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Professor Sammy Basu |
Introduction
to Plato and the Republic |
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Map of
the Ancient World:

Map of
the Ancient Greek World:
http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/gk_wrld.htm
Map of
Ancient Greece:

http://www.nmia.com/~sphinx/images/maps/greek_map_large.gif
http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/greece.htm
The
Persian Wars: 492 - 449 B.C. E.

http://lilt.ilstu.edu/drjclassics/lectures/history/PersianWars/persianwars.shtm
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa010103a.htm
500 B.C. - Ionian Revolt in Asia minor
490 B.C. - Battle of Marathon MAP
481 B.C. - Greek League
Greek league against Persia, with Sparta in charge of the army, and Athens, the navy.
480 B.C. - Battle at Thermopylae MAP
‘300’
-

Darius and other accurate images

The Persian Empire (Persian: امپراتوری ایران) was a series of historical empires that ruled over
the Iranian plateau,
the original Persian homeland, and beyond in Western Asia, Central Asia and the Caucasus.
The
most widespread entity considered to have been a Persian Empire was the Achaemenid Empire
(550–330 BC) under Darius and Xerxes (or Xerkes) —
famous in antiquity as the foe of the classical Greek states (See Greco-Persian Wars)
— a united Persian kingdom that originated in the region now known as Pars province (Fars
province) of Iran.
479 B.C. - Battle at Salamis MAP
479 B.C. - Battle at Plataea MAP END OF PERSIAN INVASION
477 B.C. - Aristides forms Delian League
Athens, in charge of the Delian League, went on the offensive to free the Ionian cities.
449 B.C. - Peace of Callias
Persia and Athens sign peace treaty.
http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/loc/sparta.htm
http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/loc/athens.htm
The Delian
League
After an Athenian led Greek victory over the Persians at the
Battle of Salamis, in 478, Athens was put in charge of a protection alliance with
the Ionian cities. The treasury was at Delos; hence the name for the alliance.
Soon the leadership of Athens became oppressive, although in one form or
another, the Delian League survived until the victory of Philip of Macedonia
over the Greeks at Chaeronea.

http://www.utexas.edu/courses/clubmed/10061pelwarmap.jpg
Peloponnesian Wars,
431-404
Pericles builds long walls.
430-426: plague ravages Athens; Pericles dies.
At
this point, Athens appears to be winning.
421-414: brief Peace.
415-413: Sicilian Expedition: Athenian disaster.
411: oligarchy at Athens; repulsed by democratic fleet.
406: Battle of Arginusae; generals condemned to death.
405: Battle of Aegospotami: Spartan victory.
404:
Athens surrenders, brief oligarchic Rule of the Thirty Tyrants.
403: less expansive democracy is restored.
Athens:
map of
Athens
http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/athensim.htm
http://www.utexas.edu/courses/introtogreece/cc301/syllabus.html
Cleisthenes
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_thucydides_funeral.htm
http://lilt.ilstu.edu/drjclassics/texts/pericles/pericles.shtm
www.utexas.edu/.../
mythologein/studyguides.html


http://plato-dialogues.org/life.htm
http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/plat.htm
http://www.timelineindex.com/content/select/841/1023,773,789,841
Works:
The early, or Socratic, dialogues,
e.g., the Apology, Meno, and Gorgias,
present Socrates conversing about his main preoccupations:
the unity of virtue and knowledge and of virtue and happiness.
also provide Plato's account of the trial, last days and
death of Socrates.
Dialogues of the middle years,
e.g., the Republic, Phaedo, Symposium, and Timaeus,
present the rational relationship between the soul, the
state, and the cosmos.
Later dialogues,
e.g., the Laws and Parmenides,
include treatises on law, mathematics, technical philosophic
problems, and natural science.



Socrates:
470-399 BCE

Socrates – Encyclopedia Channel



In his
life:


fragment of a mosaic from the Saint-Gregory Convent in Rome exhibiting the inscription in Greek "gnôti sauton", meaning "Know thyself", Rome, National Museum of the Thermae.
Other sources
on Socrates:
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Aeschines |
Aristophanes |
Xenophon |
The text:
rolls of papyrus
http://plato-dialogues.org/papyrus.htm
The
Setting:

A Roman mosaic showing Plato's Academy
