IEEE REACH Triremes Inquiry Unit

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 28

TRIREME UNIT PLAN

Compelling In what ways did the triremes promote democracy and in what ways did they promote
Question imperial dominance in Athens and the Mediterranean?

C3 Historical Thinking Standards – D2.His.1.9-12.


Evaluate how historical events and developments were shaped by unique circumstances of time
and place as well as broader historical contexts.

Standards C3 Historical Thinking Standards – D2.His.2.9-12.


and Analyze change and continuity in historical eras.
Practices

Common Core Content Standards – CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.WHST.9-10.1.B


Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly, supplying data and evidence for each while pointing
out the strengths and limitations of both claim(s) and counterclaims in a discipline-appropriate
form and in a manner, that anticipates the audience's knowledge level and concerns.
Staging the
What are triremes and how were they used by the Athenians?
Question
Supporting Supporting Supporting Supporting
Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Question 4
What were the triremes What were the basic In what ways were the In what ways were the
and their technological principles of Athenian triremes connected with triremes connected with
foundations, and how democracy? Athenian democracy? Athenian imperialism over
were they used by the eastern
Athens? Mediterranean?
Formative Formative Formative Formative
Performance Task Performance Task Performance Task Performance Task
Classroom Activity: Create a poster Watch: IEEE REACH Classroom Activity:
Introduction to the “advertising” Athenian Video: Triremes (Part Two) Triremes of Atlantis
Trireme (See Below) democracy. Include all (See Below)
- (Option 2: Watch Study.com
Watch: IEEE REACH the characteristics that video (sign-up required) http://
Video: Triremes (Part One) made it unique in its time study.com/academy/lesson/
and appealing in ours. pericles-the-delian-league-and-
- (Option 2: Trireme: Definition, the-athenian-golden-age.html
Facts &Watch: Greek Diagram
video on study.com. Sign-up on After watching above
study.com required.) video,review and answer the
Design a “car sales” ad for the
questions in the Democracy and
trireme, extolling its unique Empire PPT
features
View Pilot Program video
View: Trireme Olympias video
(outside source)
Classroom Activity: Team Competitions: Vessel
Trireme Design Load Test (Prerequisite:
Classroom Activities: Trireme
- A. Review: Triremes Design, and Building your
Hands-on Activity Vessel, found in column 1 and
"How to" PDF and the below. This activity is the last
Triremes Hands-on part of the Building Your Vessel
Activity)
Activity PPT before
beginning the hands- Optional: Vessel Speed Race
on activity and the (Determine if your tech
Trireme Design found department can build a pulley
below. system as described in the
Triremes Hands-on Activity
Classroom Activity: "How to" PDF, found in the
Classroom Activity outline in
Building Your Vessel
column one.)
- A. Review Triremes
Hands-on Activity Classroom Activity: Oarsman
"How to" PDF Simulation with Hands-on-
- B. Review Triremes Activity (To do fully, requires
model rowing platform)
Hands-on Activity PPT
- A. View Trireme Olympias
before classroom video
activity and then - B. Review Oarsman Model
begin Building your Rowing “How To” for Hands-on
Vessel found below. Activity

Featured Sources Featured Sources Featured Sources Featured Sources


1A. Excerpt from Hale, 2A. Blackwell, Christopher 3A. Excerpt from Hale, 4A. Map of Tribute
John R. Lords of the sea: W. “Athenian John R. Lords of the sea: Districts of the Athenian
The epic story of the Democracy: A brief The epic story of the Empire, from Hale, John R.
Athenian navy and the overview,” Demos. (The Athenian navy and the Lords of the sea: The epic
birth of democracy. Stoa: a Consortium for birth of democracy. story of the Athenian navy
Penguin, 2009. Scholarly Publication in Penguin, 2009. and the birth of
the Humanities), February 3B. Translation of the democracy. Penguin, 2009.
1B. Examples of bow
28, 2003.
projections dated 9th-7th Decree of Troezen. 4B. Excerpt from Hale,
http://www.stoa.org/proj
centuries BC from Lendering, Jona. "The John R. Lords of the sea:
ects/demos/article_demo
Murray, William M., Troezen Decree." The epic story of the
cracy_overview?page=all Livius.org: Articles on
Larrie D. Ferreiro, John Athenian navy and the
(Accessed 23 October ancient history. August 25,
Vardalas, and Jeffrey G. birth of democracy.
2016) 2015. Accessed January
Royal. "Cutwaters Penguin, 2009.
Before Rams: an 2B. Pericles' Funeral 02, 2017.
experimental Oration from the http://www.livius.org/sour
investigation into the Peloponnesian War, ces/content/the-troezen-
origins and Thucydides (c.460/455- decree/.
development of the c.399 BCE): 3C. Translation of the
waterline Peloponnesian War, Book Decree of Troezen.
ram." International 2.34-46, from Halsall, Jameson, Michael H. "A
Journal of Nautical Paul. Internet ancient Decree of Themistokles
Archaeology (2016). history sourcebook. Paul from Troizen." American
Halsall, 1998. School of Classical Studies
1C Technical details
http://sourcebooks.fordh at Athens. Accessed
about Olympias, a full-
am.edu/ancient/pericles- January 2, 2017.
reconstruction of the
funeralspeech.asp http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/
trireme and insight on
(Accessed 19 November pdf/uploads/hesperia/147
oarsmen, sourced from
2016) 294.pdf.
"The One and Only
Olympias." The Official 3D. Image of the Decree of
Trireme Website. Troezen. Μαρσύας.
Accessed January 29, "Decree of Themistocles
2017. (or Troezen)." Ancient
http://triremeolympias History Encyclopedia.
.com/design.html. March 20, 2014. Accessed
January 02, 2017. http://
1D. Line drawing of
www.ancient.eu/im
Athenian “three”, from
Murray, William, and age/2419/.
William Michael
Murray. The age of
titans: the rise and fall
of the great Hellenistic
navies. OUP USA, 2012.
And an excerpt from "J
T (Timothy) Shaw
Papers." The Trireme
Trust. Accessed January
29, 2017.
http://www.triremetru
st.org.uk/.
1E. Images of Cutwater
Bow tests from Murray,
William M., Larrie D.
Ferreiro, John Vardalas,
and Jeffrey G. Royal.
"Cutwaters Before
Rams: an experimental
investigation into the
origins and
development of the
waterline."International
Journal of Nautical
Archaeology 46, no. 1
(2017).
Write a thesis essay that directly addresses the compelling question using specific
Argument claims and relevant evidence from historical sources to support your claims while
Summative
Performance
acknowledging competing views.
Task
Debate whether the Greek triremes primarily promoted democracy or imperial
Extension
dominance.

