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Greek Theater ppt 2
... • Dionysian cults in ancient Greece were founded to worship Dionysus, god of grapes, vegetation, and wine. ...
... • Dionysian cults in ancient Greece were founded to worship Dionysus, god of grapes, vegetation, and wine. ...
- Munich Personal RePEc Archive
... fringes of the Greek world, as in Macedonia. The kings were the military commanders during war, when one (but almost never both on the same campaign) commanded the army (but never the navy which was almost nonexistent up to the beginning of the Peloponnesian War) as virtually an absolute monarch. Ri ...
... fringes of the Greek world, as in Macedonia. The kings were the military commanders during war, when one (but almost never both on the same campaign) commanded the army (but never the navy which was almost nonexistent up to the beginning of the Peloponnesian War) as virtually an absolute monarch. Ri ...
Antigone
... • Dionysian cults in ancient Greece were founded to worship Dionysus, god of grapes, vegetation, and wine. ...
... • Dionysian cults in ancient Greece were founded to worship Dionysus, god of grapes, vegetation, and wine. ...
Revolt of Mitylene 428 B.C.
... • “I imagine it is the poor opinion that he has of us, and the fact that he has no idea of any one coming out to engage him, that has made the enemy march up to the place and carelessly look about him as he is doing” • “..the most successful soldier will always be the man who most happily detects a ...
... • “I imagine it is the poor opinion that he has of us, and the fact that he has no idea of any one coming out to engage him, that has made the enemy march up to the place and carelessly look about him as he is doing” • “..the most successful soldier will always be the man who most happily detects a ...
Oedipus--The Dr. Philanakalis Program`s
... Oedipus asked them, they denied it. Oedipus remained suspicious and decided to ask the Delphic Oracle who his real parents were. The Oracle seemed to ignore this question, but instead told him that he was destined to "Mate with [his] own mother, and shed/ With [his] own hands the blood of [his] own ...
... Oedipus asked them, they denied it. Oedipus remained suspicious and decided to ask the Delphic Oracle who his real parents were. The Oracle seemed to ignore this question, but instead told him that he was destined to "Mate with [his] own mother, and shed/ With [his] own hands the blood of [his] own ...
Socrates, Freedom of Speech and Hate Crime
... to death by a close 30-vote margin. But Athenian courts recognized what we call today “equity” law (judging by fairness and basic justice) as complimentary to strictlyconstrued “common law.” Socrates could easily have escaped death by merely agreeing to leave Athens and relocate elsewhere. The jury ...
... to death by a close 30-vote margin. But Athenian courts recognized what we call today “equity” law (judging by fairness and basic justice) as complimentary to strictlyconstrued “common law.” Socrates could easily have escaped death by merely agreeing to leave Athens and relocate elsewhere. The jury ...
Athenian Democracy
... They didn’t have a navy but used money the Persians gave them for giving Ionia back to the Persians to buy ships and prep for war. The Spartan-led alliance eventually destroyed the Athenian fleet and laid siege to Athens itself. The Athenians surrendered in 404 B.C. ...
... They didn’t have a navy but used money the Persians gave them for giving Ionia back to the Persians to buy ships and prep for war. The Spartan-led alliance eventually destroyed the Athenian fleet and laid siege to Athens itself. The Athenians surrendered in 404 B.C. ...
Competing Constructions of Masculinity in Ancient Greece
... were expected to step up to battle when the city needed them. Those who could afford to keep a horse could enroll as a knight; those with fewer resources might be able to afford a full set of armor and could be hoplites. Finally, the poor who could not afford armor would still fight as skirmishers o ...
... were expected to step up to battle when the city needed them. Those who could afford to keep a horse could enroll as a knight; those with fewer resources might be able to afford a full set of armor and could be hoplites. Finally, the poor who could not afford armor would still fight as skirmishers o ...
Thucydides 1 - York University
... peace to continue, and there is no reason why it should will make them clearly understand that they must treat not, if you would leave the Hellenes independent." Upon you more as equals. this the Athenians held an assembly, and laid the matter before their consideration. It was resolved to deliberat ...
... peace to continue, and there is no reason why it should will make them clearly understand that they must treat not, if you would leave the Hellenes independent." Upon you more as equals. this the Athenians held an assembly, and laid the matter before their consideration. It was resolved to deliberat ...
