The-Peloponessian-Warppt.LiamMacS
... Archidamus beseiged the twon of Plataea, which only consisted of 800 citizens and 85 Athenians The Plataeans resisted courageously & Archidamus resorted to starving the city out ...
... Archidamus beseiged the twon of Plataea, which only consisted of 800 citizens and 85 Athenians The Plataeans resisted courageously & Archidamus resorted to starving the city out ...
this PDF file - Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies
... 308 HELLENIC HOMONOIA AND THE DECREE FROM PLAT AEA ...
... 308 HELLENIC HOMONOIA AND THE DECREE FROM PLAT AEA ...
The Trial of Socrates
... take my advice, I would recommend you to be careful." Anytus had an additional personal gripe concerning the relationship Socrates had with his son. Plato quotes Socrates as saying, "I has a brief association with the son of Anytus, and I found him not lacking in spirit." It is not known whether th ...
... take my advice, I would recommend you to be careful." Anytus had an additional personal gripe concerning the relationship Socrates had with his son. Plato quotes Socrates as saying, "I has a brief association with the son of Anytus, and I found him not lacking in spirit." It is not known whether th ...
The Trial of Socrates by Doug Linder (2002)
... a politician coming from a family of tanners, and Socrates. In the Meno, Plato reports that Socrates' argument that the great statesmen of Athenian history have nothing to offer in terms of an understanding of virtue enrages Anytus. Plato quotes Anytus as warning Socrates: "Socrates, I think that yo ...
... a politician coming from a family of tanners, and Socrates. In the Meno, Plato reports that Socrates' argument that the great statesmen of Athenian history have nothing to offer in terms of an understanding of virtue enrages Anytus. Plato quotes Anytus as warning Socrates: "Socrates, I think that yo ...
a garrison inscription from rhamnous
... the Akarnanians, and in the following year suffered a still more severe devastation at the hands of Philip V of Macedonia. Only once are we told that any garrison offered serious resistance; the garrison at Eleusis held out against a Macedoniandetachmentin 200 B.C.,but was saved.from destruction onl ...
... the Akarnanians, and in the following year suffered a still more severe devastation at the hands of Philip V of Macedonia. Only once are we told that any garrison offered serious resistance; the garrison at Eleusis held out against a Macedoniandetachmentin 200 B.C.,but was saved.from destruction onl ...
Untitled
... addressed. If one is to assert that literate education helped maintain and promote a culture in which a majority of citizens seemed content to live at or near the subsistence level in one of the wealthiest societies of the time by reinforcing certain values, one must examine the economy, values, and ...
... addressed. If one is to assert that literate education helped maintain and promote a culture in which a majority of citizens seemed content to live at or near the subsistence level in one of the wealthiest societies of the time by reinforcing certain values, one must examine the economy, values, and ...
Paper - PDST
... Read the following letter written by Cicero to his friend Atticus in February 49 BC, just after the outbreak of Civil War between Pompey and Caesar. There is not a foot of Italian soil which is not in Caesar’s grasp. Of Pompey I know nothing, and unless he takes refuge aboard ship I expect he will b ...
... Read the following letter written by Cicero to his friend Atticus in February 49 BC, just after the outbreak of Civil War between Pompey and Caesar. There is not a foot of Italian soil which is not in Caesar’s grasp. Of Pompey I know nothing, and unless he takes refuge aboard ship I expect he will b ...
From Innovative Democracy to Warfare State: Ancient Athens as a
... different to the Peloponnesian League, as it was not based on separate treaties between states and a hegemonic power, but a general covenant freely accepted, while not permitting secession. Sparta was the hegemonic power, as a Spartan was the commander in chief, but the consent of the allied states’ ...
... different to the Peloponnesian League, as it was not based on separate treaties between states and a hegemonic power, but a general covenant freely accepted, while not permitting secession. Sparta was the hegemonic power, as a Spartan was the commander in chief, but the consent of the allied states’ ...
Peloponnesian War: Practice Test 1. The politician who
... 75. In 421 Athens and Sparta agreed to the Peace of Nicias. Which statement is not true about the Peace? A. Athens and Sparta agreed to return to the status quo in 431. B. Delphi was chosen to moderate future disputes between the parties. C. Corinth and Thebes refused to join Sparta in the Peace. ...
