Classic Greek Art
Late Hellenistic Art
Introduction to Greek Art
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Greek Art
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336 |
Assassination of Philip II at Aegae |
336 - 323 |
Reign of Alexander III, the Great |
334 - 329 |
Alexander conquers the Persian empire |
328 - 327 |
Alexander's campaigns in India and Bactria |
323 |
Alexander dies in Babylonia |
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Bronze Marathonian Ephebe |
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Acibiades Mosaic |
Macedonian hegemony over the Greek poleis took the form of an alliance that survived the assassination of Philip II. His heir, Alexander III—called "the Great" on account of his amazing conquests—takes up the plan to invade the Persian Empire, involving all the Greeks in the liberation of cities dominated by Persian satraps.
His expeditions become a triumphant march of conquest across the Persian empire. Alexander reaches the banks of the Indus and present-day Afghanistan, establishing cities that bear his name. He founded the first huge empire in history. In it he promoted the cultural Hellenization of the countries conquered. His death in Babylonia, at only 33 years of age, triggered fierce struggles among his successors.
The imperial regent in Macedonia,Antipater, suppressed a revolt by the other Greeks, but for forty years Alexander's Macedonian generals struggled to gain portions of the empire for themselves. Eventually the great empire is broken into Hellenized kingdoms, starting long dynasties in each.
Powerful states came into being, their political, economic, and cultural activities centered on splendid capitals. The Greek poleis founded leagues, such as the Aetolian League, which trounced the invading Celts in 280 BC and the Achaean League, which put an end to Sparta's independence. But the cultural Greek hegemony throughout the Alexandren empire remains intact.
The spin-off Greek kingdoms: the Seleucids in Asia Minor, Syria, and Mesopotamia; the Ptolemies in Egypt; and the Attalids in Pergamum continue to reign until the 2nd and 1st centuries BC, until Rome completed its conquest of them. Pergamun considered itself the "new" Athens -- center of art and culture. The Ptolemies tried to make Alexandria into the same thing -- perhaps a little less so because existing Egyptian culture was still too strong to take much bending; but it is certainly the message which the Ptolemies wanted to convey with the Alexandrian Library, the greatest center of learning in the Helenistic world.
In art, the severity of Greek classical style was out. Instead a new emotional floridness was in. In fact, what most people call "classical Greek art" is not that at all -- it is really Helenistic art. Think of the things today we think of first when we think of "Classical": The 'Venus de Milo', 'Winged Victory', or 'Laocoön'. This is art done toward the end of the Helenistic period, just before the Roman period begins.
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323 - 322
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Greeks revolt against Macedonia |
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322 - 281
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Division of the Alexandran Empire and foundation of the Hellenistic kingdoms |
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276 - 239
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Absolute Macedonian monarchy over Greece |
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240
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Foundation of the Hellenistic Kingdom of Pergamum |
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227 - 222
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Democratic revolution in Sparta; end of Spartan independence |
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200 - 196
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Rome frees the Greeks from Macedonian dominion |
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171 - 168
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Rome defeats Macedonia and divides it into four republics |
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147 - 146
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Rome makes Macedonia and Greece provinces; siege and destruction of Corinth |
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Bell Krater |
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Plate with Two Baccaei |
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| Gold Oak Leaf Crown |
Demosthenes |
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Classic Greek Art
Late Hellenistic Art
Introduction to Greek Art
2003-03-23