Athens and Sparta - White Plains Public Schools
... Athenian democracy meant rule by only some people, not all. Only 40,000 of the 300,000 Athenians had the right to vote. Only citizens of Athens had this right and only free men born in Athens were citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners were not citizens and could not vote. At first, each Athenian c ...
... Athenian democracy meant rule by only some people, not all. Only 40,000 of the 300,000 Athenians had the right to vote. Only citizens of Athens had this right and only free men born in Athens were citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners were not citizens and could not vote. At first, each Athenian c ...
Athens and Sparta
... Athenian democracy meant rule by only some people, not all. Only 40,000 of the 300,000 Athenians had the right to vote. Only citizens of Athens had this right and only free men born in Athens were citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners were not citizens and could not vote. At first, each Athenian c ...
... Athenian democracy meant rule by only some people, not all. Only 40,000 of the 300,000 Athenians had the right to vote. Only citizens of Athens had this right and only free men born in Athens were citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners were not citizens and could not vote. At first, each Athenian c ...
Unit Outline – Ancient Greece
... Sparta: An oligarchy ruled by two kings – a military state – with life rigidly controlled and very disciplined. Boys began learning discipline and military thinking by age 8 – taken from family and put in training schools. Boys who were born deformed or who were sickly were taken out into the hills ...
... Sparta: An oligarchy ruled by two kings – a military state – with life rigidly controlled and very disciplined. Boys began learning discipline and military thinking by age 8 – taken from family and put in training schools. Boys who were born deformed or who were sickly were taken out into the hills ...
Unit Outline – Ancient Greece
... Sparta: An oligarchy ruled by two kings – a military state – with life rigidly controlled and very disciplined. Boys began learning discipline and military thinking by age 8 – taken from family and put in training schools. Boys who were born deformed or who were sickly were taken out into the hills ...
... Sparta: An oligarchy ruled by two kings – a military state – with life rigidly controlled and very disciplined. Boys began learning discipline and military thinking by age 8 – taken from family and put in training schools. Boys who were born deformed or who were sickly were taken out into the hills ...
The Greeks
... huge slave population called helots • All boys and girls educated- women considered equals • Military education • Farming economy • Closed society- very paranoid- did not like outsiders • No wall around city ...
... huge slave population called helots • All boys and girls educated- women considered equals • Military education • Farming economy • Closed society- very paranoid- did not like outsiders • No wall around city ...
Chapter 4: The Rise of Ancient Greece
... I will go into them for the benefit of the sick, and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption; and, further from the seduction of females or males, of freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice or not, in connection with it, I see or hear, in th ...
... I will go into them for the benefit of the sick, and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption; and, further from the seduction of females or males, of freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice or not, in connection with it, I see or hear, in th ...
Section 3 PowerPoint "Conflict in the Greek World"
... Small force meets Persians at Thermopylae Persians defeat Leonidas Burn Athens (nobody home) Themistocles navy defeats Persian fleet Final defeat > on land > Asia Minor ...
... Small force meets Persians at Thermopylae Persians defeat Leonidas Burn Athens (nobody home) Themistocles navy defeats Persian fleet Final defeat > on land > Asia Minor ...
Greek History 2010
... 22. At Athens the bouleuterion was used for A. Legislative deliberation B. Concerts C. State receptions D. Dramatic performances 23. The harbor of Athens was at A. Piraeus B. Thoricus C. Aegina D. Lampsacus 24. The chief elected official in 7th and 6th century Athens was called the A. Prytaneus B. S ...
... 22. At Athens the bouleuterion was used for A. Legislative deliberation B. Concerts C. State receptions D. Dramatic performances 23. The harbor of Athens was at A. Piraeus B. Thoricus C. Aegina D. Lampsacus 24. The chief elected official in 7th and 6th century Athens was called the A. Prytaneus B. S ...
By: S. Padgett - Mrs. Padgett`s Class
... of Greece religion were applied to Ancient Rome. Greek mythology was not real but it was their religion. There were twelve main Olympian gods in Greece mythology. ...
... of Greece religion were applied to Ancient Rome. Greek mythology was not real but it was their religion. There were twelve main Olympian gods in Greece mythology. ...
Classical Greek Culture Learning Station Information Sheets
... people could be seated in a way that let them see what was going on down in the orchestra pit - the stage area. The entire seating section was called the Theatron, which is the origin of our word "theatre". Part of the reason plays were so important is that originally plays were performed to honor D ...
... people could be seated in a way that let them see what was going on down in the orchestra pit - the stage area. The entire seating section was called the Theatron, which is the origin of our word "theatre". Part of the reason plays were so important is that originally plays were performed to honor D ...
