The Culture of Ancient Greece
... stars and the planets and came up with new ideas about the universe. In ...
... stars and the planets and came up with new ideas about the universe. In ...
Chapter 5 Classical Greece, 2000 BC
... – Archimedes - geometry/physics • pi (circumference to diameter) • Archimedes screw to raise/lower water ...
... – Archimedes - geometry/physics • pi (circumference to diameter) • Archimedes screw to raise/lower water ...
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... to the shrine of Athena, which was separated by a partition from the western cella. The northern portico, tetrastyle Ionic, stands at a lower level and gives access to the western cella through a fine doorway. The southern portico, known as the Porch of the Caryatids (see caryatid) from the six scul ...
... to the shrine of Athena, which was separated by a partition from the western cella. The northern portico, tetrastyle Ionic, stands at a lower level and gives access to the western cella through a fine doorway. The southern portico, known as the Porch of the Caryatids (see caryatid) from the six scul ...
Lesson Essential Question: Why did the city
... Darius sent 600 _______________________ and an ____________________________to Greece. Persians land in _______________________________ about 26 miles north of __________________. Greek soldiers caught Persian army off guard and ________________________ them. A _______________________ set off to tell ...
... Darius sent 600 _______________________ and an ____________________________to Greece. Persians land in _______________________________ about 26 miles north of __________________. Greek soldiers caught Persian army off guard and ________________________ them. A _______________________ set off to tell ...
Laura Green, Sarah Thomason, Sheena Striker
... of the universe and how the universe operated. Later philosophers investigated the nature of knowledge and reality and sought to define such notions as good and evil. Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle are considered the most important Greek philosophers. Socrates taught by carefully questioning his lis ...
... of the universe and how the universe operated. Later philosophers investigated the nature of knowledge and reality and sought to define such notions as good and evil. Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle are considered the most important Greek philosophers. Socrates taught by carefully questioning his lis ...
What is a myth?
... • Myth comes from the word “mythos” meaning story. • Gods /goddesses /supernatural entities AND human relationships with them. • Explain universal truths or values of a particular culture. • Part of an oral tradition. ...
... • Myth comes from the word “mythos” meaning story. • Gods /goddesses /supernatural entities AND human relationships with them. • Explain universal truths or values of a particular culture. • Part of an oral tradition. ...
Chapter 7 - Course Notes
... The Hellenistic Empires: Generals divided Alexander’s kingdom into three parts after he died. Antigonus took Greece and Macedon (Antigonid), Ptolemy took Egypt (Ptolemaic dynasty), Seleucus took the largest portion, Bactria to Anatolia, The Antigonid Empire: smallest of the Hellenistic empires but b ...
... The Hellenistic Empires: Generals divided Alexander’s kingdom into three parts after he died. Antigonus took Greece and Macedon (Antigonid), Ptolemy took Egypt (Ptolemaic dynasty), Seleucus took the largest portion, Bactria to Anatolia, The Antigonid Empire: smallest of the Hellenistic empires but b ...
Packet 4 - Pascack Valley Regional High School District
... Slaves were private chattel of their owners. Often provided needed labor. Not always for life. ...
... Slaves were private chattel of their owners. Often provided needed labor. Not always for life. ...
Herodotus glossary.
... Oligarchy. The rule of more than one person. Sparta, ruled by two kings was technically an oligarchy. ...
... Oligarchy. The rule of more than one person. Sparta, ruled by two kings was technically an oligarchy. ...
Ancient Greece – e-Adventure Worksheet
... Step 4: Label the following on your beautiful artistic outline of Ancient Greece (use different maps that you found to find the locations of these city-states and landforms): ...
... Step 4: Label the following on your beautiful artistic outline of Ancient Greece (use different maps that you found to find the locations of these city-states and landforms): ...
Chapter 9 Notes - Net Start Class
... 5. A sense of a larger Greek community prevailed among all Greeks 6. Colonists shared the same religion and language 7. Periodic panhellenic festivals reinforced their common bonds ...
... 5. A sense of a larger Greek community prevailed among all Greeks 6. Colonists shared the same religion and language 7. Periodic panhellenic festivals reinforced their common bonds ...
Accommodated GCS
... The polis was the geographic (it had houses) and political (where the government was) center of Greek life. o The polis sprung up around a fortified hill called an acropolis. o The inner part of the polis was centered around the agora or marketplace and became a city. Only free adult males were ...
... The polis was the geographic (it had houses) and political (where the government was) center of Greek life. o The polis sprung up around a fortified hill called an acropolis. o The inner part of the polis was centered around the agora or marketplace and became a city. Only free adult males were ...
