Athens
... • War supposedly involved early Greeks, led by Mycenae, who fought powerful city called Troy, in what is now Turkey over Helen • War may not have happened, but ruins of city believed to be Troy found ...
... • War supposedly involved early Greeks, led by Mycenae, who fought powerful city called Troy, in what is now Turkey over Helen • War may not have happened, but ruins of city believed to be Troy found ...
Handout Democracy Under Cleisthenes
... all important laws had to be passed by a vote of the people as a whole all male citizens could participate would meet a number of 3x each month first 6000 or so Athenians citizens to arrive (all that could fit in the meeting place of the Assembly) would deliberate and vote on all important state act ...
... all important laws had to be passed by a vote of the people as a whole all male citizens could participate would meet a number of 3x each month first 6000 or so Athenians citizens to arrive (all that could fit in the meeting place of the Assembly) would deliberate and vote on all important state act ...
From Classical to Contemporary
... Contextualizing Aristophanes • Pericles—Athens (495-429 BCE), reforms during the Golden Age, court system (Perry 65); oration reconstructed by Thucydides, reveals “Athenian democratic ideal,” “civic and personal freedom” (Perry 65) • Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta (431-404 BCE) ends th ...
... Contextualizing Aristophanes • Pericles—Athens (495-429 BCE), reforms during the Golden Age, court system (Perry 65); oration reconstructed by Thucydides, reveals “Athenian democratic ideal,” “civic and personal freedom” (Perry 65) • Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta (431-404 BCE) ends th ...
Chapter 5: The Greek City-States Introduction
... a. Polis components: Acropolis / City / Agricultural land 2. Geography and topography limited the size of the polis. 3. When city-states developed too large of a population, they established colonies. Most of the Greek cities in Ionia were colonies. 4. City-states were united culturally by language, ...
... a. Polis components: Acropolis / City / Agricultural land 2. Geography and topography limited the size of the polis. 3. When city-states developed too large of a population, they established colonies. Most of the Greek cities in Ionia were colonies. 4. City-states were united culturally by language, ...
Classics activity 1 Democracy
... Classical Athens was democratic, the other that it wasn't. Helpful hints This is a broad topic, so choose the areas that you find most interesting and that you feel you best understand. Questions and issues you might address include: - What were Cleisthenes' reforms in 509/8 B.C.? - How did Athenian ...
... Classical Athens was democratic, the other that it wasn't. Helpful hints This is a broad topic, so choose the areas that you find most interesting and that you feel you best understand. Questions and issues you might address include: - What were Cleisthenes' reforms in 509/8 B.C.? - How did Athenian ...
Britain`s 13 “Colonies”
... However, Athens did not start out as a democracy—it evolved into a democracy over 100's of years. A) Before The Democracy 1. Athens was first an aristocracy (wealthy people dominated the government) 2. It had an assembly (legislature), which debated issues and created laws. However, membership i ...
... However, Athens did not start out as a democracy—it evolved into a democracy over 100's of years. A) Before The Democracy 1. Athens was first an aristocracy (wealthy people dominated the government) 2. It had an assembly (legislature), which debated issues and created laws. However, membership i ...
Ancient Greece - Mr. Gunnells' Social Studies Class
... But Who Gets to Vote? Athenians developed the idea of Citizenship Greek leaders decided that only men who owned large plots of land were citizens. Women, slaves, foreigners and people with little or no property were not given the rights and responsibilities of Athenian citizenship. While t ...
... But Who Gets to Vote? Athenians developed the idea of Citizenship Greek leaders decided that only men who owned large plots of land were citizens. Women, slaves, foreigners and people with little or no property were not given the rights and responsibilities of Athenian citizenship. While t ...
Ancient Greece - Net Start Class
... • Menelaus calls upon all former suitors to attack Paris and Troy • Odysseus calls on Achilles, the greatest warrior in all of Greece • Agamemnon was commander-inchief of Greek army ...
... • Menelaus calls upon all former suitors to attack Paris and Troy • Odysseus calls on Achilles, the greatest warrior in all of Greece • Agamemnon was commander-inchief of Greek army ...
