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Classical Greece Test Review Name: #______ Date: Classical
Classical Greece Test Review Name: #______ Date: Classical

... Athens under Pericles  Athenian General Pericles consolidated his own power by using all the tribute money to serve rich and poor citizens.  Generals were among the only public officials in Athens who were elected.  They could not keep their job for more than one year.  Pericles paid wages to ju ...
Greece - Athens: A Young Democracy
Greece - Athens: A Young Democracy

... Poor women helped with farm work or sold goods at the market. Upper-class women often supervised the servants and spun, dyed, or wove cloth. Most upper-class women rarely left their houses except to attend funerals and festivals. Athenian women were always under the care of a male family member. Hus ...
Athens A Young Democracy
Athens A Young Democracy

... Poor women helped with farm work or sold goods at the market. Upper-class women often supervised the servants and spun, dyed, or wove cloth. Most upper-class women rarely left their houses except to attend funerals and festivals. Athenian women were always under the care of a male family member. Hus ...
Archaic Greece (800 BCE – 500 BCE)
Archaic Greece (800 BCE – 500 BCE)

... Which gave poor equal power as rich Divided Attica (Athens region) into regions (Demes) centered on villages, each with its own assembly and magistrates ...
Document B: The Athenian Constitution (Modified)
Document B: The Athenian Constitution (Modified)

... for 10 years, and this was thought to calm any anti-democratic leanings he might have. In other words, the Athenians not only voted people into office, but they had a regular procedure for voting one person per year out of office. It was an option which could be exercised but did not have to be. The ...
The Battle of Marathon Herodotus - Culture, Conflict and Civilization
The Battle of Marathon Herodotus - Culture, Conflict and Civilization

... ...
The Government and Laws of Ancient Greece By Timothy Callery
The Government and Laws of Ancient Greece By Timothy Callery

... Court/Jury--The Court was where all criminal cases were heard, though, the Athenian court was very different from our modern court. There were NO lawyers for anyone, but they did have a jury, and usually organizers/judges who were both paid. The jury voted on how the case’s outcome went, and the jud ...
Ancient Greek Civilization - TReavis
Ancient Greek Civilization - TReavis

... To maintain a 200 ship navy that would police the seas, each state was assessed ships or money in proportion to its wealth. By 468 B.C., after the Ionian cities had been liberated and the Persian fleet destroyed, various League members thought it unnecessary to continue the confederacy. Motivated by ...
PP text- L 4 - MyFranciscan
PP text- L 4 - MyFranciscan

... Athenians: “Because you would have the advantage of submitting before suffering the worst, and we should gain by not destroying you.” Melians: “So you would not consent to our being neutral, friends instead of enemies, but allies of ...
Greek Civilization
Greek Civilization

... 2. Gave land to farmers and gave them loans 3. Built public buildings and fountains to help make Athens a center of Greek culture. Cleisthenes (c.570 1. Created the Council of 500, (508 BC) All who could vote could be on the council The council dealt with all issues, foreign and domestic 2. All legi ...
File
File

... Philochorus is probably the best known of the many chroniclers of events in Athens and surrounding Attica. He wrote extensively on Greek religious customs including a 17-volume history of the region from mythological times to 260 B.C. In 250 B.C., Philochorus was murdered by political enemies. ...
Background Info for the Speech
Background Info for the Speech

... usurped power by force rather than inheritance. Of the democracies, the oldest, the most stable, the most long-lived, but also the most radical, was Athens. The architects of the first democracies of the modern era, post-revolutionary France and the United States, claimed a line of descent from clas ...
4th Century Greece - Eastern New Mexico University
4th Century Greece - Eastern New Mexico University

... Archonship for first 2 Grades Council of 400 Assembly of Appeals  Cleisthenes (570-c.507 BC) ...
Fifth Century Greece
Fifth Century Greece

... Archonship for first 2 Grades Council of 400 Assembly of Appeals  Cleisthenes (570-c.507 BC) ...
Athenian Democracy
Athenian Democracy

... lost. He was exiled for 10 years, and this was thought to calm any anti-democratic leanings he might have.   In other words, the Athenians not only voted people into office, but they had a regular procedure for voting one person per year out of office. It was an option which could be exercised bu ...
Ch. 4 Focus The Ancient Greeks.xlsx
Ch. 4 Focus The Ancient Greeks.xlsx

... www.glscott.org ...
Archaic Age - Way of living – polis revolved around market place
Archaic Age - Way of living – polis revolved around market place

... Way of living – polis revolved around market place (agora), which was a centre of trade  Acropolis - place of defense in a high position or a hill (most known Athens) Types of government  Monarchy – rule by one – total control by king with some of support of counsel  Aristocracy – rule by an elit ...
Athenian Democracy - Get Well Kathleen Davey
Athenian Democracy - Get Well Kathleen Davey

... they wanted an ostracism, voting took place two months later, and each voter scratched the name of the person he wanted ostracized on a piece of broken pottery or potsherd (ostrakon) then the person with the most votes was sent into exile for a ten year period. Ostracism did not carry with it the st ...
Athenian democracy - Ms. Cannistraci presents the World History
Athenian democracy - Ms. Cannistraci presents the World History

... In other words, the Athenians not only voted people into office, but they had a regular procedure for voting one person per year out of office. It was an option which could be exercised but did not have to be. The exile did not involve confiscation or any other punitive measures; it was designed onl ...
Birth of democracy 2 final
Birth of democracy 2 final

... ...
Section 2 Notes
Section 2 Notes

... in the government. Two types of governments developed: (1) oligarchy – a few people hold power (2) democracy – ALL citizens share in running the government. Sparta – focused on military; had an oligarchy government; conquered people to have more land and enslaved the people called them helots and fo ...
Classical Greece - Miami Beach Senior High School
Classical Greece - Miami Beach Senior High School

... participate in government decision making through mass meetings • Assembly=43,000 men over 18, meeting every ten days, but attendance averaged around 5,500 ...
Διαφάνεια 1
Διαφάνεια 1

... buildings is known from surviving examples such as the Parthenon and the Hephaesteum at Athens, the group at Pasteum, the temple complex at Selinunte (Selinus) and the sanctuaries at Agrigentum. Most buildings were rectangular and made from limestone of which Greece has an abundance, and which was c ...
athens democracy
athens democracy

... As for social standing, advancement is open to everyone, according to ability. While every citizen has an equal opportunity to serve the public, we reward our most distinguished citizens by asking them to make our political decisions. Nor do we discriminate against the poor. A man may serve his coun ...
City-States of Greece
City-States of Greece

... • Aristocracy – rule by small group of noble, landowning families • Oligarchy – gov’t by few powerful people • Tyranny – gov’t by person who seizes control • Democracy – representative gov’t by the people ...
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Ostracism

Ostracism (Greek: ὀστρακισμός, ostrakismos) was a procedure under the Athenian democracy in which any citizen could be expelled from the city-state of Athens for ten years. While some instances clearly expressed popular anger at the citizen, ostracism was often used preemptively. It was used as a way of neutralizing someone thought to be a threat to the state or potential tyrant. It has been called an ""honourable exile"" by scholar P.J. Rhodes.
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