Tuesday, March 5, 2013
More Movie
The common man would gather every 9 days to discuss future issues. 490 B.C. is when Phidipippies ran his Marathon. In early 5th century B.C. the Perisan empire was the most powerful. Perians lived in Tyranny and Darius was the king. Greeks emphasize freedom and persians emphasize obedience. Persians went to Marathon in Greece and Athens heard and all men went to go fight. hoplites were the trained warriors. Phidippies had to run to Sparta to ask for help in this war and Sparta denied him. He ran 140 miles in two days. The Greeks won the battle of Marathon and the Persians scattered. they slaughtered 6000 Persians in one day. Themistocles was an Athenian general and showed himself to be one of the greatest leaders. He provided the point that next time they fight the Persians they may not win so easily. He came up with the idea of a strong ship which stacked 170 men on 3 levels.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Notes
Pisistricis used taxes to rule and introduced free land and farming. He first recognized that you have more power if you satisfy the people instead of just high class rich people. Eastern Med. was the greatest marketing place. The vase was Athens first artistic legacy. Potters worked in the same area prostitutes worked. Potters were on a low social scale. 527 B.C. Pisistratus died and his son took over. (Hippiass) His brother was killed and he became angry and bitter and started to become an unreasonable ruler. Clisthenes was now one of the most powerful rulers. Olympics started in 776 B.C. The Olympic games were a chance for any guy no matter what social status to compete. Arete, was a chance of doing your best. Isagores was against Cleisthnes and wanted to gain power, so he went to Sparta for help and they ended up Ostracizing Cliesthnes. The Athens people rose up in a revolution. 508 B.C. MARKS THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY REGULAR PEOPLE REVOLVED AGAINST THEIR OWN GOVERNMENT. The Athenian people then turned to Cliesthnes to be in charge and rebuild their government. He had a spot carved out also known as an agora where the men would come an discuss ideas about the future and then vote. A white pebble meant yes and an black pebble meant no.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Notes
Socrates was apparently an ugly man and he had gross stinky feet. In 508 B.C. there was chaos in Athens and they were demanding freedom. Cleisthenes was brought up to be a ruler. He was one of the very few rich people who thought that people needed freedom so he set out for the Greek Empire. 570 B.C. Cheisthenes was born and he was born to be an aristocrat who were rich people with a lot of power money and land. Athens was in the middle of the Mediterrian sea and is a peninsula. The Athens town was built around the acropolis. There life expectancy was less than 15 years. Common Athenians lived under the rules of Aristocrats. Aristotle thought Athens was unfair and unjust. Greece was three fourths mountainous. It was divided into city-states, and Sparta was its own city-state, known for military and war. They lived in barraks, and the Spartan life was without comfort. Ancient tales and myths made there lives interesting. Homer wrote the Iliad and the Odessey. Physisticris showed up with a tall beautiful women and claimed she was the Goddesses Athena and that he should be ruler because Athena loves him and is looking over him. b
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Monday, February 25, 2013
Test
Today we had a test, and it was open book. I think I did pretty well, but the score will let me know!
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Study
Today I went through the outline and highlighted what I thought were some important facts in the book and studied them over again. I think I am ready to take the test on monday.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Chapter 3 outline
Today in class i downloaded this outline to study off of, and then took some class notes. All of them however are already in this outline.
Chapter 3 Outline
Chapter 3 Outline
I. The European Barbarians (LO1)
A. The Earliest Europeans
1. by 4000BC, farming and village life had
spread throughout the continent
2. by 3500BC, increased population and
wealth led to complex religious structures
B. The Barbarian Way of Life
1. common way of life as result of migrations of Indo-European
nomads (c.2500BC onward) from the steppes
that bordered Europe on the east
2. languages
a. ancestor languages of Greek and Latin
3. elites of warriors
4. farming and village life
5. In this way, Europe came to be inhabited
by peoples who spoke mostly
Indo-European
languages; who were skilled in farming, metalworking, trade, and warfare; and
who were fairly well organized on the local level, but had no cities, written
records, or fixed structures of government
6. c.2000BC-1000AD these barbarians came
into contact with civilization
7. the first such European barbarian people
to make contact with civilization were the Greeks - their
civilization, the first to emerge in Europe, was the first to definitively be
labeled “Western”
II. The Aegean Encounter (LO2)
A.
