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entry 11 the golden age of greece
... also moved the Delian League from the island of Delos to Athens. Pericles took some of the protection tax monies from the Delian League to rebuild Athens. He justified it to citizens and outsiders by saying that architecture and art forms not only praised the gods, but showed the world the power of ...
... also moved the Delian League from the island of Delos to Athens. Pericles took some of the protection tax monies from the Delian League to rebuild Athens. He justified it to citizens and outsiders by saying that architecture and art forms not only praised the gods, but showed the world the power of ...
Greek Stories - SD43 Teacher Sites
... Athena was the goddess of wisdom. She could get angry, but more typically, she was wise, and kind, and understanding. Athena was born very oddly. Her father was the mighty Zeus. But she did not have a mother. Instead, as the myth goes, she was born directly out of Zeus' brain. Zeus loved all his chi ...
... Athena was the goddess of wisdom. She could get angry, but more typically, she was wise, and kind, and understanding. Athena was born very oddly. Her father was the mighty Zeus. But she did not have a mother. Instead, as the myth goes, she was born directly out of Zeus' brain. Zeus loved all his chi ...
Ancient Greece - Mr. G Educates
... the Greek city states that Persia will again attack and they will need protection • Athens becomes really, really, really rich from all the money they are paid to protect the rest of Greece ...
... the Greek city states that Persia will again attack and they will need protection • Athens becomes really, really, really rich from all the money they are paid to protect the rest of Greece ...
Athens Gets Greedy
... they were stealing city states that were in the Peloponnesian League and making them join the Delian League o This was taking away from Sparta & adding to Athens ...
... they were stealing city states that were in the Peloponnesian League and making them join the Delian League o This was taking away from Sparta & adding to Athens ...
Latin Name
... iv. Remember the _Solemn Oath of Suitors____________________ - they pledge to get her back for _Menelaus________________ v. So, Helen is said to be “The _face__________ that __launched_______ a thousand __ships____________” ...
... iv. Remember the _Solemn Oath of Suitors____________________ - they pledge to get her back for _Menelaus________________ v. So, Helen is said to be “The _face__________ that __launched_______ a thousand __ships____________” ...
Sparta and Athens
... other Greek cities. At the same time, though, disease swept through Athens, killing thousands. For 10 years neither side could gain an advantage over the other. Eventu ally, they agreed to a truce. Athens kept its empire, and the Spartans went home. A few years later, in 415 BC, Athens tried again t ...
... other Greek cities. At the same time, though, disease swept through Athens, killing thousands. For 10 years neither side could gain an advantage over the other. Eventu ally, they agreed to a truce. Athens kept its empire, and the Spartans went home. A few years later, in 415 BC, Athens tried again t ...
Athens and Sparta DBQ
... Athens military training: in Athens boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long, once ...
... Athens military training: in Athens boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long, once ...
DEVELOPMENT OF ATHENIAN DEMOCRACY
... To make the government run, the Athenians did have to have public officials, of course. But they took radical measures to limit their power. Most public offices in the developed Athenian democracy were chose by lot, i.e., were chosen randomly. All those citizens willing to serve in a certain office ...
... To make the government run, the Athenians did have to have public officials, of course. But they took radical measures to limit their power. Most public offices in the developed Athenian democracy were chose by lot, i.e., were chosen randomly. All those citizens willing to serve in a certain office ...
Classical Civilisation Revision – June 2010 (Year 10)
... You will sit two one hour papers in June. They will cover the two topics studied in terms one and two, Athens and Sparta/Greek Tragedy and Drama Festivals Unit 1: Greece and Rome – Stories and Histories 1C – Athens and Sparta In this unit candidates will study society in both Athens and Sparta. They ...
... You will sit two one hour papers in June. They will cover the two topics studied in terms one and two, Athens and Sparta/Greek Tragedy and Drama Festivals Unit 1: Greece and Rome – Stories and Histories 1C – Athens and Sparta In this unit candidates will study society in both Athens and Sparta. They ...
