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Dark age and rise of 8 th century Ancient Greece.

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Presentation on theme: "Dark age and rise of 8 th century Ancient Greece."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dark age and rise of 8 th century Ancient Greece

2 Dark age >1100bc – 700bc< Devastation at fall of Bronze Age reduced the Mycenaean civilization and its palatial economy The terminus ad quem for the dark age is the Archaic period, marked by the rise of the city- state (polis)

3 Dark age Some locations continued (e.g. Athens) Communities on Aegean recover within a couple generations Technological innovation: ~1050 – Pottery (protogeometric period 1050-900) – IRON Population shifts to the east; Aegean is the “Greek sea”

4 Dark age Iron age reflection on the Bronze: an age of heroes – Basileus: the chieftain of a house or village (cf. Wanax) – Chieftain’s house (Lefkandi)

5 Dark age Protogeo- metric period (1150-900) gives way to … Geometric period (900-700)

6 Dark age Poetry – Oral: Homer and the cycles – Instrumental accompaniment – 16000 lines of Iliad; 12000 lines of Odyssey Details of poetics: formulaic orality Advent of writing fossilizes formulae Plots and major themes – What the epics can tell us about Bronze Age Greece – What the epics can tell us about Dark Age Greece

7 Dark age “Homeric” society – Demos: space and people Basileus Farm and village Demos and polis (=main town of demos) Oikos (household): smallest unit of Dark Age society – Men and women and oikos Marriage and paternal anxieties Labor – Thetes

8 Dark age “Homeric” society – Governmental institutions Boule (council that met in megaron) Ecclesia (assembly that met in agora) Basileus’ role confirmed by Zeus – Foreign relations Xenia – Social values Agathos vs. Kakos Time Aristos (cf. Hesiod’s Eris – Strife)

9 Dark age “Homeric” society – Women Strong women in Homeric epic Nevertheless dependent on males Contributed to public opinion, but no political rights Enjoy protection as members of oikos – Gods and mortals Pantheon set by Homer and Hesiod Theogony; Naturism; Anthropomorphism Divine attributes; Belief; Sin and punishment; afterlife Cultus

10 Dark age End of the Dark age: 8 th century – A Greek “renaissance”: Rise of landowning aristocracy Colonization Alphabet and writing Art and architecture Panhellenism

11 Dark age End of the Dark age: 8 th century – Rise of landowning aristocracy Population growth affects relative size of kleros Another option is colonization – Colonization Accompanied by growth of trade abroad – Alphabet and writing Contact with the east: the (Phoenician) phonetic alphabet Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ Ν Ξ Ο Π Ρ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π ρ σ τ υ φ χ ψ ω

12 Dark age End of the Dark age: 8 th century – Art and architecture Late geometric period (750-700) Images burst onto the scene Orientalizing elements Monumental temples

13 Dark age Panhellenism – Religious sanctuaries = festivals = athletics – Zeus & Hera at Olympia – Apollo & Artemis at Delos – Zeus at Dodona – Apollo at Delphi 776: first Olympic Games Greek sense of identity: heritage, language, religion Cult heroes

14 Dark age Panhellenic Games – Olympic: near Elis (Zeus: olive) – Pythian: near Delphi (Apollo: laurel) – Nemean: near Nemea (Zeus: celery) – Isthmian: near Corinth (Poseidon: pine) Events -- Glory for the competitor; glory for the polis

15 Dark age Legacy of the Dark age – A literature that starts a tradition – A population that grows a polis – A world around the Aegean that is common in language and religion – A civilization about to grow into the Archaic Period


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