Y3 Kira Smith - Ancient Greece
... In 490 BC the Persians decided to invade all of Greece. The Greeks and Persians fought a great sea battle at Salamis. Fun facts: *Army wagons carried shovels, axes and grain for food. *In battle orders were given by blowing horns and trumpets. *The Spartans didn’t join the Greeks because they were h ...
... In 490 BC the Persians decided to invade all of Greece. The Greeks and Persians fought a great sea battle at Salamis. Fun facts: *Army wagons carried shovels, axes and grain for food. *In battle orders were given by blowing horns and trumpets. *The Spartans didn’t join the Greeks because they were h ...
1 Greece Notes 2016 AK
... 1. Greeks invented drama as an art form and built the first theaters in the west. 2. Tragedy – a serious drama about common themes (love, hate, war, betrayal) and featured a tragic hero (important person and often gifted with extraordinary abilities). The hero’s downfall was often a tragic flaw such ...
... 1. Greeks invented drama as an art form and built the first theaters in the west. 2. Tragedy – a serious drama about common themes (love, hate, war, betrayal) and featured a tragic hero (important person and often gifted with extraordinary abilities). The hero’s downfall was often a tragic flaw such ...
STUDY GUIDE Chapter 8 tyrant polis mythology aristocrats fables
... GODS AND GODDESSES SECTION – know the following god and what they are known for Apollo Hades Zeus Demeter Hermes Hera SECTION 1 1. Mycenaeans lived where? And Minoans lived where? 2. Did everyone who lived in a city-state live inside the walls? Why or why not? 3. What sea lies east of the Greece’s m ...
... GODS AND GODDESSES SECTION – know the following god and what they are known for Apollo Hades Zeus Demeter Hermes Hera SECTION 1 1. Mycenaeans lived where? And Minoans lived where? 2. Did everyone who lived in a city-state live inside the walls? Why or why not? 3. What sea lies east of the Greece’s m ...
Ancient Greece (solucionario)
... art, in which artists made sculptures in hieratic poses that contained the seeds of Classical art. There were significant changes in political theory (the republican was a form of government), the rise of the polis, the beginning of the Olympic Games (776 B.C.), as well as the reintroduction of the ...
... art, in which artists made sculptures in hieratic poses that contained the seeds of Classical art. There were significant changes in political theory (the republican was a form of government), the rise of the polis, the beginning of the Olympic Games (776 B.C.), as well as the reintroduction of the ...
bellwork - ebruggeman
... • Unfortunately for Leonidas, after a couple of days, a Persian-sympathizer & traitor named Ephialtes led the Persians around the pass running behind the Greek army, thereby squashing the chance of Greek victory. • Now expecting defeat, Leonidas sent away most of his troops. • The remaining 300 Spar ...
... • Unfortunately for Leonidas, after a couple of days, a Persian-sympathizer & traitor named Ephialtes led the Persians around the pass running behind the Greek army, thereby squashing the chance of Greek victory. • Now expecting defeat, Leonidas sent away most of his troops. • The remaining 300 Spar ...
Greece Quick Notes
... b. Thucydides VIII. Alexander the Great • A. Alexander the Great • 1. Desires to spread Greek culture* ...
... b. Thucydides VIII. Alexander the Great • A. Alexander the Great • 1. Desires to spread Greek culture* ...
Document A
... began teaching that every disease had only natural causes. He is known as the great Greek physician. Hippocrates was the first physician known who actually considered medicine to be a science, and to be separate from religion. He wrote the Hippocratic Oath, an oath that every doctor-to-be still take ...
... began teaching that every disease had only natural causes. He is known as the great Greek physician. Hippocrates was the first physician known who actually considered medicine to be a science, and to be separate from religion. He wrote the Hippocratic Oath, an oath that every doctor-to-be still take ...
Greek Art and Architecture PPT
... The Archaic period was the earliest period in Greek Sculpture which started around 600 B.C. and lasted until 480 B.C. These works have a stiff and ridged appearance similar to that of the Egyptian sculpture. The second period, the Classical period, was between the Archaic and Hellenistic times. The ...
