My World History Chapter 10 – Ancient Greece: Secti
... Governmental structures in Greece – Most people agree that the seeds of our democratic society are rooted in the early government structure of the great Greek city of ancient Athens. However, the change towards a democratic society did not happen quickly. The Greeks experimented with several forms o ...
... Governmental structures in Greece – Most people agree that the seeds of our democratic society are rooted in the early government structure of the great Greek city of ancient Athens. However, the change towards a democratic society did not happen quickly. The Greeks experimented with several forms o ...
The Peloponnesian War
... The Peloponnesian War Directions: Using pages 137-138, put the following events in chronological order in your notes. Then create a comic strip to tell the story of the Peloponnesian War. You will NOT be graded on artistic ability but on neatness, effort and creativity. Sparta defeats Athens Per ...
... The Peloponnesian War Directions: Using pages 137-138, put the following events in chronological order in your notes. Then create a comic strip to tell the story of the Peloponnesian War. You will NOT be graded on artistic ability but on neatness, effort and creativity. Sparta defeats Athens Per ...
Council of 500
... • Conquered people forced to provide food to Sparta • Lived on their own, chose who and when to marry. • Could sell extra crops and ultimately buy their freedom. • Purposely treated badly to avoid rebellion. ...
... • Conquered people forced to provide food to Sparta • Lived on their own, chose who and when to marry. • Could sell extra crops and ultimately buy their freedom. • Purposely treated badly to avoid rebellion. ...
4-3 Athens and Sparta (Part 2) screencast sheet
... • It is these representatives in Congress ___________________________________________________ Thus, the United States is not a true democracy. We are a ____________________________! The Athenian government also included a body called the Council of 500 • The Council of 500 was a smaller body than th ...
... • It is these representatives in Congress ___________________________________________________ Thus, the United States is not a true democracy. We are a ____________________________! The Athenian government also included a body called the Council of 500 • The Council of 500 was a smaller body than th ...
Athens: A Limited Democracy
... could participate in government • Despite successive changes, citizenship was still no where close to universal • Thousands living and working in the city were slaves with no rights • Ordinary Athenians would not have been able to participate in ...
... could participate in government • Despite successive changes, citizenship was still no where close to universal • Thousands living and working in the city were slaves with no rights • Ordinary Athenians would not have been able to participate in ...
Greece #4
... Athens had the better navy, while Sparta had the better army. 2nd year of war- plague killed 1/3 Athens’ population, including Pericles. 415 BC= Athenian military defeated in Sicily at Syracuse. 404 BC= Athens and its allies surrender. 27 years of war= Athens loses empire, power, and wealth (confide ...
... Athens had the better navy, while Sparta had the better army. 2nd year of war- plague killed 1/3 Athens’ population, including Pericles. 415 BC= Athenian military defeated in Sicily at Syracuse. 404 BC= Athens and its allies surrender. 27 years of war= Athens loses empire, power, and wealth (confide ...
Greece #4
... Athens had the better navy, while Sparta had the better army. 2nd year of war- plague killed 1/3 Athens’ population, including Pericles. 415 BC= Athenian military defeated in Sicily at Syracuse. 404 BC= Athens and its allies surrender. 27 years of war= Athens loses empire, power, and wealth (confide ...
... Athens had the better navy, while Sparta had the better army. 2nd year of war- plague killed 1/3 Athens’ population, including Pericles. 415 BC= Athenian military defeated in Sicily at Syracuse. 404 BC= Athens and its allies surrender. 27 years of war= Athens loses empire, power, and wealth (confide ...
Athens: Life and Government
... 6. Now compare Athenian social order to today. How was the definition of power in Athens similar to/different from other civilizations we looked at this year? How is Athenian social order similar to/different from our country today? ...
... 6. Now compare Athenian social order to today. How was the definition of power in Athens similar to/different from other civilizations we looked at this year? How is Athenian social order similar to/different from our country today? ...
The Democratic Experiment
... The governing body of the Athenian democracy was the citizens' assembly (ekklesia). This was open to all 30,000 adult male Athenian citizens but was usually attended by only about 5,000. (Although individual women were classed as citizens or noncitizens, they had no political voice either way.) The ...
... The governing body of the Athenian democracy was the citizens' assembly (ekklesia). This was open to all 30,000 adult male Athenian citizens but was usually attended by only about 5,000. (Although individual women were classed as citizens or noncitizens, they had no political voice either way.) The ...
Golden Age in Athens
... • Developed because poorer Athenian citizens began to demand a voice in their government. • In first democracy every citizen was allowed to vote • Held large meetings to discuss and vote on important issues • Pay given to those participating in the government • Had assembly and juries • Citizens= me ...
... • Developed because poorer Athenian citizens began to demand a voice in their government. • In first democracy every citizen was allowed to vote • Held large meetings to discuss and vote on important issues • Pay given to those participating in the government • Had assembly and juries • Citizens= me ...
