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The Greeks The Beginnings of Europe Geography • Peninsula- dominated by the sea • Mostly mountains with small valleys- less than 20% of land arable • Communities isolated from each other due to mountains • Small populations- had to colonize when population got too large. (N.Africa, Italy, Asia Minor, Sicily and S. France) Geography cont’d • Greeks became fishermen and traders. • Grew olives and grapes • Little meat due to shortage of landsheep where able. The Polis • The Greeks developed independent citystates, each with own form of government. • Cities were built on sides of hills to conserve arable land. • Included the wall, living areas, agora (marketplace) and the acropolis (fort). Polis cont’d • City-states did not unify in Greece for three reasons: 1. geography 2. local patriotism 3. competition to survive New Warfare • Due to small armies the Greeks developed a new style of warfare called the phalanx. • Soldiers were armored with large shields, long spears and short swords. • Used a box formation. • Took a phalanx to beat a phalanx. Greek Personality • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Exposure to the sea did the following to the Greeks view of life: Energetic Curious Respect for human ability Aggressive Cooperative, freedom loving Greek Religion • No priests in Greece. Fathers and city leaders led religious observances. • Sacrifice and divination central features. • Polytheistic • Gods were human-like with supernatural powers. Gods interfered with people’s lives. • Afterlife concept was vague or non-existent. • Focus on here and now/ live for today. Development of Democracy • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Democracy evolved in Athens. Monarchy Aristocracy (Oligarchy) Plutocracy (Oligarchy) Tyranny Democracy Development of Democracy cont’d • Tyrants brought democracy to Athens. 1. Draco- harsh written law code 2. Solon- gave citizens right to vote without property requirements, outlawed debt slavery, cancelled debts of poor 3. Cleisthenes- gave citizenship to all males (poor or rich), encouraged education, exiled corrupt officials, freedom of speech. Athens and Sparta • Athens was larger • Education for wealthy boys only- liberal arts • Society was based on trade and open to outsiders • Many of the Greek artistic and intellectual achievements came out of Athens • Women were subordinate and kept out of public • Sparta was small with a huge slave population called helots • All boys and girls educated- women considered equals • Military education • Farming economy • Closed society- very paranoid- did not like outsiders • No wall around city The Persian Wars Herodotus • Considered “Father of History” • Wrote “Histories” a collection of stories about the rise of Persia and the wars against Greece. Cause of Persian Wars • Athens helped some colonies revolt in Asia Minor. • The provincial capital of Sardis was burned by the rebellion. • The Persians put down the revolt eventually but at great expense- so they destroyed the first city to revolt (Miletus) and killed or enslaved all its inhabitants. • Darius I decided to invade Greece to punish Athens in 490 BCE. First War: Sea Invasion by Darius I • Darius invaded and landed on a plain 26 miles from Athens with 600 ships and between 50,000 and 75,000 men. • Athenian and Greek allied army of 20,000 men met them on the plain and surprisingly defeated the larger Persian army. Only 192 Greeks died compared to thousands of Persian warriors. Second War: Land and Sea Invasions by Xerxes • To revenge his father’s shame, Xerxes in 480 BCE launched a massive land and sea invasion of Greece.(250,000 soldiers) • Fought three major engagements- Thermopylae (Stand of the 300 Spartans), Salamis (naval battle near Athens), and Platae (Sparta’s revenge). • Invasion failed and Xerxes lost most of his army. Legacy of Persian Wars • Greece now considered a Mediterranean power. Athens and Sparta become the dominant city states. • Athens enters a “Golden Age” of intellectual and artistic achievements. • Jealously over Athenian dominance of Delian League led to 25 years of civil warfare in Greece. Athens vs. Sparta (Peloponnesian Wars) • Leaves Greece open to foreign invasionMacedonia under King Philip invades and unites Greek city-states under one king.