Classics response 1 Democracy
... participate in the Boule (the main 'Council') and in the law-courts. According to one scholar's estimation, between a quarter and a third of the population could serve on the Council in a decade. Under this new system, election to office was replaced by lot. Think: why is lot more democratic than el ...
... participate in the Boule (the main 'Council') and in the law-courts. According to one scholar's estimation, between a quarter and a third of the population could serve on the Council in a decade. Under this new system, election to office was replaced by lot. Think: why is lot more democratic than el ...
File
... Following the Persian Wars, The Greek city-state of Athens emerged as a great power within the Mediterranean world. The Athenians defeated the Persian navy at Salamis, and now returned to rebuild their great city not simply for themselves, but for all of Greece to bear witness. Among the many chara ...
... Following the Persian Wars, The Greek city-state of Athens emerged as a great power within the Mediterranean world. The Athenians defeated the Persian navy at Salamis, and now returned to rebuild their great city not simply for themselves, but for all of Greece to bear witness. Among the many chara ...
sample
... Standing as we do in the shadow of the 2,500th anniversary of the Battle of Marathon, it seems a good time to consider the continuing interest in classical Greek warfare. More than two millennia ago, in 490 bce, a Greek army of Athenians and Plataeans stood between a Persian expeditionary force and ...
... Standing as we do in the shadow of the 2,500th anniversary of the Battle of Marathon, it seems a good time to consider the continuing interest in classical Greek warfare. More than two millennia ago, in 490 bce, a Greek army of Athenians and Plataeans stood between a Persian expeditionary force and ...
Document
... Athens exported the festival to its numerous colonies and allies in order to promote a common cultural identity. Western theatre originates in Athens and its drama has had a significant and sustained impact on Western culture as a whole. ...
... Athens exported the festival to its numerous colonies and allies in order to promote a common cultural identity. Western theatre originates in Athens and its drama has had a significant and sustained impact on Western culture as a whole. ...
Battle of Marathon
... Sir Edward Creasy, Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World (London: Richard Bentley and Sons, 1894. p.30): The day of Marathon is the critical epoch in the history of the two nations. It broke forever the spell of Persian invincibility, which had paralysed men’s minds. It generated among the Greeks th ...
... Sir Edward Creasy, Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World (London: Richard Bentley and Sons, 1894. p.30): The day of Marathon is the critical epoch in the history of the two nations. It broke forever the spell of Persian invincibility, which had paralysed men’s minds. It generated among the Greeks th ...
Notes on The Battle of Thermopylae - History Channel Video
... Oracle predicts that a Spartan king must die if Greeks are to defeat Persians Leonidas believes gods have chosen him to defend Greece and save Sparta Spartans also believe that Persia would want to take over all of Greece - not just Athens But Spartan Council allows Leonidas to take only a minimal f ...
... Oracle predicts that a Spartan king must die if Greeks are to defeat Persians Leonidas believes gods have chosen him to defend Greece and save Sparta Spartans also believe that Persia would want to take over all of Greece - not just Athens But Spartan Council allows Leonidas to take only a minimal f ...
lisarow high school senior ancient history
... h) BATTLE OF SALAMIS - Next morning Persian fleet attacks and is drawn into straits by feigned flight of the Greeks i) Attempt of Greeks to hold pass of TEMPE -north Thessaly , outflanked by inland march of Persians j) BATTLE OF SALAMIS - Persians on Psyttalea butchered k) Persian detachment marches ...
... h) BATTLE OF SALAMIS - Next morning Persian fleet attacks and is drawn into straits by feigned flight of the Greeks i) Attempt of Greeks to hold pass of TEMPE -north Thessaly , outflanked by inland march of Persians j) BATTLE OF SALAMIS - Persians on Psyttalea butchered k) Persian detachment marches ...
Solon and the Early Athenian Government Athens may be
... aristocracy around the eighth to seventh century BC. Similar developments were taking place across Greece at this time as monarchies gave way to oligarchies, governments ruled by a small group of aristocrats. In Athens, the king was not eliminated but had to share his power with two other officehold ...
... aristocracy around the eighth to seventh century BC. Similar developments were taking place across Greece at this time as monarchies gave way to oligarchies, governments ruled by a small group of aristocrats. In Athens, the king was not eliminated but had to share his power with two other officehold ...
November 2015 Mark Scheme 31 - Cambridge International
... Athenians to overtures made by Mardonius who hoped to bring them over to the Persian side as he prepared for a further campaign against the Greeks in 479 BC. Candidates may discuss the significance of the outcome for Athenians, whose city had been occupied and largely destroyed; they may link this w ...
... Athenians to overtures made by Mardonius who hoped to bring them over to the Persian side as he prepared for a further campaign against the Greeks in 479 BC. Candidates may discuss the significance of the outcome for Athenians, whose city had been occupied and largely destroyed; they may link this w ...
