Classical Greece Section 2
... • Reforms set stage for Athenian democracy • Cleisthenes broke up power of noble families – Divided Athens into 10 tribes based on where people lived – Made tribes, not families, social groups, basis for elections – Each tribe elected 50 men to serve on Council of 500, proposed laws – Each tribe ele ...
... • Reforms set stage for Athenian democracy • Cleisthenes broke up power of noble families – Divided Athens into 10 tribes based on where people lived – Made tribes, not families, social groups, basis for elections – Each tribe elected 50 men to serve on Council of 500, proposed laws – Each tribe ele ...
Athens - Brookwood High School
... – Rough terrain, cold climate – Macedonians thought of themselves as Greeks, but Greeks looked down on them ...
... – Rough terrain, cold climate – Macedonians thought of themselves as Greeks, but Greeks looked down on them ...
AKS 32 - Ancient Greece PPT
... – Rough terrain, cold climate – Macedonians thought of themselves as Greeks, but Greeks looked down on them ...
... – Rough terrain, cold climate – Macedonians thought of themselves as Greeks, but Greeks looked down on them ...
Ancient Athens vs. Ancient Sparta
... 1. At the top, the aristocrats held large estates and made up the cavalry or captain triremes. 2. Middle ranks consisted mostly of small farmers. 3. The lowest class was the thetes who were usually urban craftsmen or rowers. Metics – the people who lived outside the walls of Athens o Unable to own ...
... 1. At the top, the aristocrats held large estates and made up the cavalry or captain triremes. 2. Middle ranks consisted mostly of small farmers. 3. The lowest class was the thetes who were usually urban craftsmen or rowers. Metics – the people who lived outside the walls of Athens o Unable to own ...
dr. Agnieszka Bielawska Adam Mickiewicz University Faculty of
... remained the most powerful authority, its members still recruited themselves from ex-Archons chosen by all the people. One should add, that the Areopagus and the archons elections kept the aristocratic character. The functions of the Council of Four Hundred were taken over by the Council of Five Hun ...
... remained the most powerful authority, its members still recruited themselves from ex-Archons chosen by all the people. One should add, that the Areopagus and the archons elections kept the aristocratic character. The functions of the Council of Four Hundred were taken over by the Council of Five Hun ...
Greek City-States
... Athenians put a great deal of emphasis on education. Girls learned at home(c) from their mothers. They learned how to run a home, and how to be good wives and mothers. Boys were educated quite differently. Until age 6 or 7, boys were taught at home by their mothers. From 7-14, boys attended a day sc ...
... Athenians put a great deal of emphasis on education. Girls learned at home(c) from their mothers. They learned how to run a home, and how to be good wives and mothers. Boys were educated quite differently. Until age 6 or 7, boys were taught at home by their mothers. From 7-14, boys attended a day sc ...
~Web-quest worth 20 points~ 1. Definition of Agoge: a. Video
... 1. Go to http://www.ancient.eu.com/Athens/ and scroll down to the 4th paragraph beginning with “The wealthy aristocrats…” a. Athens created a series of laws to address problems of the city. i. The first series of laws was written by whom? (explain): ...
... 1. Go to http://www.ancient.eu.com/Athens/ and scroll down to the 4th paragraph beginning with “The wealthy aristocrats…” a. Athens created a series of laws to address problems of the city. i. The first series of laws was written by whom? (explain): ...
Aim: How did the “golden age” of Athens come to an end?
... the Peloponnesian War had never happened, which city-state do you think would have been most likely to unify Greece: Athens or Sparta? Why? ...
... the Peloponnesian War had never happened, which city-state do you think would have been most likely to unify Greece: Athens or Sparta? Why? ...
Ancient World History
... style government to an aristocracy Demands for Change – While an aristocracy, there was a great deal of discontent over the power of the nobles – Slowly began moving towards a ...
... style government to an aristocracy Demands for Change – While an aristocracy, there was a great deal of discontent over the power of the nobles – Slowly began moving towards a ...
A Civilization`s Rise and Demise by War
... flourished. In 452/1 B.C., Pericles introduced pay for jurors and magistrates so that no one could be barred by poverty from service to the polis. Indeed, under Pericles, Athens was rebuilt and the population greeted him as their hero. But, there were problems on the not-too-distant horizon. ...
... flourished. In 452/1 B.C., Pericles introduced pay for jurors and magistrates so that no one could be barred by poverty from service to the polis. Indeed, under Pericles, Athens was rebuilt and the population greeted him as their hero. But, there were problems on the not-too-distant horizon. ...
File
... • By the time of Pericles, Athens’ democracy had grown into a direct democracy, where citizens took direct participation in the government. An assembly known as the Council of 500 was created, selected by random each year. Those who were in the council were given a stipend, a salary for their servi ...
... • By the time of Pericles, Athens’ democracy had grown into a direct democracy, where citizens took direct participation in the government. An assembly known as the Council of 500 was created, selected by random each year. Those who were in the council were given a stipend, a salary for their servi ...
Chapter 5 - Greer Middle College
... 3. Why would Pericles not have been satisfied with securing Athens’ political and economic strength? Why did he also demand the city-state’s artistic glorification? 4. What sorts of artistic values might classical artists and architects have shunned? 5. How might Greek plays have been expressions of ...
... 3. Why would Pericles not have been satisfied with securing Athens’ political and economic strength? Why did he also demand the city-state’s artistic glorification? 4. What sorts of artistic values might classical artists and architects have shunned? 5. How might Greek plays have been expressions of ...
