The historical panorama of acne vulgaris
... appearance of women was given primordial importance. An extremely pale complexion was an indication of the elite and hence women began acquainted to the use of layers of Venetian Ceruse, a thick, white lead based paint that provided a perfect breeding ground for acne. Acne at that time was also cont ...
... appearance of women was given primordial importance. An extremely pale complexion was an indication of the elite and hence women began acquainted to the use of layers of Venetian Ceruse, a thick, white lead based paint that provided a perfect breeding ground for acne. Acne at that time was also cont ...
Rhetoric and the Architecture of Empire in the Athenian Agora
... actively engaged in doing something, is always rooted in a world of men and of manmade things which it never leaves or altogether transcends. Things and men form the environment for each of man's activities, which would be pointless without such location; yet this environment, the world into which w ...
... actively engaged in doing something, is always rooted in a world of men and of manmade things which it never leaves or altogether transcends. Things and men form the environment for each of man's activities, which would be pointless without such location; yet this environment, the world into which w ...
aus: Zeitschrift f¸r Papyrologie und Epigraphik 84 (1990) 231–295
... power: the Molossian state became part of a larger organization which Hammond (p. 537) rightly calls the Epirote Alliance. The new arrangement can be seen in Diodorus (19.36.2-4) in 317 and in an inscription dated between 317 and 297 BC, SGDI 1336 (cf. Hammond 55960 for the date): yeÚw tÊx[a: K]levm ...
... power: the Molossian state became part of a larger organization which Hammond (p. 537) rightly calls the Epirote Alliance. The new arrangement can be seen in Diodorus (19.36.2-4) in 317 and in an inscription dated between 317 and 297 BC, SGDI 1336 (cf. Hammond 55960 for the date): yeÚw tÊx[a: K]levm ...
Aristophanes on Alcibiades - Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies
... The next mention of Alcibiades in the canon makes an unambiguously political point that foreshadows Aristophanes' treatment of him in Frogs. In Wasps 42-45, Sosias describes his dream-vision of Theorus, the political lieutenant of Cleon, with the head "of a raven" (korakos) , and tells how in the dr ...
... The next mention of Alcibiades in the canon makes an unambiguously political point that foreshadows Aristophanes' treatment of him in Frogs. In Wasps 42-45, Sosias describes his dream-vision of Theorus, the political lieutenant of Cleon, with the head "of a raven" (korakos) , and tells how in the dr ...
The Medea of Euripides: An anthropological perspective
... the extensive colonization of the circumMediterranean by Greek city-states (750-550 B.C.), the merchant class grew stronger and merchants claimed the political leadership from the aristocrats. Such crucial socioeconomic developments in the Greek world were crystallized in the prototypical polities o ...
... the extensive colonization of the circumMediterranean by Greek city-states (750-550 B.C.), the merchant class grew stronger and merchants claimed the political leadership from the aristocrats. Such crucial socioeconomic developments in the Greek world were crystallized in the prototypical polities o ...
Plutarch, Charinus, and the Megarian Decree
... Plutarch is hopelessly confused, not in his chronology or his facts, but in his own explanation. To put it more strongly, if Plutarch did not think that the two decrees were identical, he wrote nonsense. 18 In fact we have other confirmation that he assumed their identity. In his Advice to Statesmen ...
... Plutarch is hopelessly confused, not in his chronology or his facts, but in his own explanation. To put it more strongly, if Plutarch did not think that the two decrees were identical, he wrote nonsense. 18 In fact we have other confirmation that he assumed their identity. In his Advice to Statesmen ...
Graphe or Dike Traumatos?
... thrashed, a man should rather bring a dike aikeias than resort to an armed attack. When wounded, a man should avail himself of a graphe traumatos and not proceed to homicide. The argument does not bespeak an advanced level of juridical thought, but it is neither muddled nor confused in terminology. ...
... thrashed, a man should rather bring a dike aikeias than resort to an armed attack. When wounded, a man should avail himself of a graphe traumatos and not proceed to homicide. The argument does not bespeak an advanced level of juridical thought, but it is neither muddled nor confused in terminology. ...
Sparta - wildehistory
... slew several enemy soldiers before being finally killed by a javelin.[38] Alexander was merciful, and he only forced the Spartans to join the League of Corinth, which they had previously refused to join.[39] Even during its decline, Sparta never forgot its claim to be the "defender of Hellenism" and ...
