1. Explain Miltiades role and contribution to the Persian Wars.
... his eldest son Hippias attempted to continue the dynasty after his ...
... his eldest son Hippias attempted to continue the dynasty after his ...
Chapter 4: The Ancient Greeks
... Gradually, people began to farm again and to produce surplus food. As a result, trade revived. One benefit of the increased trade was a new way of writing. As you read in Chapter 3, the Greeks picked up the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, one of their trading partners who lived on the coas ...
... Gradually, people began to farm again and to produce surplus food. As a result, trade revived. One benefit of the increased trade was a new way of writing. As you read in Chapter 3, the Greeks picked up the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, one of their trading partners who lived on the coas ...
Classical Greece
... coming into conflict. Under the influence of King Archidamus II (who ruled Sparta from 476 BC through 427 BC), Sparta, in the late summer or early autumn of 446 BC, concluded the Thirty Years Peace with Athens. This treaty took effect the next winter in 445 BC[15] Under the terms of this treaty, Greece ...
... coming into conflict. Under the influence of King Archidamus II (who ruled Sparta from 476 BC through 427 BC), Sparta, in the late summer or early autumn of 446 BC, concluded the Thirty Years Peace with Athens. This treaty took effect the next winter in 445 BC[15] Under the terms of this treaty, Greece ...
Chapter 4: The Ancient Greeks
... Gradually, people began to farm again and to produce surplus food. As a result, trade revived. One benefit of the increased trade was a new way of writing. As you read in Chapter 3, the Greeks picked up the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, one of their trading partners who lived on the coas ...
... Gradually, people began to farm again and to produce surplus food. As a result, trade revived. One benefit of the increased trade was a new way of writing. As you read in Chapter 3, the Greeks picked up the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, one of their trading partners who lived on the coas ...
371 BCE
... 369 BCE – Macedonians seize Larissa and Crannon; Thessalians therefore turn to Thebes; Pelopidas sent into Thessaly; Thessalian towns formed into a Theban protectorate; Dynastic conflict in Macedon results in the murder of the king (Alexander) and stasis; Athens intervenes (sets Perdiccas on the thr ...
... 369 BCE – Macedonians seize Larissa and Crannon; Thessalians therefore turn to Thebes; Pelopidas sent into Thessaly; Thessalian towns formed into a Theban protectorate; Dynastic conflict in Macedon results in the murder of the king (Alexander) and stasis; Athens intervenes (sets Perdiccas on the thr ...
File - History With Mrs. Heacock
... the city-states. People could meet and debate issues at the agora. Greek citizens could also choose officials, pass laws, vote, and hold public office. In exchange for these rights, Greek citizens were required to serve in government and fight as soldiers. With the support of Greece's common people, ...
... the city-states. People could meet and debate issues at the agora. Greek citizens could also choose officials, pass laws, vote, and hold public office. In exchange for these rights, Greek citizens were required to serve in government and fight as soldiers. With the support of Greece's common people, ...
2008 SAN ANTONIO CLASSICAL SOCIETY
... 30. When did this great desire first overtake Cataline? (a) During a childhood dream (b) After Sulla’s dictatorship (c) When he fought against Jugurtha (d) After an argument with Cicero 31. In addition to his own greed, what does the author suggest influenced Cataline’s less-thanstellar behavior? (a ...
... 30. When did this great desire first overtake Cataline? (a) During a childhood dream (b) After Sulla’s dictatorship (c) When he fought against Jugurtha (d) After an argument with Cicero 31. In addition to his own greed, what does the author suggest influenced Cataline’s less-thanstellar behavior? (a ...
the hellenic league of 480 bc -fact or ideological fiction?
... new sentence, beginning [J.E:1:et OE: nuv6cx.v6[J.E:VOL, may well denote an interval of time between the peace treaties and the next plans (to reconnoitre enemy resources and to seek aid from the neutral states), but in its immediate context it suggests that all the steps were discussed and decided ...
... new sentence, beginning [J.E:1:et OE: nuv6cx.v6[J.E:VOL, may well denote an interval of time between the peace treaties and the next plans (to reconnoitre enemy resources and to seek aid from the neutral states), but in its immediate context it suggests that all the steps were discussed and decided ...
