Geography of Ancient Greece

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1 Geography of Ancient Greece

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Geography of Ancient Greece. The Sea. Greece is a Peninsula surrounded by water Aegean Sea (to the East) Ionian Sea (to the West) Black Sea (to the North-West) Mediterranean Sea (to the South) Trade was imperative because Greece was not rich in natural resources. The Land. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Geography of Ancient Greece

Page 1: Geography of Ancient Greece

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Geography of Ancient Greece

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The Sea

• Greece is a Peninsula surrounded by water

• Aegean Sea (to the East)• Ionian Sea (to the West)• Black Sea (to the North-West)• Mediterranean Sea (to the South)

• Trade was imperative because Greece was not rich in natural resources.

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The Land

• Mountains covered 75% of Greece– Mount Olympus (highest, home of Greek

Gods)– Made for difficult travel, but good protection

• Fertile Valleys covered 25% and made for the living areas known as city-states

• Not enough fresh-water to feed a large population (only about 2 million people)

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The Climate

• Moderate temperatures• Only rains in winter• Led to outdoor living

– Agora (marketplace)– Gymnasium– Political meetings– Theatre– Religious ceremonies

• Participation in city-states was a DUTY & a VIRTUE

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The Bronze Age

• Island Life– Minoan Life

• Mainland Life– Mycenaean Life– Trojan War

Circa 2000 BC- 1400 BC?

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Minoan Society

• On Island of Crete (to the South)• From 2000-1400 BC• Lived a prosperous life from trade

• Evidence that women shared social equality• Uncertain how the cause for the end of Minoan

Civilization

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Mycenaean Society

• Lived on Mainland of Greece• From 1600-1200 B.C.• Migrated from India, Egypt, and other lands• Walled-cities for protection• Enormous wealth from war/• plunder & trade– even• indoor plumbing• Most were farmers

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Trojan War

• Happened around 1200 B.C.

• Trojan prince had taken

Helen, wife of a Greek king.

• Trojan Horse

(myth or fact?)

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Dark Ages

• Dorians

• Homer

• Arete

• The Olympics

• Religion/ Mythology

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Dorian Migration

• Mycenaean Society was destroyed by invaders around 1200 B.C.

• From 1150-750 B.C., distant relatives known as the Dorians settled there.

• They destroyed trade and lost all writing (causing the term “Dark Ages”)

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Homer

• The most famous “bard” during the Dark Ages.

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The Iliad

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The Odyssey

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Arete

• To Strive for excellence, show courage, and win fame and honor

• Homer used his Epics to portray the Greek ideal of Arete

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The Olympics

• Competition took place in Olympia every four years, beginning in 776 B.C.

• Lasted 5 days

• Winners crowned with wreath of olive leaves

• Real prize was Arete

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Mount Olympus

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Gods and Goddesses

• Very human, with human emotions, but immortal

• Gathered at Mount Olympus

• MYTHS – stories about gods intended to explain mysteries of nature and human existence

• Religion was closely linked to government and polis’ pride.