Sparta_Flash_Card__12_Spartan_Army
... Can the decline of Spartan citizens be attributed to the earthquake alone. Diodorus' estimate of 20,000 deaths is a pointer towards that. If even half of the 20,000 were Spartans rather than helots or perioeci, this would have serious and immediate results and may be a reason why Sparta petitioned A ...
... Can the decline of Spartan citizens be attributed to the earthquake alone. Diodorus' estimate of 20,000 deaths is a pointer towards that. If even half of the 20,000 were Spartans rather than helots or perioeci, this would have serious and immediate results and may be a reason why Sparta petitioned A ...
Athens - Piero Scaruffi
... – A colony could be founded by more than one Greek city – The colony was largely independent – Colonies often at war with each other and with Carthage and Etruscans – Syracuse one of the most powerful Greek cities from 485BC to the second Punic War (218-201) – Second Punic War caused destruction of ...
... – A colony could be founded by more than one Greek city – The colony was largely independent – Colonies often at war with each other and with Carthage and Etruscans – Syracuse one of the most powerful Greek cities from 485BC to the second Punic War (218-201) – Second Punic War caused destruction of ...
Greek City
... Lighter and faster, these Athenian warships destroyed the Persian navy and eventually brought an end to the Persian Wars. ...
... Lighter and faster, these Athenian warships destroyed the Persian navy and eventually brought an end to the Persian Wars. ...
Chapter 10 (The Persian Wars)
... (1) Greek city states of Miletus, Ephesus and Halicarnassus are in Ionia which is in Asia Minor – this means that ______ ___________. (2) Ionia had been _____ by Greeks/Mycenaeans fleeing the ______ during the _______. ...
... (1) Greek city states of Miletus, Ephesus and Halicarnassus are in Ionia which is in Asia Minor – this means that ______ ___________. (2) Ionia had been _____ by Greeks/Mycenaeans fleeing the ______ during the _______. ...
Early Greek History
... finance were filled by vote. So in effect Athens was a pure democracy, although it ...
... finance were filled by vote. So in effect Athens was a pure democracy, although it ...
Strauss%20Naval%20Battles
... The result was no surprise: on the day of battle, most of the ships fled. The Greeks were routed, although some of their triremes, remarkably, captured large numbers of enemy ships (Hdt. 6.12–15). Herodotus, who preserves the account of this débâcle, lays the blame at the feet of the men, but it i ...
... The result was no surprise: on the day of battle, most of the ships fled. The Greeks were routed, although some of their triremes, remarkably, captured large numbers of enemy ships (Hdt. 6.12–15). Herodotus, who preserves the account of this débâcle, lays the blame at the feet of the men, but it i ...
SS_Ch._78_Greece.pptx - New Lenox School District 122
... | Until about 500 b.c. tyrants ruled the Greek city-states | From then 500-336b.c., most city-states developed ...
... | Until about 500 b.c. tyrants ruled the Greek city-states | From then 500-336b.c., most city-states developed ...
AP World History Document Based Question: Greek Democracy
... Source: Isocrates Athenian political statesmen, orator, and writer. (346 BCE) “For those who directed the state in the time of Solon and Cleisthenes did not establish a polity (political system) which in name merely was hailed as the most impartial and the mildest of governments, while in practice s ...
... Source: Isocrates Athenian political statesmen, orator, and writer. (346 BCE) “For those who directed the state in the time of Solon and Cleisthenes did not establish a polity (political system) which in name merely was hailed as the most impartial and the mildest of governments, while in practice s ...
Athens Part 1
... powerful and granted the city its fame all over the centuries. Although his reforms lasted for short in his time, he laid the foundations for the economic, cultural and military development of the town. Solon was born into a noble family in 638 B.C. He was a merchant by profession and a poet. In 594 ...
... powerful and granted the city its fame all over the centuries. Although his reforms lasted for short in his time, he laid the foundations for the economic, cultural and military development of the town. Solon was born into a noble family in 638 B.C. He was a merchant by profession and a poet. In 594 ...
Western Classical Thought and Culture
... vote, majority ruled. Women, children, and slaves were not citizens, and thus could not vote. Every citizen has a responsibility for the state. ...
... vote, majority ruled. Women, children, and slaves were not citizens, and thus could not vote. Every citizen has a responsibility for the state. ...
Chapter Three: The Greek Polis CHAPTER OUTLINE The Formation
... Much of the information about this period was contained in poetry, which emerged as the primary form of cultural expression in sixth-century Greece. Some tyrants favored certain poets, and their works became well known; many fostered public institutions and supported public values. Some tyrants shar ...
