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Notes by: M. Steward Template by: Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley H.S. Chappaqua, NY Macedonia • Small, mountainous country north of Greece • Most Macedonians were farmers. • Cared little for Greeks; fought them in Persian Wars • Macedonian kings were from Greek decent. Philip II of Macedon • Becomes king in 359 BCE • Sparta still saw itself as the most powerful polis, or city, in Greece. • Sparta left weak after Peloponnesian War, Macedon left strong. • From 359-336, Philip conquers most of Greece around Macedon and down towards Athens King Phillip II of Macedon • Learned to love Greek culture when he was held prisoner in Thebes as a youth • Believed it was his destiny to unify the citystates and spread Greek culture How did he accomplish this in 20 years? • • • • Had professional army New infantry formation (the phalanx) Better weapons Projectile weapons Warfare in the Age of Alexander • Phalanx: A formation of infantry carrying overlapping shields and long spears, developed by Philip II and used by Alexander the Great “Alliances”? • To gain the upper-hand, would bribe local Greek officials • Caused conflict among city-states, when weakened, would attack and conquer • Made treaties with Greek leaders only to break them • Used marriage to form political alliances Demosthenes • Athenian orator; tried to warn Greeks against Philip • Most Greeks believed in Philip after being discouraged with their local governments • When Philip lead his soldiers into central Greece in 338 B.C., Thebes and Athens tried to prevent invasion. • They were defeated at the Battle of Chaeronea Philip’s Dream Unrealized...? • Philip was killed during his preparations to take over Persia as well. • His son Alexander took over the throne. Alexander the Great 356-323 B.C.E. Alexander the Great--birth • Born in 356 BCE. • Some claim he was the son of Olympias (his mother) and Zeus was his father. • Father was Philip II. • Raised in a military family, taken to battlefield at an early age. Alexander the Great-education • Fearless and strong, at 12, tames Bucephalus, a horse no one else could ride. Becomes his horse and travels on many journeys. • From 13 to 16, he was taught by Aristotle, a great Greek philosopher, scientist and lover of art. Alexander the Great • Strong in mind and physically • Was commander of his army since the age of 16 • Included scientists and philosophers in army • Would take back plant and animal samples for Aristotle Alexander the Great’s Empire Alexander the Great in Persia Alexander the Great • Conquerors: Alexander Building Greek Cities in the East Pergamum: A New “Hellenistic” City Cosmopolitan Culture Trade in the Hellenistic World Library at Alexandria (333 B.C.E.) EXTRA SLIDES Hellenic vs. Hellenistic Art Hellenistic Philosophers $ $ Cynics Diogenes ignore social conventions & avoid luxuries. citizens of the world. live a humble, simple life. Epicurians Epicurus avoid pain & seek pleasure. all excess leads to pain! politics should be avoided. Hellenistic Philosophers $ Stoics Zeno nature is the expansion of divine will. concept of natural law. get involved in politics, not for personal gain, but to perform virtuous acts for the good of all. true happiness is found in great achievements. The “Known” World – 3c B.C.E. Hellenism: The Arts & Sciences $ Scientists / Mathematicians: Aristarchus heliocentric theory. Euclid geometry. Archimedes pulley. Ptolemy geocentric theory. Ptolemaic View of the Universe The Breakup of Alexander’s Empire The Incursion of Rome into the Hellenistic World