Top Banner
Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant
75

Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Jan 20, 2016

Download

Documents

Jocelin Long
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• Frescoes• City-States• Polis• Citizen• Monarchy• Oligarchy• Tyrant

Page 2: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Ancient Greece1750 B.C. – 133 B.C.

Page 3: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Early People of the AegeanSection 1

Page 4: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Minoans

• Located in the middle of the Aegean Sea, the isle of Crete was home to a brilliant civilization

• The people who lived their were called Minoans

Page 5: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Minoans Trade and Prosper• Success was based on trade, not

conquest.• Through contact with Egypt and

Mesopotamia, they acquired ideas and technology in fields such as writing and architecture.

Page 6: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Knossos

• The rulers of the Minoans lived in a vast palace at Knossos

• The Knossos included religious shrines, area dedicated to the honor of gods and goddesses.

Page 7: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 8: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Art at Knossos• Walls covered in Frescoes= watercolor

paintings done on wet plaster• Learn a lot about Minoan society through

fresco paintings– Dolphins– Gods (Bull)– Women had more rights

Page 9: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Video

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_CNHUz2HUQ

• 4.56

Page 10: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Minoan Civilization Disappears

• Minoan civilization eventually vanished– Volcanic eruption?– Earthquake?– Invaders? The Mycenaeans, the first Greek

speaking people of whom we have a written record.

Page 11: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Trade and War in Mycenae

• Mycenaeans were sea traders who reached out to Sicily, Italy, Egypt, and Mesopotamia.

• Mycenaeans learned many skills from the Minoans, including the art of writing

• Lived in separate city-states on the mainland

Page 12: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Complete packet on Minoa and Mycenea.• Due at end of class• BINDERS!

Page 13: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• Ostracism• Assimilation• Alliance• Rhetoric• Logic• Philosopher• Hellenism• Pericles

Page 14: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Trojan War

• Mycenae and Troy had an economic rivalry.• The Trojan Prince named Paris kidnapped

Helen, the wife of a Greek King, and the Mycenaeans sailed to Troy to rescue her.

• War finally ended after 10 years when the Greeks finally seized Troy and burned the city to the ground.

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpLtXIlkyYA

Page 15: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Homer and the Great Legends of Greece

• After the victory of Troy the Mycenae's themselves were attacked and conquered by the Durians.

• Much of what we know about the Trojan War and life during this period comes from two great epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey.

• Both poems were written by Homer, a blind poet who went from village to village.

Page 16: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 17: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Iliad and Odyssey• The Iliad is the chief source about the

Trojan War.• The Odyssey tells of the many struggles of

the Greek hero Odysseus on the return home to his wife after the fall of Troy.

Page 18: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Iliad: Trojan Horse

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YbiR6IMf5KQ

• Odysseus’ Idea!• “Beware of Greeks Bearing Gifts!”

Page 19: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Complete reading on the Trojan War.

• Answer the corresponding questions.– ANSWER THE LAST

QUESTION IN TWO PARAGRAPHS!

• Due at end of class• BINDERS!

• Complete packet on Minoa and Mycenea.

• Due at end of class

Page 20: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• Punic Wars• Peloponnesian Wars• Phalanx• Homer• Acropolis

Page 21: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Rise of Greek City-States

Section 2

Page 22: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Geography Shapes Greece• Greece is apart of the Balkan Peninsula• Hundreds of rocky islands• Each city-state included a city and its

surrounding countryside

Page 23: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 24: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Life by the Sea• With hundreds of bays, the Greek

coastline offered safe harbors for ships.• Greeks were skilled sailors and traded

throughout the region.

Page 25: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Governing the City-States

• The Greeks learned about how best to govern each individual Greek polis, or city-state.

• The city was built on two levels.– TOP: Acropolis: High City with a great

marble temple dedicated to the different gods and goddesses.

– Bottom: Walled main city with its marketplace, theater, public buildings, and homes.

Page 26: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Where is the Acropolis?

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xP-FsX0QW88

Page 27: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Governing the City-States

• Citizens= Free residents• Male citizens spent much of their time outdoors in

the marketplace, debating issues that affected their lives

• Held festivals honoring the special gods and goddesses.

• Male landowner held all the political power (unequal rights)

Page 28: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Types of Government Evolve

• Monarchy= a government in which a hereditary ruler exercises central power.

• Aristocracy= rule by a hereditary landholding elite

• Oligarchy= Power is in the hands of a small, wealthy elite.

Page 29: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

New warfare Methods Shape Greece

• The Phalanx= a massive tactical formation of heavily armed foot soldiers.– The cities defense was now in the hands of

ordinary citizens• This new technology led the two most

influential cities, Athens and Sparta, to develop very different ways of life– Sparta- military virtues and discipline– Athens- individual and extended political

rights

Page 30: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 32: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Complete WS.• Due at end of class.• Put in binders!

Page 33: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• Describe Sparta.• Describe Athens.• Who were the people that help political

power? What did they need to physically own to be considered powerful?

Page 34: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Conflict in the Greek WorldSection 3

Page 35: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Persian Wars

• The Persians conquered the Greek city-states Ionia and Asia Minor

• In 499 B.C. the Greeks rebelled against Persian rule and Athens sent ships to help them.

• However the Persians soon crushed the rebel cities

Page 36: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Athenians win at Marathon• Darius I was furious at the

role Athens played in the uprising.

• So he sent a huge force across the Aegean Sea to punish Athens for its interference.

• Athens received little help from neighboring Greek city-states.

