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ANCIENT GREECE 1750 B.C. – 133 B.C.

Ancient Greece

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1750 B.C. – 133 B.C. Ancient Greece. Early People of the Aegean. Minoans : 1750-1500 B.C.- developed on the island of Crete, named after Minos , a legendary king of Crete. Success based on trade not conquest - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ancient Greece

ANCIENT GREECE1750 B.C. – 133 B.C.

Page 2: Ancient Greece

Early People of the Aegean Minoans: 1750-1500 B.C.- developed

on the island of Crete, named after Minos, a legendary king of Crete.Success based on trade not conquestKnossos: rulers lived in this palace. It

housed rooms for the royal family, banquet halls, workshops for artisans. Walls covered with frescoes

Page 3: Ancient Greece

Early People of the Aegean Mycanea: 1400-1200 B.C.- developed on

Greek mainland before taking over Cretesea traders, lived in separate city-states on the

mainlandTrojan War: 1250 B.C.- Mycanea vs. Troy Troy-(rich

trading city in present day Turkey), Troy controlled straits connecting the Mediterranean and Black Seas.

Legend of the Trojan War: Trojans kidnapped the wife of a Greek king and the Greeks went to rescue her, fought for ten years to get her back. Finally Troy was seized by the Greeks and burned down

Page 4: Ancient Greece

The Age of Homer Homer: 750 B.C.- blind poet

who wandered village to village passing on oral accounts of heroic deeds. Responsible for two great epics. Iliad: story of Achilles, the

mightiest Greek warrior. Odyssey: story of Odysseus and

his return home to his wife Penelope after the Trojan War.

Iliad and Odyssey: display the values of honor, courage, and eloquence

Page 5: Ancient Greece

Ancient Greece Geography has a huge influence on

Greek way of life.Mountains cover ¾ of Greece – results in

city-states organization, rather than centralization

Bad conditions for growing grain, market agriculture emerges

Page 6: Ancient Greece

The Rise of Greek City-States Different city states developed with

different ideas:Sparta: great military, aristocracy rule, large

slave population, but very little arts or cultureAthens: democracy and advancements in

philosophy, education, trade, science, architecture, drama, and history

Page 7: Ancient Greece

Athens Democracy Athens/American Democracy:

Athens:Citizens participate directly (direct

democracy)Only male citizens (born in Athens) could

voteAmerica:Citizens elect people to make laws

(representative democracy)All citizens can vote

Page 8: Ancient Greece

The Persian Wars By 500 B.C., Athens had emerged as

the wealthiest Greek city-state Persians: empire stretching from Asia-

Minor to the border of India.`Greek city-states: Ionia in Asia MinorThough under Persian rule-still self

governing499 B.C.- Ionian Greeks rebelled against

Persian rule- Athens sent ships to help them

Page 9: Ancient Greece

Persian Wars Persians soon crushed the rebellion but

Darius, ruler of the Persians, was upset with the Athenians role in the uprising.

Marathon: Darius sent troops to punish Athens, landed near MarathonAthenians - heavily outnumbered, outmatched,

overran the Persians and forced them to retreat back to their ships.

Pheidippides - Athenian, ran from Marathon to Athens proclaiming “We are victorious” died upon arrival

The Marathon Race is named after this event.

Page 10: Ancient Greece
Page 11: Ancient Greece

Persian Wars Darius: died before another attack was

made Xerxes: (son of Darius) 480 B.C.- sent

much larger force to conquer GreeceAthens- Sparta & other city-states supportThermopylae- Spartans led by Leonidas, held

out bravely but were defeated by the Persians, Persians then marched south and burned Athens (the city was empty)

Page 12: Ancient Greece

Persian Wars, cont’d.Greeks defeated Persians at the strait of

Salamis, and later on land in Asia Minor, ending the Persian invasion of Greece

Delian League: Athens and alliance with other greek City-States

Page 13: Ancient Greece

Athens – Age of Pericles Pericles – 460 -429 B.C. –under

his leadership, Athens thrived economically and the gov’t became more democratic.Direct democracy (6,000 members

required to decide important issues) - Stipend, Jury, Ostracism

Pericles’ Funeral Oration- one of earliest and greatest expressions of democracy

Pericles – turned Athens into cultural center of Greece

Page 14: Ancient Greece

Peloponnesian War Peloponnesian League: formed by Sparta

and other city-states to counter the Delian League

Peloponnesian War -431 B.C.- fighting broke out between Athens and Sparta. Soon all of Greece was involved. fighting lasted 27 yearsAthens geographic disadvantage: Sparta inlandPlague in Athens – 1/3 of population lost,

including Pericles

Page 15: Ancient Greece

Peloponnesian War War Ends: 404 B.C.- with the help of

Persian navy, the Spartans captured Athensended Athenian domination of Greek worldDemocratic government sufferedFor the next century, fighting plagued the

Greek world

Page 16: Ancient Greece

Greek Philosophers Socrates: Athenian

philosopher, we most know about him from his student PlatoSocratic Method – pose a series

of questions and asked students to evaluate their answers

“Know Thyself” seek truth and self-knowledge

Put on trial at age 70, jurors sentenced him to death, he drank the hemlock(deadly poison)

Page 17: Ancient Greece

Greek Philosophers Plato: distrust of democracy

after the death of SocratesSet up the Academy (school in

Athens)Emphasized the importance of

reasonThe Republic – Plato described his

vision of an ideal state. Ideal society: workers to produce, military to protect, and philosophers to rule

Page 18: Ancient Greece

Greek Philosophers Aristotle: Plato’s most

famous studentAnalyzed all forms of

governmentThought democracy could

lead to mob ruleFavored rule by a single and

strong rulerLeft writings on politics,

ethics, logic, biology, literature, and many other subjects

Page 19: Ancient Greece

Art, Architecture, and Drama Parthenon – an example of Greek

architecture (tall columns and sloping roof)

Page 20: Ancient Greece

•Greek Sculpture: valued order, balance, and proportion. Wanted to depict the ideal human form

•Poetry and Drama: Tragedies and Comedies

Art, Architecture, and Drama

Page 21: Ancient Greece

Alexander the Great 336 B.C. – 323 B.C. King of Macedonia upon

death of his father Great warrior who conquered

Persia, Egypt, and reached India

Hellenistic – Greek like Supported assimilation –

blended Greek styles with Egyptian, Persian, and Indian

Greek traditions spread to Asia and Africa