PPT Format
... Aristotle From the Poetics: 4. The final cause of a tragedy is catharsis. In other words, a properly constructed tragedy creates a purging of emotions. As noble protagonists suffer due to their hamartia, the audience experiences pity, fear, horror and other emotions. These negative emotions are pur ...
... Aristotle From the Poetics: 4. The final cause of a tragedy is catharsis. In other words, a properly constructed tragedy creates a purging of emotions. As noble protagonists suffer due to their hamartia, the audience experiences pity, fear, horror and other emotions. These negative emotions are pur ...
Classical Greece
... Ancient Greeks believed in hundreds of gods and goddesses. Each ruled over one part of nature or life. The Greeks believed the gods would protect them in exchange for sacrifices. About 12 of the gods were especially important and were thought to live on Mount Olympus, the highest mountain in Greece. ...
... Ancient Greeks believed in hundreds of gods and goddesses. Each ruled over one part of nature or life. The Greeks believed the gods would protect them in exchange for sacrifices. About 12 of the gods were especially important and were thought to live on Mount Olympus, the highest mountain in Greece. ...
Ch 5 Secs 1-3 SAWTAC CGS
... -Based on the map, how did Greek traders conduct most of their trade? -How might the topography or surface features of Greece have affected communications among the early Greek settlements? ...
... -Based on the map, how did Greek traders conduct most of their trade? -How might the topography or surface features of Greece have affected communications among the early Greek settlements? ...
b. Thucydides wrote abou
... a. Drama (tragedy and comedy) b. Poetry (Epic poetry by Homer Illiad and Odyssey) ...
... a. Drama (tragedy and comedy) b. Poetry (Epic poetry by Homer Illiad and Odyssey) ...
Greek Music History - Come Closer. Our World is your World..
... (like pandura), the lyre, especially the special kind called a kithara. ...
... (like pandura), the lyre, especially the special kind called a kithara. ...
Ancient Greece and Rome: A Philosophical legacy
... Near East-Founded By Alexander the Great. One of the reasons Greek Culture spread so far afield. ...
... Near East-Founded By Alexander the Great. One of the reasons Greek Culture spread so far afield. ...
WHICh5Sec4-Daily life in Athens-2016
... girls, she was well educated. • Little is known for certain about her life, but it is believed that she married and had a daughter. • She became famous for her poetry during her own lifetime, and was revered by later Greeks as one of the 9 great lyric poets. ...
... girls, she was well educated. • Little is known for certain about her life, but it is believed that she married and had a daughter. • She became famous for her poetry during her own lifetime, and was revered by later Greeks as one of the 9 great lyric poets. ...
Greece`s Golden Age
... • Some of their beliefs were that the universe is arranged in an orderly way and constant (absolute and unchanging laws), and that people can understand these laws using logic & reason • Sophists, led by Protagoras, questioned the existence of traditional Greek Gods, and argued there was no universa ...
... • Some of their beliefs were that the universe is arranged in an orderly way and constant (absolute and unchanging laws), and that people can understand these laws using logic & reason • Sophists, led by Protagoras, questioned the existence of traditional Greek Gods, and argued there was no universa ...
Classical Greece
... Human Societies (also called the Classical Age) How does this Period Differ from Period 1? ...
... Human Societies (also called the Classical Age) How does this Period Differ from Period 1? ...
Greece
... o Then individuals could live the good life. o Plato also believed that men and women should have the same education and equal access to all positions. o Plato established a school in Athens called the Academy. Plato's most important pupil was Aristotle, who studied there for 20 years. o Aristotle ...
... o Then individuals could live the good life. o Plato also believed that men and women should have the same education and equal access to all positions. o Plato established a school in Athens called the Academy. Plato's most important pupil was Aristotle, who studied there for 20 years. o Aristotle ...
Alexander The Great
... classical Greece before the conquests of Philip. Greeks (Hellenic)were isolated and their civilization was termed classic because it was not heavily influenced by outside forces. • Hellenistic refers to Greeks and others who lived during the period after Alexander the Great's conquests. (mixture of ...
... classical Greece before the conquests of Philip. Greeks (Hellenic)were isolated and their civilization was termed classic because it was not heavily influenced by outside forces. • Hellenistic refers to Greeks and others who lived during the period after Alexander the Great's conquests. (mixture of ...
Athens and the Persian Wars
... • No massive buildings/architecture • Fewer water wells were dug ...
... • No massive buildings/architecture • Fewer water wells were dug ...
Ancient Greece - Duluth High School
... Great General, his most lasting achievement was a melding of Greek and Eastern Culture called Hellenism • Could it be argued that while Greece conquered Persia, Persian Culture conquered Greece? ...
... Great General, his most lasting achievement was a melding of Greek and Eastern Culture called Hellenism • Could it be argued that while Greece conquered Persia, Persian Culture conquered Greece? ...
Greece, Anon. Kore, painted marble c.530 B.C. Acropolis Museum
... Polykeltios statue was very popular during the fifth century and with the later Romans. ...
... Polykeltios statue was very popular during the fifth century and with the later Romans. ...
