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Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power
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Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Introduction to Greek and Roman HistoryLecture 6

After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power

Page 2: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Monuments of War

• TheBattle of Marathon:Epitaph of Aeschylus; who fought at Marathon:The glorious grove of Marathon can tell of his Valour-as can the long haired Persian…”(found in Gela where he died).Date of inscription: disputed.

Herodotus Book 6. Records death of 192 Greeks, whose names were inscribed on the Battlefield.

Battle at Salamis: Themistocles Decree< On Troezen:Orders evacuation of citizens of Athens & Mobilisation of Greek forces. > Date: Disputed 3rd century BC copy

Page 3: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Simonides’ epitaph for the warriors of Thermopylae: Ὦ ξεῖν', ἀγγέλλειν Λακεδαιμονίοις ὅτι τῇδεκείμεθα, τοῖς κείνων ῥήμασι πειθόμενοι. ‘Stranger, go and to the Spartans tell, that here obedient to their laws, we fell’

The Battle at Thermopylae 480BC

Page 4: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Dedicated at DelphiListing the names of 31 city states set up after the battle Platea,

History in piecesBronze Snake Victory

Monument

Snake Head: @ Istanbul Archaeology Museums

Tripod base: at Delphi

Serpent Column:Instanbul

Page 5: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Serpentine Monument ca. 479 BC.Commemorating the victory at Plataea (originally in Delphi,

moved by Constantine to his Hippodrome in AD 324.

Page 6: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Arranged by numbers of soldiers contributed to the battle (Sparta, Athens and Corinth were first). Numbers taken from Herodotus, Histories 9.81.Seventh coil: ……

Tenians 200?---Sixth coil: Naxians (unreadable)

Eretrians 300?Chalcidians 400

Page 7: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Delos and the Ionian syngheneiaHomeric hymn to Apollo (III), 146-149

Phoebus, in Delos do you most delight your heart; for there the long robed Ionians gather in your honor with their children and shy wives: with boxing and dancing and song

Page 8: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Delos

Page 9: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Distirct

Polis

Aparchai

Page 10: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

454: The new Delian League

Page 11: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Athens Urban Plan

Page 12: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.
Page 13: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Phidias showing the freeze of the Parthenon

Page 14: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Carytids and the Statue of Athena Parthenos

Carytids and the Statue of Athena Parthenos

Page 15: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Pericles & Athens

Page 16: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

West & East Pediments of the Parthenon

• EE

Page 17: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Sculptures from the Parthenon (now at the British Museum)

Pediment sculpture Centuaromachy

Page 18: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Temple of Zeus at Olympia

Page 19: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Classical Architecture: Temple of Zeus PlanClassical Architecture: Temple of Zeus Plan

Page 20: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Pediment of Zeus Olympios

Page 21: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Urban Landscape of Zeus at OlympiaUrban Landscape of Zeus at Olympia

Page 22: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

The Pythian oracle at Delphi

The Treasury at Delphi

Page 23: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Snake Victory Monument

Page 24: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Thucydides & the Peloponnesian Wars Thucydides & the Peloponnesian Wars

Page 25: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Allies and Allegiances in the second half of the 5th century BCAllies and Allegiances in the second half of the 5th century BC

Page 26: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

The Archidamian War, 431-421

Naupactus

Page 27: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Corcyra (Korfu)

Page 28: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

431: The Thebans take Plataea

Plataea

Page 29: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Demosthenes Victory at Sphakteria425 BC

Demosthenes Victory at Sphakteria425 BC

Page 30: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Sicily, 415-413

Page 31: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Battle at Syracuse 415-413 BCBattle at Syracuse 415-413 BC

Page 32: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Alscibiades (from the Capitoline Musuem)

Page 33: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.
Page 34: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Lecture 6 After the Persian Wars: Athens as an emerging power.

Tissaphernes

Thuc. VIII.6The King had lately called upon him for the tribute from his government, for which he was in arrears, being unable to raise it from the Hellenic towns by reason of the Athenians; and he therefore calculated that by weakening the Athenians he should get the tribute better paid, and should also draw the Lacedaemonians into alliance with the King; and by this means, as the King had commanded him, take alive or dead Amorges, the bastard son of Pissuthnes, who was in rebellion on the coast of Caria.