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Being Greek in the 8 th c. BCE τὸ Ἑλληνικὸν ἐὸν ( to Hellênikon eon). Figurative art, sanctuaries and temples, Panhellenic competition, the alphabet, colonization and the emergence of the polis. Dipylon vases, Athens, 750-725 BCE Late Geometric: prothesis , ekphora.
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Being Greek in the 8th c. BCEτὸ Ἑλληνικὸν ἐὸν(to Hellênikon eon) Figurative art, sanctuaries and temples, Panhellenic competition, the alphabet, colonization andthe emergence of the polis
Dipylon vases, Athens, 750-725 BCELate Geometric: prothesis, ekphora
Being Greek • What do we learn from these vases about • Rituals and communal actions? • Gender roles? • The imaginary world, on vases and inbronzes depicting centaurs, sphinxes, and other imaginary creatures? Bronze minotaur, Athenian Acropolis, ca. 750 BCE Bronze warrior & centaur locked in combat, Olympia, ca. 750 BCE
Samos: 7th c. monopteral (single-columned) temple Samos: 6th c. peripteral (surrounding columns) temple Samos: altar of Hera, 8th c. Temple and altar of Hera (Heraion) Monopteral temple with cult statue of Hera, ca. 700 BCE
Olympia: displays ofaretê(ἀρετή): “excellence”kleos (κλέος): “renown”timê (τιμή): “honor”
Being Greek • What do community cult centers • with altars, temples, and cult statues of gods & goddesses • tell us about how the Greeks were organizing themselves between 800 and 700 BCE? ________________ • What do the games at Olympia (and later at Nemea & Isthmia near Corinth in the Peloponnese, and at Delphi in central Greece) • with Greeks participating from across the Mediterranean, with displays of physical and musical aretê, and with bronze tripod dedications by the victors acknowledging kleos & timê • tell us about those same organizing principles?
Being Greek abroad • What do we learn about “being Greek” from • the alphabet, • interactions with the Phoenicians, and • colonization?
Cup of Nestor, ca. 750 BCE, Pithekussai, Italy Reconstruction ΝΕΣΤΟΡΟΣΕ[ΙΜΙ] ΕΥΠΟΤ[ΟΝ] ΠΟΤΕΡΙΟΝ ΗΟΣ Δ ΑΝ ΤΟΔΕ ΠΙΕΣΙ ΠΟΤΕΡΙ[Ο] ΑΥΤΙΚΑ ΚΕΝΟΝ ΗΙΜΕΡΟΣ ΗΑΙΡΕΣΕΙ ΚΑΛΛΙΣΤΕ[ΦΑΝ]Ο ΑΦΡΟΔΙΤΕΣ Translation Of Nestor I am the pleasant-to-drink-from cup Whoever drinks from this cup, immediately him A desire will seize for fair-crowned Aphrodite. Homeric references Homer Odyssey 3.71-72: “[Athena] offered [Nestor’s] rich two-handled cup to Telemachus, Odysseus’ son ....” Homer Iliad 11.632-637: “There was also a cup of rare workmanship which [Nestor] had brought with him from home, studded with bosses of gold; it had four handles, on each of which there were two golden doves feeding, and it had two feet to stand on.” Gold cup, Mycenae, 1500 BCE
. Al Mina
Questions on colonization based on readings in Osborne, Hdt. 4, and D&G chapter 2: pp. 48-49, etc. • What is the earliest evidence for colonization? (D&G 1, 10, 12, 13) • How did these factors contribute to colonization in the 8th c.? • Population (Hdt.) • Trade (D&G 33, 36) • Resources (land, minerals, climate) (D&G 11) • Politics (power, threats, unpopularity, flight, scandal, crime), opportunity, restlessness and ambition (D&G 13, 23, 34, 28-31 & Hdt.) • What was required to create a colony? (D&G 3-5) • What was the process of colonization? (D&G 3-5, 34, 35) • Which Greek communities were active colonizers? (D&G 16, 18) • What was the relationship between colony & its mother-city? (D&G 8)
Being Greek • What does the evidence from colonization • including the emergence of the Greek alphabet, • the locations of Greek colonies, • the rituals of colonization, • and the relationship between colonies and their mother-cities, • tell us about how the Greeks were organizing themselves between 800 and 700 BCE?
What picture of the Greek world emerges by 700 BCE, based on this evidence? • figurative tradition in art, of both the imagined and real worlds • community cult centers • Panhellenic competitions at Panhellenic centers • the alphabet as a means of written communication • awareness of other cultures • the Shield of Achilles in Homer Iliad 18 • ethnos (pl. ethnê), “a grouping of people who identify together through a common myth of descent but do not focus on a single city community” (Osborne 2009, 129) • emergence of a new type of community, the polis (pl. poleis),“a peculiar synthesis of place, people and political independence … embracing city and country as equal partners” (ibid.) which might include a gymnasium, theater, agora, public water supply, and administrative offices
πόλις (polis):“a peculiar synthesis of place, people and political independence … embracing city and country as equal partners” (Osborne 129) • What does Aristotle mean when he says that ὁ ἄνθρωπος φύσει πολιτικὸν ζῷον(ho anthroposphuseipolitikon zoon) • “man is by nature a creature of the polis” (D&G 1.1, Politics1253a2)? • What do we learn about the polis (650-400 BCE) from D&G • 45: a law from Dreros on Crete • 46: the popular council at Chios • 47: immunity from indirect taxation (ateleia) at Cyzicus (Propontis) • 48: a Lokrian community settles new territory (central Greece) • 49, 52, 53: treaties between Oiantheia & Chaleion in Lokris; between Elis and Heraia in Arcadia (w. Peloponnese); between Knossos & Tylissos (Crete) • 50: a law from Elis protecting the family of an accused individual • 51: another law from Elis on fornication in the sacred precinct • 54: commendation of an ambassador (proxenos) at Athens