... Much of the information about this period was contained in poetry, which emerged as the primary form of cultural expression in sixth-century Greece. Some tyrants favored certain poets, and their works became well known; many fostered public institutions and supported public values. Some tyrants shar ...
READING ATHENS – The … ideal city 1 The ACROPOLIS – `In the
... The dazzling outcrop satisfied all prerequisites for permanent settlement. Reinforced with fortification, it first became a Mycenaean citadel, which then turned into the ‘Sacred Rock’ that housed the patron goddess and other deities, and in the classical period the glorious building complex exhibite ...
... The dazzling outcrop satisfied all prerequisites for permanent settlement. Reinforced with fortification, it first became a Mycenaean citadel, which then turned into the ‘Sacred Rock’ that housed the patron goddess and other deities, and in the classical period the glorious building complex exhibite ...
support notes
... Key Stage 2: A question for the people The final page of these notes can be copied and given to students who you think may need additional support during the workshop or to adult helpers. ...
... Key Stage 2: A question for the people The final page of these notes can be copied and given to students who you think may need additional support during the workshop or to adult helpers. ...
Periklean Building Project on Athenian Acropolis, 447
... Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, 350 BC, almost 100 ft tall; one of seven ancient wonders of the world Mausolus (King of Caria; not a Greek); finished by Artemisia, his sister & wife Amazonomachy: each side of continuous frieze done by different sculptors, including Praxiteles Epidaurus, Sanctuary of Asc ...
... Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, 350 BC, almost 100 ft tall; one of seven ancient wonders of the world Mausolus (King of Caria; not a Greek); finished by Artemisia, his sister & wife Amazonomachy: each side of continuous frieze done by different sculptors, including Praxiteles Epidaurus, Sanctuary of Asc ...
Democracy Ancient and Modern
... The greatest war in the past was the Persian War; yet in this war the decision was reached quickly as a result of two naval battles and two battles on land. The Peloponnesian War, on the other hand, not only lasted for a long time, but throughout its course brought with it unprecedented suffering fo ...
... The greatest war in the past was the Persian War; yet in this war the decision was reached quickly as a result of two naval battles and two battles on land. The Peloponnesian War, on the other hand, not only lasted for a long time, but throughout its course brought with it unprecedented suffering fo ...
The Golden Age of Athens! - Parkway C-2
... were different in each of the Greek city-states. The main lawmaking body of the Athenian democracy was the Citizens Assembly, which was open to all male citizens. A smaller executive body, the Council of 500 was responsible for proposing the laws and for voting on important political issues. Many pe ...
... were different in each of the Greek city-states. The main lawmaking body of the Athenian democracy was the Citizens Assembly, which was open to all male citizens. A smaller executive body, the Council of 500 was responsible for proposing the laws and for voting on important political issues. Many pe ...
Peloponnesian War
The Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) was an ancient Greek war fought by Athens and its empire against the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta. Historians have traditionally divided the war into three phases. In the first phase, the Archidamian War, Sparta launched repeated invasions of Attica, while Athens took advantage of its naval supremacy to raid the coast of the Peloponnese attempting to suppress signs of unrest in its empire. This period of the war was concluded in 421 BC, with the signing of the Peace of Nicias. That treaty, however, was soon undermined by renewed fighting in the Peloponnese. In 415 BC, Athens dispatched a massive expeditionary force to attack Syracuse in Sicily; the attack failed disastrously, with the destruction of the entire force, in 413 BC. This ushered in the final phase of the war, generally referred to either as the Decelean War, or the Ionian War. In this phase, Sparta, now receiving support from Persia, supported rebellions in Athens' subject states in the Aegean Sea and Ionia, undermining Athens' empire, and, eventually, depriving the city of naval supremacy. The destruction of Athens' fleet at Aegospotami effectively ended the war, and Athens surrendered in the following year. Corinth and Thebes demanded that Athens should be destroyed and all its citizens should be enslaved but Sparta refused.The Peloponnesian War reshaped the ancient Greek world. On the level of international relations, Athens, the strongest city-state in Greece prior to the war's beginning, was reduced to a state of near-complete subjection, while Sparta became established as the leading power of Greece. The economic costs of the war were felt all across Greece; poverty became widespread in the Peloponnese, while Athens found itself completely devastated, and never regained its pre-war prosperity. The war also wrought subtler changes to Greek society; the conflict between democratic Athens and oligarchic Sparta, each of which supported friendly political factions within other states, made civil war a common occurrence in the Greek world. Greek warfare, meanwhile, originally a limited and formalized form of conflict, was transformed into an all-out struggle between city-states, complete with atrocities on a large scale. Shattering religious and cultural taboos, devastating vast swathes of countryside, and destroying whole cities, the Peloponnesian War marked the dramatic end to the fifth century BC and the golden age of Greece.