
Ancient Greece: Day 2
... Persia won (480 BCE) – Naval battle of Salamis, Athens won – Final battle of Platea, land battle won by Spartans, drove off Persians ...
... Persia won (480 BCE) – Naval battle of Salamis, Athens won – Final battle of Platea, land battle won by Spartans, drove off Persians ...
Sparta Athens powerpoint
... Athens -each year, the Assembly elected 10 generals who did the following: – 1. run the Athenian army and navy – 2. serve as chief magistrates, or judges. – 3. one of them was named commander-in-chief -Council of Five Hundred -council members were chosen each year by lot instead of by vote (2 reason ...
... Athens -each year, the Assembly elected 10 generals who did the following: – 1. run the Athenian army and navy – 2. serve as chief magistrates, or judges. – 3. one of them was named commander-in-chief -Council of Five Hundred -council members were chosen each year by lot instead of by vote (2 reason ...
File
... -each year, the Assembly elected 10 generals who did the following: – 1. run the Athenian army and navy – 2. serve as chief magistrates, or judges. – 3. one of them was named commander-in-chief -Council of Five Hundred -council members were chosen each year by lot instead of by vote ...
... -each year, the Assembly elected 10 generals who did the following: – 1. run the Athenian army and navy – 2. serve as chief magistrates, or judges. – 3. one of them was named commander-in-chief -Council of Five Hundred -council members were chosen each year by lot instead of by vote ...
the peloponnesian war
... And they weren’t constantly at odds with Sparta like Athens was. Athens and Sparta just could not get along). But Athens didn’t discuss who would guard the treasury. They just started collecting money from the other city-states. Pericles was the young, talented leader of Athens during this time. He ...
... And they weren’t constantly at odds with Sparta like Athens was. Athens and Sparta just could not get along). But Athens didn’t discuss who would guard the treasury. They just started collecting money from the other city-states. Pericles was the young, talented leader of Athens during this time. He ...
The Story of Ancient Greece
... Women were not allowed to become citizens; however, they were allowed to own land and businesses, which gave them more freedom than other Greek city-states. ...
... Women were not allowed to become citizens; however, they were allowed to own land and businesses, which gave them more freedom than other Greek city-states. ...
Name
... acropolis also served as a religious center 3. Agora – an open area below the acropolis that would serve as a market and as a gathering area ...
... acropolis also served as a religious center 3. Agora – an open area below the acropolis that would serve as a market and as a gathering area ...
Chapter 6: Greek Civilization 2000 BC to 323 BC
... gathered slaves called helots For every Spartan there were 5 helots; eventually helots ...
... gathered slaves called helots For every Spartan there were 5 helots; eventually helots ...
Chapter 5: Section 4 The Expansion of Greece Greek city
... Athenian forces crushed revolts after Athens made many other city-states join their empire ...
... Athenian forces crushed revolts after Athens made many other city-states join their empire ...
The Greeks: Victory and Defeat
... The History of the Olympics The ancient Olympics were rather different from the modern Games. There were fewer events, and only free men who spoke Greek could compete, instead of athletes from any country. Also, the games were always held at Olympia instead of moving around to different sites every ...
... The History of the Olympics The ancient Olympics were rather different from the modern Games. There were fewer events, and only free men who spoke Greek could compete, instead of athletes from any country. Also, the games were always held at Olympia instead of moving around to different sites every ...
The Greece Spot Wiki Webquest
... strategies that he took back to Greece with him? What was the one weapon he created that became a standard weapon for the Greek army? (2 part questions) 3. Why is Aristotle so well known today? 4. Who wrote Iliad and what was it about? (think) 5. Socrates was the founder of what? Also, he was assass ...
... strategies that he took back to Greece with him? What was the one weapon he created that became a standard weapon for the Greek army? (2 part questions) 3. Why is Aristotle so well known today? 4. Who wrote Iliad and what was it about? (think) 5. Socrates was the founder of what? Also, he was assass ...