UNDERSTAND: Research the connection between military technology and governance around the world.
ASSESS: To what extent is responsible governance dependent on military technology and to what extent are
Taking
they in opposition.
Informed
Action ACTION: Write a letter to an elected federal official arguing for an increase or decrease (depending on your
position) in military spending for advanced technologies in order to further the goals of responsible
government.
TO THE TEACHER

REACH nstr ctiona nits are intended to e c assroom read ac nit egins it a Unit Plan in
t e form of a C3 Inquiry Design Model T e Unit Plan inc des earning o ectives, content standards,
formative and s mmative tasks, inks to rimar and secondar reso rces, and a arm activit

nits are organi ed aro nd a Compelling Question designed to ins ire c riosit and romote disc ssion
among st dents To t at end, e ave a so inc ded a rief st dent introd ction to t e to ic entit ed,
Staging the Question nce st dents ave een introd ced to t e to ic, an n m er of Formative
Performance Tasks ma e com eted sing t e inc ded Document Excerpts teac ers ma e ect instead
to ti i e f te t doc ments inked it in t e Featured Sources section Document Excerpts are rint
read in sing e s eet format and ke ed to t e citations in t e Featured Sources section of t e Unit Plan
Teac ers s o d se ect t e Formative Performance Tasks and accom an ing Sources t at est s it t eir
o n instr ctiona needs content re irements, erformance goa s, st dent readiness, and time
constraints on t e com etion of eac nit, st dents s o d e ade ate re ared to com ete t e
Summative Performance Task and Taking Informed Action sections of t e Unit Plan

To f rt er assist t e teac er, e ave inc ded a more t oro g Background Information section T is
doc ment is intended to serve as rofessiona reading rior to im ementing t e nit Teac ers ma
a so is to read t e f engt rimar and secondar so rces from ic t e s orter e cer ts ere
taken
STAGING THE QUESTION

In the fall of 480 BCE, Xerxes, the King of Persia, attacked Greece on land and at sea. While the
land battle that ended with a Spartan stand to the last man at Thermopylae, has been burned
into the collective memory of western civilization think of the movie 300 it was the Greek
navy that repelled Xerxes’ assault and saved Athens from certain defeat. The Persian naval
attack ended with the Battle of Salamis, another David and Goliath confrontation. The Greeks
were outnumbered some historians claim by as much as 10 to 1 but by early 479 BCE, the
Persian fleet was decimated and in retreat. The source of Western democracy was safe once
again

What saved Greece from the encroachment of an empire that had already consumed much of
western Asia? Was it the tenacity of Spartan warriors like at Thermopylae? Or the unique
strength of free Athenians defending their homeland? While all of this played a role at Salamis,
the key to the Greek victory was technology. The Athenian navy employed an innovative ship
design called the Trireme. Built for speed and agility and designed as an offensive weapon, the
trireme allowed the ancient Greeks to destroy most of the Persian fleet and stop the western
advance of the imperial Persian king.

The trireme was powered by as many as 170 oarsmen in three tiers. In a 1985 re creation of the
ancient vessel based on historical documents, inexperienced rowers managed to achieve a top
speed of 9 knots, so we might assume the ancient navy could go even faster. Speed was
essential because mounted at the front of each trireme was a 400 pound bronze battering ram
that could inflict fatal damage on its enemy with a single blow. In addition to its speed and
offensive prowess, the trireme was perhaps the most maneuverable sea vessel of its time.
Despite its 120 foot length and 200 person crew capacity, a trireme could achieve a 180 degree
turn in under one minute!

Historians believe that the trireme was uniquely suited to the Athenian navy. The combination
of free citizen ro ers, advanced military technology, and an astute naval commander allowed
the Athenian navy to overpower a much larger enemy at the Battle of Salamis. The details have
been subjects of historical debate for centuries, because accounts of the trireme in battle are
often contradictory and there exists no known record of the vessel’s building plans. Not subject
to debate, however, is the ultimate success of the Greek trireme navy that saved a free people
and a continent from the clutches of Persian imperialism.
PRINT DOCUMENTS

Document 1A

Themistocles had specified that Athens’ new ships should be fast triremes: light, open, and undecked for
maximum speed and maneuverability. Only gangways would connect the steersman’s small afterdeck to
the foredeck at the prow where the lookout, marines, and archers were stationed. The new Athenian
triremes were designed for ramming attacks, not for carrying large contingents of troops…. et een the
stern and stemposts ran the long lines of planking. In triremes, the outer shell was built up by joining
plank to plank, rather than by attaching planks to a skeleton of frames and ribs as in later “frame first”
traditions…. Along the narrow edges of each plank the builders bored rows of holes: tiny ones for the
linen cords, larger ones for the gomphoi or pegs…. Once the planks were in place, the shipwright’s
assistants spent days squatting on the inside of the rising hull, laboriously threading linen cords through
the small holes along the planks’ edges and pulling them tight…. Unlike wool it would not stretch or give
with the working of the ship at sea. Linen possessed the very proper nautical quality of being stronger
wet than dry. T e system of construction made a strong hull that could withstand severe shocks….

