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Explore the cultural changes in 5th-century Athens due to immense wealth, Periclean building programs, and Athenian tragedies. Uncover the rise and fall of Athens during the Peloponnesian War.
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The Peloponnesian Warthe Decline of the Polis 431-380 BCE
The Ancient Greeks • Dark Age: 1200-800 BCE • Archaic Age: 800-500 • Classical Age: 500-350 • Acharnians, 425 BCE • Clouds, 423 BCE • Lysistrata, 411 BCE • Hellenistic Age: 350-200
Timeline for Decline of Athenian Power • 480 BCE Athens forms the Delian League and discovers silver nearby at Larium • 450: Pericles extends citizenship to lower class while restricting it to immigrants (metics) • 431-404: Athens squanders resources on lost war with Sparta • 399 Execution of Socrates • 390s through 340s BCE: Greece descends into internecine warfare
How did great wealth change Athens in the fifth century BCE?
How did Athens’ immense wealth change the city? • It brought dramatic cultural change over the course of a few decades. • It increased Athens’ position relative to other states in Greece. • It encouraged less altruistic members of society to run for public office. • It allowed many Athenians to live more comfortably.
The Periclean Building Programs • Named after Pericles (c. 495-429 BCE), the Athenian general/statesman who championed the building program • Parthenon started in 447 BCE with money from the Delian league • Numerous temples built in the Parthenon complex as well as around Athens
The Parthenon, Acropolis, Athens, 448-432 BCE Concrete replica of the Parthenon in Nashville, Tennessee's Centennial Park
Discuss Athenian cultural development in the 400s. • How did tragedies advance the understanding of psychology? • How did the theater encourage the separation of Athenian and Spartan cultures? • How did the theater encourage other disciplines?
Discuss Lysistrata • How did the play depict the Spartans? • Women • Men • Was Lysistrata a radical? • How does this play reflect Athens’ situation in the war?
How did Lysistrata begin? • With Lysistrata calling a meeting women to discuss ending the war • With Lysistrata packing her bags and leaving her husband • With a prophecy from the Delphic oracle that the women of Athens will end the war • With Pericles commending the women for supporting the war
How did the play depict the male characters? • As suffering from severe discomfort due to unending erections • As level-headed individuals who sought to calm down the women • As great warriors and poets • All of the above • None of the above
Which of the following was among the political reforms proposed by Lysistrata in the wool metaphor? • Expand voting right to women. • Expand voting right to friendly foreigners. • Temporarily place women on the Athenian Council of 400. • All of the above • None of the above.
Why did Athens and Sparta go to war? • Cultural Differences • Political Rivalry • Economic opportunity • Incendiary events • Trade embargo enforcement • Confiscation of goods • Influence of Demagogues
Gymnasia were schools that emphasized physical and intellectual development
Military Might of Athens and Sparta at the Beginning of the War c. 330
Overview • Our Sources for the War • Causes of War • The Course of the War • Obstacles to Athenian Empire • The Decline of the Polis
Sources for Understanding the War • Thucydides (d. 400 BCE) • describes the war as a profound tragedy • blamed Athenian greed and influence of demagogues • huge impact on later historiography • Athenian documents • Greek theater and especially Aristophanes • Laws • archeology
The Causes of War • Athenian hubris • expanding empire • increased building • need for tax revenues • Relations with other city states: Corinth & Megara • Rival alliances and treaties • Spartan fears of Athenian domination
The Course of the War • Athenian strategy: • avoid pitched battles on land • use navy to raid enemy lands & deplete resources • win a war of attrition due to superior resources • Athens suffers disasters • plague from 430-426 • Sicily campaign of 415-413 • slave revolt 413 • losses at sea 406-4 • Final defeat and the imposition of tyranny of The Thirty
Obstacles to the Athenian Empire • The Peloponnesian League • Loyalty of the Delian League • The Peloponnesian War • Athenian leaders • Impoverishment of the Thetes • Reliance on Mercenaries • Confused loyalties
Spartan Victory • Sparta not equipped to assume Athens place as leading city-state • lack of diplomatic skills • laconic • proud • lack of governmental institutions • With Sparta’s failure to assume leadership, Greece experienced a period of sustained internecine warfare and political fragmentation
Effects of War on Athens • The economy of Athens revives somewhat after the war but never regains its widespread opulence • it loses its empire and the revenue of empire • due to high mortality of men, many widows who never before worked are forced to seek low paying work • vineyards • wet nurses • weavers • day labor
Effects of War on Athens • Militarization of society - holdings of small farmers destroyed; many families forced to resort to mercenary work for survival • decline of democracy - with a smaller portion of the population available for the leisure time demanded by Athenian public life, participatory democracy loses its constituency • the formation of a ruling elite - in the coming decades, Plato and other influential educators advocate for government controlled by a ruling elite (e.g. philosopher kings) • Search for scapegoats
The Death of Socrates c. 400 BCE • Accused of • disbelief in Athenian gods • introducing new gods • corruption of the Athenian youth • Chose death rather than escape • Became a martyr and symbol of unflinching belief in ethical actions • represented in stories and artwork, particularly since the 18th century in the West • Plato is our most complete source about his teachings but it is difficult to separate Socrates beliefs from those of Plato
Summary • The failure of Athens during the Peloponnesian War meant the failure of Greece to attain political unity • Although the fourth century was a period of continued achievement for Athens in philosophy, science, and performing arts, politically it was a period of fragmentation and war until the Macedonians unified the Greeks in the 330s
How does the play depict the Spartans? • As a bunch of belligerent hotheads; even the women were mean • As fine physical specimens who speak in a rural dialect • As the natural leaders of the Greek world; they had a daunting & commanding presence • As sick and emaciated from the deprivations of war