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Chapter 3 Commerce Culture and Trade in the Ancient Mediterranean (100 BCE to 400 CE) The Minoans 2100 BCE – 100 BCE • The Minoans were a small, vibrant civilization on the island of Crete that existed at around the same time as the Phoenicians. • The palace complex in the city of Knossos was the center of political and religious authority. © Third Eye Images/CORBIS • The Minoans suffered massive fallout from a nearby volcanic eruption in 1470 BCE, and were conquered by the Mycenaeans from mainland Greece around 1420 BCE. The Phoenicians 3000 BCE – 539 BCE • The Phoenicians were a strong sea faring people who settled along the eastern coastline of the Mediterranean Sea basin, north of Palestine • They were active merchants and traders in the Mediterranean region. • They had a strong navy but a relatively weak army. • Persian and Greek forces ultimately overran the weak ground defenses of their city-states. Phoenician Industry and Commerce • • • • Everett Collection The Phoenician economy produced grains, olives, figs, date palms, timber, glassware, and purple textiles made with dye extracted from murex. They traded these products extensively and built shops in foreign cities. By the early first millennium BCE, the Phoenicians had established commercial colonies throughout the rim of the Mediterranean. After around 1000 BCE, the Phoenicians switched their trading methods from a barter system to the use of precious metals, which they eventually minted into coins. Minoan Culture Patrick Frilet / Rex USA, Courtesy Everett Collection • Minoan fresco paintings (see image) of nature and human activities featured rich colors, curvilinear lines, and a level of detail the Western world had never seen. • Scribes gradually developed a writing system, called Linear A, that consisted of 60 phonetic signs; this became the basis for the ancient Greek language. • Minoan religion was polytheistic and featured the goddess Ariadne, which may be indicative of a high status of women in elite society. The Mycenaeans 2200 BCE – 800 BCE • Scholars believe that between 2200 BCE and 1200 BCE, waves of Indo-European nomads settled in an area known as Mycenae on the Greek peninsula of Peloponnesus. These were the immediate forerunners of Classical Greek culture. • Mycenaeans engaged in widespread trade, as well as expansionist military campaigns that conquered neighbors like Crete, Athens, various Aegean islands, Cyprus, and parts of Italy and Anatolia. • Around 1200 BCE, the political structure collapsed and city-states began to gradually die out, possibly due to a combination of invasions and natural disasters. The Dark Age of Greece Museo Gregoriano Etrusco, Vatican Museums, Vatican State • The “Dark Age” of Greek history occurred during the 200 years after the collapse of Mycenaean civilization, when production of luxury goods, painting, and writing ceased, and constant warfare and chaos reigned. • During this period, most Greek governments were composed of councils of local chiefs, and often a single ruler, or tyrant, rose to the top. • Greek culture made a strong recovery with the introduction of iron, which was forged into durable tools, weapons, and hardware used to build ships for cargo and war. Classical Greece: Athenian Politics • • • Alinari / Art Resource, NY The polis of Athens developed the standard for democracy, which was centered on a citizens’ assembly drawn by lot from all free adult men. In 594 BCE, Athenians authorized an aristocrat named Solon (see image) to craft laws that encouraged greater equality among the classes. Athenian democracy reached its pinnacle under the guidance of Pericles (461 BCE – 429 BCE), who fostered commerce and prosperity and furthered the cause of increased political participation, though women, children, slaves, and immigrants remained outside the system. Greek Economy and Architecture • • • The Greeks became a maritime power, trading wine, olive oil, metal goods, and textiles, and establishing informal colonies throughout the Mediterranean basin. Greek cities shared a common architectural style, exemplified by the Parthenon in Athens, a rectangular limestone structure built to honor Greek gods and characterized by its tapered Doric columns and size. Athenian activity centered on the Agora, a structure replicated throughout the Greek colonies that served as a public meeting place and a marketplace. Greek Philosophy iStockphoto/Thinkstock • The democratic environment of Athens encouraged innovative thinking, including the study of philosophy. • The great Classical Greek philosophers – Socrates (see image), Plato, and Aristotle – called on people to question the nature of reality and the status quo. • As a group, the three of them shifted the search for an understanding of humanity, the world, and the universe from the pantheon to the human intellect. Socrates 469 BCE – 399 BCE iStockphoto/Thinkstock • Socrates posed a complex series of questions and focused on human problems • He sought to cultivate human excellence and promote the art of living. • Many Athenians celebrated Socrates as the founder of empirical scientific knowledge. • Others regarded him as a corrupter of youth and a menace to society because of his rejection of the gods; his enemies succeeded in having him condemned to death. Plato 430 BCE – 347 BCE iStockphoto/Thinkstock • Plato was a student of Socrates and the transcriber of most of his works. • He founded a school in Athens, and wrote on topics like immortality, love, true rhetoric, and justice. • Plato believed that the Form and the Idea of a thing give it meaning and substance. • He believed that democracy was flawed, and advocated an ideal political society that prized education and was ruled bya philosopher-king and the educated class. Aristotle 384 BCE – 322 BCE iStockphoto/Thinkstock • Aristotle was a student of Plato. • He studied a wide range of subjects, including physics and astronomy, political theory, human happiness, human good, virtue, and reason. • He wrote many books on the subject of ethics, and highlighted the science of moral living. • Aristotle’s model of a geocentric universe, where the planets revolved around a motionless earth, became the standard interpretation of the cosmos for nearly a millennium. The Persian (500-479 BCE) and Peloponnesian Wars (431-404 BCE) • • • • • Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images • Persia attempted to conquer Greece beginning in 500 BCE. The Athenians defeated the Persian army of King Darius in 490 BCE at the plain of Marathon. After Darius’s death, his son Xerxes attacked again in 480 BCE. Skirmishes between Greece and Persia continued for decades, until a peace treaty was signed in 448 BCE. The Peloponnesian War pitted Athens and Sparta against one another and shifted the balance of regional power from the former to the latter. The Peloponnesian War decimated Athens and caused the region to descend into chaos, as city-states chose sides and combatants fought a “total war” to decimate entire cities and cultures.