On top of the long slender hull the shipwright now erected the structure that set Greek triremes apart
from their Phoenician counterparts: the wooden rowing frame…. Sometimes referred to as an outrigger,
the rowing frame was wider than the ship’s hull…. As the great size of the rowing frame suggests, oars
were the prime movers of the trireme. At two hundred per ship (a total that included thirty spares),
T emistoc es new fleet required twenty thousand lengths of fine quality fir wood for its oars…. One
man pulled each oar…. The 62 thranite oarsmen on the top tier enjoyed the most prestige. Inboard and
below them were placed the wooden thwarts or seats for the 54 zygian oarsmen and the 54 thalamians.
The latter took their name from the thalamus or hold since they were entombed deep within the hull,
only a little above the waterline. All the rowers faced aft toward the steersman as they pulled their oars.

Once all these wooden fittings of the hull were complete, it was time to coat the ship with pitch, an
extract from the trunks and roots of conifers…. The poetical references to “dark ships” or “black ships”
referred to the coating of pitch…. Through conscientious maintenance new applications of pitch,
drying out and inspection of the hulls, and prompt replacement of unsound planks an Athenian
trireme could remain in active service for twenty five years.

The trireme’s design approached the physical limits of lightness and slenderness combined with
maximum length. So extreme was the design that not even the thousands of wooden pegs and linen
stitches could prevent the hull from sagging or twisting under the stresses of rough seas or even routine
rowing. On Athenian triremes huge hypozomata or girding cables provided the tensile strength that the
wooden structure lacked

The ship’s beak had already been fashioned in wood as part of the hull. To complete the trireme’s prime
lethal weapon, the ram, metalworkers had to sheathe the beak with bronze…. Master craftsmen made
the rams with the same lost wax method that they used to cast hollow bronze statues….

SOURCE: Excerpt from Hale, John R. Lords of the sea: The epic story of the Athenian navy and the birth
of democracy. Penguin, 2009.
Document 1B
th th
Examples of bow projections dated 9 -7 centuries BC

760–50 BCE
Fragment of a ship from an
Attic ‘Dipylon’ Geometric
vase, Athens National
Archaeological Museum 802,
Spathari 1995, 59, fig. 61.

735–10 BCE
Ship on an Attic Geometric krater found at Thebes
London, British Museum 1899, 0219, Spathari
1995: 65, fig. 71.

c.701 BCE
Oared galley on an Assyrian
relief found in the palace of
Sennacherib at Kuyunjik,
British Museum, 124772 A,
Spathari, 1995: 76.

“Long and slender projecting


forefeet can be seen in several ship depictions, and demonstrates the persistence of this feature over a
multi-century period during which other evidence for ramming warfare is totally lacking.”

SOURCE: From Murray, William M., Larrie D. Ferreiro, John Vardalas, and Jeffrey G. Royal. "Cutwaters
Before Rams: an experimental investigation into the origins and development of the waterline
ram." International Journal of Nautical Archaeology (2016).
Document 1C

The Trireme HN Olympia is the only reconstruction of an ancient Athenian trireme in the world and an
important example of experimental naval architecture. Construction on Olympias began in 1985 by a
shipbuilder in Piraeus with drawing from naval architect John F. Coates. Coates created the trireme's
blueprint on its reconstruction by partnering with historian J.S. Morrison….The reconstruction of the
ancient warship is of a 4th and 5th century B.C. design and took into consideration ancient verification
by Morrison, who was the former President of Wolfson College in Cambridge.

• Weight 70 tons
• Length 121 ft 1 in (36.9 m)
• Beam (high) 18 ft 1 in (5.5 m)
• Wide 17 ft (5.3 m)
• Draught 1.25
• Propulsion two large square sales and 170 oarsmen
• Speed Maximum with oars over 9 knots (17 km/h), continuous (crew rowing in turns) 2.5
mph (2.15 knots), estimated

Although no remains of triremes have been found, naval scholars had to rely on circumlocutory evidence
in architecture, classical plays, a variety of ancient texts, and archaeological evidence mostly in the ship
sheds of the Port of Piraeus.

The reconstruction of Olympias included consultations by English classical scholar and teacher, Charles
Willink. Willink advised on the construction of the vessel based on his finding from Greek literat re, art
history and archaeology discoveries above and below water.

ROWER RECRUITMENT –

170 rowers supplied the driving force


Required superior rowing skills and
physical resilience and vigor to ro , as
the oarsmen had to maintain a constant
pounding with full strokes to propell
these warships through the water
Teams of Athenian Trireme rowers
were com osed of free men
Required great coordinated rowing
skills and lots of practice.

SOURCE: "The One and Only Olympias." The Official Trireme Website. Accessed January 29, 2017.
http://triremeolympias.com/design.html.
Document 1D

Line drawing of Athenian “three” by J. F. Coates. Copyright © 2000, Cambridge University Press.

SOURCE: Murray, William, and William Michael Murray. The age of titans: the rise and fall of the great
Hellenistic navies. OUP USA, 2012.

Excerpt from the Trireme Trust


In 1982 the Trireme Trust was established by John Morrison a historian and academic naval architect
along with Frank Welsh, a writer, to investigate the trireme. Their collaboration resulted in the Hellenic
av s full scale reconstruction of an Athenian Trireme of the 5t and 4t centuries BC, built in 1987 in
Greece, known as the Olympias. John Coates, a naval architect worked out a design utilizing ancient
evidence researched by John Morrison.
170 oarsman arranged in three tiers (85 to a side)
Thranites at the top (The name for oarsmen in the uppermost file of the trieres
Zygians in the middle (The name for oarsmen in the (vertically) middle file of the trieres
Thalamians at the bottom (The name for oarsmen in the lowest file of the trieres
The ideal crew height: 5'10", if yo are over 6'1" conditions o d be cramped on board.

