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YEAR 12 CLASSICAL STUDIES mythology schoolhistory.co.nz What is a myth? •Muthos means ‘utterance’ or something which is told. •Often includes legends – which are based in fact •Edges often blurred •Many myths contain elements of folk tales • • • • Some myths are strongly religious Passed on through the generations Explain the origins of the world Explain natural phenomena - day/night, seasons, storms etc • May explain or support existing customs or rituals: birth, marriage, status of women, crop fertility etc • Reflect human dreams and wishes e.g do tales of heroes reflect men’s desire to be superhuman? Where do myths come from? • • • • • Usually found in most cultures From a time before writing generally used A time of genuine belief in the gods A time lacking in scientific explanation A time when people believed all events had a divine origin • Verbal communication allowed myths to change Greek Myths • Earliest reference from Homer and Hesiod in the eighth century BC • Originated between 2000-1000BC Ancient Greece Attica and Boetia Thessaly and Macedonia Asia Minor Peloponnese Crete Important places • • • • Coast of Asia Minor to the right Cycladic Islands Crete Mainland Greece: Peloponnese (south) Attica and Boetia (central) Thessaly and Macedonia Background to Greece Stone Age Aegean pre 3000BC • • • • • Similar types of people in these areas Possibly from modern Iraq Farming and domesticated animals Worshipped fertility spirits – mainly female Placated male spirits - destructive Early Bronze Age 3000-2000BC • Bronze used over whole area • Civilization flourished • Worship of fertility goddesses (Mother/Earth) • 2000BC upheaval on Asia mainland caused people to arrive • These people brought wheel pottery • Greek mainland invaded by several waves of less cultured people from the north • They were warlike • Patriarchal • Worshipped mainly male deities who lived on mountain tops and ruled the skies • Homer called them Achaeans • They looted and killed and eventually settled Middle Bronze Age 2000-1450BC • Crete appears to have escaped the invaders and their civilisation continued uninterrupted • Around 2000BC it had a surge in trade and wealth • Largest palace was Knossos • May have had a powerful fleet • It is called Minoan Civilisation after King Minos Minoan Civilization Crete: Minoan Civilization (Palace at Knossos) • Minoans worshipped a mother goddess • The bull was an important symbol • Crete was the most advanced civilisation in the area • Minoans may have demanded ‘tribute’ from other areas Knossos: Minoan Civilization Achaeans • • • • • • They lived on mainland Greece Main centre was Mycenae This civilisation was called Mycenaeans Each state had a fort and a warrior king Endemic fighting Because of trade with Crete Mycenaeans began to worship earth goddess as well as sky god • Eventually civilisation on Crete collapsed • May be linked to Thera – volcano • Mycenaeans took opportunity to seize control of Crete around 1450BC • They burned and looted and by 1380BC the Palace of Knossos was destroyed Late Bronze Age 1450-1100BC • Mycenaeans now dominated in the Mediterranean • Peaked around 1300BC • Had unstable parasitic nobility who survived by seizing the wealth of others in war • Describing a Greek hero as a ‘sacker of cities’ (Homer) was a compliment The Mycenaean Civilization Troy • May have been a battle to eliminate trade competition or to get scarce metals • Troy fell 1250BC • Within a century all major sites on the mainland Greece fell • Except Athens Plan of the City of Troy Homer: The “Heroic Age” Original Wall of the City of Troy The Mask of Agamemnon The Dark Ages 1100-800 BC • General destruction had occurred which was disastrous for the Greek world • Loss of centralised control led to lawlessness, population decline, simpler life ensued Homer, the Blind Poet Homer’s Great Epics Homer’s View of the World The Dorians • The Dorians took advantage and moved south down through the Greek peninsula and settled in the Peloponnese and Crete • Many Greeks moved to the coast of Asia Minor to escape • The Dorians were even less ‘civilised’ and set progress back even further Creation of Mythology • At this time the art of writing was lost and oral tradition flourished • Storytellers knitted together tales from a wide area • In later Classical times Sparta and Athens changed details of myths to suit themselves The Rise of the Greek Polis Athens Naxos Eboea Larissa Syracuse Corinth ATHENS: Yesterday & Today Archaic Period and Classical Age • Between the end of the Dark Ages and the Persian Invasion which led to the Classical Age • The Classical Age ends with the death of Alexander in 323BC • Rome then dominated the Mediterranean area Great Athenian Philosophers $ Socrates Know thyself! question everything only the pursuit of goodness brings happiness. $ Plato The Academy The world of the FORMS The Republic philosopher-king Great Athenian Philosophers $ Aristotle The Lyceum “Golden Mean” [everything in moderation]. Logic. Scientific method. Athens: The Arts & Sciences $ DRAMA (tragedians): Aeschylus Sophocles Euripides $ THE SCIENCES: Pythagoras Democritus all matter made up of small atoms. Hippocrates “Father of Medicine” Phidias’ Acropolis The Acropolis Today The Parthenon The Agora The Classical Greek “Ideal” Olympia