History of Greece

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 2

History of Greece: Introduction

The ancient Classical and Hellenistic eras of Greece are undoubtedly the most splendid,
having left behind a host of ideas, concepts, and art to provide the foundation of what
we call “western civilization”. However, the two previous millennia that lead to these
ancient eras, as well as the other two millennia that succeeded them are all part of the
history of Greece and have left just as rich a cultural footprint on the land.

Much of the ancient Greek civilization has survived either directly or through
permutations to our day. The ancient Greek dialects are influential even to this day with
much Greek vocabulary embedded in the Modern Greek and English languages.
Likewise, the art and architecture of ancient Greece has remained relevant and
influential up to our time in the breadth of western society. The much-celebrated
Renaissance was guided in large part by the re-discovery of the ancient Greek ideas
through text and art, which were hitherto suppressed by the belief in the absolute
authority of the supernatural power and the church.

It should be noted that History is a discipline that was conceived first in Ancient
Greece. Herodotus (484 – 425 BCE) is considered the Father of History, as he was the
first who attempted to record events and human actions for the sole purpose of
preserving them for future generations. The very first lines of his Histories
read: “Herodotus of Halicarnassus here displays his inquiry, so that human achievements may
not become forgotten in time, and great and marvelous deeds – some displayed by Greeks, some
by barbarians – may not be without their glory;” (Herodotus, 3). Being the first to attempt
such a feat, Herodotus was not spared from harsh criticism for including in his
Histories (written between 431 and 435 BCE), myths, legends, and outrageous tales.
“I have written my work, not as an essay which is to win the applause of the moment, but as a
possession for all time.” (Thucydides, 16)

Not much later than Herodotus, Thucydides (460 – 395 BCE) with his History of the
Peloponnesian War, put his own stamp on the discipline of History by attempting to
present history in an “objective” way, and to make correlations between human actions
and events. Their approach and methods of recording historical events became the
guiding light for historians of the next two thousand years.

This brief history of Greece is compiled here as an introduction to web readers and to
provide the historical background that’s needed to appreciate all the subjects of Ancient
Greek culture. It was no easy task to compress the history of Ancient Greece into a
concise format that would be appropriate both for online reading and as a precise
overview of the subject. Suffice to say that each sentence of this essay has been the
subject of countless volumes of discourse throughout history.

REFERENCE: https://ancient-greece.org/history/intro.html

You might also like