The Greeks 1

2. The Time of Greeks and Romans
The Greeks 1: Classical Greece
(TB ch 3.2)
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2. The Time of Greeks and Romans
The Greeks 1: Classical Greece
(TB ch 3.2)

Slide 1 - Diapositive

Slide 2 - Diapositive

What you will learn in 
this lesson
  • What "united country" means
  • What "disunited country" means
  • Why it is difficult to tell if Greece was a united or a disunited country
  • That Greece had both uniting factors and disuniting factors
  • You can tell what these factors were.

Slide 3 - Diapositive

Greece: One country 
or many countries?
Greece was a different country than Egypt.
Egypt was a united country. This means that there was one ruler (pharaoh) who ruled the whole country. All the people in Egypt felt that they were Egyptians, that they belonged to the same country. They spoke the same language and obeyed the same laws.

Greece was different. Because there are so many mountains, bays and islands, the Greeks did not have that much contact with each other. 
So their cities developed separately. Each city had its own ruler, its own laws.
They were small countries as well as cities. That is why we call them: city-states.

Sparta
Knossos
Olympia
Pella
Troy
Delphi
Mount Olympus
Athens
Persian Empire
Aegean Sea
Mycenae
Ionian Sea
Macedonia
Greece

Slide 4 - Diapositive

Greece developed differently than Egypt.
This had nothing to do with the geography of Greece.
A
true
B
false

Slide 5 - Quiz

Athens was the capital city of ancient Greece
A
true
B
false

Slide 6 - Quiz

The Persian Empire lay west of Greece
A
true
B
false

Slide 7 - Quiz

in other words: united or disuntied?
Some historians say that Greece was disunited: it was not one country, but a collection of different countries.

Other historians say that Greece, despite the different city-states, was still one united country.

Let’s look at both views:




reconstruction of the Acropolis in Athens, 
painted by Leo von Klenze in 1846

Slide 8 - Diapositive

a united country is a country with one government that makes laws for the whole country
A
true
B
false

Slide 9 - Quiz

a modern example of a united country is France
A
true
B
false

Slide 10 - Quiz

uniting factors
Historians have reasons for seeing Classical Greece as one country. 
Important factors unified the Greeks:

  • They shared a language. People had different accents in different parts of Greece. They wrote their letters slightly differently. But all Greeks could understand each other. 

  • They shared a religion. They believed in the same gods and goddesses, and worshipped them in the same way. Several large religious festivals were held each year at particular places in Greece. People from all over Greece came to them. The most famous of these religious festivals was the Olympic Games.

modern reconstruction of the statue of Zeus in the temple at Olympia

Slide 11 - Diapositive

disuniting factors (I)
There were also important factors which suggest Greece was not united.

  • People lived in city states. They saw themselves as belonging to those city states. So they called themselves Athenian or 'Spartan, not Greek. A city state was a city, usually walled, and the farmland around it. City states varied in size. Athens had 250,000 people at its largest. Some city states had only a few hundred people. 

    The Greek word for city state was POLIS.



modern reconstruction of a Greek polis

Slide 12 - Diapositive

disuniting factors (II)
  • City states had their own armies, laws, taxes and money. They also had their own government. The Greeks were the first people to write and debate about the best way to rule a country. City states had different ways of ruling. Some were run by kings, others by a small group of powerful men. From 462 BC the city state of Athens was a democracy.
  •  City states often fought each other. In all city states, armies were made up of male citizens. They had to stay fit and train for war. Small city states often made an alliance with a large one, for protection or because they were forced to do so. 

Athens and Sparta were the largest, most powerful, city states and were often at war. 
modern reconstructions of Greek soldiers, called hoplites

Slide 13 - Diapositive

Can you give an example of a modern city state?

Slide 14 - Question ouverte

source B
"A state that has too few people cannot be, as it should be, self-sufficient. When it has too many people it may be self-sufficient, be it cannot govern itself. If the citizens of a state are to judge lawsuits and choose officials, then they must know each other's characters. Where they do not have this knowledge, both the choosing of officials and the decision of lawsuits will go wrong."

The Greek thinker Aristotle wrote this in about 350 BC. 


Source A  is a 1st century Roman copy in marble of a Greek bronze bust of Aristotle that was made by Lysippus, around 330 BC.
source A

Slide 15 - Diapositive


What type of source is source A for a historian studying Aristotle?
A
primary + written
B
primary + non-written
C
secondary + written
D
secondary + non-written

Slide 16 - Quiz


What type of source is source A for a historian studying Roman sculpture?
A
primary + written
B
primary + non-written
C
secondary + written
D
secondary + non-written

Slide 17 - Quiz


What type of source is source B for a historian studying Aristotle?
A
primary + written
B
primary + non-written
C
secondary + written
D
secondary + non-written

Slide 18 - Quiz

Read source B. It says a polis that is too small can not exist.
a) Why not according to Aristotle?
b) And what does he mean by that?
(look up the meaning of the words if it is not clear to you)

Slide 19 - Question ouverte

What, according to Aristotle, is the problem with a polis that has too many people?

Slide 20 - Question ouverte

Copy this in your notebook and fill in the gaps.
Summary ch 3.2
The main question of this lesson is: _________________________________________________________________.
Greece was different from Egypt because Greece was made up of many different _____________________________.
The reason why Greece had developed differently was because ___________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________.

Historians do not always agree whether Greece was a ________________ country or a __________________ country.
uniting factors:
  • ____________________________________________________________________________________________
  • ____________________________________________________________________________________________
disuniting factors:
  • ____________________________________________________________________________________________
  • ____________________________________________________________________________________________
  • ____________________________________________________________________________________________

Slide 21 - Diapositive

Word Duty
Lesson 3.2:

  • city state
  • democracy
  • citizens
  • alliance

all these words are in the glossary in your textbook

Slide 22 - Diapositive

What you learned in 
this lesson
If you can answer these questions in your own words it means you have understood this lesson.

  1. What "united country" means
  2. What "disunited country" means
  3. Why it is difficult to tell if Greece was a united or a disunited country
  4. That Greece had both uniting factors and disuniting factors
  5. You can tell what these factors were.

Slide 23 - Diapositive

Do you think that this lesson was enough for you to understand the learning goals?
A
yes, I got it.
B
no, I still do not understand everything

Slide 24 - Quiz


Was your answer in the previous question "A"?
Then you can fill in "OK".

Was your answer in the previous question "B"?
Then write down what part of the lesson you do not understand and (if you can) what can help you.


Slide 25 - Question ouverte

congratulations

Slide 26 - Diapositive