Before the time of Socrates, Greek philosophy was often only concerned with scientific inquiry, such as the nature and origin of the universe. Thales of Miletus may have been influenced Babylonian wise men when he predicted an eclipse around 585 BCE, or turned his thoughts to the problem of the beginnings of life. Another question addressed by early Greek thinkers concerned what we can really know fro certain, when all the information about our world comes to us through our senses, which can be deceived. One noteworthy idea to come from this inquiry was the theory that all matter is made up of tiny, indivisible particles called atoms. Greeks of course never realized just how tiny atoms really are.
The foundations of Greek society were shaken by philosophers questioning traditional beliefs. Men called sophists sold their services as teachers for wealthy youths, training them in public speaking (rhetoric) ad logic. One such sophist, Protagoras of Abdera, tried to throw out all the previous standards of judging what is right and wrong good and bad, ugly and beautiful. He argued that people are the measure of all things -meaning that human beings themselves set all such standards for judgement. Into this climate of distrust of wise men, there appeared a greater genius -
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"Ugly in body, but magnetic in mind; convivial and erotic, yet Spartan in habits and of enormous physical endurance," is one scholar's description of Socrates. This true "lover of wisdom" left behind nothing in writing, but through Plato, his disciple, we learn that Socrates believed it was duty of every person to care for one's inner being (soul), that is, the moral and intellectual personality, in order to make it as good as possible. His method of inquiry, which came to be called the Socratic method, was to ask people simple questions about their beliefs, then to probe deeper and deeper into their assumptions, often making them look foolish as they recognized their errors. Socrates' impact on later philosophy has been profound, but his own day he was often ridiculed. In the end, he was tried and forced to commit suicide by his own city.
Aristotle was a student at Plato's Academy. After Plato's death, Aristotle started his own school, the Lyceum, where he organized his students to carry out research in many fields of scientific learning. Aristotle himself made many important advances in biology, zoology, astronomy, meteorology, psychology, political science, ethics, and rhetoric. He also made great contributions to philosophy. He opposed some of Plato's ideas about the nature of true knowledge, and the relationship between the world of the intellect and the world of the senses. Besides these schools there were dozens of others, including those of the Cynics, the Stoics, and the Epicureans, some of which especially influenced the Romans.
If you look at examples of Egyptian painting, you will see that they are really coloured drawings. A figure is drawn and then colours are added, like in a colouring book. Greek artists were the first to learn how to show three dimensions on a flat surface by using different shades of colour to give the illusion of depth. They also used techniques such as forshortening (making near objects look bigger than distance onces) so as to produce images that looked real. Unfortunately, most Greek paintings are lost, but we can read stories about how painters painted grapes that looked so real that birds tried to eat them. Greek painters aimed at producing not only real-looking pictures, but also ideal images. These images reflected a Greek concept of the ideal, or most beautiful, human form-youth, harmonious proportions, and calm expression. When the Greeks depicted the gods, they showed them as ideal human figures, though often larger than life.
The same was true of sculptors. The Greeks concentrated on creating statues of nude young men, and over time observed each detail and proportion of the body. Scuptors wanted to make the statues appear natural but also conforming to certain rules about how an ideal figure should look. This concentration on detail and proportion resulted in statues that were almost lifelike. In the Classical period, the sculptors, like the painters, usually portrayed men and women in their ideal sate-in the prime of life, in the most beautiful or handsome pose.
In the Hellenistic period, Greek architecture was refined by elaborating on existing styles rather than by using new methods or materials. More public money was devoted to non-religious buildings such as theatres, stadiums, gymnasiums, and stoas (long colonnaded buildings, often with stores and public facilities, like ancient shopping malls). Private architecture also began to develop as rich individuals decided to use buildings to display their wealth, most notably in the construction of tombs. The most famous such tomb was built at Halicarnassus around 353 BCE by King Mausolus (from which we get the word "mausoleum") and his sister Queen Artemisia. Because of the novelty of the design, and the fame of the artists who decorated the building with sculpture, this building was later named one of the wonders of the ancient world. By the time of Alexander the Great, the Greeks had learned how to build arches and vaults out of stone, but it was the Romans who really took advantage of these new devices for spanning open spaces in their architecture.
Medicine
Greek medical facilities, the equivalent of our hospitals, were located at sanctuaries of the healing god Asclepius. Compared to the worship of the other gods, worship of Asclepius began very late in Greece, around 500 BCE. The Asclepian sanctuaries were usually located well away from the noise and dust of the city, near a source of clean, cool spring water.