Chapter 13: Classical Art
... What features of the Roman temple (such as the Temple of Fortuna Virilis) are Greek-derived, Etruscan-derived, and wholly of Roman invention? There are no names of important women artists recorded in ancient Greece. Yet there is plenty of evidence that women did have outlets for creative expression. ...
... What features of the Roman temple (such as the Temple of Fortuna Virilis) are Greek-derived, Etruscan-derived, and wholly of Roman invention? There are no names of important women artists recorded in ancient Greece. Yet there is plenty of evidence that women did have outlets for creative expression. ...
Chapter 13: Classical Art
... What features of the Roman temple (such as the Temple of Fortuna Virilis) are Greek-derived, Etruscan-derived, and wholly of Roman invention? There are no names of important women artists recorded in ancient Greece. Yet there is plenty of evidence that women did have outlets for creative expression. ...
... What features of the Roman temple (such as the Temple of Fortuna Virilis) are Greek-derived, Etruscan-derived, and wholly of Roman invention? There are no names of important women artists recorded in ancient Greece. Yet there is plenty of evidence that women did have outlets for creative expression. ...
File - Miss Diaz`s Class
... 4. Group Leader clicks “Share”, under “invite people” tab add the email addresses of those in your group (make sure “can edit” is selected) and send them the link to the presentation. 5. Members edit ONLY their slide. And practice presenting their slide’s information 1-2 minutes. (try not to read it ...
... 4. Group Leader clicks “Share”, under “invite people” tab add the email addresses of those in your group (make sure “can edit” is selected) and send them the link to the presentation. 5. Members edit ONLY their slide. And practice presenting their slide’s information 1-2 minutes. (try not to read it ...
Order in Nature and Society
... • Isolated political ideas were common knowledge before Plato tried to incorporate them to phylosophy. ...
... • Isolated political ideas were common knowledge before Plato tried to incorporate them to phylosophy. ...
File - World History
... most powerful generals • Macedonia and Greece, Persian Empire, and Egypt • Legacy of Alexander – Created new cities, most of them named Alexandria • Built Alexandria as the Greek capital of Egypt – important city which had a famous library – Alexander envisioned a world in which many cultures ...
... most powerful generals • Macedonia and Greece, Persian Empire, and Egypt • Legacy of Alexander – Created new cities, most of them named Alexandria • Built Alexandria as the Greek capital of Egypt – important city which had a famous library – Alexander envisioned a world in which many cultures ...
GREECE - the world of World History!
... most powerful generals • Macedonia and Greece, Persian Empire, and Egypt • Legacy of Alexander – Created new cities, most of them named Alexandria • Built Alexandria as the Greek capital of Egypt – important city which had a famous library – Alexander envisioned a world in which many cultures ...
... most powerful generals • Macedonia and Greece, Persian Empire, and Egypt • Legacy of Alexander – Created new cities, most of them named Alexandria • Built Alexandria as the Greek capital of Egypt – important city which had a famous library – Alexander envisioned a world in which many cultures ...
File - the world of World History!
... most powerful generals • Macedonia and Greece, Persian Empire, and Egypt • Legacy of Alexander – Created new cities, most of them named Alexandria • Built Alexandria as the Greek capital of Egypt – important city which had a famous library – Alexander envisioned a world in which many cultures ...
... most powerful generals • Macedonia and Greece, Persian Empire, and Egypt • Legacy of Alexander – Created new cities, most of them named Alexandria • Built Alexandria as the Greek capital of Egypt – important city which had a famous library – Alexander envisioned a world in which many cultures ...
document
... on polytheism. They also believed in an underworld where your spirit went after you passed on. Their religion also had a broad mythology which mainly consisted of the gods and how they affected people on Earth. Greece also hosted different religious festivals and games. There were yearly games which ...
... on polytheism. They also believed in an underworld where your spirit went after you passed on. Their religion also had a broad mythology which mainly consisted of the gods and how they affected people on Earth. Greece also hosted different religious festivals and games. There were yearly games which ...
The Greek Envoys asked every Greek city for “Earth and Water” this
... The Persians arrived in Attica after burning down Naxos. Hippias advised the Persians to fight at Marathon because it was flat. 10 generals were put in charge of Athens army and when the Spartans did not come the Plateans (another Greek city) helped. ...
... The Persians arrived in Attica after burning down Naxos. Hippias advised the Persians to fight at Marathon because it was flat. 10 generals were put in charge of Athens army and when the Spartans did not come the Plateans (another Greek city) helped. ...
History of science in classical antiquity
The history of science in classical antiquity encompasses both those inquiries into the workings of the universe aimed at such practical goals as establishing a reliable calendar or determining how to cure a variety of illnesses and those abstract investigations known as natural philosophy. The ancient peoples who are considered the first scientists may have thought of themselves as natural philosophers, as practitioners of a skilled profession (for example, physicians), or as followers of a religious tradition (for example, temple healers). The encyclopedic works of Aristotle, Archimedes, Hippocrates, Galen, Ptolemy, Euclid, and others spread throughout the world. These works and the important commentaries on them were the wellspring of science.