
  • Polis at the center of Greek life

3
Geography
  • Many small mountain ranges
  • No unifying river system like in Egypt and
    Mesopotamia
  • Produced some food, but not enough to feed
    growing population
  • Result Geography encouraged development of trade
    and the sea became a central part of Greek life

4
Geography, cont.
  • Greeks isolated from each other due to mountains
  • Each city-state independent and established their
    own values, system of government
  • Each was attached to their own independence
  • Each was small- people get to participate in
    politics
  • Also led to great rivalry and wars that damaged
    these great societies

5
The Peloponnesus
6
Economy
  • Majority of Greeks farmed or raised livestock
  • Products produced Olives, figs, fish, cheese,
    grapes and chicken
  • The Sea influenced the economy and every other
    aspect of Greek life

7
The Sea
  • Long seacoast
  • Good harbors
  • Helped Greeks become good sailors and traders
  • Their dominance of the sea helped the Greeks
    establish colonies throughout the Mediterranean

8
Map of Greece
9
Minoans
  • 2000 B.C.E. to 1450 B.C.E.
  • Earliest civilization to emerge in the Aegean
    region
  • On the island Crete
  • Named after Minos, a legendary King of Crete

10
Minoans Crete
11
Minoans, cont.
  • Great palace at Knossos
  • This was the seat of all kings
  • Artifacts reveal a complex and wealthy culture
  • Probably part of a great trade empire
  • We know that they had contact with Egyptians
  • They controlled the seas

12
Fresco Painting in Palace
13
Crete Palace of Knossos
14
Art from time of King Minos
Throne
15
Minoan Civilization
16
Minoans Collapse
  • Collapse suddenly around 1450 B.C.E.
  • Cause uncertain
  • Some believe it was a tsunami caused by a volcano
    on the island
  • Others believe invasions by the Mycenaeans caused
    collapse

17
Mycenaeans 1600-1100 B.C.E.
  • Named after area where they lived, Mycenae
  • An Indo-European people who came from central
    Asia into Europe
  • Entered Greece from the north, gained control,
    and established a civilization
  • Peak of civilization 1400-1200 B.C.E.

18
Map of Mycenae
19
Mycenaeans, cont.
  • Known for their fortified palace centers, built
    on hills and surrounded by walls
  • Royal family lived within the walls, everyone
    else outside

20
Mycenaean Politics
  • Various palace complexes in this region, with
    Mycenae the strongest
  • Formed a loose confederation of independent
    states

21
Mycenaean Society
  • Language linear B ( a form of Greek script)
  • Social Order
  • King
  • Commanders of the army
  • Priests
  • Record keepers/govt. workers
  • Free citizenry peasants, soldiers, artisans
  • Slaves and serfs

22
Society,cont.
  • Military-based/warrior people
  • Pride based on military heroics
  • Conquered new territory (Crete and other islands)
  • Did they conquer Troy as told by Homer in the
    Iliad?
  • Traded extensively throughout Middle East and
    North Africa

23
Decline
  • New invaders into Mycenae
  • Burned Mycenae itself, then other states
  • Enter a new period of instability and uncertainty

24
Mycenaeans
25
Dark Age of Ancient Greece 1100- 750 B.C.E.
  • After Mycenaeans collapse, population declines
    and food production dropped
  • Farming will not recover until 850 B.C.E.
  • Bad times saw people leaving mainland Greece and
    heading to southwest Asia Minor (Ionia)
  • Another group moved into the Peloponnesus, the
    Dorians, and also on Crete and Rhodes

26
Dark Age Migrations
27
Dark Age, cont.
  • Due to lack of agriculture, Greeks traded other
    goods
  • Iron replaced bronze in making of weapons now
    more affordable
  • Farming tools made of iron helped revive
    agriculture
  • Adopted Phoenician alphabet made writing and
    reading easier to learn
  • At end of Dark Age, Homers works appear

28
Homeric Age
  • Two great epic poems Iliad and Odyssey
  • Stories had been passed down from multiple
    generations, and recorded by Homer
  • Iliad The Mycenaens, under Agamemmon attack and
    sack city of Troy for revenge for the kidnapping
    of Helen (Queen of Sparta) by Paris (prince of
    Troy)
  • Book teaches values of heroism and honor and that
    a mans character is more important than his
    accomplishments

29
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30
Odyssey
  • This is the story of the journey of Odysseus from
    Troy back to his home and wife
  • Moral lesson morality is tested constantly, and
    virtue is always better than giving into
    temptation

31
Homers Importance
  • Greeks accepted these poems as recorded facts
  • Values and stories became marks Greeks measured
    themselves against
  • Greeks valued strength, honor, virtue, excellence
    yet these were aristocratic values (wealthy)
  • Homer provided a model of heroism that Greeks
    sought to emulate

32
The Polis
  • After the age of Homer, came the Archaic (ancient
    times) Age of Greece
  • This time period is marked by the development of
    the Greek polis as well as Greek colonization of
    the Mediterranean and Black Sea The polis was the
    center of Greek life
  • It consisted of a city and the land that
    surrounded it (think suburb)

33
Polis, cont.
  • The city was the center for politics, trade,
    religion, and social events
  • Each polis had different values (military,
    education, arts) and were distinct influenced
    by geography

34
Social Order in the Polis
  • Adult males had political rights
  • Women and children- no political rights
  • Noncitizens slaves and resident aliens (from a
    different polis)
  • There was great loyalty to the polis, but great
    distrust towards other poleis
  • Cause hostility and warfare

35
Summary
  • The geography of Greece influenced the
    development of its economy, political and social
    structure as well as its history
  • The formation of independent city-states, called
    poleis, led to innovation, creativity and
    advanced cultures, yet also to conflict and
    warfare that would bring ancient Greece to its
    ruin
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