... The Archaic period was the earliest period in Greek Sculpture which started around 600 B.C. and lasted until 480 B.C. These works have a stiff and ridged appearance similar to that of the Egyptian sculpture. The second period, the Classical period, was between the Archaic and Hellenistic times. The ...
Greeks ppt
... The Archaic period was the earliest period in Greek Sculpture which started around 600 B.C. and lasted until 480 B.C. These works have a stiff and ridged appearance similar to that of the Egyptian sculpture. The second period, the Classical period, was between the Archaic and Hellenistic times. The ...
... The Archaic period was the earliest period in Greek Sculpture which started around 600 B.C. and lasted until 480 B.C. These works have a stiff and ridged appearance similar to that of the Egyptian sculpture. The second period, the Classical period, was between the Archaic and Hellenistic times. The ...
File
... and craftsmanship, was not unique in style. Rather, Greek architects constructed the 23,000-square-foot building in the traditional style that had been used to create Greek temples for 200 years. This temple, to honor Athena, the goddess of wisdom and the protector of Athens, contained examples of G ...
... and craftsmanship, was not unique in style. Rather, Greek architects constructed the 23,000-square-foot building in the traditional style that had been used to create Greek temples for 200 years. This temple, to honor Athena, the goddess of wisdom and the protector of Athens, contained examples of G ...
WH CH 4.4 The Glory that was Greece Notes
... He taught his ideas at his school known as the Academy. Like his teacher Plato, Aristotle favored rule by a single strong leader. At his school, the Lyceum He helped people learn how to make rational decisions and established the basis of the scientific method. Courses in the early European universi ...
... He taught his ideas at his school known as the Academy. Like his teacher Plato, Aristotle favored rule by a single strong leader. At his school, the Lyceum He helped people learn how to make rational decisions and established the basis of the scientific method. Courses in the early European universi ...
Chapter 4 Review Questions
... The government of Sparta was an oligarchy, which means what? Government ruled by few people What happened at Thermopylae? A Greek force of 7,000 held off the Persian army of 180,000 for 2 days To “imitate Greeks” was know as what Era? Hellenistic – period in which Greek language and ideas were carri ...
... The government of Sparta was an oligarchy, which means what? Government ruled by few people What happened at Thermopylae? A Greek force of 7,000 held off the Persian army of 180,000 for 2 days To “imitate Greeks” was know as what Era? Hellenistic – period in which Greek language and ideas were carri ...
File
... The Archaic period was the earliest period in Greek Sculpture which started around 600 B.C. and lasted until 480 B.C. These works have a stiff and ridged appearance similar to that of the Egyptian sculpture. The second period, the Classical period, was between the Archaic and Hellenistic times. The ...
... The Archaic period was the earliest period in Greek Sculpture which started around 600 B.C. and lasted until 480 B.C. These works have a stiff and ridged appearance similar to that of the Egyptian sculpture. The second period, the Classical period, was between the Archaic and Hellenistic times. The ...
File - Dr. Afxendiou`s Classes
... • Establishment of philosophical schools that examine issues such as true knowledge, the soul, love, beauty and scientific learning • Logical thinking, rhetoric, politics • Playwrights: Sophocles, Euripides, Aeschylus • Scientists: Hippocrates, Archimedes, Pythagoras ...
... • Establishment of philosophical schools that examine issues such as true knowledge, the soul, love, beauty and scientific learning • Logical thinking, rhetoric, politics • Playwrights: Sophocles, Euripides, Aeschylus • Scientists: Hippocrates, Archimedes, Pythagoras ...
Ancient Greece
... – The ancient Greeks, especially the Athenians, made huge contributions to many fields, particularly to philosophy, the arts, and sciences. ...
... – The ancient Greeks, especially the Athenians, made huge contributions to many fields, particularly to philosophy, the arts, and sciences. ...
Chapter 8: Ancient Greece Study Guide 1. The mountain ranges
... 16. The type of government in which the “best” people inherited the right to rule a Greek citystate was call an aristocracy. 17. Government in Sparta differed from government in Athens in that Sparta’s citizens had a smaller voice in their government. 18. The Athenians’ “addiction to innovation ...
