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Heritage of Greece Heritage of Greece and Rome and Rome Pages 644 to 650 Pages 644 to 650
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Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Dec 30, 2015

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Page 1: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Heritage of Greece and Heritage of Greece and RomeRome

Pages 644 to 650Pages 644 to 650

Page 2: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

GreeceGreece

Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult

City-States: large towns w/ own governments (controls the surrounding countryside)

Prized freedom & resisted outside interference

Page 3: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

continuedcontinued

At the center of each city-state was an acropolis: hilltop fortress.

Public life centered around the acropolis

Page 4: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Greek Ideas About GovernmentGreek Ideas About Government

At first, city-states had a monarch, or king rule.

Then aristocracies, or government by a small, privileged upper class, took over.

Our ideas about democracy came from early Greek traditions.

Page 5: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

continuedcontinued

By 450 B.C. Athens developed a direct democracy- all citizens participate in government directly, rather than through elected officials.

Pericles (great leader) advanced ideas about democracy.

Page 6: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

PericlesPericles

All citizens equal before the law

Each citizen has a right and duty to participate in government

Athenian democracy was limited- only free men born in Athens could participate in gov’t

Page 7: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

The Search for TruthThe Search for Truth

Greek philosophers felt this was their duty

Questioned gods and goddesses control of nature

Found natural forces, not evil, caused diseases

Page 8: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Socrates Socrates (470 B.C. to 399 B.C.)(470 B.C. to 399 B.C.)

Socratic Method- Question & answer technique that forces the examination of beliefs & disposal of any belief that could not be proven through reason

Put to death b/c he was seen as corrupting the minds of the youth- He argued he was a friend of the truth

Page 9: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

PlatoPlato

Wrote The Republic- describes ideal government based on justice for all

Rejected democracy b/c it condemned Socrates to death

Said philosophers should rule as kings, workers produce food, and soldiers protect the state

Page 10: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

AristotleAristotle

Sought truth from experience

Gather evidence from the real world and then use reason to determine truth

Created a system of reason known as logic

Urged for moral behavior and moderation

Page 11: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

The Hellenistic WorldThe Hellenistic World

Greek city-states were constantly at war with each other.

Phillip of Macedonia (an outsider) gained control of the city-states.

Page 12: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Alexander the GreatAlexander the Great

Phillip’s son Took over and expanded his empire Spread Greek culture & Aristotle’s

teachings to all of the lands he conquered

Lasting effects on European and Asian cultures- his rich, new culture know as Hellenistic: blended Greek culture with Egypt’s and cultures of the Middle East

Page 13: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.
Page 14: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Heritage of RomeHeritage of Rome

Page 15: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Growth of RomeGrowth of Rome

In 509 B.C. Rome set up a republic- citizens who have the right to vote choose their leaders

A senate and an assembly made laws

Page 16: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Patricians- wealthy landowners, controlled the gov’t at first

Plebeians- common people, had no voice in gov’t. They could vote, but could not hold office

Page 17: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Roman ExpansionRoman Expansion

Emphasized duty, sacrifice, and patriotism

Developed strong, swift army that conquered all of Italy, North Africa, Spain, and Greece.

Expansion led to social and economic problems.

To restore order, military leaders ruled.

Page 18: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Julius CaesarJulius Caesar Most brilliant and

powerful leader Conquered many

European lands for Rome

Killed in 44 B.C. b/c people were afraid he was too powerful

His death marked the end of the Roman Republic

His son, Octavian, declared himself emperor and renamed himself Augustus Caesar

Page 19: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Roman CivilizationRoman Civilization

Pax Romana- (Roman Peace) first 200 years of Roman Empire

Developed a legal system to meet the needs of the diverse people they ruled

Everyone equal before the law

Innocent until proven guilty

Page 20: Heritage of Greece and Rome Pages 644 to 650. Greece Greece Rugged terrain made travel & communication difficult City-States: large towns w/ own governments.

Decline of RomeDecline of Rome

Several reasons1. Frequent civil war- leaders

competing for throne2. Fighting disrupted trade, weakened

the economy3. Outside invasions4. Failed attempts at reform