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... “The Golden Age is the term used to denote the historical period in Ancient Greece lasting roughly from the end of the Persian Wars in 448 BC to either the death of Pericles 429 BC or the end of the Peloponnesian War BC. Pericles - an Athenian general, politician and orator – distinguished himself a ...
... “The Golden Age is the term used to denote the historical period in Ancient Greece lasting roughly from the end of the Persian Wars in 448 BC to either the death of Pericles 429 BC or the end of the Peloponnesian War BC. Pericles - an Athenian general, politician and orator – distinguished himself a ...
Study Guide Chapter 3 (89487)
... Defendant: A person who is accused of a crime in a court case. Direct democracy: People vote directly to make decisions rather than having representatives. Epic: A long poem that tells a story, usually about a legendary hero (e.g., Illiad and Odyssey by Homer). Lottery: A process in which names are ...
... Defendant: A person who is accused of a crime in a court case. Direct democracy: People vote directly to make decisions rather than having representatives. Epic: A long poem that tells a story, usually about a legendary hero (e.g., Illiad and Odyssey by Homer). Lottery: A process in which names are ...
PP - Weber State University
... ushered in the “Hellenistic age.” in which Greek culture (art, architecture, philosophy, etc.) was brought to the nonGreek nations conquered by Alexander the Great ...
... ushered in the “Hellenistic age.” in which Greek culture (art, architecture, philosophy, etc.) was brought to the nonGreek nations conquered by Alexander the Great ...
File - Arete Project
... existence from 387 B.C. to A.D. 529, when it was closed by Justinian, the Byzantine emperor. Our knowledge of Socrates comes to us from numerous dialogues which Plato wrote after 399. In nearly every dialogue – and there are more than thirty that we know about – Socrates is the main speaker. The st ...
... existence from 387 B.C. to A.D. 529, when it was closed by Justinian, the Byzantine emperor. Our knowledge of Socrates comes to us from numerous dialogues which Plato wrote after 399. In nearly every dialogue – and there are more than thirty that we know about – Socrates is the main speaker. The st ...
Classical Greece and Rome
... http://www.mead.k12.wa.us/SHILOH/Griffith/MrGsWebPage2/Ancient_Greece/Ancient%20Greece.jpg ...
... http://www.mead.k12.wa.us/SHILOH/Griffith/MrGsWebPage2/Ancient_Greece/Ancient%20Greece.jpg ...
Entertainment and Recreation in the Classical World—Tourism
... Tourism is the leading industry in the world. Its products vary from one country to another. In some countries tourism recently became known and developed. Antiquities and ancient literary sources in Greece and Rome present huge evidence that show the origin of modern entertainment, recreation and l ...
... Tourism is the leading industry in the world. Its products vary from one country to another. In some countries tourism recently became known and developed. Antiquities and ancient literary sources in Greece and Rome present huge evidence that show the origin of modern entertainment, recreation and l ...
第二讲希腊神话
... wonder if you know the great flood described in the Bible. According to the Bible, when God saw all the people became wicked, he decided to destroy them by a flood, and while the great flood destroyed all the humans, only Noah and his family members ---- his wife and their three sons ---- survived t ...
... wonder if you know the great flood described in the Bible. According to the Bible, when God saw all the people became wicked, he decided to destroy them by a flood, and while the great flood destroyed all the humans, only Noah and his family members ---- his wife and their three sons ---- survived t ...
Athens: A Greek Polis
... had no magnificent public buildings. The theatre-like area on a hill-side was the meeting place of the ekklesia, i. e. the gathering of the citizens. In the time of the classic Athenian democracy (5th century BC) there was space for about 15,000 citizens to come together in order to discuss and vote ...
... had no magnificent public buildings. The theatre-like area on a hill-side was the meeting place of the ekklesia, i. e. the gathering of the citizens. In the time of the classic Athenian democracy (5th century BC) there was space for about 15,000 citizens to come together in order to discuss and vote ...
Plataea
... rights, it is more likely than not that he had seen them in battle. Furthermore, if the whole Spartan hoplite force had indeed been sent to Plataea, it would have been risky to have left such large numbers of able-bodied helots at home; therefore having them present at the battle as auxiliary troops ...
... rights, it is more likely than not that he had seen them in battle. Furthermore, if the whole Spartan hoplite force had indeed been sent to Plataea, it would have been risky to have left such large numbers of able-bodied helots at home; therefore having them present at the battle as auxiliary troops ...
Greek Knowledge Challenge
... The blind Greek poet who wrote the “Iliad” and the “Odyssey” was? a) Pericles b) Homer c) Herodotus d) Alexander. ...
... The blind Greek poet who wrote the “Iliad” and the “Odyssey” was? a) Pericles b) Homer c) Herodotus d) Alexander. ...
Glory, War, and Decline
... • Athenians were commonly working as farmers. • Athens did not have enough land to provide, so they had to import from other places. • Built a large fleet of ships to trade with colonies. • Athens led the Greek world in trade. ...
... • Athenians were commonly working as farmers. • Athens did not have enough land to provide, so they had to import from other places. • Built a large fleet of ships to trade with colonies. • Athens led the Greek world in trade. ...
