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Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society...

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Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2
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Page 1: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

AncientGreece

Themes 1 and 2

Page 2: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis developed independently, with its own form of government, laws and customs.

• Polis, center of daily life, culture

• Greeks fiercely loyal to their polis

• Did not think of selves as Greeks, but as residents of their particular city-state

Life in the Polis

• Polis built around high area, called acropolis

• Acropolis used as fortification

• Included temples, ceremonial spaces

• Agora, public marketplace, below

Infrastructure

• Shops, houses, temples near agora

• Gymnasium, athletes’ training grounds, public bath

• Sturdy wall for defense surrounded polis

Other Attributes

Greek City-States

Theme 1: Government

Page 3: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.
Page 4: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.
Page 5: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Political Systems of Greek City-States

Each major polis had a different political system that developed over time.

• Corinth, an oligarchy, ruled by a few individuals

• Athens, birthplace of democracy

• Sparta, oligarchy, one of mightiest city-states, but least typical, Militaristic

Page 6: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.
Page 7: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

The prosperity of Athens was due in large part to its stable and effective government. That government was the world’s first democracy, a form of government run by the people.

• Athens, birthplace of democracy

• Not always democratic city

• First ruled by kings

• Later ruled by aristocrats who had money and power

Beginnings• Most Athenians poor,

had little power over lives

• Gap between rich, poor led to conflict

• Official named Draco reformed laws

Reform • Draco thought way to

end unrest was through harsh punishment

• Belief reflected in Draco’s laws

• Harshness of laws worsened dispute between classes

Draconian Laws

Athenian Democracy

Page 8: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Slavery For DebtThrough the laws of Draco, those in debt could be made slaves -- but only if they were members of the lower class.

HomicideAnother result of the codification of laws by Draco -- and the only part that remained part of the legal code -- was the introduction of the concept of "intention to murder." Murder could be manslaughter (either justifiable or accidental) or intentional homicide. With the new law code, Athens, as a city-state, would intervene in what were formerly family matters of blood-feuds.

PunishmentPlutarch states: "It is said that Drakon himself, when asked why he had fixed the punishment of death for most offences, answered that he considered these lesser crimes to deserve it, and he had no greater punishment for more important ones."

All his laws were repealed by Solon in the early 6th century BC, with the exception of the homicide law

Page 9: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Cleisthenes

Cleisthenes considered the father of Athenian Democracy

• Cleisthenes broke up power of noble families– Divided Athens into 10 tribes based on where people lived

– Made tribes, not families, social groups, basis for elections

– Each tribe elected 50 men to serve on Council of 500, proposed laws

– Each tribe elected one general to lead Athenian army

Page 10: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Athenian Government• Those allowed to take part in government expected to:

–Vote in all elections –Serve in office if elected –Serve on juries –Serve in military during war

The Nature of Athenian Democracy• As democracy, Athens ruled by the people, but not all people able to take part in

government; only about 10 percent of total population• Only free male Athenians over age 20 who had completed military training allowed

to vote• Women, immigrants, children, slaves had no role in government

Page 11: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Council of 500• Created by Cleisthenes• Wrote laws to be voted on by full

assembly

Assembly• Included everyone eligible to serve in

government• All present voted on laws, all

important decisions• Called direct democracy

Courts • Complex series of courts• Members could number up to 6,000• Chosen from the assembly• Heard trials, sentenced criminals

Height of DemocracyThree Main Bodies

• Athenian democracy consisted of three main bodies—

• Assembly• Council of 500• Courts

Page 12: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Sparta

Page 13: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Sparta was led by two kings who served as military commanders. Decision-making was largely left to an elected council of elders.

To support their military lifestyle, the Spartans demanded strength and toughness. All babies were examined after birth and unhealthy children were left in the wild to die.

• Boys taught physical, mental toughness by mothers until age 7

• Entered combat school to toughen for hardships of being soldier

• At age 20 boys became hoplites, foot soldiers; remained in army 10 years before becoming citizens

Combat School

Militaristic State

• Unusual among Greek city-states

• Women played important role

• Trained in gymnastics for physical fitness, to bear strong children

• Women had right to own property, unlike women in most of Greece

Women in Society

War• Spartan emphasis on war not due to fondness for fighting, but as way to keep order

in society• Helots or slaves outnumbered Spartans seven to one, kept in check by strong army

Page 14: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.
Page 15: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

Phalanx Formation

Page 16: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

"Remember, boys, come back with your shield or on it!" Spartan hoplites c.600 BC

Page 17: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

• 12 gods, goddesses were particularly influential in Greek lives• These 12 lived together on Mount Olympus, highest mountain in Greece• Olympian gods thought to have great power, though not perfect• Myths say gods flawed, often unpredictable—loved, hated, argued, made mistakes,

got jealous, played tricks on each other

• Almost all Greeks worshipped same gods

• Each polis claimed one god, goddess as special protector

• Example: Athens sacred to Athena• Some locations considered sacred by

all Greeks

Worship• Delphi sacred to all Greeks—

priestesses of Apollo were thought to receive visions of future

• Olympia—every four years Greeks assembled there for Olympic Games; athletes competed against each other to honor gods

Sacred Locations

Mount Olympus

Theme 2: Religion

Page 18: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.
Page 19: Ancient Greece Themes 1 and 2. A new type of society emerged in Greece in the 800s BC. The society was centered on the polis, or city-state. Each polis.

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