File
... • As we progress through this Unit of Inquiry, look for the advantages and disadvantages of life in the Greek city-states and write your thoughts down. • Whenever you come up with an advantage/disadvantage, you can add it to your ...
... • As we progress through this Unit of Inquiry, look for the advantages and disadvantages of life in the Greek city-states and write your thoughts down. • Whenever you come up with an advantage/disadvantage, you can add it to your ...
Classical Greece Powerpoint
... • In Athens, women lived sheltered lives, and rarely ventured out, even to go shopping • Spun cloth, but didn’t sell it • In Athens, more than 40 priesthoods were held by women, and some festivals and rituals were led only by women • Women were expected to be wives and mothers, hidden in the home, u ...
... • In Athens, women lived sheltered lives, and rarely ventured out, even to go shopping • Spun cloth, but didn’t sell it • In Athens, more than 40 priesthoods were held by women, and some festivals and rituals were led only by women • Women were expected to be wives and mothers, hidden in the home, u ...
Answers
... in the Jury & in the ekklesia, & in religion. Most Greek houses had a dining room for men's dinner parties known as (Gk word in pl.= symposia). Athenian girls married in their teens to a groom usually ca.15years older.. Marriage betw/ 1st or 2nd cousins was common to protect family property. A bride ...
... in the Jury & in the ekklesia, & in religion. Most Greek houses had a dining room for men's dinner parties known as (Gk word in pl.= symposia). Athenian girls married in their teens to a groom usually ca.15years older.. Marriage betw/ 1st or 2nd cousins was common to protect family property. A bride ...
Greece Notes Continued*
... Review: GEOGRAPHY Ancient Greece developed individual city-states due to the islands and mountainous regions. Greece was divided into many City-States. The two that we will focus on: 1. Athens 2. Sparta Years: 700 BC to 400 BC. ...
... Review: GEOGRAPHY Ancient Greece developed individual city-states due to the islands and mountainous regions. Greece was divided into many City-States. The two that we will focus on: 1. Athens 2. Sparta Years: 700 BC to 400 BC. ...
Week 10: The Peloponnesian War, Part I
... general), and then twenty reinforcements to Corcyra. August 433: naval battle off the Sybota islands (Corcyra regains Epidamnus, Athens breaks peace treaty by taking part in battle); Corinth seizes and colonizes Anactorium. Corinth, convinced the Athenians had broken the Thirty Years’ Peace of 445, ...
... general), and then twenty reinforcements to Corcyra. August 433: naval battle off the Sybota islands (Corcyra regains Epidamnus, Athens breaks peace treaty by taking part in battle); Corinth seizes and colonizes Anactorium. Corinth, convinced the Athenians had broken the Thirty Years’ Peace of 445, ...
Sicilian Expedition to Aegospotami
... out faults in our neighbors, especially when we consider the enormous difference between you [Spartans] and the Athenians. To our minds, you are quite unaware of this difference; you have never yet tried to imagine what sort of people these Athenians are against whom you will have to fight--how much ...
... out faults in our neighbors, especially when we consider the enormous difference between you [Spartans] and the Athenians. To our minds, you are quite unaware of this difference; you have never yet tried to imagine what sort of people these Athenians are against whom you will have to fight--how much ...
SSAT 阅读真题及解析(7)
... was ruled by one man. In Athens, however, all citizens helped to rule. Ennobled by this participation, Athenians were prepared to die for their city-state. Perhaps this was the secret of the remarkable victory at Marathon, which freed them from Persian rule. On their way to Marathon, the Persians tr ...
... was ruled by one man. In Athens, however, all citizens helped to rule. Ennobled by this participation, Athenians were prepared to die for their city-state. Perhaps this was the secret of the remarkable victory at Marathon, which freed them from Persian rule. On their way to Marathon, the Persians tr ...
Unit 6 Lesson 8 The Persian and Peloponnesian Wars
... - 480 BC – led by Xerxes I - Persian army, navy and Immortals - Athens worked with Sparta to lead an alliance of Greek city-states - Sparta – strongest army - Athens – strongest navy - Spartans slowed the Persian’s advance at Battle of Thermopylae - Persians burned Athens - Persians defeated in nava ...
