Ancient Greece 2 session i Golden Age intro
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Transcript of Ancient Greece 2 session i Golden Age intro
Ancient GreecePart ii
session i - Golden Age
Ancient GreecePart ii
session i - Golden Age
course outline
i - Golden Age
ii - Second Military Revolution
iii - Hellenism
iv -Justice & Power
v - Plato
vi -Aristotle
vii -Machiavelli
viii -Hobbes
Major Points in last Spring’s last classKagan compared 5th century Greek leagues to the Cold War
when Athens crushed Thasos the Delian League was viewed as a tyrannical empire
the struggle for hegemony sowed the seeds of war
Thucydides explained the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War as the result of Sparta’s fear of the Athenian empire
the Sicilian expedition was a tremendous blow to Athens
Athens managed to stay in the war after 413 because of her navy
she finally lost because of Persian gold which financed a Spartan navy which could destroy her sea power
Questions to answer in this session
why is the Golden Age often called the Age of Pericles?
what are the various forms of art which this age produced?
how did Greek playwrights give birth to the tragedy?
how did science and philosophy come to replace myth and religion as the educational foundation for the upper class?
what is the Socratic method?
what is Plato’s theory of Forms?
how did the discipline of history begin?
what explains the stature of Thucydides as one of the greatest, perhaps the greatest, historians?
review of last Spring’s sessions
HeinrichSchliemann
the “mask of Agamemnon”
Homer
“Jupiter and Thetis”Jean Dominique Ingres
Odysseus
Troy
Η ΔικαιοσὖνηΤό τί;
“[the] Justice.“What [is] it?”
Plato, Republic
[The Athenian] Acropolis, Leo von Klenze
“FROGS AROUND A POND”-- SOCRATES, IN THE PHAEDO
Victor Davis Hanson(1953-)
hoplite kleros
a master, twoslaves and aboy work
together harvestingolives
transport amphora serving amphora
the Chigi vase, 4th c. BC
ΠΙΘΕΚΥΣΑΙ
Pithecusai-the first apoikia
Corinthian trade goods
Dardanelles
Sea of Marmara
Bosphorus
Aegean Sea
Europe
Asia
Black Sea
the myth of Gyges
tyranny & public works--”water houses”
aSpartanwarrior
Mount Taygetus
Sparta
ἢ τὰν ἢ ἐπὶ τᾶς(eh tan eh epi tas)
Athenian education
Young scholar followed by his pedagogue
instruction by a sophist
The Panathenaeum
SOLŌN
The Pottery“factory”
State promotionof the
fine arts,here a sculpture
of Aphroditefor a temple
mid 6th
centuryfactions
PEISISTRATOS
Harmodius and Aristogeton, the tyrannicides, kill Hipparchosin 514 BC but fail to kill his brother, the tyrant Hippias
Cleisthenes
Aristotle’s Athenian constitution
Ostrakon
The Alcmaeonidai
War is the father of all--Heraclitus
THE GREATEST EMPIRE THE WORLDHAD EVER SEEN UP TO THAT TIME
Μιλτιάδης ὁ ΝεώτεροςMiltiades the Younger
c. 550 BCE – 489 BCE
the Persian“Immortals”
at the Louvre
Miltiades’ helmet asa votive offering
Xerxes’ bridge across the Hellespont
Thermopylae
theisland
ofThasos
the Long Walls
ancientCorcyra
Pericles’ funeral oration
Sparta’s humiliation
atSphacteria
Alcibiadesc. 450-404
his rakish youth
Alcibiades’victory at Cyzicus, 410
Finale
preview of today’s session
artist’s version of the Parthenonas originally decorated
A p h r o d i t e o f M i l o s ( G r e e k : Ἀφροδίτη τῆς Μήλου, Aphroditē tēs Mēlou), better known as the Venus de Milo
The Discobolus of Myron ("discus thrower" Greek Δ ι σ κ ο β ό λ ο ς , "Diskobolos"
Exekias (Εξηκίας , a Greek name) was an a n c i e n t G r e e k v a s e -painter and potter, who w o r k e d b e t w e e n approximately 550 BC - 525 BC at Athens
Relationships Among the Pre-Socratic Philosophers
Pythagoras and his followers salute the sunrise-Fyodor Bronnikov, 1869
Πλάτων, Plátōn428/27 BC – 348/347 BC
The Republic
Ἀριστοτέλης, Aristotélēs384 BC – 322 BC
Ἡρόδοτος (Hēródotos) born in Halicarnassus, Caria (modern
day Bodrum, Turkey) 5th century BC
(c. 484 BC – c. 425 BC)
Θουκυδίδης, Thoukydídēs
c. 460 BC – c. 395 BC
Questions to answer in this session
why is the Golden Age often called the Age of Pericles?
what are the various forms of art which this age produced?
how did Greek playwrights give birth to the tragedy?
how did science and philosophy come to replace myth and religion as the educational foundation for the upper class?
what is the Socratic method?
what is Plato’s theory of Forms?
how did the discipline of history begin?
what explains the stature of Thucydides as one of the greatest, perhaps the greatest, historians?