Chapter 3: Classical and Hellenistic Greece, 500-100 B.C.E.
Greek political, social, and cultural experimentation was threatened by the vast Persian army moving west in 490 B.C.E.
Few Greek states except Athens had supported Ionians against their Persian conquerors
Many Greeks saw the Persians as potential allies or rulers preferable to the more powerful Greek neighbors and rivals within their own states
The Persian campaign initially followed the pattern established in Ionia
An almost miraculous victory at marathon against the Persians had 3 consequences on the Greeks and Athens in General
Established the superiority of the hoplite phalanx as the finest infantry formation in the Mediterranean world
Greeks expanded this belief in military superiority to a faith in the general superiority of Greeks over the barbarians who were those that spoke other languages
The victory of the Athenians solidified and enhanced the democratic reforms of Cleisthenes
Athenians selecting chief officers by lot prevented an individual from rising to power by creating powerful faction
Persians paid little attention to Greeks for 6 years
After Darius I’s death his son Xerxes began to amass foodstuffs, weapons and armies for a land assault on his Greek enemies
Greek cities began to close ranks against the invaders in response to these Persian preparations
Greek forces were small against Xerxes’ forces
Xerxes lost his appetite for fighting Greeks after events occurring at Salamis
Sparta, not Athens should have emerged as the leader of the Greek world after 479 B.C.E.
Sparta had provided the crucial military force and leadership
Emerged unscathed from Persian Wars
The Athenian fleet was the best hope in liberating the Aegean from Persians and pirates
Athens accepted control of the Delian League in 478 B.C.E.
A religious center that housed the league’s treasury
Athens’s prosperity was ensured due to its domination of the Delian League
The Delian League was too important to Athenian prosperity to stand and fall with the Persian threat
League became an empire with Athens's allies being its subjects
Athenian empire was an economic, judicial, religious, and political union held together by military might
Controlled flow of grain through the Hellespont to the Aegean
Ensured its own supply
Heavily taxed cargoes to other cities
Controlled the law courts of member cities and used them to repress anti-Athenian groups
Control over empire depended on Athenian fleet to enforce cooperation
Athens sold the population of another city into slavery
Persian tyranny was hardly worse than Athenian imperialism
Athens was an important, crowded capital drawing merchants, artisans, and laborers throughout the Greek world during the second half of 5th century B.C.E.
Over a quarter of the total population consisted of slaves
Greek slaves weren’t distinguished by race, ethnicity, or physical appearance
Anybody could be a slave
Prisoners of war, foreigners who failed to pay taxes, and victims of pirate raids
Slaves were as much the property of their owners as land, houses, cattle, and sheep
About half of Athens’s free population were foreigners (metics)
Primarily Greek citizens of the tributary states of the empires
Lydians, Phrygians, Syrians, Egyptians, Phoenicians, or Carians
Number of metals increased after the middle of 5th century B.C.E.
Metics couldn’t own land in Attica or participate directly in politics
More than half of the women born into citizen families were entirely excluded from public life
Triumph of democracy reduced the public role of all women
Every female citizen lived under the protection of a male guardian from birth to death
Male citizens in 5th century B.C.E. were free to an extent unknown in the world previously
Athenian freedom = freedom in community
Essence of freedom lay in participation in public life, especially self-government which was their passion
Participation always occurred with a network of familial, social, and religious connections and obligations
Not all Athenians were socially or economically equal
Real political leadership came from generals and popular leaders
Demagogues
Demagogues tended to be wealthy aristocrats who could afford to put in the time demanded by voluntary services
Many Demagogues competed for power and attracted the support of the people
Athenian political system of radical democracy reached its pinnacle under leadership of the general Pericles
While its imperial program drew it into a long and fatal war against Sparta
Pericles was president of the commission that constructed the statue of Athena that stood in the Parthenon
Pericles was a general, he never ruled Athens
With his influence, Athens abolished the last property requirements for office holding
Sparta invaded Attica, triggering the Peloponnesian War, which would destroy both powers
Series of wars and rebellions
Athens and Sparta waged 2 devastating 10 year wars
At the same time cities in the alliance used war as an advantage to revolt
Sparta and Athens both hoped for a quick victory
Sparta’s strength was its army
Athens was a naval power
The first phase of the war was called the Archidamian War
Sparta pillaged Attica
Wasn’t able to breach the great wall or starve Athens
Spartans received help from plague in 430 B.C.E. which ravaged Athens for 5 years
A third of the Athens population had died by the time the plague ended
Both sides contracted peace in 421 B.C.E.