... - 480 BC – led by Xerxes I - Persian army, navy and Immortals - Athens worked with Sparta to lead an alliance of Greek city-states - Sparta – strongest army - Athens – strongest navy - Spartans slowed the Persian’s advance at Battle of Thermopylae - Persians burned Athens - Persians defeated in nava ...
25. Questions 25-29. The victory of the small Greek democracy of
... drastic steps to pacify the rebellious part of the empire. Persia was ruled by one man. In Athens, however, all citizens helped to rule. Ennobled by this participation, Athenians were prepared to die for their city-state. Perhaps this was the secret of the remarkable victory at Marathon, which freed ...
... drastic steps to pacify the rebellious part of the empire. Persia was ruled by one man. In Athens, however, all citizens helped to rule. Ennobled by this participation, Athenians were prepared to die for their city-state. Perhaps this was the secret of the remarkable victory at Marathon, which freed ...
Writing Standards in Action-Grade 6 Opinion/Argument Sample
... Furthermore, the agora in Athens is one of the busiest places in Greece. The agora is like the center of a town or a plaza where the marketplace is, where most of the people’s jobs are, and it’s a place for worshiping Gods, like Athena in the Temple of Athena. Because of how busy the Agora is, it is ...
... Furthermore, the agora in Athens is one of the busiest places in Greece. The agora is like the center of a town or a plaza where the marketplace is, where most of the people’s jobs are, and it’s a place for worshiping Gods, like Athena in the Temple of Athena. Because of how busy the Agora is, it is ...
Relations between Athens and Sparta, 478 -440
... Then when Cimon sent soldiers to help Sparta crush the slave revolt, the Spartans sent them home, fearing they might actually side with the helots. In response, Athens ended its policy of friendship with Sparta and allied itself with Sparta’s enemies – Argos and Thessaly. Cimon, who had championed ...
... Then when Cimon sent soldiers to help Sparta crush the slave revolt, the Spartans sent them home, fearing they might actually side with the helots. In response, Athens ended its policy of friendship with Sparta and allied itself with Sparta’s enemies – Argos and Thessaly. Cimon, who had championed ...
Ch. 5 Sec. 5 - J Go World History
... still there, so Athens set up the Delian League, which was an alliance of city-states(140) w/ Athens as the leader ...
... still there, so Athens set up the Delian League, which was an alliance of city-states(140) w/ Athens as the leader ...
Touring Athens During the Golden Age
... You are at the home of a wealthy Athenian family, a place where men and women are rarely allowed to interact with each other. Carefully read the information below about the lives of Greek women. Then, list five (5) important facts about Greek women in your “Walking Tour” journal. Women had very spec ...
... You are at the home of a wealthy Athenian family, a place where men and women are rarely allowed to interact with each other. Carefully read the information below about the lives of Greek women. Then, list five (5) important facts about Greek women in your “Walking Tour” journal. Women had very spec ...
Visual Locating Greece
... isolated settlements from one another. • The communities were independent entities and were self-sufficient. • Examples: ...
... isolated settlements from one another. • The communities were independent entities and were self-sufficient. • Examples: ...
MEGARA Megara was a highly respected city
... home where they memorized poetry and studied drama, public speaking, reading, writing, science, poetry, the flute, the lyre, and a great deal of mathematics. Boys then attended a higher school, and went on to military school for at least two years. Like Athens, Megara offered its citizens a great de ...
... home where they memorized poetry and studied drama, public speaking, reading, writing, science, poetry, the flute, the lyre, and a great deal of mathematics. Boys then attended a higher school, and went on to military school for at least two years. Like Athens, Megara offered its citizens a great de ...
The Acropolis Anacreon and Athenian Claims to Ionia Stephanie
... Athenians certainly would have recognized the Anacreon’s incongruities, as contemporary Athenians framed their superiority through contrasting themselves with other Greeks. While the Anacreon has been claimed to reflect Periclean antiSpartan rhetoric, I argue that it demands a second reading in view ...
