Greek Religion Packet FQ: Where can we find allusions to Greek mythology today? Allusions in Myth AND History

Similar documents
Introduction to Greek Mythology. Gender Unit Mod. Humanities/Grad. Project

Platt and Maloney High Schools 9 th Grade Summer Reading Requirement 2012

MYTHOLOGY: TIMELESS TALES OF GODS & HEROES. Chapters 2-4

Greek & Roman Mythology. Jenny Anderson & Andrea Rake

Sisyphus Crimes and Punishment Greek Mythology

AN INTRODUCTION TO GREEK MYTHOLOGY

* The Dark Age of Greece ( B.C.) By the end of the 12 th century B.C. the Mycenaean's had vanished and Greece entered an undocumented dark age

Unit 3, Part 3 Arachne

AP Reading Guide for summer assignments. Edith Hamilton s Mythology

Pine Castle Christian Academy 7101 Lake Ellenor Dr., Orlando, FL (407) 313-PCCA (7222)

The rest of the Olympians were children of Zeus.

The following is a student's rough draft of a myth. Read the draft then answer the following questions. ARACHNE The First Spider


The Gods and Goddesses of Olympus

Olympians. In Ancient Greece the Greeks would create stories of gods that they believe to have created

Origins homework Knowledge Organiser

In the Beginning: Hesiod s Creation Story. Ch. 3

A Fresh Look at Its Importance and Reality

Unit 1 Guided Notes The Epic and Epic Heroes

Dear Incoming Students,

Mission Briefing: The Children of Perikoi

AP English Literature and

The Lightning Thief:

Palmview High School

HONORS FRESHMAN ENGLISH

Tracy Krauss. Norman Maine Publishing

An archetype can be thought of as a super symbol and can take on many forms:

Name: Date Received: Quarter 1. Unit 2 : ELA packet A. Lessons **Lessons MUST BE COMPLETED ON A DAILY BASIS**

Dear Incoming Students,

Myths are stories that reveal important questions about birth and death, love and hate, hardship and justice. Mythology is the study of these stories

10 th Honors World Literature Mythology Background Information

PUBLISHER S NOTE. xiii

CLAS 170: Greek and Roman Mythology Summer Session II, 2015 Course Syllabus

Demeter and Persephone

(c) Sisyphus Imagined

Roman journeys Museum and school project. Storytelling and object handling at your school. Storytelling at the Museum of London

Lost Goddesses Of Early Greece: A Collection Of Pre- Hellenic Myths By Charlene Spretnak

Greek Religion/Philosophy Background Founder biography Sacred Texts

The Everything Classical Mythology Book: Greek And Roman Gods, Goddesses, Heroes, And Monsters From Ares To Zeus By Lesley Bolton READ ONLINE

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. LitPlan Teacher Pack for Mythology based on the book by Edith Hamilton

The Great Mother by Rev. Don Garrett Delivered May 13, 2012 The Unitarian Universalist Church of the Lehigh Valley

Subject: Social Studies

Copyright 2008 Carole Marsh/ Gallopade International All rights reserved. First Edition Ebook edition Copyright 2011

Myth for a day. Ancient Greece Speech project. Name: Due: Dear Student,

Entrance. The dead had to discover the cave and follow the path inside.

Allusion Notebook. Source Citation: Dumas, Alexandre. The Three Musketeers. Trans. Lowell Bair. New York: Bantam Dell, 1984.

Greek God Interview Magazine Article

Three Questions: The Vanities of Homer. Anna Cooper. awe, oddly mingled with disgust. As I stare at the cover of the book, thoughts in my mind begin

AP English Literature and Composition Summer Reading Assignment Ms. Wayne

By Margie Sigman. Scott Foresman Reading Street 3.6.5

Illustrated by Karen Birchak

Session 6. The Day of the Lord. Download PDF File

2. MYTH OF PROMETHEUS

Hercules. Characters:

PREFACE. Conditions and Terms of Use. Copyright Heritage History 2009 Some rights reserved

Matthew 25: For it is as if a man, going on a journey, summoned his slaves and entrusted his

2008 LOUISIANA STATE JCL CONVENTION

If you finish early Work on your cheat sheet or study

Finally, with the possible gift of immortality coming their way, all the heroes decide to run a mile. Who wants to live forever? they all declare.