The Peloponnesian War showed the limitations of Athenian democracy and the potential brutality of the oligarchy as well
Demonstrated catastrophic effects of rivalry and disunity among Greek cities of the Mediterranean
Most of what is today called Greek is actually Athenian
The glory of the Athenian Empire was manifested in art and architecture
Writers, thinkers, and artists came to Athens from throughout the Greek world
Critical and rational nature was a primary characteristic of Athenian culture
Ionian interest in natural philosophy continued throughout the 5th century B.C.E.
Philosophers started to turn their attention towards the human world
Particularly the power s and limitations of the individual’s mind and individual’s relationship with society
Art of persuasion was significant in the political world
Key to political influence
Teachers called Sophists traveled throughout Greece and offered to provide an advanced education for free
Gained negative reputation later on
Sophists taught a generation of wealthy Greeks the powers and complexities of human reason
Socrates was a teacher
Reacted against what he saw as the amoral and superficial nature of sophistic education
Was superior to the sophists as he recognized his ignorance while the Sophists professed wisdom
Refused to commit any of his teachings to writing
Never doubt the moral legitimacy of the Athenian state
Condemned to death in 399 B.C.E. for charges of corrupting the moral legitimacy of the Athenian state
Two writers established spectrum of how to understand the past
Herodotus: first historian
Sought to preserve the memory of the past by recording achievements of both Greeks and Eastnersrs
Thucydides: second historian
Central subject was human society in action
Passion was the open self conscious political life characteristics of the Greek polis
Drama became popular not only in Athens but throughout the Greek world since its introduction in 6th century B.C.E.
Athenian drama became more secular and less mythic due to dramatists beginning to deal with human topics
Aeschylus’s mature plays were tragedies in which religion didn’t play a really important role
Sophocles was the most successful tragedian in the 5th century
Politics ruled the world of Greek comedy
Athenian comic playwrights caused on the political and social issues of the time
Humanity in Greek drama had a parallel in art
Traditional black figure technique revolutionized vase painting in late 6th century B.C.E.
Interior details of figures were also in black
Sculptures reflected development towards balance and realism within an ideal of human form
Greatest sculptural program of 5th century B.C.E. was produced for Athenian acropolis
The sense of overwhelming Athenian superiority and grandeur that the acropolis was meant to convey was an illusion
Writers and artists focused on human existence, seeking a proper proportion, order, and meaning
A blend of practical and the ideal
Peloponnesian War touched all aspects of Greek Life
Conduct of war and nature of politics changed over decades-long struggle
Brought forth new conflicts for the victors and those that were vanquished
Spartans and their allies slaughtered all men, enslaved the women, and razed the city when they captured Plataea in 427 B.C.E.
Moment of Greek unity experienced during second Persian War was forgotten due to horrors concerning Peloponnesian conflict
Spartans proved to be unpopular imperialists
Persia turned against its former ally when Sparta supported an unsuccessful attempt of Cyrus to unseat his brother, Artaxerxes II
Unstable alliance of Athens, Corinth, Argos, Thebes, and Euboea was financed by Persia
Entered series of wars against Sparta
Envy, greed, and distrust which had devastated other Greek powers, also devastated Thebes
Athenian philosophers were affected by failure of Greek political forms, oligarchy, and democracy
Plato was aristocratic student of Socrates
Plato used dialogue in the form of discussions for transmit his teachings
Plato argued that true knowledge was impossible as long as it focused on the constantly changing, imperfect world of everyday experiences
Much of ancient philosophy was dominated by Plato’s idealist view of knowledge
Aristotle’s teachings didn’t have a large effect on his famous student, Alexander, the son of King Philip of Macedon
Polis had never been the only form of Greek state
Traditional hereditary chieftains and monarchs
Macedonian people spoke a Greek dialect
Macedonian kings and elite identified with Greek tradition and culture
Philip intervened in war between Thebes and Phocis
Ended conflict by forcing himself into the center of Greek affairs
Success was based on his powerful military machine which combined Macedonian military tradition and new mercenary forces
Philip intended to lead a combined Greek force in a war of revenge and conquest against Persia
Before he could carry out his plan, he was assassinated
Alexander, King Philip’s son conquered the world within 13 years
“Alexander the Great”
Alexander’s teacher was Aristotle
Alexander’s military genius, dedication to troops, reckless disregard for his own safety, and ability to move men and supplies across large distances at great speeds inspired the war machine developed by Philip
Left it on an odyssey of conquest that stretched from Asia Minor to India
After conquering Persia, Alexander intended to conquer the whole world
Reorganized and founded cities
Alexander worked to unite Greek and Persian culture and society
Traditions of Persian government and Zoroastrian toleration and openness combined with Greek culture in novel ways
Alexander died after his return from India at the age of 32, in 323 B.C.E.
