5IR Ancient Greece Class Assembly
... Persian: Darius collects countries and yours looks really pretty. Narrator 2: So the Athenians and the Spartans forgot their differences and joined together to fight the invaders. Athenian 1: Come on, Athenians - let’s get them!!! Narrator 3: The Athenians defeated the Persians at the battle of ...
... Persian: Darius collects countries and yours looks really pretty. Narrator 2: So the Athenians and the Spartans forgot their differences and joined together to fight the invaders. Athenian 1: Come on, Athenians - let’s get them!!! Narrator 3: The Athenians defeated the Persians at the battle of ...
The Athenian Empire and Control of the Saronic Gulf: Expansion
... Peloponnesian War. Before this truce, “conditions of war are likely to have prevented the journey to the Epidaurian sanctuary to fetch Asklepios.”39 The man who undertook these efforts to transport Asklepios (in the form of his sacred snake) to Athens, between 421 and 419 BCE, was Telemachos. He ere ...
... Peloponnesian War. Before this truce, “conditions of war are likely to have prevented the journey to the Epidaurian sanctuary to fetch Asklepios.”39 The man who undertook these efforts to transport Asklepios (in the form of his sacred snake) to Athens, between 421 and 419 BCE, was Telemachos. He ere ...
Ancient Greece Project - Teaching and Technology Ideas
... areas. Include symbols indicating important items, such as a hearth or main piece of furniture. Topic #4 (30 marks) Research activities that took place at the agora in Ancient Athens. Make a diorama depicting this site as well as typical activities in and around it. Topic#5 (20 marks) Pretend you ar ...
... areas. Include symbols indicating important items, such as a hearth or main piece of furniture. Topic #4 (30 marks) Research activities that took place at the agora in Ancient Athens. Make a diorama depicting this site as well as typical activities in and around it. Topic#5 (20 marks) Pretend you ar ...
INDIVIDUALS IN XENOPHON, HELLENICA 1
... Greek cities conducted their internal government and their external relations with one another. He also enjoyed the misfortune, so valuable to a historian, of having been exiled.2 Banishment, as Plutarch points out,3 was the lot of many Greek historians ; it was almost a professional qualification.4 ...
... Greek cities conducted their internal government and their external relations with one another. He also enjoyed the misfortune, so valuable to a historian, of having been exiled.2 Banishment, as Plutarch points out,3 was the lot of many Greek historians ; it was almost a professional qualification.4 ...
ATAR Syllabus Year 12 - SCSA - School Curriculum and Standards
... The Ancient History ATAR course enables students to study life in early civilisations based on the analysis and interpretation of physical and written remains. The ancient period, as defined in this syllabus, extends from the development of early human communities to the end of late antiquity AD 6 ...
... The Ancient History ATAR course enables students to study life in early civilisations based on the analysis and interpretation of physical and written remains. The ancient period, as defined in this syllabus, extends from the development of early human communities to the end of late antiquity AD 6 ...
Word Format - SCSA - School Curriculum and Standards Authority
... The Ancient History ATAR course enables students to study life in early civilisations based on the analysis and interpretation of physical and written remains. The ancient period, as defined in this syllabus, extends from the development of early human communities to the end of late antiquity AD 650 ...
... The Ancient History ATAR course enables students to study life in early civilisations based on the analysis and interpretation of physical and written remains. The ancient period, as defined in this syllabus, extends from the development of early human communities to the end of late antiquity AD 650 ...
Rori T. Stubbs Maj Garriott ERH-201WX December 6th, 2015 HR
... nations), Greek and western rhetoric in general is easier to relate to due to its influence on present day society. Ancient Greece was composed of numerous city-states with one of its most prominent and influential being Athens. In Athens, there emerged a group known as The Sophists. The Sophists we ...
... nations), Greek and western rhetoric in general is easier to relate to due to its influence on present day society. Ancient Greece was composed of numerous city-states with one of its most prominent and influential being Athens. In Athens, there emerged a group known as The Sophists. The Sophists we ...
1 Fracturing the Insularity of the Global State: War and Conflict in
... The parallel with Liberia is remarkable: a war-torn, war-weary, poverty stricken African nation which has just elected a female president. After two incapacitating civil wars, the country embraces democracy and chooses to rebuild an enduring nation, with the help of more powerful states – United Sta ...