... Athenians certainly would have recognized the Anacreon’s incongruities, as contemporary Athenians framed their superiority through contrasting themselves with other Greeks. While the Anacreon has been claimed to reflect Periclean antiSpartan rhetoric, I argue that it demands a second reading in view ...
Fusion The Persian Wars - White Plains Public Schools
... in phalanxes, waited for them. Vastly outnumbered, the Greek soldiers charged. The Persians, who wore light armor and lacked training in this kind of land combat, were no match for the disciplined Greek phalanx. After several hours, the Persians fled the battlefield. The Persians lost more than 6,00 ...
... in phalanxes, waited for them. Vastly outnumbered, the Greek soldiers charged. The Persians, who wore light armor and lacked training in this kind of land combat, were no match for the disciplined Greek phalanx. After several hours, the Persians fled the battlefield. The Persians lost more than 6,00 ...
The Ancient Greeks - Leon County Schools
... against the Athenians and under the rule of their new king, Xerxes, the Persians invaded Greece. b. The Greek city-states banded together to fight the Persians. c. Although the Spartan’s fought at Thermopylae, the Greeks could not stop the Persians. A traitor showed the Persians a trail leading arou ...
... against the Athenians and under the rule of their new king, Xerxes, the Persians invaded Greece. b. The Greek city-states banded together to fight the Persians. c. Although the Spartan’s fought at Thermopylae, the Greeks could not stop the Persians. A traitor showed the Persians a trail leading arou ...
The Persian Wars
... With an army of more than 100,000 men as well as 600 - 700 ships, the Persian king Xerxes was determined to conquer all of Greece. FINALLY… Athens and Sparta put aside their differences. (hip hip hurray!) With these two joined together along with a few other city-states they had about 10,000 men and ...
... With an army of more than 100,000 men as well as 600 - 700 ships, the Persian king Xerxes was determined to conquer all of Greece. FINALLY… Athens and Sparta put aside their differences. (hip hip hurray!) With these two joined together along with a few other city-states they had about 10,000 men and ...
3.1) Ch. 2 Lecture PowerPoint
... – Ten years after Marathon, Darius’s successor, Xerxes, plotted a full-scale invasion of the Greek mainland, building a pontoon bridge across the Hellespont and brining 180,000 soldiers to Greece. His men built a canal in northern Greece so that his troops could be supplied; archaeological proof of ...
... – Ten years after Marathon, Darius’s successor, Xerxes, plotted a full-scale invasion of the Greek mainland, building a pontoon bridge across the Hellespont and brining 180,000 soldiers to Greece. His men built a canal in northern Greece so that his troops could be supplied; archaeological proof of ...
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). ...
Athens information
... Girls did not receive a secondary education. Generally they were married off in their teens to older men. Their father chose who they would marry, and when they were married they would be controlled by their husbands. Equipment When children needed to, they wrote on wooden boards covered with layers ...
... Girls did not receive a secondary education. Generally they were married off in their teens to older men. Their father chose who they would marry, and when they were married they would be controlled by their husbands. Equipment When children needed to, they wrote on wooden boards covered with layers ...
The Golden Age of Athens! - Parkway C-2
... The Greeks had a well-established legal system. In the days before the Greeks invented their alphabet, the handed down their laws by oral traditions. This meant that officials and their assistants had to memorize entire legal codes. However by 600 BCE writing had spread throughout Greece and laws we ...
... The Greeks had a well-established legal system. In the days before the Greeks invented their alphabet, the handed down their laws by oral traditions. This meant that officials and their assistants had to memorize entire legal codes. However by 600 BCE writing had spread throughout Greece and laws we ...
Pericles
... All surviving statues and images of Pericles show him wearing a helmet—his rightful symbol as an Athenian general. The armor also covered up his one known physical flaw—his ong and narrow head. ...
... All surviving statues and images of Pericles show him wearing a helmet—his rightful symbol as an Athenian general. The armor also covered up his one known physical flaw—his ong and narrow head. ...
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.