Committee: Peloponnesian War: Delian League Crisis Topic: 431
... Persian forces out of Europe. The Persian invasions united the otherwise fractious Greek political world: it took an allied effort to defeat the Persians. Political divisions in Greece centered around two great city-states and their respective allies: Athens and Sparta. Both played a significant rol ...
... Persian forces out of Europe. The Persian invasions united the otherwise fractious Greek political world: it took an allied effort to defeat the Persians. Political divisions in Greece centered around two great city-states and their respective allies: Athens and Sparta. Both played a significant rol ...
Committee: Peloponnesian War: Delian League Crisis Topic: 431
... fractious Greek political world: it took an allied effort to defeat the Persians. Political divisions in Greece centered around two great city-states and their respective allies: Athens and Sparta. Both played a significant role in the Persian Wars, but towards the end of the conflict, the Athenians ...
... fractious Greek political world: it took an allied effort to defeat the Persians. Political divisions in Greece centered around two great city-states and their respective allies: Athens and Sparta. Both played a significant role in the Persian Wars, but towards the end of the conflict, the Athenians ...
Athenian Imperialism June 2014
... Athenians had stopped recognising Mytilenian independence (1) / had started picking allies off one by one (1) / despite Mytilenian efforts to stay on good terms (1) / only fear had kept them from revolting (1) / they now felt they had nothing to lose (1) and that the Spartans would help them (1). (3 ...
... Athenians had stopped recognising Mytilenian independence (1) / had started picking allies off one by one (1) / despite Mytilenian efforts to stay on good terms (1) / only fear had kept them from revolting (1) / they now felt they had nothing to lose (1) and that the Spartans would help them (1). (3 ...
Athens animation lengthened
... Athens was becoming too powerful, and the Spartans rose up to take them down. ...
... Athens was becoming too powerful, and the Spartans rose up to take them down. ...
From Innovative Democracy to Warfare State: Ancient Athens as a
... long, which meant losing allies that depended on them to defend them.3 It is worth noting that the Peloponnesian League did not meet throughout the fifteen years of the First Peloponnesian War, until 432 when the Spartans had to call a meeting before launching the second war. By ...
... long, which meant losing allies that depended on them to defend them.3 It is worth noting that the Peloponnesian League did not meet throughout the fifteen years of the First Peloponnesian War, until 432 when the Spartans had to call a meeting before launching the second war. By ...
2013.07.09w Krentz on Cartledge, After Thermopylae
... Paul Cartledge tackles the challenge of “paying due homage to the Battle of Plataea as a key and pivotal moment not just in ancient or classical Greek history but in all Western history.” There could hardly be a better person for the job: Cartledge has established himself as an excellent scholar who ...
... Paul Cartledge tackles the challenge of “paying due homage to the Battle of Plataea as a key and pivotal moment not just in ancient or classical Greek history but in all Western history.” There could hardly be a better person for the job: Cartledge has established himself as an excellent scholar who ...
Sparta and Athens
... Reserved office holding for the wealthy: only those who had 500 bushels or more, should hold the highest office of the state, and these alone could be archon(执政官), holding the ...
... Reserved office holding for the wealthy: only those who had 500 bushels or more, should hold the highest office of the state, and these alone could be archon(执政官), holding the ...
Ancient Studies History -- Unit 3 -
... For what two reasons did Mardonius urge King Xerxes to make war on Greece? But what does Herodotus identify as Mardonius’s real “motive”? (14) ...
... For what two reasons did Mardonius urge King Xerxes to make war on Greece? But what does Herodotus identify as Mardonius’s real “motive”? (14) ...
Democracy Does not value art and music Delian
... tensions increased because: • Sparta believed that Athens was trying to take too much power. • Other city states believed that Athens was using the money from the Delian League for their own gain (they were). ...
... tensions increased because: • Sparta believed that Athens was trying to take too much power. • Other city states believed that Athens was using the money from the Delian League for their own gain (they were). ...
Sparta and Athens
... Sparta and Athens Descriptive Writing Imagine that you are a 28-year-old man living in Sparta in 700 B.C. Write a letter to your 6-year-old nephew telling him what to expect when he leaves home on his next birthday. Your letter should discuss early military training and the importance of serving Sp ...
... Sparta and Athens Descriptive Writing Imagine that you are a 28-year-old man living in Sparta in 700 B.C. Write a letter to your 6-year-old nephew telling him what to expect when he leaves home on his next birthday. Your letter should discuss early military training and the importance of serving Sp ...