... 75. In 421 Athens and Sparta agreed to the Peace of Nicias. Which statement is not true about the Peace? A. Athens and Sparta agreed to return to the status quo in 431. B. Delphi was chosen to moderate future disputes between the parties. C. Corinth and Thebes refused to join Sparta in the Peace. ...
Parthenon - Action West London
... Parthenon was built under the general supervision of the great sculptor Phidias (also responsible for the sculptural decorations) by the architects Ictinos and Callicrates and was completed by 431 BC. Parthenon was built of marble stone from Mount Pentelicus, which is 16 km away from Acropolis a ...
... Parthenon was built under the general supervision of the great sculptor Phidias (also responsible for the sculptural decorations) by the architects Ictinos and Callicrates and was completed by 431 BC. Parthenon was built of marble stone from Mount Pentelicus, which is 16 km away from Acropolis a ...
The History of the Peloponnesian War, Book I 1-88
... Thucydides proceeds to discuss the second key event leading up to the Peloponnesian war: the affair of Potidaea. A Corinthian colony that is also a tributary ally of Athens, Poitdaea finds itself caught in the middle of the Athens-Corinth conflict. Potidaea decides to revolt against Athens after rec ...
... Thucydides proceeds to discuss the second key event leading up to the Peloponnesian war: the affair of Potidaea. A Corinthian colony that is also a tributary ally of Athens, Poitdaea finds itself caught in the middle of the Athens-Corinth conflict. Potidaea decides to revolt against Athens after rec ...
Oedipus--The Dr. Philanakalis Program`s
... Much of the myth of Oedipus takes place before the opening scene of the play. The main character of the tragedy is Oedipus, son of King Laius of Thebes and Queen Jocasta. After Laius learned from an oracle that "he was doomed/To perish by the hand of his own son," Jocasta ordered a messenger to leav ...
... Much of the myth of Oedipus takes place before the opening scene of the play. The main character of the tragedy is Oedipus, son of King Laius of Thebes and Queen Jocasta. After Laius learned from an oracle that "he was doomed/To perish by the hand of his own son," Jocasta ordered a messenger to leav ...
Chapter 2 : The Rise of Greek Civilization
... (Answer: Panhellenic, page 41) 22. In some cities the crisis produced by new economic and social conditions led to or intensified factional division within the ruling aristocracy and often resulted in the establishment of a ___________. (Answer: tyranny, page 42) 23. Examine Map 2-2. What accounts f ...
... (Answer: Panhellenic, page 41) 22. In some cities the crisis produced by new economic and social conditions led to or intensified factional division within the ruling aristocracy and often resulted in the establishment of a ___________. (Answer: tyranny, page 42) 23. Examine Map 2-2. What accounts f ...
to read an essay
... limited democratic assembly, which Thucydides praised as “a better government than ever before, at least in my time.” He praised it for having “a reasonable and moderate blending of the few and the many, and it was in this, in the first place, that made it possible for the city to recover from the b ...
... limited democratic assembly, which Thucydides praised as “a better government than ever before, at least in my time.” He praised it for having “a reasonable and moderate blending of the few and the many, and it was in this, in the first place, that made it possible for the city to recover from the b ...
Historiographical Estrangement as Critique: The Divided History of
... the common people. Thus, even when these works focused specifically on Athens, as was the case with the earliest historical accounts of Greek past, written by the French writer Guillaume Postel in 1541 and the humanist thinker Carolus Sigonius in 1565, their subject matter was not the Athenian democ ...
... the common people. Thus, even when these works focused specifically on Athens, as was the case with the earliest historical accounts of Greek past, written by the French writer Guillaume Postel in 1541 and the humanist thinker Carolus Sigonius in 1565, their subject matter was not the Athenian democ ...
Music before and after Solesmes - Pudel Uni
... notation in the 11th century by Guido of Arezzo, one of the most important teachers of Gregorian chant in the Middle Ages, was a fundamental break in the understanding of Gregorian chant. Putting the neumes on lines, giving them a certain pitch, made it possible to sing chants without the aid of a t ...
... notation in the 11th century by Guido of Arezzo, one of the most important teachers of Gregorian chant in the Middle Ages, was a fundamental break in the understanding of Gregorian chant. Putting the neumes on lines, giving them a certain pitch, made it possible to sing chants without the aid of a t ...
