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+ Greece & Persia, 800-30 B.C.E. Mr. Ermer World History AP Miami Beach Senior High School + Early Classical Era Empires Connecting diverse, previously unfamiliar cultures Cross-cultural Persian exchanges, judgment & Greek commonalities: Indo-European language Common Cultural Traits Social Organization Persian Origins Indo-Europeans from Iran (land of the Aryans) Former Pastoral Nomads, Expert Horsemen Settled in southwestern Iranian Plateau Borrowed cultural elements from Babylonians & Assyrians Very little Persian records found Underground irrigation channels Great Salt Desert Tin, Copper, Iron, Gold, Silver Persia’s Achaemenid Emperors Cyrus the Great (559-529 BCE) First emperor of Persia Portrayed himself as a benevolent savior Darius I (521-486 BCE) Conquers lands up to the Indus River in the east Expands empire into eastern Europe, Libya Controlled 70 different ethnicities Established new bureaucratic system, fixed taxation Made best use of local leaders and customs, built infrastructure Semitic-Aramaic becomes official language Equality for all peoples in the empire New Administrative system divided into satrapies Persian Ideology Persian kings enjoy absolute authority Expected to behave and rule morally Skilled warriors and horsemen Social Structure = 4 groups Priests Nobles Warriors Administrative & Commercial class Women have many rights, influential Zoroastrianism Monotheistic faith, taught by Zoroaster Avesta: the holy book of Zoroastrians Ahura Mezda: the one creator God of all good Ahiram: in struggle with AM for control of universe Reverence given to elements of nature Rules of Behavior Avoidance of intoxicants Corpses exposed to be picked by animals Influences on Judaism & Christianity God vs. Devil, eternal reward/suffering, End of Time Building An Empire Infrastructure: Roads (The Royal Road) Way stations for travellers Art Uniquely Persian style promoted by Darius Monumental Architecture Grand columned halls/palaces Paradayadam + Map of Greece Moving & Shaking Mediterranean basin = uniform ecological zone Easy transfer of lifestyles across space Second Generation Societies/Cultures Assyrian defeat & Persian expansion= new cultural blending Improved maritime navigation = colonization of Western Med. Sea Hybrid communities combining new and old ideas Phoenicians, Greeks, Lydians, Etruscans New models of governments comprised of citizens, not kings The Greek Dark Age 1100-800 BCE: Greece suffers from loss of population and declining agriculture, Greece is isolated from Asia Many Mycenaean Greeks spread throughout Mediterranean basin. Begin use of iron weapons 800: Phoenicians reestablish trade between Greece & Asia Greeks adopt the Phoenician alphabet Greece = plentiful clay for pottery, and stone for building material (marble) Two new groups pastoral nomadic Indo-European Greeks settle Greek mainland: Aeolian Greeks: settle in northern and central Greece; including Athens Dorian Greeks: settle on the island of Crete, other Aegean islands and the Peloponnese; including Sparta Archaic Greece & The Polis Archaic Period: 800-480 BCE, Greece=urban society Polis=The Greek City-State Acropolis & Agora Greek poleis reject Mycenaean monarchical system, choose self-government by citizens in various forms: Tyrannis (Tyranny): rule by one leader elected by the citizens Oligoi (Oligarchy): rule by a few chosen citizens Dēmokratia (Democracy): rule by many citizens who vote on policy Competition between city-states=warfare and athletic competition Hoplites: heavily armored, well trained infantrymen, phalanx Olympic Games Free Market & Money Based Economy Chattel Slavery: humans bought and sold as property Sparta Oligarchical Government Two “king” system: one for domestic rule, one for battlefield The Ephors: five elected to oversee education and regulate conduct The Council of 30: men over sixty debate policy to present for vote Presented policies were voted on by all men over 30 years of age Non-Spartans denied entry into the polis Conquered polis of Messenia, Messenians to work as helots Fear of a helot revolt creates military state, cautious foreign policy The Spartan Military State Tight government control of behavior Young men educated in military discipline, enlist at 20 Men under 30 live