Notes
... and the world become great. If one should ask whether this struggle is gruesome, then the only answer could be – for the weak, yes, for humanity as a whole, no. Instead of everlasting struggle, the world preaches cowardly pacifism, and everlasting peace. These three things, considered in the light o ...
... and the world become great. If one should ask whether this struggle is gruesome, then the only answer could be – for the weak, yes, for humanity as a whole, no. Instead of everlasting struggle, the world preaches cowardly pacifism, and everlasting peace. These three things, considered in the light o ...
City-States of Greece
... Agoge Training • Boys lived in army barracks until age 30 - Rough training to become tough soldier • Girls taught to be strong & athletic - Give birth to tough Spartan boys - More freedom than Athenian women ...
... Agoge Training • Boys lived in army barracks until age 30 - Rough training to become tough soldier • Girls taught to be strong & athletic - Give birth to tough Spartan boys - More freedom than Athenian women ...
Classical Greece ppt
... • Sparta: military camp of preparedness – best soldiers, 7 year olds taken from home and beaten into “warrior-hood”, little culture or art, arrogant and cruel, women had more rights • Athens: Believed “superior”, economic & political heart of Greece, loved art and culture, more people, more freedoms ...
... • Sparta: military camp of preparedness – best soldiers, 7 year olds taken from home and beaten into “warrior-hood”, little culture or art, arrogant and cruel, women had more rights • Athens: Believed “superior”, economic & political heart of Greece, loved art and culture, more people, more freedoms ...
File
... weakness in the Spartan polis. Spartan boys began military training at the age of seven under the generals of the army. Strict and harsh discipline made youths excellent soldiers. There was no emphasis on formal education besides military training in Sparta. Spartan girls, too, had a rigorous upbrin ...
... weakness in the Spartan polis. Spartan boys began military training at the age of seven under the generals of the army. Strict and harsh discipline made youths excellent soldiers. There was no emphasis on formal education besides military training in Sparta. Spartan girls, too, had a rigorous upbrin ...
Athens and Sparta became the two most powerful
... were beaten. The boys marched without shoes to make them strong. It was a brutal training period. ...
... were beaten. The boys marched without shoes to make them strong. It was a brutal training period. ...
Chapter 4
... development of democracy Ended the rule of aristocrats & allowed new people to participate in government ...
... development of democracy Ended the rule of aristocrats & allowed new people to participate in government ...
Sparta and Athens: Totalitarianism vs. Democracy
... and the world become great. If one should ask whether this struggle is gruesome, then the only answer could be – for the weak, yes, for humanity as a whole, no. Instead of everlasting struggle, the world preaches cowardly pacifism, and everlasting peace. These three things, considered in the light o ...
... and the world become great. If one should ask whether this struggle is gruesome, then the only answer could be – for the weak, yes, for humanity as a whole, no. Instead of everlasting struggle, the world preaches cowardly pacifism, and everlasting peace. These three things, considered in the light o ...
The Peloponnesian War Purple
... During the mid-fifth century B.C.E., the rivalry between Athens and Sparta intensified. In an effort to curb the rise of Athenian influence, Sparta issued Athens an ultimatum: Athens had to free all the cities under its control or face a war. Athens refused, and in the year 431 B.C.E., the war began ...
... During the mid-fifth century B.C.E., the rivalry between Athens and Sparta intensified. In an effort to curb the rise of Athenian influence, Sparta issued Athens an ultimatum: Athens had to free all the cities under its control or face a war. Athens refused, and in the year 431 B.C.E., the war began ...
教學目標:
... They died in battle protecting Sparta. They died protecting their country, land, freedom, and dignity. They died for their king. Or It was meaningless. They were all slaughtered; it was too brutal, and too stupid. ...
... They died in battle protecting Sparta. They died protecting their country, land, freedom, and dignity. They died for their king. Or It was meaningless. They were all slaughtered; it was too brutal, and too stupid. ...
A Short History of Greek Warfare
... • Athens send envoys to Sparta and beg for an alliance • Battle of Thermopylae – Leonidas recruited 300 men to bodyguard Greek soldiers – The Spartans held off a quarter million Persians for three days ...
... • Athens send envoys to Sparta and beg for an alliance • Battle of Thermopylae – Leonidas recruited 300 men to bodyguard Greek soldiers – The Spartans held off a quarter million Persians for three days ...
Ancient Greece Review- Quest 5/27 - Hewlett
... The purpose of Spartan education was to produce men and women who could protect the city-state. They valued discipline and strength. Children learned to read and write but these were not valued skills. Spartan boys were taught to endure any amount of physical pain. They walked without shoes, and wer ...
... The purpose of Spartan education was to produce men and women who could protect the city-state. They valued discipline and strength. Children learned to read and write but these were not valued skills. Spartan boys were taught to endure any amount of physical pain. They walked without shoes, and wer ...
