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The Age of Homer

The Age of Homer

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The Age of Homer . Do Now (U3D2) 10/30/2013. Question: Is literature art ? Why is literature created ? . An important question to ask!. Who invaded Greece and took over the Mycenaeans ?. Fall of Mycenaean Civilization . Not long after the fall of Troy (1100 BCE) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Age of Homer

The Age of Homer

Page 2: The Age of Homer

Do Now (U3D2)10/30/2013

Question: Is literature art? Why is literature created?

Page 3: The Age of Homer

An important question to ask!

Who invaded Greece and took over the Mycenaeans?

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Fall of Mycenaean Civilization Not long after the fall of Troy

(1100 BCE) Mycenaean civilization crumbled

(1100- 800 BCE) Another Greek-speaking people

invaded Greece Invaders are called the Dorians

As Mycenaean civilization fell: People left the cities People forgot the ability to write

Page 5: The Age of Homer

Who are the Dorians and

where did they come from?1100 BCE

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Dorian=Doris=Woodland/Upland

Conquered Mycenae by 1100 BCE

Indo-European group that migrated from the North into Southern Greece

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If Greeks lost the ability to write after the Dorians took control, how did people share important stories of their culture?

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The Poet: Homer

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The Age of Homer Homer (750 BCE)

Was a blind poet Wandered from village to village singing of

heroic deeds Poems were originally passed orally then

eventually written down

Two famous Homeric epic poems: The Iliad and The Odyssey The Iliad: Chief source of information for the

Trojan War The Odyssey: tells of the Greek hero Odysseus’

troubles returning home to his faithful wife, Penelope, after the fall of Troy

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A Question…

How does the great Homeric poems, The Iliad and The Odyssey, reveal Greek values?

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The Iliad: Hector vs. Achilles (Book XXII)

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Setting the Stage You are about to read a selection from the

Iliad The great Trojan warrior, Hector, stands

alone outside the walls of the city of Troy When Achilles returns from chasing Apollo

(disguised as Agenor), Hector confronts him. At first, the mighty Trojan considers trying to negotiate with Achilles, but he soon realizes the hopelessness of his cause and flees.

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Setting the Stage Hector runs around the city three

times, with Achilles at his heels. Zeus considers saving Hector, but

Athena persuades him that the mortal’s time has come. Zeus places Hector’s and Achilles’ respective fates on a golden scale, and, indeed, Hector’s sinks to the ground.

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Setting the Stage During Hector’s fourth circle around the

city walls, Athena appears before him, disguised as his ally Deiphobus, and convinces him that together they can take Achilles.

Hector stops running and turns to face Achilles.

YOUR SELECTION FORM THE ILIAD BEGINS AT THIS POINT!!!

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The Iliad Now let’s look a primary

source activity Read and answer the two

questions (10 Minutes) Read the brief summary and

double check your answer

Page 16: The Age of Homer

With your partner, discuss the following question: What value is represented in this Iliad story? Cite specific evidence from the text to support your group’s claim.

Complete this task on a separate piece of paper.