The Greeks at War!
... He encouraged the Athenians to build up their fleet and prepare for battle with the Persians. In 480 B.C. the new Persian King Xerxes sent a larger force to conquer Greece. He sent about 100,000 soldiers and nearly 1,000 ships. By this time Athens had convinced Sparta to join them in battle. Twenty ...
... He encouraged the Athenians to build up their fleet and prepare for battle with the Persians. In 480 B.C. the new Persian King Xerxes sent a larger force to conquer Greece. He sent about 100,000 soldiers and nearly 1,000 ships. By this time Athens had convinced Sparta to join them in battle. Twenty ...
Archaic Greece and Classical Greece: the Introduction to Greek
... When the Greek Ionian cities revolted against their Persian rulers in 494 B.C.E, Athens initially intervened to aid them. Initially the Persians were able to subdue all the Greek city-states except Sparta and Athens. With their Royal Road and great supply network, the Persians made use of these adva ...
... When the Greek Ionian cities revolted against their Persian rulers in 494 B.C.E, Athens initially intervened to aid them. Initially the Persians were able to subdue all the Greek city-states except Sparta and Athens. With their Royal Road and great supply network, the Persians made use of these adva ...
World History
... 5. Battle of Marathon 6. Pheidippides 7. Xerxes 8. Divisions among Greeks on how to handle the Persian threat 9. Battle of Thermopylae 10. Themistocles 11. Battle of Salamis & how it was won 12. Battle of Plataea 13. Delian League 14. The Athenian Empire F. Chapter 5, Section 3 (p. 134-137) (part 1) ...
... 5. Battle of Marathon 6. Pheidippides 7. Xerxes 8. Divisions among Greeks on how to handle the Persian threat 9. Battle of Thermopylae 10. Themistocles 11. Battle of Salamis & how it was won 12. Battle of Plataea 13. Delian League 14. The Athenian Empire F. Chapter 5, Section 3 (p. 134-137) (part 1) ...
Greeks and Persians Battle of Marathon • 490 BC • In 508 BC the
... Organized forces for an easy March inland Athenians ran army democratically: each year they elected 10 generals (strategoi) who formed committee and voted on tactics Militades (general) took charge • 9000 athenian hoplites grabbed whatever food they had and headed to Marathon Generals sent runner Ph ...
... Organized forces for an easy March inland Athenians ran army democratically: each year they elected 10 generals (strategoi) who formed committee and voted on tactics Militades (general) took charge • 9000 athenian hoplites grabbed whatever food they had and headed to Marathon Generals sent runner Ph ...
Persia and Pan
... “It was the beginning of spring that the King dismissed his other strategoi and Mardonios the son of Gobryes came down to the sea, bringing with him a large force….Mardonios arrived in Ionia and there something remarkable happened, at least I think so….for Mardonios put down all the tyrants of the I ...
... “It was the beginning of spring that the King dismissed his other strategoi and Mardonios the son of Gobryes came down to the sea, bringing with him a large force….Mardonios arrived in Ionia and there something remarkable happened, at least I think so….for Mardonios put down all the tyrants of the I ...
Peloponnesian War - the Sea Turtle Team Page
... Athenians began to treat other league members as their subjects. They refused to let members quit the league and forced more cities to join it. The Athenians even used the league’s money to pay for buildings in Athens. Without even fighting, the Athenians made the Dalian League an Athenian empire. ...
... Athenians began to treat other league members as their subjects. They refused to let members quit the league and forced more cities to join it. The Athenians even used the league’s money to pay for buildings in Athens. Without even fighting, the Athenians made the Dalian League an Athenian empire. ...
Teachers` notes and discussion sheets
... Teachers’ notes and discussion sheets: Exploring Ancient Greece and Persia These materials have been created as a way of exploring galleries about two empires from the same age, through linked themes. They focus on selected Greek and Persian objects from the Museum: they are not prescriptive, but of ...
... Teachers’ notes and discussion sheets: Exploring Ancient Greece and Persia These materials have been created as a way of exploring galleries about two empires from the same age, through linked themes. They focus on selected Greek and Persian objects from the Museum: they are not prescriptive, but of ...
4th Century Greece - Eastern New Mexico University
... Restriction of citizenship only to children whose parents both could claim to be Athenian citizens ...
... Restriction of citizenship only to children whose parents both could claim to be Athenian citizens ...
Fifth Century Greece
... Restriction of citizenship only to children whose parents both could claim to be Athenian citizens ...
... Restriction of citizenship only to children whose parents both could claim to be Athenian citizens ...
Persians and Greeks - White Plains Public Schools
... was much bigger than he had thought, and a war with an Indian king named Porus showed that India would not fall easily to the Greeks. Porus was powerful both as a man and a king. He stood seven feet tall, a widely-feared ruler and warrior. He fielded an army that was a match for the Greeks, but Poru ...
