Term
What was the Greek/Athenian Polis predominately? |
|
Definition
rural and agricultural that comprised of villages, olive orchards, and vineyards. |
|
|
Term
Who described the Athenian polis in POLITICS to be"the partnership finally composed of several villages is the polis; it has at last attained the limit of virtually complete self-sufficiency, and thus while it comes into existence for the sake of mere life, it exists for the sake of the good life." |
|
Definition
Greek philosopher Aristotle |
|
|
Term
For Aristotle, what was the polis purpose? |
|
Definition
the essential purpose of the polis was to guarantee, barring catastrophe, that each of its citzens may flourish. |
|
|
Term
What was the Fifth century BCE? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the pursuit during the Golden Age? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does eudaimonia mean? |
|
Definition
the good or flourishing life that resulted in a culture of astonish sophistication and diversity. |
|
|
Term
What writings during the Golden Age contributed to the development of history as a systematic and critical discipline? |
|
Definition
Herodotus and Thucydides writings |
|
|
Term
What did the Golden Age Athens develop that to this day influences stage actors and the methods dramatists use to reveal human psychology? |
|
Definition
developed a theatre, both comedic and tragic |
|
|
Term
What is the style that refers to anything of the highest class and for scholars refers specifically to the art and architecture of the Greeks in the fifth century BCE Greece? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What pursuit of the good life did the Athenians foster that dedicated to the well-being of the polis through discussion, consensus, and united action as well as the creation of institutions to foster the process? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What period of Greek history began with the rise of power of Alexander the Great and extends to the Roman defeat of Cleopatra in Egypt? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was Alexander understood to have done during the Hellenistic period? |
|
Definition
To have made the world over in the image of Greece. He conquered region after region, and created great centers of learning. |
|
|
Term
Who wrote "Nothing is worse than a tyrant? |
|
Definition
Euripides in his play, "The Suppliant Woman." |
|
|
Term
What does politics, in Euripides words, rely on? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does Aristotle mean when he says that man is a political animal? |
|
Definition
that man is a creature of the polis, bound to it, dedicated to it, determined by it, and somewhat paradoxically, liberated by it as well. |
|
|
Term
What would the Athenians do in the agora? |
|
Definition
they would shop for grapes, figs, flowers, lambs; congregate, debate the issues of the day, argue points of law, settle disputes, and present philosophical discourse; practice their politics. |
|
|
Term
What was elected annually, met in the Bouleuterion in the agora, dine at public expense in a nearby Tholos (a small round building with six columns supporting the conical roof. |
|
Definition
The City Council of 500 citizens |
|
|
Term
What was carved in the hill in the southwestern part of the city where as many as 10,000 citizens could gather? |
|
Definition
A giant bowl called the Pynx |
|
|
Term
What circumstances did most citizens live in? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the staple of life? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What did the Athenians choose to do? |
|
Definition
They simply chose not to buy material things. Instead, they acquired leisure, the free time necessary to perform the responsibilities of citizenship. |
|
|
Term
What was the Athenian democracy based on? |
|
Definition
based on its citizens' ability to have others do its manual work. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Typically it fell to slaves or to metics (free men who were not citizens because they came from other polis in Greece or from a Creek colony |
|
|
Term
What was life like for woman in Athens? |
|
Definition
They were excluded from aspects of social life. They married before 15 years old, at an age they were considered to e educable by husbands who averaged about 30 years of age. They were not educated and were not allowed to participate in conversation. It was their duty to produce offspring. |
|
|
Term
What did woman partake of? |
|
Definition
Religious rituals and public festivals. They were central figures in much of Greek culture. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a powerful woman who was the mistress of Pericles. She was a hetaira, one of a cla of Greek Courtesans distinguised by their beauty and was educated |
|
|
Term
What dominated Athenian political life during the Golden Age? |
|
Definition
Pericles, who served on the Board of Ten Generals for nearly 30 years. |
|
|
Term
What defines Athenian political, social and cultural life? |
|
Definition
claim of excellence- their military life |
|
|
Term
What does Pericles mean when he says Athens is the school of Hellas? |
|
Definition
That it teaches all of Greece by its example |
|
|
Term
What was one of the most interesting aspects of Pericles's oration? |
|
Definition
the greatness of the Athenians is expressed in the love of beauty and the cultivation of intellectual inquiry. |
|
|
Term
What happened in the fifth century? |
|
Definition
a new way of thinking transformed the way human beings see themselves in relation to the natural world. |
|
|
Term
Greeks believed things were...? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who accurately described the causes of a solar eclipse? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Kritios Boy (Look at page 193) |
|
|
Term
