two notes on athenian epigrams - The American School of Classical
... JACOBY'S discussion (Hlesperica, XIV, 1945, p. 158, note 8) of the frago mentarily preserved epigram published as I.G., 12, 609 is based on the assumption that the second line was engraved later than the first line. A study of the monument, or even of the photographs illustrated by Kirchner, makes i ...
... JACOBY'S discussion (Hlesperica, XIV, 1945, p. 158, note 8) of the frago mentarily preserved epigram published as I.G., 12, 609 is based on the assumption that the second line was engraved later than the first line. A study of the monument, or even of the photographs illustrated by Kirchner, makes i ...
Spartan Hegemony
... 393 Pharnabazus and Conon sail to Greece, raid coast of Laconia, and take possession of the island of Cythera, leaving a garrison and an Athenian harmost; at Isthmus of Corinth, Pharnabazus gives money to quadruple alliance to carry on the war; he urges them to remain faithful to the King; he provi ...
... 393 Pharnabazus and Conon sail to Greece, raid coast of Laconia, and take possession of the island of Cythera, leaving a garrison and an Athenian harmost; at Isthmus of Corinth, Pharnabazus gives money to quadruple alliance to carry on the war; he urges them to remain faithful to the King; he provi ...
Thucydides and Xenophon: Political Historians of Ancient Greece
... leave the Delian League, Athens used her stronger force to keep them within the tribute paying system, e.g. in the cases of Naxos, Samos, and Miletos. As this tension increased, Athens began to court allies among the population of these cities (Farrar 1988, p149), supporting democratic factions (ver ...
... leave the Delian League, Athens used her stronger force to keep them within the tribute paying system, e.g. in the cases of Naxos, Samos, and Miletos. As this tension increased, Athens began to court allies among the population of these cities (Farrar 1988, p149), supporting democratic factions (ver ...
The Peloponnesian War - National History Day in Wisconsin
... pretense of equality; meanwhile, they started trying to implement themselves into the vacuum of power left by Athens's defeat. “Sparta’s attempt to gain control of at least part of the old Athenian empire failed” (The Great Peloponnesian War). They had little success since even though there was a po ...
... pretense of equality; meanwhile, they started trying to implement themselves into the vacuum of power left by Athens's defeat. “Sparta’s attempt to gain control of at least part of the old Athenian empire failed” (The Great Peloponnesian War). They had little success since even though there was a po ...
The Treaties between Persia and Athens
... emphasized that the Athenian envoys went under an existing treaty and not in order to conclude a new one. Obviously, the Athenians were shocked to hear that the Spartans were trying to negotiate for aid from Persia,17 and they were prepared to complain about it, just as eighty years earlier they had ...
... emphasized that the Athenian envoys went under an existing treaty and not in order to conclude a new one. Obviously, the Athenians were shocked to hear that the Spartans were trying to negotiate for aid from Persia,17 and they were prepared to complain about it, just as eighty years earlier they had ...
Coping with a new Situation - Utrecht University Repository
... the Persian elite or Persia in general was considered as an act of medism.4 As a response to the Persian Wars and supposedly to the act of medism, democratic Athens banned some members of the elite from her society, which took place in the form of ostracism. According to the Athenian Constitution, C ...
... the Persian elite or Persia in general was considered as an act of medism.4 As a response to the Persian Wars and supposedly to the act of medism, democratic Athens banned some members of the elite from her society, which took place in the form of ostracism. According to the Athenian Constitution, C ...
Achaemenid Persia
... (Herodotus, 5.35) At that same moment there came to [Aristagoras] from Susa a fellow from Histiaeus, with his head tattooed, urging Aristagoras to desert from the King. For Histiaeus wanted to urge Aristagoras to revolt but he had no other safe way of communicating with him (for all the roads were w ...
... (Herodotus, 5.35) At that same moment there came to [Aristagoras] from Susa a fellow from Histiaeus, with his head tattooed, urging Aristagoras to desert from the King. For Histiaeus wanted to urge Aristagoras to revolt but he had no other safe way of communicating with him (for all the roads were w ...
English PDF
... Building blocks were quarried according to the specifications of the architect, who stipulated the material, number, and size of the blocks required. Measurements were given in foot lengths, subdivided into 16dactyls (fingers). The foot lengths varied between buildings, the two most common having mo ...
... Building blocks were quarried according to the specifications of the architect, who stipulated the material, number, and size of the blocks required. Measurements were given in foot lengths, subdivided into 16dactyls (fingers). The foot lengths varied between buildings, the two most common having mo ...