Chapter 4, Section 2 Sparta and Athens
... Oligarchy: government in which a small group of people holds power Democracy: government in which all citizens share in running the government p. 74 ...
... Oligarchy: government in which a small group of people holds power Democracy: government in which all citizens share in running the government p. 74 ...
Chapter 4: Ancient Greece
... conquered and enslaved their neighbors, calling them helots. • To keep the helots from rebelling, the Spartans created a strong military of boys and men. • Boys entered the military at age 7. • At age 20, men entered the regular army and lived in the barracks for 10 years. (pages 126–127) Clic ...
... conquered and enslaved their neighbors, calling them helots. • To keep the helots from rebelling, the Spartans created a strong military of boys and men. • Boys entered the military at age 7. • At age 20, men entered the regular army and lived in the barracks for 10 years. (pages 126–127) Clic ...
Analysis of Leaders from the Peloponnesian War Submitted by
... A leader in nearly any society needs many characteristics to be effective for the people they rule and for the land they serve: an effective leader needs to be an eloquent speaker so as to inspire the people to serve the state and inspire loyalty; simultaneously, a leader needs to be open to opinion ...
... A leader in nearly any society needs many characteristics to be effective for the people they rule and for the land they serve: an effective leader needs to be an eloquent speaker so as to inspire the people to serve the state and inspire loyalty; simultaneously, a leader needs to be open to opinion ...
Marathon 490 BC: The First Persian Invasion Of Greece
... possibly divorced his first wife when Hippias gave his daughter away to Aiantides of Lampsakos. Lampsakos, on the opposite side of the Hellespont, was the arch-rival of the Thracian Chersonese. He took as his second wife Hegesipyle, daughter of the Thracian king Oloros. His son and heir Kimon was bo ...
... possibly divorced his first wife when Hippias gave his daughter away to Aiantides of Lampsakos. Lampsakos, on the opposite side of the Hellespont, was the arch-rival of the Thracian Chersonese. He took as his second wife Hegesipyle, daughter of the Thracian king Oloros. His son and heir Kimon was bo ...
Chapter 4: The Ancient Greeks
... Gradually, people began to farm again and to produce surplus food. As a result, trade revived. One benefit of the increased trade was a new way of writing. As you read in Chapter 3, the Greeks picked up the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, one of their trading partners who lived on the coas ...
... Gradually, people began to farm again and to produce surplus food. As a result, trade revived. One benefit of the increased trade was a new way of writing. As you read in Chapter 3, the Greeks picked up the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, one of their trading partners who lived on the coas ...
Question paper - Unit F391/01 - Greek history from original
... 10 Read the passage and answer the questions. You are expected to refer to the passage and to use your own knowledge in your answers. I will now describe the power and the honour which Lycurgus decreed for the king on campaign. First, the king and his entourage are maintained at public expense when ...
... 10 Read the passage and answer the questions. You are expected to refer to the passage and to use your own knowledge in your answers. I will now describe the power and the honour which Lycurgus decreed for the king on campaign. First, the king and his entourage are maintained at public expense when ...
Marathon 490 BC - Liberty Manufactured Homes
... possibly divorced his first wife when Hippias gave his daughter away to Aiantides of Lampsakos. Lampsakos, on the opposite side of the Hellespont, was the arch-rival of the Thracian Chersonese. He took as his second wife Hegesipyle, daughter of the Thracian king Oloros. His son and heir Kimon was bo ...
... possibly divorced his first wife when Hippias gave his daughter away to Aiantides of Lampsakos. Lampsakos, on the opposite side of the Hellespont, was the arch-rival of the Thracian Chersonese. He took as his second wife Hegesipyle, daughter of the Thracian king Oloros. His son and heir Kimon was bo ...
The Battle of Marathon, 490 BC
... this than I do, I would have done it somewhat differently. I can do this because we've included the counters in War Elephant, counters that (I feel) more accurately represent the make-up of the Persian force. You'll still need abatis counters from GBA. This deployment - and counter choice - places t ...
... this than I do, I would have done it somewhat differently. I can do this because we've included the counters in War Elephant, counters that (I feel) more accurately represent the make-up of the Persian force. You'll still need abatis counters from GBA. This deployment - and counter choice - places t ...
