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Download Chapter 5: The Greek City-States
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Chapter 5: The Greek City-States Section 1: Early Greeks and the Rise of City-States The Sea and the Land Mainland Greece lies on the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula This is located at the northeastern end of Med. Sea Aegean Sea separates Greece from Asia Minor in the east Ionian Se divides Greece from Italian Peninsula in the west Many Greeks became fishers, sailors, and traders Geography made it hard for Greeks to unite Mountains kept villages apart Greeks formed city-states instead of large kingdoms Early Greek Peoples People first lived in Greece 55,000 years ago Found Minoan civilization Developed on the island of Crete in 2000 B.C. The Minoans named after legendary king of Crete, King Minos had palace in Knossos and built great civilization artists covered palace walls with frescospaintings made on wet plaster walls also carved figures from bronze, gold, ivory, silver, and stone worshipped the bull and an Earth goddess many Minoans became sailors and traders traded for food cause soil was bad in about 1628 B.C. a volcano erupted on nearby island tidal waves destroyed many coastal settlements on Crete Minoan civilization grew weak 1400 B.C. Mycenaeans conquered mainland Crete The Mycenaeans Warring people who grouped themselves into clans and tribes Related families formed a clan that was headed by a warrior Clans made up a tribe that had its own chief Built fort-like cities in the Peloponnesus(southern part of Greece) and north-central Greece Carried out raids through eastern Mediterranean Adopted many elements of Minoan civilization Used Minoan system of writing The City-States of Greece The Greek word for city-state is polis Usually developed around a fort Based on three ideas The geographical territory of the city-state, the community that it represented, and the political and economic independence that it produced Inhabitants were loyal to it City-sates were alike in many ways Covered a small area of land Had a population of fewer than 10,000 people In most city-states the original fort was built on an acropolis or hill Eventually each city-state had an agora or marketplace Served as main public meeting place Citizens believed they owed loyalty to their polis Willing to die for their city-state Formed their own kind of government and laws Had its own calendar, money, and system of weights and measures All ancient Greeks spoke the same language Great festivals brought them together Section 2: Greek Government and Society Greek Culture in the Homeric Age Not a very advanced civilization Few people could write Most communication was oral or spoken Epic- a long poem about heroes and great events The Iliad and the Odyssey Much of oral poetry was gathered into these two epics blind poet Homer wrote these epic this period was called the Homeric Age the Iliad tells the legend of the Trojan War story begins with Paris falling love with Helen, the wife of a Mycenaean king kidnaps Helen and takes her with him to Troy Mycenaeans lay siege to Troy for 10 years Mycenaeans win by building a big wooden horse that can fit all of their best soldiers inside They give the horse to the Trojans as a gift and Trojans bring it into the city That night Mycenaean soldiers conquer troy In the story located in the Odyssey, it takes Odysseus 10 years to reach his home of Ithaca Greek religious beliefs Greek religions did not emphasize high standards of personal mortality Looked to religion for three things Wanted religion to explain nature Wanted religion to explain the emotions that sometimes cause people to lose self-control The believed religion could bring them certain benefits: long life, good luck, and good harvest Did not expect religion to save them from sin Believed spirits of most all people went to a gray, gloomy underworld ruled by the god Hades Greeks created myths Myths- traditional stories about gods, goddesses, and heroes Gave human qualities and personalities to their goads Zeus was the king of the gods His daughter was the goddess Athena, protector of wisdom and womanly goodness Athens was named in her honor Apollo, a son of his, was the god of light, music, and poetry Dionysus was god of fertility and wine Oracles- special places believed to have been where priests and priestesses spoke to the gods Most important contests were the Olympic Games Held every four years in honor of Zeus Only men could watch and compete in these games Included boxing, foot races, javelin and discus throwing, and wrestling Winners received wreaths of olive branches Greek Government: From Kings to Democracy Only wealthy land owners could afford expensive horse, chariots, and bronze weapons A small group of land owners called aristocrats came to represent each city-state The nobles gained more land and power City-states that were controlled by nobles were known as aristocracies Hoplites emerged in many parts of Greece Hoplites were heavy infantry who carried long spears and who fought in closely spaced rows Leaders who were able to bring a better life to the people were tyrants Tyrant- someone who illegally took power but had the people’s support Ruled many city-states Ended nobles’ fights for power and promoted more trade These powerful rulers became unjust Tyrant became to mean someone who uses absolute power brutally Greek city-states eventually overthrew tyrants Popular government began to take root Pop. Government- idea that people can and should rule themselves Some formed a democracy- government in which citizens take part Political rights were allowed to only some of population Women had no political rights Slaves has none either Section 3: Sparta and Athens Sparta: The Military Ideal Invaders from the north had overrun most of the Peloponnesus and forced peeps to work for them Called conquered people helots Invaders conquered village which became Sparta Located in a valley not on a hill Not surrounded by walls for defense Rigid and highly militarized society Spartan Society Had three social groups 1st group- known as the equals; descended from invaders; controlled city-state 2nd group- half-citizens; free, paid taxes, served in the army, no political power, some farmed, some live in town, some became rich Helots were the 3rd group; slaves of city-state, Spartans decided how they lived and worked Helots hated the Spartans Government in Sparta Had two kings One led the army Other took care of the home matters Council of Elders was made up of 28 male citizens over the age of 60 They were wealthy, aristocratic men Council proposed laws and served as criminal court Final part of government was an assembly Included all male citizens over 30 years old Voted to accept or reject laws proposed by Council of Elders Assembly elected five ephors for one-year terms Ephors made sure the kings stayed within the law Life in Sparta’s military society Sparta controlled life of citizens from birth to death Goal was to make every male part of the military Development of Spartan fighting men began at birth Athens: The Group of officials would examine newborn babies Any child that seemed unhealthy was left to die At age of seven, boys left home to go to military barracks From ages 18 through 20, they trained for war At age 20, males began their military service Could now marry but not live at home until age 30 No trade or business Believed that love of money interfered with discipline Retired from military at 60 Spartan girls had to be strong and healthy Received physical training and had to be devoted to city-state Both boys and girls studied music to learn discipline and coordination This lead to strong government and unbeatable army Created art, literature, philosophy, and science Birth of Democracy Located on Attic peninsula Not very fertile lands Became sea traders Introduction of coined money made trading easier Constructed Piraeus as their special port Typical polis built around rocky hill of Acropolis Athens Society Citizens formed the top group in society Either were rich aristocrats or farmers Only men had political rights Females could not vote or hold office Next group was the metics Non-citizens because they had been born outside Athens Worked as artisans or merchants Free and paid the same taxes as citizens Could not take part in government or own land Slaves were at the bottom of society Athenians considered slavery natural and necessary Slaves were people who were captured in war Owned by masters and treated as property Early Government in Athens Only citizens who owned land were in office Adult men met in an assembly Elected nine archons- rulers who served one-year terms Laws were not written down Archon named Draco created Athens’s first written law code Laws were harsh and severe Nobles and metics became wealthy from trade Farmers became poorer More citizens were sold into slavery to pay debts Discontent and anger spread Solon, an archon, settled disputes Freed people who have became slave to pay their debt Divided citizens into four groups Two richest groups could hold office Set up a court made of citizen jurors Peisistratus ruled over Athens as a tyrant Improved economy and after he ws gone the nobles returned to power Athenian Democracy Cleisthenes seized power and turned Athens into a democracy Divided citizens into 10 tribes Had each tribe choose 50 men Formed the Council of Five Hundred Served for one year Assembly had authority over council Courts became more democratic Direct democracy- citizens participate directly in making decisions