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Bellringer: Aug 18. What are Ms. B’s 5 basic class rules. What is the extra credit opportunity when you read the text book?. Greeks, and Romans, and Knights, OH MY!. The Classical C ivilizations and Medieval Times Unit 1: Part 1. Review. Go over Timeline (BCE to CE)
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Bellringer: Aug 18 • What are Ms. B’s 5 basic class rules. • What is the extra credit opportunity when you read the text book?
Greeks, and Romans, and Knights, OH MY! The Classical Civilizations and Medieval Times Unit 1: Part 1
Review • Go over Timeline (BCE to CE) • Go over Roman Numerals • 5 key changes in history • Social • Political • Economic
Division of European History • Euro History is divided into 3 eras: • Classical Civilization • 750 BC to 467 AD • Included the Ancient Greeks and Ancient Romans • Middle Ages: 467 AD-1500 AD • Modern Era: 1500-Present
Geography of Greece • Located on the continent of Europe • Surrounded by water • Mountainous terrain • What does all this mean?
Ancient Greece Lasted from 750 BC-146 BC
Is it a City or a State? • 800-700s BC the Greeks formed independent city states • City-State- a region controlled by a city (ex: Athens, Sparta, Corinth) • Polis- Greek word for a city • Characteristics of a city-state • Shared a common language and culture • Each polis was politically independent • Greeks were NOT united under a single govt • Ruled by powerful kings • Polis- Greek word for a city • Around 650 BC Greeks started to overthrow the tyrants/kings and thus democracy was established
Its all Greek to me • Demos: the peopleKratos/cracy-the rule • Democracy = “the rule of the people” • A form of government where the people control the government’spower • Two forms of Democracy: • Direct Democracy: each person in society directly makes the government’s decisions • Representative Democracy: the people elect representatives to make decisions for them (aka: Republic)
Early Democracy in Athens • Athens first to establish democracy after overthrowing their King • Solon • Founding father of democracy • 594 BC; he was chosen to reorganize the govt of Athens • Divided Athenians into 4 groups based on wealth (only 3 wealthiest groups could hold public office) • Citizens with rights: adult males (sorry women, children, and slaves)
The Greek Assembly • Voted on laws proposed by the 3 wealthiest groups • Any male citizen could serve on the Assembly • All citizens could sit in the assembly (again, sorry women, children, slaves) • Assembly was example of DIRECT democracy • Problem with Solon’s reforms: the wealthy were able to dominate the Athenian govt.
Alexander the Great • 356-323 B.C (33 years old when he died) • King of Macedonia (NE of Greece) • son of Philip II • Philip II: brought the city-states of Greece under one rule • Alexander expanded empire and conquered Persians, died in Babylon • Legacy is not his reign or territory but the cultural diffusion that resulted (Hellenistic culture) • Issue of who was now in charge created confusion and tension- 40 years of frequent turnover in leadership • Empire began to collapse and was later divided into 4 power groups
Search Results for "Alexander the Great" Historical Tweet of the Year As another historic decade is about to pass, and we’d like to honor our most popular Historical Tweet of the Year, chosen from the tweets posted in 2009. There were a lot of good ones from the past 12 months, but one shone above and beyond as your favorite: Alexander the Tweet. And, yes, we’ve been on hiatus for a few weeks, but we’re gearing up for a great 2010, especially leading up to April, when the Historical Tweets book hits shelves around the United States (we just finished the book and sent to our editor last week — it features 144 pages of mostly new material!). Thanks for your support over the past year. It’s been historic. - Alec & Alan Alexander the Tweet: 2009 Historical Tweet of the Year
Greek Empire under Alexander the Great • 334-323 B.C.
The Fall of Greece • Alex’s empire divided into 4 kingdoms • Peloponnesian War 431 B.C.- a Civil War • Athens vs. Sparta, long rivals but both Greek • Battle of Corinth • Fought in 146 B.C. • Romans defeated the Greeks • City-states and it’s people fell under Roman rule • Marks the end of Greek rule and the beginning of the Roman Empire