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The Golden Age and Greek Gifts

The Golden Age and Greek Gifts. Do Now. Who was Pericles? Why was he important to the development of Athens and its early democracy?. The Golden Age. After defeating the strong Persian army, Greeks felt a great sense of pride. Tribute from the Delian League allowed Athens to rebuild.

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The Golden Age and Greek Gifts

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  1. The Golden Age and Greek Gifts

  2. Do Now • Who was Pericles? Why was he important to the development of Athens and its early democracy?

  3. The Golden Age • After defeating the strong Persian army, Greeks felt a great sense of pride. • Tribute from the Delian League allowed Athens to rebuild. • The Golden Age of Athens lasted from 479 B.C. to 431 B.C. • Architects designed new government buildings, schools, temples, and theaters.

  4. Pericles • Directed architects and builders to create beautiful structures

  5. Pericles • His goal was to make Athens an example to all of Greece, and to rebuild Athens as the model for respected political, economic, and social structures, as well as the center for art and learning. • Oversaw the building of the Parthenon, which honored the goddess Athena.

  6. Pericles • Completed in 438 B.C., it took 9 years to build and required more than 22,000 tons of white marble. • Today it is considered a classic example of balance and simplicity, and many modern buildings are based on it.

  7. Parthenon

  8. Supreme Court

  9. Acropolis

  10. Lincoln Memorial

  11. Lincoln Memorial (Continued)

  12. Greek Columns

  13. Pericles • He also had the best architects and artists that the Greek world had to offer. They designed new government buildings, schools, temples, and theaters.

  14. Pericles • Statues of Greek gods and of people decorated buildings. Murals, or wall paintings, showed lifelike scenes from Athens’ history and Greek myths.

  15. Discobolus: The Disc Thrower

  16. Pericles Sculpture

  17. Remember…

  18. Pericles • Paintings on vases showed scenes from Greek mythology and daily life.

  19. Pericles • By carefully observing vases, we can see how people dressed, how they wore their hair, and even what they ate.

  20. Literature and Theater • Theater means “a place to see.” During the Golden Age, Athens was known throughout Greece for its fine theaters and skilled playwrights.

  21. Literature and Theater • a. It was an all-day outdoor event • b. There were men actors only – they played women’s roles as well • c. There were few actors – costumes were important • d. All actors wore masks to represent different characters and emotions

  22. Theater Masks

  23. Greek Theatre

  24. Activity • Turn to pages 326 and 327 of your textbook to look at a Greek Theater.

  25. Aesop’s Fables • The Shepherd Boy and the Wolf • The Hare and the Tortoise • The Ant and the Grasshopper

  26. Atlas • A book of maps is called an atlas. The Greek god Atlas was said to carry on his shoulders the columns that separated the heavens and the earth.

  27. Achilles • Achilles’ heel is sometimes used to describe a person’s weak spot. It comes from the myth about Achilles, a Greek hero of the Trojan War.

  28. Hesiod • Greek poet and author, wrote down the myths and legends that had long been told in Greek mythology

  29. Hesoid • In other poems, he described the difficulties of everyday life in ancient Greece. His poems have provided modern historians with useful information about early Greek culture.

  30. Homer • Greek poet and author of The Iliad and The Odyssey. Much of what we know about the Mycenaeans comes from his stories.

  31. Sophocles • Ancient Greek writer of tragedies, or serious plays

  32. Sophocles • In tragedies, the main characters come to an unhappy end. In Sophocles’ tragedies, heroes always struggle to do the right thing. In one play, a young woman named Antigone faces a terrible choice. If she chooses to do the right thing, she will break an unfair law. The punishment for breaking the law is death. Antigone chooses to do the right thing and accept the consequences.

  33. Aristophanes • Ancient Greek writer of comedies, or humorous plays

  34. Aristophanes • In his comedies, he used humor to make serious statements about political and social life.

  35. Science, Mathematics, and History

  36. Pythagoras • Greek philosopher and mathematician; the inventor of geometry

  37. Pythagoras • Believed that everything in the universe could be explained by using numbers.

  38. Pythagoras • Remembered for his theorem, or formula, that expresses the relationship among the lengths of the sides of a right triangle; this is called the Pythagorean theorem.

  39. Pythagorean theorem

  40. Hippocrates • Greek physician known as the Father of Medicine

  41. Hippocrates • Believed that illnesses had natural causes.

  42. Hippocrates • His name is associated with the Hippocratic oath, a pledge of duties and responsibilities made by doctors to this day.

  43. Democritus • Greek scientist and philosopher; explained that all matter is made up of building blocks called atoms

  44. Democritus • He believed people could understand nature by learning about the movement of atoms.

  45. Herodotus • One of the earliest geographers and Greece’s first historian.

  46. Herodotus • Wrote 9 books about the Persian Wars that included not only facts but also differing views about the wars and their causes.

  47. Thucydides • Greek teacher who is considered the greatest historian of ancient times.

  48. Thucydides • Wrote about the war between Sparta and Athens from beginning to end. • He wrote about the war from both sides, and is therefore credited with creating a method in which historians write about historical events without including their personal opinions.

  49. Socrates • Greek philosopher who taught by asking questions.

  50. Socrates • His teachings focused on morals, or knowing right from wrong. • Asking students questions required them to think for themselves. • His way of teaching, called the Socratic method, is still a model for debating ideas.

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