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GREECE. Bordering countries are Albania, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Turkey Bordering bodies of water are Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea, Sea of Crete.

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Presentation on theme: "GREECE. Bordering countries are Albania, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Turkey Bordering bodies of water are Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea, Sea of Crete."— Presentation transcript:

1 GREECE

2 Bordering countries are Albania, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Turkey Bordering bodies of water are Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea, Sea of Crete

3 Capital is Athens

4 Mountains cover most of Greece, land is rocky with little fertile soil, summers are hot and dry

5 Winter – ¾ of rain falls, mild and wet Summer – hot, dry, very sunny

6 Greece is a seafaring country because you are never far from the sea, 1/5 of Greece is islands, land is not very good for farming

7 A city-state is the city/town and the surrounding villages and farmland

8 Greek city-states were independent, small in size, quarreled among themselves

9 The Ancient Greeks were: patriotic shared a common language, religion, and culture prized their freedom and way of life creative thinkers

10 Greece became independent in 1829

11 What happened in Olympia, Greece in 776 BCE? What is Greece’s capital city called? How many letters make up the Greek alphabet? What is Greece’s national cheese? What is the currency used in Greece? How many Greeks work in agriculture? What two major geographic features shape Greece? How many islands are apart of Greece? What religion do ninety-eight percent of Greeks belong to? What is a major holiday in Greece? First Olympics Athens 24 feta Euro One in five Mountains and Seas 2000 Greek Orthodox Church ~ Christian Easter and Christmas

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13 Passport to Ancient Greece

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18 GREECE’S GEOGRAPHY

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20 1)Peloponnesus Peninsula and numerous islands in the Aegean Sea 2)They were separated from one another by rugged mountains, bays and inlets, and by being on an island 3) Most Ancient Greeks were farmers

21 4) A Mediterranean climate – mild winters with hot, sunny summers... you can grow crops all year round... similar to southern California 5) Mainly grow grapes and olives Grow small amounts of wheat and barley

22 6) Main disadvantage is that only ¼ of the land is level so they could only grow small amounts of grain crops and, therefore, they had to trade with others to get more grain

23 7) Main advantage is the sea – it connected all Greeks to one another and Greece to other civilizations so that they could trade and get what they needed

24 LOCATION Greece is located in southern Europe between Albania and Turkey. It borders the Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea, and the Mediterranean Sea. It has a population of 10,964,020. Athens is its capital.

25 AREA Greece has a total area of 131,940 sq km. That means it is slightly smaller than Alabama

26 CLIMATE Greece has a Mediterranean climate with plenty of sunshine, mild temperatures and a limited amount of rainfall.

27 SUMMER In summer, the dry hot days are cooled by seasonal winds called the meltemi, while mountainous regions have generally lower temperatures.

28 WINTER The winters are mild in lowland areas, with a minimum amount of snow and ice, yet, mountains are usually snow-covered.

29 TERRAIN Greece consists of a mountainous and craggy mainland jutting out into the sea. Four-fifths of Greece consist of mountains or hills, making the country one of the most mountainous in Europe. Greece has the tenth longest coastline in the world.

30 LAND USE About 20% of Greece is farmable. Farmers grow olives, figs, fruit, grapes, and very little grain.

31 GREECE’S ORIGINS

32 MINOAN AGE Minoans Crete ~ Knosses 2000 – 1400 BCE had a system of writing, fine artwork, great sailors, traded with Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Phoenicia, master builders of palaces that were maze like with plumbing and decorated with colorful murals

33 MYCENAEAN AGE Mycenaeans Greek mainland/ Mycenae 1400 – 1100 BCE Built cities on top of hills, very similar to the Minoans – sailors, trade, palaces, and writing, conquered the Minoans

34 MINOANSMYCENAEANS First navy Named after King Minos Had minitar and bull fighting Known for pottery cups On Crete Weakened by fire, earthquakes, tidal waves Linear A – cannot read On Greek mainland Had walls that were 40 ft. high and 20 ft. thick Known for bronze weapons Linear B – can read Tall people Fell to outsiders Writing for record keeping Had palaces Were into trade Seafarers - sailors

35 DARK AGE Dorians Invaders from northern Greece who came to middle and southern Greece 1100 – 800 BCE Trade came to a stop, written language disappeared, people lived in isolated villages, oral traditions kept Greek history alive, population increases

36 AGE of EXPANSION 800ish – 500 BCE Villages grow and develop back into cities, trade comes back and increases, leaders emerge in each city, city-states {an independent, self governing city and the land around it} develop and begin to fight one and compete against one another

37 The Greek City-State Ruins of the agora at Corinth, Greece. Most Greek cities had an agora, which acted as the city center, housing marketplaces, civic centers, and forums. Map of major Greek City- States in 500 BCE

