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Chapter Objectives
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  1. How Greek civilization borrowed from Near Eastern civilizations
  2. How the Greeks laid the foundation of Western civilization
  3. The cultural contributions of the Minoans, the makers of the first high civilization in what became the Greek area
  4. The cultural contributions of the Mycenaeans, the makers of the first high civilization on the Greek peninsula
  5. The origin of the Dorians and the Ionians and the significance of these cultural terms for Greek civilization
  6. The significance of the Dark Ages
  7. The characteristics and major forms of cultural expression of Archaic Greece
  8. The meaning of polis and the central role it played in Greek civilization
  9. The evolution of the polis, from monarchy to oligarchy to democracy
  10. The significance of Sparta and Athens, symbols respectively of Dorian and Ionian civilization
  11. How the Athenian victory over Persia laid the groundwork for the Athenian dominance of Greece
  12. How religion helped to shape Greek culture, especially the muses, the Olympian gods and goddesses, and the chthonic deities
  13. The epic tradition as established by Homer in the Iliad and the Odyssey
  14. The lyric poetic tradition as expressed in the verses of Sappho
  15. The early history of natural philosophy and the contributions of Thales, Pythagoras, and Heraclitus
  16. To recognize visually the Doric style of temple building and to identify its components, decorative details, and aesthetic principles
  17. To recognize visually the Archaic style in sculpture and to identify its distinguishing characteristics, with special reference to kouros and kore statuary
  18. To recognize visually the changes taking place in Archaic-style sculpture that were leading to Hellenic-style sculpture and to identify significant changes in this transition period
  19. Historic "firsts" achieved in Archaic Greece that became legacies for later Western developments: the polis, epic poetry, lyric poetry, the post-beam-triangle temple, the kore and kouros sculptures, black-figure-style vase painting, natural philosophy, and the humanities







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