... The parallel with Liberia is remarkable: a war-torn, war-weary, poverty stricken African nation which has just elected a female president. After two incapacitating civil wars, the country embraces democracy and chooses to rebuild an enduring nation, with the help of more powerful states – United Sta ...
Coping with a new Situation - Utrecht University Repository
... Besides discussing both ancient and modern literature, I also studied archaeological evidence. Ostraka provide information about both the usage of ostracism and the reason for the banishment of Athenian individuals. As will be discussed in the fourth chapter, ca. 6000 Athenian citizens would vote. I ...
... Besides discussing both ancient and modern literature, I also studied archaeological evidence. Ostraka provide information about both the usage of ostracism and the reason for the banishment of Athenian individuals. As will be discussed in the fourth chapter, ca. 6000 Athenian citizens would vote. I ...
Oedipus Rex Handout Plot Synopsis
... Oedipus sends for Tiresias, the blind prophet, and asks him what he knows about the murder. Although at first he refuses to tell Oedipus what he knows, he finally reveals that Oedipus is the murderer. Oedipus naturally refuses to believe Tiresias’s accusation and accuses Creon and him of conspiring ...
... Oedipus sends for Tiresias, the blind prophet, and asks him what he knows about the murder. Although at first he refuses to tell Oedipus what he knows, he finally reveals that Oedipus is the murderer. Oedipus naturally refuses to believe Tiresias’s accusation and accuses Creon and him of conspiring ...
Kairos: a cultural history of time in the Greek polis
... events with others that do not. Specifically, the festival and bouletic calendars of Athens are self-contained systems without essential reference to natural time. Although intercalary months were used to keep festival calendars from diverging too far from the year of the seasons, the fact that enti ...
... events with others that do not. Specifically, the festival and bouletic calendars of Athens are self-contained systems without essential reference to natural time. Although intercalary months were used to keep festival calendars from diverging too far from the year of the seasons, the fact that enti ...
ch. 10 greeks
... expansion – Promote their economic interests • Athen’s port, Piraeus became most important commercial center in eastern Med. Sea • Built Parthenon during Pericles • Promoted plays: tragedies and comedies • Artists and thinkers attracted to Athens ...
... expansion – Promote their economic interests • Athen’s port, Piraeus became most important commercial center in eastern Med. Sea • Built Parthenon during Pericles • Promoted plays: tragedies and comedies • Artists and thinkers attracted to Athens ...
Strategy and Changing Moods in Thucydides
... world of the concrete to increasingly abstract and general things, and ultimately to the forms. Loves draws us toward “contemplating the vast sea of beauty,” which is “absolute, separate, simple, and everlasting.”9 But this is the ideal; in practice, the dialogue concludes with such problems of love ...
... world of the concrete to increasingly abstract and general things, and ultimately to the forms. Loves draws us toward “contemplating the vast sea of beauty,” which is “absolute, separate, simple, and everlasting.”9 But this is the ideal; in practice, the dialogue concludes with such problems of love ...
A-level Classical Civilisation Mark scheme Unit 02D
... so bothered about Sparta (tendency to go relatively easy on allies); also Persia still a threat under Cimon so no fundamental reason for allies to resent Athenian leadership; four years after Thasos Cimon ostracised (political manoeuvring by democrats – at home at least - Ephialtes and Pericles); cr ...
... so bothered about Sparta (tendency to go relatively easy on allies); also Persia still a threat under Cimon so no fundamental reason for allies to resent Athenian leadership; four years after Thasos Cimon ostracised (political manoeuvring by democrats – at home at least - Ephialtes and Pericles); cr ...
A-level Classical Civilisation Mark scheme Unit 02D
... accord is signed (returning Megara to Sparta - making likely further conflict later); Pericles spent the next few years fighting off opposition at home; in 440 further confrontation with Sparta arose over Samos, but the Spartan allies backed down from war allowing Pericles to install a democratic go ...
... accord is signed (returning Megara to Sparta - making likely further conflict later); Pericles spent the next few years fighting off opposition at home; in 440 further confrontation with Sparta arose over Samos, but the Spartan allies backed down from war allowing Pericles to install a democratic go ...
On Bribing Athenian Ambassadors - Greek, Roman, and Byzantine
... endemic in Greece but that they were the main motive behind decisions on interstate relations and international politics. In the fifth and fourth centuries B.C. we already find pronouncements that Persian gold may be more effective in bringing Greece into subjection than Persian arms and that Philip ...