His empire didn’t outlive him
Fighting broke out among his generals and his kin
Alexander’s wife and son were killed along with all other members of the royal family
Three large kingdoms dominated Alexander’s former kingdom by 275 B.C.E.
Alexander’s conquests transformed the political map of southern Europe, eastern Asia, and Egyptian Africa
Large parts of the Hellenistic world had been united at different times by the Assyrian and Persian Empires
Hellenistic kings ruled kingdoms already accustomed to centralized government
Hellenistic kingdoms lived in perpetual state of warfare with one another
Kings needed Greek soldiers, merchants, and administrators
Hellenistic cities were Greek in physical organization, constitution, and language
Had agoras (marketplaces), temples, theaters, baths, and gymnasiums
Hellenistic cities different fundamentally from Greek cities and colonies of the past
Hellenistic cities were never politically sovereign
Great social and geographical mobility possible in new cities extended to women and men alike
Women began to assume greater roles in the family, economy, and in public life
Most powerful women in Hellenistic society were queens, especially in Egypt
Monarchs vied in making their cities centers of Greek culture
Queens in particular patronized poets and dramatists
Cities and wealthy individuals endowed gymnasia and libraries
Alexandria was the most vibrant center of social change and culture
Alexander the Great had founded it
Royal agents looked through the book markets of Greece and Asia Minor and paid top prices for rare and obscure texts
By royal order, ships arriving in Alexandria were boarded and searched for books to copy
Generations of poet-scholars spent their careers in the Museum
Studied, edited, and commented on the classics
Standardized texts
Invented basic aspects of writing; punctuation, accent marks, etc.
Hellenist writers developed new forms of literature
Such as romance
Alexandria attracted the greatest scholars and poets of the Hellenistic world
Political rivalry encourage architectural and artistic rivalry
Temples, porticoes, and public building crew in size and ornamentation
Architects experimented with multi-tiered buildings
Hellenistic architects developed more elaborate and monumental buildings and combined the buildings in harmonious urban ensembles
Freestanding statues and murals and mosaics adorned public squares, temples, and private homes of Hellenistic cities
Artists continued traditions of Hellenistic age while showing more freedom in portraying tension, restlessness, and individuality in the human form
Philosophy thrived in the Hellenistic world
Cynics, Epicureans, and Stoics advocated types of morality less directly related to the state and society
Cynics
Believed that individual freedom came through renunciation of materialistic things, society, and leisure
The more that one had the more vulnerable one would be to the whims of fortune
Goal was to reduce possessions, connections, and pleasures
Epicureans
Sought freedom from pain rather than from conventions of ordinary life
Pleasure was to be pursued rationally
Real goal was to reduce desires to those desires that were simple and attainable
Stoics
Followed nature
Nature led them to greater participating in it
Believed that human society was ordered and unified like the universe
Believed everybody had a role in the divinely ordered universe and all roles were of equal value
All three philosophical traditions emphasized importance of reason and the proper understanding of nature
Ptolemaic Egypt became center of mathematical studies
Aristarchus of Samos theorized that the sun and fixed stars were motionless and that the earth moved around the sun
His theory wasn’t taken into account as it wasn’t supported by math
Hipparchus of Nicaea placed the earth at the center of the universe and was supported by more mathematically acceptable arguments
Hellenistic medicine combined theory and observation
Continuing hostility between kingdoms and within kingdoms in the west made way for the new power of the west: Rome
Rugged slopes, fertile plains, and arid islands of the Greek world gave way to characteristic forms of social, political, and cultural organization that show up in different forms wherever Western civilization has taken root
The interminable wars amongst the Greek states left eh Greek world open for conquest by a powerful semi-Greek monarchy which went on to spread Athenian culture throughout the known world
Greek political, social, and cultural experimentation was threatened by the vast Persian army moving west in 490 B.C.E.
