Sparta and Athens
... Why were Spartan citizens rarely allowed to travel outside Sparta? Why did Athens’s poor people grow angry? What is the significance, or importance, of Solon’s reforms to the idea of citizenship? How was an Athenian education different for boys and girls? What made the Greek city-states fe ...
... Why were Spartan citizens rarely allowed to travel outside Sparta? Why did Athens’s poor people grow angry? What is the significance, or importance, of Solon’s reforms to the idea of citizenship? How was an Athenian education different for boys and girls? What made the Greek city-states fe ...
Chapter 10
... Included an open-air market Only citizens could: vote, Own property, Speak for themselves, Hold office Helots were enslaved people who owned by the city-state and who did most of the farming. The perioeci were artists and merchants who lived in the villages. The perioci and helots worked while t ...
... Included an open-air market Only citizens could: vote, Own property, Speak for themselves, Hold office Helots were enslaved people who owned by the city-state and who did most of the farming. The perioeci were artists and merchants who lived in the villages. The perioci and helots worked while t ...
wrote comedies Tragedy Serious – love, hate, war, betrayal
... Opened new school called the “Lyceum” in Athens Invented method of arguing according to rules of logic ...
... Opened new school called the “Lyceum” in Athens Invented method of arguing according to rules of logic ...
Mythology - Jerry Zucker Middle School Of Science
... which all eligible government. Some ofpower them government in which is Assembly Charged citizens participate arethe still in useof-today. in hands aequally—either small, with directly elected lookingorruling atthrough all prospective privileged, class. representatives—in the proposal, ideas for new ...
... which all eligible government. Some ofpower them government in which is Assembly Charged citizens participate arethe still in useof-today. in hands aequally—either small, with directly elected lookingorruling atthrough all prospective privileged, class. representatives—in the proposal, ideas for new ...
Greece, Persia, and Alexander 546
... 1. Strongest Greek city-state: naval power 2. Democracy- free, landowning citizens could participate in: a) The Assembly (voting) b) Council of 500- proposed laws c) People’s Courts ...
... 1. Strongest Greek city-state: naval power 2. Democracy- free, landowning citizens could participate in: a) The Assembly (voting) b) Council of 500- proposed laws c) People’s Courts ...
Classical Greece: Politics, Geography, and Economy
... – 1. Monarchy (rule by one man) to – 2. Aristocracy (rule by small group of nobles) – 3. Tyranny (rule by one man who favored the people) – 4. Democracy (rule by the people) Encouraged similar reforms in other city-states ...
... – 1. Monarchy (rule by one man) to – 2. Aristocracy (rule by small group of nobles) – 3. Tyranny (rule by one man who favored the people) – 4. Democracy (rule by the people) Encouraged similar reforms in other city-states ...
Warring City
... • What did some people in Athens want to do when the Persians came back? • What happened at the following battles – ...
... • What did some people in Athens want to do when the Persians came back? • What happened at the following battles – ...
Ancient Greece
... refused. At home slaves and women had no vote, which prompted the comic play writer Aristophanes to allow his women to express their exasperation with the system, but if you were an Athenian citizen you took part in a direct democracy. The world has not seen the like of it since. Everyone could turn ...
... refused. At home slaves and women had no vote, which prompted the comic play writer Aristophanes to allow his women to express their exasperation with the system, but if you were an Athenian citizen you took part in a direct democracy. The world has not seen the like of it since. Everyone could turn ...
File - Mr. Swords` Classes
... accumulation of knowledge up until that time. What was the role of Spartan women? – To care for the home and family because the men were often away at war. What was an effect of the Greek victory over the Persians? – The Persians were never able to threaten Greece again. What was Athens like under P ...
... accumulation of knowledge up until that time. What was the role of Spartan women? – To care for the home and family because the men were often away at war. What was an effect of the Greek victory over the Persians? – The Persians were never able to threaten Greece again. What was Athens like under P ...
Daily Life in Athens
... or older with the main purpose of having children • If they could not afford a child they left it to die, especially if it was a girl ...
... or older with the main purpose of having children • If they could not afford a child they left it to die, especially if it was a girl ...
The City States Home Page
... hill. This area was called an acropolis. The acropolis was also a religious center to honor the gods and goddesses of Greek culture. ...
... hill. This area was called an acropolis. The acropolis was also a religious center to honor the gods and goddesses of Greek culture. ...
The Age of Pericles - 6th Grade Social Studies
... • Compare to present day as well as early American women • An Athenian woman’s childhood ended when she married. The day before the wedding, she took her toys to the Temple of Artemis (goddess of the hunt, protector of women in childbirth). After the wedding, the husband would carry her over the thr ...
... • Compare to present day as well as early American women • An Athenian woman’s childhood ended when she married. The day before the wedding, she took her toys to the Temple of Artemis (goddess of the hunt, protector of women in childbirth). After the wedding, the husband would carry her over the thr ...
pericles apparts
... Who is the intended audience? How might they receive this? – quotes to support your claims? Reason for Creation What is the purpose of this document? Read between the lines, support claims with a quote ...
... Who is the intended audience? How might they receive this? – quotes to support your claims? Reason for Creation What is the purpose of this document? Read between the lines, support claims with a quote ...
Sparta and Athens: A look at the Greek polis
... democracy was the result of response to political crisis over a ...
