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  1. That Hellenistic society was one of the first world-states to be organized on multiracial lines
  2. The role of Alexander in giving a vision to Hellenistic civilization
  3. A brief summary of Hellenistic economics and society
  4. A comparison of Hellenistic women with those of Hellenic Greece
  5. The two historic stages of Hellenistic civilization
  6. The major Hellenistic successor states to Alexander the Great's unified empire, their leading cultural characteristics, and how each state eventually fell to Rome
  7. The two largest Hellenistic cities, Pergamum and Alexandria, and their chief contributions to the civilization of this age
  8. How Hellenistic artists and writers adopted the Hellenic style and modified it into Hellenistic Classicism
  9. How Menander developed New Comedy and the ways it differed from the Old Comedy of the Hellenic period
  10. The characteristics of Alexandrianism, the unique literary style of the Hellenistic Age
  11. The contributions and enduring influence of Theocritus, the chief writer of the Hellenistic period
  12. The principles of the main Hellenistic philosophies (Cynicism, Skepticism, Epicureanism, and Stoicism), their leading spokespersons, and how they differed from one another
  13. The teachings of the Hellenistic mystery cults and the belief in Fate
  14. How Hellenistic religions and philosophies reflected the then-prevailing climate of opinion, especially in the cities
  15. The characteristics of the Corinthian temple, as seen in the Olympieum, Athens
  16. How today the Corinthian style is a symbol of Hellenistic influence
  17. To describe and recognize the altar of Zeus at Pergamum
  18. How Hellenistic rulers wanted to identify with Greek culture and to create cities that were "new" versions of Athens
  19. The identifying characteristics of Hellenistic sculpture
  20. To recognize visually key examples of Hellenistic sculpture
  21. How Hellenistic sculpture differs from Hellenic sculpture
  22. Historic "firsts" of Hellenistic civilization that became part of the Western tradition: the union of Greek culture and politics for propaganda purposes; the concept of a capital city as a "new Athens"; the Corinthian temple; the literary forms of the pastoral and the idyll; the Alexandrian literary style; the earliest museum; a multiracial and multiethnic empire; the Hellenistic art style, including new images of women; and the philosophies of Cynicism, Skepticism, Epicureanism, and Stoicism
  23. The role of Hellenistic civilization in transmitting the heritage of earlier civilizations: redefining Classicism to meet new needs, adopting the humanities as the curriculum in the schools, preserving the chief texts of Greek literature in Alexandria, expanding Greek science, making libraries into primary institutions in the large cities, and adopting the Near Eastern idea of a ruler-god







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