Regents Review - Ancient Greece - WorlD History LHS
... The Mycenaean Civilization Thrived from 1400-1200 BCE Were overtaken by the Dorians – Dark Age for Greece ...
... The Mycenaean Civilization Thrived from 1400-1200 BCE Were overtaken by the Dorians – Dark Age for Greece ...
City States
... Today, we can see the impact of ancient Greece most clearly in our own system of government. Athens had an established system of government as well as an organized judicial system very similar to modern government in the United States. The Athenian justice system decided not only criminal and proper ...
... Today, we can see the impact of ancient Greece most clearly in our own system of government. Athens had an established system of government as well as an organized judicial system very similar to modern government in the United States. The Athenian justice system decided not only criminal and proper ...
Compare and contrast the Persian invasions of 490 and 480/79 BCE
... The Persian invasions of 490 and 480/79 played a major role in the Athenian rise to power and the political climate of Greece, particularly during the interbellum period and the second invasion. Spartan and Athenian unity was also influenced by the invasions. Beginning in a period when fear of Persi ...
... The Persian invasions of 490 and 480/79 played a major role in the Athenian rise to power and the political climate of Greece, particularly during the interbellum period and the second invasion. Spartan and Athenian unity was also influenced by the invasions. Beginning in a period when fear of Persi ...
Mantineia
... Poseidon was the patron god of Mantinea. The First Battle of Mantinea, in 418 BC, was the largest land battle of the Peloponnesian War. On one side were Sparta and its remaining allies, and on the other were Athens, its allies, plus the cities that had revolted against the Spartans. After Laches the ...
... Poseidon was the patron god of Mantinea. The First Battle of Mantinea, in 418 BC, was the largest land battle of the Peloponnesian War. On one side were Sparta and its remaining allies, and on the other were Athens, its allies, plus the cities that had revolted against the Spartans. After Laches the ...
Lecture 3—Greek and Hellenistic Civilization
... Society: A new system was created by the possibly legendary Spartan Lycurgus. From birth, the state controlled your entire life, killing those infants seen as unfit to live. At age 7, you were taken from your mother and sent to train in athletics (and military arts for the boys). "Between leaving [y ...
... Society: A new system was created by the possibly legendary Spartan Lycurgus. From birth, the state controlled your entire life, killing those infants seen as unfit to live. At age 7, you were taken from your mother and sent to train in athletics (and military arts for the boys). "Between leaving [y ...
The Peloponnesian War II
... • Elect Alcibiades strategos to defend democracy! • Stasis: • Thrasybulus ready to sail against Athens! • Alcibiades: self interest cloaked in reason ...
... • Elect Alcibiades strategos to defend democracy! • Stasis: • Thrasybulus ready to sail against Athens! • Alcibiades: self interest cloaked in reason ...
Group 1
... training they get enlisted into the military at 20. If they survive the wars, at 30 they're allowed to marry. From this point they still continue to live heir miserable lives fighting for their country until age 60, when they can retire. The Lycurgan reforms reorganized the Spartan government as wel ...
... training they get enlisted into the military at 20. If they survive the wars, at 30 they're allowed to marry. From this point they still continue to live heir miserable lives fighting for their country until age 60, when they can retire. The Lycurgan reforms reorganized the Spartan government as wel ...
Chapter 27 Two City-States Athens and Sparta
... In Sparta, the purpose of education was to produce capable men and women who could fight to protect the city-state. Spartans were likely to abandon sickly infants who might not grow up to be strong soldiers. Spartans highly valued discipline and strength. From the age of 7, all Spartan children tra ...
... In Sparta, the purpose of education was to produce capable men and women who could fight to protect the city-state. Spartans were likely to abandon sickly infants who might not grow up to be strong soldiers. Spartans highly valued discipline and strength. From the age of 7, all Spartan children tra ...
