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The Ancient Greeks City- States and Greek Culture
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The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Jan 06, 2018

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Prudence Ellis

The Rise of City-States During the Dark Age in the 1100s B.C., developments of the Aegean civilization were lost.
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Page 1: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

The Ancient Greeks

City-States and Greek

Culture

Page 2: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

The Rise of City-States

During the Dark Age in the 1100s B.C., developments of the Aegean civilization were lost.

Page 3: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

The Rise of City-StatesThe development of ___________ Greek civilization began with the rise of _______________.

Classical

City-states

Page 4: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

The Rise of City-States

Each city-state built walled forts on hilltops called an ____________, which means “high city” in Greek

acropolis

Page 5: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

The Rise of City-States

An ________ is an open-air market that stood below the acropolis.

agora

Page 6: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

SpartaThe city-state of ________ was located inland on the Peloponnesian Peninsula. It developed a _________ economy where people lived simple lives of hard work and physical activity. It had a standing army led by two kings who were part of a governing council.

Sparta

military

Page 7: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Spartan Government

Sparta used a governing system known as an _________, which is when a few people from the ruling class make decisions for everyone.

oligarchy

Page 8: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Spartan Military Way of Life

• Spartan citizens ______ the lower classes because they outnumbered the citizens more than 10 to 1. Fear of _________ from within and ________ from outside led the Spartan citizens to focus on their military.

feared

rebellion attack

Page 9: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Athens• The city-state of _________ was located

on Attica, a part of the Balkan Peninsula northeast of the Peloponnesus.

Athens

Page 10: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Athenian Government

Athens was ruled by an ____________, or a small group of leaders from wealthy landowning families who inherit the right to rule. They often struggledwith each other forcontrol of Athens.

aristocracy

Page 11: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Where Does Our Government Come From?

Reforms in 508 B.C. made the Athenian city-state into the world’s first ___________, a system of government in which the people rule. Government was opened by Cleisthenes to all free men 18 years of age or older.

democracy

“Power to the People!!!!”

Page 12: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

AthensHe also created a new council who suggested laws for the assembly and decided on government __________, or plans of action.

policies

Page 13: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

To Be Greek…

Although the city-states were independent, according to their mythology, the people of all the city-states shared a common __________. His name was _________.For this reason, they called themselves Hellenes. In English, their language and civilization are known as Greek.Their mythology, religion, activities, and language united them.

ancestor Hellene

Page 14: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Greek Heritage

Greeks were united also by activities such as the __________________, which were held every four years to honor Zeus Olympic Games

Olympic Games

Page 15: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

A Familiar CivilizationWriting also helped bring the city-states together. They developed a writing system based on the one used by _____________ traders.

Phoenician

Alpha and Beta = the first 2 Greek letters = alphabet

Page 16: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Uncivilized?

The Greeks called anyone who could not speak Greek a ___________.

Today a barbarian is a person who is considered uncivilized, or rough-mannered.

barbarian

Page 17: The Ancient Greeks City-States and Greek Culture.

Think About It

• What parts of Greek culture helped form a Greek identity?

MythologyLanguageAncestry Olympic Games