SOURCE: "J T (Timothy) Shaw Papers." The Trireme Trust. Accessed January 29,
2017. http://www.triremetrust.org.uk/.
Document 1E

Benefits of the Cutwater Bow Design

a) Control bow showing wave build-up at 10 knot equivalent;


b) cutwater bow showing wave attenuation at 11 knot equivalent.

SOURCE: Murray, William M., Larrie D. Ferreiro, John Vardalas, and Jeffrey G. Royal. "Cutwaters
Before Rams: an experimental investigation into the origins and development of the
waterline." International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 46, no. 1 (2017).
Document 2A

The city of Athens lived under a radically democratic government from 508 until 322 BCE. Before the
earlier date there was democracy to be found here and there in the government of Athens, and
democratic institutions survived long after the latter date, but for those 186 years the city of Athens was
se f consciously and decidedly democratic, autonomous, aggressive, and prosperous. Democracy in
Athens was not limited to giving citizens the right to vote. Athens was not a republic, nor were the
People governed by a representative body of legislators. In a very real sense, the Peo e governed
t emse ves, debating and voting individually on issues great and small, from matters of war and peace
to the proper qualifications for ferry boat captains

The democratic government of Athens rested on three main institutions, and a few ot ers of lesser
importance. The three pillars of democracy were: the Assembly of the Demos, the Council of 500, and
the People’s Court. These were supplemented by the Council of the Areopagus, the Archons, and the
Generals. Actual legislation involved both the Assembly and the Council, and ad hoc boards of
“Lawmakers.”

The Assembly was the regular gathering of male Athenian citizens (women also enjoyed a certain citizen
stat s, but without political rights) to listen to, discuss, and vote on decrees that affected every aspect of
Athenian life, both public and private, from financial matters to religious ones, from public festivals to
ar, from treaties with foreign powers to regulations governing ferry boats.

In the ssem , each male citizen of Athens could speak, regardless of his station. The orator Aeschines
says that “the herald, acting as a sergeant at arms, does not exclude from the platform the man whose
ancestors have not held a general’s office, nor even the man who earns his daily bread by working at a
trade; nay, these men he most heartily welcomes, and for this reason he repeats again and again the
invitation, ‘Who wishes to address the Assembly?’”

Of course, some people might be better qualified than others to speak on certain subjects, and the
citizens of Athens could be very critical when anyone tried to speak outside of his expertise. The
character Socrates in Plato’s Protagoras says that “when the Athenian Assembly is discussing
constr ction, the citizens call for builders to speak, and when it is discussing the construction of ships
they call for shipwrights, but if anyone else, whom the people do not regard as a craftsman, attempts to
advise them, no matter how handsome and wealthy and well born he may be, not one of these things
ind ces them to accept him; they merely laugh him to scorn and shout him down, until either the
speaker retires from his attempt, overborne by the clamor, or the Archers pull him from his place or turn
him out altogether by order of the presiding officials”. But, Socrates continues, when the discussion is
not about technical matters but about the governing of the city, the man who rises to advise them on
this may equally well be a smith, a shoemaker, a merchant, a sea ca tain, a rich man, a poor man, of
good family or of none
SOURCE: Blackwell, Christopher W. “Athenian Democracy: A brief overview,” Demos. (The Stoa: A
Consortium for Scholarly Publication in the Humanities), February 28, 2003.
Document 2B Page 1 of 2

Our constitution does not copy the laws of neighboring states; we are rather a pattern to others than
imitators ourselves. Its administration favors the many instead of the few; this is why it is called a
democracy. If we look to the laws, they afford equal justice to all in their private differences; if no social
standing, advancement in public life falls to reputation for capacity, class considerations not being
allowed to interfere with merit; nor again does poverty bar the way, if a man is able to serve the state,
he is not hindered by the obscurity of his condition. The freedom which we enjoy in our government
extends also to our ordinary life. There, far from exercising a jealous surveillance over each other, we do
not feel called upon to be angry with our neighbor for doing what he likes, or even to indulge in those
injurious looks which cannot fail to be offensive, although they inflict no positive penalty. But all this
ease in our private relations does not make us lawless as citizens. Against this fear is our chief safeguard,
teaching us to obey the magistrates and the laws, particularly such as regard the protection of the
in red, whether they are actually on the statute book, or belong to that code which, although
n ritten, yet cannot be broken without acknowledged disgrace

If we turn to our military policy, there also we differ from our antagonists. We throw open our city to the
or d, and never by alien acts exclude foreigners from any opportunity of learning or observing,
although the eyes of an enemy may occasionally profit by our liberality; trusting less in system and policy
than to the native spirit of our citizens; while in education, where our rivals from their very cradles by a
painful discipline seek after manliness, at Athens we live exactly as we please, and yet are just as ready
to encounter every legitimate danger. In proof of this it may be noticed that the Lacedaemonians do not
invade our country alone, but bring with them all their confederates; while we Athenians advance
unsupported into the territory of a neig or, and fighting upon a foreign soil usually vanquish with ease
men who are defending their homes. Our united force was never yet encountered by any enemy,
because we have at once to attend to our marine and to dispatch our citizens by land upon a hundred
different services; so that, wherever they engage with some such fraction of our strength, a success
against a detachment is magnified into a victory over the nation, and a defeat into a reverse suffered at
the hands of our entire people. And yet if with habits not of a or but of ease, and courage not of art but
of nature, we are still willing to encounter danger, we have the double advantage of escaping the
experience of hardships in anticipation and of facing them in the hour of need as fearlessly as those who
are never free from them

