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Transcript
AIM: How did Ancient Greece establish
itself as a dominant power in the western
world?
DO NOW: What do you already know about Ancient Greece?
Roots of Greek Civilization
 Minoan Culture – 3,000 B.C.
 Island of Crete
 Mycenaean Civilization– 2,700 B.C.
 Peloponnesian Peninsula
Earliest developed culture
on mainland Greece!
Decline of Early Civilizations
 1400 B.C.E Minoan civilization
vanished
 Mycenaean’s came under
attack (Dorians)
 As power faded, people
abandoned their cities and
trade declined ~ 1100 B.C.E
Greek Values and the Great Legends
 Homer – poet, most likely
lived about 750 BCE
 Credited for the works of
The Iliad and The Odyssey
 Homer’s tales were passed
on orally from one
generation to the next.
The Illyiad:
• Chief source of information about
the Trojan war
• Achilles – the mightiest Greek
warrior
The Odyssey:
• Tells of the many struggles between
the struggles of the Greek hero
Odysseus on his return home to his
wife Penelope.
Greek Mythology
 Greek gods and goddesses
(polytheistic belief system)
 Twelve main Olympians
 Mount Olympus
 Ruled every aspect of
human life
Geography Shapes Ancient Greece
 Greece is located on peninsula
in Southern Europe. The Balkan
peninsula stretches south into
the Mediterranean Sea.
 Covered with rugged
mountains. No long rivers. Mild
climate, hot summers.
Geography Shapes Greece
 Polis: Greek city-state. Made up of
a major city or town and its
surrounding countryside.
 Mountains divided Greeks from
one another.
 Seas provided a vital link to the
outside world.
 Acropolis: high city, stood on top of
a hill with a great marble temple
dedicated to different gods or
goddesses
Asia Minor
Aegean
Sea
Adriatic
Sea
+Marathon
Ionian
Sea
Mediterranean Sea
Governing the City-States
 Citizens: free residents
 Between 750 BC and 500 BC, different forms of government
evolved in ancient Greece
 Monarchy
 Aristocracy
 Oligarchy
 Tyranny
 Democracy
Athens vs. Sparta
SIMILARITIES
-Direct Democracy
-Only male citizens
Involved in government
-trade with other city-states
-Education for the boys
only
-Boys/men served in the
Military at 18 for 2 years
-Women were not equal
-Navy
-Located by the water
DIFFERENCES
-same language
-Olympics
-city-states
-located in Greece
-same gods and
religious beliefs
-Military Oligarchy
-Military society
-Trade and travel not allowed
-Military training for all boys
-Girls to be trained to be
mothers of soldiers
-Women obey men but they
could own property and
had rights.
-Army
-Located inland
DIFFERENCES
Would you rather be an Athenian or Spartan?
Speech Activity
AIM: Should Greece be credited for the
foundations of Western Civilization?
Do Now:
Based on what you already
know about the Greek citystates, if you had to fight in a
war with either Sparta or
Athens, would you want to be
in the Spartan army or the
Athenian army? Support your
answer with EVIDENCE!
The Persian Wars
 The Expansion of the
Persian Empire
 The Ionian Revolt
 The Battle of Marathon
 The Battle of
Thermopylae
 The Battle of Salamis
THREE MAJOR EFFECTS OF THE PERSIAN WARS
1) More than ever before Spartans, Athenians and
residents of other Greek city-states referred to
themselves collectively as “Greeks”
2) Greeks had new level of confidence
3) Athens enters a Golden Age
Athens
One of the most important
ancient Greek city-states
Birthplace of democracy
Modern foundations – art,
literature, philosophy
democracy
demokratia
demo:
the people
kratia:
power or rule
rule by the people
The Agora
Agora = marketplace
• Center of Athenian
life – government
buildings, temples,
stoas (columned
buildings)
• Place for recreation
Men socialized there
Greek Achievements
 Architecture:
 Greek Columns: Doric, Ionic, Corinthian
 Parthenon
 Geography, Astronomy
 Equator, latitude and longitude, equinoxes, eclipses
 Medicine
 Hippocrates – Hippocratic Oath
 Zoology
 Evolution, natural selection
 Military
 Phalanx
Achievements
 Engineering
 Lever, force
 Mathematics
 Euclid - Geometry, Pythagoras – Pythagorean
Theorem
 Physics
 Atoms, protons, neutrons, repelling forces
 Theatre, poetry & drama
 Tragedies and comedies
 Sports
 Olympics
Thinkers, Artists, Philosophers
 Herodotus – historian
 Socrates, Plato, Aristotle – philosophers
 Logic (rational thinking) and rhetoric (art
of skillful speaking)
 Archimedes – inventor
 Pericles – father of democracy
 Homer – writer
 Phidias - sculptor
The Greeks: Crucible of Civilization
Video Activity
Aim: Does Alexander deserve his reputation of
‘the great’?
Aim: Was Alexander the Great a hero or
Do Now: What
a villain?
characteristics do you
associate with a hero?
What characteristics do
you associate with a
villain?
The Downfall – The Peloponnesian War
Many Greeks outside of Athens
resented Athenian domination.
Sparta & other enemies of
Athens formed the
Peloponnesian League
431 B.C.E warfare broke out
between Athens and Sparta –
lasted 27 years
The Peloponnesian War
Sparta had the geographic
advantage
Pericles took in surrounding
peoples to Athens –
Overcrowding led to disaster
Pericles died from plague – unfit
successors
Committed savage acts against
each other
Ex: Sparta allied itself with Persia
The Peloponnesian War
Spartans captured Athens, but
did not destroy the city.
For the next century, fighting
continued to disrupt the Greek
world
By 359 BCE, Macedonia poised
to conquer Greece
Macedonia & Greece
In 338 B.C.E the Macedonian army conquered
Greece
Athens & other Greek city-states lost their
independence.
However, Greek culture spread from the
Mediterranean to the borders of India.
*All because of Alexander ‘the Great’
Background
 Macedonia – rugged, mountainous
kingdom
 Rulers were of Greek origin and kept ties
with their Greek neighbors.
 Philip II – lived in Thebes and admired Greek
culture
 359 B.C.E gained throne of Macedonia
Philip Conquers Greece
338 B.C.E – brought all of Greece under his control
Bigger dream -> conquer the Persian empire.
Did not achieve – he was assassinated at his
daughters wedding.
Alexander took the throne at 20 years old
Alexander Builds an Empire
 With Greece subdued, he
moved into Persia
 He then moved from victory to
victory, marching through Asia
Minor to Palestine and south to
Egypt and east again to
Babylon
 With much of the Persian
empire under his control, he
headed farther east to
northern India
Legacy
Died at 32 years old – cause of death still
questioned by historians
Assimilation of Culture – local people absorbed
Greek culture & in turn Greek settlers adopted local
customs
HELLENISM
REGENTS BASED QUESTION
Which leader is most closely associated with the accomplishments shown by
The illustration?
A) Charlemagne
C) Alexander the Great
B) Suleiman the Magnificent
D) Mansa Musa
Hero or Villain Activity
1.Independent Reading
2.Alexander Clips
3.Mini-debate
Exit
Was Alexander the Great a hero or a villain?