PowerPoint Presentation - Scarsdale Public Schools
... leading power in ancient Greece after the Persian Wars A ...
... leading power in ancient Greece after the Persian Wars A ...
Peloponnesian War - Mrs. Law`s World
... help you figure out what happened during the Peloponnesian wars. All I ask is for EVERYONE to participate in the class discussion! ...
... help you figure out what happened during the Peloponnesian wars. All I ask is for EVERYONE to participate in the class discussion! ...
The Athenian as Citizen
... 7. Compose a commentary on this entire excerpt, the speech and the plague sequence, by either Confucius or Qin Shi Huangdi. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------During the . , . winter, ...
... 7. Compose a commentary on this entire excerpt, the speech and the plague sequence, by either Confucius or Qin Shi Huangdi. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------During the . , . winter, ...
ATINER`s Conference Paper Series MDT2013
... stayed behind their walls and endured insults and taunts of cowardice from the Spartans. The Athenians were afraid of a direct battle on land and accepted the temporary humiliation in hope of defeating the Spartans by trusting in their long walls, navy, and the resources of their empire in hope of w ...
... stayed behind their walls and endured insults and taunts of cowardice from the Spartans. The Athenians were afraid of a direct battle on land and accepted the temporary humiliation in hope of defeating the Spartans by trusting in their long walls, navy, and the resources of their empire in hope of w ...
Persian wars Ch7.3 - OCPS TeacherPress
... 7) Combined Greek forces defeated Persians at Plataea, northwest of Athens. ...
... 7) Combined Greek forces defeated Persians at Plataea, northwest of Athens. ...
Objectives for Chapter 4 - East Lynne School District
... Soon people begin to farm again and produce a surplus of food. This lead to more trade. As a result the Greeks came in contact with the Phoenicians and picked up from them the idea of an alphabet. A Greek alphabet was developed that had 24 letters each of which stood for different sounds. ...
... Soon people begin to farm again and produce a surplus of food. This lead to more trade. As a result the Greeks came in contact with the Phoenicians and picked up from them the idea of an alphabet. A Greek alphabet was developed that had 24 letters each of which stood for different sounds. ...
The Melian Dialogue
... “Thucydides was one of those prophets and kings of thought who have desired to see the day of all-conquering Knowledge, and have not seen it. The deepest instinct of the human mind is to shape the chaotic world and the illimitable stream of events into some intelligible form which it can hold before ...
... “Thucydides was one of those prophets and kings of thought who have desired to see the day of all-conquering Knowledge, and have not seen it. The deepest instinct of the human mind is to shape the chaotic world and the illimitable stream of events into some intelligible form which it can hold before ...
Chapter 8, Section 2 Government in Athens
... This is the type of democracy the U.S. has The citizens elect officials to represent them Americans elect representatives & Senators to Congress Americans do not vote on each law that Congress passes but trust their chosen representatives to vote for them ...
... This is the type of democracy the U.S. has The citizens elect officials to represent them Americans elect representatives & Senators to Congress Americans do not vote on each law that Congress passes but trust their chosen representatives to vote for them ...
Milestone Documents in World History Funeral Oration of Pericles
... outsiders at bay to prevent contamination of their social system. Pericles emphasizes their open society that allowed any to come and prosper (even if noncitizens could not earn political rights). Further, the Athenians would have recognized an implicit reference to Sparta’s rigid hierarchy, which p ...
... outsiders at bay to prevent contamination of their social system. Pericles emphasizes their open society that allowed any to come and prosper (even if noncitizens could not earn political rights). Further, the Athenians would have recognized an implicit reference to Sparta’s rigid hierarchy, which p ...
Athens: The Birthplace of Democracy
... It had not always been this way. In the past, Athens had been ruled by a king. 15 Then, several nobles started to rule in place of the king. 16 Finally, a new leader came along who thought every citizen should be able to take part in his government. Originally, only men who were born in Athens—and w ...
... It had not always been this way. In the past, Athens had been ruled by a king. 15 Then, several nobles started to rule in place of the king. 16 Finally, a new leader came along who thought every citizen should be able to take part in his government. Originally, only men who were born in Athens—and w ...
Peloponnesian War
... Athens' rise to brilliance was resented and mistrusted by other city-states, and especially by Sparta and Corinth. The former feared that Athens would begin expanded on land and threaten her system of alliances in the Peloponnesian Peninsula, while Corinth feared Athens as an economic rival that ha ...
... Athens' rise to brilliance was resented and mistrusted by other city-states, and especially by Sparta and Corinth. The former feared that Athens would begin expanded on land and threaten her system of alliances in the Peloponnesian Peninsula, while Corinth feared Athens as an economic rival that ha ...
3.13 SOAPStone Activity for Pericles` Funeral
... At the end of the first year of the Peloponnesian War, the Athenians held, as was their custom, an elaborate funeral for all those killed in the war. The funeral oration over these dead was delivered by the brilliant and charismatic politician and general, Pericles, who perished a little bit later i ...
... At the end of the first year of the Peloponnesian War, the Athenians held, as was their custom, an elaborate funeral for all those killed in the war. The funeral oration over these dead was delivered by the brilliant and charismatic politician and general, Pericles, who perished a little bit later i ...
01citizen-body
... Socrates was identified with this group of intellectuals and teachers who serviced the desire on the part of the citizen body to learn and practice public discourse some names – Gorgias, Protogoras, Euthydemos developing an intellectual discourse pertinent to these urban and political spaces Plato d ...
... Socrates was identified with this group of intellectuals and teachers who serviced the desire on the part of the citizen body to learn and practice public discourse some names – Gorgias, Protogoras, Euthydemos developing an intellectual discourse pertinent to these urban and political spaces Plato d ...