... was much bigger than he had thought, and a war with an Indian king named Porus showed that India would not fall easily to the Greeks. Porus was powerful both as a man and a king. He stood seven feet tall, a widely-feared ruler and warrior. He fielded an army that was a match for the Greeks, but Poru ...
File
... Athenians, the Persians vowed revenge. • In 480 B.C., new Persian king Xerxes invaded Greece with a large army and thousands of warships that even had their own supply ships. • The Greek city-‐state ...
... Athenians, the Persians vowed revenge. • In 480 B.C., new Persian king Xerxes invaded Greece with a large army and thousands of warships that even had their own supply ships. • The Greek city-‐state ...
Battle of Marathon - Prep World History I
... generals, since anciently the Athenians allowed him an equal right of voting with them. The Polemarch at this juncture was Callimachus of Aphidnae; to him therefore Miltiades went, and said: "With you it rests Callimachus, either to bring Athens to slavery, or, by securing her freedom, to leave behi ...
... generals, since anciently the Athenians allowed him an equal right of voting with them. The Polemarch at this juncture was Callimachus of Aphidnae; to him therefore Miltiades went, and said: "With you it rests Callimachus, either to bring Athens to slavery, or, by securing her freedom, to leave behi ...
The Father of History - Norwell Public Schools
... the Greek city-states formed an alliance. They did this to protect themselves from other invaders. Their goal was also to protect the trade routes in the Aegean Sea. To pay for this protection each city state gave money to the alliance. The funds were kept on the island of Delos, hence they called t ...
... the Greek city-states formed an alliance. They did this to protect themselves from other invaders. Their goal was also to protect the trade routes in the Aegean Sea. To pay for this protection each city state gave money to the alliance. The funds were kept on the island of Delos, hence they called t ...
Thermopylae 480 Be - IED Virtual Assistants
... Herakles himself), and 300 chosen men died bravely in their efforts to delay the Persians. Out of this do-or-die disaster sprung the belief amongst Greeks of a later generation that the Spartans obeyed their iron laws and never retreated, but this was a belief very largely created by the battle itse ...
... Herakles himself), and 300 chosen men died bravely in their efforts to delay the Persians. Out of this do-or-die disaster sprung the belief amongst Greeks of a later generation that the Spartans obeyed their iron laws and never retreated, but this was a belief very largely created by the battle itse ...
The Early Greeks
... blank, and if a statement is false, rewrite it correctly on the line. 1. The mainland of Greece is a peninsula, a body of land with water on three sides. 2. The island of Crete lies northwest of Greece and was the home of the Minoan civilization. 3. The Minoans made their wealth from fishing. 4. The ...
... blank, and if a statement is false, rewrite it correctly on the line. 1. The mainland of Greece is a peninsula, a body of land with water on three sides. 2. The island of Crete lies northwest of Greece and was the home of the Minoan civilization. 3. The Minoans made their wealth from fishing. 4. The ...
Lead Up to peloponnesian wars
... Most towns had sworn to subordinate their foreign policy to Spartan wishes and received protection in return. ...
... Most towns had sworn to subordinate their foreign policy to Spartan wishes and received protection in return. ...
Marathon 490 BC: The First Persian Invasion Of Greece
... of the obligations they had entered into, and their actions were later disavowed by the Athenian assembly. In 505 Hippias turned up at Sardis and Artaphernes ordered the Athenians to take him back (Hdt. 5.96). The Athenians refused and relations between Athens and the Persians deteriorated. This is ...
... of the obligations they had entered into, and their actions were later disavowed by the Athenian assembly. In 505 Hippias turned up at Sardis and Artaphernes ordered the Athenians to take him back (Hdt. 5.96). The Athenians refused and relations between Athens and the Persians deteriorated. This is ...
Unit Two Notes - Blaine School District
... -Marathon race named after this -Persian ships arrive much later. Saw the situation was helpless, and sailed away 3. Persians invade Greece again -Before Darius dies, tells his son to conquer the Greeks -480 B.C. Xerxes invades -1200 ships, 200,000 men (2 million men?????) -army made up of people fr ...
... -Marathon race named after this -Persian ships arrive much later. Saw the situation was helpless, and sailed away 3. Persians invade Greece again -Before Darius dies, tells his son to conquer the Greeks -480 B.C. Xerxes invades -1200 ships, 200,000 men (2 million men?????) -army made up of people fr ...
Ancient Greece - Public Schools of Robeson County
... He wanted revenge and invaded Greece. The Greek states formed a defensive league under the Spartans, Athenians followed their own policy, but all the Greeks were united in an effort to defeat the Persians. 1. Athenian forces abandoned their city at the approach of the Persian army. 2. In 479 B.C. th ...
... He wanted revenge and invaded Greece. The Greek states formed a defensive league under the Spartans, Athenians followed their own policy, but all the Greeks were united in an effort to defeat the Persians. 1. Athenian forces abandoned their city at the approach of the Persian army. 2. In 479 B.C. th ...