We Become What We Worship. 2 Peter 1: 3-4 and Psalm 115: 8. Lifepath Church. November 6, 2016

Psyche: Your daughter's fever has broken but make sure she gets plenty of rest for the next 2 days.

Welcome to the Worship Celebration of

This is a dedication page.

UNIT 5. The myths we live by

Fate in Homer's Iliad. Fate in Homer's Iliad

1 MODERN SCIENTIFIC ORIGIN STORY 1070L

3. What influence do you believe had the mountain relief on the political independence of the poleis? 4. What is a polis? Give some examples.

A sarcophagus (carved stone coffin) depicting Prometheus bringing his created men to life (Louvre Museum. 200s CE). 2. The establishment of sacrifice

FILE MYTHOLOGY STUDY PART LIST EBOOK

Indiana Academic Super Bowl. English Round. Junior Division - Coaches Practice A Program of the Indiana Association of School Principals

Lecture 4 In our last meeting, we were discussing the pros and cons of the anthropomorphic conception of deity. If you'll recall from our last

Write Your Own Greek Myth

Other traveling poets (called rhapsodes) memorized and recited these epics in the banquet halls of kings and noble families.

goddess of legend 9FAF58E973A237E2C104D8C55D407A30 Goddess Of Legend 1 / 7

English 12 HONORS Summer Assignment- M. Reider

Mythology Trilogy Greek Mythology Norse Mythology Egyptian Mythology Gods Myths Legends Mythology

Mythology. Need to access completely for Ebook PDF mythology

The Repression of Percy Jackson in the Lightning Thief Novel (2005) Merry Rullyanti and Ice Inda Rukmana University of Dehasen Bengkulu

The Culture of Classical Greece

Victoria ISD 7 th Grade Pre-AP English 2017 Summer Reading Assignment

Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows.

Revelation. Revelation. Judgment Cycle (6 20) Judgment Cycle (6 20) LIterary Structure: Dragon Cycle (12 20) LIterary Structure: Dragon Cycle (12 20)

" <^. 01/1/ CUR SCHOLASTIC SCOPE DECEMBER 2013

The Story of a Kingdom Chapter 1

Please read the handout carefully and do not hesitate to contact us with any questions you might have along the way.

Point of View and Voice

Part One Multiple-Choice Terminology

How were the governments of Athens and Sparta different?

GREEK GODS GODDESSES COLORING BOOK

Faith and Culture in the Ancient Near East Wonders of Arabia

MATRIX REVOLUTIONS COMMENTARY

Exploring the Background: The Context of ROMANS

Malachi. This is a message from the Lord to Israel. God used Malachi to tell this message to the people.

*SEMESTER FINAL REVIEW *ENGLISH *2014

of geese flying south. After a moment searching for the familiar v-formation, I

GRADE 8: MODULE 2B: UNIT 2: LESSON 9. Mid-Unit 2 Assessment: Analyzing Narrative Structure and Author s Craft: Part 1. Name: Date:

The Myth Continues in Percy Jackson: A look into mythology and its persistence today

PERSEPHONE RULES! Adventures of a Teenage Goddess

The Kronia. 12 Hekatombaion

Gods and Heroes of the Ancient World. Series editor Susan Deacy Roehampton University

Transcription:

Name: KEY Period: Date: World History Mrs. Schenck Greek Religion Packet FQ: Where can we find allusions to Greek mythology today? Allusions in Myth AND History Why should we study Greek gods and religion? Because they are everywhere in the form of ALLUSIONS!! ALLUSION: a reference to some piece of knowledge (in this case mythology) that the reader is expected to know and understand NOT an Illusion: something that deceives by creating a false/misleading impression of reality Example of an ALLUSION: The Seahawks super bowl loss finally showed their team s Achilles heel to be the lack of a running game. o You are expected to know that Achilles heel refers to a weakness based on the Greek myth that Achilles mother dipped him in the river Styx, making him immortal except for his heel, which she held to dip him in the waters. List some other allusions to Greek mythology from the examples in class they are everywhere! o Venus Razor Venus is the Roman name for the goddess Aphrodite. If you know that Venus was the goddess of beauty, you can better understand the ad campaign that sells razors to women who want to be beautiful like the goddess, Venus.