ASSIGNMENT #2: Introduction to Ancient Greece Reading
... drafted a harsh set of laws that required total dedication to the state from its people. The laws' goal was to train citizens to become hardened soldiers so that they could fight off potential enemies or slave revolts. The result was a rigid lifestyle unlike any seen in Greece at the time. The devot ...
... drafted a harsh set of laws that required total dedication to the state from its people. The laws' goal was to train citizens to become hardened soldiers so that they could fight off potential enemies or slave revolts. The result was a rigid lifestyle unlike any seen in Greece at the time. The devot ...
Station 1 Greek Money Barter
... ancestral weapons and shield and run would be seen as a disgrace on multiple levels. Watch the Video Clip ...
... ancestral weapons and shield and run would be seen as a disgrace on multiple levels. Watch the Video Clip ...
slides
... 462/461 BC Pericles assists Ephialtes in reducing power of Areopagus Council (council of ex-arkhons). Introduces payment for participation in juries. Other ...
... 462/461 BC Pericles assists Ephialtes in reducing power of Areopagus Council (council of ex-arkhons). Introduces payment for participation in juries. Other ...
Overview of Ancient Greek War
... had certainly been complete by 650 BC. The hoplite was heavily armored, spear-armed citizen soldier, mostly from middle class. The phalanx composed of hoplites fighting in lines, shoulder to shoulder. The hoplite would lock their shields together and the first few ranks would project their spears ou ...
... had certainly been complete by 650 BC. The hoplite was heavily armored, spear-armed citizen soldier, mostly from middle class. The phalanx composed of hoplites fighting in lines, shoulder to shoulder. The hoplite would lock their shields together and the first few ranks would project their spears ou ...
2008 SAN ANTONIO CLASSICAL SOCIETY
... a) Leonidas b) Themistocles c) Callimachus d) Miltiades. 33) Name the Spartan king who went over to the Persians or medized in 490 BCE. a) Demaratus b) Cleomenes c) Leonidas d) Agis. 34) In 484 BCE the Great King who decided to invade Greece was a) Darius b) Xerxes c) Cyrus d) Mardonius 35) Which of ...
... a) Leonidas b) Themistocles c) Callimachus d) Miltiades. 33) Name the Spartan king who went over to the Persians or medized in 490 BCE. a) Demaratus b) Cleomenes c) Leonidas d) Agis. 34) In 484 BCE the Great King who decided to invade Greece was a) Darius b) Xerxes c) Cyrus d) Mardonius 35) Which of ...
Spartan army
The Spartan army stood at the centre of the Spartan state, whose male and female citizens were trained in the discipline and honor of the warrior society. Subject to military drill from early manhood, the Spartans were one of the most feared military forces in the Greek world. At the height of Sparta's power – between the 6th and 4th centuries BC – it was commonly accepted that, ""one Spartan was worth several men of any other state."" According to Thucydides, the famous moment of Spartan surrender at the island of Sphacteria off of Pylos was highly unexpected. He said that ""it was the common perception at the time that Spartans would never lay down their weapons for any reason, be it hunger, or danger.""The iconic army was first coined by the Spartan legislator Lycurgus. In his famous quote of Sparta having a ""wall of men, instead of bricks"", he proposed to create a military-focused lifestyle reformation in the Spartan society in accordance to proper virtues such as equality for the male citizens, austerity, strength, and fitness. A Spartan man's involvement with the army began in infancy when he was inspected by the Gerousia. If the baby was found to be weak or deformed he was left at Mount Taygetus to die, since the world of the Spartans was no place for those who could not already fend for themselves. It should be noted, however, that the practice of discarding children at birth took place in Athens as well. Those deemed strong were then put in the agoge at the age of seven. Under the agoge the young boys or Spartiates were kept under intense and rigorous military training. Their education focused primarily on cunning, sports and war tactics, but also included poetry, music, academics, and sometimes politics. Those who passed the agoge by the age of 30 were given full Spartan citizenship.The term ""spartan"" became synonymous with multiple meanings such as: fearlessness, harsh and cruel life, bland and lacking creativity, or simplicity by design.