Few Greek states except Athens had supported Ionians against their Persian conquerors
Many Greeks saw the Persians as potential allies or rulers preferable to the more powerful Greek neighbors and rivals within their own states
The Persian campaign initially followed the pattern established in Ionia
An almost miraculous victory at marathon against the Persians had 3 consequences on the Greeks and Athens in General
Established the superiority of the hoplite phalanx as the finest infantry formation in the Mediterranean world
Greeks expanded this belief in military superiority to a faith in the general superiority of Greeks over the barbarians who were those that spoke other languages
The victory of the Athenians solidified and enhanced the democratic reforms of Cleisthenes
Athenians selecting chief officers by lot prevented an individual from rising to power by creating powerful faction
Persians paid little attention to Greeks for 6 years
After Darius I’s death his son Xerxes began to amass foodstuffs, weapons and armies for a land assault on his Greek enemies
Greek cities began to close ranks against the invaders in response to these Persian preparations
Greek forces were small against Xerxes’ forces
Xerxes lost his appetite for fighting Greeks after events occurring at Salamis
Sparta, not Athens should have emerged as the leader of the Greek world after 479 B.C.E.
Sparta had provided the crucial military force and leadership
Emerged unscathed from Persian Wars
The Athenian fleet was the best hope in liberating the Aegean from Persians and pirates
Athens accepted control of the Delian League in 478 B.C.E.
A religious center that housed the league’s treasury
Athens’s prosperity was ensured due to its domination of the Delian League
The Delian League was too important to Athenian prosperity to stand and fall with the Persian threat
League became an empire with Athens's allies being its subjects
Athenian empire was an economic, judicial, religious, and political union held together by military might
Controlled flow of grain through the Hellespont to the Aegean
Ensured its own supply
Heavily taxed cargoes to other cities
Controlled the law courts of member cities and used them to repress anti-Athenian groups
Control over empire depended on Athenian fleet to enforce cooperation
Athens sold the population of another city into slavery
Persian tyranny was hardly worse than Athenian imperialism
Athens was an important, crowded capital drawing merchants, artisans, and laborers throughout the Greek world during the second half of 5th century B.C.E.
Over a quarter of the total population consisted of slaves
Greek slaves weren’t distinguished by race, ethnicity, or physical appearance
Anybody could be a slave
Prisoners of war, foreigners who failed to pay taxes, and victims of pirate raids
Slaves were as much the property of their owners as land, houses, cattle, and sheep
About half of Athens’s free population were foreigners (metics)
Primarily Greek citizens of the tributary states of the empires
Lydians, Phrygians, Syrians, Egyptians, Phoenicians, or Carians
Number of metals increased after the middle of 5th century B.C.E.
Metics couldn’t own land in Attica or participate directly in politics
More than half of the women born into citizen families were entirely excluded from public life
Triumph of democracy reduced the public role of all women
Every female citizen lived under the protection of a male guardian from birth to death
Male citizens in 5th century B.C.E. were free to an extent unknown in the world previously
Athenian freedom = freedom in community
Essence of freedom lay in participation in public life, especially self-government which was their passion
Participation always occurred with a network of familial, social, and religious connections and obligations
Not all Athenians were socially or economically equal
Real political leadership came from generals and popular leaders
Demagogues
Demagogues tended to be wealthy aristocrats who could afford to put in the time demanded by voluntary services
Many Demagogues competed for power and attracted the support of the people
Athenian political system of radical democracy reached its pinnacle under leadership of the general Pericles
While its imperial program drew it into a long and fatal war against Sparta
Pericles was president of the commission that constructed the statue of Athena that stood in the Parthenon
Pericles was a general, he never ruled Athens
With his influence, Athens abolished the last property requirements for office holding
Sparta invaded Attica, triggering the Peloponnesian War, which would destroy both powers
Series of wars and rebellions
Athens and Sparta waged 2 devastating 10 year wars
At the same time cities in the alliance used war as an advantage to revolt
Sparta and Athens both hoped for a quick victory
Sparta’s strength was its army
Athens was a naval power
The first phase of the war was called the Archidamian War
Sparta pillaged Attica
Wasn’t able to breach the great wall or starve Athens
Spartans received help from plague in 430 B.C.E. which ravaged Athens for 5 years
A third of the Athens population had died by the time the plague ended
Both sides contracted peace in 421 B.C.E.