The History of the Peloponnesian War, Book I 1-88
... Corinth attempts to spur Sparta to take action against Athens, arguing that Sparta’s conservative, plodding strategy has allowed the Athenians to gain too much strength. Several Athenian citizens respond to Corinth’s efforts to incite Sparta by reminding the Greeks of the paramount role Athens playe ...
... Corinth attempts to spur Sparta to take action against Athens, arguing that Sparta’s conservative, plodding strategy has allowed the Athenians to gain too much strength. Several Athenian citizens respond to Corinth’s efforts to incite Sparta by reminding the Greeks of the paramount role Athens playe ...
The Peloponnesian War
... Athenians destroyed the Spartan navy and took control of the water around Greece. But the Athenians that lived outside of the city had to move inside the walls while the Spartans waited outside. Also, to support the new crowded city, there were boats in and out of Athens all of the time. Not long in ...
... Athenians destroyed the Spartan navy and took control of the water around Greece. But the Athenians that lived outside of the city had to move inside the walls while the Spartans waited outside. Also, to support the new crowded city, there were boats in and out of Athens all of the time. Not long in ...
The Greeks: Crucible of Civilization
... 16. How did the battle of Salamis affect Athens as a regional power economically and politically? 17. What happened to an Athenian whose name was placed too many times in the “Ostraka” and why did the Athenians do this? ...
... 16. How did the battle of Salamis affect Athens as a regional power economically and politically? 17. What happened to an Athenian whose name was placed too many times in the “Ostraka” and why did the Athenians do this? ...
The Greeks: Crucible of Civilization
... 16. How did the battle of Salamis affect Athens as a regional power economically and politically? 17. What happened to an Athenian whose name was placed too many times in the “Ostraka” and why did the Athenians do this? ...
... 16. How did the battle of Salamis affect Athens as a regional power economically and politically? 17. What happened to an Athenian whose name was placed too many times in the “Ostraka” and why did the Athenians do this? ...
Plato
... • With theories of government; • It represents what Plato regarded as the ideal toward which actual states should strive [it is a little bit too idealistic; in a later and considerably longer dialogue titled, The Laws, Plato proposed a less idealistic but more practical alternative for the organizat ...
... • With theories of government; • It represents what Plato regarded as the ideal toward which actual states should strive [it is a little bit too idealistic; in a later and considerably longer dialogue titled, The Laws, Plato proposed a less idealistic but more practical alternative for the organizat ...
Name ______ __ Score ____________% Due: Thursday, January
... _____8. Which of the following words was used by the Greeks to refer to generals or politicians who, although often popular, gained power by irregular means. a. tyrant b. polis c. archon d. emperor e. hellas Page: 192 _____9. Which of the following events occurred during the time of Pericles? a. At ...
... _____8. Which of the following words was used by the Greeks to refer to generals or politicians who, although often popular, gained power by irregular means. a. tyrant b. polis c. archon d. emperor e. hellas Page: 192 _____9. Which of the following events occurred during the time of Pericles? a. At ...
Review: Paul Cartledge, Ancient Greek Political Thought in Practice
... the treatment of the ancient evidence. Thus we have a chapter devoted to the third century Spartan revolutions of Agis and Cleomenes but a mere two pages on Plato’s philosopher-kings. The book’s ambition, however, is not unduly limited by its brevity. It stretches from Homer to Plutarch, with a coda ...
... the treatment of the ancient evidence. Thus we have a chapter devoted to the third century Spartan revolutions of Agis and Cleomenes but a mere two pages on Plato’s philosopher-kings. The book’s ambition, however, is not unduly limited by its brevity. It stretches from Homer to Plutarch, with a coda ...
Viewpoint Activity: The Values of Sparta and Athens
... Pericles of Athens: The freedom which we enjoy King Archidamus of Sparta: We are both warin our government extends also to our ordinary life. like and wise, and it is our sense of order that makes There, far from exercising a jealous surveillance over us so. We are warlike, because self-control cont ...
... Pericles of Athens: The freedom which we enjoy King Archidamus of Sparta: We are both warin our government extends also to our ordinary life. like and wise, and it is our sense of order that makes There, far from exercising a jealous surveillance over us so. We are warlike, because self-control cont ...
Greece Power Point
... mostly naval, and the other city-states provided financial support In the absence of the Persian threat, eventually the other city-states came to resent financing Athens’ bureaucracy and construction projects ...
... mostly naval, and the other city-states provided financial support In the absence of the Persian threat, eventually the other city-states came to resent financing Athens’ bureaucracy and construction projects ...
Athens vs. Sparta Postcard Assignment
... rough draft before creating your postcard on an index card. This will be your ticket to earn an index card. Back side of postcard (lined side): ● Write to your family as if you have “time traveled” and have been able to visit EITHER the city-state of Athens OR the city-state of Sparta (choose one, n ...
... rough draft before creating your postcard on an index card. This will be your ticket to earn an index card. Back side of postcard (lined side): ● Write to your family as if you have “time traveled” and have been able to visit EITHER the city-state of Athens OR the city-state of Sparta (choose one, n ...
投影片 1
... The decline of Athens The whole traditional basis of individual conduct, stressing the concern for the unity of the city-state, was undermined. The surrender to Spartan in 404 BCE The execution of Socrates The defeat by Macedon (馬其頓王國)in 338 BCE ...
... The decline of Athens The whole traditional basis of individual conduct, stressing the concern for the unity of the city-state, was undermined. The surrender to Spartan in 404 BCE The execution of Socrates The defeat by Macedon (馬其頓王國)in 338 BCE ...
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.