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The Decline of the City- State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE)

The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

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Page 1: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

The Decline of the City-State& the rise of the Hellenistic Age

The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE)

Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE)

Page 2: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

The corruption of the Delian League

Page 3: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Sparta's response to the Delian League

Page 4: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )
Page 5: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )
Page 6: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

The Final Blow to Athens…

• The Spartan admiral, Lysander captured the Athenian fleet in the Dardanelles …cutting of its food supplies

• Athens was required to tear down its walls and agreed to be ruled by a government appointed by Sparta

Page 7: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Effects of the Peloponnesian Wars, 431-404 BCE

• Despite the restoration of democratic government, Athens never returned to its former power…

• Constant warfare among other states continued… In 371, Sparta lost its first war to Thebes

• The loss of manpower on both sides weakened all of Greece

Page 8: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Philip II of Macedon r. 359-336 BCE

An ambitious and resourceful ruler of Macedonia who built up his army and planned to conquer the Greeks and the Persians.

Page 9: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

“The Philippics”

• A series of fiery speeches by Demosthenes

• In 338 BC, Philip defeated Athens and its allies and created “The League of Corinth”

Page 10: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander the Great, r 336-323 BC

• Inherited an empire• Destruction of Thebes

Page 11: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Aristotle tutoring Alexander

(J. L. Ferris, 1895)

Page 12: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander III… The Legend:

• Some say he had a vision to unite the human race in a Pan-Hellenic culture - one empire where people could live in peace, understanding and harmony…

• He wanted to conquer the known world…just another paranoiac-tyrant.

• His goal may have been to have a stable empire with no threats to his vast holdings.

Page 13: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )
Page 14: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander in Egypt

• Welcomed as a liberator from Persian tyranny

• Hailed as Pharoah and given the double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt

• Egypt had always been the object of awe and source of inspiration to the Greeks

Irony: “a barbarian chief of a backwater kingdom in the Balkan mountains had become the ruler of the oldest continuous civilization on earth.”

Page 15: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander’s final campaign…Alexander’s expansionism ended

in the mountainous regions of Bactria (present-day Afghanistan) - his army experienced its hardest fighting and never succeeded in getting more than a tenuous hold on the territory.

Alexander’s last battle, Hydaspes, 326 BC, on the banks of the Indus

River, was an empty victory- his famous horse Bucephalus was killed and his men, thousands of miles and eight years from home, refused to go on.

Page 16: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )
Page 17: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander died in 323 BC

Returning to Babylon, Alexander began to

consolidate his empire:

> integrated 30,000 Persian youth into his army

> married a Persian princess

> arranged for 80 of his officers and 10,000

soldiers to marry women from the Empire

>punished soldiers who did not respect

Persian culture > Adopted Persian dress for himself

> Encouraged the ritual of proskynesis

Page 18: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )
Page 19: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander’s Legacy…

He pushed the world in a new direction- a fusion of disparate people & an intermingling of cultures

• The Hellenistic Age begins with his death in 323 BCE and ends with the death of Cleopatra in 27BCE.

Page 20: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Alexander’s vast empire merged many peoples into a new, cosmopolitan culture known as “Hellenistic Civilization.”

• Map of Alex empire goes here

Page 21: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

The empire was divided among 4 generals

Seleucus; Ptolemy; Lysimachus and Cassander

Page 22: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Cosmopolitanism…

• Hellenistic society is characterized by a mingling of Greek, Egyptian & Persian cultures

• In the lands he conquered, Alexander introduced Greek language, literature and art;

• established over 70 cities: Alexandria• A world community joined by commerce, trade

and travel replaced the Polis as the center of life• New philosophies- Stoicism and Epicureanism

emerged to help the common man cope with their new status in a world community instead of the local polis.

Page 23: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Zeno (342-270 BC) Stoicism:

• Urged individuals to live according to reason and be indifferent to

pleasure and pain (happiness

and sorrow)

• Avoid desires and disappointments; calmly accept whatever life brings your way…

• The commonality of Man: all people are morally equal, including women and slaves, because all have the power to reason…

• Advocated high moral standards including protecting the rights of fellow human beings

Page 24: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Epicurus, (341-270 BC) -Epicureanism:

• Strive for individual happiness in the big, confusing world by avoiding pain and anxiety…

• Criticized attempts to gain wealth, power or fame because it increases anxiety…

• Enjoy the simple pleasures of life- talking with friends, enjoying good food or just “lying on soft grass near a running stream.”

• Later followers stressed the “pleasure” rather than the simplicity!

Page 25: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Circa 200 BCE

The Lighthouse of Alexandria, Egypt, was the world's first important lighthouse. It guided ships into the city's harbor for about 1,500 years before being toppled by an earthquake.

Page 26: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Hellenistic Science and Math

• Euclid (about 300 BC): Geometry

• Archimedes (287-212 BC): Mathematician and Scientist – discovered principles of the lever, the pulley and specific gravity.

• Aristarchus (310-230 BC): Astronomy-concluded the earth revolved around the sun

• Architecture: emphasized size and grandeur• Sculpture: showed realism and individuality

Page 27: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Ptolemy's great work on geography and mapmaking, called the Geography, appeared around the year 150 AD. It influenced philosophers and scientists for 1500 years.

Page 28: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

The alter to Zeus at Pergamon, Asia Minor

Architecture: emphasized size and grandeur

Page 29: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

Sculpture: showed realism and emotion

Page 30: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

“Heaven cannot have two suns, nor earth, two masters.”

Page 31: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

“I am not afraid of an army of lions led by a sheep, I am afraid of an army of sheep led by a lion.”

Page 32: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

“Remember upon the conduct of each depends the fate of all.”

Page 33: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

“There is nothing impossible to him who will try.”

Page 34: The Decline of the City-State & the rise of the Hellenistic Age The Peloponnesian Wars (431—404 BCE) Alexander the Great (r 336-323 BCE )

“I m indebted to my father for living, but to my teacher for living well.”