Burns
Avatar of War Slayer
The traditional definition of Culture:What? You know "medieval" Greek is perfectly readable and understandable by modern Greeks right? The religion is also identical. You think all that was snuffed out just because the new rulers became Ottomans? The opposite, and Greek princes and patriarchs were given authority and rule over other Orthodox (Bulgarian, Romanian, etc) subjects in the Ottoman Empire. Very little changed.
You'd have to define what you mean by "culture". If there is any culture that we can claim to be continuous throughout the centuries, it would be Greek. Israeli jews can't even read the majority of "Jewish" medieval work, because its in a Germanic language and their "real" (Hebrew) language had to be artificially resurrected into a living language again......... I'm willing to bet there has been more religious change in Jews over these past 2k years than the Greeks.
- the beliefs, customs, arts, etc. of a particular social group, place, or time
- a particular society that has its own characteristic features of everyday existence (as pastimes or a way of life)
To clarify, I didn't mean Ancient Greek culture died on the exact date they capitulated to the Romans nor when Eastern Romans capitulated to the Turks, but instead it would usher in changes that the new dominate culture (of the ruling class) would naturally impose as they ruled the minority party (Greeks in the Ottoman empire). In the case of the Turks, being under the thumb of not only a foreign power, but a foreign religion is going to cause people to conform in at least some ways, in order to get along. After enough time, those changes become part of that culture.
Another huge break culturally, that can easily be pointed to is the Christianization of the Roman empire and the backlash of Julian trying to restore polytheism. Over the course of 50 or so years everything would have probably changed drastically.
To circle back around, when people talk about ancient Greece being the foundation of western civilization it means exactly that. It's the single largest influence on what we call Western Civilization today. It's still just a link in the chain; the largest link, but a link all the same (which has absolutely nothing to do with modern Greek culture).
That said, ancient Greek culture certainly influenced all cultures that Alexander touched as well. Although seemingly less than the west, in no small part due to the European Renaissance injecting ancient Greek culture/philosophy back into the primary cultures of the various nations of the time (while the near east was stuck in the quagmire that is Islam).

