Chapter 4. Daily Focus Skills

Similar documents
Effect of Geography on Ancient Greece. Chapter 4-1

January 6, Chapter 7 & 8 Vocab. due Wednesday, 1/11

The early Greeks developed important settlements, trade routes, and political ideas in the Mediterranean region.

Ch 4, Sec 1-2: The Early Greeks, Sparta, and Athens

Lesson 1

Study Guide Chapter 7 The Ancient Greeks

Trojan War Actors at their best (I can look at an event from different perspectives and act out what can happen when two different civilizations want

Ancient Greece Chapter 7 Review

CHAPTER 8 STUDY GUIDE ANSWERS

Ancient Greeks. The 700 B.C. 600 B.C. 500 B.C. 400 B.C. c. 650 B.C. 480 B.C. 431 B.C. Greece s Dark Age comes to an end. Xerxes invades Greece

Ancient Greece. Chapter 6 Section 1 Page 166 to 173

Geography and Early Greek Civilization

Objectives for Chapter 4

Geography of Ancient Greece Summary Sheet for Use in Assessment

Chapter Introduction

Ancient Greece. The achievements of the ancient Greeks continue to influence culture, science, and politics in the world today.

αρχαία Ελλάδα (Ancient Greece)

Ancient Greece GREECE UNIT 5 GEOGRAPHY CHALLENGE. 1 Unit 5 Geography Challenge miles. Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area Projection

Chapter 25 Geography and the Settlement of Greece. How did geography influence settlement and way of life in ancient Greece?

Classical Greek Civilization Our main topics: n History of Greek City-States n Cultural contributions as foundation of Western Civilization n

One of the earliest civilizations began on the island of CRETE This was the Minoan civilization, named for King MINOS Crete is long and narrow, about

Greece Intro.notebook. February 12, Age of Empires

1. Sea: heavy influence on physical environment of Greece (Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea)

Ancient Greece Packet

Warring City-States. Chapter 5, Section 2

Ancient Greece. Greek Literature Chapter 8, Section 3 Ancient Civilizations

Target. List and describe the government, religion, economy, and contributions of the Minoan civilization

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? The Ancient Greeks Lesson 1 Rise of Greek Civilization ESSENTIAL QUESTION GUIDING QUESTIONS

WARRING CITY-STATES polis Monarchy- rule by a king Oligarchy- rule by nobles and wealthy merchants Democracy rule by the people

Early People of the Aegean

Eurasian Empires 500 BCE to 500 CE. AP World History Notes Chapter 4

Ancient Greece. Roots of Western Civilization

WHI.05: Ancient Greece: Geography to Persian Wars

Ancient Greece. Teachers Curriculum Institute Geography and the Settlement of Greece 1

NAME DATE CLASS. Troy. KEY Ancient Greece ASIA MINOR. 100 miles km Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection

World History I Mrs. Rogers Sem

Chapter 6. The Rise of Ancient Greece. Section 1 The Rise of Greek Civilization Section 2 Religion, Philosophy, and the Arts

Aim: How did geography impact the development of classical Greece?

Unit 6 Lesson 8 The Persian and Peloponnesian Wars

Ancient Greece 1750 B.C B.C. Chapter 5

Geography. Greece s Physical Geography is: Peninsula (water on three sides) The Peloponnesus. Mountainous Terrain (see Map dark green)

Good morning! You need: both sheets from yesterday! Write HW in agenda: BRING IN CANS. College day tomorrow: Wear college shirts and hats!

APWH chapter 4.notebook. September 11, 2012

Minoan Greeks Mycenaean Hellenic Hellenistic King Minos Thalossocracy

the basic principle of justice in Hammurabi s Code ( an eye for an eye ). (H, C, E)

Ancient Greece. Theme: Religion Theme: Society & Culture -Slide 1 -Slide2 Theme: Science & Tech. -Slide 1 -Slide 2

DO NOW: Pick up the map of Eastern Europe pg 978

Ancient Greece. Aristocrats and Tyrants Rule Chapter 8, Section 2 Ancient Civilizations

The Minoans (c B.C.)

Reading Informational Medford 549C Work Sample Effective February 2010 Informational Text Title:

LESSON 1: The Geography of Greece (read p )

A K S 3 1 T H E C L A S S I C A L E R A A N C I E N T G R E E C E

Essential Question: What is Hellenism? What were the lasting characteristics of the Roman Republic & the Roman Empire?