Fighting by the Rules: The Invention of the Hoplite Agôn Author(s
... century,but only after480, when nonhoplite armsbegan to be excludedfrom the phalanx.Regularclaims ofvictory, in the form of battlefieldtrophies,and concessions of defeat, in the form of requestsfor the retrievalof corpses, appeared in the 460s. Other 5th-century changes in military practice fit the ...
... century,but only after480, when nonhoplite armsbegan to be excludedfrom the phalanx.Regularclaims ofvictory, in the form of battlefieldtrophies,and concessions of defeat, in the form of requestsfor the retrievalof corpses, appeared in the 460s. Other 5th-century changes in military practice fit the ...
Battle of Marathon
... disposed towards them, and had often helped them in times past, and would do so again in time to come?" The Athenians, entirely believing in the truth of this report, as soon as their affairs were once more in good order, set up a temple to Pan under the Acropolis, and, in return for the message whi ...
... disposed towards them, and had often helped them in times past, and would do so again in time to come?" The Athenians, entirely believing in the truth of this report, as soon as their affairs were once more in good order, set up a temple to Pan under the Acropolis, and, in return for the message whi ...
The Peloponnesian War – Video 26 – Siege of Syracuse Athenians
... (Did they come here to build forts, or win the war? Nicias’ conservative policies lose the war?) Two battles break out up ___________. The first is won by the ___________, but the second is won by the Syracusans. This allows the Syracusans to finish the ___________. This is a ___________ for the Ath ...
... (Did they come here to build forts, or win the war? Nicias’ conservative policies lose the war?) Two battles break out up ___________. The first is won by the ___________, but the second is won by the Syracusans. This allows the Syracusans to finish the ___________. This is a ___________ for the Ath ...
415-413 Be
... fashioned a dynamic culture based on expropriated capital, but rather an oppressive and unpredictable imperialist state, whose navy and democracy ensured turmoil for any who chose to stand in its way. Like all such myths, this particular myth of 'Periklean Athens' is true in parts. However, like all ...
... fashioned a dynamic culture based on expropriated capital, but rather an oppressive and unpredictable imperialist state, whose navy and democracy ensured turmoil for any who chose to stand in its way. Like all such myths, this particular myth of 'Periklean Athens' is true in parts. However, like all ...
MATHEW Socrates Argument Paper In ancient Greece, the sciences
... In ancient Greece, the sciences and arts flourished under a democracy in one of the most famous city-states, Athens. One of the most major subjects that spread throughout Athens like a wildfire was philosophy. Philosophy was mostly able to prosper due to a single teacher, Socrates. Known for his wis ...
... In ancient Greece, the sciences and arts flourished under a democracy in one of the most famous city-states, Athens. One of the most major subjects that spread throughout Athens like a wildfire was philosophy. Philosophy was mostly able to prosper due to a single teacher, Socrates. Known for his wis ...
Making Athens Great Again - International Psychoanalysis
... been. We know, each one of us, or at least we fear, that the same will happen to us. The oceans of time will cover us over, like waves closing over the head of a sailor, leaving not a ripple, to use an image that inspired abject terror in the seafaring Greeks. Really, why do any of us even bother to ...
... been. We know, each one of us, or at least we fear, that the same will happen to us. The oceans of time will cover us over, like waves closing over the head of a sailor, leaving not a ripple, to use an image that inspired abject terror in the seafaring Greeks. Really, why do any of us even bother to ...
List of oracular statements from Delphi
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Eugène_Delacroix_-_Lycurgus_Consulting_the_Pythia_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg?width=300)
Pythia was the priestess presiding over the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi. There are more than 500 supposed Oracular statements which have survived from various sources referring to the oracle at Delphi. Many are anecdotal, and have survived as proverbs. Several are ambiguously phrased, apparently in order to show the oracle in a good light regardless of the outcome. Such prophesies were admired for their dexterity of phrasing. One such famous prediction was the answer to an unknown person who was inquiring as to whether it would be safe for him to join a military campaign; the answer was: ""Go, return not die in war"", which can have two entirely opposite meanings, depending on where a missing comma is supposed to be – before or after the word ""not"". Nevertheless, the Oracle seems consistently to have advocated peaceful, not violent courses generally.The following list presents some of the most prominent and historically significant prophecies of Delphi.