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Greek Mythology: Women in Greek Life
Examining the way in which women were depicted in classic Greek mythology. -- 1,025 words; MLA

Ancient Greek Theater
A paper on ancient Greek drama, the Greek theater and ancient Greek playwrights. -- 2,413 words; MLA

Who Are the Greeks Today?
A look at the Greek-American experience, including their successes, challenges they've overcome and prominent Americans with Greek heritage. -- 2,339 words; MLA

“Literature; Ancient Greek Literature”
A discussion of the relationship between ancient Greek burial and death rites and ancient Greek literature. -- 1,409 words; MLA

Greek Culture
A study of Greek culture and how it's been influenced by the Orthodox church and ancient Greek history. -- 1,800 words;

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GREEKS

People from all different regions of the earth talk about "the Greek miracle." A period in
time when a new outlook on the world came about. A common phrase in used to describe this
"Old things are passed away; behold all things are become new"(Hamilton 78). Why it
happened, or when, people have no idea. The only conclusion people can make from this
would be a new point of view dawned; new ideas were brought forth never thought of before
them. With this new miracle mankind became the center of the universe the most important
thing it(Osborne134). " In Greece man first realized what mankind was"
People do not know when Greek dramas and myths were first told in their present shape,
but whenever it was primitive life had been left far behind". 
The stories we read tell us what the people of ancient Greece thought about their world.
They believed there were many Gods and that those Gods controlled the universe. For
example, Zeus, the greatest god, was in charge of the weather, thunder and lighting. When
it thundered, the ancient Greeks thought Zeus was at work. 
The ancient Greeks believed that all of nature- trees and mountains and rivers and rocks,
either was or contained gods and goddesses. Many stories explained nature. If the pattern
of particular stars in the sky looked like a horse, people told a story about a bull that
had been placed in the sky long before. An example of this would be when the Greeks were
unaware of the tilting of the earth and it rotation, so Greeks came up with another
explanation of why the seasons change. The story of Demeter and Persephone filled this
particular gap. In the case of Demeter and Persephone, a story about a mother's grief
over her missing daughter satisfies not only the scientific question but also your
curiosity. 
The ancient Greeks also believed that the gods and goddesses were not very different from
human beings, they were just like another family. Zeus was the father, and Hera queen of
gods, women marriage and childbirth was the mother. Mount Olympus home of the gods seem
to modern day and ancient theater were a large cast of characters preformed drama. The
Greeks though, believed that these characters really existed and influenced human lives.
Often myths talk about how gods even married human beings and became the fathers and
mothers of humans. An example would be Zeus and Leda how produced Helen, one of the
ancient world's greatest beauties the persons who abduction triggered the Trojan War. 
The Greeks were a deeply religious people with many of their myths serving a religious
function. Most of the time it had an obvious consequence that showed the Greek's concerns
with the nature and actions of the gods and the way they relate to the human race. Nearly
every aspect in nature and human life fell under the category of one or more gods or
goddesses. When Greeks offered up sacrifices to the gods, they burned the bones of the
slaughtered animals while saving the meat for themselves. They practiced this religious
rite from the myth of the first sacrifice. When Prometheus reserved the meat for humans
and gave the gods the bones and fat. Some myths led to the development of particular
religious rituals and practices. Some even gave rise to the birth of cults. The myth of
Demeter, and the importance of the goddesses of the harvest in the day-to-day lives of
the ancients gave rise to Eleusinian- a mystery religion. Mystery religions were secret
cults in both Greece and Rome that offered religious experiences that the more
established, officially sanctioned religious practices could not offer. The Dionysian
cults, the Orphic cults, and the Eleusinian Mysteries were all mystery religions in
ancient Greece. People in theses secret cults would seek spiritual fulfillment through
mysterious ceremonies, rituals, religious feats and dances. Activities that would
strengthen the bonds within the cult (Osborn 78). 
Each Greek city was normally under the protection of one or more individual gods who were
worshipped with special emphasis, as, for example, Athens and the goddess Athena. While
many sanctuaries honored more than a single god, usually one god such as Zeus at Olympia
or a closely linked pair of gods like Demeter and her daughter Persephone at Eleusis
dominated the cult place. Elsewhere in the arts, various painted scenes on vases, and
stone, terracotta and bronze sculptures portray the major gods and goddesses. The gods
are depicted either by themselves or in traditional mythological situations in which they
interact with humans, gods and legendary characters. 
They worshipped many gods whom they believed appeared in human form and yet were capable
of superhuman strength and never-ending beauty. The Iliad and the Odyssey, our earliest
surviving examples of Greek literature, record men's interactions with these various gods
and goddesses whose characters and appearances underwent little change in the centuries
that followed. The Greeks attributed these epic narratives to Homer. Know body really
knows just when Homer lived but people believe that his parents were Greek and that he
lived and wrote in "Ionia". Also that he might or might not of been blind(Pearson 97). 

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