GREEK CREATION MYTH 1. Summarize the key events in the Greek creation myth: Gaia, the Earth mother, and Uranus, the sky god, were the first couple and had many monster children and gods. Uranus was cruel, and Gaia gave her son Kronos a sickle to kill him. Kronos and Rhea created the first men and other gods. Fearful of being overthrown like his father, Kronos ate his children. Rhea tricked Kronos, and his one son Zeus survived to overthrow Kronos and create the next ages of men. 2. What big questions or natural events did the creation myth help ancient Greeks understand? Where do humans come from and what is their purpose? How was the Earth and its landforms created? Etc. 3. What similarities/difference do you see to other creation myths we have read so far: Similarities: Earth began in darkness and chaos, gods create humans, etc. Differences: there were four different ages of men created, father killing gods complex, etc. 4. Why do you think these key similarities exist? Ancient people used myth/stories to explain the world around them. The Greeks would have traded with and been influenced by other civilizations too. If you imagine how you would explain the natural world without the scientific knowledge we have today, you would probably see some of the same things the ancients did. 5. Did you think of any other allusions after reading the myth? Uranus god of the sky has a planet in space named after him, etc. On the following page, identify the god with their Greek and Roman name, job, and an important symbol.

Poseidon/Neptune: God of the sea, trident Zeus/Jupiter: King of the gods, lightning bolts Hera/Juno: queen of the gods, peacock Ares/Mars: God of war, skull/spear Artemis/Diana: Goddess of moon/women/hunters, silver arrows Hermes/Mercury: Messenger god, winged sandals/hat Demeter/Ceres: Goddess of grain/agriculture, wheat Haphaestos/Vulcan: God of craftsmen, hammer/anvil Aphrodite/Venus: Goddess of love and beauty, seashells/roses/doves Dionysus/Bacchus: God of wine/parties, Cup/vine Apollo: God of sun/music/ science/etc., laurel tree/lyre Athena/Minerva: Goddess of wisdom and war, owl/olive branch

Greek Myths FQs: What is human nature? How are the Greek gods like us? With your group, read the myth you were given and complete your story in the chart. Firebringer (Prometheus) Plot Summary Theme Allusions Prometheus steals fire from the gods and is punished by Zeus. Do what s right even when it s hard. promethean = creative, boldly, original, etc. Pandora Pandora opens a box she was forbidden to open and let s all evil out into the world. Hope endures, don t go looking for trouble, do as you re told opening Pandora s box = situation where you get yourself into more trouble Arachne Arachne challenges Athena to a weaving contest and her pride causes Athena to turn her into a spider. Pride is dangerous, vanity is a bad trait, humility is important arachnophobia = fear of spiders Sisyphus Sisyphus tries to hide from death and is punished by Zeus and Hades. You can t cheat death. sisyphean = endless, tortuous task Echo and Narcissus Echo is punished for her endless talking and Narcissus for his vanity. Self-interest is harmful, vanity is a dangerous trait echo = reverberating sound, narcissistic = self-love, vanity, arrogant Join the other groups and complete the chart and the final discussion questions here. How does myth explain nature? How humans got fire, where spiders come from, origin of echoes, etc. How does myth explain human nature? Humans are vain, full of pride, think they re smarter than the gods, can cheat death, etc.

Pre-Writing Organizer Question: Explain the theme the author is trying to convey in your Greek myth. Answer - Theme: Claim: Claim: Example Direct Quote : Example Direct Quote :

FQ: Where can we find allusions to Greek mythology today?

Hades/Pluto: God of the Underworld, Cerberus (three headed dog)