Page 37: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Athenians win at Marathon• Persians used arrows, but the Greeks

continued to fight hard.• The Persians became overwhelmed and

had to retreat to their ships.• Athens celebrated but knew they had to

prepare for the Persians to come back.• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=

I22xdJgraZw

Page 38: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

What does this mean?

Page 39: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Greek city-states Unite• When Darius of Persia died, his son

Xerxes sent a much larger force to conquer Greece.

• By this time Athens had joined forces with Sparta and other city-states.

• But the Persian force was just to much.• Persians burned Athens.

Page 40: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

End of the Persian Wars

• The Greeks now put their faith in the faith of ships they had built.

• Athenian warships eventually drove into Persian ships and sank their ships.

• The next year the Greeks defeated the Persians on land in Asia Minor.

Page 41: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Delian League• Athens emerged as the

most powerful city-state in Greece.

• Athens formed the Delian League alliance.

• When allies protested and wanted to leave the alliance they used force to make them stay.

Page 42: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Was Athens truly democratic?• Read and analyze the primary sources.• Complete the corresponding questions.• Finish next class.

Page 43: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• What happened in the Persian War?

Page 44: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Direct Democracy

• Athens leader Pericles allowed for Athens to grow and prosper.

• Pericles Athens was a Direct Democracy.

Page 45: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Direct Democracy

• A council of 500 conducted daily government business.

• Pericles believed all citizens should take part in government.

• Athens began to pay a stipend for men who participated in government.

Page 46: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Juries• A jury is a panel of citizens who have the

authority to make the final judgment in a trial.

• Athenian juries might have included hundreds or thousands of jurors.

Page 47: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Ostracism

• Citizens could also vote to banish a public figure whom they saw as a threat to their democracy.

Page 48: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Peloponnesian War

• Many Greeks outside Athens resented Athenian domination.

• Sparta and other enemies of Athens formed the Peloponnesian League against Athens and the Delian League.

• Sparta and Athens then began to fight for 27 years.

Page 49: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 50: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Sparta Defeats Athens

• Athens defeat marked the end of Athenian domination of the Greek world.

• A new power arose in Macedonia.

Page 51: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Quiz (30 minutes)• Complete WS after.• Due at end of class.

Page 52: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up• Macedonia• Carthage• Battle of Thermopolea• Battle of Marathon• Parthenon

Page 53: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Glory That Was Greece

Section 4

Page 54: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Socrates

Page 55: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Plato

Page 56: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Aristotle

Page 57: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Complete primary source analysis on Battle of Thermopylae.

• Read sources• Answer final claim in

1 paragraph• Finish graphic

organizer• Due EOC.

• Quiz corrections• IN A DIFFERENT

COLOR PEN, circle the correct answer and EXPLAIN WHY IT IS CORRECT.

• Due EOC.

Page 58: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Quiz Corrections and Philosophy

• Complete Quiz Corrections for 20 minutes.• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=

rRMSGSbExwg• Read the following article and answer the

corresponding questions.• Due EOC.

Page 59: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Plato’s “The Cave”

• Finish reading the article and answer the corresponding questions.

• Then complete #2 in Going Further.– Draw a comic panel (4 images) about the

article you just read.– Identify what the cave means to you and how

does addiction relate to Plato’s cave allegory.– Write down what an allegory means.– All due EOC.

Page 60: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• Phillip II of Macedonia• Alexander the Great • Hippocrates• Pythagoras• Ostracism

Page 61: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Alexander and the Hellenistic Age

Section 5

Page 62: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Empire of Alexander the Great

• Phillip II conquered Greece– Defeated Athens and Thebes– Wanted to conquer the Persian Empire but

died before he could do so.– Phillip was Assassinated.

Page 63: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Alexander the Great

• Alexander was only 20 years old when he took the throne

• Began organizing the forces needed to conquer Persia which stretched from Egypt to India.

• Conquered much of the Persian Empire because Persia was weak.

• Never lost a battle.• Extended the Empire as far east as India.

Page 64: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Video

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hh48WBGXK8

Page 65: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 66: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Alexander’s Early Death• Alexander dies at the age of 32 when he

fell victim to a sudden fever• Alexander wanted to leave the empire to

“the strongest”– Macedonia and Greece went to one general.– Egypt to another– Most of Persia to a third

*For the next 300 years these three powers competed for power over lands Alexander had conquered.

Page 67: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

The Legacy of Alexander

• The Spread of Greek culture– Founded many new cities– Built Greek temples– Local people assimilated Greek ideas

*The result was a blend of Greek, Egyptian, and Indian influences.

Page 68: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Activity

• Complete reading.• Answer LAST question in ONE

PARAGRAPH.• Due at end of class.

Page 69: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Warm Up

• What is hellenism?

Page 70: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Alexandria: The Cultural Capital

• Located on the sea lanes between Europe and Asia

• Was the Egyptian cultural capital of the Hellenistic World

• Home to 1 million people• Pharos (an enormous lighthouse)• Built a great museum.

Page 71: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.
Page 72: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Hellenistic Philosophers

• Stoicism– Urged people to avoid desires and

disappointments by accepting calmly whatever life brought

Page 73: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Advances in Math and Astronomy

• Pythagoras- derived a formula to calculate the relationship between the sides of a right triangle

• Aristarchus- argued that the Earth rotated on its axis and orbited the sun

• Archimedes- Applied principles of physics to make practical inventions.– mastered the use of a lever and pulley

Page 74: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Improving Medical Practice

• Hippocrates- Set ethical Standards for doctors.

Page 75: Warm Up Frescoes City-States Polis Citizen Monarchy Oligarchy Tyrant.

Quiz

• Take Quiz (40 minutes)• Leave at desk to switch with partner and

correct.