Mark scheme - Unit F391 - Greek history from original
... decree, the use of tribute to spread the burden of defence against Persia (at least in the early stages) examples where Athens’ treatment of allies could be seen as less ‘fair and reasonable’, such as in the early examples of Naxos and Thasos, the favouring of one ally over another in local conflict ...
... decree, the use of tribute to spread the burden of defence against Persia (at least in the early stages) examples where Athens’ treatment of allies could be seen as less ‘fair and reasonable’, such as in the early examples of Naxos and Thasos, the favouring of one ally over another in local conflict ...
Pericles Structured Essay
... and modern sources. Pericles’ public image as a political leader has been seen differently by ancient sources, such as Thucydides and Plutarch, and modern sources, such as Donald Kagan and Victor Ehrenberg. Thucydides, who wrote at the same time that Pericles lived, in fifth century BC, greatly admi ...
... and modern sources. Pericles’ public image as a political leader has been seen differently by ancient sources, such as Thucydides and Plutarch, and modern sources, such as Donald Kagan and Victor Ehrenberg. Thucydides, who wrote at the same time that Pericles lived, in fifth century BC, greatly admi ...
Document
... Which of the following is NOT a reason why Athens’ became the leading power in Greece after the Persian Wars a) Strong Army ...
... Which of the following is NOT a reason why Athens’ became the leading power in Greece after the Persian Wars a) Strong Army ...
Finding the Truth: An Examination into the Use of Rhetoric in
... speech was composed of an introduction, narration, proofs, and finally a conclusion. The introduction was used to gain the trust of the audience while the narration was used to set out the facts of the case. Proofs helped support the facts that were previously set out by the speaker in order to supp ...
... speech was composed of an introduction, narration, proofs, and finally a conclusion. The introduction was used to gain the trust of the audience while the narration was used to set out the facts of the case. Proofs helped support the facts that were previously set out by the speaker in order to supp ...
The Athenian Decree for the N aturalisation of the Plataeans
... citizens by virtue of this decree as Apollodorus' deliberate distortion of the wording. The provision that the Plataeans must first undergo a personal scrutiny (1((l't' livopa) before a lawcourtH to ensure that no intruders would benefit from this 'blanket' naturalisation and register themselves by ...
... citizens by virtue of this decree as Apollodorus' deliberate distortion of the wording. The provision that the Plataeans must first undergo a personal scrutiny (1((l't' livopa) before a lawcourtH to ensure that no intruders would benefit from this 'blanket' naturalisation and register themselves by ...
Thucydides and Political Order
... It may be that this sentence must be interpreted with greater care than the juxtaposition of “immediate” and “truest cause” leads us to assume. It confronts us with the direct nexus between the annulment of the contract of 446/5 and the beginning of the war. I now turn to a detailed consideration of ...
... It may be that this sentence must be interpreted with greater care than the juxtaposition of “immediate” and “truest cause” leads us to assume. It confronts us with the direct nexus between the annulment of the contract of 446/5 and the beginning of the war. I now turn to a detailed consideration of ...
Residential Restrictions on the Athenian Ostracized
... work that, to the best of our knowledge, was synthetic and possibly prescriptive in character. A serious shortcoming of Raubitschek's hypothesis is that it compels him to argue that the account of ostracism in Diod. 11.55.3 is derived from Timaeus, and not from Ephorus, the main source for the Athen ...
... work that, to the best of our knowledge, was synthetic and possibly prescriptive in character. A serious shortcoming of Raubitschek's hypothesis is that it compels him to argue that the account of ostracism in Diod. 11.55.3 is derived from Timaeus, and not from Ephorus, the main source for the Athen ...
An Examination into the Use of Rhetoric in Thucydides
... speech was composed of an introduction, narration, proofs, and finally a conclusion. The introduction was used to gain the trust of the audience while the narration was used to set out the facts of the case. Proofs helped support the facts that were previously set out by the speaker in order to supp ...
... speech was composed of an introduction, narration, proofs, and finally a conclusion. The introduction was used to gain the trust of the audience while the narration was used to set out the facts of the case. Proofs helped support the facts that were previously set out by the speaker in order to supp ...
tyrannicides, symposium and history
... says hints that the law was a new creation, but he offers no clues as to the law’s date at all. Aligning the prohibition with the emergence of the very democracy that adopted the tyrannicides as its figureheads, MacDowell ventures a very early date – late sixth century / early fifth – for the law. 1 ...
