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Early Greeks THE ALPHABET (FROM ALPHA TO OMEGA) POSEIDON’S ADVENTURES Meet the Minoans, the Mycenaeans, and the Minotaur Early_Greeks_FC.indd 1 IN PARTNERSHIP WITH 3/8/17 4:55 PM Reykjavik 2 Mountains and Seas It is thousands of years ago. You’re sitting on a beach looking out at a crystal-blue sea. Suddenly, in the distance, you see your father’s ship returning home. Your heart skips a beat. You can’t wait to see how many fish he’s caught. Or maybe he’s bringing back goods from a faraway land. You see islands on the horizon. Your father says there are thousands more you cannot even see. Maybe on one of the islands is a child looking your way, wondering what life is like for you on the ICELAND mainland. And what about FINLAND the mountains behind you? Torshavn Beyond the jagged peaks NORWAY are Helsinki deep valleys that are home to Oslo Stockholm kids and their families, living St. Petersburg on farms. Chances are you’ll Jaroslavl Rostov never meet them,DENMARK but you’re Gorkiy Copenhagen all Greek. You’re Sunderland all part of Kazan Moscow Minsk Tol Yatti anDublin ancientU.civilization that Gdansk Kuybyshev Berlin K. BELARUS POLAND IRELAND will change the world forever. London Saratov Warsaw Skelleftea Archangelsk Ostersund Vaasa Syktyvkar Vologda Tallinn Kirov ESTONIA Novgorod Riga LATVIA LITHUANIA Kaunas Orol NETH. Voronez Cork BELGIUM Paris Loire Ri GERMANY LUX. CZECH Krakow Kiev Lviv SLOVAKIA Volgograd UKRAINE 0 500 mi. r ve l GREECE IS LOCATMOLDOVA E AUSTRIA U R O P E HUNGARY ATLANTIC Nantes 0 500 km.Frunze SWITZ. ED on the Balkan SLOVENIA ROMANIA CROATIA Dan OCEAN River FRANCE A L P S PoITALY Peninsula in southuBucharest b e R er Krasnodar iv BOSNIA Toulouse I TA A p Ad Constanta Bayonne P Black eastern Europe. Italy, Sicily, and parts SERBIA L I A e n n riat Ebr y r e n e e i Sea BULGARIA i MONTENEGRO N c ne s oR (A peninsula is an of Turkey. The southS P Valladolid GEORGIA ea EN s Corsica N ive MACEDONIA Porto I B E R I A Madrid IN r SU Rome area of land that is ern part of Greece’s r e AZERBAIJAN v i R Ankara Barcelona ARMENIA ALBANIA BALKAN Tagus Naples L A PORTUGAL Sardinia Tyrrhenian P E NGREECE INSULA almost completemainland is called Asia SPAIN Sea TURKEY M e d i t Aegean Izmir M i n o r NSULA Lisbon P E N ISevilla e r ly surrounded by the Peloponnesus. It Ponta Delgada Adana r a Sicily Ionian Sea Sea Athens n e water.) Greece is is connected to the Tunis Algiers Gibraltar Tehran a Nicosia Crete TUNISIA n SYRIA Black Sea bordered by the rest of the mainland CYPRUS THRACE Bakhtaran Cyprus NI A Sea of CEDO Rabat LEBANON Casablanca Tripoli MA Mediterranean, by the Isthmus of Marmara Esfahan Baghdad S e a Pin MOROCCO ISRAEL Ouargla Mt. Olympus du Troy A s i a Aegean, Corinth. (An isthmus N IRAQand Ionian sM Basra Minor ts. Aegean JORDAN Seas. Ancient Greece is a strip of land that E G Y P T Canary Islands SeaALGERIA Cairo W E Ionian also colonized what connects two large Mycenae KUWAIT A F RSabhah ICA Sea Reggane Red PELOPONNESUS are today southern pieces of land.) EGYPT WESTERN N il e R Sea Knossos LIBYA Djanet S Al Jawf r Mediterranean Crete ive SAHARA Sea Riyadh QATAR Aswan U. A. E. Makkah (Mecca) MAURITANIA Nouakchott Early_Greeks_2-3.indd 16 SENEGAL SAUDI ARABIA Araouane MALI Bilma NIGER Khartoum CHAD ERITREA Asmara YEMEN 3/8/17 4:56 PM 3 u GREECE IS ALSO made up of thousands of islands and islets. The early Greeks who settled on the islands and along the coast of the mainland became great seafarers and fishers. Traveling on the sea inspired What would you have liked to be in ancient Greece? Fisher? Potter? Storyteller? Shepherd? Actor? Early_Greeks_2-3.indd 17 trade, migration, and the sharing of ideas, beliefs, and customs. r HARBORS, WHICH are places along the coast where ships can dock safely, became very important – and busy – in early Greece. By the fifth century BCE, the harbor of Piraeus, near Athens, became the busiest trading center in the Mediterranean. Merchants from all the Greek islands – plus Egypt, other u ON THE MOUN- mainland of Greece, people built communities in the valleys and plains. They cultivated olives, TAINOUS figs, grapes, and grain in the rocky