Acts 16 - Sun River Church
... that there was a synagogue (v. 16 “place of prayer is literally “synagogue”) that was most likely outside the city limits and usually held in some kind of building (a house?) that was near a river. It is likely that a place of prayer connected with the synagogue was available to people and that ofte ...
... that there was a synagogue (v. 16 “place of prayer is literally “synagogue”) that was most likely outside the city limits and usually held in some kind of building (a house?) that was near a river. It is likely that a place of prayer connected with the synagogue was available to people and that ofte ...
Name ______ __ Score ____________% Due: Thursday, January
... _____13. By 338 B.C.E., the Greeks had fallen to a. Darius. b. Alexander. c. Philip II. d. Xerxes. e. Julius Caesar. Page: 197 _____14. The largest part of Alexander’s conquests, essentially the former Achaemenid empire, was taken over by a. Ptolemy. b. Antigonus. c. Darius. d. Seleucus. Page: 199 _ ...
... _____13. By 338 B.C.E., the Greeks had fallen to a. Darius. b. Alexander. c. Philip II. d. Xerxes. e. Julius Caesar. Page: 197 _____14. The largest part of Alexander’s conquests, essentially the former Achaemenid empire, was taken over by a. Ptolemy. b. Antigonus. c. Darius. d. Seleucus. Page: 199 _ ...
The Persian Wars 2016
... – He believed it was necessary to subjugate the free Greeks of the Greek mainland in order to secure his control over western Asia Minor. ...
... – He believed it was necessary to subjugate the free Greeks of the Greek mainland in order to secure his control over western Asia Minor. ...
The Greek World - La Trobe University
... leads a large army round the Aegean and through Thrace The Greek city-‐states meet in Corinth to devise a joint strategy against the Persians 480 BCE 300 Spartans, led by Leonidas, die a1emp[ng ...
... leads a large army round the Aegean and through Thrace The Greek city-‐states meet in Corinth to devise a joint strategy against the Persians 480 BCE 300 Spartans, led by Leonidas, die a1emp[ng ...
Ancient Greek Philosophers
... It was said of Diogenes that throughout his life he “searched with a lantern in the daylight for an honest man.” And though Diogenes apparently did not find an honest man, he had, in the process, “exposed the vanity and selfishness of man.” He was a pupil of Antisthenes who founded the cynics. Cynic ...
... It was said of Diogenes that throughout his life he “searched with a lantern in the daylight for an honest man.” And though Diogenes apparently did not find an honest man, he had, in the process, “exposed the vanity and selfishness of man.” He was a pupil of Antisthenes who founded the cynics. Cynic ...
the peloponnesian war
... Where was all this money coming from? Some of it came from the Delian League. (Athens only kept 1/60th of the League’s treasury to pay for the guards but because the League collected so much money, even 1/60th was a lot!) Athens grew rich guarding the treasury of the Delian League. The other Greek c ...
... Where was all this money coming from? Some of it came from the Delian League. (Athens only kept 1/60th of the League’s treasury to pay for the guards but because the League collected so much money, even 1/60th was a lot!) Athens grew rich guarding the treasury of the Delian League. The other Greek c ...
HERODOTUS ON THE OLYMPICS: BIGNESS AND GREEKNESS
... D. Ogden, The Crooked Kings of Ancient Greece (London, 1997), 117. ...
... D. Ogden, The Crooked Kings of Ancient Greece (London, 1997), 117. ...
WHICh6-GreecePart2-Internet-2013
... 10) I designed the Parthenon and a sanctuary for Demeter: 11) I gave my name to a formula used to calculate the sides of a right triangle: 12) I believed that illnesses were the result of imbalances in the 4 humors: 13) I wrote comedies that poked fun at the Athenian way of life: 14) I was sentenced ...
... 10) I designed the Parthenon and a sanctuary for Demeter: 11) I gave my name to a formula used to calculate the sides of a right triangle: 12) I believed that illnesses were the result of imbalances in the 4 humors: 13) I wrote comedies that poked fun at the Athenian way of life: 14) I was sentenced ...
2. Athens: The Polis - The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College
... put such strong emphasis on the average citizen's performance of his duties. ...
... put such strong emphasis on the average citizen's performance of his duties. ...
Ancient Greece Persian and Peloponnesian War
... Led army to the Indus River where his troops forced in him to turn back ...
... Led army to the Indus River where his troops forced in him to turn back ...
The Golden Age of Athens - Mrs. Silverman: Social Studies
... • Alliance between 140 city-states • Athens quickly emerged as Greek leader ...
... • Alliance between 140 city-states • Athens quickly emerged as Greek leader ...
Rise and Fall of Athenian Greatness Dr. Geoffrey Dipple Chair of
... Chair of History Dept. at Augustana College Athens was the largest polis in the Greek world. Its population rose to about 300,000 at its height about 440 BCE. About half of these were citizens and their families. At least 100,000 were slaves. The rest were foreigners--traders who had to be registere ...
... Chair of History Dept. at Augustana College Athens was the largest polis in the Greek world. Its population rose to about 300,000 at its height about 440 BCE. About half of these were citizens and their families. At least 100,000 were slaves. The rest were foreigners--traders who had to be registere ...
War, Glory, and Decline 4 iv The Persian Wars
... session followed by a banquet. Wives were excluded. ...
... session followed by a banquet. Wives were excluded. ...