Ancient Greece
Many of these notes were taken from Ancient Greece by Thomas R. Martin.
Minoans
- Named after the legendary king Minos
- c. 6000 First settlers migrated to Crete
- c. 2200 Earliest Cretan palaces of Minoan Civilization
- Constructed large building complexes, referred to as “palaces”
- Famous palace at Knossos had indoor plumbing, and storage jars which could hold 240,000 gallons of water, olive oil, wine, or other goods.
- They appear to have had a top-down redistributive economy
- Were sea-traders; seem to have specialized in luxury goods
- Colorful frescoes of dolphins, bulls, ships, women, and griffins
- Minoans are depicted in Egyptian tomb reliefs
- Archaeological evidence indicates that Minoan civilization existed peaceably for several centuries
- There are no defensive walls found around the towns or palaces
- Prominent snake and bull imagery; bull leaping
- There is some evidence that they practiced human sacrifice
- c. 1450 most sites on the island were burned
- c. 1370 The palace at Knossos is destroyed
Myceneaens
- Named after the city Mycenae
- c. 1600–1450 shaft graves
- c. 1450–1240 Koine Era (Highpoint of their civilization)
- Strongly influenced by the Minoans, who they eventually conquered
- Unlike the Minoans, they seem like a warrior culture
- Spoke Greek; wrote using Linear B
- References to Hera, Zeus, Poseidon, Dionysus and other divinities found in Linear B tablets
- Built walls with such large blocks that the Greeks believed Cyclops had built them
- Traded widely, including with the Egyptians
- c. 1250–1100 Decline
Greek Dark Age
- c. 1100 All major Myceneaen palaces except Athens destroyed
- The Greek Dark Age is darker than then Medieval Dark Age
- Population decline, poverty, greatly decreased trade
- Quality of pottery and other goods greatly decreased
- Stopped writing in Linear B; no literary sources
- Myceneaen culture and religion passed down orally
- Art has geometric patterns
- c. 900–800 Population growth and adoption of iron tools and weapons
- c. 800 Adopt the Phoenician alphabet
- c. 776 First Olympics—competition between individual naked athletes
- Later Greeks did not know much about their Mycenaean past
Greek Archaic Age
- Art-historians thought Greek art from this period was old-fashioned, or archaic, compared to the classical age
- Population growth
- Rise of the Polis, a political, social, and religious organization of a city and surrounding areas
- Political systems included monarchies, oligarchies, tyrants, and early forms of democracy
- c. 750–500 Population growth and Greek colonization of the Mediterranean and Black Sea; “Frogs around a pond” (Plato)
- c. 750–700 Homer and Hesiod write epic poems
- c. 600 chattel slavery is the norm
Greek Classical Age
- 499–494 Ionian revolt in Western Anatolia, which is eventually crushed by the Persians
- 490 Darius sends force to Athens; Athenians win the battle of Marathon
- 480 Xerxes leads massive Persian force into Greece; battle of Thermopylae (the 300) and navel battle of Salamis
- 458 Aeschylus writes The Oresteia (Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers, and The Eumenides)
- c. 440 Herodotus writes The Histories
- 431–404 Peloponnesian War, written about by Thucydides
- 399 Trial and execution of Socrates
- c. 400–380 Plato founds the Academy at Athens
- 359 Philip II becomes king of Macedonia
- 336 Philip II murdered, Alexander the Great becomes king
- 335 Aristotle founds the Lyceum at Athens
- 334 Alexander begins campaign against Persia
- 331 Alexander takes Egypt and founds Alexandria
- 326 Alexander’s army mutinies at the Hyphasis River in India, and they head back to Babylon
- 323 Alexander dies in Babylon
Hellenistic Age
- 310 murder of Alexander’s son
- 310 Zeno founds Stoic school in Athens
- 307 Epicurus founds his school in Athens
- 306–304 Alexander’s former commanders split up the empire
- 304–30 Ptolemys in Egypt