Poster - Society of American Archivists
... outside of the Bouleuterion, the Boule’s building, which brought about a need for more space. As a result, a new building was constructed for the assembly in the last decade of the fifth century B.C. The old building remained as office space, where legislative and administrative records of Athenians ...
... outside of the Bouleuterion, the Boule’s building, which brought about a need for more space. As a result, a new building was constructed for the assembly in the last decade of the fifth century B.C. The old building remained as office space, where legislative and administrative records of Athenians ...
Slide 1 - Images
... against the Persians. 2. Worked to drive the Persians out of Greek territories in Asia Minor. Because most of the chief officials and military leaders in the Delian League were Athenian, Athens gained control over all city-states, except Sparta. ...
... against the Persians. 2. Worked to drive the Persians out of Greek territories in Asia Minor. Because most of the chief officials and military leaders in the Delian League were Athenian, Athens gained control over all city-states, except Sparta. ...
1 - Bardstown City Schools
... To rule such a large area, King Darius (duh-RAHY-uhs), one of the greatest of all the Persian kings, divided the empire into 20 provinces. He established a system of tax collection and appointed officials to rule local areas. He allowed conquered peoples to keep their own customs and religions. Kin ...
... To rule such a large area, King Darius (duh-RAHY-uhs), one of the greatest of all the Persian kings, divided the empire into 20 provinces. He established a system of tax collection and appointed officials to rule local areas. He allowed conquered peoples to keep their own customs and religions. Kin ...
Aeschylus` Oresteia
... The democrats, on the other hand, whole-heartedly favored the Aegean involvement, and therefore supported a peace with Persia [which officially came in 450] in order to avoid a 'two-front' conflict with Sparta, whom they thought would eventually take up arms against Athens to prevent their assuming ...
... The democrats, on the other hand, whole-heartedly favored the Aegean involvement, and therefore supported a peace with Persia [which officially came in 450] in order to avoid a 'two-front' conflict with Sparta, whom they thought would eventually take up arms against Athens to prevent their assuming ...
Persia and Pan
... Thessalians, Dolopians, Ainianes, Perraibians, Lokrians, Magnetes, Malians, Achaians of Phthiotis and Thebans and other Boiotians except for the Thespians and Plataians. The Greeks who were proposing to make war on the barbaroi swore an oath against them, that any Greeks who gave themselves up to th ...
... Thessalians, Dolopians, Ainianes, Perraibians, Lokrians, Magnetes, Malians, Achaians of Phthiotis and Thebans and other Boiotians except for the Thespians and Plataians. The Greeks who were proposing to make war on the barbaroi swore an oath against them, that any Greeks who gave themselves up to th ...
Athens vs Spartan society DBQ
... Athens military training: in Athens, boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long. Once ...
... Athens military training: in Athens, boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long. Once ...
Legendary Runner of Marathon - Pheidippides
... History tells us that Pheidippides ran to Athens with the news of the great victory his people had over the Persians at Marathon. It was 490 BC, and the distance he ran was about 26 miles (or, around 40 kilometers). After he delivered his message - “Nenikikamen” (which means, “Rejoice we conquer” or ...
... History tells us that Pheidippides ran to Athens with the news of the great victory his people had over the Persians at Marathon. It was 490 BC, and the distance he ran was about 26 miles (or, around 40 kilometers). After he delivered his message - “Nenikikamen” (which means, “Rejoice we conquer” or ...
Sparta - Hale
... After cooperating to oust the Persians, relations between Athens and Sparta disintegrate Increasing tensions (based on Athenian attempts to dominate Greek trade and Spartan paranoia about Athens supporting a helot uprising) result in Peloponnesian War (431-404 BCE) ...
... After cooperating to oust the Persians, relations between Athens and Sparta disintegrate Increasing tensions (based on Athenian attempts to dominate Greek trade and Spartan paranoia about Athens supporting a helot uprising) result in Peloponnesian War (431-404 BCE) ...
