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The Golden Age
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The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Jan 01, 2016

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Ezra Richardson
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Page 1: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

The Golden Age

Page 2: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

The Age of Pericles

Page 3: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

3 Goals

• 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy

• 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire

• 3. Glorify Athens

Page 4: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Strengthen Democracy

• Increased number of public officials who were paid– Allowed poorer people to participate– Had more citizens engaged in government

• Introduced Direct Democracy– Citizens rule directly, not through representatives– “Our constitution is called a democracy because

power is in the hands not of a minority but of the whole people.”

Page 5: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Strengthen the Empire

• Athens took control of the Delian League

• Used money from the league to strengthen the Athenian navy

• Treated other members of the league as part of the Athenian Empire

• Led to some city-states forming a new alliance against Athens, led by Sparta

Page 6: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Glorify Athens

• Used money from the league to beautify Athens

• Bought gold, ivory, and marble

• Paid artists, architects, and workers to use these materials

Page 7: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Architecture

• The Parthenon– 23,000 square feet– Traditional style that had been used for 200

years– Served as a temple to Athena, goddess of

wisdom and protector of Athens

Page 8: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 9: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 10: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Columns

Doric Capital      Ionic Capital      Corinthian Capital

Page 11: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Sculpture

• Graceful, strong, and perfectly formed

• Faces showed neither joy nor anger, only serenity

• Emphasized the body in motion

• The ideal beauty, not realism

Page 12: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 13: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 14: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 15: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 16: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Drama

• Tragedy – serious drama about common themes such as love, hate, war, or betrayal.

• Comedy – contained scenes filled with slapstick situations and crude humor. Made fun of politicians and respected people and ideas of the time.

Page 17: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.
Page 18: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Peloponnesian War

• City-states begin to view Athens with hostility

• War between Athens and Sparta seems inevitable

• 431 B.C.- Sparta declares war

Page 19: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

War

• Athens has stronger navy• Sparta has stronger army• Pericles’ strategy is to avoid land battles• Spartans march into Athenian territory• Pericles brings all residents inside city walls

where they would be safe• 1/3 of Athenian population, including Pericles die

in a plague• 421 B.C. – sign a truce

Page 20: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Hostilities renew

• 415 B.C. – Athens sends fleet to destroy Syracuse, Sparta’s ally

• 413 B.C. – Athenians defeated

• 404 B.C. – Athens surrenders

• Athenian Empire comes to an end

Page 21: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Philosophers

• Determined to seek the truth

• Means “lovers of wisdom”

• Two assumptions– The universe is put together in an orderly

way, and subject to absolute and unchanging laws.

– People can understand these laws through logic and reason.

Page 22: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Famous philosophers

• Socrates

• Plato

• Aristotle

Page 23: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Socrates

• 470-399 B.C.• Encouraged students to examine own beliefs• Asked leading questions; Socratic method• Condemned to death for “corrupting the

youth of Athens” and “neglecting the city’s gods.”

• “There is only one good, knowledge, and one evil, ignorance.”

• “The unexamined life is not worth living.”

Page 24: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Plato

• 427-347 B.C.• Student of Socrates• Famous work, The Republic, set forth his

vision of a perfectly governed society made up of three groups:

• Farmers and artisans• Warriors• The ruling class – person with greatest insight and

intellect chosen as philosopher king

• Started the Academy which lasted 900 years• “Philosophy begins in wonder.”• The Matrix

Page 25: The Golden Age. The Age of Pericles 3 Goals 1. Strengthen Athenian Democracy 2. Hold and strengthen the Empire 3. Glorify Athens.

Aristotle

• 384-322 B.C.• Studied under Plato at the Academy• Questioned nature of the world and human

belief• Argument according to rules of logic• Started own school called the Lyceum• Teacher to Alexander the Great• “He who studies how things originated…will

achieve the clearest view of them.”