Ancient-Greece-Engineering-an-Empire-Video
... 7. What began to develop and flourish throughout Greece in the 8th century BC? ...
... 7. What began to develop and flourish throughout Greece in the 8th century BC? ...
The Iliad vs. The Burial at Thebes
... • Creon’s son and wife kill themselves in response to Antigone’s death • What happens to Creon at the end? – he gives up the throne after “seeing the light” ...
... • Creon’s son and wife kill themselves in response to Antigone’s death • What happens to Creon at the end? – he gives up the throne after “seeing the light” ...
document
... Greeks religious practices were ceremonies and rituals performed on alters as well as sacrifices of domestic animals on alters. Parts of the animal were burned as offering to certain gods. Greeks celebrated rites of passage. One of the rites of passage is called Amphidromia when a child reaches five ...
... Greeks religious practices were ceremonies and rituals performed on alters as well as sacrifices of domestic animals on alters. Parts of the animal were burned as offering to certain gods. Greeks celebrated rites of passage. One of the rites of passage is called Amphidromia when a child reaches five ...
Slide 1
... All met in the agora (marketplace) f. Became the center for religion, trade, art, politics g. Creates rivalry between cities ...
... All met in the agora (marketplace) f. Became the center for religion, trade, art, politics g. Creates rivalry between cities ...
Greece Test Review Power Point
... Hippocrates is known as the “Father of Medicine.” The Hippocratic oath, which doctors take today promising that they will deny no one medical attention, is associated with him, although he most likely did not write it. ...
... Hippocrates is known as the “Father of Medicine.” The Hippocratic oath, which doctors take today promising that they will deny no one medical attention, is associated with him, although he most likely did not write it. ...
Ancient Greece - South Windsor Public Schools
... Sparta was an isolated city-state that was culturally and politically different from Athens. Sparta was an oligarchy, government ruled by a few. They had 2 kings. During the Peloponnesian War, Sparta sacked Athens. ...
... Sparta was an isolated city-state that was culturally and politically different from Athens. Sparta was an oligarchy, government ruled by a few. They had 2 kings. During the Peloponnesian War, Sparta sacked Athens. ...
Ancient Greece is called `the birthplace of Western civilisation`
... joined together against a bigger enemy, the Persian Empire. Athens, Sparta, Corinth and Olympia were four of these citystates, and you can find out more about them on this site. Only a very powerful ruler could control all Greece. One man did in the 300s BC. He was Alexander the Great, from Macedoni ...
... joined together against a bigger enemy, the Persian Empire. Athens, Sparta, Corinth and Olympia were four of these citystates, and you can find out more about them on this site. Only a very powerful ruler could control all Greece. One man did in the 300s BC. He was Alexander the Great, from Macedoni ...
Greece Wars and Culture - 6th Grade Social Studies
... Best known for the Pythagorean Theorem- All relationship are expressed in numbers ...
... Best known for the Pythagorean Theorem- All relationship are expressed in numbers ...
Ancient Greece
... come from pottery because it could be pieced back together if broken, unlike paintings on paper or canvas. • Pottery falls into 7 periods, from stone age to Hellenistic period. ...
... come from pottery because it could be pieced back together if broken, unlike paintings on paper or canvas. • Pottery falls into 7 periods, from stone age to Hellenistic period. ...
Ancient Greece
... built. ► Agora- marketplace, public meeting place. ► Each city-state formed its own government, laws, calendar, money, & system of weights and measures. ► All ancient Greeks had certain things in common; Language (People who didn’t speak Greek were considered Barbarians) Religious Ideas, Culture ...
... built. ► Agora- marketplace, public meeting place. ► Each city-state formed its own government, laws, calendar, money, & system of weights and measures. ► All ancient Greeks had certain things in common; Language (People who didn’t speak Greek were considered Barbarians) Religious Ideas, Culture ...
Greek City States
... descent from one parent who was a citizen; but often the requirements were more difficult, demanding that the each citizen demonstrate that both parents were citizens. Every once in a while, however, the administration of a polis would admit people into the citizenship who could not demonstrate desc ...
... descent from one parent who was a citizen; but often the requirements were more difficult, demanding that the each citizen demonstrate that both parents were citizens. Every once in a while, however, the administration of a polis would admit people into the citizenship who could not demonstrate desc ...
Achievements of Ancient Greece
... Athens and wrote plays to honor it. He had fought with his countrymen in many wars and therefore wrote plays about his experiences. These plays were called tragedies. A tragedy is a play in which life is treated seriously and usually has a sad ending. Aeschylus is known as the “father of tragedy”. T ...
... Athens and wrote plays to honor it. He had fought with his countrymen in many wars and therefore wrote plays about his experiences. These plays were called tragedies. A tragedy is a play in which life is treated seriously and usually has a sad ending. Aeschylus is known as the “father of tragedy”. T ...
