Chapter Two, Lecture One The Cultural Context of Classical Myth To Greek Society.
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Transcript of Chapter Two, Lecture One The Cultural Context of Classical Myth To Greek Society.
![Page 1: Chapter Two, Lecture One The Cultural Context of Classical Myth To Greek Society.](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062716/56649e155503460f94affaea/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Chapter Two, Lecture One
The Cultural Context of Classical Myth
To Greek Society
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Cultural Context of Classical Myth
• “Myths reflect the society that produces them. In turn, they determine the nature of that society. They cannot be separated from the physical, social, and spiritual worlds in which a people lives or from a people’s history.”
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Greek Geography
• Greece not rich in minerals or tillable land– mountainous
• Principal Areas:– Thessaly, Macedonia, Boeotia, Attica,
Peloponnesus, Argolis, Laconia, Elis– Maps of Greece
• Horses were scarce
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Greek Geography
• Some areas rich in limestone, marble, and clay– the basis for Greek material culture– temples and pottery tell us much about their
gods and myths
• The Aegean Sea the greatest natural resource– Maps of Greece
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Greek Geography
• Cycladic Islands and the Sporades
• Importance of trade and colonization
• Mountainous terrain encourage political independence of cities and spawned myths of city founders
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Greek History
– 7000 BC Paleolithic
7000–3000 BC Neolithic
3000–1150 BC Bronze Age
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Greek History
3000–1600: Early/Middle Bronze Age
1600–1150: Mycenaean (Late Bronze) Age
1150–800: Dark Age
800–490: Archaic Period
490–323: Classical Period
323–30: Hellenistic Period
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Greek History
3000: Writing and Cities, Bronze
1600: Ascendancy of Mainland Greeks
1150: Sack and Collapse of Cities
800: Greek Alphabet
490: Persian Invasion of Greece
323: Death of Alexander the Great
30: Rome's Conquest of Egypt
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Early/Middle Bronze Age3000–1600 BC
• Early Bronze Age (3000–2000 BC) peoples in the Greek area not Greek
• Agricultural peoples mainly
• Worshipped goddesses of fertility
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Early/Middle Bronze Age3000–1600
• Minoans (on Crete)
• Started building elaborate palaces toward the end of the Early Bronze Age and beyond (2200–1450 BC)– Knossos Reconstruction and other images
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The Origin of the Greeks2100 BC?
• Migration of a people, whom we call the Indo-Europeans – first around 2100 BC?
• Were no doubt speaking an early form of Greek– Their language the basis for many world
languages today
• Language of the people they replaced still in many place names and names for plants and animals
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The Origin of the Greeks2100 BC?
• Appear to be more warlike that aboriginal peoples
• Society divided into – (1) kings and priests– (2) warriors– (3) food producers
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The Late Bronze Age1600-1150 BC
• Known also as the Mycenaean Age
• People called “Mycenaean” because that is one of their main sites– They may have called themselves “Achaean”
• Mycenae taken over by Indo-Europeans in 1650 BC– Other Mycenaean sites: Thebes, Athens,
Orchomenus, Pylos
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The Late Bronze Age1600–1150 BC
• Ruled by powerful and rich warrior kings
• Perhaps the Mycenaean destroyed the Minoan sites on Crete in 1450
• Ruled on Crete until 1400– Impressed by Minoan art and culture
• Their writing system: Linear B– Translated in 1952; proved to be an early
form of Greek
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The Late Bronze Age1600–1150 BC
• Great heroic legends of classical myth set in this period
• Historically related to a conflict with Troy in about 1230?
• Perhaps the Trojans were Mycenaean Greeks themselves?
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The Dark Age:1150–800 BC
• Great Mycenaean palaces destroyed around 1180–1150 BC
• The Dorian Invasion (a.k.a. the Heraclidae)
• Athens survived• Period of migration of Mycenaean Greeks
across the Aegean– Ionia and Aeolis on the western coast of
modern-day Turkey
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The Dark Age:1150–800 BC
• Social disorganization, depopulation and impoverishment
• Petty kings and small dominions– Families and small villages
• The island of Euboea a possible exception– Continued contacts with the Near East– Greek alphabet first appears on Euboea,
allowing Homer and Hesiod to be written down
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The Archaic Period: 800–490 BC
• Invention of the Greek alphabet
• Includes symbols for vowels, not just consonants
• Colonization from Euboea to southern Italy and Sicily
• A cultural revival
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The Archaic Period: 800–490 BC
• The Greek polis– People identified themselves geographically
and not just by family ties– “Citizenship”– Competitiveness encouraged, not so much
cooperation
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The Archaic Period: 800–490 BC
• Rebirth of commerce depended on the sea
• Greek economy thus decentralized and competitive, not like landed/river monarchies such as Egypt and Mesopotamia
• 6th century innovation of coined money spurned economic growth even more
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The Archaic Period: 800–490 BC
• The “new” economy strains old social orders– Period of conflict between the old, landed
aristocracy (the aristoi) and the entrepreneurial class (the kakoi)
• Period of tyrants (650–600)– Perhaps can be thought of as populists– Negative connotation of the word tyrant from
the hostility of the literate aristoi
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The Archaic Period: 800–490 BC
• Toward the end of the Archaic Period and series of conflicts with Persia
• Persia conquers the Greek cities on the western coast of Turkey
• Mainland Greeks drawn into the conflict
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The Classical Period490–323
• A democracy in Athens (508 BC)– Cleisthenes– All free men had a stake in the city and a role
to play in its administration
• Persians first repelled by Athenian citizen army at Marathon in 490– “What a noble thing freedom is”
• Persians finally defeated in 480 by Athens and other Greek cities
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The Classical Period490–323
• Classical floruit of Athens and Greece inspired by their national pride and their military prowess
• Greek cities fought with one another but they recognized that they were all Hellenes, different from the barbaroi around them
• The great “civil” war of the Greeks in the Peloponnesian War (431-404) fatally weakened them all
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The Classical Period490–323
• Myth reworked and re-presented in new forms to reflect the political and social realities of the day– Tragedy above all
• Philosophy and science developed in the late Classical Period as a counterpoint to myth
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The Classical Period490–323
• The Macedonian king Philip II overran the southern Greeks in 338 and changed the political landscape
• Greece cities yoked in a kingdom; their freedom limited
• Alexander the Great follows; leads campaign against Persia
• Death in 323 the conventional date for the end of the Classical Period
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The Hellenistic Period: 323–30 BC
• Greek culture the “global” culture in the Mediterranean area
• Center moved from the “old” Greece to the new cities of Alexandria
• 146 BC, Greek mainland conquered by Rome, followed by another 100 years of conflict
• Finally pacified in 30 BC with the conquest of Egypt, by then a Greek dynasty
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Beginning of the Roman Period
• 30 BC the beginning of the Roman period and the end of Greek “independence”
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Next Lecture
Greek Society