The oldest Asclepian sanctuary was at Epidaurus, and from there the cult spread to Corinth, Athens, Curene in Libya, the island of Cos, and many other places. At these sanctuaries, Greek doctors learned their skills in the use of potions, ointments, healthy diets and exercise, and surgery. A device to remove barbed arrows (like the one that went into the eye of Philip the Great) was one of the Greek surgical inventions. The usual cure for disease was to sleep in a special hall at a sanctuary and wait for a dream about the god to work a cure. This was probably combined with proper medical practices.
The most famous Greek Physician was Hippocrates whose oath about caring for the sick is still repeated by newly graduated doctors even today. Hyppocrates worked at the Asclepian sanctuary at Cos at the same time that Socrates lived in Athens. Hippocrates was the first to study how parts of the body work in relation to the body as a whole.
There was a great deal of superstition and religion mixed with the practice of ancient medicine, but cleanliness, healthy food, rest, and a number of good, naturally occurring drugs helped the healing process. There are many records of cures left at sanctuaries; some are unbelievable, bordering on miraculous, but a good portion of the inscriptions, and the hundreds of clay body parts dedicated in thanks to the god, suggest good success.
Sexuality
While some societies have abhorred, ridiculed, or even attacked homosexuality, that was not the case among the Greeks. On the contrary, it was quite a conspicuous part of Greek life. The Greeks were ready to respond favorably to the open expression of homosexual desire whether in words and behaviors, or in literature and the visual arts. Many vase paintings, for example, depict homosexual courtship and love. for the most part, these represent relationships between older men and youths. This was particularly common in aristocratic circles. Homosexuality is also a common theme in Greek poetry, and Plato treats it on a philosophical level when he discusses the concepts of ideal beauty and love.
The finest unit of warriors in the Theban army, during its period of dominance in the fourth century BCE, was called the Sacred Band. The Sacred Band was made up entirely of pairs of homosexual lovers. It was believed, and indeed proved correct, that a warrior would fight more fiercely if standing in battle beside his beloved. At the battle of Chaeronea in 338 BCE, when Philip the Great of Macedon crushed the Greek army opposing his rule over mainland Greece, the entire Sacred Band of Thebes died fighting.
Female homosexuality was much less common but can be found in poetry of Sappho (ca. 600 BCE), a woman poet who ran a finishing school for aristocratic girls on the island of Lesbos. Her poetry was regarded as among the finest of her age. A common theme was her love for certain of her students. It is because of the poetry of Sappho that the island of Lesbos gave its name of female homosexuality (lesbianism).
Science and Technology
Greek mathematics reached very advanced levels, especially by the Hellenistic Age. Best known are the works by Pythagoras and Euclid in geometry, but algebra and even trigonometry were also well developed. In the field of science, biology progressed particularly well, especially through the efforts of Aristotle. The Greeks did not know the scientific method, and while they observed natural phenomena carefully, they were not at all good at carrying out accurate experiments to test their theories.
The Greeks did develop a number of more complicated devices based on simple machines such as the pulley, the lever, and the plane. Clock-like mechanisms with complex gears, perhaps to measure astronomical data, have been found, as have large siege machines for hurling various projectiles against an enemy. The famous mathematician and inventor Archimedes, who lived in the third century BCE on the island of Syracuse, which is still used today to draw water up out of streams to irrigate fields.
The Role of Women
The subject of women's roles in Greek society has received a great deal of attention in recent years. It is a topic that depends on very sparse evidence, since most of the archaeological and historical writings were produced by Greek men. Governments were run by men, temples were built by men, writers and artists were men almost exclusively. An exemption was Sappho, of course, who was famous for her beautiful lyric verses.
In Athens, women of citizen families led very sheltered lives. They closely oversaw the running of their own households, but rarely ventured out in public, even to shop. Their skills in the production of textiles were admired, but cloth was woven just to fill household needs, not for commercial purposes.
In religion, women had a significant public part to play. In Athens, more than 40 priesthoods were held by women, and some festivals and rituals were led only by women, such as the
Thesmophoria festival of Demeter, goddess of fertility and agriculture. Another example of a festival dominated by women occurred at the sanctuary of Artemis at Brauron, located about 30 km outside Athens on the east coast of Attica. Here Artemis was worshipped as the goddess of childbirth, and especially of happy deliveries. She was linked to the bear (though the reason why is no longer known( so her young worshippers, unmarried girls, dressed as "little bears" (arctoi) in the rites performed in her honours. This was a rite of initiation that preceded puberty and was meant to guarantee a fertile marriage and safe childbirth. Childbearing was probably the single most important aspect of a Greek woman's life.
A woman in Greek society fulfilled her role in life almost entirely as a wife and mother hidden in the home. She was, however, free to visit neighbors and participate in religious festivals, marriages, and funerals. Occasionally, women played a part in public life, as wife or mother of a ruler, but otherwise they id not participate in political life, either to hold office or even to vote. Women in most city-states could not even own property, and had to have a male guardian in legal matters. One exception to this was in Sparta. Though a Spartiate woman was still required to have a guardian, usually the woman's father before she married, and her husband afterward, she could own property. Women received their share of the family estate in the form of a dowry when they married, and this returned with them to their family in the even of divorce or widowhood.
