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Humanities ch 2

  • The term Acropolis is translated to mean “top of the city” and refers to the portion of an ancient Greek city-state that functioned as its religious center.

  • The term agora refers to the portion of an ancient Greek city-state that served as a public meeting place, marketplace, and civic center.

  • The Greek term kyklos can be translated as “circle”

  • Items found to be common among the People of Thea (santerini)

  • Elaborately decorated homes

  • Clay pipes connected toilets and baths to sewers

  • Straw reinforced the walls of their homes

  • Minos is recognized as the legendary ruler of Crete’s ancient capital, Konossos.

  • Male virility and strength was associated with bulls

  • The Greek term labrys can be translated as “double ax”

  • The palace of Minos was known in Greek times as the House of the Double Axes

  • Queen Pasiphae, wife of Minos, gave birth to the Minotaur

  • Daedalus was the chief craftsperson who constructed the hollow wooden cow to assist the queen in attracting the bull

  • Ariadne, daughter of Minos, provided Theseus with a weapon and thread to help kill the Minotaur

  • The ancient city of Mycenae is a citadel city that depended on cyclopean masonry for its construction and was entered through a massive Lion Gate

  • Homer is considered the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey

  • Achilles was considered the greatest warrior among the Greeks while battling the Trojans

  • Achilles is the central character in the Iliad, which focused on his rage

  • The Greek term arete can be translated as “virtue,” and be interpreted as “reaching one’s highest potential”.

  • Hector, son of the king of Troy, killed Patroclus which enraged Achilles

  • Priam is best remembered as the King of Troy during the action of the Iliad

  • Penelope was the wife of Odeysseus

  • Hesiod, in his Theogony, The Birth of the Gods, who first detailed the Greek pantheon

  • Corinth controlled north-south trade routes from early times, but after it built a towpath to drag ships over the isthmus on rollers, it soon controlled the sea routes east and west as well

  • Delphi was the home to the Sanctuary of Apollo

  • The term peristyle refers to the row of columns that stand on the raised platform of an ancient Greek temple

  • The term entasis refers to columns swell about one-third of the way up and contract again near the top

  • In ancient Greek architecture, the Ionic order features scrolled capitals

  • On the Krater the Death of Sarpedon, Sarpedon has just been killed by Patroclus and is being carried off by Hypnos (the winged figure) and Thanatos (Death) as Hermes, the messenger of the gods looks on.

  • Kleisthenes instituted the first Athenian democracy in 508 BCE.

  • The term demes became part of the Athenian political system and refers to small local areas comparable to precincts or wards in a modern city.

  • At the time of the Battle of Marathon in 490 BCE, Darius ruled the Persians.

  • After battle of the Marathon in 490 BCE, Phidippides ran 26 miles between Marathon and Athens to deliver word of Greek victory

  • Herodotus, author of an extensive HIstory of the Persian Wars is recognized as the first Greek historian

  • The Parthenon was considered the centerpiece on the Athenian Acropolis.

  • The Propylaia served as a monumental entryway to the complex.

  • Polyciltus cast the bronze statue known as Doryphoros (Spear bearer), which was celebrated throughout the ancient world as a demonstration of a treatise on proportions of the human body.

  • The 92 metopes on the four sides of the temple narrate battles between the Greeks and four enemies:

  • Trojans

  • Giants

  • Amazons

  • Centaurs

  • Socrates was placed on trial for:

  • Subversive behavior

  • Corrupting young men

  • Introducing new goals

  • Leucippus, a pre-Socratic thinker conceived an atomic theory in which everything is made up of small, indivisible particles and the empty space, or void, between them.

  • Protagoras is responsible for one of the most famous of all Greek dictums: “Man is the Measure of all things”.

  • Aristophanes specialized in writing comedies and is playwright for Lysistrata

  • Aeschylus is the playwright for the Oresteia trilogy that includes events after Agamemnon’s return form the Trojan War

  • In the ancient Greek theater, the term proscenium identifies the elevated platform on which the actors performed

  • Rumor had it that farther to the east, the kingdom of the Ganges, Alexander’s next logical opponent, had a force of 5,000 elephants.

  • One of the most important ideas that Aristotle expressed in the Poetics is catharsis, the cleansing, purification, or purgation of the soul.