The Peloponnesian War showed the limitations of Athenian democracy and the potential brutality of the oligarchy as well
Demonstrated catastrophic effects of rivalry and disunity among Greek cities of the Mediterranean
Most of what is today called Greek is actually Athenian
The glory of the Athenian Empire was manifested in art and architecture
Writers, thinkers, and artists came to Athens from throughout the Greek world
Critical and rational nature was a primary characteristic of Athenian culture
Ionian interest in natural philosophy continued throughout the 5th century B.C.E.
Philosophers started to turn their attention towards the human world
Particularly the power s and limitations of the individual’s mind and individual’s relationship with society
Art of persuasion was significant in the political world
Key to political influence
Teachers called Sophists traveled throughout Greece and offered to provide an advanced education for free
Gained negative reputation later on
Sophists taught a generation of wealthy Greeks the powers and complexities of human reason
Socrates was a teacher
Reacted against what he saw as the amoral and superficial nature of sophistic education
Was superior to the sophists as he recognized his ignorance while the Sophists professed wisdom
Refused to commit any of his teachings to writing
Never doubt the moral legitimacy of the Athenian state
Condemned to death in 399 B.C.E. for charges of corrupting the moral legitimacy of the Athenian state
Two writers established spectrum of how to understand the past
Herodotus: first historian
Sought to preserve the memory of the past by recording achievements of both Greeks and Eastnersrs
Thucydides: second historian
Central subject was human society in action
Passion was the open self conscious political life characteristics of the Greek polis
Drama became popular not only in Athens but throughout the Greek world since its introduction in 6th century B.C.E.
Athenian drama became more secular and less mythic due to dramatists beginning to deal with human topics
Aeschylus’s mature plays were tragedies in which religion didn’t play a really important role
Sophocles was the most successful tragedian in the 5th century
Politics ruled the world of Greek comedy
Athenian comic playwrights caused on the political and social issues of the time
Humanity in Greek drama had a parallel in art
Traditional black figure technique revolutionized vase painting in late 6th century B.C.E.
Interior details of figures were also in black
Sculptures reflected development towards balance and realism within an ideal of human form
Greatest sculptural program of 5th century B.C.E. was produced for Athenian acropolis
The sense of overwhelming Athenian superiority and grandeur that the acropolis was meant to convey was an illusion
Writers and artists focused on human existence, seeking a proper proportion, order, and meaning
A blend of practical and the ideal
Peloponnesian War touched all aspects of Greek Life
Conduct of war and nature of politics changed over decades-long struggle
Brought forth new conflicts for the victors and those that were vanquished
Spartans and their allies slaughtered all men, enslaved the women, and razed the city when they captured Plataea in 427 B.C.E.
Moment of Greek unity experienced during second Persian War was forgotten due to horrors concerning Peloponnesian conflict
Spartans proved to be unpopular imperialists
Persia turned against its former ally when Sparta supported an unsuccessful attempt of Cyrus to unseat his brother, Artaxerxes II
Unstable alliance of Athens, Corinth, Argos, Thebes, and Euboea was financed by Persia
Entered series of wars against Sparta
Envy, greed, and distrust which had devastated other Greek powers, also devastated Thebes
Athenian philosophers were affected by failure of Greek political forms, oligarchy, and democracy
Plato was aristocratic student of Socrates
Plato used dialogue in the form of discussions for transmit his teachings
Plato argued that true knowledge was impossible as long as it focused on the constantly changing, imperfect world of everyday experiences
Much of ancient philosophy was dominated by Plato’s idealist view of knowledge
Aristotle’s teachings didn’t have a large effect on his famous student, Alexander, the son of King Philip of Macedon
Polis had never been the only form of Greek state
Traditional hereditary chieftains and monarchs
Macedonian people spoke a Greek dialect
Macedonian kings and elite identified with Greek tradition and culture
Philip intervened in war between Thebes and Phocis
Ended conflict by forcing himself into the center of Greek affairs
Success was based on his powerful military machine which combined Macedonian military tradition and new mercenary forces
Philip intended to lead a combined Greek force in a war of revenge and conquest against Persia
Before he could carry out his plan, he was assassinated
Alexander, King Philip’s son conquered the world within 13 years
“Alexander the Great”
Alexander’s teacher was Aristotle
Alexander’s military genius, dedication to troops, reckless disregard for his own safety, and ability to move men and supplies across large distances at great speeds inspired the war machine developed by Philip
Left it on an odyssey of conquest that stretched from Asia Minor to India
After conquering Persia, Alexander intended to conquer the whole world
Reorganized and founded cities
Alexander worked to unite Greek and Persian culture and society
Traditions of Persian government and Zoroastrian toleration and openness combined with Greek culture in novel ways
Alexander died after his return from India at the age of 32, in 323 B.C.E.