soil. They also raised goats and other livestock. Communication, travel, and trade between mountain villages was very difficult. This gave rise to individual city-states instead of a unified empire. d AS GREEK SOCIETY developed and the economy grew, so did job specialization. Instead of making everything they needed to survive, many early Greeks specialized in one job – like fishing, selling goods, making pottery, or acting – to earn a living. parts of Africa, Asia, and parts of Europe – traded goods there. It was said that anything could be bought in Piraeus, including food, pottery, gold, spices, marble, and more. 3/8/17 4:56 PM 4 Early Civilization in Greece Crete is the largest of the Greek islands. In ancient times, it was home to two civilizations, the Minoans and the Mycenaeans. Imagine living on Crete so many years ago. . . . If you’re a Minoan, you might live near a palace with so many rooms and passageways, it’s like a maze. According to legend, King Minos built the labyrinth, or maze, to house the Minotaur. (That’s a mythical beast with the head and tail of a bull and the body of a man.) But that’s just a legend. Your life centers on the palace. It’s where your mom goes to the market, your dad discusses the news with friends, and your family attends sporting events. Like most Minoans, you love theater, art, and music. You dream of becoming an actor, or maybe you’ll be a great sailor, like your dad. Perhaps you’re a Mycenaean, whose family moved south to Crete from the Peloponnesus. Your family may be poor, but you’re happy living on your farm. You love to hear stories about great warrior kings like Agamemnon who, according to legend, fought in the Trojan War. u ANCIENT CRETE bustled with cities but it also had rich farmland. In The Odyssey, the great blind Greek poet Homer said Crete was a “handsome country, fertile, thronged [crowded] with people. . . .”* THE MINOANS BUILT cities around lavish palaces. Everything happened at the palace, from religious worship and trade to government and entertainment. The largest was built in 1700 BCE in the city of Knossos. r THE MINOAN civilization began in 2000 BCE and was named after the mythical king Minos. According to Greek mythology, Minos was the son of the god Zeus and the goddess Europa. *Homer. The Odyssey. Robert Fagles, trans. Penguin Group, 1996. Early_Greeks_4-5.indd 16 3/8/17 4:58 PM 5 u THE MINOAN civilization fell in about 1450 BCE. Many say it was because of a Mycenaean invasion. Others blame a volcanic eruption, earthquake, or fire. Some believe it was a combination of all these events. d SOME SAY THE Mycenaean civilization fell because it was invaded by the Dorians, a people from northern Greece. Others blame economic troubles. There is a theory that the Sea Peoples, a mysterious band of naval raiders, caused the downfall. Whatever caused it, that collapse started the Greek Dark Ages. u THE MINOANS were great sailors and successful traders. They traded olive oil, wool, and pottery for things like copper, tin, and gold from the Egyptians and Mesopotamians. Early_Greeks_4-5.indd 17 They developed a system of writing to keep track of their trading activities. Examples of Minoan writing still exist, but no one has been able to translate them – yet. u FROM ABOUT 1450 BCE to 1100 BCE, the Mycenaean civilization ruled over Crete and the Peloponnesus. Named after the city of Mycenae, Mycenaeans were mostly peasants, or poor farmers, who were ruled over by warrior kings. They were greatly influenced by the Minoans. They adopted many Minoan customs as their own. This cultural borrowing included sailing techniques, a writing system, and pottery styles. Because they spoke an early form of Greek, they’re called the first Greeks. Try This! Greek myths are filled with imaginary creatures like the Minotaur. Draw or describe your own mythical beast. What is its special power? 