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MR MOUNCE WORLD HISTORY ANCIENT GREECE I. The Polis A typical polis included a city and the surrounding villages and field; citizens both rights and responsibilities but made up only a minority of the residents of the polis; slaves, foreign-born residents, and women had no political or legal rights. The two major city-states were Sparta and Athens; Sparta was a warlike society, while Athens contributed to the development of democracy with its constitution and assembly. ll. City-States City-States (aka Polis) Villages banded together to form strong trading centers Ancient Greeks referred to themselves as citizens of their individual city-state Examples of City-States: Sparta, Athens, Corinth, Argos, Olympia, Thebes, Delphi, Marathon They band together to fight a common enemy but also went to war with each other Each city-state had own form of government Some, like Corinth, were ruled by kings Sparta - ruled by a small group of men Athens - experimented with new forms of government War, glory, and Decline In 546 BC Persian armies conquered the Greek city-states of Ionia, in Asia Minor; the Ionians, with support from mainland Greeks, revolted unsuccessfully again and the Persians then decide to punish those who had helped the rebels. After reaching marathon, just north of Athens, the Persians moved to attack Athens, but the Athenians defeated the Persians. Ten years later, Persians returned to Greece and were defeated by the Greek Navy near the island of Salamis. As Athens’s economic and political power grew, several city-states joined Sparta in a war against Athens. The Peloponnesian war ended in 404 BC with Athens’s surrender. III. Political Reforms Solon- a respected statesman eliminated slavery and canceled farmers’ debts. He created a class system based off of wealth and not heredity. He created the Council of Four Hundred to help with the administrative dealings of government. (1/10th were real citizens) Cleisthenes- He is credited with attempting to make the Athenian democracy a direct democracy. He also tried to make holding government office more available for citizens. He created the Council of Five Hundred. (1/5th were real citizens) Pericles-army general who became statesman. He moved Athens farther towards a direct democracy. He increased the pay of public officials and paid jurors. This enabled more citizens to participate in government. “It is true that we (Athenians) are called a democracy, for the administration in the hands of many and now the few, with equal justice to all alike in their private disputes.” -Greek General, Pericles (over 2400 years ago) Only in Athens and for a short time, “rule by many” meant that all citizens had to be willing to take an active part in government—it was the law! Each year, 500 names drawn from all citizens and those would serve as law makers for that year Majority Ruled! IV. Economic hardships weakened the Athenian economy. Farmers had sold themselves into slavery in an attempt to secure their lands from the wealthy land owners. Greek Civilization During the mid-400s BC, Greek civilization reached its culture peak, particularly in Athens. They created an artistic style now called classical. In both painting a sculpture, the Greeks excelled at portraying the human form. There Greeks were the first people to write and perform plays-tragedies and comedies. Beware of Greeks Bearing Gifts! Much of Greek history is told in oral history Blind poet, Homer, responsible for two Epic poems: The Iliad and the Odyssey V. Socrates Socrates, the first major Greek philosopher, developed the Socratic method of Teaching. One of Socrates’ students, Plato, devised a philosophy that located the source of “truth” in ideas rather than in information for the senses. Aristotle’s method of using logic and science to develop generalizations would dominate European scientific thinking for centuries. The ancient Greeks believed that the world is ruled by natural laws and that human beings can discover these laws by using reason. Socrates thought the charge was ridiculous He couldn’t believe anyone would find him guilty and so he refused a defense (had he presented a defense, then jury most probably would have found him innocent) Stayed silent and so jury found him guilty Socrates took poison (hemlock) and died He was 70 years old at the time His student Plato, Aristotle's teacher, would carry on with the voice of Socrates VI. Four Forms of Government • • • • Monarchy-rule by a king Oligarchy-rule by a small group Tyranny-rule by a dictator Democracy-rule by citizens, voting in an assembly VII. Persian War • • • • • • • Greece was not alone in the ancient world—other civilizations developed around the Mediterranean—one of the largest and most powerful, Persian Empire Persian Empire: Mediterranean Sea to the Indus River in Pakistan Persia eventually attempts to conquer Greeks believing easy victory Persian Empire Persians forgot that Greeks were incredible warriors *Athens-great navy (tiny ships, easy to maneuver) *Sparta-fierce army Persians tried three different times to conquer Greeks—each time they failed Making sure they (Greeks) were prepared if Persians attacked again, the Greeks city-states formed the Delian League VIII. Delian League • • • • • • Put money in a shared treasury in case of war Money used to make weapons, train men and build ships Athens guarded treasury (kept 1/60th of the treasury to fund guards, storage…) Treasury grew and so did Athens wealth Athens and Sparta couldn’t ever seem to get along IX. Peloponnesian War • • • • • • Eventually, Athens and Sparta go to war War began not because of treasury or its home, but over some silly argument War lasts for about 3 decades! Sparta wins Usually Sparta leveled conquered towns but it did not level Athens Placed king on throne which ended Athen’s experiment with democracy X. Alexander’s Empire • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • By 338 BC Philip II, King of Macedonia, controlled almost all of Greece. Two years later, Philip’s son, later know as Alexander the Great, became king. In 334 BC Alexander successfully led his soldiers into Asia against Persia. He defeated the Persians, then Phoenicia and Egypt; two years later he invaded Mesopotamia. Before his death in 323 BC, Alexander’s empire extended to the Indus River Valley. Aristotle (philosopher who lived over 2000 years ago) was born in ancient Macedonia, however, spent a lot of time in ancient Greece Aristotle was one of Alexander’s teachers and so had much influence on him Following Alexander’s death, three of his generals eventually divided his empire into separate domains. In the lands Alexander had conquered, Hellenic ways mixed with elements of Middle Eastern culture to form the Hellenistic culture. Aristotle had many famous sayings some of which we still use today: "Anyone can become angry. This is easy. But to be angry with the right person, to the right degree, at the right time, for the right purpose, and in the right way - that is not easy.“ "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then is a habit.“ "We must reduce everything to the simplest form possible, but no simpler.“ "We think in pictures. If you wish to change what you think, change the picture.” Alexander, son of King of Macedonia Born 356 B.C.E. Macedonia-country north of Greece He was well educated (Greek history, Greek gods, spoke Greek…) As he expanded his empire, he introduced literature, myth, dance… • Gave conquered opportunity to run their own country as long as they learned the Greek ways. Alexander dies at a young age but conquered the ENTIRE known world in the Mediterranean region Gifts from the Greeks: Greek Architecture Trial by Jury Fables and Legends Greek Myths Comedy, Tragedy, Satyr, Theatre The Olympics Roots of Democracy