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Ancient Greece - Options
Ancient Greece - Options

... city-states were very independent • Rivalries often developed between city-states • Each city-state relied heavily on sea trade for exchange of goods and ideas; the Greeks adopted then expanded the Phoenician alphabet • As the population grew, Greeks began to colonize new areas; colonies were create ...
classwork_10-11
classwork_10-11

... place to place. Nowhere is this more clear than in the differing cases of Athens and Sparta, two of the leading city-states of Greek civilization. Although Athens has been celebrated for democratic government, its attitude toward women was far more restrictive than that of the highly warfocused and ...
Sparta and Athens 4.2
Sparta and Athens 4.2

... • By the end of the Dark Ages, many nobles who owned large estates had overthrown the Greek kings. They created city-states. • Each city-state was known as a polis-or a tiny independent country. The main gathering was usually a hill called an acropolis. Below the acropolis was an open area called a ...
- Free Documents
- Free Documents

... carefully, for it is one of the outstanding experiments in the history of government. It is limited, first, by the fact that only a small minority of the people can read. It is limited physically by the difficulty of reaching Athens from the remoter towns of Attica. The franchise is restricted to th ...
Warring City
Warring City

... Athens emerges as the dominant power in Greece after the formation of the Delian League. The Delian League was an alliance between Athens and other Greek city-states (not Sparta) that made Athens wealthy and powerful. ...
5. CH 5 NOTES
5. CH 5 NOTES

... o -Mountainous *Sparta: develops into o rigid, militarized society  -Keep Helots in line Spartan Society o Three Social Groups:  1. Equals – descendants of invaders  Controlled city-state.  Land divided among them.  2. Half Citizens – free, paid taxes, served in army.  no political power  far ...
Ancient Greece QR Code Questions
Ancient Greece QR Code Questions

... 1) What geographic features do you notice in this image? (Do not include things made by people) 2) How did these geographic features lead to Greece developing into vastly different societies? 3) How could this geography both help and hurt ancient Greek society? C) Ancient Sparta ...
STUDY GUIDE FOR SPARTA AND ATHENS: BE ABLE TO WRITE
STUDY GUIDE FOR SPARTA AND ATHENS: BE ABLE TO WRITE

... girls in Sparta learned to fist fight, wrestle and handle weapons! The Spartans had a powerful army, defeated many other armies. Athens, named after the goddess Athena, on the other hand, was not a war-like society like Sparta. Athens and Sparta were considered enemies. Unlike Sparta, Athens was mor ...
The Hellenic Age of Ancient Greece
The Hellenic Age of Ancient Greece

... citizens, and these men were _____________________ to office. x. Art and science really didn’t thrive in Sparta. 1. The _____________________________ was the only thing that they cared about. 2. Most Spartans believed that their kings descended from _______________________, the might Greek hero. 3) ...
Comparing the Government of
Comparing the Government of

... of service to the state, is kept in political obscurity because of poverty. And, just as our political life is free and open, so is our day-to-day life in our relations with each other. We do not get into a state with our next-door neighbor if he enjoys himself in his own way, nor do we give him the ...
File
File

... Government & Political organizations Athenian Government Usually classified as a "direct democracy" (because everyone, not just politicians attended the Assembly), Athens claims to be the "birthplace of democracy"Elected officials including 10 generals (strategos), magistrates (archons), and others ...
SPARTA VS ATHENS: A CLASS DEBATE
SPARTA VS ATHENS: A CLASS DEBATE

... still lived in barracks with other soldiers. They were educated in choral dance, reading and writing, but athletics and military training were emphasized.Girls: Girls were educated at age 7 in reading and writing, gymnastics, athletics and ...
5-3 Guided Notes
5-3 Guided Notes

... The __________________________ had a huge empire that stretched from Asia Minor to India—which included the Greek city-states of Ionia o The city-states were __________________________________, but they still ___________________________________ their situation 499 BC: Ionian Greeks _________________ ...
Persian Wars - Mrs. Helmer
Persian Wars - Mrs. Helmer

... The Greek politician, Themistocles, convinced the Athenians otherwise. o So while Persia delayed through the 480's, Themistocles and the Athenians began a navybuilding project of epic proportions. o Themistocles convinced the Athenians to invest the profits from a newly discovered silver mine into t ...
Station 1 Greek Money Barter
Station 1 Greek Money Barter

... The Spartan Army was made up of elite warriors who were well trained from a young age. Being a warrior was the only career the men of the Spartan Army ever held; it was what their entire society and life was built upon, making the Army stronger. With the weight and effort of the entire society behin ...
Classical Greece PowerPoint
Classical Greece PowerPoint

...  Ran families while husbands were at war  “Come back with your shield, or on it.”  Freedom ...
Athens and Its Goddess By Kayla Maedche HIS 325
Athens and Its Goddess By Kayla Maedche HIS 325

...  Acts 17:24 – Paul preached to the Athenians on Mars Hill (Areopagus)  Civic place to hear new ideas; also used for trials before the Council of the State  Truth that God is not man-made and will raise His believers into everlasting Life ...
Athenian Attitudes towards Sparta
Athenian Attitudes towards Sparta

... states, was evidently the most powerful and most celebrated city in Greece; and I fell to wondering how this could have happened. But when I considered the institutions of the Spartans, I wondered no longer…In other states, I suppose, all men make as much money as they can. One is a farmer, another ...
ANCIENT GREECE
ANCIENT GREECE

... ruled by a small group of people. But for a brief period of about 100 years, Athens was a democracy. It was not a perfect ...
Chronology of Athenian Imperialism
Chronology of Athenian Imperialism

... • Largest city Mytileneled a revolt to unify island against Athens when oligarchy took over—disliked restraints on their navy. 428 Mytilene pleaded their case at the Olympic games. • Spartans promise aid, but never come. Instead they invade Attica again. Athenians invade Lesbos and put down revolt. ...
The Greek “Polis”: Athens and Sparta I. The classical ______ (city
The Greek “Polis”: Athens and Sparta I. The classical ______ (city

... A. With the power of hindsight, we can see an orderly process (that would lead to the creation of democracy) that almost seems inevitable to us today! B. That process also seems natural to use because we suppose that others would share in our (American) love for ____________________ (which means rul ...
ANCIENT GREECE
ANCIENT GREECE

... a democracy. Thus Athens is said to be the “Cradle of Democracy”. -It was a “Direct Democracy” since the citizens made all of the decisions directly. -It was a “Limited Democracy” since not everyone in Athens was a citizen. -Women could NOT vote & had very few rights. ...
Athens/Sparta PowerPoint
Athens/Sparta PowerPoint

... Oligarchy: A small group controls a large population Democracy: Citizens decide on laws ...
Chapter 9 Lesson 3
Chapter 9 Lesson 3

... because they told people what they wanted to hear, even though it was not true ...
Sparta: Life and Power
Sparta: Life and Power

... endure to face the blood and slaughter, go close against your enemy and fight with his hands.” Should 7 year olds learn things?! Anyone?! Task B: Play “Egg Thief”. How is stealing viewed in Spartan society? What is the message for children here? Stealing is encouraged and only punished if you get ca ...
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Theorica

Theorica (Gr. Θεωρικά) (also Theoric Fund and Festival Fund) was in ancient Athens the name for the fund of monies expended on festivals, sacrifices, and public entertainments of various kinds; and also monies distributed among the people in the shape of largesses from the state.
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