Who designed most of the sculptures decorating the Parthenon? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The model of Greek womanhood/maiden? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The stance of most Greek statures (One leg straight while the other is forward and bent) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the material choice for Greek sculptors? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What has been interepreted as a depiction of the Panathenaic procession, an annual civic festival honoring Athena, but recently has been interpreted as a mythological reading. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does the male nude reflect? |
|
Definition
reflects not only physical but mental superiority, a theme particularly appropriate for a temple to Athena, a goddess of both war and wisdom. |
|
|
Term
What city did the Athenians intitially vow to keep in a state of ruin as a reminder of the horrible price of war against the Persian invasion (the greeks avoided by fleeing by ship) but Pericles convinced them to rebuild? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the center piece of the Acropolis project? |
|
Definition
Parthenon (a tangible sign of the power and might of the Athenian state) |
|
|
Term
Who designed the Parthenon? |
|
Definition
Architects Ictinus and Callicrates |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Victory (Temple of Athena Nike was built in hope for victory in the Peloponnesian War) |
|
|
Term
Was Erechtheion, a stature designed by Mnesicles, was built on flatter land on purpose? |
|
Definition
Flatter areas were available on the Acropolis, so its demanding position is clearly intentional. |
|
|
Term
What was the oracle of Delphi to King Erechtheus? |
|
Definition
In ordert to protect the city from Eumolpos's wrath, one of his three daughters must be sacraficed. |
|
|
Term
What does the greek word parthenoi mean? |
|
Definition
place of the maidens or girls. (the Parthenon may well rest over the tombs of the three daughters of Erectheus) |
|
|
Term
What acheivement matches the architectural achievement of the Acroplis? |
|
Definition
the philosophical achievement of the great Athenian philosopher Socrates. |
|
|
Term
What was Socrates charged of? |
|
Definition
Socrates was brought to trail, accused of subversive corrupting of young men, and introducing new gods, though charges may have been politically motivated |
|
|
Term
Socrates eloquent defense of his decision submit is recorded in what? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What did Socrates death mark? |
|
Definition
The end of the Athenians great experiment with democracy |
|
|
Term
What does Greek philosophia mean? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What did Pythagoras contribute? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What did Leucippus conceive? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Form or guiding force guides the process of a concept that later informs the Gospel of John in the Ghristian Bible, where it is often mistranslated as "word" (Heraclitus of Ephesus) Also means change or flux |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Teachers who traveled about, imparting their wisdom for pay. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Subtle. tricky, superficially plausible, but ultimately false and deceitful reasoning. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
that there is an invisible world of eternal Forms, or Ideas, beyond everyday experience, and that the psyche, trapped in the material world and the physical body, can only catch glimpses of this higher order. |
|
|
Term
What does symposium (also a story written by Plato) mean? |
|
Definition
drinking part for men (woman are there just for different reasons if you catch my drift) |
|
|
Term
What does Eros eventually mean according to Plato? |
|
Definition
interpersonal love; it is also desire, desire for something that lacks |
|
|
Term
What does the dionysian aspects of the symposium-the drinking, the philosophical dialogue, and sexual license-tell us? |
|
Definition
Tells us things about the origins of Greek drama |
|
|
Term
What was drama originally? |
|
Definition
a participatory ritual, tied to the cult of Dionysus |
|
|
Term
What is comedy derived of? |
|
Definition
from komos, a phallic dance, and nothing is sacred to comedy. |
|
|
Term
Which of the following refers to the “recognition” stage of Greek tragedy? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
According to Aristotle’s Poetics, a moment of recognition or knowing. Most powerful when simultaneous with the moment of reversal. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Phyhagora created how many notes in the Greek scale? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
drinking song (by Seikolos, found chiseled on the first-century gravestone of his wife Euterpe. |
|
|
Term
What did Phythagoras believe? |
|
Definition
The movement of the planets produced a special harmony called the music of spheres |
|
|
Term
What music did Plato favor and why? |
|
Definition
The Dorian mode. He loved it for its restraint. It was formal and dignified, and promoted virtue in its audience. |
|
|
Term
What music did Plato condemn? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What pages should you look at for info on Alexander the Great? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who did Alexander higher to do all his sculptures? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What did Lysippus challenge? |
|
Definition
The Classical kanon of proportion created by Polyclitus-smaller heads and slenderer bodies lent his heroic sculptures a sense of greater height |
|
|
Term
What did Aristole's methods of observation come to be know as? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the library of Pergamon? |
|
Definition
The Attalids created a huge library with over 200,000 Classical Athenian tests. (Eumenes 11) |
|
|
Term
Who built the first museum? |
|
Definition
Ptolomies (museum comes from mouseion which means the temple of muses) It housed students and scholars |
|
|