... endemic in Greece but that they were the main motive behind decisions on interstate relations and international politics. In the fifth and fourth centuries B.C. we already find pronouncements that Persian gold may be more effective in bringing Greece into subjection than Persian arms and that Philip ...
T he P elo P onnesian W ar
... modern historians from the enlightenment era through the nineteenth century. A good representative is Edward Gibbon, who wrote in his famous Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire that “wars, and the administration of public affairs, are the principal subjects of history” (ch. IX). Like many who came ...
... modern historians from the enlightenment era through the nineteenth century. A good representative is Edward Gibbon, who wrote in his famous Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire that “wars, and the administration of public affairs, are the principal subjects of history” (ch. IX). Like many who came ...
S N : PEECH AND
... the Platonic corpus. Where efforts are expended outside of the dialogues or the letters, the turn is usually to “historical” sources, i.e. near contemporary commentators on the dialogues. There has been some, not a great deal by ratio, but some discussion of Plato’s relation to his philosophical fo ...
... the Platonic corpus. Where efforts are expended outside of the dialogues or the letters, the turn is usually to “historical” sources, i.e. near contemporary commentators on the dialogues. There has been some, not a great deal by ratio, but some discussion of Plato’s relation to his philosophical fo ...
Published in: S. Constantinidis (ed.) Greece in Modern Times (An
... significantly earlier stages of the language such as the Greek of the New Testament or Ancient Greek, was formed by no later than the seventeenth century, and most likely even earlier. In surveying the literature produced over the past forty to sixty years on Modern Greek per se, therefore, one must ...
... significantly earlier stages of the language such as the Greek of the New Testament or Ancient Greek, was formed by no later than the seventeenth century, and most likely even earlier. In surveying the literature produced over the past forty to sixty years on Modern Greek per se, therefore, one must ...
Kelsey T. Chodorow
... When Ephialtes died Pericles became the leader of the party. He was the post powerful person in the state at that time”(Donald 1). After Cleisthenes died Pericles felt like he had to carry on what hus uncle did and did not want to fail him. Once Ephialtes died Pericles felt like he had to step up th ...
... When Ephialtes died Pericles became the leader of the party. He was the post powerful person in the state at that time”(Donald 1). After Cleisthenes died Pericles felt like he had to carry on what hus uncle did and did not want to fail him. Once Ephialtes died Pericles felt like he had to step up th ...
tHe AtHeniAn AGORA
... the United States often display magnificent objects with little or no information as to where they were found and what else was found with them. What sets the Agora project and museum apart from most collections is the relationship of the objects to the ...
... the United States often display magnificent objects with little or no information as to where they were found and what else was found with them. What sets the Agora project and museum apart from most collections is the relationship of the objects to the ...
dicere laudes6.indd - Fondazione Canussio
... the context of viewing is or is not sufficiently constraining to allow the artist to produce panegyric. For there are some circumstances in which a painter or sculptor can show a person not merely doing something, but doing something in a virtuous way. One way to do this is to take advantage of the ...
... the context of viewing is or is not sufficiently constraining to allow the artist to produce panegyric. For there are some circumstances in which a painter or sculptor can show a person not merely doing something, but doing something in a virtuous way. One way to do this is to take advantage of the ...
Marbleworkers in the Athenian Agora
... As early as the 5th century b.c. the poet Pindar in a dithyramb (Fragment 75, line 5) called the Athenian Agora “glorious, richly decorated,” and so it was, the setting for justly famous works of art, many of them sculpted from marble. Its buildings had marble decoration and housed dedications in th ...
... As early as the 5th century b.c. the poet Pindar in a dithyramb (Fragment 75, line 5) called the Athenian Agora “glorious, richly decorated,” and so it was, the setting for justly famous works of art, many of them sculpted from marble. Its buildings had marble decoration and housed dedications in th ...
Untitled - Agora Excavations
... As early as the 5th century b.c. the poet Pindar in a dithyramb (Fragment 75, line 5) called the Athenian Agora “glorious, richly decorated,” and so it was, the setting for justly famous works of art, many of them sculpted from marble. Its buildings had marble decoration and housed dedications in th ...
... As early as the 5th century b.c. the poet Pindar in a dithyramb (Fragment 75, line 5) called the Athenian Agora “glorious, richly decorated,” and so it was, the setting for justly famous works of art, many of them sculpted from marble. Its buildings had marble decoration and housed dedications in th ...