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Ancient Greece Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.) (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.)

Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

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Page 1: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Ancient GreeceAncient Greece(1750 B.C.–133 B.C.)(1750 B.C.–133 B.C.)

Page 2: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Environment#1-3

Page 3: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Geography and the Greek City-States• Greece is

in southern Europe

• It’s part of the Balkan

(BALL-can) Peninsula

• Mountains divide the peninsula into isolated valleys.

Page 4: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

•Off the Greek mainland are hundreds of small islands.

Page 5: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

How Geography Affected Ancient Greece

•Mountains and water were barriers that prevented the Greeks from creating a large, united empire. •Instead, they built many small city-states, cut off from one another by mountains or water.•The seas linked the Greeks to the outside world. •The Greeks became skilled sailors, traveling and trading all over the Mediterranean.

Page 6: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Conquest and Culture Diffusion

#4-7

Page 7: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Alexander The Great• Before becoming “the Great,”

his father Philip of Macedonia conquered Greece from the north.

• Philip was assassinated before he could fulfill his dream of conquering the Persian empire.

• Philip’s son, Alexander, succeeded him to the throne.

• Alexander set out to fulfill his father’s dream for himself.

• He conquered Asia Minor, Palestine, Egypt, and Babylon.

Page 8: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

• Alexander crossed the Hindu Kush into northern India.

•There his troops faced soldiers mounted on war elephants.

•They were forced to retreat.

•While planning his next battle campaign, Alexander died of a sudden fever.

•Three generals divided up the empire.

Page 9: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

OwlTeacher.com

Page 10: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

The Legacy of Alexander

“The Great”• Although Alexander’s empire did not last, he

unleashed changes that would ripple across the Mediterranean & Southwest Asia for centuries.

• Alexander’s most lasting achievement was the spread of Hellenistic (Greek) ideas, language, religion, art, architecture, food, and clothing.

• Across the empire, Alexander’s conquering led to diffusion of Greek culture.

• In turn, Greek settlers adopted customs brought back by Alexander’s soldiers from far away.

Page 11: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Greek Rivals: Athens and Sparta

Society grew into a limited democracy, or government by the people.

Male citizens over age 30 were members of the assembly.

Rulers encouraged trade with other city-states.

Women were considered inferior.

Boys received education in many areas, not just military training.

Rulers were two kings and a council of elders.

Rulers formed a military society.

Conquered people were turned into slaves, called helots.

Rulers forbade trade and travel.

Male, native-born Spartans over age 30 were citizens.

All boys received military training.

Girls were raised to produce healthy sons for the army.

Women had the right to inherit property.

ATHENS SPARTA

Page 12: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Unity in Ancient Greece?

1. They honored the same ancient heroes.

2. They participated in common festivals, including the Olympic Games.

3. They were polytheistic and prayed to the same gods.

4. They shared the Greek language.

5. They felt superior to non-Greeks, whom they called “barbaroi,” people who did not speak Greek.

Local ties, independent spirit, and economic rivalries led to fighting among the Greek city-states. Despite these divisions, the Greeks shared a common culture:

Page 13: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Forms of Government

#8-12

Page 14: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Governing the City-States

Between 750 B.C. and 500 B.C., the Greeks evolved different forms of government.

1.At first, the ruler was a king.

2.Slowly, power shifted to a class of noble landowners.

3.At first, the nobles defended the king, but in time, they won power for themselves.

Page 15: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

4. As trade expanded, a new class of wealthy merchants, farmers, and artisans came to dominate some city-states.

5. A government in which power is in the hands of a small, powerful elite, usually from the business class, is called an -

•oligarchy.

Page 16: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

The Age of Pericles1. After a series of wars with other

city states and faraway Persia, Athens became the center of Greece.

2. Athens enjoyed a “golden age” time period with Pericles as a “ruler”.

3. Periclean Athens was a direct democracy, where large numbers of citizens take part in the day-to-day affairs of government.

Page 17: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

4. This meant that Athenian men participated in the assembly and served on juries.

5. Pericles hired architects and sculptors to rebuild the Acropolis, which the Persians had destroyed.

6. Pericles turned Athens into the cultural center of Greece.

7. He did this with the help of an educated, foreign-born woman named Aspasia.

Page 18: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

The Acropoli

s

The Parthen

on

Page 19: Ancient Greece (1750 B.C.–133 B.C.). Environment #1-3

Pericles’ Funeral Oration (Speech)

• Pericles gave a speech at the funeral of Athenians slain in battle.

•This speech is considered one of the earliest and greatest expressions of democratic ideals.

“Our constitution is called a democracy because power is in the hands not of a minority but of the whole people.”

“We alone regard a man who takes no interest in public affairs, not as a harmless but as a useless character.”