... slew several enemy soldiers before being finally killed by a javelin.[38] Alexander was merciful, and he only forced the Spartans to join the League of Corinth, which they had previously refused to join.[39] Even during its decline, Sparta never forgot its claim to be the "defender of Hellenism" and ...
The Ancient Greek Civilization
... the language and knowledge needed for the next more complex text within and across domains. The Supplemental Guide’s focus on oral language in the earlier grades addresses the language learning needs of students with limited English language skills who may not be exposed to the kind of academic lang ...
... the language and knowledge needed for the next more complex text within and across domains. The Supplemental Guide’s focus on oral language in the earlier grades addresses the language learning needs of students with limited English language skills who may not be exposed to the kind of academic lang ...
Ancient Greek Civilization
... the language and knowledge needed for the next more complex text within and across domains. The Supplemental Guide’s focus on oral language in the earlier grades addresses the language learning needs of students with limited English language skills who may not be exposed to the kind of academic lang ...
... the language and knowledge needed for the next more complex text within and across domains. The Supplemental Guide’s focus on oral language in the earlier grades addresses the language learning needs of students with limited English language skills who may not be exposed to the kind of academic lang ...
origins of public speaking - The Public Speaking Project
... escaped death fled into the mountains. Thus, Athenian democracy was born. In 621 B.C., the citizens of Athens commissioned Draco, who was an elder citizen considered to be the wisest of the Greeks, to sort their laws into an organized system known as codification, because until that time, they simpl ...
... escaped death fled into the mountains. Thus, Athenian democracy was born. In 621 B.C., the citizens of Athens commissioned Draco, who was an elder citizen considered to be the wisest of the Greeks, to sort their laws into an organized system known as codification, because until that time, they simpl ...
origins of public speaking - The Public Speaking Project
... escaped death fled into the mountains. Thus, Athenian democracy was born. In 621 B.C., the citizens of Athens commissioned Draco, who was an elder citizen considered to be the wisest of the Greeks, to sort their laws into an organized system known as codification, because until that time, they simpl ...
... escaped death fled into the mountains. Thus, Athenian democracy was born. In 621 B.C., the citizens of Athens commissioned Draco, who was an elder citizen considered to be the wisest of the Greeks, to sort their laws into an organized system known as codification, because until that time, they simpl ...
Residential Restrictions on the Athenian Ostracized
... Any historical discussion of the residential clause must begin with an observation on motivations, which should not be controversial. The limitation on places of residence is to be connected with the decision to recall citizens who had been ostracized earlier, for a change of such practical signific ...
... Any historical discussion of the residential clause must begin with an observation on motivations, which should not be controversial. The limitation on places of residence is to be connected with the decision to recall citizens who had been ostracized earlier, for a change of such practical signific ...
Demosthenes on Distrust of Tyrants
... for the sake of the commercial advantages granted Athens by that generous monarch. 10 In the Against Aristocrates (108), the Olynthians are represented as having begun to distrust Philip purely because of his growing power and not, as in the First Olynthiac (5), because he is a 'tyrant'. In the same ...
... for the sake of the commercial advantages granted Athens by that generous monarch. 10 In the Against Aristocrates (108), the Olynthians are represented as having begun to distrust Philip purely because of his growing power and not, as in the First Olynthiac (5), because he is a 'tyrant'. In the same ...
History 421 Chapter 4 Notes
... • As the Greek philosopher Aristotle stated, “We must regard every citizen as belonging to the state.” • This loyalty, however, made the city-states fiercely patriotic and distrustful of one ...
... • As the Greek philosopher Aristotle stated, “We must regard every citizen as belonging to the state.” • This loyalty, however, made the city-states fiercely patriotic and distrustful of one ...
Ancient Greece Project - Teaching and Technology Ideas
... o For your project, you must choose several topics with a final total of 150 marks. o You must choose at least one topic from each station. o For each topic, you must use at least two different sources. o You can only build one model. If you are going to build something (i.e. a temple) you are to co ...
... o For your project, you must choose several topics with a final total of 150 marks. o You must choose at least one topic from each station. o For each topic, you must use at least two different sources. o You can only build one model. If you are going to build something (i.e. a temple) you are to co ...