Guided notes - third block - Ms. Tamayo
... ***Although Troy had lost Paris it was okay because as long as they had Palladium, Troy couldn’t be taken ____________________________ passed and troy was as ___________________________ as ever. The Greeks came up with the plan to make a ______________________________… the others stayed people o ...
... ***Although Troy had lost Paris it was okay because as long as they had Palladium, Troy couldn’t be taken ____________________________ passed and troy was as ___________________________ as ever. The Greeks came up with the plan to make a ______________________________… the others stayed people o ...
Ancient Greece - AlexisWprojectnotes
... The Greeks believed that the twelve most important gods and goddess lived at the top of Mount Olympus. They were a family and, just like a human family, they argued and looked after one another. Mount Olympus, in northern Greece, is the highest mountain in the country. It was believed to be the home ...
... The Greeks believed that the twelve most important gods and goddess lived at the top of Mount Olympus. They were a family and, just like a human family, they argued and looked after one another. Mount Olympus, in northern Greece, is the highest mountain in the country. It was believed to be the home ...
Ancient Greece Eras
... and poetry, 4) Ares (war), 5) Aphrodite (love), 6) Poseidon (brother of Zeus and god of seas and earthquakes). Often a city state would have a patron god they identified with more than others. This might be influenced by geography and served to create a type of unity and identity now known as nation ...
... and poetry, 4) Ares (war), 5) Aphrodite (love), 6) Poseidon (brother of Zeus and god of seas and earthquakes). Often a city state would have a patron god they identified with more than others. This might be influenced by geography and served to create a type of unity and identity now known as nation ...
Chapter 4: The Rise of Ancient Greece
... D. Loyalty between friends V. A Family of Deities A. Mythology B. Greeks believed their gods and goddesses actions controlled nature C. Did not fear gods; Greeks placed more worth on the individual D. Greek gods and goddesses were in human form 1. Did human actions-married, had children, lying, murd ...
... D. Loyalty between friends V. A Family of Deities A. Mythology B. Greeks believed their gods and goddesses actions controlled nature C. Did not fear gods; Greeks placed more worth on the individual D. Greek gods and goddesses were in human form 1. Did human actions-married, had children, lying, murd ...
What role did geography play in the development of classical Greece?
... Greeks were polytheistic & believed that the gods were immortal but had human qualities; Religion became the basis for Greek mythology Zeus King of the gods Athena Goddess of wisdom Aphrodite Goddess of love Apollo God of sun & music Ares God of war Hades God of underworld Hera Goddess of f ...
... Greeks were polytheistic & believed that the gods were immortal but had human qualities; Religion became the basis for Greek mythology Zeus King of the gods Athena Goddess of wisdom Aphrodite Goddess of love Apollo God of sun & music Ares God of war Hades God of underworld Hera Goddess of f ...
amaure - My Teacher Pages
... divided their society. People of different social classes lived in different kinds of homes.most people lived in small mud homes built right up against each other. Most ...
... divided their society. People of different social classes lived in different kinds of homes.most people lived in small mud homes built right up against each other. Most ...
Ancient Greece and Rome: A Philosophical legacy
... Questions to think about • In what ways have modern governments been influenced by the Ancient Greeks? • In what ways have modern social ideas been influenced by the Ancient Greeks? ...
... Questions to think about • In what ways have modern governments been influenced by the Ancient Greeks? • In what ways have modern social ideas been influenced by the Ancient Greeks? ...
to Unit 3 - Ancient Greece Notes
... 3. _________________________ covered about ______% of Greece which divided the people & made _____________ the Greek people nearly impossible 4. The Greeks developed independent city-states, called ___________, within each valley & its surrounding mountains B. Greek Culture 1. Despite their lack of ...
... 3. _________________________ covered about ______% of Greece which divided the people & made _____________ the Greek people nearly impossible 4. The Greeks developed independent city-states, called ___________, within each valley & its surrounding mountains B. Greek Culture 1. Despite their lack of ...
Ancient Greek religion
Ancient Greek religion encompasses the collection of beliefs, rituals, and mythology originating in ancient Greece in the form of both popular public religion and cult practices. These different groups varied enough for it to be possible to speak of Greek religions or ""cults"" in the plural, though most of them shared similarities.Many of the ancient Greek people recognized the major (Olympian) gods and goddesses (Zeus, Poseidon, Hades, Apollo, Artemis, Aphrodite, Ares, Dionysus, Hephaestus, Athena, Hermes, Demeter, Hestia, and Hera), although philosophies such as Stoicism and some forms of Platonism used language that seems to posit a transcendent single deity. Different cities often worshiped the same deities, sometimes with epithets that distinguished them and specified their local nature.The religious practices of the Greeks extended beyond mainland Greece, to the islands and coasts of Ionia in Asia Minor, to Magna Graecia (Sicily and southern Italy), and to scattered Greek colonies in the Western Mediterranean, such as Massalia (Marseille). Greek religion was tempered by Etruscan cult and belief to form much of the later Ancient Roman religion.