Ancient Greece
I. Early Greek civilizations
A. Minoan (mih-NO-un)
Located on the Island of Crete, the Minoan civilization
appeared about 2000 B.C.; it emerged through trading rather than conquest. They seemed to be a very wealthy
civilization; they had few weapons so they enjoyed a relative degree of peace;
their women dressed elegantly with extensive jewelry and seemed to enjoy a
status in society equal to men. The
Ancient Greeks learned trade from the Minoans.
The mathematics and technology of Egypt and Mesopotamia also made their way to Greece through the Minoans
This civilization was
destroyed after about 500 years by natural disasters such as earthquakes and
volcanoes.
B.
The Mycenaeans (my-suh-NEE-un)
A civilization on the
mainland. They were responsible for destroying the
Minoan civilization in about 1550 B.C.
They took over the trade routes of their predecessors. They were more warlike than the Minoan
civilization.
At the height of their power, some unknown threat
caused them to fortify all their cities.
The idea of the city state, an important idea in early Greece, came from the
Mycenaeans. Homer’s famous books, the
Iliad and the Odyssey, were based on events from this era.
C. The Trojan
War
Troy was a rich trading city in
present day Turkey; it controlled the straits
into the Black Sea. According to legend, the
Trojans kidnapped Helen, the beautiful wife of a Greek king. The Greeks went to war with Troy for 10 years before finally
laying waste the city of Troy. (The Trojan Horse)
D.
The Greek Dark Ages
(1100-725 B.C.)
As the Mycenaean
civilization collapsed, Greece was invaded and inhabited
by people from the North called Dorians. The
Dorian invasions destroyed the prosperity and cohesion of Greece. There was a sharp drop in agricultural production
and in population. Greek cities became villages, and writing declined and was
lost. Large numbers of people left the mainland and sailed to various lands to
begin new settlements. Trade between Greece and elsewhere disappeared as the Dorian Greeks had no
desire for contact with foreign peoples, believing that beyond them lived only
strange people and monsters.
II. The Impact of Greek Geography
A. Greece is a
peninsula.
It is surrounded by water and has a great
deal of coastland. This gives the Greeks
access to the sea. They will be great traders in the Mediterranean world.
B. The land is
divided up by mountains.
It was difficult to travel across Greece. Communication between regions was also
difficult. The made it hard for ancient Greece to unit politically into a large state or
empire. As a result, Greece would remain divided up into city-states.
C. The soil was
poor and rocky.
Agriculture was difficult. In fact, the only
two things that grew well were grapes and olives. That meant they made a lot of wine and olive
oil, but had to look elsewhere for grain.
Greece also could not support a large population because of
its inability to grow grain. When the
population grew too large, they sent people away to start colonies. These colonies bought olive oil and wine from
Greece and sold them grain in return.
III. Life of the Polis
A. The Polis
The polis became the center of Greek life after about
750 B.C. A polis was a city and the
surrounding countryside that it controlled.
On the highest part was a place called the acropolis, a fortified area
that served as a place of refuge during attack and as a center of social,
political, and religious life. The Greeks thought that life outside the
polis did not allow human beings to flourish, or reach their full
potential. Their word for people outside
the polis, barbarian, came from their word for a baby’s sound (this is what
they said other languages sounded like.)
B. Athens and Sparta
Athens evolved through many forms
of government, trying each one out and learning the benefits and limitations of
each. With Pericles, they finally
settled on a democracy, or a “rule by the people.” (Note: the limitation of Athen’s democracy is
that only males over 30 could be citizens; woman and slaves could not vote.)
They developed a system in which people thought to be dangerous would be
ostracized (kicked out) from the city.
This process required the vote of 6000 Athenian citizens.
Athens was a culture of trade,
wealth, and leisure. Its citizens were
free and celebrated life.
As Athens’ economy improved, it began
to grow in trade. It began to put
together a navy for protection.
Sparta emerged on the Peloponnesus. Rather than colonize and trade over long
distances, they simply attacked and enslaved the people around them. This behavior required them to create a
strong military state for protection and stability.
The military was the center of Spartan life, and all
males were required to serve in the army from age 20 to 60. The men lived and ate together in the
barracks; their wives raised the children at home to be soldiers. At age 7 they were taken from the mothers and
raised by the government. Children unfit
for military service were not allowed to live.
As a result, the Spartan men were tough and mean; they were known as the
best soldiers in all of Greece.
Spartan society is known for it conformity and rigid
discipline. The military and society
were so interwoven as to be indistinguishable.
