The ancient Greeks
Unlike the Egyptians and Mesopotamians, the early Greeks were sea peoples who did not live by great rivers. their civilizations revolved less around farming than trade and warfare, often another form of trade. Three stages of civilization: Minoan, Mycenaean, and Greek civilizations were built upon one another. The first two stages especially provided a historical and cultural identity for the later Greeks.
The Aegean World
Greeks arrive c. 2300 BCE?
called Achaeans or Danaans by Homer.Early Minoan 3000-2100BC
- soon after Iraq and Egypt, but on a much smaller scaleMid Minoan 2100-1500BC - High Point. Linear A script - not Greek
Mycenaean Civilization 2000-1100BC - Linear B script - deciphered by Michael Ventris in 1950.
Nature of the Minoan (Cretan) state
Cretan states of the first half of the second millenium BC were bureaucratic monarchies. While the government was dominated by priests and while the monarch seemed to have some religious functions, the principle role of the monarch seemed to be that of "chief entrepreneur." They had extensive trade with the outside world. Their decline was perhaps due to a volcanic eruption on a nearby island.
Mythology associated with Minos that the Greeks inherited.
Daedalus: the craftsman who constructed the maze.
Minotaur: half bull, half human monster defeated by Theseus.
2000-1100 BC, an Indo-European people destroyed the existent site of civilization in the Greek islands by a non-Indo-European people.
The society of the conquerors was primarily based on warfare; their leaders were essentially war-chiefs.
They were so called, after the largest of their states, Mycenae, in its leadership in the legendary Trojan War (1200 BC) that also ended this phase of Greek civilization. Today, much of their history is captured in the Iliad and the Odyssey.
The Iliad and the Odyssey.
The Iliad, about the decision to attack Troy, or Ilium, chiefly revolved around the last year of the 10 year siege of Troy.
Odyssey: about the voyage back home of Odysseus, king of Ithaca.
Both stories, while serving as historical background to ancient Greece, also shed light on Greek religion and the values held of human beings.
Archaic Greece
1100-800 BC is usually called the Dark Ages in Greek history because of the decline of civilization. Culture and writing picked up after 800 BC.
Gradually, tribes developed into city-states ruled by hereditary kings.
Over a hundred cities, or poleis, developed. And the two ends of the spectrum of city-states were Athens and Sparta.
Greek connections with Egypt and Mesopotamia:
Early Greek art: resembled Egypt in geometrical shape.
Greek religion: some gods and goddesses paralleled those in Mesopotamia and might have come from there via Crete. Anthropomorphic, involved in human life, and each limited in his/her power, also resembled Mesopotamian ones. The vision of the underworld was similar, too.