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Greek Colonization and Migration

Greek Colonization and Migration. Why Colonization?. The lack of natural resources in Greece lack of metals (tin, copper, sliver) timber food (grains and fish) fights between Greek states looking for good agricultural lands expanding trade routes Persian Empire

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Greek Colonization and Migration

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  1. Greek Colonization and Migration

  2. Why Colonization? • The lack of natural resources in Greece • lack of metals (tin, copper, sliver) • timber • food (grains and fish) • fights between Greek states • looking for good agricultural lands • expanding trade routes • Persian Empire • Phoenician colonization

  3. Emigration • economic • trade with remote areas • the colonization of conquered areas • use of its inhabitants as slaves. • political reasons • banishing of political enemies • Most emigrants left the Greek area and only slaves entered • Not like American Colonies of England

  4. Emigration from the Greek cities. • The leader of a banished group of political dissidents would lead them away from the Polis to found a colony elsewhere. • Themistocles is ostracized

  5. Ostracism • Athenian democracy • a procedure under which a prominent citizen could be expelled from the city-state of Athens • Sometimes is was a way to express popular anger at the victim • Usually it was a way of defusing major confrontations between rival politicians • removing one of them from the scene • neutralizing someone thought to be a threat to the state, • or exiling a potential tyrant. • There was no charge or defense, and the exile was not in fact a penalty • a command from the Athenian people “be gone for ten years”.

  6. Ostraka • potsherds or pieces of broken pottery were used as voting tokens • Broken pottery, abundant and virtually free, served as a kind of scrap paper • papyrus, which was imported from Egypt was expensive • Each year the Athenians were asked in if they wished to hold an ostracism. • In a roped-off area of the agora, citizens scratched the name of a citizen on an ostraka and deposited them in urns • The presiding officials counted the ostraka submitted • minimum of six thousand votes for the ostracism • : the officials sorted the names into separate piles • the person receiving the highest number of votes was exiled for ten years. • The person nominated had ten days to leave the city • if he attempted to return, the penalty was death. • the property of the banished was not confiscated and there was no loss of status. • After ten years • allowed to return without stigma

  7. Voted into a 10 year exile

  8. Remains of a 2,500-year-old Greek ship are recovered off Sicily, Italy, on July 28, 2008. • At a length of nearly 70 feet (21 meters) and a width of 21 feet (6.5 meters), it is the largest recovered ship built in a manner first depicted in Homer's Iliad, which is believed to date back several centuries earlier.The ship's outer shell was built first, and the inner framework was added later. The wooden planks of the hull were sewn together with ropes, with pitch and resin used as sealant to keep out water."Greek sewn boats have been found in Italy, France, Spain, and Turkey. Gela's wreck is the most recent and the best preserved," Beltrame said."The vessel was a mercantile sailer, probably used to sail short stretches along the coast, docking frequently to load and unload," said Rosalba Panvini, head of the Cultural Heritage Department of Sicily, who directed the raising operations.Recovered artifacts�including cups, two-handled jars called amphoras, oil lamps, pottery, and fragments of straw baskets�reveal details of the ship's journey before it sank, Panvini said."The vessel stopped in Athens, then in the Peloponnese Peninsula," Panvini said. "It sailed up the western coast of Greece, crossed the Otranto Channel, coasted along Italy, and pointed to Sicily."The ship was headed for Gela, then a Greek colony. About a half mile (800 meters) off the coast, a storm probably tilted the ship. The ballast broke the hull, and the vessel went down, where it lay on the muddy seabed for 25 centuries.In 1988 two scuba divers discovered the remains and informed the Sicilian Cultural Heritage Department.It took 20 years to recover the whole vessel, which will now be sent to Portsmouth, U.K., to be restored before it returns to Gela. Officials hope to display the restored ship in a planned new sea museum.A Sewn BoatBeltrame, of the Universit� Ca' Foscari, said the ship�"part of a family of archaic Greek vessels"�is something of a missing link in the evolution of naval engineering."It shows a mix of sewing and mortise-and-tenon joints�a different technique that later prevailed in shipbuilding," Beltrame said, referring to joints in which a protrusion in one piece of wood inserts into a cavity in another.Roberto Petriaggi of the Italian Central Institute for Restoration said Greeks were not the only people in the region to build ships using the sewing method."Technical knowledge spread easily around the Mediterranean Basin," he said. "We have finds proving that Egyptians and Phoenician-Punic people used that method, too." http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/08/080811-greek-ship.html

  9. Greek ship raised from Mediterranean August 2008

  10. Why Sicily ?

  11. Natural Resources in Med • http://mappinghistory.uoregon.edu/english/EU/EU05-02.html

  12. Settlement PatternsMagna Graecia • http://mappinghistory.uoregon.edu/english/EU/EU05-03.html

  13. Ceramics workshop in Italy

  14. Archaeological Evidence Burial in

  15. Bread Oven in Taganrog, Russia

  16. Modern Migration • The Facts of the Matter • immigrant -- a person who leaves one country to settle permanently in another after being granted permission to do so by the government • illegal immigrant -- an alien (non-citizen) who has entered the United States without government permission or stayed beyond the termination date of a visa. This person is sometimes referred to as an undocumented immigrant". • undocumented immigrant -- an alien (non-citizen) who has entered the United States without government permission or stayed beyond the termination date of a visa. This person is sometimes referred to as an "illegal immigrant".

  17. WHAT WOULD YOU BRING? • Your political party has just been ostracized – Now What? • What would you bring with you on your voyage to a colony? • How would you pack it? • How would it help you once you arrived? • Do you think you’d ever go back?

  18. Taranto 706 BCE Dorian Greek immigrants as the only Spartan colony

  19. Who would you ostracize? • Draw your own pot sherd • Inscribe the name of a teacher to be banished • Place in ceramic kylix

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