1 / 23

Homeric and Archaic Greek Communities: Homer & Herodotus

Homeric and Archaic Greek Communities: Homer & Herodotus. Reconstructing history from epic poetry, history and material culture. Periodization of history. Homer and the world he creates …. What constitutes a community in the … family ( γένος : génos ) ? household ( οἶκος : oīkos )?

leann
Download Presentation

Homeric and Archaic Greek Communities: Homer & Herodotus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Homeric and Archaic Greek Communities:Homer & Herodotus Reconstructing history from epic poetry, history and material culture

  2. Periodization of history

  3. Homer and the world he creates … What constitutes a community in the … • family (γένος: génos)? • household (οἶκος: oīkos)? • palace (μέγαρον: mégaron)? • world of the elite (ἄριστοι: áristoi)? • world of the people (δήμος: dēmos)? • world of the slaves (δούλοι: doúloi)? • world of the other (ξένοι: xénoi)?

  4. Homer and the world he creates … • What do the passages from the Odyssey – selection 1 on the handout – tell us about conceptions of community in the Homeric world? • political values • class distinctions • gender distinctions • generational relationships • hosts and guests • economic values

  5. Cultural values • ξενία: xenía: guest-friendship • δίκη: díke: justice • ἀρετή: aretē: excellence, virtue • τίμη: tíme: honor • κλέος: kléos: respect, reputation • ἀνδρεῖα: andreīa: manliness • ἄγων: ágon: competition • αἰδώς: (avoidance of) aidōs: shame

  6. 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

  7. Herodotus’ Histories • What does passage 2 - Herodotus’ Histories 8.144 - tell us about his notions of community? "…There is the Greek nation - the community of blood and language, temples and ritual, and our common customs ….” • blood and language • temples and ritual • common customs

  8. Olympia, Sanctuary of Zeus: stadium

  9. Agon: competition Pankration

  10. Rhapsodes and performance

  11. Herodotus’ Histories • What does passage 3 - Herodotus’ Histories the prooimion (προοίμιον: “opening song”) – tell us about the focus of his work? • What does his characterization of the Nile tell us about his historiographic methodology? • What does his study of Egyptian culture tell us about his attitudes and approaches towards other peoples?

  12. Archaic Age: 750-480 • Land and topography • Limited arable land • Crops: oil, wine • Contact with Phoenicians • Alphabet: ABGDEZ YIKLM NOPRSTUFX • later: H J CV • Codification of law • Land pressures, growing population, interest in exploration, inquiry (ἱστορίη: historie), all led to … • revolutions and factionalism (the nostoi) • migrations • Dorian invasion • colonization

  13. Delphi, Sanctuary of Apollo: temple of Apollo

  14. Distribution of colonies

  15. Colonization: 750-600 BCE Acquisition of • arete, time, kleos • knowledge of other places • economic & political opportunities Process: • Consult Delphic oracle • Send out nobles, landless poor, disenfranchised politicals, exiles, merchants • Founder: oikistes to found an oikos • Stake out land, temenos • Reliance on hoplites (hoplon) • Maintain connection to mother-city Places to colonize: southern Italy, Sicily, Black Sea Chigi Vase (detail), ca. 650 BCE

  16. Athens: Acropolis and Agora (now)

  17. Athens: Acropolis and Agora (then)

  18. Herodotus’ Histories • What does passage 4 – Herodotus on events in Athens in 508 BCE – tell us about the evolution of the Athenian community?

  19. The πόλις (pólis or autonomous city-state), ca. 700-500 BCE • Colonization contributed to the sense of isolation and autonomy • city-state (πόλις: polis) = autonomous, self-governing, urban (ἄστυ: astu) and rural (χώρα: chora) • usually fortified with a high point (ἀκρόπολις: akropolis) • identified with the citizens (πολιταί: politai) • ruled by the “best” (ἄριστοι: aristoi) – hence, aristocracy

  20. Archaic age • an age of political development • an age of intellectual curiosity • an age of artistic achievement • an age of kings giving way to aristocrats giving way to oligarchs giving way to tyrants and, in some poleis, democracy

  21. Persian Wars: defending the Greek way of life, 490-480 BCE • Persian motivation: • vengeance against Greeks (esp. Athens) for role in civil unrest and attempted revolt in 499-494 BCE • conquest of new lands • Major battles: • 490, Marathon: Athens, Plataeans defeats Persians • 480, Thermopylae: stalemate • 480, Salamis: Athens, Corinth, Greeks defeat Persians • 479, Plataea: Sparta, Athens, Greeks defeat Persians

  22. Herodotus’ Histories and the Persian Wars • In the last passages, what were the key values to the Greeks as exemplified by the Spartans at Thermopylae? • How does Herodotus present the Persians in this account and how do their values differ from those of the Greeks?

  23. Persian Wars Darius I of Persia Modern statue of Leonidas Trireme Olympias Spartan hoplites • Extent of the Persian Empire Persian Wars, 490-479 BCEReal and Imagined

More Related