Athens and Sparta - White Plains Public Schools
... where average citizens had political power. Democracy has become the most important contribution the ancient Greeks made to civilization. Let’s define the following political terms: Aristocracy: ________________________________________________________ Tyrant: ____________________________________ ...
... where average citizens had political power. Democracy has become the most important contribution the ancient Greeks made to civilization. Let’s define the following political terms: Aristocracy: ________________________________________________________ Tyrant: ____________________________________ ...
Ancient Greece Military Battles Powerpoint
... Sparta attacked Athens and Persia attacked Athens (revenge from Persian Wars) 405 BCE- Athenian navy destroyed in a surprise attack 404 BCE- Athens totally surrendered to Sparta who installed oligarchic government Age of Athens, Age of Pericles, the Classical Age and the Athenian Empire- came to and ...
... Sparta attacked Athens and Persia attacked Athens (revenge from Persian Wars) 405 BCE- Athenian navy destroyed in a surprise attack 404 BCE- Athens totally surrendered to Sparta who installed oligarchic government Age of Athens, Age of Pericles, the Classical Age and the Athenian Empire- came to and ...
Sequencing events in the Peloponnesian War
... Sequencing events in the Peloponnesian War Outcomes: 4.4 Identifies major periods of historical time and sequences people and ...
... Sequencing events in the Peloponnesian War Outcomes: 4.4 Identifies major periods of historical time and sequences people and ...
Chapter 5: Ancient Greece
... Cleisthenes took over after Peisistratus died and set the table for Athenian democracy. He divided Athens into 10 tribes based on where people lived. Each tribe elected 50 men to serve on a council of 500. ...
... Cleisthenes took over after Peisistratus died and set the table for Athenian democracy. He divided Athens into 10 tribes based on where people lived. Each tribe elected 50 men to serve on a council of 500. ...
Delian League
... forever. In 460 BCE the First Peloponnesian War broke out between Athens, Corinth, Sparta, and their allies. For the first time the League was being used against Greek citystates and Persia was off the agenda. Then c. 454 BCE Athens used the excuse of a failed League expedition in Egypt (to aid the ...
... forever. In 460 BCE the First Peloponnesian War broke out between Athens, Corinth, Sparta, and their allies. For the first time the League was being used against Greek citystates and Persia was off the agenda. Then c. 454 BCE Athens used the excuse of a failed League expedition in Egypt (to aid the ...
Greek Political Systems and Greek Wars
... Although the Persian empire was at the peak of its strength, the collective defense mounted by the Greeks overcame seemingly impossible odds and even succeeded in liberating Greek city-states Greek triumph ensured the survival of Greek culture and political structures long after the demise of th ...
... Although the Persian empire was at the peak of its strength, the collective defense mounted by the Greeks overcame seemingly impossible odds and even succeeded in liberating Greek city-states Greek triumph ensured the survival of Greek culture and political structures long after the demise of th ...
Athens
... classes who had to help their family make a living and performed menial tasks (like getting water from one of the two fountain houses) alongside slave women from richer families . For fear of corruption, aristocratic families often did not allow their sons to frequent the Agora until young adulthood ...
... classes who had to help their family make a living and performed menial tasks (like getting water from one of the two fountain houses) alongside slave women from richer families . For fear of corruption, aristocratic families often did not allow their sons to frequent the Agora until young adulthood ...
Classical Greece
... basically slaves forced to work for Sparta. The Spartan form of government was an oligarchy, composed of two kings and 28 council members over the age of 60. Sparta was above all a military state with the art of warfare as the central focus of Spartan life, and all other arts were frowned upon. ...
... basically slaves forced to work for Sparta. The Spartan form of government was an oligarchy, composed of two kings and 28 council members over the age of 60. Sparta was above all a military state with the art of warfare as the central focus of Spartan life, and all other arts were frowned upon. ...
the Acropolis
... Stadium for contests.The Olympics were held there in 1896, and today people still jog and exercise in the stadium. ...
... Stadium for contests.The Olympics were held there in 1896, and today people still jog and exercise in the stadium. ...
Assess how the Delian League transformed into the Athenian empire
... Sea, Mesopotamia and western Mediterranean as far as Massilia (Marseilles) ...
