1 / 25

Archaic Greece

Archaic Greece. 750-500 BCE. What is the Archaic Age?. Transitional period between 750 and 500 BCE when the Greeks began to look at their place in the world. It led to the explosion of invention that became the Golden Age!. Greek & Phoenician Colonization: 750-500 BCE.

mleona
Download Presentation

Archaic Greece

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. Archaic Greece 750-500 BCE

  2. What is the Archaic Age? • Transitional period between 750 and 500 BCE when the Greeks began to look at their place in the world. • It led to the explosion of invention that became the Golden Age!

  3. Greek & Phoenician Colonization: 750-500 BCE

  4. Experiments in Local Government • Early in the Archaic age, the Greeks still lived in small villages • Each community had an “archon” which was the Greek word for “ruler” • The archon depended on advice and support from warriors

  5. As the communities continued to expand, they grew into city-states. The Greek word for city-state is polis.

  6. Shops around the square

  7. The Rise of the Greek Polis Eboea Syracuse Athens Larissa Naxos Corinth

  8. Three largest city-states: Athens, Sparta, Thebes

  9. Athens: Located in Attica, this city-state had so many people it had to begin trading crafts for grain and developed a wealthy merchant class. It later became a center for learning and the arts.

  10. Sparta: The Dorians invaded this region, where they enslaved the local Mycenaean, (and later Messenian) farmers, whom they called “Helots.” They became a tightly-run military state and did not trade.

  11. Sparta was conservative • Started out interested in trade • They even had a poet named Alcman who wrote love poetry! • But when their helots (slaves) revolted, it took 17 long years to get them under control • The Spartans took drastic measures to ensure a revolt would not happen again and became a militaristic state • They avoided contact with the outside world

  12. Thebes Located in the fertile plains of Boeotia, merchants in this city once traded with the Minoans.

  13. Corinth This polis had a strategic location on the narrow isthmus connecting the Peloponnese to the rest of Greece, which brought its people great wealth through trade. They valued craftsmen more than soldiers.

  14. Ionia: Directly east of Greece across the Aegean Sea, this region traded to ports around the Black Sea and became an international center for many cultures to mingle and exchange products and ideas. Ionian people also improved on the Phoenician alphabet.

  15. Lydia A kingdom to the east of the Ionian colonies; it was the first ancient culture to mint gold and silver coins.

  16. Despite squabbles!

  17. Forms of Government • Aristocracy – Means “rule by the best.” Usually means the wealthiest • Cratos means “power” in Greek • Monarchy – Means “rule by one.” Usually a king • Oligarchy – Means “rule by a few.” This was the form of government they had in Sparta

  18. Athenian Democracy In 621 BCE, the Archon Eponymos was Draco • Archon Eponymos – Most important man in the community. Leader of the nine archons selected to lead the polis.

  19. “Draconian” • Means a rule or law that has harsh penalties • Comes from the Archon Eponymos, Draco, who would punish even the smallest crimes with death • He did create the first written constitution, which was posted throughout the polis so everyone would be aware of the rules

  20. Solon’s Reforms • Removed death penalty for all crimes but murder • Set up court system • Said that farmers who fell on hard times would no longer be imprisoned

  21. Solon’s Reforms, continued… • Created the “Boule,” also known as the Council of Four Hundred. This group of men voted on issues to be discussed by the “Ecclesia,” a larger body of citizens • Strengthened the economy by encouraging export of olive oil and pottery • Divided the Athenians into classes based on wealth

  22. Cleisthenes – Founder of Democracy • Divided Attica into Demes, which are electoral districts following property lines • The Demes prevented clans from becoming too powerful • Gave each citizen the right to vote for men to represent them in the Boule • Gave a voice to the entire polis

  23. Our Alphabet:From Phoenician to Greek The Greeks added symbols for vowels and increased the letters to 24

More Related