Chapter 3 Section 4 The Phoenicians

by Cindy Barden illustrated by Corbin Hillam

7/8 World History. Week 10. The Late Bronze Age

Review Questions 1. What works of art give clues to Minoan culture?

Sparta: A Nation of Soldiers

Geography of the Greek Homeland. Geography of the Greek Homeland

The Rise of Greek City-States: Athens Versus Sparta By USHistory.org 2016

The Story of Ancient Greece

Civilization Spreads to the West

WHI SOL 5. Ancient Greeks

Life in Two City-States: Athens and Sparta

1200 BCE. Mediterranean Society under the Greeks and the Romans. The Minoans BCE

Social Studies Grade 6 Benchmark 3

Sixth Grade, Social Studies, Quarter 3

Ancient Greece Chapter Four

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3. Early Civilization in Greece. Minoans Settle on Crete. Ancient Greece Chapter Four

Bell Work: HINT HINT HINT! Look on pg. 140

Write Me!!! peninsula

Athens. Sparta. Central Greece. Isolated. Harbor 25 miles away - surrounded by mountains! 4 miles from Aegean Sea

UNIT 14: Ancient Greece Exercises

Chapter 1: Citizenship and democracy in Athens (5 th 4 th BC)

The Myth of Troy. Mycenaeans (my see NEE ans) were the first Greek-speaking people. Trojan War, 1200 B.C.

THE RISE OF GREECE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF GREEK POLITICAL LIFE

The Rise of Rome. After about 800 BC other people also began settling in Italy The two most notable were the and the

Text 1: Minoans Prosper From Trade. Topic 5: Ancient Greece Lesson 1: Early Greece

To Helen Edgar Allen Poe

What Does Greece Look Like?

THINK: How did the many Greek city-states commonly relate/deal with each other?

Athenian Background. Located NE of Sparta, on the Aegean Sea Had different philosophy than Spartans

Ancient Greece: The Greek Mainland and Greek Colonies

Greek Test Review Chapter 10 and Chapter 11

Ancient Greece. Written by: Marci Haines. Sample file. Rainbow Horizons Publishing Inc. ISBN-13:

Athens and Sparta. Chapter 7, Section 2

Today you need: Pencil If you have your notebook-put it in bin. Thank you

Greece. The Origins of Ancient Greece. The Origins of Scientific Thinking?

11. How was Hippias a different ruler than his father Pysistritus? What did he do to his father's reforms?

It had a privileged position between Asia and Africa.

Ancient Greece B.C.E.

The Polis ORGANIZATION AND GOVERNMENT ECONOMY ATHENS AND SPARTA

Ancient Greece By Anne Pearson READ ONLINE

Cultures of the Mountains and the Sea

Aegean Alphabets. Phaistos Disk. Linear B Tablet

direct democracy Delian League Acropolis Parthenon Lesson Main Ideas Pericles Leads Athens Pericles Strengthens Democracy Paid Public Officials

Mycenaean Civilization Develops 4. Mycenaean people were who migrated from the Eurasian Steppes. How was Mycenae ruled?

Geography *1/5 of the land can be farmed *The Attica peninsula had the best farmland *Since Greece was made up of so many peninsulas there were many

THE PREHISTORIC AEGEAN AP ART HISTORY CHAPTER 4

Rome is now the capital city of Italy. 2,000 years ago it was the centre of the Roman Empire. The Romans had a story to explain how Rome began.

Transcription:

Chapter 4 Daily Focus Skills

Chapter 4

On a historical map of the ancient Mediterranean area, locate Greece and trace the boundaries of its influence to 300 BC/BCE. Explain how the geographical location of ancient Athens and other city-states contributed to their role in maritime trade, their colonies in the Mediterranean, and the expansion of their cultural influence. Explain how the development of democratic political concepts in ancient Greece lead to the origins of direct Democracy and representative Democracy, including: the polis or city-state, civic participation and voting rights, legislative bodies, constitution writing, rule of law.

Locating Places Crete (KREET) Agamemnon (A guh MEHM nahn) Mycenae (my SEE nee) Peloponnesus (PEH luh puh NEE suhs) Meeting People Building Your Vocabulary peninsula colony polis agora

The geography of Greece influenced where people settled and what they did.

Mainland Greece is a mountainous peninsula a body of land with water on three sides. The Ionian Sea is to the west of Greece, the Aegean Sea is to the east, and the Mediterranean Sea is to the south.