3/8/17 4:58 PM 6 Legends and Myths A bard has come to town! You cheer when you hear the news. Your friends gather around to hear the traveling storyteller sing, play music, and tell stories about gods, heroes, and adventure. Storytelling was a very important part of early Greek life. Myths and legends were not only entertaining, they were also the basis of the Greek religion and taught valuable lessons. They were passed down from generation to generation by word of mouth. From myths about the gods to fables and epic poems about Greek history, these stories survived thousands of years, through prosperity and the Dark Ages. They greatly influenced world culture, language, and literature – and they still do today. Early_Greeks_6-7.indd 16 r GREEK MYTHS, which are stories about gods and heroes, explained nature, history, and humankind’s place in the world. Put together, all the myths make up a mythology. Each god and goddess in Greek mythology ruled over a different domain and had a unique power. The most powerful Greek god was Zeus, the god of thunder and lightning. Zeus ruled over all the other gods. 3/8/17 5:00 PM 7 u HOMER WAS ONE OF the ancient world’s greatest poets. The Iliad and The Odyssey are two of the best-known epic poems, or long poems about heroic deeds. Yet we know almost nothing about Homer. We think he was blind, because the bard in The Odyssey cannot see. Many believe Homer was born in Ionia, in Asia Minor, between 1200 BCE and 700 BCE. Some think he’s just a legend; they believe the works were created by a group of poets. Whatever the truth is, thousands of verses of poetry that we call Homer’s were passed down by word of mouth after he died. These epic poems helped define Greek identity, and they have influenced literature through the ages. “No man or woman born, coward or brave, can shun his destiny.”* — Homer, The Iliad *From Myths of Greece and Rome by H. A. Guerber. American Book Company, 1921. u MANY GREEK legends, or stories about heroes or events passed down through the ages, were based on real events. The Trojan War was an actual war in 1200 BCE. It inspired Homer to write his epic poems. The Odyssey tells the adventures a man named Odysseus has on his ten-year journey home from the war. It includes the tale of the Trojan Horse, a trick the Greeks used to get into the walled city of Troy. r THE TROJAN WAR ended around the time the Greek Dark Ages began. From about 1100 BCE to 750 BCE, trade and the arts in Greece declined. Poverty increased, and cities were abandoned. Greeks began migrating from the mainland to the islands in search of a better life. Writing all but disappeared. Greek myths and legends survived, thanks to storytellers. d IF THERE WAS A bright spot in the Dark Ages, it was the introduction of iron. Iron is stronger and hard- er than bronze, which is made of copper, tin, and other metals. Most likely, iron was first brought to Greece from Cyprus or the Near East. Iron led to great changes in Greece, including the beginning of the Iron Age. Homer’s The Odyssey and The Iliad are great adventures filled with heroes and mythical beasts. Write your own adventure. It’s going to be epic! Early_Greeks_6-7.indd 17 3/8/17 5:00 PM 8 d SOME OF THE greatest city-states included Sparta, Argos, and Corinth. As home to more than 20,000 people, Athens was the largest. Most city-states centered around an acropolis, or “city on a hill.” An acropolis housed temples and gave citizens a place to take shelter in case of attack. Beyond the acropolis were houses, farms, and an agora, or openair market. The agora was the city-state’s center of trading and government. The Rise of Greek City-States The myths and legends of ancient Greece survived through a dark time that began after the Trojan War. Cities became empty, art almost disappeared, and there were no books for hundreds of years. Then, around 750 BCE, the Greek Dark Ages finally ended. It was the dawn of a Early_Greeks_8-9.indd 16 r IN THE EIGHTH century BCE, each city-state was ruled by an oligarchy, or small group of wealthy aristocrats. Many oligarchies found it hard to share power. Some ambitious aristocrats wanted to be the sole leader. By the seventh century BCE, many city-states were under the rule of tyrants, or sole leaders who rule by force. In the fifth century BCE, some city-states, like Athens, overthrew tyrants and created democracy, or rule by the people. new time – the age of the Greek polis, or city-state. If you’d been alive in Greece back then, you might have lived on a farm on the mainland. Or perhaps you’d have dwelt in a fishing village along the coast. Maybe you’d have been at home in a city on an island. Wherever you lived, your community would have been part of a city-state. All city-states were independent and separated by geography from other city-states. 