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Civ IA- text from PP 7-8 • Lecture 7- Becoming Greek I) The Iron Age (c.700 BC to 500 BC) II) Greek City-States III) 1st Persian Invasion IDs: Homer ethnos/Polis Agora phalanx Reason Corinth Sparta helots Athens Solon Peisistratus Barbarians despotism Marathon Ostracism Thermopylae • First Midterm Exam • Academic Support • Chapters 1 through 3, possibly Chapter 4 – Depending on how far we get by the end of Tuesday’s class • 40-45 objective questions • 1 essay (out of 2 or 3) • Review questions discussed at the beginning of class on Thursday and next Tuesday • Views of the Gods in the Dark Age • Spirit of the Dark Age • Views of Women in the Dark Age • Greek City-States during the Iron Age (700-500 BC) Recovery - population - politics, art, etc. - bronze→iron 2 types of cities: Ethnos - oligarchy Polis (pl. poleis) - agora • Democratic innovation #1 Mycenean alphabet Adminstration Lost during Dark Age Mixed with Phoenician alphabet Vowels added • Democratic innovation #2 • The Poet Tyraues on the phalanx (around 650 BC) “ Stand near and take the enemy, strike with long spear or sword, set foot by foot, lean shield on shield, crest on crest, helmet on helmet.” Wider involvement- 25 to 40 percent of landowners • Growing Political Tension- Result #2 Tyrants: Members of the elite Appeal to commoners (hoplites) Progressive reforms Built upon precedents Short-lived dynasties • Religion in Archaic Greece More “democratic” influence Civic religion Reason and mythology Secular knowledge: Science philosophy • II) Archaic City-States • Examples of Archaic Cities: Eunomia (“good order”) in Corinth Sparta Athens • City-States in Archaic Greece Corinth - commercial center - c. 650 BC- Periander’s canal - great wealth • Trade • City-States in Archaic Greece Corinth Sparta • Sparta Population growth Conquest Helots Extreme application of phalanx Isolation • City-States in Archaic Greece Corinth Sparta Athens • Athenian tyrants and democracy (7th and 6th Centuries BC) Defining democracy - “popular participation in government” 621 BC- Draco 594 BC- Solon Debt-slavery and ekklesia 546 BC- Peisistratus State loans 508 BC- Cleisthenes Direct democracy • Lecture 8- Becoming Greek I) First Persian Invasion II) Second Persian Invasion III) “Golden Age” of Athens IDs: Barbarians Darius Miletus despotism Marathon Ostracism Xerxes Thermopyle Salamis Delian League Pericles Demagogue Peloponnesian Wars “survivors” Sophism • Socrates Examples of Archaic Cities: Eunomia (“good order”) in Corinth Sparta Athens • Greek influence in the Mediterranean • 1st Persian War (vs. Darius): Darius enters Europe- 512 BC Persian Empire Revolt in Miletus- 499 BC - Support (fr. Athens) - Persian suppression Athenian propaganda: Democracy vs. despotism Persian invasion- 490 BC Battle of Marathon • Battle of Marathon Larger Persian army Greek strategy Phalanx Greek victory March to Athens Lasting “message” - Superiority of the phalanx (and) democracy • Trireme • Ostracism Effect of victory over Persian despotism Started by Themistocles Safeguard vs. tyranny Potential threats 6,000 votes 10-year exile and loss of property Democratic? • II) Second Persian Invasion • Persian Empire • Second Persian Invasion Xerxes 2nd Persian invasion- 480 BC 250K men Northern cities surrender Sparta joins defense vs. Persians • Battle of Thermopylae (480 BC) 40K Greek troops Mountain pass Three days “Go tell the Spartans, you have read, we have fought, and now we are dead.” • Battle of Salamis Athenian fleet of triremes Decision to fight Greek victory Persian retreat • “Greek Fire” • Results of the Second Persian War Thermoplyae Salamis Results: - army- Sparta - navy- Athens Postwar leadership- Athens • III) “Golden Age” of Athens • Delian League (478 BC- 404 BC) Delian League -naval protection vs. Persians -Athenian domination -funds -duties -garrisons -coercion -rival alliance Postwar glory - Democracy Naval protection Athenian leadership Athenian Empire? Delian funds Citadels Tolls Coercion • Internal Contradictions and Athenian Democracy 1) Limited vote-women, slaves, metics 2) Collective basis, not individual 3) “safeguards”- ostracism, term limits 4) Result- demagogues (ex. Pericles) • Pericles (r. 461-430 BC) Demagogue: - using popular prejudices for political gain -appealed to thetes -elevated larger councils -aggressive toward other polis • Athenian Sophism Athenian use of reason during “the Golden Age of Athens” (5th Century BC) Relativism: “Man is the measure.” Schools • Sophism at work- Athenian imperialism: Athenians: “. . . You know as well as we do that right, as the world goes, is only in question between equals in power, while the strong do what they can the weak suffer what they must. . . . We would desire to exercises empire over you without trouble, and see you preserved for the good of us both. Melians: “And how, pray, could it turn out as good for us to serve you to rule?” Athenians: “Because you would have the advantage of submitting before suffering the worst, and we should gain by not destroying you.” Melians: “So you would not consent to our being neutral, friends instead of enemies, but allies of neither side?” Athenians: “No, for your hostility cannot so much hurt us as your friendship will be an argument to our subjects of our weakness, and your enmity of our power.” • The Peloponnesian Wars 1st war- 431-421BC Pericles Delian League vs. Spartan League Fight vs. Corinth (SL) Stalemate 2nd war- 415-404 Alliances Athenian defeat “Survivors”