In short, I say that as a city we are the school of Hellas, while I doubt if the world can produce a man
o, where he has only himself to depend upon, is equal to so many emergencies, and graced by so
happy a versatility, as the Athenian. And that this is no mere boast thrown out for the occasion, but plain
matter of fact, the power of the state acquired by these habits proves. For Athens alone of her
contemporaries is found when tested to be greater than her reputation, and alone gives no occasion to
her assailants to blush at the antagonist by whom they have been worsted, or to her subjects to
question her title by merit to rule. Rather, the admiration of the present and succeeding ages will be
o rs, since we have not left our power without witness, but have shown it by mighty proofs; and far
from needing a Homer for our panegyrist, or other of his craft whose verses might charm for the
moment only for the impression which they gave to melt at the touch of fact, we have forced every sea
and land to be the highway of our daring, and everywhere, whether for evil or for good, have left
imperishable monuments behind us. Such is the Athens for which these men, in the assertion of their
SOURCE: Thucydides (c.460/455-c.399 BCE): Peloponnesian War, Book 2.34-46, from Halsall, Paul.
Internet ancient history sourcebook. Paul Halsall, 1998. (Accessed 19 November 2016)
Page 2 of 2
resolve not to lose her, nobly fought and died; and well may every one of their survivors be ready to
suffer in her cause

So died these men as became Athenians. You, their survivors, must determine to have as unfaltering a
resolution in the field, though you may pray that it may have a happier issue. And not contented with
ideas derived only from words of the advantages which are bound up with the defense of your country,
though these would furnish a valuable text to a speaker even before an audience so alive to them as the
resent, you must yourselves realize the power of Athens, and feed your eyes upon her from day to day,
till love of her fills your hearts; and then, when all her greatness shall break upon you, you must reflect
that it was by courage, sense of duty, and a keen feeling of honor in action that men were enabled to
win all this, and that no personal failure in an enterprise could make them consent to deprive their
country of their valor, but they laid it at her feet as the most glorious contribution that they could offer.
For this offering of their lives made in common by them all they each of them individually received that
renown which never grows old, and for a sepulcher, not so much that in which their bones have been
de osited, but that noblest of shrines wherein their glory is laid up to be eternally remembered upon
every occasion on which deed or story shall call for its commemoration. For heroes have the whole earth
for their tomb; and in lands far from their own, where the column with its epitaph declares it, there is
enshrined in every breast a record unwritten with no tablet to preserve it, except that of the heart.
These take as your model and, judging happiness to be the fruit of freedom and freedom of valor, never
decline the dangers of war. For it is not the miserable that would most justly be unsparing of their lives;
these have nothing to hope for: it is rather they to whom continued life may bring reverses as yet
nkno n, and to whom a fall, if it came, would be most tremendous in its consequences. And surely, to
a man of spirit, the degradation of cowardice must be immeasurably more grievous than the unfelt
death which strikes him in the midst of his strength and patriotism!

SOURCE: Thucydides (c.460/455-c.399 BCE): Peloponnesian War, Book 2.34-46, from Halsall, Paul.
Internet ancient history sourcebook. Paul Halsall, 1998. (Accessed 19 November 2016)
Page 1 of 2
Document 3A
[By the mid fifth century BC…] T e e eriences of the common Athenian in seafaring and fighting were
beginning to rival those of the aristocrats. He might not know Homer by heart, or trace his ancestry back
to a warrior who had fought in the Trojan War. But the average thete had now seen Troy with his own
e es, a small hill off to the south as one rowed into the Hellespont on the run to Byzantium. D ring his
naval service the ordinary citizen would follow the sea routes hallowed by the legends of Odysseus,
T ese s, Jason, and Cadmus, to Asia, Africa, Europe, and the islands between. Although he cut a modest
figure ashore in foreign parts, carrying his rowing pad as his only weapon instead of shield and spear, a
mariner from Athens was the Odysseus of his time, widely traveled, many minded, facing dangers on the
deep in the struggle to bring himself and his shipmates safely home

An Athenian mariner s first stop outside the gates of the Navy Yard was likely to be the barbershop. In
Athens haircuts and hairstyles had social and political implications. Aristocratic horsemen still wore long
braids and gold hairpins. The common man (and the politicians who spoke for him) preferred a short
c t, though not quite a crewcut…. From the barbershop the Athenian mariner emerged neatly trimmed
and fully up to date. Flush with pay, he was now ready to plunge into the roiling marketplace of the
irae s, located just beyond the perimeter of the shipsheds at Zea Harbor. Here the returning mariner
could indulge in the luxuries that had been denied him during months of hard service with the fleet
The food vendors provided fare fit for the Great King himself. An Athenian feast could include salt fish
from the Black Sea, beef ribs from Thessaly, pork and cheese from Syracuse in Sicily, dates from
oenicia, raisins and figs from Rhodes, pears and apples from Euboea, almonds from Na os, and
chestnuts from Asia Minor

As the role of the navy and maritime trade expanded, the Piraeus became a great city in its own right.
To create a home worthy of the Athenian navy, the Assembly hired the world’s first professional urban
anner, Hippodamus of Miletus…. o mere surveyor of streets, Hippodamus was in fact a utopian
theorist. His quest led him in search of a physical setting for the perfect human community: social,
s atia , and spiritual…. In his ideal city the population would be divided into three classes: craftsmen,
farmers, and warriors. Land should also have its tripartite division: sacred, public, and private…

i odam s assignment was described as dividing or cutting up the Piraeus. First he chose as his axis
the long saddle of land that ran from the foot of Munychia Hill, the acropolis of the Piraeus, southwest
to the Akte Hill and the quarries. On either side of this central spine Hippodamus marked out the
boundaries of the sacred, public, and private areas…. In the center was the Agora, with its own co ncil
house and public offices. On the expanse of level ground north of Zea Harbor Hippodamus laid out this
civic center, ever after known as the Hippodamian Agora. Near the edge of Zea Harbor the Agora
widened out into an open area where the crews of triremes could assemble at the start of a naval
e edition