Minoan Civilization
1. c.2200BC a distinct civilization known as
Minoan arose on the Aegean
island of Crete
2. Minoans drew wealth from control of the
seas and trade with eastern Mediterranean
lands, especially Egypt
B. The Arrival of the Greeks: Mycenaean
Civilization
1. when the Greeks made their way to the
Aegean, they seem to have been a European barbarian people much like any other
2. eventually they came under the influence
of nearby Crete
3. by c.1600BC Greek chieftains had
established settlements along the mainland’s southern shore and on some
islands
4. Mycenaean Greeks
5. struggles between Mycenaeans and Minoans
for control of the commerce of the eastern
Mediterranean lasted until c.1400BC, with the destruction of Minoan towns, perhaps as a result of
Mycenaean conquest
C. The “Dark Ages”
1. Mycenaean civilization lasted until
shortly after 1200BC due to the conquest of the Sea Peoples
2. c.1150 BC Myceneae was sacked and all
settlements deserted - in addition, the population dropped, and writing fell
out of use
3.
this led to the eclipse of civilization for almost 400 years, known as the Dark Ages (1150 - 750 BC)
4. but the Greeks themselves survived and
even expanded their territory
D. The Renewal of Greek Civilization
1. c.800 BC the Aegean region recovered
2. population expansion led to founding of
colonies, c.800-600 BC
3. the Greeks joined the Phoenicians as the
leading commercial and seafaring nation of the
Mediterranean
4. a common religion
5. new developments
a. use of iron tools and weapons
b. coined money
c. borrowing of Phoenician shipbuilding and
warfare techniques
d. writing and the alphabet formed the Greek
language
III. Citizens and Communities: The Greek City-States (LO3)
A. City-States and Citizens
1. notion of citizenship seems to have
originated partly in geography
2. hoplites: Greek infantrymen equipped with
bronze helmets and armor, round
shields, long spears, and short swords
3. city-state, citizens, tradition, and myth
B. Monarchy, Oligarchy, Tyranny, Democracy
1. in the earliest times, communities were
ruled by kings
2. monarchy then gave way to new forms of
government that distributed power more widely among male citizens
a. oligarchy: a minority
of citizens dominated the government, and the power of the majority was limited in various ways
3. but other city-states gave more power to
the majority (particularly those
that developed into large
commercial centers)
a. in these city-states the common people
were too numerous and
active
to ignore,
b. in these cities, social conflicts
sometimes led to the emergence of tyranny (rule by a dictator)
c. but tyranny was often only a passing
phase on the way to democracy
(all government decisions were made by the majority of male citizens)
4. although Greek city-states had many
features in common, each was individual in character
C. Sparta: The Military Ideal
1. Spartans were descendants of Greeks who
had conquered part of the
Southern
mainland: Laconia
2. by 800BC they were a minority of
landholders ruling over a majority of helots (noncitizens forced to work for landholders)
3. Messenian helots, however, frequently
rebelled
a. this forced Spartans to accept a
governmental system that put them
under almost total domination by a few among themselves
4. by 500BC, policy decisions had been taken
over by a council of elders
5. thus the Spartan government was a leading
example of oligarchy
6. Spartan male life was dedicated entirely
to the service of the state
7. the relative freedom of Spartan women
aroused both admiration and disapproval among other Greeks
8. to protect this way of life, Spartans
tried to seal off their city-state from outside influences
D. Athens: Freedom and Power
1. c.800BC many old-established communities
in the Attica peninsula merged to form a single city-state
that was known by the name of the most important
community: Athens
2. over the next 300 years, Athens grew to
become the wealthiest and one of the most powerful city-states, largely as a result of overseas
trade
a. produced and exported wine and oil
b. workshops produced weapons, pottery, and
articles of silver,
lead,
and marble
c. these were trade overseas for metal, timber,
and grain
3. with a rising population and greater
wealth came social and political conflicts
a. usually between aristocrats and
increasingly numerous dēmos
b. in conflicts with the aristocracy, the dēmos could generally find aristocrats to lead them whom they
respected and who wanted their support
4. as a result, Athens passed through
several stages of political growth, beginning with monarchy and
including both oligarchy and tyranny
a. eventually political power was extended
to all adult male citizens,
with aristocrats becoming leaders instead of rulers
5. The Persian Wars
a. in the sixth century BC, the Persians had
conquered a realm that stretched
from the border of India to the Nile and the Aegean
b. now the empire was within striking
distance of the Greeks, and Persia conquered the Greek
city-states in western Asia Minor
c. when Athens aided a rebellion by these
city-states, Persian king
Darius
sought to extend his empire into mainland Greece, c.494BC
d. the Persians lost the decisive battle of
Marathon in 490BC
e. then in 480BC, the Athenian navy crushed
the Persians at
Salamis,
and the Spartans faced the Persians on land at Thermopylae and then at Platea
6. when final peace was made with Persia in
445 BC, Athens was the controlling power of the Aegean Sea
7. after Persia’s defeat, Athenian democracy
entered a “Golden Age”
8. the workings of democracy
a. a Council of Five Hundred and roughly one
thousand public
officials
were chosen annually by lot
b. chief military officers, the Ten Generals, were chosen each
year by vote of the male citizens
c. adult
male citizens were a minority of the population of Athens
i. the rest of the population was composed
of adult female citizens,
adult noncitizens, and children
ii. adult male citizens probably made up no
more than one-
fifth
of the total adult population
iii. the remaining four-fifths had no say in
government
9. men and women in Athens
a. women were highly visible in religious
affairs
b. not much is known of women’s life lower
down the social scale or outside the city
10. slaves
a. were a diverse group; not all of them
lived lives of total subjection
and powerlessness
b. most slaves were non-Greeks, or the
descendants of non-Greeks
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