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Section 2: Greek Government and Society

Section 2: Greek Government and Society. The Story Continues Between 1000 B.C. and 700 B.C., the Greeks based their governments on the old system of tribes and chiefs. These tribal systems gradually developed into small kingdoms that were often at war with one another. By 700 B.C.,

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Section 2: Greek Government and Society

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  1. Section 2: Greek Government and Society The Story Continues Between 1000 B.C. and 700 B.C., the Greeks based their governments on the old system of tribes and chiefs. These tribal systems gradually developed into small kingdoms that were often at war with one another. By 700 B.C., however, many city-states had overthrown their kings. New forms of government began to evolve.

  2. I. Greek Culture in the Homeric Age During this period, few Greeks could write and most communication was oral

  3. I. Greek Culture in the Homeric Age Euripides (c. 480 BC–406 BC) was one of the three great tragedians of classical Athens, along with Aeschylus and Sophocles. According to ancient sources, he wrote over 90 plays Traveling poets sang or recited folk songs, ballads, and epics

  4. A. The Iliad and the Odyssey During the 700s B.C., oral poetry was gathered into two great epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey

  5. A. The Iliad and the Odyssey Tradition says they were written by the blind poet Homer

  6. A. The Iliad and the Odyssey Paris- the second son of Priam, King of Troy, and cause of the Trojan War The Iliad tells the legend of the Trojan War in which a Trojan prince falls in love with the wife of a Mycenaean king and takes her to Troy Helen, the face that launched a thousand ships

  7. A. The Iliad and the Odyssey The Mycenaeans besiege Troy for 10 years without success and finally build a giant wooden horse as a “gift” to the Trojans

  8. A. The Iliad and the Odyssey The Trojans brought the horse inside the city and that night soldiers hidden inside the horse leapt out and conquered Troy

  9. A. The Iliad and the Odyssey The Odyssey describes the adventures of Odysseus and his 10 year journey home from the Trojan War Odysseus and the Sirens

  10. B. Greek Religious Beliefs To explain their world, the Greeks created myths—traditional stories about gods, goddesses, and heroes

  11. B. Greek Religious Beliefs Greek gods had human qualities and personalities and lived on Mount Olympus in northern Greece

  12. B. Greek Religious Beliefs Ancient Greeks looked to religion for three things – to explain acts of nature, to explain emotions, and to benefit their lives

  13. B. Greek Religious Beliefs The Greeks traveled to special places called oracles, where the gods spoke through priests and priestesses Oracle at Delphi

  14. B. Greek Religious Beliefs Greek religion was not concerned with sin or the afterlife but rather with pleasing the gods

  15. B. Greek Religious Beliefs One way to please the gods was to show strength and bravery, such as when men competed in the Olympic Games The Olympian games were so important that many Greeks dated their historical periods from the first games, which were held in 776 BC.

  16. II. Greek Government: From Kings to Democracy City-states began as small kingdoms ruled by warrior chieftains, who relied on wealthy landowners known as aristocrats

  17. II. From Kings to Democracy Wealthy landowners overthrew their kings and created city-states called aristocracies

  18. II. From Kings to Democracy Aristocrats controlled the military, the economy, politics, courts, the law, and religion Kouros of Tenea (575-550 BC. Since archaic times long hair was a mark of the aristocrats

  19. II. From Kings to Democracy By the 600s BC, soldiers called a hoplites became essential for defense

  20. II. From Kings to Democracy The age of the Greek Tyrants was known for the progress made in Hellenic civilization. The tyrant title means that political power had been unfairly taken, rather than that it was abused Hoplites, the poor, and other citizens became unhappy with aristocracies and supported new leaders called tyrants

  21. II. From Kings to Democracy Direct participation was the key to Athenian democracy. Every male citizen was entitled to attend and had the right to debate, offer amendments, and vote on proposals. All male citizens were allowed to participate any thing that required a government decision Some city-states, such as Athens, developed forms of democracy

  22. II. From Kings to Democracy Other city-states, such as Sparta, restored rule by kings or nobles, but limited their power

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