Uniformity of housing reinforced the message of democracy and equality. Hippodamus divided each
residential city block among eight dwellings, all of which were only variations on a uniform “Piraeus
house.” The long and narrow lots, 40 feet by 70 feet, accommodated in one half a flagged courtyard
equipped with outdoor ovens and a deep bell shaped cistern to provide the household’s water. The
house itself included a family room with a hearth, with bedrooms on an upper floor above it. No one in
the Piraeus was ever very far from the water. Thanks to the sloping terrain, the houses rose in tiers like

: cer t from a e, o n ords of t e sea: T e e ic stor of t e


t enian nav and t e irt of democrac eng in,
Page 2 of 2
the seats in a theater. Almost every roof or upper story commanded a view down to the nearest harbor
and out to the blue sea beyond

In the maritime world of the Piraeus a happy tolerance reigned among all religions, and the idea of
killing a man for worshipping the wrong god was unknown…. So popular were the foreign festivals that
Athenians often walked the four miles down to the Piraeus to watch some new and exciting celebration
in the streets.

The democratic spirit of Athens and its navy found its fullest embodiment in the sacred trireme
Paralos…. Ardent democrats to a man, the crew of the Paralos opposed any proposals that smacked of
oligarchy or tyranny…. The Paralos took on the role of the flagship for the entire navy. At times the
Paralos served as a ship of war, but it also carried important dispatches, conveyed embassies on
di omatic missions, provided scouting reports to the rest of the navy, or served as a sacred ship to take
priests and celebrants to rites and festivals overseas. Every four years the ship transported the city’s
Olympic athletes and their entourage around the Peloponnese to Olympia for the prestigious games
celebrated in honor of Zeus…. Every member of the Paralos’ crew was an Athenian citizen. The ship had
no trierarch: the democratic crew was in command….

The experiment in democracy ensured that the fruits of naval victories were shared by all Athenians,
transforming the life of even the poorest citizen. The age of the common man had dawned. For the first
time anywhere on earth, a mass of ordinary citizens, independent of monarchs or aristocrats or religious
eaders, was guiding the destiny of a great state.

: cer t from a e, o n ords of t e sea: T e e ic stor of t e


t enian nav and t e irt of democrac eng in,
Document 3B

Gods.
Resolved by the Boule and the People.
Themistocles son of Neocles of Phrearrhioi made the motion.

The city shall be entrusted to Athena, t ens' protectress, and to the other gods, all of them, for
protection and defense against the Barbarian on behalf of the country.

The Athenians in their entirety and the aliens who live in Athens shall place their children and their
omen in Troe en, [to be entrusted to Theseus?] the founder of the land. The elderly and movable
property shall for safety be deposited at a amis. The treasurers and the priestesses are to remain on
the Acropolis and guard the possessions of the gods.

T e rest of the Athenians in their entirety and those aliens who have reached young manhood shall
embark on the readied two hundred ships and they shall repulse the Barbarian for the sake of liberty,
both their own and that of the other Greeks, in common with the Lacedaemonians, Corinthians,
Aeginetans and the others who wish to have a share in the danger.

ointment i a so e made of ca tains, t o ndred in n m er, one for eac s i , t e genera s,


eginning tomorro , from t ose o are o ners of ot and and ome in t ens and o ave
c i dren o are egitimate T e s a not e more t an fift ears o d and t e ot s a determine eac
man s s i T e genera s s a a so en ist marines, ten for eac s i , from men over t ent ears of age
to t irt , and arc ers, fo r in n m er T e s a a so ot a oint t e s ecia ist officers for eac
s i en t e a oint t e ca tains ot ist s a e made a so of t e ro ers, s i s i , t e
genera s, on notice oards, it t e t enians to e se ected from t e e iarc ic registers, t e a iens
from t e ist of names registered it t e o emarc T e s a rite t em , assigning t em
divisions, to t o ndred divisions, eac of to one ndred ro ers, and t e s a a end to
eac division t e name of t e ars i and t e ca tain and t e s ecia ist officers, so t at t e ma
kno on at ars i eac division s a em ark

en assignment of a t e divisions as een made and t e ave een a otted to t e ars i s, a


t e t o ndred s a e manned order of t e o e and t e genera s, after t e ave sacrificed to
a ease e s t e o erf and t ena and ictor and oseidon t e ec rer en t e ave
com eted t e manning of t e s i s, it one ndred t e s a ring assistance to t e rtemisi m in
oea, i e t e ot er ndred s a , a aro nd a amis and t e rest of ttica, ie at anc or and g ard
t e co ntr

To ens re t at in a s irit of concord a t enians i ard off t e ar arian, t ose anis ed for t e ten
ear s an s a eave for a amis and t e are to remain t ere nti t e eo e decide a o t t em
T ose o ave een de rived of citi en rig ts are to ave t eir rig ts restored
trans ated ar es Fornara, Trans ated doc ments of Greece and ome, vo me one: rc aic times
to t e end of t e e o onnesian ar a timore and ondon
: endering, ona T e Troe en Decree ivi s org: rtic es on ancient istor g st ,
ccessed an ar , tt : ivi s org so rces content t e troe en decree
Document 3C

T e Gods.

Resolved by the Council and the People on the motion of Themistokles, son of Neokles, of the deme
Phrearrhoi: to entrust the city to Athena the Mistress of Athens and to all the other gods to guard and
defend from the Barbarian for the sake of the land. The Athenians themselves and the foreigners who
live in Athens are to remove their women and children to Troizen . . . the archegetes of the land. . . . The
old men and the movable possessions are to be removed to Salamis. The treasurers and the priestesses
are to remain on the acropolis protecting the possessions of the gods.