Some ancient authors leave the impression that Greek men were nervously fearful of women and that they regarded the female character as unpredictable and mysterious. Other authors regarded women with a more liberal attitude. Herodotus described their influence in many historical events. It was mostly through the imagination of Greek men that women made a contribution to the literature and art of this civilization. The Athenian playwrights gave women important and sometimes powerful roles in their dramas.
Sometime not long after 400 BCE, attitudes toward women and their role in society began to change. For example, statues of nude women first appeared at this time. Women were also allowed to participate in important athletic competitions (though the Olympics were never opened to them) and they began to acquire a stronger role in public life. Women like Cleopatra, ruler of Hellenistic Egypt, were still an exception, however, in terms of political power.
Greek Religion
The Greeks had many special days when they celebrated and honoured the gods, days that occurred at irregular intervals (remember, there was no such thing as a weekend). But Greeks did not wait for a holy day to pay their respects to their deities. There were altars, shrines, temples, and statues of the gods everywhere in towns and in the countryside. If a person felt the need for help in a certain aspect of life, they might give a small gift and say a little prayer at the appropriate god's shrine. There were gods of birth, death, and the Underworld; gods for women, the weather, and wine; gods of war, peace. victory, and healing; in short, there were gods for all aspects and stages of life. There were also more important gods, most of whom were thought to reside on Mt. Olympus. It was to these gods that the Greeks built their beautiful temples and sanctuaries.
All the gods were thought to have human forms and characters. This is an important idea to understand, since it explains the Greek attitude toward the gods. People honoured the gods with festivals, and offered sacrifices of honey-cakes, terracotta figurines, or sacrificed animals. In exchange, they expected the gods' blessings, or at least to avoid the gods' punishments.
Myths and Legends
In order to explain the many rites and cults, stories were told about significant eventsin the lives of the differnet gods. These stories, which we now retad as myths, were firly believed by most Greeks. Myths had the wieght of tradition behind them, and the support of great poets like Homer and Hesiod. Man stories, creations of fertile imaginations, arose as late as the sixth century BCE. They then became fixed and written down, less easy to change or embelish.
There were also several cycles of stories, waht we might call legends, surrounding great heroes of the past and the foes they fought: Herakles, Jason and the Argonauts, Perseus and the Gorgon, Theseus and the Minotaur, and great warriors such as Ajax, Achilles, and Hector. These heroes accompolished superhuman deeds, often with the direct help of the gods who were their patrons and sometimes even their parents. Such legends helped times even their parents. Such legends helped explain the tradition of a glorious past, the remains of which could still be seen in placs like Mycenae, Tiryns, and Knossos. The belief in the greatness of these heroes and their connection with the gods was so strong that many cities had hero shrines where people could worship a local hero and ask forhelp in their lives.
Temples, Oracles, and Curses
Temples were built as houses for the gods. The richer the city, the greater the temples. Temples were symbols of the wealthy and power of the community and of its protecting patron deity. Temples themselves, however, were not places of worship. virtually all rituals took place around altars outside the temples. In fact, in most sanctuaries there was only an altar and no temple at all.
The Greeks believed strongly that the gods communicated with them; this might take place through the songs of birds, the rustling of leaves, then entrails of animals, or the voice of a special person like a prophet. The sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi became famous because the oracle (prophet) there was regarded as reliable. Apollo spoke answers to inquiries through his priestess, an old woman called the Pythia.
It was also possible for people to address their concerns to the gods. The normal way was through prayers accompanied by fits, but in popular black magic and sorcery, it was also possible to cast spells and put curses on people. A curse on an enemy might be invoked by scratching the enemy's name and the desired curse on a sheet of lead, often scrambling up the letters, then folding up the sheet and driving bronze nail through it. This could then be buried in a grave or in a sanctuary to the goddess Persephone, who dwelt in the Underworld for three months of the year.
Festivals
Most festivals included a procession of priests, worshippers, sacred objects, and animals for sacrifice. The more popular festivals had competitions in poetry, music, dance, and athletics, with valuable prizes for the winners. The Olympic Games, held at Olympia, in the Peloponnese, were part of a five-day festival in honour of Zeus. Athletic contests were held on the second and fourth days of this festival as well as on the afternoon of the third day. The first, third, and fifth days were otherwise given over to processions, sacrifices, and prayers to Zeus. No music or poetry contest interfered with he athletic games here, and although the reward at winner usually gave its winners prizes equal to tens of thousands of dollars.