The Bribing of Ismenias
... servants, towards the end of the nineteenth century (a period when social equality steadily increased). Since these populist Athenian politicians were generally men whose influence came partly from their self-made wealth, because even in Athens a full political career still required money, they tend ...
... servants, towards the end of the nineteenth century (a period when social equality steadily increased). Since these populist Athenian politicians were generally men whose influence came partly from their self-made wealth, because even in Athens a full political career still required money, they tend ...
Worksheet - WordPress.com
... In 483 BC, a massive new seam of silver was found in the Athenian mines at Laurium. Themistocles proposed that the silver should be used to build a new fleet of 200 triremes. Aristides suggested it ...
... In 483 BC, a massive new seam of silver was found in the Athenian mines at Laurium. Themistocles proposed that the silver should be used to build a new fleet of 200 triremes. Aristides suggested it ...
a spear butt from the lesbians - The American School of Classical
... 8 Pausanias, I. 15. 4. B 262, a bronze shield taken from the Spartans at Pylos in 425/4 B.C., found in a cistern (D-E 8-9: 1) on Kolonos Agoraios: T. L. Shear, Hesperia 6, 1937, pp. 346-348. Since the cistern went out of use and was filled in the early 3rd centuny B.C., this particular shield could ...
... 8 Pausanias, I. 15. 4. B 262, a bronze shield taken from the Spartans at Pylos in 425/4 B.C., found in a cistern (D-E 8-9: 1) on Kolonos Agoraios: T. L. Shear, Hesperia 6, 1937, pp. 346-348. Since the cistern went out of use and was filled in the early 3rd centuny B.C., this particular shield could ...
SOLON - Hellenic Link
... agricultural produce per year from their agricultural holdings, in other words these were the rich people, the highest social class, the highest economic class. The next class beneath are the "hippies" (as in horse); they are the knights, not quite as rich as the class on top, but these people are r ...
... agricultural produce per year from their agricultural holdings, in other words these were the rich people, the highest social class, the highest economic class. The next class beneath are the "hippies" (as in horse); they are the knights, not quite as rich as the class on top, but these people are r ...
1 Fracturing the Insularity of the Global State: War and Conflict in
... national peace, security, unity and reconciliation by investigating the events and personalities surrounding the civil conflict in the country since the 1980s. The idea was modelled after South Africa’s post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission instituted by the Promotion of National Unity ...
... national peace, security, unity and reconciliation by investigating the events and personalities surrounding the civil conflict in the country since the 1980s. The idea was modelled after South Africa’s post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission instituted by the Promotion of National Unity ...
Why Menexenus Spells Trouble for Andropov
... had withdrawn from public affairs , either making their deals with the mercenary classes or living a sullen , isolated exist ence on their farms . The glamorous men of the day were ...
... had withdrawn from public affairs , either making their deals with the mercenary classes or living a sullen , isolated exist ence on their farms . The glamorous men of the day were ...
28 page pdf - The Stoa Consortium
... pic Games” and the “Pythian Games” placing wreaths on Alcibiades’ head and () the personification Nemea seated, with beautiful Alcibiades on her lap (Ath. .). e paintings probably celebrated Alcibiades’ victory in the chariot race at the st Olympiad (in , cf. uc. ..). e pain ...
... pic Games” and the “Pythian Games” placing wreaths on Alcibiades’ head and () the personification Nemea seated, with beautiful Alcibiades on her lap (Ath. .). e paintings probably celebrated Alcibiades’ victory in the chariot race at the st Olympiad (in , cf. uc. ..). e pain ...
Legal Profession in Ancient Athens - NDLScholarship
... This situation changed radically after the time of Solon, when the purely magistral courts and the Court of Areopagus were replaced by large popular juries, the so-called heliastic courts which were composed of at least five hundred Athenian citizens, who may be described as jurors. At this point it ...
... This situation changed radically after the time of Solon, when the purely magistral courts and the Court of Areopagus were replaced by large popular juries, the so-called heliastic courts which were composed of at least five hundred Athenian citizens, who may be described as jurors. At this point it ...
Active Reading Note-Taking Guide
... estates had overthrown the kings.** • Each city-state was known as a polis and was like a small, independent country.*** • Below the acropolis was as an open area called the agora, which was used for a market area and a place to meet for a debate. ...
... estates had overthrown the kings.** • Each city-state was known as a polis and was like a small, independent country.*** • Below the acropolis was as an open area called the agora, which was used for a market area and a place to meet for a debate. ...
