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3. Greek and Hellenistic Civilization. Greek and Hellenistic Civilization. The Bronze Age on Crete and on the Mainland to ca. 1150 B.C.E. Greek “Middle Age” to ca. 750 B.C.E. The Polis Expansion of the Greek World Life in Archaic Greece. Greek and Hellenistic Civilization (continued).
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3 Greek and Hellenistic Civilization
Greek and Hellenistic Civilization • The Bronze Age on Crete and on the Mainland to ca. 1150 B.C.E. • Greek “Middle Age” to ca. 750 B.C.E. • The Polis • Expansion of the Greek World • Life in Archaic Greece
Greek and Hellenistic Civilization (continued) • Major City-States • The Persian Wars • Classical Greece • Emergence of the Hellenistic World • Hellenistic Culture
The Bronze Age on Crete and on the Mainland to ca. 1150 B.C.E.
Introduction • About 2000 B.C.E., Greek speaking people settled the lands surrounding the Aegean Sea • Contact with Egypt, Mesopotamia, Asia Minor • Greeks forged their own unique ideas, values • Polis – city-state – foundation of Greek life • Conflict with the Persian empire
Introduction (cont’d) • Extraordinary cultural achievements • Eventual fall to Macedonians • Expansion in Hellenistic age
Minoans - 3rd and 2nd Millennia • Minoan Bronze Age civilization on island of Crete • Major influence on early Greeks • Named after Minos, legendary founder • Early, Middle, and Late Minoan • Cnossus - extraordinary remains
Minoans - 3rd and 2nd Millennia (cont’d) • Early forms of writing • Evidence of early form of Greek • Trade with the Mycenaeans • Eventually fall to Mycenaeans
Mycenaeans (2000-1100 B.C.E.) • Earliest Greek-speaking society • Influenced by Minoans, but very different • Mycenaeans were warriors • Independent, well-organized monarchies • Tholos tombs • Wanax - title of Mycenaean king • Height of power – 1400-1200 B.C.E. • Sacked Troy around 1250 B.C.E. • Inspiration for Homer’s Iliad, Odyssey
Fall of Mycenaean Power • Palaces destroyed, cities abandoned,1100 B.C.E. • Art, way of life, and writing system buried and forgotten • Possible invasion of Greece by the Dorians • Resulted in dispersion of Greeks and Greek dark “Middle Age,” lasting to 750 B.C.E.
Global Perspective: The Achievement of Greek and Hellenistic Civilization • Why are the achievements of Greek culture so fundamental to the development of Western civilization? • In what ways was Greece influenced by neighboring civilizations? Which civilizations had the most influence on Greek culture, and why?
Global Perspective: The Achievement of Greek and Hellenistic Civilization (cont'd) • How did the Hellenistic era differ from the Hellenic? What made Hellenistic culture more cosmopolitan than Hellenic culture?
Age of Homer (1100-750 B.C.E.) • Greek “Middle Age” • Homer wrote of Mycenaeans • But reflected age he lived in – 700s • Kings less powerful than Mycenaean rulers • Limited, constitutional government
Age of Homer (1100-750 B.C.E.) (cont’d) • Sharp class divisions - society was aristocratic • Values - physical prowess, courage, protection of one’s friends, property, honor and reputation • Arete - courage, manliness • The agon – contest – was the best test of arete
The Polis and the Hoplite Phalanx • City-state • Characteristic Greek institution • Thought of as a community of relatives • Agora - marketplace and civic center • Heart of Greek social life
The Polis and the Hoplite Phalanx (cont’d) • Hoplite phalanx • Dominant military force in Mediterranean • Phalanx and polis heralded the decline of kings • Bond between aristocrats and farmers
The Polis (cont’d) • Agora • hoplite phalanx
Expansion of the Greek World • Tremendous expansion from 750 B.C.E. • Fringe of Mediterranean • Magna Graecia • Relieved pressure and land-hunger • Safety valve for poleis to escape civil wars • Panhellenic (“all-Greek”) spirit • Common religious festivals - Olympia, Delphi • Encouraged trade and industry
The Tyrants (ca. 700-500 B.C.E.) • Economic expansion brought social pressures • Tyrant - monarch who had gained power in unorthodox way • Strong one-man rule - might be popular • Expelled aristocratic opponents • Public works projects, land division
The Tyrants (ca. 700-500 B.C.E.) (cont’d) • Tyrants disappeared - some outrages • Concept of tyranny was inimical to ideal of polis
Life in Archaic Greece • Features of Greek life coming into focus • Increasing role of merchants, artisans • Farmers - simple, hard life, Hesiod’s Works and Days,700 B.C.E • Aristocrats - rich enough to employ • Hired laborers, sharecroppers, slaves • Symposion • Athletic contests • Running, long jump, discus, javelin, pentathlon, boxing, wrestling, chariot race
Religion • Worship did not involve great emotion • No hope for immortality • Justice lay in paying one’s debts • Cult of Apollo at Delphi very important • Priests preached moderation • “Know thyself” and “Nothing in excess” • Sophrosyne - self-control • Hubris - arrogance • Leads to divine vengeance
Gods - Pantheon • Zeus - father of the gods • Hera - Zeus’ wife • Zeus’s siblings • Poseidon - god of the seas and earthquakes • Hestia - goddess of the hearth • Demeter - goddess of agriculture and marriage
Gods – Pantheon (cont’d) • Zeus’s Children • Aphrodite - goddess of love and beauty • Apollo - god of the sun, music, poetry, prophecy • Ares - god of war • Athena - goddess of wisdom and the arts • Hephaestus- god of fire and metallurgy • Hermes- messenger of the gods
The City-States • Great variety • Commonalities • Sparta and Athens notable • Powerful, influential • Sharp contrasts
Sparta • Second Messenian War, 650 B.C.E. • Fear of Helots • Transformation of society • Control exerted over each Spartan from birth • Powerful commitment to polis • Ambition - glory and respect by glory in war
Sparta (cont’d) • Spartan girls had greater freedom • Mixture of monarchy, oligarchy, democracy • Leadership of Peloponnesian League
Athens - Early Tensions • Initially an aristocratic polis • No written law code • Areopagus - council of nobles • Elected magistrates, archons • Agrarian crisis • Economic and social pressures • Many debtors pledged family as surety • Many defaulted and enslaved • Solon elected archon, 594 B.C.E.
Solon (ca. 639-559 B.C.E.) • Shaking off of burdens” • Canceled current debts • Forbade future debts secured by one’s person • Freed Athenians enslaved for debt • Expanded citizenship • Included immigrant artisans and merchants
Solon (ca. 639-559 B.C.E.) (cont’d) • Divided citizenry into four classes • Third class - serve in council of 400 • Thetes - fourth class - voted in assembly
Pisistratus (605?-527 B.C.E.) • Seizes power as tyrant in 546 B.C.E. • Increased power of central government • At expense of nobles • Public works projects • Supported poets and artists