All the other Athenians and foreigners of military age are to embark on the 200 ships that lie ready and
defend against the Barbarian for the sake of their own freedom and that of the rest of the Greeks, along
with the Lakedaimonians, the Corinthians, the Aiginetans, and all others who wish to share the danger.
The generals are to appoint, starting tomorrow, 200 trierarchs, one to a ship, from among those who
ave ancestra and in t ens and egitimate c i dren and o are not o der t an fift to t ese men t e
s i s are to e assigned ot T e are a so to en ist marines, to a s i , from men et een t e ages
of t ent and t irt , and fo r arc ers to a s i T e are a so to assign t e ett officers to t e s i s at
t e same time t at t e a ot t e trierarc s

T e genera s are a so to rite t e names of t e cre s of t e s i s on ite oards, taking t e names


of t e t enians from t e e iarc ic registers, t e foreigners from t ose registered it t e o emarc
T e are to rite t e names assigning t e o e n m er to e a divisions and to rite a ove
eac division t e name of t e trireme and trierarc and t e names of t e ett officers so t at eac
division ma kno on ic trireme it is to em ark en a t e divisions ave een com osed and
a otted to t e triremes, t e o nci and t e genera s are to com ete t e manning of t e s i s,
after sacrificing a acator offering to e s t e mig t , t ena, ictor , and oseidon t e ec rer
en t e manning of t e s i s as een com eted, it one ndred of t em t e are to meet t e
enem at rtemision in oia, and it t e ot er ndred of t em t e are to ie off a amis and t e
rest of ttika and kee g ard over t e and

n order t at a t enians ma e nited in t eir defense against t e ar arian, t ose o ave een
sent into e i e for ten ears are to go to a amis and to sta t ere nti t e eo e come to some
decision a o t t em, i e t ose o ave een de rived of citi en rig ts

SOURCE: Jameson, Michael H. "A Decree of Themistokles from Troizen." American School of Classical
Studies at Athens. Accessed January 2, 2017.
http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147294.pdf.
Document 3D

SOURCE: Μαρσύας. "Decree of Themistocles (or Troezen)." Ancient History Encyclopedia. March 20,
2014. Accessed January 02, 2017. http://www.ancient.eu/image/2419/.
Document 4A

SOURCE: From Hale, John R. Lords of the sea: The epic story of the Athenian navy and the birth of
democracy. Penguin, 2009.
Document 4B

The demise of Spartan power had abruptly knocked away the cornerstone on which the Second
Maritime League had been founded. The charter of the alliance proclaimed the league’s purpose: to
protect the allies from Spartan aggression. Why then should it continue to exist after the fall of Sparta?
Pericles had managed to keep the Delian League together even after concluding peace with the Great
ing. Now the Athenians of a later generation decided to hold on to their naval hegemony with or
without a Spartan menace to justify it. Fortunately for them, marauding fleets of pirates or Thessalians
or Thebans almost annually stirred up trouble in the Aegean. The raids endangered trade and shipments
of grain and thus obligingly provided Athens with a pretext for maintaining the league. As so often
happens in empire building, an apparent enemy proved a valuable friend.

The allies were still haunted by the specter of the old oppressive Athenian Empire, with its imperial
tribute and bloody massacres. Despite the Assembly’s original pledge to promote liberty and justice, it
was drifting in the direction of empire once more. Ignoring the league’s charter, the Athenians installed
governors and garrisons in certain cities and islands, just as in the bad old days. Because the Assembly
contin ed to send expeditions to sea with insufficient funds to pay the crews, Athenian generals had to
raid the territories of neutrals and even allies. Blatantly Athenians interfered in the internal politics of
other states and increasingly employed the navy on missions that had nothing to do with the league.

This rising tide of abuses almost washed out the benefits that the league still provided to its members
and to the Greeks at large….

SOURCE: Excerpt from Hale, John R. Lords of the sea: The epic story of the Athenian navy and the birth
of democracy. Penguin, 2009.
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY – INTRODUCTION TO THE TRIREME

Watch: IEEE REACH Video: Triremes Video (Part One)


If time, Watch: Triremes Video (Part Two) (Students may watch these videos at home.)
Option 2: atc video on t d com sign re ired

Introduction
“Time and winter rains have washed the original gaudy colors of scarlet, azure, and gold off the
Parthenon. Passing centuries have also washed the blood and guts, sweat and struggle, from the
modern conception of Athens. In losing sight of the Athenian navy, posterity has overlooked the
vital propulsive force behind the monuments. A living sea creature, all muscle and appetite and
growth, generated the glistening shell of inspiring art, literature and political ideas. Today we admire
the shell for its beauty, but it cannot be fully understood without charting the life cycle of the animal
that generated it. The beat of the oars was the heartbeat of Athens in the city’s Golden Age. This,
then, is the story of unique and gigantic marine organism, the Athenian navy, that built civilization,
empowered the world’s first great democracy, and led a band of ordinary citizens into new worlds.
Their epic voyage alter the course of history (John R. Hale’s Lords of the Sea, p XXXIII).”

According to the above passage, what TWO key things did the trireme symbolize?
a.

b.

What is a Trireme? (Please watch the Trireme video and describe a trireme in one original paragraph.)

3 tiered trireme: yes those are


Olympias: reproduction of a The bronze ram of the
people in the hull on
trireme trireme
the bottom right
2
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY – TRIREME DESIGN

Trireme Design:
Understanding the Math and Science of Flotation

View Algodoo's video to lea n t e ole densit la s in lotation

Foam Core Vessel Design: Follow the instructions in the Trireme Hands-on
Activity PPT Feel free to use a calculator.