Where would YOU rather be living?
... you were caught, you were severely beaten. As the soldiers approached, the boy hid the fox beneath his shirt. While the soldiers quizzed him on why he was not in school, the boy let the fox chew into his stomach rather than confess he had stolen it. He did not allow his face or body to express his ...
... you were caught, you were severely beaten. As the soldiers approached, the boy hid the fox beneath his shirt. While the soldiers quizzed him on why he was not in school, the boy let the fox chew into his stomach rather than confess he had stolen it. He did not allow his face or body to express his ...
The Classical Age - World History and Honors History 9
... Sparta united with the Persians and forced Athens’ surrender in 404 BC The Spartans attacked Athens and were soon joined by the Persians. For awhile the Athenians hung on. But in 405, their navy was destroyed in a surprise attack, and by the next year the situation was hopeless. In 404 BC, the Athen ...
... Sparta united with the Persians and forced Athens’ surrender in 404 BC The Spartans attacked Athens and were soon joined by the Persians. For awhile the Athenians hung on. But in 405, their navy was destroyed in a surprise attack, and by the next year the situation was hopeless. In 404 BC, the Athen ...
Athens v. Sparta
... According to a Spartan legend, a Spartan woman had five of her sons killed in a single battle. When this news was broken to her, she said, “All I want to know is: did Sparta win?” This indicates how Spartan women had also been trained to consider their personal feelings less important than the welfa ...
... According to a Spartan legend, a Spartan woman had five of her sons killed in a single battle. When this news was broken to her, she said, “All I want to know is: did Sparta win?” This indicates how Spartan women had also been trained to consider their personal feelings less important than the welfa ...
DBQ Essay and Scaffolding Questions
... Athens military training: in Athens, boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long. Once ...
... Athens military training: in Athens, boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long. Once ...
Topics in Lysistrata
... Aeschylus: The tragic poet is mentioned briefly as the source of a ferocious oath that Lysistrata proposes to her comrades, in which a shield is to be filled with blood; the oath is found in Seven Against Thebes. Aristogeiton: A famous tyrannicide, he is mentioned briefly here with approval by the O ...
... Aeschylus: The tragic poet is mentioned briefly as the source of a ferocious oath that Lysistrata proposes to her comrades, in which a shield is to be filled with blood; the oath is found in Seven Against Thebes. Aristogeiton: A famous tyrannicide, he is mentioned briefly here with approval by the O ...
DBQ Essay and Scaffolding Questions
... Athens military training: in Athens boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long, once ...
... Athens military training: in Athens boys were sent to school to learn reading, writing, math, and other things from the age of 6 to 17. When boys turned 18 in Athens they were required to go to military school and learn how to fight in battle. In Athens military training was only 2 years long, once ...
Week 16 Junior High Class Notes
... III. Archaic Sparta Sparta is the second most important city-state in Greek history for two reasons. First and foremost, its famed warriors literally saved Western civilization in the Greco-Persian Wars, which we will learn about in detail in the next segment. Without the Spartan participation in th ...
... III. Archaic Sparta Sparta is the second most important city-state in Greek history for two reasons. First and foremost, its famed warriors literally saved Western civilization in the Greco-Persian Wars, which we will learn about in detail in the next segment. Without the Spartan participation in th ...
CHAPTER 5 • Section 3
... When you analyze motives, you examine the reasons why a person, group, or government took a particular action. These reasons can be rooted in the needs, emotions, experiences, or goals of the person or group. The passage below is from a funeral oration delivered by Pericles in honor of Athenian sold ...
... When you analyze motives, you examine the reasons why a person, group, or government took a particular action. These reasons can be rooted in the needs, emotions, experiences, or goals of the person or group. The passage below is from a funeral oration delivered by Pericles in honor of Athenian sold ...
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.