Athens vs. Sparta - History Connections
... Confined to the home Ventured outside under the guardianship of slaves and servants Women in rural areas Had more Freedom However, Athenian women: No political rights, could not own property or businesses Citizens: however could not participate in government affairs Other Athenian Women ( ...
... Confined to the home Ventured outside under the guardianship of slaves and servants Women in rural areas Had more Freedom However, Athenian women: No political rights, could not own property or businesses Citizens: however could not participate in government affairs Other Athenian Women ( ...
The Greeks at War!
... Athens emerged as the most powerful city-state in Greece. Athens organized the Delian League, an alliance with other Greek city-states. Athens used the league to assert power and build an Athenian Empire. They moved the treasury to Athens, and forced people to stay in the league against their will. ...
... Athens emerged as the most powerful city-state in Greece. Athens organized the Delian League, an alliance with other Greek city-states. Athens used the league to assert power and build an Athenian Empire. They moved the treasury to Athens, and forced people to stay in the league against their will. ...
AP World History Reading Guide Stearns
... The best thing to do here is to create a time line. Put all the Greek events on one side and the Roman events on the other. This will give you an overall idea of the chronology of each civilization and also allow you to see how they overlap. Also make sure that you are familiar with the vocab terms ...
... The best thing to do here is to create a time line. Put all the Greek events on one side and the Roman events on the other. This will give you an overall idea of the chronology of each civilization and also allow you to see how they overlap. Also make sure that you are familiar with the vocab terms ...
AP World History Reading Guide Stearns
... The best thing to do here is to create a time line. Put all the Greek events on one side and the Roman events on the other. This will give you an overall idea of the chronology of each civilization and also allow you to see how they overlap. Also make sure that you are familiar with the vocab terms ...
... The best thing to do here is to create a time line. Put all the Greek events on one side and the Roman events on the other. This will give you an overall idea of the chronology of each civilization and also allow you to see how they overlap. Also make sure that you are familiar with the vocab terms ...
Living in Ancient Greece
... Mount Olympus. The ancient Greeks thought that the Olympian gods were a family of huge all-powerful beings who could change their shapes by magic. The Greek gods were believed to be immortal, that is, that they could live forever. Each god had a different role—some governed various regions of the wo ...
... Mount Olympus. The ancient Greeks thought that the Olympian gods were a family of huge all-powerful beings who could change their shapes by magic. The Greek gods were believed to be immortal, that is, that they could live forever. Each god had a different role—some governed various regions of the wo ...
The Persian Wars
... • The civilizations that developed in Greece and Rome had an enduring impact on later civilizations. This legacy includes governance and law, engineering and technology, art and architecture, as well as literature and history. The Roman Empire also played an instrumental role in the spread of Christ ...
... • The civilizations that developed in Greece and Rome had an enduring impact on later civilizations. This legacy includes governance and law, engineering and technology, art and architecture, as well as literature and history. The Roman Empire also played an instrumental role in the spread of Christ ...
The Classical World of Ancient Greece
... • “The gods have not revealed the beginning to mortals, but, by seeking, human beings discover in time what is better” • Philosophy began to grow and the movement away from the gods-not to say that the ancient didn’t believe in the gods anymore, but rather saw them as entities that helped our fate ...
... • “The gods have not revealed the beginning to mortals, but, by seeking, human beings discover in time what is better” • Philosophy began to grow and the movement away from the gods-not to say that the ancient didn’t believe in the gods anymore, but rather saw them as entities that helped our fate ...
PROLOGUE: The Origins of Drama
... The theater of Ancient Greece evolved from religious rites that date back to at least 1200 BC. At that time Greece was populated by primitive tribes. In northern Greece, in an area called Thrice, there arose a cult that worshipped Dionysus, the god of human and agricultural fertility. The Cult of Di ...
... The theater of Ancient Greece evolved from religious rites that date back to at least 1200 BC. At that time Greece was populated by primitive tribes. In northern Greece, in an area called Thrice, there arose a cult that worshipped Dionysus, the god of human and agricultural fertility. The Cult of Di ...
wh72notes
... Sparta and Athens and War When Athenians built the Parthenon and other projects with money from the Delian League, some of the league’s city-states joined forces with Sparta and its allies in the Peloponnesian League. The two leagues struggled in the Peloponnesian War for 27 years, until Athens was ...
... Sparta and Athens and War When Athenians built the Parthenon and other projects with money from the Delian League, some of the league’s city-states joined forces with Sparta and its allies in the Peloponnesian League. The two leagues struggled in the Peloponnesian War for 27 years, until Athens was ...
File
... The large Persian force blew past the Spartans who were guarding the mountain pass at Thermopylae. The Persians burnt Athens to the ground, but the Athenians had already fled. ...
... The large Persian force blew past the Spartans who were guarding the mountain pass at Thermopylae. The Persians burnt Athens to the ground, but the Athenians had already fled. ...
Empire - World History
... Parthenon was build, Comedy and Tragedy were invented, and the first histories also began. • Athens took a lot of money from the rest of Greece. Sparta got really mad. Athens=Navy and Sparta=Army. There was a stalemate, but Athens was hit with plague. It killed a third of the people. Athens lost. • ...
... Parthenon was build, Comedy and Tragedy were invented, and the first histories also began. • Athens took a lot of money from the rest of Greece. Sparta got really mad. Athens=Navy and Sparta=Army. There was a stalemate, but Athens was hit with plague. It killed a third of the people. Athens lost. • ...
Document
... Troy, on the northwestern coast of modern Turkey, around 1250 B.C. Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, led them. Ever since Schliemann’s excavation of Troy (see Chapter 1), some people have believed Homer’s account is based in fact, but no one is certain. E. The Mycenaean states began to war on each other, ...