38 GREEK CITY-STATE Had over 100 city-states Known as a polis All Greeks belonged to one It is the city and its surrounding countryside Athens was the biggest Some had walls, some had natural barriers around them, some had nothing All had their own culture and identity – coins, laws, calendars

39 GREECE’S RELIGION

40 1)The gods controlled the world of nature and the human world. 2)Purpose of Myths and Legends: celebrate the gods explain the gods’ role in creating the world and causing natural events to tell of the gods’ powers

41 3)All Greek gods were part of a family and Zeus was the supreme god. 4)Zeus – justice and weather Poseidon – sea Hera – marriage Ares – war Dionysus – wine Apollo – light (sun), health, herding, prophecy

42 5)Ways the Greeks worshipped their gods: prayed to them for things they wanted thanked the gods with animal sacrifices built sanctuaries where they could worship and honor the gods religious festivals and competing in the Olympics

43 GOVERNMENTS of GREECE

44 MONARCHY King rules over a group of people King was head of the most powerful family Power was passed on to the oldest son King relied on nobles to defend the land

45 OLIGARCHY A few people hold the power over a large group of people Improved the government – more efficient City-states grew to quickly – food shortages, discontent, poor farmers lost land to wealthy and became slaves

46 TYRANT A leader who seizes power by force and rules single handedly {dictator} Many people supported, laws are reformed, poor are aided, and taught the citizens by uniting behind a leader they could gain power and make changes Leader can become harsh and greedy

47 DEMOCRACY Power to make decisions was in the hands of the people Council proposed new laws, all citizens met every 9 days to vote on laws. Law courts had jurors who made decisions, all citizens rich or poor were involved Not all citizens liked sharing power, especially the rich

48 GREEK CITIZENSHIP

49 ADULT MALE CITIZENS Men over eighteen Your father had to have been a citizen and mother’s father had to have been a citizen for you to be a citizen Only 45,000 citizens in Athens

50 WIVES and CHILDREN of CITIZENS 145,000 women and children of citizens in Athens They had no political rights They could not own land

51 METICS 35,000 foreigners in Athens They were from other city-states or countries They couldn’t vote or hold public office They were protected by the law They were usually traders, shopkeepers, craftsmen, or moneylenders

52 SLAVES About 80,000 slaves in Athens They were captured during war They couldn’t vote or choose jobs They needed permission to have a family They were paid and could buy their freedom They were farmhands, did household chores, metalwork, and made pottery

53 ATHENS vs. SPARTA

54 GOVERNMENT ATHENS Democracy SPARTA Oligarchy

55 ECONOMY ATHENS Farming and trade SPARTA Military - - - communities around them provided trade and crafts

56 EDUCATION ATHENS Wealthy received it Lived at home Learned reading, writing, poetry, math, music, dance, and athletics At age 18 served 2 years in the Army After service were given a spear and shield and only called out at war time Girls learned from Mother’s crafts and poetry SPARTA Boys lived in barracks Taught to read and write Emphasized physical skills Strict discipline Slept on the floor Wore light clothing At 18 in Army full time At 30 full citizen and could marry Girls got a strong physical education

57 OTHER DIFFERENCES ATHENS City-state had walls Didn’t fear slave revolts Lavish lives Large government projects to benefit all SPARTA No walls Feared slave revolts Simple lives No luxury goods/items

58 Greece and Persia

59 Persia was east of the Greek peninsula.

60 Darius attacked Greece first to expand his Persian Empire. Xerxes attacked Greece to try an avenge his father’s defeat to the Greeks

61 The Greeks were able to defeat the Persians twice because the city-states united together and fought together.

62 The Golden Age of Greece was when Greece’s culture flourished from 460 – 430 BCE.

63 PELOPONNESIAN WAR

64 Peloponnesian League Sparta and its allies Mainly found on the Peloponnesian Peninsula and Macedonia Scared of Athens growing power Delian League Athens and its allies Found along the coasts of the Aegean Sea Was formed to protect Greece from Persia Athens had turned the league into its empire Dates were 431 – 404 BCE Sparta and its allies vs. Athens and its allies

65 Athens wouldn’t let city-states leave the Delian League Athens began to attack other cities to protect its trade routes Sparta and its allies were scared of Athens growing power Athens refuses Sparta’s ultimatum to free all cities under its control

66 Sparta invades Athens countryside, burns farms, and cuts down grain Athens brings all its citizens within the walls of the city- state and a plague strikes {many die, food scarce, slaves escape} Sparta has a powerful army and Athens has a powerful navy As Athens weakened, its allies joined Sparta Persia gives Sparta money to improve its navy Sparta captures Athens navy at Hellespont

67 Sparta and its allies win after Athens surrenders from starvation and its navy being captured


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