in army barracks, eat together Men over 30 live at home, gain right to vote, discharged at 60 Women expected to exercise, given more freedom than elsewhere Art, literature, money, and commerce are forbidden Foreign policy is isolationist Athens Archaic Athens is largest polis in Greece, trade-based economy Athens experiences transition from monarchy to oligarchy to tyranny to democracy Threat of war resulting from debt peonage brings elected tyrants Salon, Pisistratus, and Cleisthenes expand democratic participation Council of 500 male citizens supervises the rule Cleisthenes Tyrant Pericles expands democracy Athenian men experience great amount of freedom Women stay home to cook, clean, supervise servants, raise children Must have male escort to leave home, excluded from public life Married at 14-15 years of age, to older and established men Women expected to be literate and trained in music The Greco-Persian War 546 BCE: Cyrus the Great conquers Ionian Coast of Anatolia 499: Ionian city-states revolt, Athens sends naval support 490: Darius sends forces to Greece, repelled by Athens at Marathon 486: Xerxes, son of Darius, invades from the north Many northern and central Greek poleis accept Persian control Sparta assembles the Hellenic League (coalition of southern poleis) Battle of Thermopylae Sacking of Athens & Battle of Salamis Battle of Plataea Athenian navy controls the Aegean Sea—Delian League Athenian trireme The Athenian Trireme The Peloponnesian War Athens exercises hegemony over Delian League Sparta forms Peloponnesian League to protect itself Rivalry between the two leagues’ interests leads to conflict Athenians threaten Spartan interests by trading with Sparta’s allies 431: Sparta marches on Athens, Athens holds out behind walls Plague (Typhoid Fever) sweeps across Athens Athens holds out for generation Extended contact with outsiders erodes Spartan integrity Peloponnesian forces are victorious, but at a cost No polis enjoys large amounts of control after the war Sparta declines, Athens rebounds, Thebes rises as commercial power Greek Society Polytheistic Religion Temples to patron gods and goddess dominate the polis Non-institutionalized, no doctrine or moral code Oracles provide access to will of the gods Ritual sacrifice & festivals important to well-being of state and self Popular Entertainment Dramas performed at the amphitheater Tragedies & Comedies Aeschylus (Oresteia) Sophocles (Oedipus Rex, Antigone) The Oracle at Delphi Greek Thought Greek art idealizes the natural world, human body Gods take human form, not anthropomorphic gods of Asia Nudity is admired, not shunned as in the traditional Asian societies Artists sign works, become known as individuals Greek philosophy (“love of wisdom”) Pythagoras studies numbers in search of a unifying principle Democritus discovers the atom (atoma) Sophists travel and teach rhetoric and relativity for selfbetterment The “Big Three”: Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle Socrates: questioned authority, held conversations with public Plato: Platonic Forms, natural world is an imperfect copy Aristotle: By studying nature, one can arrive at a better understanding of the true world, rules for successful societies Alexander the Great By 400 BCE, Macedonia develops from a fringe state to a powerful, united, and ethnic Greek state Wealth comes from gold mines and slave trade Finances new military technologies Philip II conquers Greek city-states, including Athens Assassinated, succeeded by son—Alexander Alexander conquers the Persian Empire, enters India Alexander continues cross-cultural integration Exposes southwest Asia to money and Med. Goods Spread of Greek language and philosophy Redistribution of Persian wealth 323 BCE: Alexander dies of wounds and alcohol poisoning Alexander’s Empire Hellenistic Kingdoms After his death, Alexander’s generals (Ptolomy, Seleucus, Antigonus, Lysimachus) split the empire into four kingdoms: Macedonia, Syria, Egypt, and Pergamum Absolute rulers, modeled after Persian satraps Women, especially queens, exercise great influence Conquered people were equal to Greeks Greeks move throughout the Hellenistic world Greek art, architecture, ideas, and language become common throughout Alexandria, Egypt becomes the model city Hellenistic Kingdoms Alexandria