Public Coercive Power of the Greek Polis: On a Recent Debate
... showing how small a public coercive power was available in Athens.2 It is citizens themselves that were mobilised to be on guard against conspirators, not an organised police force nor standing army, because there were no such organisations. ...
... showing how small a public coercive power was available in Athens.2 It is citizens themselves that were mobilised to be on guard against conspirators, not an organised police force nor standing army, because there were no such organisations. ...
The Ancient Greek Civilization
... distinct parts, so that the lesson may be divided into smaller chunks of time and presented at different intervals during the day. Each entire lesson will require a total of sixty minutes. This domain includes a Pausing Point following Lesson 7. At the end of the domain, a Domain Review, a Domain As ...
... distinct parts, so that the lesson may be divided into smaller chunks of time and presented at different intervals during the day. Each entire lesson will require a total of sixty minutes. This domain includes a Pausing Point following Lesson 7. At the end of the domain, a Domain Review, a Domain As ...
The Ancient Greek Civilization
... distinct parts, so that the lesson may be divided into smaller chunks of time and presented at different intervals during the day. Each entire lesson will require a total of sixty minutes. This domain includes a Pausing Point following Lesson 7. At the end of the domain, a Domain Review, a Domain As ...
... distinct parts, so that the lesson may be divided into smaller chunks of time and presented at different intervals during the day. Each entire lesson will require a total of sixty minutes. This domain includes a Pausing Point following Lesson 7. At the end of the domain, a Domain Review, a Domain As ...
THE STORY OF CIVILIZATION (tm) Ver. 4.8 2: The Life of Greece
... a fair, rich land, begirt with water; and therein are many men past counting, and ninety cities." `02014 When Homer sang these lines, perhaps in the ninth century before our era, *02002 Greece had almost forgotten, though the poet had not, that the island whose wealth seemed to him even then so grea ...
... a fair, rich land, begirt with water; and therein are many men past counting, and ninety cities." `02014 When Homer sang these lines, perhaps in the ninth century before our era, *02002 Greece had almost forgotten, though the poet had not, that the island whose wealth seemed to him even then so grea ...
Oedipus--The Dr. Philanakalis Program`s
... Laius' murderer and promises to exile the man responsible for it, ignorant of the fact that he is the murderer. The blind prophet, Teiresias, is called to aid Oedipus in his search; however, after warning Oedipus not to follow through with the investigation, Oedipus accuses him of being the murderer ...
... Laius' murderer and promises to exile the man responsible for it, ignorant of the fact that he is the murderer. The blind prophet, Teiresias, is called to aid Oedipus in his search; however, after warning Oedipus not to follow through with the investigation, Oedipus accuses him of being the murderer ...
ALL THE KING`S GREEKS: MERCENARIES, POLEIS, AND
... sources – writing for Classical audiences – insist that these soldiers were superior to their Near Eastern counterparts and that they were highly sought after for their skill in combat. They indicate that the security of Egypt and depended primarily upon mercenaries from mainland Greece. They are no ...
... sources – writing for Classical audiences – insist that these soldiers were superior to their Near Eastern counterparts and that they were highly sought after for their skill in combat. They indicate that the security of Egypt and depended primarily upon mercenaries from mainland Greece. They are no ...
Thales - WordPress.com
... During Thales' time, Miletus was an important Greek metropolis in Asia Minor, known for scholarship. Several schools were founded in Miletus, attracting scientists, philosophers, architects and geographers It is possible that Thales has been given credit for discoveries that were not really his. He ...
... During Thales' time, Miletus was an important Greek metropolis in Asia Minor, known for scholarship. Several schools were founded in Miletus, attracting scientists, philosophers, architects and geographers It is possible that Thales has been given credit for discoveries that were not really his. He ...
Aspects of Ancient Greek Drama
... better term than “myth,” for legend is based on some real “historical” events, elaborated admittedly out of recognition, but real nonetheless. Greek tragedy falls partly into this category, since its themes and subjects are for the most part drawn from the heroic age, an idealized time about a thous ...
... better term than “myth,” for legend is based on some real “historical” events, elaborated admittedly out of recognition, but real nonetheless. Greek tragedy falls partly into this category, since its themes and subjects are for the most part drawn from the heroic age, an idealized time about a thous ...
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.