Although the sculptures, paintings, and buildings discussed in
this chapter were made and built all over Greece and in its many
colonies abroad (MAP5-1), Athens, the capital of Greece today, has
justifiably become the symbol of ancient Greek culture. Athens is
where the great plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides were
first performed. And there, in the city’s central square (agora), cov-
ered colonnades (stoas), and gymnasiums (palaestras), Socrates en-
gaged his fellow citizens in philosophical argument, and Plato formu-
lated his prescription for the ideal form of government in the
Republic.Complementing the rich intellectual life of ancient Athens
was a strong interest in physical exercise, which played a large role in
education, as well as in daily life. The Athenian aim of achieving a
balance of intellectual and physical discipline, an ideal of humanistic
education, is well expressed in the familiar phrase “a sound mind in a
sound body.”
The distinctiveness and originality of Greek contributions to
art, science, and politics should not, however, obscure the enormous
debt the Greeks owed to the cultures of Egypt and the Near East.
Scholars today increasingly recognize this debt, and the ancient
Greeks themselves readily acknowledged borrowing ideas, motifs,
conventions, and skills from those older civilizations. Nor should a
high estimation of Greek art and culture blind anyone to the realities
of Hellenic life and society. Even Athenian “democracy” was a politi-
cal reality for only one segment of the demos. Slavery was regarded
as natural, even beneficial, and was a universal institution among the
Greeks. Greek women were in no way the equals of Greek men.
Women normally remained secluded in their homes, emerging usu-
ally only for weddings, funerals, and religious festivals. They played
little part in public or political life. Despite the fame of the poet Sap-
pho, only a handful of female artists’ names are known, and none of
their works survive. Both the existence of slavery and the exclusion
of women from public life are reflected in Greek art. On many occa-
sions freeborn men and women appear with their slaves in monu-
mental sculpture. The symposium(a dinner party that only men and
prostitutes attended) is a popular subject on painted vases.
Although the Greeks invented and passed on to future genera-
tions the concept and practice of democracy, most Greek states, even
those constituted as democracies, were dominated by wellborn
white males, and the most admired virtues were not wisdom and
justice but statecraft and military valor. Greek men were educated in
the values of Homer’s heroes and in the athletic exercises of the
palaestra. War among the city-states was chronic. Fighting among
themselves, the Greeks eventually fell victim to the Macedonians and
Romans.
Geometric and Orientalizing Periods
Disintegration of the Bronze Age social order accompanied the de-
struction of the Mycenaean palaces. The disappearance of powerful
kings and their retinues led to the loss of the knowledge of how to
cut masonry, to construct citadels and tombs, to paint frescoes, and
to sculpt in stone. Even the arts of reading and writing were forgot-
ten. Depopulation, poverty, and an almost total loss of contact with
the outside world characterized the succeeding centuries, sometimes
called the Dark Age of Greece. Only in the eighth centuryBCEdid
economic conditions improve and the population begin to grow
again. This era was in its own way a heroic age, a time when the
poleis of Classical Greece took shape; when the Greeks broke out of
their isolation and once again began to trade with cities both in the
east and the west; when Homer’s epic poems, formerly memorized
and passed down from bard to bard, were recorded in written form;
and when the Olympic Games were established.
100 Chapter 5 ANCIENT GREECE
MAP5-1The Greek world.
Rome
Sperlonga
Naples Pompeii
Paestum
Riace
Gela Syracuse
Pella
Vergina
Sparta
Athens
Anavysos
Marathon
Delphi
Chaeronea
Thebes
Eleusis
Eretria
Argos
Tegea
Sikyon
Corinth
Elis
Olympia
Epidauros
Mycenae
Troy
Pergamon
Phokaia
Ephesos
Priene
DidymaMiletos
Knidos
Knossos
Prinias
Ionian
Sea
Ionian
Sea
Adriatic
Sea
Adriatic
Sea
Aegean
Sea
Aegean
Sea
Black SeaBlack Sea
Sea of
Marmara
Sea of
Marmara
Sea of CreteSea of Crete
Tyrrhenian
Sea
Tyrrhenian
Sea
Mediterranean SeaMediterranean Sea
Sicily
Corfu
Crete
Delos
Chios
Samos
Thasos
Cape
Artemision
Samothrace
Salamis
Aegina
Mt. Olympus
Mt. Pentelicus
Paros
Melos
Thera Rhodes
Siphnos
MACEDONIA
PELOPONNESOS
ATTICA
THRACE
ASIA
MINOR
IONIA
CARIA
ITALY
0 100 200 miles
0 100 200 kilometers