the early kingdoms

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THE EARLY KINGDOMS By: Madison Halcovage

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The Early Kingdoms. By: Madison Halcovage. Building Communities. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Early Kingdoms

THE EARLY KINGDOMSBy: Madison Halcovage

Page 2: The Early Kingdoms

Building Communities Around the time 2000 B.C.E. horseman

from central Europe moved to the Greek peninsula. These people were called the Achaeans by a Greek poet that was named Homer. The Achaeans invaded Greece for a while. They destroyed villages that people were already living in and claimed it theirs. They spoke a language that was a forerunner of Greek.

Page 3: The Early Kingdoms

Tribes Every tribe chieftain had seized the most

land that they could find. Then they made a small kingdom on their land. They built a citadel which is a walled fortress. That way they could live in privacy with their family and the other people of their tribe.

Page 4: The Early Kingdoms

Tribes Most of the small kingdoms were built on

the eastern side of Peloponnese which is not far from the sea. The chieftains in the tribes were eventually kings.

Page 5: The Early Kingdoms

Houses Common people usually built their

houses out of mud brick and wood. They built their houses at the foot of the citadel. They planted their crops around the area they built their houses. Since the soil is thin and rocky they always had to work very hard to cultivate it.

Page 6: The Early Kingdoms

Grapes Grapes grow a lot in Greece in the hot

and dry summer and they are picked out in the fall. People placed them in wooden vats and trampled by the farmers families until all of the grape juice drained out. The liquid was poured into clay pots

Page 7: The Early Kingdoms

Olive Oil The olives were extracted to make oil

which had a whole lot of uses. The uses of olive oil were for butter, lighting, soap, paying taxes, to offer it to the gods at ritual ceremonies, and to take the stiffness out of cloth.

Page 8: The Early Kingdoms

Animals People raised animals in Greece. They

raised sheep, goats, oxen, and horses. The sheep gave people wool. The goats gave people milk. They were also a good source of meat. The oxen were used to help farmers do their plowing job by pulling their plows. Horses were used to pull war chariots.

Page 9: The Early Kingdoms

Fish In Greece people ate lots of fish from the

Mediterranean. At first people of Greece fished in the Agean Sea. They would have nets and spears poised to fish.

Page 10: The Early Kingdoms

Common Bonds The Greeks all shared some of the same

things like language, similar life styles, and the same sets of religious beliefs. The religion was based on the worship of lots of gods. The most important deity was Zeus which was the sky god. Other important deities were Poseidon the god of the sea and Dionysus the god of vegetation was also important.

Page 11: The Early Kingdoms

Fighting In Greece people were fighting against

other neighborhood kingdoms which is very common. Earlier in Greece people were very warlike. They fight over land ownership which sometimes lead to bloodshed. When a army that was unknown all the farmers hid in the citadels. After warriors would go to other city gates to battle.

Page 12: The Early Kingdoms

Kingdoms Southern Greece controlled lots of

kingdoms. These kingdoms that southern Greece controlled were Argos, Mycenae, Thebes, Pylos, Athens, and Tiryns. When other people invaded the small kingdoms they appealed to their stronger neighbors to defend their land.

Page 13: The Early Kingdoms

Mycenae In 1600 B.C.E. Mycenae became the most

powerful kingdom in all of Greece. They made a empire and they made the first great civilization in mainland Europe. They ruled for 500 years. This period was know as the Mycenaean Age.

Page 14: The Early Kingdoms

Facts In Greece only one fifth of the land can

be farmed because of all the mountains on the land.

People learned how to make bronze weapons and tools just like the Minoans.

The iron age began when the tools and weapons were not made of bronze anymore.

The Agean islands were made up by the peaks of the under water mountain range.

Page 15: The Early Kingdoms