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Warm-Up • "Good habits formed at youth make all the difference.” – Aristotle Unit 3: Classical Civilizations Greece and Rome The Minoans • Developed around 2000 BC • Named after their King Minos • Capital city of Knossos on the island of Crete • Had a running water system • 1400 BC, invaders from mainland conquered Minoans The Mycenaeans • A warring people that took Minoan civilization traits and made life better for themselves • Developed early form of Greek writing called Linear B. The City-States • Polis- Greek word for city-state. Consists of a fort, the city, and surrounding farm lands and village. • Acropolis- Greek for hill. Usually where the fort, temples and public buildings were. • Agora- the marketplace and meeting place. Government • Aristocracies- city-state controlled by noble class. Military, economy, judges, established laws and punishments. • Tyrants- illegally took power, but had people’s support. A ruler with absolute power. Popular Government • The idea that people can and should rule themselves. • Democracy- a government in which citizens take part. Society • Myths- stories about gods, goddesses, and heroes. Most came from Homer’s two epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey. • A polytheistic society. • Priests and Priestesses could speak to the gods through Oracles. • Olympic Games- a way to please the gods by showing off strength and bravery. Warm-Up • What is the name of the early form of Greek writing? Sparta • Gained control of the Peloponnesus around 1100 BC. • People they conquered became slaves called Helots. • Two kings, one led the army, the other took care of the city-state. • Oligarchy- a government ruled by “few” Military Society • Every male Spartan was to be a military machine. • By age 7, Spartan boys went into military camps. • By age 18, they trained specifically for war. • Men would serve in the military until the age of 60, or were killed in battle • Women were trained, but not like the men. They devoted themselves to the city-state and the men. Athens • Poor soil for farming, became good sea traders. • Introduced coined money in 600 BC • Practiced early forms of democracy – Direct Democracy- all citizens participate directly in making decisions. – Representative Democracy- citizens elect representatives to govern for them. • US modern government. • Draco- created Athens first written law code in 621 BC. –Draconian law- harsh or severe law. Parthenon Philosophers • Socrates- taught education was key to personal growth. Used the Socratic Method, answering a question with a question. • Plato- a student of Socrates, founder of the Academy. Believed in a universal world • Aristotle- a student of Plato. He believed that every field of knowledge had to be studied logically. Believed in the physical world. Warm-Up • What type of government structure did the Greek city-state Athens have? Math, Science, Medicine • Pythagoras- believed everything could be explained mathematically. – Theorem- • Hippocrates- founder of medical science performing experiments to understand the human body. – Hippocratic Oath- code of laws followed by doctors to always help the sick with their abilities, but never to injure. The Persian Wars • 500 BC, Persians and Greeks began fighting. • Darius crushed the Greek forces early on. • 490 BC, Greeks defeated Persians at the Battle of Marathon. • 480 BC, Xerxes, Darius’s son, led forces to Thermopylae. Defeated Greek forces there. • Greek navy defeats Persian navy, eventually wins war. The Age of Pericles • Pericles was a great general and statesmen in Athens from 461 to 429 BC. • Established the most democratic government in history. • Responsible for building the Parthenon. • Used Athenian Navy to keep Persians out of Greece. • He failed to unite Greece under Athens. The Peloponnesian War • In 431 BC, war between Sparta and Athens broke out. • Continued on and off for 27 years. • Sparta allied with the Persians and blocked Athens food supplies. • Athens finally surrendered to Sparta in 404 BC • Greece was unstable for many years after this war. Warm-Up • Who is considered the founder of medical science? Conquering the World • Peloponnesian War left Greek city-states in shambles. • Philip II of Macedon- became king in 359 BC and united Greece. • In 336 BC he was assassinated. His son, Alexander the Great, becomes king. Alexander the Great • Completely crushed Darius III, Persian King, and took control of Persia. • Conquered Asia Minor, Syria, Mesopotamia and Egypt. • Invaded India for 4 years, never conquered India. • Became ill and died in Babylon in June 323 BC. He was only 32 years old. Spread of Culture • Alexander wanted to spread Greek and Persian cultures amongst the world. • Religious ideas spread throughout empire • Philosophies of Socrates and Aristotle spread to Egypt and Mesopotamia. The Hellenistic Age • • Also called the Golden Age Great contributions – Euclid- development of geometry – Archimedes- calculated the value of pi – Eratosthenes- calculated the distance around the earth. – Herodotus- considered the Father of History. • Lasts till 156 BC when Rome takes over. After Alexander • After his death, his empire was split up into three kingdoms- Macedon, Egypt, and Syria. – Ptolemy in Egypt – Seleucid in Syria/Persia – Cassander in Macedonia • Rule is weak and Rome was able to take over. Warm-Up • Who is considered the father of history? Warm-Up • What is the Greek term for a city-state? ROME Twelve Tables • Ancient legislation that was the foundation of Roman Law. • Served as the constitution of the Roman Republic. Birth of the Roman Empire • The First Triumvirate- rule of three, Julius Caesar, Pompey, Crassus. • Caesar became consul in 59 BC, Crassus died in battle in 53 BC, Pompey became consul in 52 BC. • Caesar built up army and conquered Gaul (France). • Caesar marched army to Rome, in 44 BC, Caesar was declared dictator for life. Rome after Caesar • Octavian- Caesar’s grandnephew, was named heir to Rome. • Senate gave him the name, Augustus, “the revered one.” He is now known as Augustus Caesar, or simply Augustus. – 27 BC-14 AD – Called himself Princeps, “First Citizen” • Pax Romana- “Roman Peace”, the time period known during the rule of Augustus and his successors. – 9AD-209AD A Few Notable Rulers • Nero- the last Roman ruler of the Julius Caesar lineage (54-68 AD). Blamed for a fire that almost took out Rome. • Hadrian- (117-138 AD), helped conquer Britannia and built Hadrian’s Wall. • Marcus Aurelius- (161-180 AD) helped keep invaders from the north and east from attacking Rome. Roman Contributions • ARCHITECTURE: • Colosseum- gladiatorial fights, fights between man and beast, reenactments of naval battles. • Aqueducts- bridge like structures that carried water from mountains to the city and farm lands. • Circus Maximus- chariot races. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sLy5V CMuKM Circus Maximus Warm-Up • What is the name of the architecture structure that would bring water into the city of Rome? Contributions cont… • Ptolemy- developed a system of astronomy and geography. The Ptolemaic System, the belief that stars, planets and sun revolved around Earth, lasted for 1500 years. • Galen- medical scientist, wrote lots of medical journals that people studied for centuries. Warm-Up • What does Pax Romana mean? Warm-Up • What is the name of noble class land owners in Rome? Who was their conflict with? Christianity • Jesus of Nazareth taught teachings based off the Jewish traditions. • Jewish rabbis, feared Jesus, convinced Roman officials that Jesus was trouble. • Roman officials arrested Jesus and Jesus was crucified. • Jesus rose from the dead and his followers started calling him Messiah in Greek, Christos, giving him the name Jesus Christ. The Spread of Christianity • The Apostles of Jesus went across the Roman Empire spreading the teachings of Jesus and Christianity. • Romans viewed Christianity in the 1st century as a small group of radicals that could be ignored. • Romans then feared Christianity, believed it was an attack on their religion and laws. • By 200 AD, Rome began to fall and people turned to Christianity for hope. Romans Adopt Christianity • In 312 AD, Roman emperor Constantine declared his support for Christianity. He promoted the religion across the empire. • In 391 AD, emperor Theodosius declared Christianity the official religion of Rome. The Fall of Rome • Money issues occurred, soldiers weren’t getting paid enough, left army. • Invaders from Germanic tribes start attacking Roman borders. • The Empire was too big to rule for one person, it was split up between East and West. Diocletian • In 284 AD, split the Roman empire in 2, East and West. • He ruled in the East. • He was able to drive out invading barbarians. • Retired in 305 AD. Constantine • His father, Constantius, was emperor of West Rome. He died, Cons. became emperor. • Emperor of East did not like, went to war, Constantine won. • In 324 AD, Constantine was sole emperor of whole Roman Empire. • Established the new capital of the empire, Constantinople, in the East. Warm-Up • Which Emperor split the Roman Empire in 2? The Final Invasions • Germanic tribes would continue to attack Rome over a period of 100 years. – Goths (Visigoths & Ostrogoths) In 410 AD, Visigoths sacked Rome. – Vandals sacked Rome in 455 AD – Franks • In 451, The Huns, led by Attila, attacked Rome, was defeated. • In 476 AD, Romulus Augustulus, the last Roman emperor of the west was overthrown. Causes of Decline • • • • Germanic invasions Too big to govern and protect. Poor leadership at times. Heavy taxes to pay more soldiers crushed the economy. Warm-Up • “Good people do not need laws to them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws.“ – Plato