The Persian Wars
... Remember all those towns the ancient Greeks built in early times? Some were still flourishing. The Greek towns located along the Turkish coast had fallen under Persian rule. The Greek colonists were unhappy about it. Athens sent supplies to help them out. Those supplies included weapons. Persia woul ...
... Remember all those towns the ancient Greeks built in early times? Some were still flourishing. The Greek towns located along the Turkish coast had fallen under Persian rule. The Greek colonists were unhappy about it. Athens sent supplies to help them out. Those supplies included weapons. Persia woul ...
The Greek Polis
... • Aristotle believed that people “naturally” lived in poleis. He and his pulis studied more than 100 Greek poleis. The amount of variation from one to another could be considerable. ...
... • Aristotle believed that people “naturally” lived in poleis. He and his pulis studied more than 100 Greek poleis. The amount of variation from one to another could be considerable. ...
Athens v. Sparta
... the citizens and the 2 kings, acted as judges and proposed laws to the Assembly Assembly: all male citizens 30 or older, voted on proposed laws by shouting out their votes Did women participate in the political life of Sparta? ...
... the citizens and the 2 kings, acted as judges and proposed laws to the Assembly Assembly: all male citizens 30 or older, voted on proposed laws by shouting out their votes Did women participate in the political life of Sparta? ...
Greece Lecture
... Ionian Revolts and the Golden Age • 491 BC – 600 ships traveled across the sea and camped near Marathon – The Greek city states were scared, but raised the armies and went to fight – The numbers: Greeks 20,000, Persians ...
... Ionian Revolts and the Golden Age • 491 BC – 600 ships traveled across the sea and camped near Marathon – The Greek city states were scared, but raised the armies and went to fight – The numbers: Greeks 20,000, Persians ...
The Greek Roots of Democracy
... Pisistratus was a tyrant who gave farmers and poor citizens more power. Cleisthenes set up a council of 500 chosen by lot from citizens to prepare laws and supervise government, a legislature Democracy was limited ...
... Pisistratus was a tyrant who gave farmers and poor citizens more power. Cleisthenes set up a council of 500 chosen by lot from citizens to prepare laws and supervise government, a legislature Democracy was limited ...
Unit Two Notes - Blaine School District
... Strategies for both Sparta and Athens. First list strengths, then come up with a strategy on how they would try to defeat each other Peloponnesian War 431-404 B.C. -in 431 BC war breaks out between Sparta and Athens. It involved many city states. Both states had prepared for war and did little to p ...
... Strategies for both Sparta and Athens. First list strengths, then come up with a strategy on how they would try to defeat each other Peloponnesian War 431-404 B.C. -in 431 BC war breaks out between Sparta and Athens. It involved many city states. Both states had prepared for war and did little to p ...
Chapter 5: The Greek City-States
... Included boxing, foot races, javelin and discus throwing, and wrestling Winners received wreaths of olive branches Greek Government: From Kings to Democracy Only wealthy land owners could afford expensive horse, chariots, and bronze weapons A small group of land owners called aristocrats cam ...
... Included boxing, foot races, javelin and discus throwing, and wrestling Winners received wreaths of olive branches Greek Government: From Kings to Democracy Only wealthy land owners could afford expensive horse, chariots, and bronze weapons A small group of land owners called aristocrats cam ...
The Democratic Experiment
... people directed foreign policy, revised the laws, approved or condemned the conduct of public officials, and made many other state decisions. Greek democracy and modern democracy The creators of the first “democracies” of the modern era, post-revolutionary France and the United States, claimed a spe ...
... people directed foreign policy, revised the laws, approved or condemned the conduct of public officials, and made many other state decisions. Greek democracy and modern democracy The creators of the first “democracies” of the modern era, post-revolutionary France and the United States, claimed a spe ...
Democracy in Athens
... • Why do some believe that there is a connection between the phalanx and the way larger numbers of people gained political power? ...
... • Why do some believe that there is a connection between the phalanx and the way larger numbers of people gained political power? ...