... says hints that the law was a new creation, but he offers no clues as to the law’s date at all. Aligning the prohibition with the emergence of the very democracy that adopted the tyrannicides as its figureheads, MacDowell ventures a very early date – late sixth century / early fifth – for the law. 1 ...
A Day In Old Athens by William Stearns Davis
... translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, PROBABLE matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will b ...
... translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, PROBABLE matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will b ...
Conflict and Reconciliation: Dynamics of the Athenian Mass and
... poet).23 While conservative, both of these men had been associated with Pericles, which made them unlikely enemies of the democracy or supporters of 0ligarchy.24 However, the demos had showed its disfavour towards the demagogic rhetores who had supported the Sicilian expedition, and was clearly wary ...
... poet).23 While conservative, both of these men had been associated with Pericles, which made them unlikely enemies of the democracy or supporters of 0ligarchy.24 However, the demos had showed its disfavour towards the demagogic rhetores who had supported the Sicilian expedition, and was clearly wary ...
dicere laudes6.indd - Fondazione Canussio
... speaking in front of others enables them to assume the support of their audience, and the larger the audience or the more what that audience thinks matters, the greater their (potential) power. If representations can be perceived as praise only in some circumstances and from some sources, source and ...
... speaking in front of others enables them to assume the support of their audience, and the larger the audience or the more what that audience thinks matters, the greater their (potential) power. If representations can be perceived as praise only in some circumstances and from some sources, source and ...
Theseus - Ancient Philosophy at UBC
... is shown here. StarJng at the top and going in a clockwise direcJon the labors are: (1) Cercyon; (2) Procrustes; (3) Sciron (note the turtle); (4) the bull of Marathon; (5) Sinis (Pityocamptes); (6) ...
... is shown here. StarJng at the top and going in a clockwise direcJon the labors are: (1) Cercyon; (2) Procrustes; (3) Sciron (note the turtle); (4) the bull of Marathon; (5) Sinis (Pityocamptes); (6) ...
Athenian Identity and Civic Ideology
... to (kai es ... akroasin) my account, the very lack of fables (muthodes) will probably make it appear rather unpleasant" (1.2.2..4). Here the word~' -.. .r,•.... ing draws an explicit contrast between Thucydides' history and the ac"~' __~"._. counts of the logographoi, which were composed with an eye ...
... to (kai es ... akroasin) my account, the very lack of fables (muthodes) will probably make it appear rather unpleasant" (1.2.2..4). Here the word~' -.. .r,•.... ing draws an explicit contrast between Thucydides' history and the ac"~' __~"._. counts of the logographoi, which were composed with an eye ...
The Discourse of Kingship in Classical Athenian Thought
... significant changes in the depiction and use of kingship myth. Engagement with kingship as a topos and particularly as a source of examples for imitation implies a changing approach to democracy, but even within the use of this topos there is space for disagreement. While Theseus, the king who unit ...
... significant changes in the depiction and use of kingship myth. Engagement with kingship as a topos and particularly as a source of examples for imitation implies a changing approach to democracy, but even within the use of this topos there is space for disagreement. While Theseus, the king who unit ...
A short biography of Pericles
... because it was clear that he was hated and feared by the enemy. So the war with Sparta started. The Spartans invaded the territory of Athens, cutting down trees and burning farms to provoke the Athenians to come out from behind their walls and fight. Pericles decided that it was too dangerous to ris ...
... because it was clear that he was hated and feared by the enemy. So the war with Sparta started. The Spartans invaded the territory of Athens, cutting down trees and burning farms to provoke the Athenians to come out from behind their walls and fight. Pericles decided that it was too dangerous to ris ...
ALL THE KING`S GREEKS: MERCENARIES, POLEIS, AND
... Greek soldiers, Artaxerxes and his loyal satrap, Pharnabazus, hired a number of Greek sailors under the command of Conon, an exiled Athenian admiral, for service in the Aegean Sea against the Spartan navy. Conon served the Persians from 397 until 392, when he was arrested by Tiribazus, a freshly app ...
... Greek soldiers, Artaxerxes and his loyal satrap, Pharnabazus, hired a number of Greek sailors under the command of Conon, an exiled Athenian admiral, for service in the Aegean Sea against the Spartan navy. Conon served the Persians from 397 until 392, when he was arrested by Tiribazus, a freshly app ...
The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Day In Old Athens by William
... translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, PROBABLE matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will b ...
... translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, PROBABLE matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will b ...