File
... The Ephors may have kept order while the kings were leading armies in battle. Council of Elders (Gerousia) The law-making body of Sparta. Was only open to people over 60 years old. They prepared laws for the assembly of citizens to vote on. ...
... The Ephors may have kept order while the kings were leading armies in battle. Council of Elders (Gerousia) The law-making body of Sparta. Was only open to people over 60 years old. They prepared laws for the assembly of citizens to vote on. ...
The Bloody Laws of Draco
... You have already learned that Athens was one of the greatest cities of ancient Greece, and that after the heroic self‐ sacrifice of Codrus the inhabitants would not allow anyone to bear the name of king. The sons of Codrus were named archons, or rulers for life, an office which was at first handed ...
... You have already learned that Athens was one of the greatest cities of ancient Greece, and that after the heroic self‐ sacrifice of Codrus the inhabitants would not allow anyone to bear the name of king. The sons of Codrus were named archons, or rulers for life, an office which was at first handed ...
Athens vs. Sparta Cornell Notes
... • Sparta was ruled by two kings. • Elected officials ran the day-to-day activities. • Sparta’s government was set up to control the city’s helots or slaves. • Since all true citizens were in the military, many other people were needed to do all other jobs! • Slaves grew all the city’s crops and did ...
... • Sparta was ruled by two kings. • Elected officials ran the day-to-day activities. • Sparta’s government was set up to control the city’s helots or slaves. • Since all true citizens were in the military, many other people were needed to do all other jobs! • Slaves grew all the city’s crops and did ...
The Polity of the Athenians
... that if the rich and the elite have control the rule of the poor back at Athens will be short-lived. This then is why they disenfranchise the the elite, rob them of their wealth, drive them into exile, or put them to death, while they exalt the thieves. The poor of Athens protect the poor in the all ...
... that if the rich and the elite have control the rule of the poor back at Athens will be short-lived. This then is why they disenfranchise the the elite, rob them of their wealth, drive them into exile, or put them to death, while they exalt the thieves. The poor of Athens protect the poor in the all ...
Focus on Ancient Greek objects
... Displays cover a wide range of themes; Early Greece, Sparta, Corinth and Athens; The Hellenistic World; gods and goddesses; heroes and myths; the symposium; trading posts in Western and Eastern Greece; arts and crafts; death and burial; theatre and athletics; art and literature. The Ashmolean’s coll ...
... Displays cover a wide range of themes; Early Greece, Sparta, Corinth and Athens; The Hellenistic World; gods and goddesses; heroes and myths; the symposium; trading posts in Western and Eastern Greece; arts and crafts; death and burial; theatre and athletics; art and literature. The Ashmolean’s coll ...
Group 1 - Polk School District
... Laconians and later the Messenia. The Spartans created a military state the prevent rebellion. Spartans were huge on military, and made boys at age 7 begin harsh military lives. Spartan women had more freedom than was common elsewhere. Sparta created the Lycurgan reforms which made an oligarchy. A g ...
... Laconians and later the Messenia. The Spartans created a military state the prevent rebellion. Spartans were huge on military, and made boys at age 7 begin harsh military lives. Spartan women had more freedom than was common elsewhere. Sparta created the Lycurgan reforms which made an oligarchy. A g ...
Group 1 Ancient and Classic Greece: Geography: Greece`s
... Day one: Geography -Greece occupied a small area compared to other ancient civilizations -A peninsula with valleys and plains separated by mountain ranges which caused communities to develop separately The coast consisted of many bays and inlets for harbor use in trade and warfare Trade -Population ...
... Day one: Geography -Greece occupied a small area compared to other ancient civilizations -A peninsula with valleys and plains separated by mountain ranges which caused communities to develop separately The coast consisted of many bays and inlets for harbor use in trade and warfare Trade -Population ...
Across 1. When Athens built these it angered Sparta. 2. Ships used
... vessels or immobilize them by breaking their ores. ...
... vessels or immobilize them by breaking their ores. ...
Cleisthenes
... above the age of thirty could serve on the Boule for a year. Under the law, they could not be on the Boule for more than twice in their lifetime or in two consecutive years. Being a member of the Boule might sound glamorous, but the responsibility was actually without pay! Luckily, the lack of monet ...
... above the age of thirty could serve on the Boule for a year. Under the law, they could not be on the Boule for more than twice in their lifetime or in two consecutive years. Being a member of the Boule might sound glamorous, but the responsibility was actually without pay! Luckily, the lack of monet ...
The Peloponnesian War
... army at Pylos, a coastal fort in the south of Lacedaemonia. Three to four hundred Spartan hoplites were taken as valuable hostages. Furthermore, a grave threat to Spartan internal security was presented, for Pylos lay within that part of Lacedaemonia that was inhabited by the Helots, a class of slav ...
... army at Pylos, a coastal fort in the south of Lacedaemonia. Three to four hundred Spartan hoplites were taken as valuable hostages. Furthermore, a grave threat to Spartan internal security was presented, for Pylos lay within that part of Lacedaemonia that was inhabited by the Helots, a class of slav ...
The Peloponnesian War
... was dominated by Athens. • It forced smaller polis to join the League and pay tribute. • It used the common League funds to rebuild Athens (which had been destroyed by the Persians). ...
... was dominated by Athens. • It forced smaller polis to join the League and pay tribute. • It used the common League funds to rebuild Athens (which had been destroyed by the Persians). ...
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.