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Overview • Overview & Timeline for Greek History • Background on Archaic Period • Factors favoring Panhellenism – Homer’s Epics – The Olympic Games – Threat of Foreign Invasion • Factors favoring the Polis – – – – Geographical Influences Acropolis Civic Identity Tyrants and political agitation Timeline • Archaic Period: 750-500 – The genesis of ancient Greek Culture • Classical Period: 500-350 – The Golden Age of the Polis • Hellenistic Period: 350-50 BCE – The Spread of Greek Culture throughout the Eastern Mediterranean The Archaic Period – Period of Creative Tension influenced partly by the conflicting loyalties to the polis and a common Greek identity – Demographic & Commercial Expansion c. 700 BCE – Formation of Greek Colonies • Magna Graecia • Ionian Greece – Philosophy & Speculative inquiries The Archaic Period • Between 1000 and 800 BCE many Greeks migrate from Greece to Asia Minor and gradually develop a distinctive Ionian Greek culture • Ionia preceded mainland Greece in the rebirth of civilization by re-developing trade networks, cities, and literature; many of the pre-Socratic philosophers and scientists, such as Thales, Pythagorus, and Heraclitus, were born in Ionia • By 800 BCE Ionian civilization had spread across the Mediterranean as far away as Spain and connected the Greek mainland to many of the ideas and developments, including the Phoenician alphabet, which the Greeks quickly adopted and adapted Ionian Greeks & Philosophy • During the course of the eighth century, Greek city states along the coast of Asia Minor underwent a resurgence of trade; prosperity spread as populations swelled • By the seventh century in the city of Miletus a new strain of intellectual endeavors spread • A group of thinkers, including Thales and Heraclitus, known as sophoi or philosophoi (lovers of wisdom) imagined that the workings of the cosmos could be explained through reference to mechanistic rather than supernatural forces • Later, Pythagoras of Samos incorporated the orderly nature of mechanistic thought with religion to produce a secretive mystery religion Factors Favoring Panhellenism: Homer • Using the newly adopted Greek alphabet, Homer allegedly wrote the epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey around 750 BCE • The poems had been circulating in oral tradition for centuries before Homer put his version in writing • References in the poems suggest that they relate events that took place during the Bronze Age c. 1500-1200 BCE • The Iliad tells the story of a ten year long siege of Troy that the Greeks endure in order to reclaim a Greek princess who was kidnapped by Paris of Troy Factors Favoring Panhellenism: Homer • Achilles is the great Greek hero of the Iliad; by modern standards he seems almost bipolar, one minute sulking in his tent because his concubine has been ravished by his king, Agamemnon, and the next minute seeking revenge against the Trojans for the slaying of his soul mate, Patrocolus - the relationship between Achilles and Patrocolus is reminiscent of that between Gilgamesh and Enkidu • Rather than viewing Achilles as bi-polar, it is more accurate to view his moodiness as the result of ten years of fighting and bloodshed; his violent slaying of Hector, Patrocolus’ killer, signifies the brutality of the hardened warrior Factors Favoring Panhellenism: Homer • Eventually Achilles is re-civilized and he agrees to return the battered body of Hector to the Trojans for proper burial; by agreeing to the entreaties of his enemies who invoke the wishes of the gods, Achilles demonstrates his willingness to re-integrate with civilized life Influence of the Homeric Epics • The Homeric epics became the basis for Greek education during the classical period; students memorized great portions of the poem in order to learn grammar, vocabulary, and particularly ancient values – heroism – piety and respect for the gods • The poems never doubt the existence of the gods, whose humanity is evident throughout • The poems established a common identity and shared past for the various tribes and cities that began to emerge at the end of the Greek Dark Ages Factors Favoring Panhellenism: Olympics • Beginning in the early eighth century, the games are part of a religious festival held at Olympia in the NW Peloponese every four years • Competition initially included running, wrestling, jumping, throwing and later included horse and chariot racing • Individual, not city-state, competitions with a garland for the winner • Women were barred on pain of death but had their own games dedicated to Hera, wife of Zeus Factors Favoring Panhellenism: Olympics • • • • Emphasis on excellence: aretê Contributed to panhellenic identity all fighting ceased during the games Olympia was not the site of an ancient city or town; it was a sacred sanctuary complex – Temple of Zeus was the principal shrine; it was destroyed by the Christian Roman Emperor Theodosius II in 426 CE Homer c. 750 BCE wrote about events from the early 1100s BCE Achilles in 5th century manuscript What values did the Iliad convey? How did it depict the Greeks? In what ways was the Iliad a tragedy? What did it say about warfare and human nature? The Rage of Achilles Giovanni Battista 1757 Greek Bireme c. 1200 Mycenaean Palace: Lion’s Gate Mycenaean Daggers Mycenaean murals from the palace of Nestor in SW Peloponese Mycenaean Vase c. 1300 Troy The Walls of Troy 7 Entrance Ramp to Ancient Troy 2 Pergammon Museum in Berlin The Archaic Greek Age 800-500 BCE Homer c. 725 BCE Remains of the ancient site of Olympia Mt. Olympus in Thessalonica Apollo Temple of Zeus • One of the most popular gods of the Greco Roman world • Represented the sun, wisdom, justice • The favored god of the ancient Trojans; Achilles desecrates his temple in the Iliad Pentathlon: The Discuss Pentathlon: Wrestling Running • Races varied in length from ½ mile