Main Idea 1
... Changes in Athenian Democracy • As time passed, citizens got more power, such as serving on juries. • Athens reached its height under Pericles, who encouraged people to take pride in their city. • He also began to pay people who served in public office or on juries. ...
... Changes in Athenian Democracy • As time passed, citizens got more power, such as serving on juries. • Athens reached its height under Pericles, who encouraged people to take pride in their city. • He also began to pay people who served in public office or on juries. ...
The Acropolis - Mrs. Walroth`s Classroom
... • Mainland Greece, colonies in southern Italy and Sicily ...
... • Mainland Greece, colonies in southern Italy and Sicily ...
Book Notes for Unit 3 Ch 4
... G. The Athenians developed ostracism to protect themselves from overly ambitious politicians. If six thousand assembly members voted so, a person was banned from the city for 10 years. H. Pericles used the Delian League’s treasury to rebuild Athens after the Persians looted and burned it. Athens bec ...
... G. The Athenians developed ostracism to protect themselves from overly ambitious politicians. If six thousand assembly members voted so, a person was banned from the city for 10 years. H. Pericles used the Delian League’s treasury to rebuild Athens after the Persians looted and burned it. Athens bec ...
Ch08
... Changes in Athenian Democracy • As time passed, citizens got more power, such as serving on juries. • Athens reached its height under Pericles, who encouraged people to take pride in their city. • He also began to pay people who served in public office or on juries. ...
... Changes in Athenian Democracy • As time passed, citizens got more power, such as serving on juries. • Athens reached its height under Pericles, who encouraged people to take pride in their city. • He also began to pay people who served in public office or on juries. ...
Ancient Greece - Fairfield Public Schools
... Later the acropolis became a center of religion The agora was located outside the acropolis Agora was center of government and trade Mountains kept city-states separate Natural barriers meant no central government of all city-states ...
... Later the acropolis became a center of religion The agora was located outside the acropolis Agora was center of government and trade Mountains kept city-states separate Natural barriers meant no central government of all city-states ...
Classical Greece #1 (Greeks #2)
... EARLIER GREEKS FOUGHT WITH THEIR MEN IN CHARIOTS BUT IN CLASSICAL PERIOD a. COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF INFANTRYMEN CALLED HOPLITES b. CHEAPER THAN HORSES & CHARIOTS ...
... EARLIER GREEKS FOUGHT WITH THEIR MEN IN CHARIOTS BUT IN CLASSICAL PERIOD a. COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF INFANTRYMEN CALLED HOPLITES b. CHEAPER THAN HORSES & CHARIOTS ...
Geography and Early Greek Civilization
... government. • A democracy is a system of government where citizens participate in government. • Only free men born in Athens could be citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners could not vote. ...
... government. • A democracy is a system of government where citizens participate in government. • Only free men born in Athens could be citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners could not vote. ...
Chapter 13: Classical Art
... Greek-derived, Etruscan-derived, and wholly of Roman invention? There are no names of important women artists recorded in ancient Greece. Yet there is plenty of evidence that women did have outlets for creative expression. Explain. ...
... Greek-derived, Etruscan-derived, and wholly of Roman invention? There are no names of important women artists recorded in ancient Greece. Yet there is plenty of evidence that women did have outlets for creative expression. Explain. ...
A Techno-Buffet of Hands-On Learning Activities (Tiered Learning
... After more days of repelling wave after wave of Persians, the Greek contingents from most of the remaining city states, realizing the desperately bad odds, left Thermopylae to return to their cities and defend them for when the Persians came through the pass. This left the Greek commander Leonidas a ...
... After more days of repelling wave after wave of Persians, the Greek contingents from most of the remaining city states, realizing the desperately bad odds, left Thermopylae to return to their cities and defend them for when the Persians came through the pass. This left the Greek commander Leonidas a ...
A Techno-Buffet of Hands-On Learning Activities (Tiered Learning
... After more days of repelling wave after wave of Persians, the Greek contingents from most of the remaining city states, realizing the desperately bad odds, left Thermopylae to return to their cities and defend them for when the Persians came through the pass. This left the Greek commander Leonidas a ...
... After more days of repelling wave after wave of Persians, the Greek contingents from most of the remaining city states, realizing the desperately bad odds, left Thermopylae to return to their cities and defend them for when the Persians came through the pass. This left the Greek commander Leonidas a ...
GREEK THEATER
... thymele -- altar to Dionysus on which sacrifices were made, and which was sometimes used as a stage prop ...
... thymele -- altar to Dionysus on which sacrifices were made, and which was sometimes used as a stage prop ...
Note the Greek columns in the ruins of the Parthenon.
... Athenians built three temples on the acropolis to honor Athena. As you have read, one of these was the Parthenon. One of the most beautiful temples in ancient Greece, the Parthenon was built on a long rectangular platform. There were 8 columns across both the front and the back, and 17 along each si ...
... Athenians built three temples on the acropolis to honor Athena. As you have read, one of these was the Parthenon. One of the most beautiful temples in ancient Greece, the Parthenon was built on a long rectangular platform. There were 8 columns across both the front and the back, and 17 along each si ...
ANCIENT GREECE THE MINOANS
... the competition among Athenians was fierce. However, it also allowed for the commercial value of Athenian trade to increase exponentially. To protect the trading routes of its citizens, the Athenian government placed a heavy emphasis on the buildup of a navy instead of providing food for its citizen ...
... the competition among Athenians was fierce. However, it also allowed for the commercial value of Athenian trade to increase exponentially. To protect the trading routes of its citizens, the Athenian government placed a heavy emphasis on the buildup of a navy instead of providing food for its citizen ...
Greek Drama: - School of Liberal Arts
... Defeating Darius 1 at Marathon (490 B.C) Xerxes at great sea battle Salamis (480 BC) ...
... Defeating Darius 1 at Marathon (490 B.C) Xerxes at great sea battle Salamis (480 BC) ...
Greek Revival architecture
The Greek Revival was an architectural movement of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, predominantly in Northern Europe and the United States. A product of Hellenism, it may be looked upon as the last phase in the development of Neoclassical architecture. The term was first used by Charles Robert Cockerell in a lecture he gave as Professor of Architecture to the Royal Academy of Arts, London in 1842.With a newfound access to Greece, archaeologist-architects of the period studied the Doric and Ionic orders, examples of which can be found in Russia, Poland, Lithuania and Finland (where the assembly of Greek buildings in Helsinki city centre is particularly notable). Yet in each country it touched, the style was looked on as the expression of local nationalism and civic virtue, especially in Germany and the United States, where the idiom was regarded as being free from ecclesiastical and aristocratic associations.The taste for all things Greek in furniture and interior design was at its peak by the beginning of the 19th century, when the designs of Thomas Hope had influenced a number of decorative styles known variously as Neoclassical, Empire, Russian Empire, and British Regency. Greek Revival architecture took a different course in a number of countries, lasting until the Civil War in America (1860s) and even later in Scotland. The style was also exported to Greece under the first two (German and Danish) kings of the newly independent nation.