Military and political participation in archaic
... hundred thousand men; and as Hammond points out, Mardonius must still have had a good 150,000 men in 479, and the original force must have been at least two or three times as big. Maybe his guess isn’t far wide of the mark. It’d be good to gather more data, but even these factoids suggest that the A ...
... hundred thousand men; and as Hammond points out, Mardonius must still have had a good 150,000 men in 479, and the original force must have been at least two or three times as big. Maybe his guess isn’t far wide of the mark. It’d be good to gather more data, but even these factoids suggest that the A ...
Ancient Greece - 6th Grade Social Studies
... Sparta’s army is its great strength and the source of its pride. From the time you were a boy, you trained to be a soldier. You learned to be tough. You and your friends played at war, preparing for the real thing. Athens is Sparta’s main rival. Its way of life is different. Men there spend most of ...
... Sparta’s army is its great strength and the source of its pride. From the time you were a boy, you trained to be a soldier. You learned to be tough. You and your friends played at war, preparing for the real thing. Athens is Sparta’s main rival. Its way of life is different. Men there spend most of ...
Ancient Greece II - College of William and Mary
... explaining how the people of Ancient Greece used and adapted to their environment. These standards will be emphasized and used during this unit along with other relating objectives and standards. Please see Appendix A for the complete list of standards. ...
... explaining how the people of Ancient Greece used and adapted to their environment. These standards will be emphasized and used during this unit along with other relating objectives and standards. Please see Appendix A for the complete list of standards. ...
Nubia - British Museum
... from the Parthenon and a full-size cast of the west frieze and reconstruction of a corner of the building above a column. These side galleries also set the Parthenon sculptures in their context on the building and on the Acropolis. The southern side gallery (on your left as you go through the glass ...
... from the Parthenon and a full-size cast of the west frieze and reconstruction of a corner of the building above a column. These side galleries also set the Parthenon sculptures in their context on the building and on the Acropolis. The southern side gallery (on your left as you go through the glass ...
Ancient Greece - Mr. G Educates
... Athens Gets Greedy • The smaller city states agree to pay Athens for Naval protection • He goes around convincing the Greek city states that Persia will again attack and they will need protection • Athens becomes really, really, really rich from all the money they are paid to protect the rest of Gr ...
... Athens Gets Greedy • The smaller city states agree to pay Athens for Naval protection • He goes around convincing the Greek city states that Persia will again attack and they will need protection • Athens becomes really, really, really rich from all the money they are paid to protect the rest of Gr ...
Athens Gets Greedy
... 6.G.1.1 Explain how the physical features and human characteristics of a place influenced the development of civilizations, societies and regions (e.g., location near rivers and natural barriers, trading practices and spread of culture). 6.G.1.2 Explain the factors that influenced the movement o ...
... 6.G.1.1 Explain how the physical features and human characteristics of a place influenced the development of civilizations, societies and regions (e.g., location near rivers and natural barriers, trading practices and spread of culture). 6.G.1.2 Explain the factors that influenced the movement o ...
4-4 War Glory and Decline (pt 2) screencast sheet
... • But now, Pericles used money from the Delian League to __________________________ and construct its most well-known work of architecture: ________________________. Obviously, this led much of Greece grew to resent Athens. Meanwhile _____________, who had not joined the Delian League, had created t ...
... • But now, Pericles used money from the Delian League to __________________________ and construct its most well-known work of architecture: ________________________. Obviously, this led much of Greece grew to resent Athens. Meanwhile _____________, who had not joined the Delian League, had created t ...
sample
... all dedicated to the city’s patron goddess, Athena (the Temple of Athena Nike, the Erechtheum, and the Parthenon); shrines to other gods; altars for outdoor worship; and dozens of statues, some of them huge, of Athena and other deities. Without a doubt, though, the hill’s dominant feature, dwaring ...
... all dedicated to the city’s patron goddess, Athena (the Temple of Athena Nike, the Erechtheum, and the Parthenon); shrines to other gods; altars for outdoor worship; and dozens of statues, some of them huge, of Athena and other deities. Without a doubt, though, the hill’s dominant feature, dwaring ...
ancient greek government systems
... exercising naked and others combing their hair. Seeing these things he marveled, and took note of their number; and when he had noted everything exactly he departed and went back in. He told Xerxes all he had seen. When Xerxes heard it, he did not understand; but to him they appeared to be doing lau ...