3/8/17 5:02 PM “Man is made by nature to live in a polis.”* *Aristotle. Politics. Ernest Barker, trans. Oxford University Press, 1995. l THE GREEK philosopher Aristotle thought it was natural for people to live in a polis, where free people were citizens. u COMMERCE, OR large-scale trade, flourished among the city-states. They traded goods such as olive oil, grain, wood, and pottery. They also traded weapons and tools made of iron. Early_Greeks_8-9.indd 17 r THE INTRODUCTION of iron in the 700s BCE helped change Greece forever. Tools and weapons made of iron were stronger than those made of bronze. Strong iron tools helped Greek farmers produce more food. More food meant more people. More people meant there was more competition for resources and land. 9 l IN A GREEK democracy, citizens were not subjects of a monarchy or oligarchy. Male citizens over the age of 18 could vote for their leaders, serve on juries, and help make laws. Citizenship meant that ordinary people helped make the decisions for their city-state. Greek democratic values have survived over the centuries and greatly influenced modern democracies. l IN SEARCH OF more land and resources, Greece founded colonies in Europe, North Africa, and Asia Minor. (A colony is a country, or area of a country, that is under the political control of another country.) Greek control over the colonies did not last, but the influence of Greek art, customs, goods, and ideas is still with us today. 3/8/17 5:02 PM 10 Athena and Poseidon According to Greek mythology, gods and goddesses competed to be the patrons, or protectors, of cities. Zeus’s daughter Athena was the goddess of wisdom, justice, and war, among other things. Poseidon, Zeus’s brother, was the god of the sea, storms, earthquakes, destruction, and horses. In one myth, Athena and Poseidon both had their eyes on the same town. Poseidon tapped his trident, or threepronged staff, against the ground and a spring appeared. The people of the town rejoiced and named him the winner. But when they tasted the water, they found that it was salt water. Then, Athena created an olive tree. People could harvest its wood for building or burning, and they could use its olives for food – or to make oil for cooking or for lighting lamps. The people rejoiced and chose Athena as their guardian. They named their city Athens in her honor. On the Acropolis in Athens stands the Parthenon, a temple to Athena. Long ago, a huge statue of the goddess stood inside this impressive building. Early_Greeks_10-11.indd 16 3/8/17 5:03 PM 11 Early_Greeks_10-11.indd 17 3/8/17 5:03 PM 12 Greek Culture Although it was divided by mountains and seas, Greece was united in many ways. All Greeks used the same alphabet and loved hearing the same myths and legends. They had similar forms of government and customs. They worshipped Zeus, Poseidon, and all the same gods and goddesses. In 776 BCE, an amazing event happened that would help bring the city-states together – if only for a little while. It was the first Olympic Games, held in Olympia. Athletes from different city-states all over Greece gathered to compete. A Greek cheered for his or her hometown athletes, hoping they would bring honor to the polis. u IN THE 700S BCE, the Greeks developed their own alphabet. It was inspired by the Phoenician alphabet, which used symbols to represent different sounds. The Early_Greeks_12-13.indd 16 alphabet was first developed to help keep records of trades, laws, and taxes. Having a common written language helped bring the citystates closer together. l FOR THE FIRST time, works like Homer’s epic poems, which had been kept alive by word of mouth, were finally written down. The Odyssey and The Iliad are considered the very first examples of Western literature. They are still taught in schools today. THE GREEKS were united by a common religion, which they learned through myths. Stories about gods and goddesses explained history and nature, and they were used to teach important lessons. 