greek intro with notetaking strategies

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Greeks A Study of Classic A Civilizations

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Page 1: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

GreeksA Study of Classic A Civilizations

Page 2: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

Hey… What’s the Big Idea?• How does geography play a role in the development of Greek

culture?

• Why is government important?

• What factors led to the decline of the Greek civilization?

• How does war affect society?

• What is the legacy of Greek Culture?

• What can America learn from Greece?

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Note Taking Strategies…

• Cornell Style..

• 2 columns– Record – take notes, main ideas and facts– Reduce – summaries the notes you’ve taken– Recite – read only your summary and practice– Reflect – read all and find

connections/relationships– Review – to retain… 20 minutes/week

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Page 5: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

More strategies..

• Short hand – abbreviate and use symbols

Examples:

- civilization = cvzn- Greek = gk - BCE and CE = b.

• Don’t worry about spelling or mistakes… keep writing…

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Greek Influence– Theater– Olympic games– Architecture– Democracy

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Architecture

–http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek_arch.html

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Page 9: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

Marathon

• 490 B.C. - Athenian troops defeated a large Persian invasion force on the plain of Marathon, (about 25 miles from Athens)

• Athenians sent a military courier named Phidippides to bring news of the victory at Marathon.

• "Rejoice, we conquer”

• Then he died.

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Olympic Games

• Held every four years at Olympia

• All free Greek men were entitled to compete.

• The first Olympic Games were held in 776 BCE and the last in 393 CE

• Abolished by the Christian Byzantine Emperor Theodosius I. (EC… Why?)

http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Olympics/

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Olympics

Main Sports• Boxing • Discus (part of Pentathlon) • Equestrian Events • Javelin (part of Pentathlon) • Jumping • Pankration • Pentathlon • Running • Wrestling

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Page 13: Greek intro with notetaking strategies
Page 14: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

Greek’s Geography

• Mountains make up ¾ of mainland

• Fertile plains lie between mts. and sea good for farming

• many harbors suitable for trading

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Greek Geography

• Mountains – protection and isolation (much like Indus Valley)– Made attack difficult– Limited travel / communication– Never united under one government

• The Sea– Way of life– Fishermen, traders, pirates

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Greek Civilization

• Grew from Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations.

• Both thrived in the Aegean area for 1,400 years (2500 BCE to 1100 BCE)

• Minoans – lived on Crete (an island)

• Mycenaean – lived on the mainland

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Minoans• From the Island of

Crete• Sea traders

• Easy to trade to Mesopotamia and Egypt, China

•Fleets carried goods, and protected Crete from attack

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Mycenaeans

• Originally from Southeast Asia– Rapid population growth,

migrated west.– Intermarried with locals

(Hellenes)

• Kingdoms– Centered on a hilltop (a fortress)– Stone walls – Nobles lived outside the walls

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Mycenaean Culture

• Palaces were administrative buildings and places of production– artisans insides

• Tax collections– Wheat, livestock, honey

• Great record keeping– Wealth of everyone in the city– Had banks which would exchange

foreign currency

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Mixing of Culture / Dark Ages

• Mycenaeans adopted Minoan culture– Metalworking, shipbuilding,

navigation– Worship Minoan’s Earth

Mother

• 1400s BCE - Mycenaeans conquered Minoans– Fighting destroyed hilltop

fortresses– Start of the “Dark Ages”

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Greek “Dark Ages”

• Archaeology shows a collapse of civilization in the eastern Mediterranean

• The great palaces and cities of the Myceneans were destroyed or abandoned.

• Cities from Troy to Gaza were destroyed.

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Greek “Dark Ages”• The Greek language largely ceased to be

written.

• Dark age pottery has simple geometric designs and lacks the figurative decoration of Mycenean ware. (compare to the pottery on page 140)

• Greeks lived in fewer and smaller settlements, suggesting famine and depopulation

• foreign goods have not been found at archaeological sites, suggesting minimal international trade.

• Contact was also lost between foreign powers during this period, yielding little cultural progress or growth of any sort.

• http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/greeks/history/darkages.htm

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Poets and Heroes

• Bards – singing poets who passed down stories from generation to generation

• Homer – blind poet, composed two of the most famous Greek Epic Poems…– The Iliad and The Odyssey

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The Works of Homer

The Iliad• A prince, Paris falls in

love with and steals Helen, the wife of a Mycenaean King.

• To avenge the kidnapping the Mycenaeans attempt to take Troy.

• For 10 years they are unsuccessful until…

• The Trojan Horse

The Odyssey• The wanderings of

Odysseus, a Mycenaean King after the fall of Troy.

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Greek Values

• Schools used Iliad and Odyssey to teach values– Greek pride– Love of nature– Loyalty– Strive for excellence– Importance of

marriage

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Persian Wars

• A series of conflicts between several Greek city-states and the Persian Empire

• Fought from 500 BC to 448 BC

• Allied Greeks successfully defeated the invasions.

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Page 29: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

The Golden Age of Greece

• After Persian Wars Athens emerged as a powerful, confident city-state, ready for expansion

• Athens was burned in Persian Wars

• Led by Pericles, determined to rebuild the city

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The Greek Mind

• Socrates– Socratic Method, ask questions instead of

giving answers…

• Plato – Developed Political Science

• Aristotle– Encouraged modest living

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Pericles

• Rebuilt temples and palaces better than ever

• The Parthenon

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Athenian Life under Pericles

• Aspasia – woman known for intelligence– Prosecuted for ‘impiety’ – Acquitted by Pericles

• Delian League– Pericles alligned with other city-states (except

Sparta)– Greece grew richer– Common currency– Greece policed all of Aegean area– Freed Ionia from Persian rule

• Essentially an Athenian Empire

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Peloponnesian War

• Anti-Athenian Alliance (led by Sparta)

• Greece vs. Sparta

• Sparta had no navy– Struck a deal with Persians– Ionia for gold to build a fleet

• The Plague– Kills Pericles

• Should Athens continue?

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Page 35: Greek intro with notetaking strategies

The End of Greece

• Athenian allies switch sides..• Athens surrenders in 404 BC

– 27 years of battle• Greek city-states destroyed

– Lost ability to govern themselves

– Sparta tried to rule, overthrown by several city-states (Thebes)

– Thebans overthrown by other city-states…

– Greece was at its weakest…– Allowed for a Great

Macedonian Leader to take over…

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Alexander the Great

• http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~atlas/europe/interactive/map23.html