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Transcript
By Niall
£ Ancient Greece is called 'the
birthplace of Western civilisation'.
About 2500 years ago, the Greeks
created a way of life that other
people admired and copied. The
Romans copied Greek art and
Greek gods, for example. The
Ancient Greeks tried out
democracy, started the Olympic
Games and left new ideas in
science, art and philosophy
(thinking about life).
£ The Ancient Greeks lived in
mainland Greece and the Greek
islands, but also in what is now
Turkey, and in colonies scattered
around the Mediterranean sea
coast. There were Greeks in Italy,
Sicily, North Africa and as far west
as France. Sailing the sea to trade
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and find new land, Greeks took
their way of life to many places.
The timeline will show you some of
the important events in the history
of Ancient Greece
What was ancient Greece like?
Ancient Greece had a warm, dry
climate, as Greece does today.
People lived by farming, fishing,
and trade. Some were soldiers.
Others were scholars, scientists or
artists. Most Greeks lived in
villages or in small cities. There
were beautiful temples with stone
columns and statues, and open-air
theatres where people sat to watch
plays.
Many Greeks were poor. Life was
hard because farmland, water and
timber for building were all scarce.
That's why many Greeks sailed off
to find new lands to settle.
£ There was not one country called
"Ancient Greece." Instead, there
were small 'city-states'. Each citystate had its own government.
Sometimes the city-states fought
one another, sometimes they
joined together against a bigger
enemy, the Persian Empire.
Athens, Sparta, Corinth and
Olympia were four of these citystates, and you can find out more
about them on this site. Only a
very powerful ruler could control all
Greece. One man did in the 300s
BC. He was Alexander the Great,
from Macedonia. Alexander led his
army to conquer not just Greece
but an empire that reached as far
as Afghanistan and India
£ When did Greek civilisation
begin?
£ About 3000 BC, there lived on the
island of Crete a people now called
Minoans. The name comes from
their King Minos. Minos and other
Minoan kings grew rich from trade,
and built fine palaces. The Minoan
civilization ended about 1450 BC.
£ After the Minoans came the
Myceneans. They were soldiers
from mainland Greece, and were
the Greeks who fought Troy in the
1200s BC. After the Mycenean age
ended, about 1100 BC, Greece
entered a "Dark Age". This lasted
until the 800s BC when the Greeks
set off by sea to explore and set up
colonies.
£ The Olympic Games begun in 776
BC. This was the start of "Archaic"
Greek civilization.
£ Around 480 BC the "golden age" of
Greece began. This is what
historians call
"Classical"
Greece.
£ Greek theatre
£ Most Greek cities had a theatre. It
was in the open air, and was
usually a bowl-shaped arena on a
hillside. Some theatres were very
big, with room for more than
15,000 people in the audience.
£ All the actors were men or boys.
Dancers and singers, called the
chorus, performed on a flat area
called the orchestra. Over time,
solo actors also took part, and a
raised stage became part of the
theatre. The actors changed
costumes in a hut called the
"skene". Painting the walls of the
hut made the first scenery.
£ The plays were comedies (funny,
often poking fun at rulers) or
tragedies (sad and serious, with a
lesson about right and wrong).
£ costumes to make them look fatter
or stronger. The masks showed the
audience what kind of character an
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actor was playing (sad, angry or
funny). Some masks had two
sides, so the actor could turn them
round to suit the mood for each
scene.
The best actors and play writers
were awarded prizes - a bit like the
Hollywood Oscars and BAFTAs
today. The most famous writers of
plays were Aeschylus, Sophocles
and Euripides for tragedy and
Aristophanes for comedy.
Greek statues
Greek sculptors made figures of
people and gods. Statues were set
up outdoors in towns and inside
temples. A statue lasts much
longer than a painting, especially
when made of a hard stone, such
as marble. There were also statues
made of wood and bronze (a kind
of metal).
Over time Greeks made their
statues more lifelike - gods look
like human beings. There are
figures of people without clothes,
and statues of athletes in action (a
discus thrower, for example). The
Romans collected Greek statues
and made copies of them. Many
later artists imitated the Greek
styles too.
£ BBC - Primary History - Ancient Greeks - Growing
up in Greece