... exercising naked and others combing their hair. Seeing these things he marveled, and took note of their number; and when he had noted everything exactly he departed and went back in. He told Xerxes all he had seen. When Xerxes heard it, he did not understand; but to him they appeared to be doing lau ...
PDF sample - Inarin Lomapalvelut
... time-eroded the better). Yet it does not follow that the novel ‘[sprang] up full grown all at once like Athena from the head of Zeus’ on that Tuesday in July, or at any other time. It is true that the imperial romances of Chariton, Xenophon, Achilles, Longus and Heliodorus seem both internally cohe ...
... time-eroded the better). Yet it does not follow that the novel ‘[sprang] up full grown all at once like Athena from the head of Zeus’ on that Tuesday in July, or at any other time. It is true that the imperial romances of Chariton, Xenophon, Achilles, Longus and Heliodorus seem both internally cohe ...
Entertainment and Recreation in the Classical World—Tourism
... All Greek city states were allowed to participate in these games and a truce was held among all Greek states where no wars or any form of fighting was permitted. These games were held in honor of Zeus. By the sixth century B.C., other Panhellenic (all Greek) games were being held at Delphi, such as ...
... All Greek city states were allowed to participate in these games and a truce was held among all Greek states where no wars or any form of fighting was permitted. These games were held in honor of Zeus. By the sixth century B.C., other Panhellenic (all Greek) games were being held at Delphi, such as ...
WHICh5Greece-Internet_part1_-2016
... 14. What was the Academy? Who went there? 15. What happens to the painted parts of a pot when the pot is fired? 16. What does Ampharete hurry home in late afternoon to do? 17. What does Ampharete do in the evening? 18. What does Diokles do in the evening? 19. Where is Eleotheros going in the evening ...
... 14. What was the Academy? Who went there? 15. What happens to the painted parts of a pot when the pot is fired? 16. What does Ampharete hurry home in late afternoon to do? 17. What does Ampharete do in the evening? 18. What does Diokles do in the evening? 19. Where is Eleotheros going in the evening ...
Chapter 5 - Net Start Class
... Ancient Greece consisted mainly of a mountainous peninsula jutting out into the Mediterranean Sea. It also included approximately 1,400 islands in the Aegean (ih•JEE•uhn) and Ionian (eye•OH•nee•uhn) seas. Lands on the western coast of Anatolia were also part of ancient Greece. (See the map on page 1 ...
... Ancient Greece consisted mainly of a mountainous peninsula jutting out into the Mediterranean Sea. It also included approximately 1,400 islands in the Aegean (ih•JEE•uhn) and Ionian (eye•OH•nee•uhn) seas. Lands on the western coast of Anatolia were also part of ancient Greece. (See the map on page 1 ...
Archives in Classical Athens: Some Observations
... Archives in Classical Athens: Some Observations ...
... Archives in Classical Athens: Some Observations ...
The Delian League: A Prelude to Empire and War
... by Persia, Greek city-states met on the island of Delos to form a confederation, or league. In their quest to repel invasion, Athens, which was the foremost city-state in the league, grew in prominence and power, eventually turning the Delian League into the Athenian Empire. Thus, the formation of t ...
... by Persia, Greek city-states met on the island of Delos to form a confederation, or league. In their quest to repel invasion, Athens, which was the foremost city-state in the league, grew in prominence and power, eventually turning the Delian League into the Athenian Empire. Thus, the formation of t ...
It`s All Greek to Me [6th grade]
... Europe, labeling countries and bodies of water fully 4. Glue map into WNB 5. Only using the map created in classa. Exit ticket: What body of water borders Greece? b. What countries border Greece? c. What bodies of water surround Europe? Day 3 KWBAT create a map of Ancient Greece which highlights imp ...
... Europe, labeling countries and bodies of water fully 4. Glue map into WNB 5. Only using the map created in classa. Exit ticket: What body of water borders Greece? b. What countries border Greece? c. What bodies of water surround Europe? Day 3 KWBAT create a map of Ancient Greece which highlights imp ...
File - Mr. Wright`s Class
... of doing things, the city-states of ancient Greece had many things in common. They all spoke the same language; they all believed in the same gods; they all worshiped in the same way; they all thought of themselves as Greeks. But they were loyal to their city-state. If you asked someone in ancie ...
... of doing things, the city-states of ancient Greece had many things in common. They all spoke the same language; they all believed in the same gods; they all worshiped in the same way; they all thought of themselves as Greeks. But they were loyal to their city-state. If you asked someone in ancie ...