3/8/17 5:06 PM 13 r THE FIRST OLYMPIC Games were dedicated to Zeus. According to some myths, the games were his idea. Other stories suggest the games were held in memory of Zeus’s battle with Kronos, his father. The games celebrated the physical abilities of male athletes, since only men were allowed to compete. The games also promoted good feelings between the competing city-states. Even in ancient times, the Olympics were held every four years. The Greeks loved these big contests, and they held other, similar events all around Greece. u WITH THE RISE of the city-states came the development of city militia, or part-time soldiers. These citizen soldiers were known as hoplites. They fought on foot with swords and spears and wore heavy bronze helmets and armor. Many city-states like Athens had mandatory military service for men between the ages of 18 and 20. During wartime, men up to age 60 Early_Greeks_12-13.indd 17 d FEMALE ATHLETES competed in their own version of the Olympics, which were called the Heraean Games. Named for Hera, Zeus’s wife, these games included were called on to fight. Places like Sparta and Thebes prided themselves on having mighty, well-trained militias. athletic, equestrian (horseback riding), musical, and dramatic contests. r CHILDREN IN ancient Greece learned their “Alpha, Beta, Gamma’s.” The Greek alphabet has 24 letters, from alpha to omega. The word “alphabet” comes from the first two Greek letters: alpha and beta. The alphabet began as a way to help record trades and create other official documents. It also enabled people to write down myths and stories. Without written versions of great works like Homer’s Odyssey, the fables of Aesop (Ee-sop), or the Greek myths, these stories might have been lost forever. Using the Greek alphabet shown above, write the names of some Greek cities or people mentioned in this issue. 3/8/17 5:06 PM 14 Sparta Imagine living in Sparta during the 400s BCE. Life is not easy. You’re expected to be a great athlete, a brave fighter, and a good citizen. You don’t have any luxuries. (In fact, today the word “spartan” means “having no comforts.”) Your father is a warrior, and your mother is just as strong. Legend has it that Spartans were descendants of powerful Heracles, son of Zeus. That’s what it means to be from Sparta, and you could not be more proud. Located inland on a fertile plain, Sparta was the most powerful city-state on the Peloponnesus. History tells us that Spartans were descendants of the Dorians, who came from northern Greece and invaded southern Greece and the Peloponnesus in about 1100 BCE. l THE SPARTANS overtook much of the Peloponnesus. They turned the people they conquered into helots, or enslaved people owned by the citystate. There were so many helots, they outnumbered Spartan citizens by Early_Greeks_14-15.indd 16 almost four to one. Sparta was always afraid that its helots would revolt, or that other citystates or nations might invade. That helps explain why it made the military central to everyone’s life. u SPARTA WAS RULED by two kings whose powers were limited by a council of elders. The elders were recruited from Sparta’s highest class, which was called the Spartiates. They proposed laws that could then be approved by an assembly, or lawmaking group, made up of male citizens. The assembly elected five ephors, or wealthy landowners who handled the daily job of governing. The assembly was important, but the elders and ephors held the real power. 3/8/17 5:43 PM 15 u THE MAIN purpose of education in Sparta was teaching girls and boys to be strong, loyal citizens of Sparta. Training to be in Sparta’s military began at age seven for boys. All children were taught to read and ari ALBANIA write, but most of their time was spent wrestling, boxing, running, and doing gymnastics. When they had time to play, Spartan children enjoyed board games, ball games, dolls, and toy animals. Thessaloniki d ATHENS AND Sparta weren’t that far apart geographically, but they were very far apart in their ideas. In Athens, thought and discussion were important. Meanwhile, Sparta was all about physical strength and pride in the