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Alexander the Great and the Spread of Greek Culture. Macedonia Attacks Greece. Macedonia – a powerful kingdom that lay north of Greece Philip II needed to unite Greece with Macedonia to defeat the Persian Empire After training a vast army, Philip began taking over the Greek city-states
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Macedonia Attacks Greece • Macedonia – a powerful kingdom that lay north of Greece • Philip II needed to unite Greece with Macedonia to defeat the Persian Empire • After training a vast army, Philip began taking over the Greek city-states • Defeated the Greeks at the Battle of Chaeronea (kehr-uh-nee-uh) • After this battle, Philip controlled most of Greece
Alexander Builds an Empire • Alexander the Great became king of Macedonia after his father, Philip, died • Began his conquest of the Persian Empire in 334 B.C. with the Battle of Granicus • Alexander’s forces destroyed the Persian forces • A year later, he defeated the Persian army at Issus and freed the Greek cities in Asia Minor • Captured Syria and Egypt • Built the city of Alexandria (in Egypt) as the center of business and trade • Continued his conquest of the Persian Empire by fighting in modern Pakistan, India, and Iran
In 323 B.C., Alexander planned to invade southern Arabia, but he became ill and died • Legacy = what a person leaves behind when he or she dies • Alexander’s legacy – the spread of Greek culture throughout southwest Asia and northern Africa • Alexander’s conquest marked the beginning of the Hellenistic Era- time when Greek language and ideas spread to non-Greek areas of southwest Asia
After Alexander’s death, his generals fought for power, and his empire ended • Four kingdoms emerged in its place • Government business was conducted in the Greek language • People who didn’t speak Greek could not hold government jobs helped the Greeks maintain control • New cities were created during the Hellenistic Era • Cities needed architects, engineers, and philosophers • Hellenistic rulers sent Greek colonists to southwest Asia to help build the cities Greek culture spread
Greek Culture Spreads • Philosophers, poets, scientists, and writers moved to the new Greek cities in southwest Asia, mainly Alexandria, during the Hellenistic Era • Kings hired Greek architects and sculptors to make their cities like Greece • Writers of the Hellenistic Era produced a large body of literature • Athenians still created plays, but the plays of the Hellenistic Era were about love and relationships
New Philosophy and Science • Epicurus taught that happiness was the goal of life • Zeno developed Stoicism (stoh-uh-sih-zuhm) – happiness comes from reason, not emotions • Astronomers study the stars, planets, and other heavenly bodies • Euclid- one of the most famous Greek mathematicians • described plane geometry (points, lines, angles, etc.) • Archimedes- the most famous scientist of the Hellenistic Era • Worked on solid geometry (spheres, cylinders, pi, invented the catapult)
Greece Falls to Rome • The four Greek kingdoms shared their culture but fought one another • In the late 200s B.C., Rome, a city-state in Italy, conquered the Italian peninsula, and the Romans began expanding into Greece • Greece began supporting Rome’s enemies in times of war, but the Romans conquered Greece and its allies • end