Major Works Data Sheet
... Queen Jocasta. With his wife/mother, Oedipus had two daughter/sisters and two brother/sons.When Jocasta found out the truth of their incestuous relationship, she killed herself. Oedipus was pretty upset too. He plucked out his eyeballs. Then, he spent his remaining years wandering through Greece, be ...
... Queen Jocasta. With his wife/mother, Oedipus had two daughter/sisters and two brother/sons.When Jocasta found out the truth of their incestuous relationship, she killed herself. Oedipus was pretty upset too. He plucked out his eyeballs. Then, he spent his remaining years wandering through Greece, be ...
Introduction A Biography of Pericles in the Context of the Ancient
... the Athenians’ democracy founded by his uncle Cleisthenes after the Spartans had just expelled Athens’ tyranny, and about the harsh realities of Athenian political life as revealed to the young Pericles by the exile imposed on his father. Those tough lessons were further driven home by Pericles’ him ...
... the Athenians’ democracy founded by his uncle Cleisthenes after the Spartans had just expelled Athens’ tyranny, and about the harsh realities of Athenian political life as revealed to the young Pericles by the exile imposed on his father. Those tough lessons were further driven home by Pericles’ him ...
saved - PDFbooks.co.za
... translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, PROBABLE matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will b ...
... translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. Rare happenings have been omitted and sometimes, to avoid long explanations, PROBABLE matters have been stated as if they were ascertained facts; but these instances are few, and it is hoped no reader will b ...
hermocrates the syracusan1 - Manchester eScholar
... match for their enemies and appealed to Athens for naval support. Twenty ships were sent, which, arriving in Sicilian waters in the autumn of 427, could do no more than keep the war alive by engaging in operations of limited scope. A further appeal to Athens at the end of 426 led to the dispatch of ...
... match for their enemies and appealed to Athens for naval support. Twenty ships were sent, which, arriving in Sicilian waters in the autumn of 427, could do no more than keep the war alive by engaging in operations of limited scope. A further appeal to Athens at the end of 426 led to the dispatch of ...
Introduction
... century will be examined as well. Concurrently, the reason why Athens took imperial measures concerning its allies, is subject of investigation too. The nature of the Achaemenid Empire in relation to Miletus is central in chapter four. How the Achaemenids acted during and after the Ionian revolt and ...
... century will be examined as well. Concurrently, the reason why Athens took imperial measures concerning its allies, is subject of investigation too. The nature of the Achaemenid Empire in relation to Miletus is central in chapter four. How the Achaemenids acted during and after the Ionian revolt and ...
Cleisthenes
... above the age of thirty could serve on the Boule for a year. Under the law, they could not be on the Boule for more than twice in their lifetime or in two consecutive years. Being a member of the Boule might sound glamorous, but the responsibility was actually without pay! Luckily, the lack of monet ...
... above the age of thirty could serve on the Boule for a year. Under the law, they could not be on the Boule for more than twice in their lifetime or in two consecutive years. Being a member of the Boule might sound glamorous, but the responsibility was actually without pay! Luckily, the lack of monet ...
Corinthian War
The Corinthian War was an ancient Greek conflict lasting from 395 BC until 387 BC, pitting Sparta against a coalition of four allied states, Thebes, Athens, Corinth, and Argos, who were initially backed by Persia. The immediate cause of the war was a local conflict in northwest Greece in which both Thebes and Sparta intervened. The deeper cause was hostility towards Sparta provoked by that city's ""expansionism in Asia Minor, central and northern Greece and even the west"".The war was fought on two fronts, on land near Corinth (hence the name) and Thebes and at sea in the Aegean. On land, the Spartans achieved several early successes in major battles, but were unable to capitalize on their advantage, and the fighting soon became stalemated. At sea, the Spartan fleet was decisively defeated by a Persian fleet early in the war, an event that effectively ended Sparta's attempts to become a naval power. Taking advantage of this fact, Athens launched several naval campaigns in the later years of the war, recapturing a number of islands that had been part of the original Athenian Empire during the 5th century BC.Alarmed by these Athenian successes, the Persians stopped backing the allies and began supporting Sparta. This defection forced the allies to seek peace. The Peace of Antalcidas, commonly known as the King's Peace, was signed in 387 BC, ending the war. This treaty declared that Persia would control all of Ionia, and that all other Greek cities would be independent. Sparta was to be the guardian of the peace, with the power to enforce its clauses. The effects of the war, therefore, were to establish Persia's ability to interfere successfully in Greek politics and to affirm Sparta's hegemonic position in the Greek political system.