... Sea, Mesopotamia and western Mediterranean as far as Massilia (Marseilles) ...
webquest sparta athens handout
... Spartan women enjoyed considerably more rights and equality to men than elsewhere in the classical world. Women from Spartiate families were raised to embrace the same ideals of service to the state as Spartan men were. They did not serve in the army, although they took a lively interest in it and i ...
... Spartan women enjoyed considerably more rights and equality to men than elsewhere in the classical world. Women from Spartiate families were raised to embrace the same ideals of service to the state as Spartan men were. They did not serve in the army, although they took a lively interest in it and i ...
DEVELOPMENT OF ATHENIAN DEMOCRACY
... limit their power. Most public offices in the developed Athenian democracy were chose by lot, i.e., were chosen randomly. All those citizens willing to serve in a certain office put their names forward, and the winner was chosen rather like we choose lottery numbers. The Greeks considered this the m ...
... limit their power. Most public offices in the developed Athenian democracy were chose by lot, i.e., were chosen randomly. All those citizens willing to serve in a certain office put their names forward, and the winner was chosen rather like we choose lottery numbers. The Greeks considered this the m ...
File
... Athens had to give up its navy and empire Athens had to follow Spartan foreign policy ...
... Athens had to give up its navy and empire Athens had to follow Spartan foreign policy ...
Peloponnesian War
... Athens had to give up its navy and empire Athens had to follow Spartan foreign policy ...
... Athens had to give up its navy and empire Athens had to follow Spartan foreign policy ...
Peloponnesian War ppt
... Athens had to give up its navy and empire Athens had to follow Spartan foreign policy ...
... Athens had to give up its navy and empire Athens had to follow Spartan foreign policy ...
Athenian Government Rocks - wwpk-3
... Athens had a democracy, but instead of a democracy where we elect representatives to represent us, in Athens, you voted on laws yourselves. This is what we call a direct democracy. A direct democracy was better than an oligarchy because in an oligarchy, although you get certain protections, you get ...
... Athens had a democracy, but instead of a democracy where we elect representatives to represent us, in Athens, you voted on laws yourselves. This is what we call a direct democracy. A direct democracy was better than an oligarchy because in an oligarchy, although you get certain protections, you get ...
Cleisthenes
... Cleisthenes a. Athens – 510 BC/BCE b. The Tyrant Hippias had been kicked out of Athens for being a bad leader c. Cleisthenes was an Athenian Aristocrat i. Rich and powerful person ii. He wanted more power…he wanted to rule d. Tyrranies were unpopular with the people, so he could not be a tyrant II. ...
... Cleisthenes a. Athens – 510 BC/BCE b. The Tyrant Hippias had been kicked out of Athens for being a bad leader c. Cleisthenes was an Athenian Aristocrat i. Rich and powerful person ii. He wanted more power…he wanted to rule d. Tyrranies were unpopular with the people, so he could not be a tyrant II. ...
Greece - Fort Bend ISD
... • Sparta was a Military State. From a young age children (boys) were trained in military tactics. • Women would exercise and keep their bodies in good physical health. ...
... • Sparta was a Military State. From a young age children (boys) were trained in military tactics. • Women would exercise and keep their bodies in good physical health. ...
Ancient Greece - Duluth High School
... – Mt. Olympus is the highest (home of the gods) – Made transportation difficult (took Sparta nearly a week to travel 60 miles to Olympics) – Affected political life with a collection of small independent city-states, not one large government No navigable rivers—the people could not trade ...
... – Mt. Olympus is the highest (home of the gods) – Made transportation difficult (took Sparta nearly a week to travel 60 miles to Olympics) – Affected political life with a collection of small independent city-states, not one large government No navigable rivers—the people could not trade ...
ATHENS - Alabama School of Fine Arts
... • Divided citizens into 4 groups, based on wealth (rather than inherited noble status). Men from the two richest groups could hold office, including Archon. In effect, Athens made the transition from aristocracy to oligarchy. • All male citizens were members of the Assembly, and the Assembly elected ...
... • Divided citizens into 4 groups, based on wealth (rather than inherited noble status). Men from the two richest groups could hold office, including Archon. In effect, Athens made the transition from aristocracy to oligarchy. • All male citizens were members of the Assembly, and the Assembly elected ...
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.