His empire didn’t outlive him
Fighting broke out among his generals and his kin
Alexander’s wife and son were killed along with all other members of the royal family
Three large kingdoms dominated Alexander’s former kingdom by 275 B.C.E.
Alexander’s conquests transformed the political map of southern Europe, eastern Asia, and Egyptian Africa
Large parts of the Hellenistic world had been united at different times by the Assyrian and Persian Empires
Hellenistic kings ruled kingdoms already accustomed to centralized government
Hellenistic kingdoms lived in perpetual state of warfare with one another
Kings needed Greek soldiers, merchants, and administrators
Hellenistic cities were Greek in physical organization, constitution, and language
Had agoras (marketplaces), temples, theaters, baths, and gymnasiums
Hellenistic cities different fundamentally from Greek cities and colonies of the past
Hellenistic cities were never politically sovereign
Great social and geographical mobility possible in new cities extended to women and men alike
Women began to assume greater roles in the family, economy, and in public life
Most powerful women in Hellenistic society were queens, especially in Egypt
Monarchs vied in making their cities centers of Greek culture
Queens in particular patronized poets and dramatists
Cities and wealthy individuals endowed gymnasia and libraries
Alexandria was the most vibrant center of social change and culture
Alexander the Great had founded it
Royal agents looked through the book markets of Greece and Asia Minor and paid top prices for rare and obscure texts
By royal order, ships arriving in Alexandria were boarded and searched for books to copy
Generations of poet-scholars spent their careers in the Museum
Studied, edited, and commented on the classics
Standardized texts
Invented basic aspects of writing; punctuation, accent marks, etc.
Hellenist writers developed new forms of literature
Such as romance
Alexandria attracted the greatest scholars and poets of the Hellenistic world
Political rivalry encourage architectural and artistic rivalry
Temples, porticoes, and public building crew in size and ornamentation
Architects experimented with multi-tiered buildings
Hellenistic architects developed more elaborate and monumental buildings and combined the buildings in harmonious urban ensembles
Freestanding statues and murals and mosaics adorned public squares, temples, and private homes of Hellenistic cities
Artists continued traditions of Hellenistic age while showing more freedom in portraying tension, restlessness, and individuality in the human form
Philosophy thrived in the Hellenistic world
Cynics, Epicureans, and Stoics advocated types of morality less directly related to the state and society
Cynics
Believed that individual freedom came through renunciation of materialistic things, society, and leisure
The more that one had the more vulnerable one would be to the whims of fortune
Goal was to reduce possessions, connections, and pleasures
Epicureans
Sought freedom from pain rather than from conventions of ordinary life
Pleasure was to be pursued rationally
Real goal was to reduce desires to those desires that were simple and attainable
Stoics
Followed nature
Nature led them to greater participating in it
Believed that human society was ordered and unified like the universe
Believed everybody had a role in the divinely ordered universe and all roles were of equal value
All three philosophical traditions emphasized importance of reason and the proper understanding of nature
Ptolemaic Egypt became center of mathematical studies
Aristarchus of Samos theorized that the sun and fixed stars were motionless and that the earth moved around the sun
His theory wasn’t taken into account as it wasn’t supported by math
Hipparchus of Nicaea placed the earth at the center of the universe and was supported by more mathematically acceptable arguments
Hellenistic medicine combined theory and observation
Continuing hostility between kingdoms and within kingdoms in the west made way for the new power of the west: Rome
Rugged slopes, fertile plains, and arid islands of the Greek world gave way to characteristic forms of social, political, and cultural organization that show up in different forms wherever Western civilization has taken root
The interminable wars amongst the Greek states left eh Greek world open for conquest by a powerful semi-Greek monarchy which went on to spread Athenian culture throughout the known world