File
... of famous Greeks and Romans. Plutarch’s accounts are vital to modern historians, as they provide historical accounts, and give us an idea of how Greeks and Romans wanted to remember and interpret their own past. However, not everything that Plutarch wrote is true. He did not cite his sources, even t ...
... of famous Greeks and Romans. Plutarch’s accounts are vital to modern historians, as they provide historical accounts, and give us an idea of how Greeks and Romans wanted to remember and interpret their own past. However, not everything that Plutarch wrote is true. He did not cite his sources, even t ...
Backgrounds to English Literature
... -The terms ‘philosopher’ and ‘sophist’ were disputed in the fifth and fourth century B.C. The subject of contention between rival schools of thought. ...
... -The terms ‘philosopher’ and ‘sophist’ were disputed in the fifth and fourth century B.C. The subject of contention between rival schools of thought. ...
The Birth of Politics: Eight Greek and Roman Political Ideas and Why
... made them equals, even though some were rich, others poor. That equality was Janus-faced. Some lucky few were included as citizens by means of excluding all others (foreigners and slaves) from their common privileges. Most harshly excluded were those whom Greek societies enslaved. Citizens could co ...
... made them equals, even though some were rich, others poor. That equality was Janus-faced. Some lucky few were included as citizens by means of excluding all others (foreigners and slaves) from their common privileges. Most harshly excluded were those whom Greek societies enslaved. Citizens could co ...
discussion paper: 10.02 march 2010 the context of ancient greek
... activity. 11 A type of personal autarky (autarkes) is ideal, where one is freed from economic constraints by others (Booth 1993, p. 42). In time, oikoi joined into larger units (villages) and the final form of the larger unit in ancient Greece was the polis which emerged around 700 BC. 12 Sparta, At ...
... activity. 11 A type of personal autarky (autarkes) is ideal, where one is freed from economic constraints by others (Booth 1993, p. 42). In time, oikoi joined into larger units (villages) and the final form of the larger unit in ancient Greece was the polis which emerged around 700 BC. 12 Sparta, At ...
Thucydides [from Encyclopedia of Social Measurement]
... though democratic Athens has exerted a greater influence on the thinking of Thucydides’ contemporary interpreters than has aristocratic Sparta, the latter of these two powers was clearly the stronger at the war’s beginning. Indeed, as Thucydides tells us, most Greeks initially believed that the Spar ...
... though democratic Athens has exerted a greater influence on the thinking of Thucydides’ contemporary interpreters than has aristocratic Sparta, the latter of these two powers was clearly the stronger at the war’s beginning. Indeed, as Thucydides tells us, most Greeks initially believed that the Spar ...
Thucydides in Wartime PURE Upload
... interpreters of classical antiquity concerned with modern democracy at war may have different political preoccupations, but like their nineteenth-century predecessors, many redeem from the History a democratic exceptionalism Thucydides never meant to authorize. This article focuses on the Thucydidea ...
... interpreters of classical antiquity concerned with modern democracy at war may have different political preoccupations, but like their nineteenth-century predecessors, many redeem from the History a democratic exceptionalism Thucydides never meant to authorize. This article focuses on the Thucydidea ...
(Golden Age of Greece) - Presentation
... The Golden Age of Greece • What was it? (1) a time when the city-states of Greece achieved a high level of culture and political stability ...
... The Golden Age of Greece • What was it? (1) a time when the city-states of Greece achieved a high level of culture and political stability ...
Athenian democracy
Athenian democracy developed around the fifth century BC in the Greek city-state (known as a polis) of Athens, comprising the city of Athens and the surrounding territory of Attica and is the first known democracy in the world. Other Greek cities set up democracies, most following the Athenian model, but none are as well documented as Athens.It was a system of direct democracy, in which participating citizens voted directly on legislation and executive bills. Participation was not open to all residents: to vote one had to be an adult, male citizen, and the number of these ""varied between 30,000 and 50,000 out of a total population of around 250,000 to 300,000.""The longest-lasting democratic leader was Pericles. After his death, Athenian democracy was twice briefly interrupted by oligarchic revolutions towards the end of the Peloponnesian War. It was modified somewhat after it was restored under Eucleides; and the most detailed accounts of the system are of this fourth-century modification rather than the Periclean system. Democracy was suppressed by the Macedonians in 322 BC. The Athenian institutions were later revived, but how close they were to a real democracy is debatable. Solon (594 BC), Cleisthenes (508/7 BC), an aristocrat, and Ephialtes (462 BC) contributed to the development of Athenian democracy.