Chapter 9 Section 2 Outline
... Describe Sparta and Athens. How were they similar and how were they different? 3)Spartans Build a Military Society Spartan society was dominated by what? The Spartan social system was created when and by whom? ...
... Describe Sparta and Athens. How were they similar and how were they different? 3)Spartans Build a Military Society Spartan society was dominated by what? The Spartan social system was created when and by whom? ...
Political Changes during the Archaic Period (750
... • Briefly summarize the military training of the Spartans. • They were enrolled in military brotherhoods and raised by the state starting at age seven. • From seven to eighteen they underwent rigorous physical and military training. • From 18-20 many served in the krypteia (secret police). • From 20 ...
... • Briefly summarize the military training of the Spartans. • They were enrolled in military brotherhoods and raised by the state starting at age seven. • From seven to eighteen they underwent rigorous physical and military training. • From 18-20 many served in the krypteia (secret police). • From 20 ...
Main article: Classical Greece
... The Spartan hegemony lasted another 16 years, until, when attempting to impose their will on the Thebans, the Spartans suffered a decisive defeat at Leuctra in 371 BC. The Theban general Epaminondas then led Theban troops into the Peloponnese, whereupon other city-states defected from the Spartan ca ...
... The Spartan hegemony lasted another 16 years, until, when attempting to impose their will on the Thebans, the Spartans suffered a decisive defeat at Leuctra in 371 BC. The Theban general Epaminondas then led Theban troops into the Peloponnese, whereupon other city-states defected from the Spartan ca ...
Greece—404 to 338 bc
... The Decline of Greece—404 to 338 B.C. Aftermath of Peloponnesian War — Battle of Chaeronea After Athens’s defeat at the end of the Peloponnesian War, Sparta became the undisputed first power among the Greek city-states. The Spartan general Lysander had Athens’s walls pulled down and appointed thirty ...
... The Decline of Greece—404 to 338 B.C. Aftermath of Peloponnesian War — Battle of Chaeronea After Athens’s defeat at the end of the Peloponnesian War, Sparta became the undisputed first power among the Greek city-states. The Spartan general Lysander had Athens’s walls pulled down and appointed thirty ...
Sparta and Athens
... Spartan women also trained physically. They believed that with strong mothers, children would ...
... Spartan women also trained physically. They believed that with strong mothers, children would ...
III. Archaic Sparta A. Spartan Society 1. Sparta is the second most
... were generally left alone. 3. The conquered people within Sparta itself were slaves. They were known as Helots. B. Spartan Government 1. Duarchy a) Early in their history, the conquering Spartiatai had belonged to two ruling tribes. Since there were two tribes, they choose to co-operate and have one ...
... were generally left alone. 3. The conquered people within Sparta itself were slaves. They were known as Helots. B. Spartan Government 1. Duarchy a) Early in their history, the conquering Spartiatai had belonged to two ruling tribes. Since there were two tribes, they choose to co-operate and have one ...
Chapter 2 / Section 2 Sparta and Athens - Ms-Jernigans-SS
... government in which a few people hold power. A democracy (dih*mah*kruh*see) is a form of government in which all citizens share power. Sparta was an oligarchy. Athens was a democracy. ...
... government in which a few people hold power. A democracy (dih*mah*kruh*see) is a form of government in which all citizens share power. Sparta was an oligarchy. Athens was a democracy. ...
Ancient Greece: Sparta
... and survival skills. At twenty, after thirteen years of training, the Spartan became a soldier. The Spartan soldier spent his life with his fellow soldiers; he lived in barracks and ate all his meals with his fellow soldiers. He also married, but he didn't live with his wife; one Athenian once joked ...
... and survival skills. At twenty, after thirteen years of training, the Spartan became a soldier. The Spartan soldier spent his life with his fellow soldiers; he lived in barracks and ate all his meals with his fellow soldiers. He also married, but he didn't live with his wife; one Athenian once joked ...
Document
... Any Spartan male that did not pass the examinations became part of the middle class. They were allowed to own property, have business dealings, but had no political rights and were not citizens. If they passed, they became a full citizen and a Spartan soldier. Spartan soldiers spent most of their li ...
... Any Spartan male that did not pass the examinations became part of the middle class. They were allowed to own property, have business dealings, but had no political rights and were not citizens. If they passed, they became a full citizen and a Spartan soldier. Spartan soldiers spent most of their li ...
ARG01 - Relationship prior to Philip and Alexander
... The Relationship Macedonian Perception of Relationship Different and superior to their Greek cousins They were not to be ruled by the Greeks. It is possible that they did appreciate the finer asspects of Athenian culture. Both Philip and Alexander appreciated Greek music and literature as well as t ...
... The Relationship Macedonian Perception of Relationship Different and superior to their Greek cousins They were not to be ruled by the Greeks. It is possible that they did appreciate the finer asspects of Athenian culture. Both Philip and Alexander appreciated Greek music and literature as well as t ...
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.