`On Teaching Aeschylus` Persians` - Classical Association of Victoria
... consists of twelve people in an Aeschylean play (or fifteen in Sophocles’ and Euripides’ time) who are all the same in terms of identity and social status, who are present on-stage for the majority of the action, and are therefore always in the background, witnessing all the events that affect the o ...
... consists of twelve people in an Aeschylean play (or fifteen in Sophocles’ and Euripides’ time) who are all the same in terms of identity and social status, who are present on-stage for the majority of the action, and are therefore always in the background, witnessing all the events that affect the o ...
Greece Bingo Questions and Answers
... 4. The rebellion of this group eventually led to Sparta transforming into a completely militaristic society. Answer: Helots 5. Which battle during the Persian Wars ended with a man running 26 miles to Athens to tell the people that the Greeks had won? Answer: Battle of Marathon 6. This alliance brou ...
... 4. The rebellion of this group eventually led to Sparta transforming into a completely militaristic society. Answer: Helots 5. Which battle during the Persian Wars ended with a man running 26 miles to Athens to tell the people that the Greeks had won? Answer: Battle of Marathon 6. This alliance brou ...
Study Guide Thucydides and the Peloponnesian War
... 9) “All who have taken it upon themselves to rule over others have incurred hatred and unpopularity for a time; but if one has a great aim to pursue, this burden of envy must be accepted, and it is wise to accept it. Hatred does not last for long; but the brilliance of the present is the glory of th ...
... 9) “All who have taken it upon themselves to rule over others have incurred hatred and unpopularity for a time; but if one has a great aim to pursue, this burden of envy must be accepted, and it is wise to accept it. Hatred does not last for long; but the brilliance of the present is the glory of th ...
“Begging in Style: Supplication in Mind`s Eye and on Stage”
... uselesslyby dead fellow Suitor Agelaus. The righteous executioner spares another suppliant, ...
... uselesslyby dead fellow Suitor Agelaus. The righteous executioner spares another suppliant, ...
Hellenic Holocaust: A Historical Clinico-Pathologic
... Lacking a “perfect-fit” diagnosis, we must look for alternative ways to ferret out the cause of this patient’s illness. Let us consider the characteristics of the epidemic. Four features make this outbreak unique: it occurred in Athens, its setting was wartime, it erupted within a besieged city, and ...
... Lacking a “perfect-fit” diagnosis, we must look for alternative ways to ferret out the cause of this patient’s illness. Let us consider the characteristics of the epidemic. Four features make this outbreak unique: it occurred in Athens, its setting was wartime, it erupted within a besieged city, and ...
Chapter 4 section 2 - Plainview Public Schools
... • The main city contained the marketplace, public buildings, and homes. • The citizens, or free residents, of cities shared responsibilities and debated ideas. • Male landowners held all of the political power. ...
... • The main city contained the marketplace, public buildings, and homes. • The citizens, or free residents, of cities shared responsibilities and debated ideas. • Male landowners held all of the political power. ...
Persian Wars Play
... Greek soldier #1: But King Leonidas, I heard that there will be so many Persian arrows, that the sky will turn black from all of them! King Leonidas: That is good news, soldier. We will fight in the shade! Ha, ha! (Themistocles, King Leonidas, and Greek soldier #1 are standing center stage, whisperi ...
... Greek soldier #1: But King Leonidas, I heard that there will be so many Persian arrows, that the sky will turn black from all of them! King Leonidas: That is good news, soldier. We will fight in the shade! Ha, ha! (Themistocles, King Leonidas, and Greek soldier #1 are standing center stage, whisperi ...
Chapter 4
... Herodotus: We must show the Persians that we have the right to land and liberty! We must not stop spreading Greek culture! So, people of Athens, continue to spread Greek colonies throughout the world! (All exit stage right, except Herodotus who goes to stage left.) Scene 2: Persepolis, 490 B.C. (He ...
... Herodotus: We must show the Persians that we have the right to land and liberty! We must not stop spreading Greek culture! So, people of Athens, continue to spread Greek colonies throughout the world! (All exit stage right, except Herodotus who goes to stage left.) Scene 2: Persepolis, 490 B.C. (He ...