Religion and Political Life
The Greeks were generally quite tolerant of the religious beliefs of others, probably because Greek religion did not have rigid rules. So, for example, the sophists in fifth-century Athens could discuss their serious doubts about the existence or knowability of the gods. The Greeks could also be deadly serious about religion, especially at times when they thought their city was being threatened or the gods were angry with them. In 414 BCE, in the dark days of the Peloponnesian War and its aftermath, a number of wealthy were tried and executed on the charge of impiety. Protagoras the sophist is said to have fled Athens after being convicted on a charge of atheism in 411 BCE. Socrates was executed (by drinking poison) in 399 BCE on twin charges of corrupting the youth of Athens and introducing new gods. The concept of separation of church and state was unknown in the ancient Greek world, so the temples, and cults were readily supported with public money. Since political leaders were often also religious leaders, threats to religion might also be regarded as threats to the state.
Trade and Coinage
In Greece, trade over any great distance or in any bulk product was carried out by ship since overland travel by pack animal was difficult and expensive. It seems probable that Phoenician ships first visited Greek shores during the Dark Ages fro trading purposes. These encounters may have encouraged Greeks to make voyages in their own ships, perhaps built especially for the purpose, though more likely used for fishing or island raiding. As underwater archaeological expeditions have revealed, these ships were small, able to accommodate a crew of four or five and a capacity of several tonnes.
Profits from a successful voyage could be substantial, as much as two or three times the cost of the cargo. However, these voyages were not without risks, from storms and pirates, as well as the great cost of hiring a ship to carry the cargo. A normal venture began when a merchant borrowed money from a banker at a rate of 25 to 60 percent for the term of the voyage. The money would be used to purchase a cargo. The merchant would then make a contract with a shipowner for space on his ship to carry the cargo, for example, copper ingots from Cyprus, back to Piraeus (the main port for Athens). The shipowner presumably would have a contract with another merchant to carry a cargo outbound from Athens, for example, olive oil and fine pottery, to Cyprus. The first merchant would accompany the ship in order to make the best deal possible for the copper. In Piraeus, he then had to find a buyer for his cargo, pay the shipowner, and pay his banker with the necessary interest. If demand for copper were high, as in wartime when armour was needed, the merchant could make a considerable profit.
The most common trade goods shipped to and from Greece included:
- grain from south Asia, Sicily, or Egypt in exchange for Greek olive oil and wine
- luxury goods like glass, alabaster, perfumes, and ivory from Phoenicia and Egypt in exchange for Greek silver or white marble
- timber and pitch for shipbuilding from the North Aegean in exchange for Greek olive oil and finished goods like pottery, furniture, jewelry, or textiles
Clearly, Greek merchants and sailors traveled to every corner of the Mediterranean and far inland from its ports in order to find trade opportunities and satisfy their natural curiosity about the world. These traders, together with Greek mercenaries, were no doubt the major force for spreading Greek culture abroad before the time of Alexander. These same traders, on their return to their homeland, brought back the natural resources, goods, and most importantly, the ideas that they acquired in distant places. Many foreigners in turn came to visit and live in Greece, either freely as traders or as ambassadors, or in captivity as slaves.
For centuries, trade depended on a system of bartering where traders made deals to exchange so much of one product for so much of another - there was no money involved because money did not exist yet. Tow hundred kilograms of salt might be traded for 150 kg of grain, and so on. Days might be spend arguing over amounts and types of compensation. Eventually, traders recognized that small amounts of precious metals might be conveniently accepted almost anywhere in exchange for most products used in daily life. Precious metals like copper, bronze, silver, electrum (an alloy of silver and gold), and even pure gold, could be carried in small chunks, weighed by the traders and used as a form of exchange.
Chunks of different sizes always had to be weighed against different standards, which was awkward, and there were widely varying standards of purity for metals, or percentages of metals in alloys. To bring some uniformity to this process, beginning in the eighth and seventh centuries BCE, the chunks of precious metal were stamped with a symbol indicating there weight and purity. The stamps of certain traders came to be trusted more than others. Eventually, the uncertainty of this state of affairs was revolved when governments began stamping their own metal chunks, and so put the reputation of the state or monarch behind the quality of the metal and its standard of weight. This was the first coinage of the Western world.
The first mints, dating to the seventh century BCE, were in Lydia and the East Greek states, but coinage quickly spread to the trading cities of Athens, Corinth, Aegina, and Chalcis in the western Aegean. Silver became the most commonly used metal. By the time of the Athenian Empire in the fifth century BCE, the so-called owls of Athens - coins with an owl on on e side and the head of Athena on the other - became the most common coinage in the Mediterranean area.
Writing: ECHOES from the past published by McGraw-Hill Ryderson Ltd.