Ch 5 Power Point
... • Plague sweeps through a total of 3 times during the war • Generals are dead, Pericles is dead, no leadership ...
... • Plague sweeps through a total of 3 times during the war • Generals are dead, Pericles is dead, no leadership ...
GREECE`S GOLDEN AGE (480 to 430 BC)
... • The Peloponnesian War reshaped the ancient Greek world. On the level of international relations, Athens, the strongest city-state in Greece, was reduced to a state of near-complete subjection, while Sparta became established as the leading power of Greece. • The economic costs of the war were fel ...
... • The Peloponnesian War reshaped the ancient Greek world. On the level of international relations, Athens, the strongest city-state in Greece, was reduced to a state of near-complete subjection, while Sparta became established as the leading power of Greece. • The economic costs of the war were fel ...
Greece—404 to 338 bc
... Aftermath of Peloponnesian War — Battle of Chaeronea After Athens’s defeat at the end of the Peloponnesian War, Sparta became the undisputed first power among the Greek city-states. The Spartan general Lysander had Athens’s walls pulled down and appointed thirty loyal Spartans to run the city. These ...
... Aftermath of Peloponnesian War — Battle of Chaeronea After Athens’s defeat at the end of the Peloponnesian War, Sparta became the undisputed first power among the Greek city-states. The Spartan general Lysander had Athens’s walls pulled down and appointed thirty loyal Spartans to run the city. These ...
Newsletter - Compu Tar Inc.
... Ancient Greece The ancient Greeks believed in many different gods and goddesses. Each city-state in ancient Greece had its own gods and worshiped them in its own way. They were thought to be very much like men and women except that they never grew old or died. They were more powerful than humans, bu ...
... Ancient Greece The ancient Greeks believed in many different gods and goddesses. Each city-state in ancient Greece had its own gods and worshiped them in its own way. They were thought to be very much like men and women except that they never grew old or died. They were more powerful than humans, bu ...
Greek History II
... Athens was, at various times, an aristocracy (ruled by members of a privileged upper class), a plutocracy (ruled by the wealthiest members of society), an autocracy (ruled by a single individual, known as a tyrant to the Athenians regardless of how benevolent), and a limited democracy (ruled by the ...
... Athens was, at various times, an aristocracy (ruled by members of a privileged upper class), a plutocracy (ruled by the wealthiest members of society), an autocracy (ruled by a single individual, known as a tyrant to the Athenians regardless of how benevolent), and a limited democracy (ruled by the ...
Rivals: Athens vs. Sparta - Mat
... – Started this after they suppressed a 30 year revolt by the helots ...
... – Started this after they suppressed a 30 year revolt by the helots ...
Classical Greece
... such as democracy were replaced with monarchy. Women’s lives also changed: for the first time, they were given the rights to be educated and to own property. ...
... such as democracy were replaced with monarchy. Women’s lives also changed: for the first time, they were given the rights to be educated and to own property. ...
greece - Michellelapointe
... • Encouraged Greeks to move to the Alexandria cities – Created a new type of culture • Blended elements of Greek civilization with ideas from Persia, Egypt, and Central Asia • Created the Hellenistic Era – Hellenistic means “to imitate the Greeks” – Expansion of Greek language and ideas to other par ...
... • Encouraged Greeks to move to the Alexandria cities – Created a new type of culture • Blended elements of Greek civilization with ideas from Persia, Egypt, and Central Asia • Created the Hellenistic Era – Hellenistic means “to imitate the Greeks” – Expansion of Greek language and ideas to other par ...
Greek Art. - History Teacher.net
... survived. Our knowledge of Greek painting comes mainly from literary descriptions and from Roman copies. The mural painters often chose to illustrate scenes from the Iliad or Odyssey. On one of the public buildings, for example, an artist painted "The Sack of Troy." With a true sense of tragedy, he ...
... survived. Our knowledge of Greek painting comes mainly from literary descriptions and from Roman copies. The mural painters often chose to illustrate scenes from the Iliad or Odyssey. On one of the public buildings, for example, an artist painted "The Sack of Troy." With a true sense of tragedy, he ...
Ancient Greece - Pineda Ancient History
... 776 BC - The first Olympic Games takes place. The games would take place every 4 years in honor of the Greek god Zeus. 750 BC - Homer begins to write the Iliad and Odyssey. These epic poems become two of the most famous literary works in Greek literature. 508 BC - Democracy is introduced in At ...
... 776 BC - The first Olympic Games takes place. The games would take place every 4 years in honor of the Greek god Zeus. 750 BC - Homer begins to write the Iliad and Odyssey. These epic poems become two of the most famous literary works in Greek literature. 508 BC - Democracy is introduced in At ...