... Troy, on the northwestern coast of modern Turkey, around 1250 B.C. Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, led them. Ever since Schliemann’s excavation of Troy (see Chapter 1), some people have believed Homer’s account is based in fact, but no one is certain. E. The Mycenaean states began to war on each other, ...
Discovering Ancient Greece
... Because Apollo felt regret for killing Python, the god punished himself; and for eight long years lived the life of a simple shepherd–a way of life that is still pursued around Delphi today. The myth of Apollo and Python formed the basis of many of the religious rites at Delphi–rites that involved a ...
... Because Apollo felt regret for killing Python, the god punished himself; and for eight long years lived the life of a simple shepherd–a way of life that is still pursued around Delphi today. The myth of Apollo and Python formed the basis of many of the religious rites at Delphi–rites that involved a ...
HUM 2210 Name: Instructor: Paloma Rodriguez Summer 2010 http
... 3. F (T) Sparta came out of the Persian Wars as a ruling power. (Athens did so too, so this can be true or false. Athens emerged more as an imperial power than Sparta) 4. F Athens flourished after the Peloponnesian war.(Athens was defeated by the Spartans in the Peloponnesian war and it never recov ...
... 3. F (T) Sparta came out of the Persian Wars as a ruling power. (Athens did so too, so this can be true or false. Athens emerged more as an imperial power than Sparta) 4. F Athens flourished after the Peloponnesian war.(Athens was defeated by the Spartans in the Peloponnesian war and it never recov ...
Classical Greece - McKinney ISD Staff Sites
... Sparta could not be easily attacked from the sea. Athens plagued by disease and defeat lost its wealth and power to Sparta which caused political change in the city-state. ...
... Sparta could not be easily attacked from the sea. Athens plagued by disease and defeat lost its wealth and power to Sparta which caused political change in the city-state. ...
Ancient Greece Military Battles Powerpoint
... Sparta attacked Athens and Persia attacked Athens (revenge from Persian Wars) 405 BCE- Athenian navy destroyed in a surprise attack 404 BCE- Athens totally surrendered to Sparta who installed oligarchic government Age of Athens, Age of Pericles, the Classical Age and the Athenian Empire- came to and ...
... Sparta attacked Athens and Persia attacked Athens (revenge from Persian Wars) 405 BCE- Athenian navy destroyed in a surprise attack 404 BCE- Athens totally surrendered to Sparta who installed oligarchic government Age of Athens, Age of Pericles, the Classical Age and the Athenian Empire- came to and ...
Table of Contents The Persian Wars: .....................................................
... o Ionian Revolt of 499 BC. Aristagoras the tyrant of Miletus united the Ionians in a revolt against Persian Rule. The Ionians could not secure Spartan support under King Cleomenes however Athens was willing to aid them. Allied forces were defeated. There were a number of consequences relating to thi ...
... o Ionian Revolt of 499 BC. Aristagoras the tyrant of Miletus united the Ionians in a revolt against Persian Rule. The Ionians could not secure Spartan support under King Cleomenes however Athens was willing to aid them. Allied forces were defeated. There were a number of consequences relating to thi ...
Archaic Greece and Classical Greece: the Introduction to Greek
... immorality of the enemy. Most wars saw the final results generally inconclusive. If one side clearly won then the other side had to surrender. This was humiliating and devastating as all citizens’ possessions and property went to the victors, and the women and children became slaves of winners. Sons ...
... immorality of the enemy. Most wars saw the final results generally inconclusive. If one side clearly won then the other side had to surrender. This was humiliating and devastating as all citizens’ possessions and property went to the victors, and the women and children became slaves of winners. Sons ...
Symbolism and Allusion
... literature draws upon an increasingly rich, diverse range of cultural traditions, but the Bible and classical Greek literature and mythology are prevalent in the literature you will see on the AP exam. Two important devices – symbolism and allusion – draw heavily on history, art, literature, religio ...
... literature draws upon an increasingly rich, diverse range of cultural traditions, but the Bible and classical Greek literature and mythology are prevalent in the literature you will see on the AP exam. Two important devices – symbolism and allusion – draw heavily on history, art, literature, religio ...
Chapter 7 The Greek Adventure
... Council of 500 citizens, served 1-year terms Day-to-day legislature, executive Supervised civil and military affairs All male citizens would serve at least one term ...
... Council of 500 citizens, served 1-year terms Day-to-day legislature, executive Supervised civil and military affairs All male citizens would serve at least one term ...
6 th Grade Performance Task
... times, however, that lofty ideal has not always been attained. The Ancient Olympics The earliest reliable date that recorded history gives for the first Olympics is 776 B.C., although virtually all historians presume that the Games began well before then. It is certain that during the midsummer of 7 ...
... times, however, that lofty ideal has not always been attained. The Ancient Olympics The earliest reliable date that recorded history gives for the first Olympics is 776 B.C., although virtually all historians presume that the Games began well before then. It is certain that during the midsummer of 7 ...
Chapter 2: The Minoans, The Mycenaeans, and the Greeks of
... Crete was derived from the elaborate floor plan of the Palace at Knossos. Daedalus the Athenian craftsman, was the architect and inventor who designed for King Minos of Crete the labyrinth in which was imprisoned the Minotaur, a man-eating monster that was half man and half bull. The labyrinth was s ...
... Crete was derived from the elaborate floor plan of the Palace at Knossos. Daedalus the Athenian craftsman, was the architect and inventor who designed for King Minos of Crete the labyrinth in which was imprisoned the Minotaur, a man-eating monster that was half man and half bull. The labyrinth was s ...
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.