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RAPDefine the following vocabulary words found on page 154 in your text. Use the 3 column format!MythOracleEpicFableDramaTragedycomedy
HW: Read pages 155-163 and answer Section Review questions 1-4 on page 163.
Ch 5 Sec 1Culture of Ancient GreeceDate
SECTION 1: The Culture of Ancient GreeceGREEK MYTHOLOGY• Myths: traditional stories about gods and heroes• Used to express people’s religious beliefs• Polytheistic• Gods and goddesses affected everyday life,
shaped events, and controlled nature• Lived on Mount Olympus• 12 important gods (pg 155, Demeter is missing!)• Looked and acted like human beings• Followed many rituals (actions carried out in a
specific way)• Believed in afterlife
What was a Greek Oracle?• Greeks believed in destiny and prophecy• Many visited the Oracle who would make
predictions and prophecies• Most famous: Oracle at Delphi• Story of King Croesus (hahaha!)
Greek Poetry and Fables• Oldest in the Western world• Epics: earliest Greek stories, which were
long poems about heroic deeds• Homer wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey• The Iliad: tells the story of the Trojan War• The Odyssey: tells the story of Odysseus
after he journeys home from the Trojan War
• Greeks believed these stories were real history!
• Stories taught courage, honor, loyalty, and love
Aesop• Greek slave who created fables (stories
that teach a lesson)• Most of his fables were funny and had
animals that talk (ex: The Tortoise and the Hare)
• Had morals (ex: Slow and steady wins the race)
• Part of Greek oral tradition for 200 years and were written down later
Greek Drama• Drama: stories told by actors who pretend to be
characters in the story• Tragedies and comedies • Greek tragedy writers: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and
Euripides• Greek comedy writer: Aristophanes• Early tragedies had only one actor• Aeschylus: introduced 2 actors into plays and
wrote Oresteia• Sophocles: used 3 actors and scenery, wrote
Oedipus Rex and Antigone• Euripides: more down to earth and real• Aristophanes: made fun of leading politicians and
scholars and had jokes
Greek Art and Architecture• Greek artists want
people to see reason, moderation, balance, and harmony in their work
• Greek paintings on pottery
• Architecture (Parthenon)
• Used Doric, Ionian, and Corinthian columns
• Temples decorated with sculpture
SECTION 2: Greek Philosophy and History• Philosophy: “love of wisdom”, led to the study of
history, political science, science, and mathematics
• Pythagoras: believed all relationships with the world could be expressed in numbers (Pythagorean theorem)
• Sophists: professional traveling teachers who did not believe that the gods influenced people, rejected idea of absolute right and wrong
• Socrates: Athenian sculptor who believed in absolute truth and that all real knowledge was in each person, invented the Socratic method (asking pointed questions that had students use their reasoning and see things for themselves)
• Socrates was found guilty of trying to get people to rebel and was sentenced to death
Plato• Student of Socrates• Wrote the Republic• Thought democracy was not a good
system• His ideal gov’t: philosopher-kings, warriors,
and rest of the people (lack wisdom)• Believed both men and women should
have the same education and equal chance for jobs
• Established a school called the Academy
Aristotle• Student of Plato• Wrote more than 200 books• 335 BC: Opened the Lyceum• Advanced science and observation• Believed people should not live in excess• Compared different forms of government• Believed government needed to be a
combo of oligarchy and democracy (like the US!)
Greek Historians• People did not always write history, relied
on oral tradition, myths, and legend to explain the past
• 435 BC: Herodotus wrote the history of the Persian Wars and separated fact from legend, called the “father of history”
• Thucydides: wrote the History of the Peloponnesian War, saw war and politics as acts of humans, not gods
SECTION 3: ALEXANDER THE GREAT• Macedonia: country north of Greece
gaining power in 400 BC• 359 BC: Philip II came to power, admired
everything Greek, wanted to unite Greece with own kingdom
• Took city-states over one by one• Demosthenes: a lawyer in Athens who
warned city-states about Philip and encouraged them to unite
• Peloponnesian War left city-states too weak and divided
• 338 BC: Macedonians defeated Athens and others at the Battle of Chaeronea and Philip controlled most of Greece
Alexander Builds an Empire• Next on Philip’s chopping block: Persian
Empire• Was murdered before he could attempt it• His son, Alexander, took the throne at 20
years old• Alexander: carefully trained for leadership
and battle• 334 BC: Alex invades Asia Minor with
Macedonian and Greek soldiers and defeats the Persian satrapies at the Battle of Granicus
• 333 BC: Greek cities in Asia Minor freed from Persian rule
• 332 BC: captured Syria and built the city of Alexandria as center of business and trade
Alexander’s Conquests• 331 BC: Alex defeats Persians at
Gaugamela near Babylon and then overruns rest of empire
• Marched as far east as present-day Pakistan over next 3 years
• 326 BC: entered India, but soldiers refused to go further and Alex led them home
• Crossed desert in southern Iran and many died
• 323 BC: Alex returned to Babylon• Wanted to plan an invasion of southern
Arabia, but he died from wounds and is dead at age 32
Alexander’s Legacy• Great military leader• Brave and reckless• Strong childhood education• Inspired by Homer’s Iliad and Achilles• Helped extend Greek and Macedonian rule
over large area, spread Greek art, culture, ideas, language, and architecture
• Asian and African ideas spread as well• Marked the beginning of the Hellenistic
Era: a time when Greek language and ideas spread to non-Greeks
The Empire Breaks Apart• Alex encouraged union between
Macedonians, Greeks, and Persians• After death, generals fought for power and
empire fell apart• 4 kingdoms formed: Macedonia,
Pergamum, Egypt, and the Seleucid Empire
• All government business in these kingdoms was conducted in the Greek language, so Greek still controlled government
• 100 BC: largest city in Mediterranean was Alexandria
• New Greek cities needed architects, engineers, philosophers, artisans, and artists
The Empire Break Aparts (cont)• Hellenistic rulers encouraged Greeks to
settle in west Asia• New colonists provided new recruits for
army and pool of gov’t officials and workers
• Helped Greek culture spread into Egypt and present-day Afghanistan and India
SECTION 4: THE SPREAD OF GREEK CULTURE• Philosophers, scientists, poets, and writers
flocked to new Greek cities in southwest Asia and Egypt, especially Alexandria
• Architecture and Sculpture: Greek architects and sculptors hired to build baths, theaters, temples and statues
• Literature and Theater: writers strongly supported by rulers but very little writing survived from this time
• Epic poem by Appolonius of Rhodes: Argonautica, tells of Jason and his band of heroes who search for the golden fleece
• Theocritus wrote short poems about nature• Athens remained center for Greek theater• Comedies still popular but lost focus on political
leaders and told about love and relationships• Menander: best known Hellenistic playwright
Philosophy• Athens attracted philosophers• Epicurus: founded Epicureanism, which
says happiness is the goal of life• To be happy, you hang out with friends
and avoid worry by not taking part in politics and public service
• Zeno: developed Stoicism and taught from a porch near the market
• Stoicism: happiness comes from reason and doing your duty, not emotions
Greek Science and Math• Astronomers study stars and planets• Aristarchus: astronomer from Samos who
claimed sun was center of the universe and that Earth circled around it (rejected by others who thought Earth was center)
• Eratosthenes: in charge of library at Alexandria, thought Earth is round and tried to measure Earth’s circumference
• His measure: 24, 675 miles, only off by 185 miles
• Also measured distance to sun and moon, very accurate