... 16. The type of government in which the “best” people inherited the right to rule a Greek citystate was call an aristocracy. 17. Government in Sparta differed from government in Athens in that Sparta’s citizens had a smaller voice in their government. 18. The Athenians’ “addiction to innovation ...
Test Seven: Ancient Greece Study Guide
... 7. True or False: Athenian women had more rights than other Greek women, such as the right to own property? 8. What were the requirements for citizenship in ancient Greece? 9. What rights did citizens in ancient Greece have? 10. How did the Persians manage/govern their vast empire? 11. What is Zoroa ...
... 7. True or False: Athenian women had more rights than other Greek women, such as the right to own property? 8. What were the requirements for citizenship in ancient Greece? 9. What rights did citizens in ancient Greece have? 10. How did the Persians manage/govern their vast empire? 11. What is Zoroa ...
Historical Background (all dates BCE)
... Indo-Europeans, Trans-Caucasus, “Aryan” (term adopted from Skr.) Mycenae, Lion’s Gate Heinrich Schliemann Tombs Mask of Agamemnon Trojan War Collapse: so-called Dorian Invasion, starting c. 1200 Cyclopean architecture Isthmus of Corinth (canal built 1893) ...
... Indo-Europeans, Trans-Caucasus, “Aryan” (term adopted from Skr.) Mycenae, Lion’s Gate Heinrich Schliemann Tombs Mask of Agamemnon Trojan War Collapse: so-called Dorian Invasion, starting c. 1200 Cyclopean architecture Isthmus of Corinth (canal built 1893) ...
Greek Study Guide Identification Tyrant
... women’s rights. Athens developed a society based on education and logical reasoning. It had minimum military training. Women were given more rights here than anywhere else. It placed emphasis on individual learning. What can we infer from the frescoes on the palace walls in Knosses? The frescoes tel ...
... women’s rights. Athens developed a society based on education and logical reasoning. It had minimum military training. Women were given more rights here than anywhere else. It placed emphasis on individual learning. What can we infer from the frescoes on the palace walls in Knosses? The frescoes tel ...
Ancient Greece P 182-189 The Greek World: (1
... speech. The Iliad and Odyssey were used in schools to teach Greek students the values of loyalty, courage, and honor. A Greek hero strove to realize his human potential to achieve personal excellence, which the Greeks called “arête” in a hero, it meant complete development of qualities such as physi ...
... speech. The Iliad and Odyssey were used in schools to teach Greek students the values of loyalty, courage, and honor. A Greek hero strove to realize his human potential to achieve personal excellence, which the Greeks called “arête” in a hero, it meant complete development of qualities such as physi ...
Greek Sculpture - Libertyville High School
... statues, decorations after his death Considered world’s greatest ex. of memorial sculpture Currently located in British Museum, displayed as “Elgin Marbles” (stolen in 1816 while ambassador to Ottoman Empire) ...
... statues, decorations after his death Considered world’s greatest ex. of memorial sculpture Currently located in British Museum, displayed as “Elgin Marbles” (stolen in 1816 while ambassador to Ottoman Empire) ...
Sparta Society - Spring Branch ISD
... • Greeks sought to define a single source of order and meaning in the universe. • Aristotle, best known for his ideas about ethics. • Avoid extremes in behavior. • This moderation was called the “Golden Mean.” ...
... • Greeks sought to define a single source of order and meaning in the universe. • Aristotle, best known for his ideas about ethics. • Avoid extremes in behavior. • This moderation was called the “Golden Mean.” ...
Curriculum coverage map - Lady Margaret Primary School
... Fresh water theatre – Ancient Greeks 4th Dec Visit to a mosque ...
... Fresh water theatre – Ancient Greeks 4th Dec Visit to a mosque ...
Greek contributions to Islamic world
Greece played an important role in the transmission of classical knowledge to the Islamic world and to Renaissance Italy, and also in the transmission of medieval Arabic science to Renaissance Italy. Its rich historiographical tradition preserved ancient knowledge upon which art, architecture, literature and technological achievements were built.