military. GREECE Ioannina Larisa Would you have liked to live in ancient Sparta? Why or why not? How does Spartan life compare to a modern life like yours? Aegean Sea Lesbos Thermopylae Agrinion DORIS AETOLIA PHOCIS LOCRIS N EUBOEA W BOEOTIA Athens Thebes ACHAEA Pat rai ARCADIA S ATTICA Athens Corinth AEGINA Argos ARGOLIS Peloponnesus MESSENIA Messene u WOMEN WERE NOT allowed to take part in the assembly or council, but Spartan women had more power and freedom than women in other city-states. Because Spartan men spent most of their time fighting or preparing for war, much of the daily business of life fell to women. They were also expected to be strong and healthy so they could raise powerful Spartan boys. M y r t o u m S e a Sparta LACONIA 0 0 E 50 mi. 50 km. Kh a n ia Early_Greeks_14-15.indd 17 3/8/17 5:43 PM 16 Athens Your days are spent playing in an olive orchard and learning to read and write. You enjoy listening to stories about clever animals and powerful gods. Your father is a wealthy merchant who sails the seas. Your mother takes care of you and your brothers and sisters, and she runs a busy household. You are a child of Athens. A powerful city-state and trading center, ancient Athens was located on the Aegean Sea, at the crossroads of Europe, Asia Minor, and Africa. In the 600s BCE, Athens was also at a crossroads historically. Life would soon change for all Athenians, and the changes would influence the whole world for thousands of years to come. l IN 683 BCE, Athens’s monarchy (rule by a single monarch) was replaced by an oligarchy. In 621 BCE, a lawmaker named Draco instituted Athens’s first written laws, which were very harsh. (Today, the word “draconian” l A LEADER NAMED Solon came to power in 594 BCE. He made many reforms, or changes, to the laws of Athens. He canceled all debts and freed all Athenian citizens who had sold themselves into slavery. Early_Greeks_16-17_v2.indd 16 means “cruel” or “severe.”) In 600 BCE, many Athenian farmers were in such deep debt that they lost their farms. They had to sell themselves into slavery to survive. This caused great civil unrest among the poor. Solon, the Athenian leader and poet, is believed to have said, “[Lawfulness] makes all things well ordered and fitted and often puts chains on the unjust.” *From Egypt, Greece, and Rome: Civilizations of the Ancient Mediterranean by Charles Freeman. Oxford University Press, 2014. 3/8/17 5:45 PM 17 r SOLON’S REFORMS allowed all male citizens to attend the assemblies, which elected leaders, passed laws, and served as juries. The richer a man was, the higher the position in government he could hold. Every man had one vote. Decisions were made by majority rule. That means that if more than 50 percent of the voters approved an idea, it would win. Many of Solon’s reforms laid the foundation for democracy. u EDUCATION WAS very important in Athens. Boys and girls studied writing, reading, arithmetic, phys- ical education, and the arts. A boy learned his father’s trade. Girls learned how to manage a u IN THE 500S Athens and other Greek citystates faced a growing threat from the Persian Empire, which was centered in Mesopotamia. By 539 BCE, the Persian king Cyrus the Great (above) had conquered much of Asia Minor and the Babylonian Empire. Next, King Cambyses II conquered all of Egypt. Later, King Darius I set his sights on conquering all of Greece and its valuable trade routes, but his attempts failed. BCE, Early_Greeks_16-17_v2.indd 17 household. Many enslaved people were educated, too; some became doctors and teachers. r THE CHILDREN of Athens learned valuable lessons from Aesop’s Fables. Aesop was a storyteller whose fables about animals taught morals like “never give up” and “kindness is king.” Aesop’s Fables influenced world literature, and people today still enjoy the wisdom they offer. u THE PERSIANS even caused concern in Sparta, the most powerful city-state on the Peloponnesus. In the 500s BCE, Sparta created a league, or a group of allies, called the Peloponnesian League. At first, the league’s goal was to protect its member city-states against Athens. Under Sparta’s leadership, the Peloponnesian League became a major fighting force that would help hold back the Persians. 