1 / 38

Classical Greece

Classical Greece. 2000 B.C.E. - 300 B.C.E. Section 1:. Cultures of the Mountains and Sea. Geography Shapes Greek Life. Greek life influenced by: 1) Sea 2) Land 3) Climate. Mycenaean Civilization Develops. Strong culture led by wealthy warrior-kings

lavi
Télécharger la présentation

Classical Greece

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Classical Greece 2000 B.C.E. - 300 B.C.E.

  2. Section 1: Cultures of the Mountains and Sea

  3. Geography Shapes Greek Life • Greek life influenced by: • 1) Sea • 2) Land • 3) Climate

  4. Mycenaean Civilization Develops • Strong culture led by wealthy warrior-kings • Invade Crete, spread aspects of Minoan culture • Mycenaean kings defeat Troy & become the dominant power in Aegean region

  5. Greek Culture Declines Under the Dorians • Dorians replace Mycenaeans • No written language & less advanced than Mycenaeans • Homer composes The Iliad & The Odyssey • Myths help Greeks understand nature & human behavior

  6. Individual Activity • In your notebook, answer questions 1-2 on page 124. You do not have to write the question. • Where was the center of the Mycenaean Civilization located? • Based on the map, how did Mycenaean traders conduct most of their trade?

  7. Group Activity: 1-2 People • Option 1: Comparing Cultures • Create a chart comparing the Mycenaeans, Minoans, and Dorians • Option 2: Remembering the Trojan War-2 pages • Write a journal entry as a survivor of the Trojan War. Discuss what you remember about the war, why it was fought, and how it ended (p. 125) • Option 3: Greek Epics and Myths-2 pages • Write an essay explaining why the Greek epics and myths are so well known and studied in today’s society (page 125-126)

  8. Section 2: Warring City-States

  9. Rule & Order in Greek City-States • Polis (city-state): basic political unit; run by males • Acropolis: hilltop where men gathered to conduct business • Each polis ruled by a monarchy, aristocracy, or oligarchy • A new idea--army made of citizen-soldiers • Used the phalanx formation (spear & shield)

  10. Sparta Builds a Military State • Conquers Messenians & forces them to stay on the land to work it (helots) • Governed by an assembly, Council of Elders, & 5 elected officials that carried out the laws passed by the assembly • Spartan education=military training for boys • Boys & girls learned to put Sparta before anything else • Valued duty, strength, & discipline

  11. Athens Builds a Limited Democracy • Avoids civil war by developing democratic rule; only free men can be citizens (women expected to be unheard, unseen) • Solon given power in 594 B.C.E.; reformed legal system, assembly, & trade • Cleisthenes weakens the nobility & gives citizens more power • Valued individuality, beauty, & freedom

  12. The Persian Wars • Defeats Darius on land; 10 years later defeat Xerxes by land & sea • Victory gives Athenians renewed self-confidence & sets the stage for a golden age

  13. Section 3: Democracy & Greece’s Golden Age

  14. Pericles’ 3 Goals for Athens • 1) Direct Democracy: increased # of paid public officials, citizens rule directly • 2) Strengthens Navy: used $ from Delian League’s treasury; 200 ships • 3) Beautifies Athens: bought gold, marble, built Parthenon

  15. Greek Styles in Art • Artists & sculptors create an idealized human form • Classical Art=standards of order, balance, & proportion

  16. Individual Activity • Look at pages 140-141 on Greek Art and Architecture • Read the section and answer the following questions in your notebook: • How does the Parthenon display the Greek preference for symmetry and balance? • On what does our culture today base its standards of beauty? Give examples to support your answer.

  17. Greek Drama • Dramatic tragedies & comedies serve as entertainment • (More about this in your group activity today)

  18. Spartans & Athenians Go to War • Sparta & Athens begin the Peloponnesian War willingly (so much for the unification they had at Thermopylae) • After 27 years, Athens surrenders to Sparta • Athens loses its empire, power & wealth; confidence in democratic rule declines due to bad leaders

  19. Reasons for the Peloponnesian War • How could the goal of strengthening democracy have helped lead Athens to war? • How could war be used to strengthen Athens’ trade empire? • How might war increase Athens’ prestige?

  20. Philosophers Search for Truth • Believe universe & its laws can be studied & understood • Socrates: ?’s traditional Greek values; condemned to death • Plato: wrote The Republic & says ideal society is an oligarchy • Aristotle: develops rules of logic; leads to scientific method

  21. Partner Activity: Exploring Themes in Greek Drama • Step 1: Read the passage on Greek drama on page 136. • Step 2: Create a list of the different themes treated in Greek theater. • Step 3: Match as many themes as possible with some of the TV shows or movies you have watched. • Ex: the movies in the Star Wars series deal with war • Extra Credit: Identify any shows or movies in which a leading character has a tragic flaw that causes his/her downfall.

  22. Alexander–Empire Builder

  23. Philip Build’s Macedonia’s Power • Builds a powerful professional army & defeats his enemies • Conquers Greece, but murdered before he gets to Persia • Alexander continues father’s empire building

  24. Alexander Defeats Persia • 1st establishes control over Greece, then invades Persia • Defeat of Persians in Anatolia shows military genius • Darius tries to negotiate, but Alexander conquers Egypt & Persia

  25. Alexander’s Other Conquests • Extends empire into Central Asia; wants to reach continent’s end • Conquests end at Indus Valley • Dies planning another expansion • Strong generals divide and take over his empire • Conquests result in blending of Greek & Persian cultures

  26. Activity: Pop-Up Map • In groups of no more than 3, develop a map of Alexander’s Empire • On your map, you must outline the empire and label important geographical features • Use pages 142-146 to research the places Alexander took his empire. • Create at least 7 “pop-ups” that provide information about what happened in that region • This assignment is worth 20 points. It is graded on completeness and effort.

  27. Section 5: The Spread of Hellenistic Culture

  28. Hellenistic Culture in Alexandria • A blend of Greek, Egyptian, Persian, & Indian influences • Alexandria in Africa becomes greatest Hellenistic city • City thrives as major center of scholarship with its museums & library

  29. Science & Technology • Astronomers develop theories that shape European thought for centuries • Euclid develops geometry • Archimedes’ laws serve as the basis for many mechanical inventions

  30. Individual Activity • Refer to the picture on page 147 of your book. • For what aspects of astronomy were the Greeks relatively correct? • For what aspects of astronomy were the Greeks incorrect? • What was Ptolemy’s view of the universe?

  31. Philosophy & Art • Stoics seek to control desire & live in harmony w/ natural & divine laws • Epicureans seek to harmonize in mind & body • Sculptors reject classical ideas & create more realistic works

  32. Colossus of Rhodes

  33. Group Activity: Hellenistic Alexandria • For this activity, you will be dividing into 6 groups: • Trade and Cultural Diversity • Alexandria’s Attractions • Astronomy • Mathematics and Physics • Stoicism and Epicureanism • Realism in Sculpture • In your group, read your section then create a poster to explain your section. • Remember the purpose of posters: to inform briefly from a distance • Your poster must have written and visual information • You may not go to the library to print pictures

  34. Review Questions • Why was sea travel important to early Greece? • Why did the Greeks develop myths? • What were the two most powerful city-states in early Greece? • What were the consequences of the Persian Wars? • What were Pericles’ three goals for Athens? • Who were the three renowned philosophers of the golden age? • Why was Greece so easily conquered by Macedonia? • What was the full extent of Alexander’s empire before his death? • What four influences blended to form Hellenistic culture? • What were some of the scientific achievements of the Hellenistic period?

More Related