Ancient Greece 2 - Franceschini
... City-states were cities separated from other cities. A city-state was sometimes called a polis. Each city-state had a central walled city with villages and farmland surrounding it. There was one government where everyone obeyed the same laws. The people shared the same culture, religion and language ...
... City-states were cities separated from other cities. A city-state was sometimes called a polis. Each city-state had a central walled city with villages and farmland surrounding it. There was one government where everyone obeyed the same laws. The people shared the same culture, religion and language ...
WHICh5Greece-Internet_part1_-2013
... 14. What was the Academy? Who went there? 15. What happens to the painted parts of a pot when the pot is fired? 16. What does Ampharete hurry home in late afternoon to do? 17. What does Ampharete do in the evening? 18. What does Diokles do in the evening? 19. Where is Eleotheros going in the evening ...
... 14. What was the Academy? Who went there? 15. What happens to the painted parts of a pot when the pot is fired? 16. What does Ampharete hurry home in late afternoon to do? 17. What does Ampharete do in the evening? 18. What does Diokles do in the evening? 19. Where is Eleotheros going in the evening ...
Ancient Greece I > Introduction - Franceschini
... The people settled into separate cities. City-states were cities separated from other cities. A city-state was sometimes called a polis. Each city-state had a central walled city with villages and farmland surrounding it. There was one government where everyone obeyed the same laws. The people share ...
... The people settled into separate cities. City-states were cities separated from other cities. A city-state was sometimes called a polis. Each city-state had a central walled city with villages and farmland surrounding it. There was one government where everyone obeyed the same laws. The people share ...
Critical Thinking Activities
... fighting stopped. No matter how long or how fierce a battle had raged, every soldier in the battlefield put down his weapons and traveled to Olympia, there to compete in athletic games designed to honor Zeus and the other Greek gods. For seven days before and seven days after (and for the period of ...
... fighting stopped. No matter how long or how fierce a battle had raged, every soldier in the battlefield put down his weapons and traveled to Olympia, there to compete in athletic games designed to honor Zeus and the other Greek gods. For seven days before and seven days after (and for the period of ...
Theatre of ancient Greece
... A drawing of an ancient theater. Terms are in Greek language and Latin letters. there are very few modern large theaters that have truly good acoustics. The first seats in Greek theaters (other than just sitting on the ground) were wooden, but around 499 BC the practice of inlaying stone blocks into ...
... A drawing of an ancient theater. Terms are in Greek language and Latin letters. there are very few modern large theaters that have truly good acoustics. The first seats in Greek theaters (other than just sitting on the ground) were wooden, but around 499 BC the practice of inlaying stone blocks into ...
ancient greece 1/6
... Recommended teaching and learning activities Under the cloth Pupils have lots of cut up photocopy images of Ancient Greek influence on our world today all placed under a cloth. Pupils have to work in pairs to retrieve one picture and then identify it, not that easy as you have put 6 red herrings in ...
... Recommended teaching and learning activities Under the cloth Pupils have lots of cut up photocopy images of Ancient Greek influence on our world today all placed under a cloth. Pupils have to work in pairs to retrieve one picture and then identify it, not that easy as you have put 6 red herrings in ...
Regions of ancient Greece
The regions of ancient Greece were areas identified by the ancient Greeks as geographical sub-divisions of the Hellenic world. These regions are described in the works of ancient historians and geographers, and in the legends and myths of the ancient Greeks.Conceptually, there is no clear theme to the structure of these regions. Some, particularly in the Peloponnese, can be seen primarily as distinct geo-physical units, defined by physical boundaries such as mountain ranges and rivers. These regions retained their identity, even when the identity of the people living there changed during the Greek Dark Ages (or at least, was conceived by the Greeks to have changed). Conversely, the division of central Greece between Boeotia, Phocis, Doris and the three parts of Locris, cannot be understood as a logical division by physical boundaries, and instead seems to follow ancient tribal divisions. Nevertheless, these regions also survived the upheaval of the Greek Dark Ages, showing that they had acquired less political connotations. Outside the Peloponnese and central Greece, geographical divisions and identities did change over time suggesting a closer connection with tribal identity. Over time however, all the regions also acquired geo-political meanings, and political bodies uniting the cities of a region (such as the Arcadian League) became common in the Classical period.These traditional sub-divisions of Greece form the basis for the modern system of regional units of Greece. However, there are important differences, with many of the smaller ancient regions not represented in the current system. To fully understand the ancient history of Greece therefore requires more detailed description of the ancient regions.