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Aim: What is the legacy of Aim: What is the legacy of Ancient Greece? Ancient Greece? L28 Contributions of Greece L28 Contributions of Greece Do Now: Set up notebook page Do Now: Set up notebook page for today. Leave room to add for today. Leave room to add to each section based on our to each section based on our discussions discussions

Greek Contributions

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Aim: What is the legacy of Ancient Greece? L28 Contributions of Greece Do Now: Set up notebook page for today. Leave room to add to each section based on our discussions. Greek Contributions. Greek contributions: Language Government Medicine Mathematics Science Architecture - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Greek Contributions

Aim: What is the legacy of Ancient Aim: What is the legacy of Ancient Greece?Greece?L28 Contributions of GreeceL28 Contributions of Greece

Do Now: Set up notebook page for Do Now: Set up notebook page for today. Leave room to add to each today. Leave room to add to each section based on our discussionssection based on our discussions

Page 2: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek Contributions• Greek

contributions: – Language– Government– Medicine– Mathematics– Science– Architecture– Entertainment– Sports

Page 3: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern GeographyModern Geography

• The work of Greek astronomers also contributed to geography, the study of the Earth’s surfaces.

• The word, geography, comes from the Greek word geographia which means “writing about the Earth.”

To describe where places were, they developed a system of longitude and latitude.

Page 4: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern MathematicsModern Mathematics

• The Greeks loved reasoning and looked for answers to nature’s mysteries in mathematics.

• One such scientist, Pythagoras, believed that numbers were the key to understanding nature.– He started a school where students developed

mathematical theories. – Like many Greeks,

Pythagoras was especially fascinated by

geometry. • geometry: the branch of

mathematics involving points, lines, planes, and figures

Page 5: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern AstronomyModern Astronomy

• How far away are the sun and moon?

• How do planets move in space?– These are the kinds of

questions asked by astronomers.

– The word, Astronomy comes from the Greek word astronomia meaning “star.”

– Astronomy means the study of stars, planets, and other objects in space.

• Once again, the Greeks were pioneers in this field.

Page 6: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern AstronomyModern Astronomy

• People in all civilizations observed the sun, moon, and

stars.– But a Greek scientist named

Aristarchus was the first person to suggest that Earth moves around the sun.• This idea upset many Greeks who believed that

Earth was the center of the universe.

Page 7: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern MedicineModern Medicine

• For centuries, the Greeks believed that the gods and goddesses controlled natural events, including health and sickness.– The earliest Greeks

thought that illness and accidents were punishments sent by the gods.

• They didn’t know about the natural causes of disease and healing.

Page 8: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern MedicineModern Medicine

• A Greek man named Hippocrates changed the way people thought about health and medicine.– Hippocrates brought

a scientific way of thinking to his work as a doctor.

• He believed that diseases had natural causes.

• He taught his students to carefully observe their patients and write down what they saw.

Page 9: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek Contributions• Our form of

government was a Greek idea.– Democracy, or rule

by the people, began in Athens.

– The practice of having citizens serve on juries also began in Greece.

Modern GovernmentModern Government

Page 10: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek Contributions

• Citizens control their own destiny.

Modern GovernmentModern Government

• We elect representatives

to speak for us and

make laws.• Only native-born men could be citizens in Athens.

• Today, women are citizens, and people from other countries can become U.S. citizens, too.

• Citizens debated and voted

on every issue.

Page 11: Greek Contributions

Greek ContributionsGreek Contributions• Literature:

– Drama• Comedy, Tragedy

– Historical writing

Modern Language and LiteratureModern Language and Literature

• Thucydides wrote only one book; its modern title is the History of the Peloponnesian War.

• one of the first true historians

• he created the first scientific approach to history

• consulted written documents and interviewed participants in the events that he recorded

• Quote: "The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must."

• Herodotus is known as the “father of history.”

• He is almost exclusively known for writing The Histories, a collection of 'inquiries' about the different places and people he met during travels around the Mediterranean and into Mesopotamia.

• The unifying theme of his work is the conflict between the ancient Greeks and the Persians.

Page 12: Greek Contributions

• The word architecture comes from the Greek word, arkhitekton which means "master builder," from arkhi- "chief" + tekton "builder, carpenter."

• The Greeks used:– columns to make their temples balanced and stately

– pediments, the triangular shapes where roof lines come together

–decorative bands called friezes

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern ArchitectureModern Architecture

Page 13: Greek Contributions

churches- First Presbyterian Church of Cranbury,

New Jersey -

• Greek styles are still used in many buildings today.

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern ArchitectureModern Architecture

government buildings - The

White House -

schools - Johnson Hall at the

University of Oregon -

libraries - New York Public

Library

museums - Carnegie Art

Museum, Oxnard, CA -

Page 14: Greek Contributions

• The word, theater, comes from the Greek word theatron, which means "place for viewing," from theasthai "to behold" (cf. thea "a view," theates "spectator") +

-tron, suffix denoting place • Greek theaters were built

as semicircles.– The rows of seats rose steeply from the stage so

that everyone in the audience could see and hear.

• These ideas influence the waytheaters are built today.

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern TheaterModern Theater

Page 15: Greek Contributions

• The Greeks even invented special effects. They used hoists to make people appear to fly.

• They also created scenery that revolved, or turned.

-Perhaps the greatest Greek contributions to the theater are their stories and plays.– Writers throughout the ages have

been inspired by Greek myths and stories.

– Greek dramas are still performed today all over the world.

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern TheaterModern Theater

Page 16: Greek Contributions

• The first Olympics were held in 776 B.C.E. to honor the Greek god Zeus.

• Today’s Olympics reflect ancient Greek

customs.

-During the opening ceremony, an athlete lights the Olympic flame.

-This custom comes from the time when the first Olympic athletes

lit a fire on the altar of Zeus.

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern SportsModern Sports

Page 17: Greek Contributions

• Many modern Olympic events grew out of Greek contests.– One example is the pentathlon.– The word, pentathlon, which means “five contests,” comes

from the Greek words pente meaning "five" and athlon meaning "prize, contest.“

– The Greek pentathlon included:

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern SportsModern Sports

footraces

discus throw

long jump

javelin throw

wrestling

Page 18: Greek Contributions

• The Greeks invented the pentathlon as a test of all-around athletic skill.

• Although the five contests are different today, the pentathlon is still an Olympic event.

Greek ContributionsGreek ContributionsModern SportsModern Sports

shooting

fencing

swimming

riding

running

Page 19: Greek Contributions

Review – The Legacy of Ancient Review – The Legacy of Ancient GreeceGreece

• Language and Literature• Government• Medicine• Understanding of the Body• Mathematics• Astronomy• Geography• Understanding of Plants and Animals• Architecture• Theater• Sports