Due to its location, many Greeks made a living from the sea. (fishers, sailors, traders) Others settled in farming communities. Greece s mountains and rocky soil were made farming difficult. Crops: grapes, wheat, barley, olives Raised: sheep and goats

The ruins of the Minoan civilization, the first civilization to arise in Greece, are on the island of Crete. The Minoans were not Greek. They only inhabited the region that later became Greece. Artifacts at the palace at Knossos reveal the riches of the Minoan people, such as wine, oil, jewelry, and statues.

The Minoan people made their wealth from trade, traveling by ship to trade with other countries. The Minoan civilization collapsed around 1450 B.C., although historians disagree on the cause of the Minoan destruction. Some historians think an undersea earthquakes caused waves that washed away the cities. Others think the Mycenaeans invaded the Minoans.

How do historians know the Minoans were a wealthy people? Artifacts at the palace of Knossos included items only wealthy people would have, such as bathrooms.

The first Greek kings were Mycenaean leaders, whose people invaded the Greek mainland around 1900 B.C. The center of the Mycenaean kingdom was a palace surrounded by large farms.

The Mycenaeans began trading with the Minoans and learned much about Minoan culture. They copied the ways Minoans worked with bronze and built ships. They also copied the way the Minoans used the sun and stars to navigate the seas.

The Mycenaean people also worshiped the Earth Mother, the Minoan s chief goddess. Before collapsing around 1100 B.C., the Mycenaean civilization was the most powerful on the Mediterranean.

Even though the Mycenaeans were wealthy. They were prouder of their warriors and battles. Their most famous victory was the Trojan War. We will learn later of the Trojan War and the Mycenaean king Agamemnon and how he used trickery to win that war.

The Mycenaean kingdom collapsed due to earthquakes and fighting. The Dark Age occurred between 1100 B.C. and 750 B.C. and was a time of less trade and poverty among people.

Negative effects: Not enough food Teaching stopped Greeks forgot written language Positive effects: Population shift 1000 s of Greeks left the mainland and settled on the islands in the Aegean Sea Others moved to Asia Minor This caused the expansion of Greek culture.

The Dorians (who lived in the northern mountains of Greece) invaded Greece, bringing new weapons and farming technology to the Greek people.

The new farming tools helped create a food surplus. Trade was revived. Due to trade resuming, a new language was gained from the Phoenicians (trading partner on eastern coast of Mediterranean.)

The Greek alphabet had 24 letters that stood for different sounds.

After the Dark Age, Greek people began to set up colonies in other countries. This colonization spread Greek culture. A colony is a settlement in a new territory that keeps close ties with the homeland. Trade between colonists and the parent cities grew, and soon merchants were trading goods for money instead of more goods.

A polis, or city-state, was like an independent country. City-states varied in size and population. An acropolis, located at the top of a hill, was the main gathering place of the city-state.

An agora, or open area, served as a market and as a place for people to meet and debate issues. The Greeks were the first people to develop the idea of citizenship, in which citizens of a country are treated equally and have rights and responsibilities.

Each Greek city-state was run by its citizens. In Greek city-states, only free, native-born, landowning men could be citizens. Citizens could vote, hold office, own property, and defend themselves in court.

Citizen Rights Gather in the agora to choose their officials and pass laws Vote Hold office Own property Defend themselves in court Citizen Duties Serve in government Fight for their polis as citizen soldiers

The military of the city-states was made of ordinary citizens, not nobles. These citizens were called hoplites and fought each battle on foot instead of on horses. Hoplites carried a shield, sword, and spear. They fought shoulder to shoulder in rows. This make them very good soldiers.

Discuss the following statement: The geography of Greece influenced where people settled and what they did.

The Early Greeks What made the Minoans wealthy? Trade

The Early Greeks How was a Greek city-state different from a city? City-states were tiny independent countries, while cities are part of a country.

The Early Greeks Summarize What changes occurred in Greece during the Dark Age? Trade slowed, poverty took hold, people stopped farming, people stopped teaching writing and craftwork, and many Greeks moved elsewhere.

The Early Greeks Citizenship Skills Name three rights granted to Greek citizens that American citizens have today. Answers include voting, holding office, owning property, defending themselves in court.

The Early Greeks Link to Economics Why did the use of money help trade to grow? Money is small and easier to trade than bartered goods.