Western Civilization

(Sean Pound) #1
derived from Greek poetry and
drama. Greek notions of har-
mony, proportion, and beauty
have remained the touchstones
for all subsequent Western art
and architecture. A rational
method of inquiry, so impor-
tant to modern science, was conceived in ancient Greece. Many
of our political terms are Greek in origin, and so are our con-
cepts of the rights and duties of citizenship, especially as they
were conceived in Athens, which gave the idea of democracy to
the Western world. Especially during the classical period, the
Greeks raised and debated fundamental questions about the

purpose of human existence, the structure of human society,
and the nature of the universe that have concerned Western
thinkers ever since. Although the Greeks did not conceive of
Western civilization as a cultural entity, their artistic, intellec-
tual, and political contributions were crucial to the foundations
of Western civilization.
All of these achievements came from a group of small city-
states in ancient Greece. And yet there remains an element of
tragedy about Greek civilization. For all of their brilliant accom-
plishments, the Greeks were unable to rise above the divisions
and rivalries that caused them to fight each other and undermine
their own civilization. Luckily, their contributions to Western civ-
ilization survived their political struggles.

CHAPTER TIMELINE


CHAPTER REVIEW


Upon Reflection


Q What was thepolis, and why is it considered by
many historians to be an important development
in the political history of Western civilization?
Q Discuss the organization of the Athenian
democratic system. Was it truly a democracy? In
what ways was Athenian democracy similar to U.S.
democracy? In what ways was it different?

Q The period of the Classical Age in Greece is known
for its literary, artistic, and intellectual
achievements. What basic characteristics of Greek
culture are reflected in the major achievements of
the Greeks in the writing of history, drama, the
arts, and philosophy? What universal human
concerns did these same achievements reflect?

1600 B.C.E. 1340 B.C.E. 1080 B.C.E. 820 B.C.E. 560 B.C.E. 300 B.C.E.

Mycenaean Greece Age of Greek expansion

Classical Age

Great Peloponnesian War

Homer Parthenon

Plato and Aristotle
Greek drama (Aeschylus,
Sophocles, Euripides)

Reforms in Sparta

Dark Age

Cleisthenes’s reforms
Battle of Marathon

Chapter Summary • 71


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