... democracy was the result of response to political crisis over a ...
Daily life in Ancient Athens and Sparta
... • Girls learn a bit of reading and writing, but mainly how to run a household. ...
... • Girls learn a bit of reading and writing, but mainly how to run a household. ...
Ch4_2 Notes
... Spartan Education o Boys daily life centered around military training. At birth they were determined fit or weak. If weak, they were abandoned. At age 7 left home and trained to be a soldier. 20 - became soldiers 30 - they could marry but Sparta and the army were still first priority. 60 - ...
... Spartan Education o Boys daily life centered around military training. At birth they were determined fit or weak. If weak, they were abandoned. At age 7 left home and trained to be a soldier. 20 - became soldiers 30 - they could marry but Sparta and the army were still first priority. 60 - ...
AP World History
... • Helots- Agricultural slaves of the Spartans • Helots outnumbered Spartans 10-1 ...
... • Helots- Agricultural slaves of the Spartans • Helots outnumbered Spartans 10-1 ...
Greek Mythology
... gods and goddesses as very human like. There is often time a moral to the myths. These Myths were some of the first written novels of the Classical world. Ex.) Zeus, Hercules, Atlas. ...
... gods and goddesses as very human like. There is often time a moral to the myths. These Myths were some of the first written novels of the Classical world. Ex.) Zeus, Hercules, Atlas. ...
The Greek Polis
... – NOT Spartan (conquered • Helots – slaves/farmers – provide food for the Spartans 20 helots & perioci : 1 Spartan • All Spartan males are professional soldiers **SPARTAN WOMEN – were more free and had more rights than in any other city-state They ran the towns while men were at war or in training. ...
... – NOT Spartan (conquered • Helots – slaves/farmers – provide food for the Spartans 20 helots & perioci : 1 Spartan • All Spartan males are professional soldiers **SPARTAN WOMEN – were more free and had more rights than in any other city-state They ran the towns while men were at war or in training. ...
Ancient Greek City States
... – NOT Spartan (conquered • Helots – slaves/farmers – provide food for the Spartans 20 helots & perioci : 1 Spartan • All Spartan males are professional soldiers **SPARTAN WOMEN – were more free and had more rights than in any other city-state They ran the towns while men were at war or in training. ...
... – NOT Spartan (conquered • Helots – slaves/farmers – provide food for the Spartans 20 helots & perioci : 1 Spartan • All Spartan males are professional soldiers **SPARTAN WOMEN – were more free and had more rights than in any other city-state They ran the towns while men were at war or in training. ...
Greek Government
... Carried out all laws & administered decisions of ekklesia Did not receive recompense Requirements: > 30 and an Athenian citizen Served for one year at a time and could not serve for more than two years in a lifetime 50 men were elected from each of the 10 tribes of Athens Chosen by lot Each s ...
... Carried out all laws & administered decisions of ekklesia Did not receive recompense Requirements: > 30 and an Athenian citizen Served for one year at a time and could not serve for more than two years in a lifetime 50 men were elected from each of the 10 tribes of Athens Chosen by lot Each s ...
Life in Two City-States: Athens and Sparts
... Helots were Spartan slaves who had been conquered. Spartans treated their slaves harshly. ...
... Helots were Spartan slaves who had been conquered. Spartans treated their slaves harshly. ...
Life in Two City-States: Athens and Sparts
... Helots were Spartan slaves who had been conquered. Spartans treated their slaves harshly. ...
... Helots were Spartan slaves who had been conquered. Spartans treated their slaves harshly. ...
HA Chapter 27 Athens and Sparta
... Helots were Spartan slaves who had been conquered. Spartans treated their slaves harshly. ...
... Helots were Spartan slaves who had been conquered. Spartans treated their slaves harshly. ...
Sparta - kwamekstith
... o Spartan females, who were taught to be fit, brave, and patriotic o Spartan males, all of whom became warriors Newborn males judged to be weak were left to die of exposure. At the age of seven, boys left home to live in barracks and receive military training from older boys. Boys went barefoot, wor ...
... o Spartan females, who were taught to be fit, brave, and patriotic o Spartan males, all of whom became warriors Newborn males judged to be weak were left to die of exposure. At the age of seven, boys left home to live in barracks and receive military training from older boys. Boys went barefoot, wor ...
Epikleros
An epikleros (ἐπίκληρος; plural epikleroi) was an heiress in ancient Athens and other ancient Greek city states, specifically a daughter of a man who had no male heirs. In Sparta, they were called patrouchoi (πατροῦχοι), as they were in Gortyn. Athenian women were not allowed to hold property in their own name; in order to keep her father's property in the family, an epikleros was required to marry her father's nearest male relative. Even if a woman was already married, evidence suggests that she was required to divorce her spouse to marry that relative. Spartan women were allowed to hold property in their own right, and so Spartan heiresses were subject to less restrictive rules. Evidence from other city-states is more fragmentary, mainly coming from the city-states of Gortyn and Rhegium.Plato wrote about epikleroi in his Laws, offering idealized laws to govern their marriages. In mythology and history, a number of Greek women appear to have been epikleroi, including Agariste of Sicyon and Agiatis, the widow of the Spartan king Agis IV. The status of epikleroi has often been used to explain the numbers of sons-in-law who inherited from their fathers-in-law in Greek mythology. The Third Sacred War originated in a dispute over epikleroi.