to 3 miles • In one of the half mile races contests wore full armor (50-60 lbs) Equestrian Sports • Expensive, only the wealthy could compete • Road bareback and without stirrups • At 4.5 miles, the standard race was much longer than modern thoroughbred racing Four Horse Chariot Race Typical Greek Acropolis Colonization c. 500 BCE Ancient Greece Greek Hoplites Hoplite phalanx Hoplite phalanx This frieze of attacking foot soldiers is from the so-called Chigi Vase--a Corinthian masterpiece. When the Greeks adopted heavy armor, weapons, and shields, their lack of mobility forced them to fight in several dense lines, each behind the other. Cohesion and order became as valuable as courage. Here a flute player plays a marching tune to help the hoplites maintain their pace during the attack. (Villa Giulia Museum/Gabinetto Fotografico Nazionale) Sophoi: Thales of Miletis (624-547) Pythagoras of Samos (570-495) Sophoi: Socrates? (470-399) Attica Solon and the Tyrants Pesistratus Instituted the Pan Athenian Festival during the mid 500s BCE Cleisthenes Father of Athenian Democracy 508-507 BCE Aristophanes & Old Comedy What does the introduction tell us about Aristophanes and his plays? A. They were written during the 500s BCE B. They were performed in front of small elite audiences over the course of a Summer C. They were often performed during a festival honoring the wine god, Dionysos D. They rarely relied on crude humor What topic are the primary focus of these plays? A. Education & how to end the war B. Political corruption & public drunkenness C. Bribery & extortion D. Achilles, the gods, and heroism How did Aristophanes portray Socrates? a. b. c. d. As a warrior As a sophist, who corrupted Athenian youth As a drinking companion As a very religious priest Factors Favoring the Polis: Geography • Similar to the political organization of ancient Sumeria - and later Renaissance Italy - city states had become the principal form of political organization in Greece by 750 BCE, which is traditionally identified as the beginning of the Archaic Greek Age • With its plethora of mountains and isolated pockets of land surrounded by sea, the geography of Greece encouraged the formation of fragmented rather than unified political structures • Additionally Greeks established numerous urban colonies throughout the Aegean and Mediterranean The Polis • In contrast to the Mesopotamian city-state, the Greek polis had a much broader level of political participation, which was often divided among its male citizens, not its inhabitants • Because both rich and poor participated in the political process, tension was an ongoing feature of many poleis during the Archaic Age, when many city-states sought to define the rules for administering justice and sharing power The Polis • Several poleis first emerged on fortified hilltops, called an acropolis, which served as a defensive post in time of war and the treasury in time of peace • Unified by civic gods, traditions, and ceremonies, the various poleis were the primary focus of Greek political loyalties, which were caught between the conflicting forces of panhellenism and civic pride • Most poleis numbered only ten to twenty thousand people and many were limited in size by the fertility of the surrounding countryside The Tyrants & the Poleis • As the population and commercial expansion spread to the Greek mainland during the seventh and sixth centuries, tensions emerged in the poleis as the merchants and prosperous independent farmers challenged the control that the hereditary aristocracy had exercised on the governments of Greek cities • In most of the Greek mainland a group of popular dictators known as tyrants seized power from the aristocracy by catering to the will of the independent farmers and merchants The Tyrants • One of the most successful tyrants was Solon (630-560 BCE) of Athens; he reorganized the social and economic laws of the city and ushered in a period of profound prosperity for the city’s merchants during the early decades of the sixth century BCE • An unintended consequence of his actions was a mushrooming of foreign born slaves in the city • Solon is usually credited with a vital influence on the spread of popular control over the city government: the democratization of Athens Diverging Cultures: The Lacedaemonians • Unlike Athens, Sparta never had a tyrant and they developed a culture that was rabidly opposed to tyranny • Political power was shared by hoplite warriors, “the Similars,” who were led by a king • The Spartan warriors were free to train for warfare throughout most of their life while their economy was supported by virtually servile labor of helots • Encouraged to perform physical exercise, Spartan women enjoyed more independence and freedom than in other Greek city-states Diverging Cultures: The Lacedaemonians • The term used to describe those who lived in and around Sparta – people of few words, from whom we obtain the term laconic – male children raised for martial career from a very early age; by 7 they are living in barracks, separated from family – Relatively sparse population but immense political influence in Hellas based on the respect that they engendered for their bravery and military exploits; this respect helped the Spartans form the Peloponesian League, a coalition of allied city-sates loyal to Sparta Summary • The writing of the Iliad and the Odyssey marked an important step in the coalescence of the various elements of Greek culture – language – religion – values • As various civic cultures developed throughout the Greek mainland, the common heritage of the Homeric epics provided a unifying element of panhellenic identity; nevertheless, panhellenism generally played second fiddle to the attraction of the polis • During the archaic Greek Age, the various poleis of Greece developed their own customs and traditions and gradually undermined the unifying aspects of panhellenism