3/8/17 5:45 PM 18 Activities MAKE A VENN DIAGRAM Think about life in Athens and Sparta. How were these citystates similar? How were they different? A Venn diagram, consisting of two overlapping circles, is a way to show the comparison. Use the information in this magazine to complete the diagram. Write Athens in the partial circle on the left and Sparta in the partial circle on the right. In the area where the circles overlap, list the ways Athens and Sparta were alike. Then, describe unique characteristics of each city-state in the corresponding partial circle. These descriptions will show ways Athens and Sparta were different. CREATE A NEWSPAPER PAGE Suppose you’re a newspaper writer in Greece at the time of one of the transitions between forms of government. Your job is to write the front page of the newspaper, including an article announcing the governmental transition, an article about one of Homer’s epics or an Aesop fable, and a weather report. Use the information in this magazine to pick the particular governmental transition you will write about and the epic or fable. Draft your articles and the weather report. Then, exchange with a classmate to give and receive feedback before producing your final article. Early_Greeks_18-19.indd 18 3/8/17 5:47 PM 19 MAKE CONNECTIONS WITH THESE RELATED TITLES Greece’s Golden Age Early Romans Roman Empire Long ago, the great thinkers, politicians, and artists of ancient Greece came up with many ideas and art forms we still know today. From democracy to architecture to science and more, the Golden Age of Greece left a lasting mark on Western civilization. How did a culture from 2,500 years ago become so powerful? It began as a collection of farming villages and grew to become a city that ruled over a vast empire. Along the way, a king was overthrown, a republic begun, and a government of checks and balances created. Learn the details behind Rome’s early people and the empire’s extraordinary place in history. Ancient Rome may be long gone, but its legacy lives on in the Western world in just about every area of life. From the birth of law to major contributions in engineering and language, the Roman Empire’s influence endures today. CALIFORNIA STANDARDS HSS 6.4 Students analyze the geographic, political, economic, religious, and social structures of the early civilizations of Ancient Greece. LEARN MORE ONLINE! • Greece borders the Mediterranean Sea, which is surrounded by Europe, Asia Minor, and Africa. The Mediterranean supplied an abundance of fish to eat and sell. • Gods and goddesses were very popular subjects of Greek art. Pottery, sculpture, and frescoes (paintings on walls) all show figures and scenes from Greek mythology. • The Cyclades is a group of islands in the Aegean Sea. According to Greek mythology, Poseidon, god of the sea, was so angry at a sisterhood of mermaids that he turned them into islands. • There were about 1,500 Greek city-states of all sizes. Greece had 500 colonies, which were home to almost 60,000 Greek colonists. Early_Greeks_18-19.indd 19 6.4.1 Discuss the connections between geography and the development of city-states in the region of the Aegean Sea, including patterns of trade and commerce among Greek city-states and within the wider Mediterranean region. 6.4.2 Trace the transition from tyranny and oligarchy to early democratic forms of government and back to dictatorship in ancient Greece, including the significance of the invention of the idea of citizenship (e.g., from Pericles’ Funeral Oration). 6.4.4 Explain the significance of Greek mythology to the everyday life of people in the region and how Greek literature continues to permeate our literature and language today, drawing from Greek mythology and epics, such as Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, and from Aesop’s Fables. 6.4.5 Outline the founding, expansion, and political organization of the Persian Empire. 