Sketch your vessel. Include sizes and buoyancy calculations on the next page.

idea #1

idea#2

3
Calculations Worksheet

Volume in cu inches (L x W x H) =

Volume in cu feet (cu / 1728) =

Pounds of water displaced (vol x 64) =

Mass of vessel =

Convert grams to lbs (g/453.6) =

Determine Load (water displaced - weight of vessel) =

4
emergence of the Athenian democracy and empire. You and
your design team will:
a. design, build and test a vessel
b. simulate the skill and strength of an oarsman
CLASSROOM
c. analyze the impact of the triremeACTIVITY
on Athenian–history
BUILDING YOUR VESSEL

When engaging in the IEEE REACH hands-on activities contemplated in the IEEE REACH lesson plans please proceed
with caution and use all reasonable safety measures. All IEEE REACH hands-on activities are designed for classroom
use only, with supervision by a teacher or an adult educator. Please be advised that IEEE shall not be responsible for
any injuries or damages related to the use of these lesson plans or any activities described herein.

Review Trireme Hands-on Activity PPT


Review Triremes Hands-on Activity "How to" PDF

Building your Vessel


1. If you have access to the Battle of Salamis app, open it to begin this step. Swipe to the left and click
on “The Trireme”; then click on the button in the top right corner and look at the directions as it
loads. Take a moment and use the 3D graphic to explore the construction of this amazing vessel.
Although we are not actually constructing a trireme, you should note both the complexity and
simplicity of this design before you begin to study the math and science behind floatation and start
to make your own vessel.
2. Meet with your design team and examine your sketches and design plans. Choose ONE design that
you believe will give you maximum speed and cargo weight. In this team competition, the winners’
vessel will carry the heaviest load and attain the highest speed.
3. Build your vessel using foam board, duct tape, and an exacto knife. Remember a paper clip needs
to be attached to the front for testing.
4. Bring your vessel to the “testing tank.” One team member should hold the vessel while another
places the weights inside. Remember to periodically let go to see if it still floats. As soon as it starts
taking on water, you have reached your max. Consider shifting the load and spreading out the
weight to maximize the results of your test.

Testing Results:
Success? Yes?___No?___ Why or why not? __________________________________

Load capacity:__________________ Maximum Speed:_____________________

Now after your first test add the ram and test again:
How did this impact your results? Why?
5
Evaluation Worksheet

1. Did your product come out as planned. If no, what did you
change?

2. What was the difference between your estimated load and actual
load?

3. Why do you think this difference exists?

4. If you could go back and rebuild this prototype, what changes


would you make for improved performance and aesthetics?

5. Knowing what you do about the Athenian trireme and having


experienced real-world design and execution, what have you learned
about the complexity and sophistication of their vessels?

6. What do you think were the design elements that made the Greek
Trireme such a formidable force?

6
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY – OARSMEN SIMULATION
When engaging in the IEEE REACH hands-on activities contemplated in the IEEE REACH lesson plans please proceed
with caution and use all reasonable safety measures. All IEEE REACH hands-on activities are designed for classroom use
only, with supervision by a teacher or an adult educator. Please be advised that IEEE shall not be responsible for any
injuries or damages related to the use of these lesson plans or any activities described herein.

ands on Activity for how to build an oar sim ator


Oarsmen Simulation
John R. Hale, in his book, Lords of the Sea said, “the beat of the oars was the heartbeat of
Athens in the city’s Golden Age”. As you have discovered,
the power of the Trireme lies with the men who row.
Rowing required tremendous strength, skill and stamina.

Now you and your teammates will step back in time, take
a seat at the simulator and suspend reality. Grab the oars
and pretend you are rowing for the glory and power of
Athens! Behold the power of the Athenian oarsman!
`
First your rowing lesson:
Please take a look at the image. Notice the form and
positioning of the oars. Here are some key terms so
that you understand the motion:

Catch - The beginning of the rowing stroke where the


oar blade is set in the water.

Drive - The part of the stroke where the blade is pulled through the water.

Finish - The final part of the stroke where the blade comes out of the water.

Release - Pushing down on the handle to raise the blade out of the water at the end of the
stroke to begin the recovery.

Recovery - The part of the stroke where the rower comes slowly up the slide to return to the
catch.

Watch the Triremes Olympias video


Please watch from the beginning to about 1:20 minutes. This video documents the
construction and sailing of the Olympias, a full-scale working replica of the legendary 170-
oared Athenian trireme of the 5th century B.C. The ship is the fastest human-powered vessel
on the planet. While you watch, pay attention to the movements

Now it’s your turn!


a. Sit down all facing the same direction.
b. Take an oar and bring it across your lap.
c. Follow the motion of catch, drive, finish, release, recovery and remember you need to be
in sync. You may even want to play the rowing segment of the video so you can hear the
beat! The Whumff! Whroosh!

Reflection: Now that you have tried it, (without water, chaos of actual battle, and for
an entire day) Do you think the oarsman deserve their honored status? Why?

7
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY – TRIREMES OF ATLANTIS

Triremes of Atlantis
In one day and night of terror all your fighting men were swallowed up by
the earth, just as the island of Atlantis was swallowed up by the sea and
disappeared.” -Plato

According, to Hale and some others; there is no real Atlantis but in fact Plato’s story
about this lost society is actually Athens. Hale says that Plato, the dominant figure in
what some call the Age of Reason. Plato uses his discussions of Atlantis as an
allegory (a symbolic tale to teach a lesson) about what he sees as the defining
component of Athenian politics and history - sea rule (thalassocracy).

Read the quotes from Plato and answer the question that follows.

-Plato says of those great leaders like Themistocles and Pericles, “Yes, they say these
men made our great city. They never realize that it is now swollen and infected
because of these statesmen of former days, who paid no heed to discipline and
justice. Instead, they filled our city with harbors and navy yards and walls and tribute
and such-like trash.” (Hale, p. 269)

“They appeared glorious and blessed to those who could not recognize true
happiness. Yet at the very same time they were in fact full of greed and unrighteous
power.” (Hale, p 275)

Based on the quotes above and what you know about Athenian history, how
does Plato feel about heroes and Athens? Do you think this view is justified?
Why or why not (think about the concept of a hero)?

12

You might also like