SOCIAL STUDIES EXAM REVIEW Short Answer B.C.E = ______
... The name for the Athenian Citizen Assembly. Goddess and the city of Athens was named after Famous Spartan leader; a hero. Sentenced to death for corrupting the youth Minoans lived on this island. A person living in Athens but not a "citizen" Formed after the Persian wars Main god in the new mystery ...
... The name for the Athenian Citizen Assembly. Goddess and the city of Athens was named after Famous Spartan leader; a hero. Sentenced to death for corrupting the youth Minoans lived on this island. A person living in Athens but not a "citizen" Formed after the Persian wars Main god in the new mystery ...
Sparta
... to become mothers of soldiers. • Their cities did not have walls as they believed any city defended by a Spartan did not require walls. ...
... to become mothers of soldiers. • Their cities did not have walls as they believed any city defended by a Spartan did not require walls. ...
Greece Notes- Part I The Cradle of Western Civilization
... Pheidippides’ run. Marathons are exactly 26 miles and 385 yards, which is exactly the distance Pheidippides is believed to have run. Persia planned to conquer the Greek peninsula by defeating individual poli, but Athens convinced other poli to combine forces with one another. The combined forces wer ...
... Pheidippides’ run. Marathons are exactly 26 miles and 385 yards, which is exactly the distance Pheidippides is believed to have run. Persia planned to conquer the Greek peninsula by defeating individual poli, but Athens convinced other poli to combine forces with one another. The combined forces wer ...
The Symposium
... The Guest List for the Party Setting: Apollodorus is telling what happened at Agathôn's house in Athens, 404 BCE (just a few years before Socrates' execution in 399 BCE and a few months before Alcibiades' assassination) v Apollodorus: The fictional narrator who recollects what happened at Agathôn's ...
... The Guest List for the Party Setting: Apollodorus is telling what happened at Agathôn's house in Athens, 404 BCE (just a few years before Socrates' execution in 399 BCE and a few months before Alcibiades' assassination) v Apollodorus: The fictional narrator who recollects what happened at Agathôn's ...
PowerPoint Overview of Ancient Greece
... Ancient Athens is often referred to as the cradle of democracy Democracy flourished during the Golden Age of Athens (4th Century BCE) under Pericles Direct Democracy= All the male citizens would gather, discussed the issues, and then voted on them. However, Athenian democracy was flawed. Only male c ...
... Ancient Athens is often referred to as the cradle of democracy Democracy flourished during the Golden Age of Athens (4th Century BCE) under Pericles Direct Democracy= All the male citizens would gather, discussed the issues, and then voted on them. However, Athenian democracy was flawed. Only male c ...
The Battle of Thermopylae - stephenspencer
... was the first time they Greek city-states fought together. This continued. • It showed Xerxes that conquering Greece was not going to be easy. The Greeks were a strong, determinded and skilled force. (just as Marathon had shown Darius) • The courageous self-sacrifice of Leonidas and his men won the ...
... was the first time they Greek city-states fought together. This continued. • It showed Xerxes that conquering Greece was not going to be easy. The Greeks were a strong, determinded and skilled force. (just as Marathon had shown Darius) • The courageous self-sacrifice of Leonidas and his men won the ...
The Marathon Story
... poleis (plural for polis). These early city-states spawned the democratic ideas that have persisted into modern times. Athens eventually became the largest and most prosperous polis. Another Greek polis, Sparta, was not so democratic. They kept their kings/oligarchs and maintained a conservative, st ...
... poleis (plural for polis). These early city-states spawned the democratic ideas that have persisted into modern times. Athens eventually became the largest and most prosperous polis. Another Greek polis, Sparta, was not so democratic. They kept their kings/oligarchs and maintained a conservative, st ...
The Battle of Marathon, 490 BC
... The battle of Marathon is one of history's most famous military engagements. It is also one of the earliest recorded battles. Their victory over the Persian invaders gave the fledgling Greek city states confidence in their ability to defend themselves and belief in their continued existence. The bat ...
... The battle of Marathon is one of history's most famous military engagements. It is also one of the earliest recorded battles. Their victory over the Persian invaders gave the fledgling Greek city states confidence in their ability to defend themselves and belief in their continued existence. The bat ...
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.