Reputation Management

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Alexander the Great: His Empire and its Impact World History I Mr. Swartz.
Advertisements

Alexander the Great. Outline Introduction Introduction Part I. His life Part I. His life a. His family a. His family b. Accession to the throne b. Accession.
PAGES People warned Athens of Philip II, the king of Macedonia. They warned that he was never satisfied and always wanted more. Athens acted.
THE LEGACY OF ALEXANDER
Holt McDougal, Why did Egypt Decline? After Ramses II died, pharaohs fought costly wars. Armies from the Eastern Mediterranean attacked Egypt Libyans conquered.
West African Trading Kingdoms
 Greece was weakened by the ongoing fighting among the city-states.
ANCIENT CHINA Prepared by Anita Billeter Palmdale School District with funding from Jordan Fundamentals Grant Keeping History Alive Grant.
TERMS: Dynasty Monarchy Hieroglyphics.
Quis Erat Cleopatra? Latin IV Culture/Reading Lesson.
Do Now ▪What were the causes of the Peloponnesian War? ▪Who had the advantage on land? ▪Who had the advantage by sea? ▪Who won the war? ▪What were the.
Chapter 5 Lesson 3 Egypt’s Empire.
The Three Kingdoms of Egypt
Who is Philip Of Macedonia? Objective: Using this power point You will complete the blanks and be able to identify where Philip II Is from and how he.
Ancient Egypt The Egyptian Empire Chapter 2 Section 3.
Alexander “the Great”? Was he great? Does it depend who you ask? CHW3M Metropolitan Museum. Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Stater with Head of Alexander.
Alexander the Great Son of Phillip II, the king of Macedonia, who had conquered Greece Alexander conquered the Persians and established an empire from.
The Rulers of Egypt p I. Egyptian Kingship A. Pharaohs: kings of ancient Egypt, usually, though not always men B. Egypt ruled by dynasties for hundreds.
Backgrounds for Egyptian poetry Taken from our text The Language of Literature Pages 20-21,
Historical Timeline. TERMS: Dynasty Monarchy Hieroglyphics.
Chapter 4 Section 5 Alexander and the Hellenistic Era Who joined with Alexander the Great to form the Hellenistic Society? Macedonians Invade Greece How.
Greece’s Geography Located in Southeast Europe
Ancient Greece and Rome
Chapter 10 “The Kingdom of Kush”
The Fall of Greece and Alexander the Great
Rulers of Ancient Egypt
Chapter 4.1 First Age of Empires
Alexander the Great.
The Early Republic Ch10 Sec1, Pt2.
Fulfilled Prophecies Dan. 11
Alexander The Great. Alexander The Great Alexander the Great B.C. “There is nothing impossible to him who will try.” -Alexander the Great Son.
Alexander the Great.
Alexander the Great & Hellenistic Culture
ALEXANDER AND HELLENISTIC WORLD
Classical Civilizations
Alexander the Great & Hellenistic Culture
Egypt.
The Empires of Ghana, Mali
The Fall of Greece Vocabulary Hellenic Hellenistic.
Alexander The Great and The Hellenistic Age
Old Kingdom Old Kingdom.
Classical Civilizations
The Middle Ages.
War and Conquest in Ancient Greece
Constantinople and his Capital
Ancient Greece Chapter 8 Lesson 4.
The Hellenistic Period
Alexander the Great.
Alexander the Great (p )
The Empire of Alexander the Great
Ancient Greece and Rome
ALEXANDER AND HELLENISTIC WORLD
Jeopardy Final Jeopardy People of the Period Religions Of I & C
The early Chinese were so isolated that they came to believe that China was the world’s only civilization. They called the world Tian Xia, which means.
From Macedonians to the Hellenistic Era.
Section 3: Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great & Hellenistic Culture
1.8 The Break-up of the Greek Empire ( B.C.)
How did the geography of Thermopylae help the Greek army?
The Empire of Alexander the Great
What did Hippocrates say was the cure to all diseases
Alexander the Great and Hellenism
The Hellenistic World Cades_Giuseppe-ZZZ-Alexander_the_Great_in_the_Workshop_of_Apelles.
Alexander the Great Macedonian Greece.
Alexander the Great Key Terms Philip II Phalanx Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic CULTURE
FOA Week of February : Explain the rise of Alexander the Great and the spread of Greek culture. 6.55: Describe the myths and stories of classical.
A Survey of the New Testament
Reign of the Ptolemies Ally.
WELCOME to NT101C-03: A Survey of the New Testament
Presentation transcript:

Reputation Management Melodie Carli

Ptolemy VIII Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II (c.182 BC – June 26 116 BC), nicknamed Physcon, was a king of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt Ptolemy VIII's complicated political career started in 170 BC. This is when Antiochus IV Epiphanes of the Seleucid Empire invaded and captured King Ptolemy VI Philometor and all of Egypt, with the exception of the city of Alexandria. Antiochus allowed Ptolemy VI to continue as a puppet monarch. Meanwhile, the people of Alexandria chose Ptolemy Euergetes, his younger brother, as king. Euergetes was popularly known as Physcon, meaning sausage, due to his obesity. Instead of taking up arms against one another, the brothers decided to co-rule Egypt.

Cultural Disasters under Ptolemy VIII For all its great reputation as the intellectual capital of the Hellenistic world, Alexandria did not maintain that position for ever. An enormous blow to its reputation came in 145 BCE: when Ptolemy VIII expelled nearly all the leading intellectual lights of his capital city in a fit of unexplained pique. He removed Aristarchus of Samothrace, a man of world-wide scholarly reputation, as the head of the famous Library, replacing him with a low-level military officer, so as to deepen the insult. The Museum and its scholars suffered similarly. As a consequence, even when the city was to regain some of its intellectual prestige in later years, it never quite recovered from this needless blow. During the Mitradaic war, many writers, artists, and thinkers from all over the region fled to Alexandria to avoid this clash between Rome and the Pontic kingdom. Rome, now an intellectual center in its own right, also benefited from this flight.

Situation analysis As Ptolemy VIII is facing a difficult situation and is no longer respected by his people we need to reestablish confidence, trust and loyatly to their king. Need to bring back the intellectuals

Objectives Promoting the dynasties of Ptolemy VIII by strengthening ties between Romans & Egyptians. To improve relationships between Egyptians & Romans by allowing the intellectual to come back Build trust, a strong and better reputation Have a better influence Build a better image Bring awareness

Keys to a good reputation Do what you say you will do. Go out of your way to help others reach their goals. Make other people look good Go a step beyond what is expected. Be consistent Act with integrity. Get engaged with your community. Be likable

Strategy Organize monthly meetings with respective classes Listen to the need of each classes Answer those needs Delegate the work and trust surroundings Make meaningful offers to population Organize praying sessions to the Gods

Audiences

Messages Democracy Equality Worship animals and Gods Good to the people Peace and some type of equality

Tactics Papyrus Art Monuments Donations

Results Give credibility to Ptolemy VIII as a ruler Allows him to restore Ancient Egypt and not fall to Roman Empire Ptolemy VIII has a new image He becomes symbol for equality, generosity and a true leader & ruler.