Golden Age of Athens PowerPoint
... • Developed because poorer Athenian citizens began to demand a voice in their government. • In first democracy every citizen was allowed to vote • Held large meetings to discuss and vote on important issues • Pay given to those participating in the government • Had assembly and juries • Citizens= me ...
... • Developed because poorer Athenian citizens began to demand a voice in their government. • In first democracy every citizen was allowed to vote • Held large meetings to discuss and vote on important issues • Pay given to those participating in the government • Had assembly and juries • Citizens= me ...
Greece: Athens/Sparta Reading
... Approximately 140,000; Approximately 40,000 men were citizens; and slaves (about 40,000). By 432 BC, Athens had become the most populous city-state in Hellas. In Athens and Attica, there were at least 150,000 Athenians, around 50,000 aliens, and more than 100,000 slaves. Athenian Government Usually ...
... Approximately 140,000; Approximately 40,000 men were citizens; and slaves (about 40,000). By 432 BC, Athens had become the most populous city-state in Hellas. In Athens and Attica, there were at least 150,000 Athenians, around 50,000 aliens, and more than 100,000 slaves. Athenian Government Usually ...
Greek Government
... 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 section of Attica was equally represented ...
... 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 section of Attica was equally represented ...
Athens and Experiments in Democracy
... * Athens was most valuable with Athena on one side and an owl on the other ...
... * Athens was most valuable with Athena on one side and an owl on the other ...
Ancient Greece: The Development of Athenian Democracy
... 508 BC. In 507 BC Cleisthenes introduced a new constitution that made the Assembly the major political body. All citizens could belong to the Assembly, where they were considered equal before the law and guaranteed the freedom of speech. ...
... 508 BC. In 507 BC Cleisthenes introduced a new constitution that made the Assembly the major political body. All citizens could belong to the Assembly, where they were considered equal before the law and guaranteed the freedom of speech. ...
File - Ms. Peterman`s Class
... ◦ City-states have different forms of government. Monarchy -rule by a king Aristocracy -rule by nobility Oligarchy -rule by a small group of powerful merchants and artisans ...
... ◦ City-states have different forms of government. Monarchy -rule by a king Aristocracy -rule by nobility Oligarchy -rule by a small group of powerful merchants and artisans ...
Democracy in Athens
... • Why do some believe that there is a connection between the phalanx and the way larger numbers of people gained political power? ...
... • Why do some believe that there is a connection between the phalanx and the way larger numbers of people gained political power? ...
thens and Sparta Info Chart
... ATHENS Approximately 140,000; Approximately 40,000 men were citizens; and slaves (about 40,000). By 432 BC, Athens had become the most populous citystate in Hellas. In Athens and Attica, there were at least 150,000 Athenians, around 50,000 aliens, and more than 100,000 slaves. ...
... ATHENS Approximately 140,000; Approximately 40,000 men were citizens; and slaves (about 40,000). By 432 BC, Athens had become the most populous citystate in Hellas. In Athens and Attica, there were at least 150,000 Athenians, around 50,000 aliens, and more than 100,000 slaves. ...
Name: Mrs. S.S. Block 2 Date: Greece
... Athenians practice __________ democracy- where all citizens can participate in the decisions making process. __________ was an important general in Athenian government. He worked to allow all people to have the chance to be involved in government. Under Pericles, Athens also became a center of _____ ...
... Athenians practice __________ democracy- where all citizens can participate in the decisions making process. __________ was an important general in Athenian government. He worked to allow all people to have the chance to be involved in government. Under Pericles, Athens also became a center of _____ ...
Funding Military Expeditions in Classical Athens
... wealthy citizens often had to step forward and perform liturgies to keep Athens operational. Some liturgies, such as sponsoring a chorus, cost about 300 drachmas or so. However, the biggest liturgy was the trierarchy, when an elite citizen or group of 2-3 wealthy people working together would fund a ...
... wealthy citizens often had to step forward and perform liturgies to keep Athens operational. Some liturgies, such as sponsoring a chorus, cost about 300 drachmas or so. However, the biggest liturgy was the trierarchy, when an elite citizen or group of 2-3 wealthy people working together would fund a ...
Liturgy (ancient Greece)
The liturgy (Greek: λειτουργία or λῃτουργία, leitourgia, from λαός / Laos, ""the people"" and the root ἔργο / ergon, ""work"" ) was in ancient Greece a public service established by the city-state whereby its richest members (whether citizens or resident aliens), more or less voluntarily, financed the State with their personal wealth. It took its legitimacy from the idea that ""personal wealth is possessed only through delegation from the city"". The liturgical system dates back to the early days of Athenian democracy, but gradually fell into disuse by the end of the 4th century BC, eclipsed by the development of Euergetism in the Hellenistic period.