A Son`s Revenge Play
... Themistocles: Thousands of Greeks are trying to build a wall across the isthmus with stones, bricks, logs, and sandbags. And we want to keep the Persians away from the Peloponnesus not bring them closer to it. That is why Salamis comes in. As for the priests, they have their responsibilities and I h ...
... Themistocles: Thousands of Greeks are trying to build a wall across the isthmus with stones, bricks, logs, and sandbags. And we want to keep the Persians away from the Peloponnesus not bring them closer to it. That is why Salamis comes in. As for the priests, they have their responsibilities and I h ...
Oracle at Delphi
... • However, the Spartans gain the Greeks time to prepare. • The Athenian navy lures the Persian navy into a trap at Salamis. • Greek ships were smaller than the Persian’s ships. Easier to maneuver. • Xerxes leaves a powerful army in Greece, goes home. • The next year (479 BC), a combined Greek army d ...
... • However, the Spartans gain the Greeks time to prepare. • The Athenian navy lures the Persian navy into a trap at Salamis. • Greek ships were smaller than the Persian’s ships. Easier to maneuver. • Xerxes leaves a powerful army in Greece, goes home. • The next year (479 BC), a combined Greek army d ...
File
... order they appear in the film and you do not have to answer in complete sentences. IMPORTANT: The Crucible of Civilization is a two part film. This is part 1 and you should also watch part 2 to get a more complete story of the rise and fall of the ancient Greeks. 1. What was the situation in Athens ...
... order they appear in the film and you do not have to answer in complete sentences. IMPORTANT: The Crucible of Civilization is a two part film. This is part 1 and you should also watch part 2 to get a more complete story of the rise and fall of the ancient Greeks. 1. What was the situation in Athens ...
The Greeks Crucible of Civlization Part 66KB Aug 30 2016 10:52
... order they appear in the film and you do not have to answer in complete sentences. IMPORTANT: The Crucible of Civilization is a two part film. This is part 1 and you should also watch part 2 to get a more complete story of the rise and fall of the ancient Greeks. 1. What was the situation in Athens ...
... order they appear in the film and you do not have to answer in complete sentences. IMPORTANT: The Crucible of Civilization is a two part film. This is part 1 and you should also watch part 2 to get a more complete story of the rise and fall of the ancient Greeks. 1. What was the situation in Athens ...
Marathon 490 BC - Liberty Manufactured Homes
... of the obligations they had entered into, and their actions were later disavowed by the Athenian assembly. In 505 Hippias turned up at Sardis and Artaphernes ordered the Athenians to take him back (Hdt. 5.96). The Athenians refused and relations between Athens and the Persians deteriorated. This is ...
... of the obligations they had entered into, and their actions were later disavowed by the Athenian assembly. In 505 Hippias turned up at Sardis and Artaphernes ordered the Athenians to take him back (Hdt. 5.96). The Athenians refused and relations between Athens and the Persians deteriorated. This is ...
Battle of the Eurymedon
The Battle of the Eurymedon was a double battle, taking place both on water and land, between the Delian League of Athens and her Allies, and the Persian Empire of Xerxes I. It took place in either 469 or 466 BC, in the vicinity of the mouth of the Eurymedon River (now the Köprüçay) in Pamphylia, Asia Minor. It forms part of the Wars of the Delian League, itself part of the larger Greco-Persian Wars.The Delian League had been formed between Athens and many of the city-states of the Aegean to continue the war with Persia, which had begun with the first and second Persian invasions of Greece (492–490 and 480–479 BC, respectively). In the aftermath of the Battles of Plataea and Mycale, which had ended the second invasion, the Greek Allies had taken the offensive, besieging the cities of Sestos and Byzantium. The Delian League then took over responsibility for the war, and continued to attack Persian bases in the Aegean throughout the next decade. In either 469 or 466 BC, the Persians began assembling a large army and navy for a major offensive against the Greeks. Gathering near the Eurymedon, it is possible that the expedition aimed to move up the coast of Asia Minor, capturing each city in turn. This would bring the Asiatic Greek regions back under Persian control, and give the Persians naval bases from which to launch further expeditions into the Aegean. Hearing of the Persian preparations, the Athenian general Cimon took 200 triremes and sailed to Phaselis in Pamphylia, which eventually agreed to join the Delian League. This effectively blocked the Persian strategy at its first objective.Cimon then moved to pre-emptively attack the Persian forces near the Eurymedon. Sailing into the mouth of the river, Cimon quickly routed the Persian fleet gathered there. Most of the Persian fleet made land-fall, and the sailors fled to the shelter of the Persian army. Cimon then landed the Greek marines and proceeded to attack the Persian army, which was also routed. The Greeks captured the Persian camp, taking many prisoners, and were able to destroy 200 beached Persian triremes. This stunning double victory seems to have greatly demoralised the Persians, and prevented any further Persian campaigning in the Aegean until at least 451 BC. However, the Delian League do not appear to have pressed home their advantage, probably because of other events in the Greek world that required their attention.