6.4.6 Compare and contrast life in Athens and Sparta, with emphasis on their roles in the Persian and Peloponnesian Wars. 6.4.8 Describe the enduring contributions of important Greek figures in the arts and sciences (e.g., Hypatia, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Euclid, Thucydides). Historical and Social Sciences Analysis Skills: Research, Evidence, and Point of View 4. Students assess the credibility of primary and secondary sources and draw sound conclusions from them. 3/8/17 5:47 PM hmhco.com EDITOR: Jennifer Dixon ART DIRECTION: Brobel Design DESIGNERS: Ian Brown, Ed Gabel, David Ricculli, Jeremy Rech PHOTO RESEARCH: Ted Levine, Elisabeth Morgan, Sheila Sarmiento ACTIVITIES WRITER: Marjorie Frank PROOFREADER: Margaret Mittelbach FACT-CHECKER: David Stienecker AUTHOR: Emily Dodi AUTHOR TEAM LEAD: Barak Zimmerman PRESIDENT AND CEO: Ted Levine CHAIRMAN AND FOUNDER: Mark Levine GRADE 6 TITLES World’s Early People Ancient India Mesopotamia Indian Empires Ancient Egypt Ancient China Archaeology Early Romans Language Roman Empire Ancient Hebrews Christianity and Rome’s Legacies Early Greeks Olmec and Maya Greece’s Golden Age Civil Rights Image: p.17 middle left (school scene); Ivy Close Images: p.17 middle right (“The Tortoise and the Hare”); ACTIVE MUSEUM: p.19 top center (Cincinnatus receiving the ambassadors). Art Resource: Balage Balogh: pp.4–5 (Knossos Palace scene), p.5 middle (Knossos Palace); © RMN-Grand Palais: pp.10–11 (Athena and Poseidon); Universal Images Group: p.15 bottom left (Spartan women). Bridgeman: Weatherstone, A.C.: p.17 top (men voting in assembly). Getty: ©CORBIS/Corbis p.4 middle left (Crete); DEA / G. DAGLI ORTI: p.5 bottom right (ship procession); p.19 bottom (Akrotiri); Print Collector: p.5 top right (volcano); Universal History Archive: p.7 top left (Homer); Leemage: p.9 top left (Aristotle). Granger: Granger, NYC: p.13 bottom right (Hera); DeA Picture Library / Granger, NYC: p.13 bottom left (hoplite). iStock: Starcevic: p.3 top right (Greek mountains and valley); BremecR: p.3 top left (Karpathos island); ZU_09: p.7 middle (scene from The Odyssey); Grafissimo: p.7 top right (scene from The Iliad); duncan1890: p.17 bottom right (Spartan army). Shutterstock: Pokomeda: p.18 bottom (newspaper icon); vvoe: p.19 top right (Colosseum). Ancient Persia ORIGINAL ILLUSTRATIONS: Brobel Design: Maps, p.2, p.15. ON THE COVER: Trojan horse scene from The Iliad. iStock: Grafissimo. PICTURE CREDITS: Alamy: North Wind Picture Archives: p.3 middle (Piraeus), p.6 bottom (bard entertaining), p.12 (Athena); Lebrecht Music and Arts Photo Library: p.3 bottom (Greek craftsmen); bilwissedition Ltd. & Co. KG: p.4 bottom right (King Minos); Stefano Bianchetti: p.5 bottom right (sea peoples); Valery Voennyy: p.5 middle right (Mycenaeans); Walker Art Library: p.6 top (Athena); PRISMA ARCHIVO: p.7 bottom (iron tools), p.14 bottom (helots); FALKENSTEINFOTO: p.8 top (Acropolis), p.16 bottom right (Solon); INTERFOTO: p.9 top right (voting in assembly), p.9 middle right (farmer), pp.14–15 (Spartans), p.16 bottom left (Draco), p.17 bottom left (Cyrus the Great), p.19 top left (Aristotle teaching); Mary Evans Picture Library: p.9 bottom right (Greek ship); Lanmas: p.13 top left (olympian); p.16 top (Athens landscape); Classic Michael Kline Illustration: Cartoons, cover; Child Writing on Tablet, p.7; Oligarchy, p.8; Sheep Herder Reading, p.12; Child Reading Tablet, p.12; Child Writing on Paper, p.13; Spartan Kings, p.14; Spartan Boys Wrestling, p.15; Make a Venn Diagram, p.18. Wood Ronsaville Harlin, Inc.: Rob Wood: Boy Looking Out to Sea, pp.2–3; Agora, pp.8–9. TEXT ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Excerpt from a translation of “Eunomia makes all things well ordered…” by Oswyn Murray taken from Egypt, Greece and Rome by Charles Freeman. Text copyright ©2014 by Charles Freeman. Reprinted by permission of Oxford University Press. Copyright © by Kids Discover, LLC All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner unless such copying is expressly permitted by federal copyright law. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be submitted through our Permissions website at https://customercare.hmhco.com/ contactus/Permissions.html or mailed to Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, Attn: Intellectual Property Licensing, 9400 Southpark Center Loop, Orlando, Florida 32819-8647. Printed in the U.S.A. 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