Battle of Salamis Bay
... • The Persian army was watching the battle at Salamis Bay from the Athenian hills. • Xerxes fled for home, but he left the army in Thessaly. • They fought their last battle in Boeotia. They fought as undisciplined troops. • The Greeks were able to hold off the army and defeat them. ...
... • The Persian army was watching the battle at Salamis Bay from the Athenian hills. • Xerxes fled for home, but he left the army in Thessaly. • They fought their last battle in Boeotia. They fought as undisciplined troops. • The Greeks were able to hold off the army and defeat them. ...
Lecture 12 Persian Wars II: Thermopylae
... – Sparta left the bulk of her army in the Peloponnese. – King Leonidas of Sparta brought with him three hundred Spartans – small turn-out of Sparta reflects disunity of strategy ...
... – Sparta left the bulk of her army in the Peloponnese. – King Leonidas of Sparta brought with him three hundred Spartans – small turn-out of Sparta reflects disunity of strategy ...
Western Civilization
... k goods d coming i in i • Eventually an aristocracy took over Athens, this unrest allowed for Sparta to finally make them give up (Persian ships also helped form a blockade) ...
... k goods d coming i in i • Eventually an aristocracy took over Athens, this unrest allowed for Sparta to finally make them give up (Persian ships also helped form a blockade) ...
McDonald - Ancient Greece Lesson 2
... Each polis honored at least one god or goddess as its special protector and provider. In Athens people worshiped Athena, the goddess of wisdom. Every summer they held a huge festival in her honor. After singing and dancing all night, Athenians walked to the top of the city’s acropolis. There, as the ...
... Each polis honored at least one god or goddess as its special protector and provider. In Athens people worshiped Athena, the goddess of wisdom. Every summer they held a huge festival in her honor. After singing and dancing all night, Athenians walked to the top of the city’s acropolis. There, as the ...
Greece fell into a dark age!
... myths. Myths involve heroes, gods, and supernatural beings and are used to explain customs, ways of life, or aspects of the world in which we live. A collection of myths is referred to as mythology. • The Greeks believed that the gods and goddesses lived in a beautiful palace on Mt. Olympus. They be ...
... myths. Myths involve heroes, gods, and supernatural beings and are used to explain customs, ways of life, or aspects of the world in which we live. A collection of myths is referred to as mythology. • The Greeks believed that the gods and goddesses lived in a beautiful palace on Mt. Olympus. They be ...
Pre-Classical and Classical Greece AP World History Kienast
... term had in antiquity both negative and neutral connotations, or sometimes even positive ones. That is, not all Greek tyrannoi (plural of tyrannos) were seen as "tyrannical", some were just lawgivers. Athens had no less than two great lawgivers: Draco at the end of the seventh century (600's) BCE an ...
... term had in antiquity both negative and neutral connotations, or sometimes even positive ones. That is, not all Greek tyrannoi (plural of tyrannos) were seen as "tyrannical", some were just lawgivers. Athens had no less than two great lawgivers: Draco at the end of the seventh century (600's) BCE an ...
Answers for Quiz #4
... _F_In jail, Sokrates discussing death says that the pious go to a higher Earth above & are reunited w/their (re-constructed) bodies. _T__ Vergina is the probable site of the tomb of Philip II of Macedonia. 6-7.(1/4 pt.ea.) The 2 charges against Sokrates were: “Impiety” & _corrupting the youth__, but ...
... _F_In jail, Sokrates discussing death says that the pious go to a higher Earth above & are reunited w/their (re-constructed) bodies. _T__ Vergina is the probable site of the tomb of Philip II of Macedonia. 6-7.(1/4 pt.ea.) The 2 charges against Sokrates were: “Impiety” & _corrupting the youth__, but ...
Unit #5 Ancient Greece Assignment Sheet
... affect its development? 4. What aspects of culture did the Mycenaeans adopt from the Minoans? 5. Other than the explanation offered by the legend, why do you think the Greeks went to war with Troy? 6. The Dorian period is often called Greece’s Dark Age. Why do you think this is? ...
... affect its development? 4. What aspects of culture did the Mycenaeans adopt from the Minoans? 5. Other than the explanation offered by the legend, why do you think the Greeks went to war with Troy? 6. The Dorian period is often called Greece’s Dark Age. Why do you think this is? ...
The Evolution of the Greek Polis
... his father’s defeat. • In 480 BC, his army of 360,000 foot soldiers and 800 ships marched over a bridge across the Dardanelles ...
... his father’s defeat. • In 480 BC, his army of 360,000 foot soldiers and 800 ships marched over a bridge across the Dardanelles ...
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.