Chapter 6-Greece, Golden and Hellenistic Ages - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 6-Greece, Golden and Hellenistic Ages

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Title: Chapter 6-Greece, Golden and Hellenistic Ages


1
Chapter 6-Greece, Golden and Hellenistic Ages
2
Golden Age of Greece
  • Lasted from about 480BC-430BC, only 50 years
  • Period between the Persian and Peloponnesian Wars
  • Athens was the center of Greek culture at this
    time

3
Greek Architecture
  • Temples had the finest architecture
  • Surrounded by a colonnade
  • 3 types of columns Doric, Ionic, Corinthian

4
Temples
  • Triangle shaped pediment with sculpture on top,
    which were painted with bright colors
  • Had a shrine inside with a statue to honor one of
    the Gods

5
Acropolis of Athens-Parthenon
  • After the Persian Wars, Athens rebuilt the Temple
    of Athena Parthenos (virgin) the Parthenon-on
    its acropolis
  • One of the most beautiful buildings in the world
  • Built of white marble
  • Perfectly balanced proportions 49
  • Used counter-optical illusions, called optical
    refinements, to make it look perfect to the
    human eye
  • Had a 38 ft. ivory gold statue of Athena inside
  • Heavily damaged in 1687 when it was used as for
    ammunition storage during a war, and blew up!

6
Vase Painting
  • Best preserved examples of Greek painting are on
    vases.
  • Scenes from mythology or everyday life, which
    tell us a lot about life in Greece
  • Either black on red, or red on black red being
    the natural color of the clay

7
SCULPTURE
  • Original Greek statues are rare today we mostly
    know them from Roman copies
  • Early Greek sculpture was stiff and straight,
    like Egyptian painting
  • By 400s BC, figures were graceful, rounded,
    lifelike, but more beautiful and buff than a
    real person could possibly be. Often portrayed
    the nude male body.
  • Examples
  • The Discus Thrower Poseidon Funeral Stele of
    Hegeso

8
Greek Art-General Characteristics
  • Glorified the human individual and showed the
    individual at his best, physically and mentally.
  • Was displayed in public for public enjoyment and
    the honor of the polis
  • Showed harmony balance, order, moderation
  • Much of Greek art was also useful for example,
    the vases.

9
Greek Philosophy
  • Literally-love of wisdom
  • Study of the basic questions of reality and human
    existence
  • Earliest Greek philosophers were interested in
    what the universe was made of, like theoretical
    physicists often called cosmologists
  • For example Democritus theorized that everything
    is made of tiny indivisible particles he called
    atoms.

10
Greek Philosophers-Socrates
  • Roamed around the Athenian agora, talking to
    people
  • Asked questions to force people to test their own
    ideas.
  • Socratic method-teaching through asking questions
  • Falsely accused of denying the existence of the
    Gods and corrupting the youth
  • Put on trial and found guilty.
  • Refused to escape was executed by being forced
    to drink poison.

11
Greek Philosophers-Plato
  • Student of Socrates, who wrote his own philosophy
    in the form of dialogues between Socrates other
    people in Athens
  • Founded the Academy-a school of philosophy in
    Athens
  • Theory of Forms-all material things are
    imperfect expressions of perfect, universal
    ideas, which he called Forms
  • Allegory of the Cave-We are like prisoners in a
    cave the material things we see are like shadows
    on the wall of the cave the cave the real
    things, the Forms, are outside the cave
  • Identified God with the Form of Goodness, the
    highest Form
  • Believed our Souls are immortal, and are
    reincarnated.

12
Greek Philosophers-Aristotle
  • Student of Plato
  • Unlike Plato, believed that material
  • things are real
  • Believed every field of knowledge should be
    studied logically studied wrote about almost
    everything
  • Wrote scientific works, classified many things,
    including plants and animals, into systems
  • Also studied wrote Ethics-what is good
    Poetics-analyzed drama Politics-analyzed
    different forms of government, and what makes a
    good government
  • Teacher of Alexander the Great

13
Greek Approach to Science
  • Scientists of earlier civilizations explained
    natural events as the work of the Gods
  • Greek scientists explained the natural world in
    terms of natural laws, that could be discovered
    through reason

14
Greek Mathematics
  • Pythagoras-philosopher who believed everything
    could be explained in terms of mathematics, and
    that mathematics was the ultimate reality
  • Developed the Pythagorean Theorem (though others
    may have discovered it separately)
  • Established a special community of
    mathematicians, who lived by strict rules and ate
    no meat (or beans!), which combined math with
    mystical religious teachings

15
Greek Science- Hippocrates
  • Regarded as the founder of medical science
  • Wrote 60-70 medical studies, based on
    observation, experiment and experience
  • Believed that disease comes from natural causes,
    not punishment from the Gods
  • Believed in rest, fresh air, proper diet.
  • Doctors still take the Hippocratic Oath, in
    which they pledge to follow a code of ethics
    based on the teachings of Hippocrates.
  • From the Hippocratic Oath Use treatment to help
    the sick. . . never with a view to injury . . .

16
HISTORIANS-Herodotus
  • Called the father of history-First historian of
    the western world
  • Traveled to Babylonia, Phoenicia Egypt and
    included descriptions of these countries in his
    writings
  • Wrote the History of the Persian Wars
  • Probably exaggerated at times, and
    fictionalized conversations
  • However, he usually noted whether he had seen
    something himself or heard about it from others.

17
HISTORIANS-Thucydides
  • 2nd great Greek historian
  • Wrote History of the Peloponnesian War
  • Tried to be accurate and fair to both sides far
    less biased than the writings of Herodotus
  • Tried to analyze the deeper causes of the war,
    and the causes of events during the war
  • Believed that studying the past helps us
    understand human nature.

18
  • Greeks were the first to write drama-plays with
    dialogue and conflict
  • 1, 2 or 3 actors also a chorus, a groups of
    12-15 performers, who spoke together and spoke or
    sang the lines

19
  • They performed wearing oversized masks of wood,
    cloth or leather.
  • Plays were often performed in honor of the god
    Dionysus.

20
  • The theaters were usually semi-circular and built
    into a hillside.
  • In Athens, there was an annual dramatic
    competition

21
  • The main types of plays were
  • Tragedies
  • Often the main character was punished for
    hubris-the sin of pride.
  • Comedies
  • Hilarious. Made fun of real people and
    institutions.

22
Tragedy
  • Most famous writers of tragedy
  • Aeschylus-wrote about religion and the nature of
    justice
  • Sophocles-wrote about the deeper Greek values
  • What do you do when Gods law says do x, but
    mans law says to do y?
  • Euripides-questioned accepted beliefs.
  • The Trojan Women-Tragedy written to protest the
    cruelty of the Peloponnesian War

23
  • Most famous writer of comedy
  • Aristophanes
  • Absolutely hilarious.
  • Clouds-made fun of Socrates for his theories
    about education.
  • Lysistrata-comedy written to protest the
    Peloponnesian War

24
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