Spartans were ont allowed to travel abroad and foreign visitors were not
welcome. They believed they had nothing
to learn from anyone else and did not want disruptive influences coming into
their polis. Anything than might
encourage new thoughts—philosophy, literature, and the arts—were
forbidden. Spartan society was a
disciplined war making machine.
C. The Persian War
To the east of Greece, the Persian empire began to grow. The Ionian coast was conqueror by the Persians. When they revolted against Persian, the
Athenian navy assisted them. Persians,
under Darius I, retaliated against Athens. They landed on the shore at Marathon and were defeated by the
Greeks. (One man ran all the way to Athens to report the victory—hence
the modern Marathon.)
Darius’ successor, Xerxes, vowed revenge and
launched a major invasion of Greece. This time, the Spartans and Athenians put
aside their arguments and joined forces to battle the Persians. The most famous battle was at Thermopylae, where a small band of
Spartan soldiers held the Persians briefly to save the Greek retreat. Although Athens fell and was burned, the
Greek forces were saved and came back to defeat the Persians.
Classical Greece
A. The Age of Pericles (Greece’s Golden Age)
After the Persian war Spartan turned their troops to
civilian life and Athens turned
their fleet into merchant ships. The
Spartans suffered terrible unemployment and food shortages, while Athens
grew wealthy and entered its most flourishing time. Pericles, a general from the war,
became the most important figure in Athens. Pericles did some important things:
1) He ushered in a golden age of art, drama and
philosophy
2) He brought
direct democracy to Athens. Every male citizen was allowed to vote on all
issues of the government. The citizens
also practiced ostracism: they wrote the name of anyone they considered
dangerous to the state on a piece of pottery.
If 6000 people chose the same person, that person was banned from the
city for 10 years.
3) He ordered
the building of the Parthenon. This
brought harsh resistance because of the incredible cost.
B. Other important thinkers
Pythagoras Believed that numbers are
the basis of all reality. His idea that
perfection only exists in the world of ideas (rather than the material world)
was the basis for Plato and Socrates.
Socrates Used Socratic method (asking questions) to lead
people to truth. Was forced to drink poison for doubting the
Greek gods and corrupting the youth.
Plato Socrates most famous student. Believed that only ideas
are true and perfect; material things are imperfect copies of these ideas. Thus experience is not as important to
finding truth as wisdom and philosophy (there is an argument against democracy
here; the experience of a majority is not beneficial to finding the best
way. Plato believed kings should be
philosophers.
Aristotle Believed Plato’s “ideas” were not separate from the
material world. His belief was the
foundation for science. His most famous
student was Alexander the Great.
Hippocrates Father of medicine. Looked for the cause of sickness in the body, not in some spiritual
force.
C. Greek
Architecture. (Internet
activity: Greek Architecture)
B. Peloponnesian War
Several
Greek city-states began to resent Athens’ domination of Greece. When
they appealed to Sparta for help,
Sparta when to
war. Most of the city-states of Greece were divided into two
different camps: one that supported Athens, and the other that
supported Sparta.
During
the war Sparta surrounded Athens. Pericles knew that the
Athenian army could not beat the Spartans, so they remained inside the
protected walls of Athens. Plague broke out. Pericles
died. After 25 years of war, the
Spartans destroyed the Athenian navy and Athens surrendered. The city walls were torn down. The Athenians wondered why they lost and a
period of great self-examination began for Athens.
Athens and Sparta, as well of the rest of Greece, were so weakened by these
long wars that Greece was vulnerable to foreign
invasion. And Macedonia, under a new and powerful
king, soon invaded.
The
Age of Alexander
Alexander was born in Macedonia. His father wanted the best education for him,
so he sent him to Athens to be tutored by
Aristotle. This education firmly
grounded Aristotle in Greek culture, or Hellenism.
Alexander
began to create an empire and easily invaded and took over Greece because the Greek
city-states has been weakened by the long
Peloponnesian Wars. For the first time,
all of Greece was united in an empire
rather than separated into independent city-states.
The
first civilization outside of Greece that Alexander the Great sought to conquer was the Persians. He wanted revenge for their invasion of Greece in the Persian Wars. He defeated them and then went on to conquer
many civilizations until he reached India. At that point his troops refused to fight any
longer. They only wanted to return
home. Soon after their return, Alexander
died. He failed to pick who would lead
his empire after him, so his empire was broken up between his generals. Ancient Greek history came to an end.
Perhaps
the most important result of the rule of Alexander was his intentional spread
of Hellenism. In Persian, he commanded
10,000 of his troops to stay in Persian and marry Persian women in order to
bring up children in the culture of the Greeks.
Because of this, many aspects of Greek civilization were spread
throughout the known world.