Greece 60-80 - Copley-Fairlawn City Schools
... •Protesters said the generals should be tried & executed •Socrates was the only one that tried to calm down the mob & said that an execution would be wrong •It didn’t work - 1 man was not enough •The generals were sentenced to death by drinking hemlock poison ...
... •Protesters said the generals should be tried & executed •Socrates was the only one that tried to calm down the mob & said that an execution would be wrong •It didn’t work - 1 man was not enough •The generals were sentenced to death by drinking hemlock poison ...
Student Notes - Student Handouts
... – 300 Spartans led by Leonidas • Attempted to block Pass of Thermopylae • Traitor betrayed them and showed Persians another route • All 300 Spartans killed after inflicting heavy casualties ...
... – 300 Spartans led by Leonidas • Attempted to block Pass of Thermopylae • Traitor betrayed them and showed Persians another route • All 300 Spartans killed after inflicting heavy casualties ...
Battle of Marathon
... the full length of that of the Persians, but their center was only a few ranks deep and herein lay their weakest point. Both wings, however, were manned to full strength. They took up their position, and when the sacrifices proved propitious the Athenians were given the signal and advanced on the ba ...
... the full length of that of the Persians, but their center was only a few ranks deep and herein lay their weakest point. Both wings, however, were manned to full strength. They took up their position, and when the sacrifices proved propitious the Athenians were given the signal and advanced on the ba ...
Περίληψη : Χρονολόγηση Γεωγραφικός Εντοπισμός
... Callisthenes mentions a certain Ariomandes, son of Gombryus, as the head of the army. When Cimon was informed about the concentration of the Persian troops in Pamphylia, he directed 200 ships there from Cnidus and Triopio, in an attempt to prevent the Persians from sailing to the west of the Chelido ...
... Callisthenes mentions a certain Ariomandes, son of Gombryus, as the head of the army. When Cimon was informed about the concentration of the Persian troops in Pamphylia, he directed 200 ships there from Cnidus and Triopio, in an attempt to prevent the Persians from sailing to the west of the Chelido ...
The Peloponnesian War – Video 22 – Peace of Nicias Situation
... talents from its treasury. 3. Brasidas and Cleon are dead, so the two main warhawks are gone. 4. Nicias and Pleistoanax are more peaceful. 5. The Peloponnesian League is ___________. Mantinea and Elis are acting independently, and Sparta can’t start a war with them while maintaining war with Athens. ...
... talents from its treasury. 3. Brasidas and Cleon are dead, so the two main warhawks are gone. 4. Nicias and Pleistoanax are more peaceful. 5. The Peloponnesian League is ___________. Mantinea and Elis are acting independently, and Sparta can’t start a war with them while maintaining war with Athens. ...
Warrick 1 Ancient Greek Childhood and the Pursuit of Polis Identity
... within Athens.7 This gender imbalance was probably not matched within Sparta, where women were revered for their child-bearing abilities. Pomeroy suggests in her work Spartan Women, “it is likely that the magistrates understood that the number of Spartiates was directly related to the number of chil ...
... within Athens.7 This gender imbalance was probably not matched within Sparta, where women were revered for their child-bearing abilities. Pomeroy suggests in her work Spartan Women, “it is likely that the magistrates understood that the number of Spartiates was directly related to the number of chil ...
Peloponnesian War: Sparta - Carolina International Relations
... The people who would eventually become the Greeks began migrating from the Balkans into the Achaean peninsula (“mainland” Greece) around 2,000 BC1 They came in three different ethnic groups, each speaking ...
... The people who would eventually become the Greeks began migrating from the Balkans into the Achaean peninsula (“mainland” Greece) around 2,000 BC1 They came in three different ethnic groups, each speaking ...
entry 11 the golden age of greece
... felt confident that they could do anything. They had survived the Persian’s attacks and rebuilt their homes in Athens. As Athens grew in power, Athens began to demand the protection tax of the Delian League to be paid in coin or in the ―oil‖ of the ancient world, wheat. When the land and soil-rich i ...
... felt confident that they could do anything. They had survived the Persian’s attacks and rebuilt their homes in Athens. As Athens grew in power, Athens began to demand the protection tax of the Delian League to be paid in coin or in the ―oil‖ of the ancient world, wheat. When the land and soil-rich i ...