OB

Humanities ch 2

  • The term Acropolis is translated to mean “top of the city” and refers to the portion of an ancient Greek city-state that functioned as its religious center.

  • The term agora refers to the portion of an ancient Greek city-state that served as a public meeting place, marketplace, and civic center.

  • The Greek term kyklos can be translated as “circle”

  • Items found to be common among the People of Thea (santerini)

  • Elaborately decorated homes

  • Clay pipes connected toilets and baths to sewers

  • Straw reinforced the walls of their homes

  • Minos is recognized as the legendary ruler of Crete’s ancient capital, Konossos.

  • Male virility and strength was associated with bulls

  • The Greek term labrys can be translated as “double ax”

  • The palace of Minos was known in Greek times as the House of the Double Axes

  • Queen Pasiphae, wife of Minos, gave birth to the Minotaur

  • Daedalus was the chief craftsperson who constructed the hollow wooden cow to assist the queen in attracting the bull

  • Ariadne, daughter of Minos, provided Theseus with a weapon and thread to help kill the Minotaur

  • The ancient city of Mycenae is a citadel city that depended on cyclopean masonry for its construction and was entered through a massive Lion Gate

  • Homer is considered the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey

  • Achilles was considered the greatest warrior among the Greeks while battling the Trojans

  • Achilles is the central character in the Iliad, which focused on his rage

  • The Greek term arete can be translated as “virtue,” and be interpreted as “reaching one’s highest potential”.

  • Hector, son of the king of Troy, killed Patroclus which enraged Achilles

  • Priam is best remembered as the King of Troy during the action of the Iliad

  • Penelope was the wife of Odeysseus

  • Hesiod, in his Theogony, The Birth of the Gods, who first detailed the Greek pantheon

  • Corinth controlled north-south trade routes from early times, but after it built a towpath to drag ships over the isthmus on rollers, it soon controlled the sea routes east and west as well

  • Delphi was the home to the Sanctuary of Apollo

  • The term peristyle refers to the row of columns that stand on the raised platform of an ancient Greek temple

  • The term entasis refers to columns swell about one-third of the way up and contract again near the top

  • In ancient Greek architecture, the Ionic order features scrolled capitals

  • On the Krater the Death of Sarpedon, Sarpedon has just been killed by Patroclus and is being carried off by Hypnos (the winged figure) and Thanatos (Death) as Hermes, the messenger of the gods looks on.

  • Kleisthenes instituted the first Athenian democracy in 508 BCE.

  • The term demes became part of the Athenian political system and refers to small local areas comparable to precincts or wards in a modern city.

  • At the time of the Battle of Marathon in 490 BCE, Darius ruled the Persians.

  • After battle of the Marathon in 490 BCE, Phidippides ran 26 miles between Marathon and Athens to deliver word of Greek victory

  • Herodotus, author of an extensive HIstory of the Persian Wars is recognized as the first Greek historian

  • The Parthenon was considered the centerpiece on the Athenian Acropolis.

  • The Propylaia served as a monumental entryway to the complex.

  • Polyciltus cast the bronze statue known as Doryphoros (Spear bearer), which was celebrated throughout the ancient world as a demonstration of a treatise on proportions of the human body.

  • The 92 metopes on the four sides of the temple narrate battles between the Greeks and four enemies:

  • Trojans

  • Giants

  • Amazons

  • Centaurs

  • Socrates was placed on trial for:

  • Subversive behavior

  • Corrupting young men

  • Introducing new goals

  • Leucippus, a pre-Socratic thinker conceived an atomic theory in which everything is made up of small, indivisible particles and the empty space, or void, between them.

  • Protagoras is responsible for one of the most famous of all Greek dictums: “Man is the Measure of all things”.

  • Aristophanes specialized in writing comedies and is playwright for Lysistrata

  • Aeschylus is the playwright for the Oresteia trilogy that includes events after Agamemnon’s return form the Trojan War

  • In the ancient Greek theater, the term proscenium identifies the elevated platform on which the actors performed

  • Rumor had it that farther to the east, the kingdom of the Ganges, Alexander’s next logical opponent, had a force of 5,000 elephants.

  • One of the most important ideas that Aristotle expressed in the Poetics is catharsis, the cleansing, purification, or purgation of the soul.