Alexander the Great
... Sparta and Athens fought over who should have power and influence in Greece. • Sparta and Athens worked together to win the Persian Wars. • After the Persian Wars, city-states joined an alliance, which historians call the Delian League. – “Alliance” means they agreed to work together. • Sparta forme ...
... Sparta and Athens fought over who should have power and influence in Greece. • Sparta and Athens worked together to win the Persian Wars. • After the Persian Wars, city-states joined an alliance, which historians call the Delian League. – “Alliance” means they agreed to work together. • Sparta forme ...
ANCIENT GREECE
... Xerxes decided for safer, but longer land passage to Greece, crossed the Bosporus, and marched on Athens ...
... Xerxes decided for safer, but longer land passage to Greece, crossed the Bosporus, and marched on Athens ...
Rivals: Athens vs. Sparta - Harrison Humanities
... • Combination of many different city-states around the Aegean Sea. • City-states shared a common culture, many other systems were different. • Civilization was spread throughout the world due to diversity and travels around the Med. • Left physical structures like the Parthenon, much of the legacy i ...
... • Combination of many different city-states around the Aegean Sea. • City-states shared a common culture, many other systems were different. • Civilization was spread throughout the world due to diversity and travels around the Med. • Left physical structures like the Parthenon, much of the legacy i ...
Athens
... Based upon their birth and the wealth of their parents, the length of education was from the age of 5 to 14, for the wealthier 5 - 18 and sometimes into a student's mid-twenties in an academy where they would also study philosophy, ethics, and rhetoric (the skill of persuasive public speaking). Fina ...
... Based upon their birth and the wealth of their parents, the length of education was from the age of 5 to 14, for the wealthier 5 - 18 and sometimes into a student's mid-twenties in an academy where they would also study philosophy, ethics, and rhetoric (the skill of persuasive public speaking). Fina ...
Document
... To fight against the Persians (in many battles). Sparta and Athens even fought together against the Persians (in the Persian War). At one time Athens and Sparta weren’t doing to well. But they re-grouped and in the battle of Salamis (first naval battle ever recorded) beat the Persians (300 sunk ship ...
... To fight against the Persians (in many battles). Sparta and Athens even fought together against the Persians (in the Persian War). At one time Athens and Sparta weren’t doing to well. But they re-grouped and in the battle of Salamis (first naval battle ever recorded) beat the Persians (300 sunk ship ...
Classical Greece, 2000 BC*300 BC
... Thermopylae and Salamis 1. In 480 B.C., Persians launch new invasion of Greece 2. Greeks are divided; many stay neutral or side with Persians 3. Greek forces hold Thermopylae for three days before retreating 4. Athenians defeat Persians at sea, near island of Salamis 5. Victories at Salamis and Plat ...
... Thermopylae and Salamis 1. In 480 B.C., Persians launch new invasion of Greece 2. Greeks are divided; many stay neutral or side with Persians 3. Greek forces hold Thermopylae for three days before retreating 4. Athenians defeat Persians at sea, near island of Salamis 5. Victories at Salamis and Plat ...
Name: Date: Block: The Greeks: Crucible of Civilization Part 1 -2
... You have now watched three documentaries that describe the rise and fall of Athens. The Greek contribution to Western Civilization is profound, and modern thought, language, art, architecture, science, and political systems have all been influenced by the ancient Athenians featured in these films. D ...
... You have now watched three documentaries that describe the rise and fall of Athens. The Greek contribution to Western Civilization is profound, and modern thought, language, art, architecture, science, and political systems have all been influenced by the ancient Athenians featured in these films. D ...
SKIT – PERSIAN WAR - Alabama School of Fine Arts
... NARRATOR1. Themistocles had been right, and luckily for the Athenians, they took his advice. They began to build a fleet of warships. Ten years passed, and during that time, Darius died, and Xerxes became King of Persia. In 480BC, Xerxes decided to launch another attack on Greece. This time the Pers ...
... NARRATOR1. Themistocles had been right, and luckily for the Athenians, they took his advice. They began to build a fleet of warships. Ten years passed, and during that time, Darius died, and Xerxes became King of Persia. In 480BC, Xerxes decided to launch another attack on Greece. This time the Pers ...
Περίληψη : Χρονολόγηση Γεωγραφικός Εντοπισμός
... 1. The events according to the literary sources The naval battle of Abydus was one of the first and most important events of the Ionian War (412-405 BC). It took place in November 411 BC and the opponents were the Peloponnesian fleet under Mindarus, supported by the Persian infantry and cavalry of P ...
... 1. The events according to the literary sources The naval battle of Abydus was one of the first and most important events of the Ionian War (412-405 BC). It took place in November 411 BC and the opponents were the Peloponnesian fleet under Mindarus, supported by the Persian infantry and cavalry of P ...
Περίληψη : Χρονολόγηση Γεωγραφικός Εντοπισμός
... 1. The events according to the literary sources The naval battle of Abydus was one of the first and most important events of the Ionian War (412-405 BC). It took place in November 411 BC and the opponents were the Peloponnesian fleet under Mindarus, supported by the Persian infantry and cavalry of P ...
... 1. The events according to the literary sources The naval battle of Abydus was one of the first and most important events of the Ionian War (412-405 BC). It took place in November 411 BC and the opponents were the Peloponnesian fleet under Mindarus, supported by the Persian infantry and cavalry of P ...
sample
... under the leadership of Themistocles, the Greeks won a stunning victory by outwitting and outfighting the Persians in the naval battle of Salamis. With fall storms setting in and fearing that his retreat over the Hellespont might be cut off by the Greeks, Xerxes made his way back to Persia, leaving ...
... under the leadership of Themistocles, the Greeks won a stunning victory by outwitting and outfighting the Persians in the naval battle of Salamis. With fall storms setting in and fearing that his retreat over the Hellespont might be cut off by the Greeks, Xerxes made his way back to Persia, leaving ...
Chapter 5 - HERE in Barrington
... To fight against the Persians (in many battles). Sparta and Athens even fought together against the Persians (in the Persian War). At one time Athens and Sparta weren’t doing to well. But they re-grouped and in the battle of Salamis (first naval battle ever recorded) beat the Persians (300 sunk ship ...
... To fight against the Persians (in many battles). Sparta and Athens even fought together against the Persians (in the Persian War). At one time Athens and Sparta weren’t doing to well. But they re-grouped and in the battle of Salamis (first naval battle ever recorded) beat the Persians (300 sunk ship ...
File
... The Greek colonies along the Mediterranean and Black Sea coasts maintained close contact with the city-states on the Greek peninsula. When King Darius sent Persian troops to suppress, or stop, the rebellion in the Greek colonies, the Greek city-states of Athens and Eretria sent boats and soldiers to ...
... The Greek colonies along the Mediterranean and Black Sea coasts maintained close contact with the city-states on the Greek peninsula. When King Darius sent Persian troops to suppress, or stop, the rebellion in the Greek colonies, the Greek city-states of Athens and Eretria sent boats and soldiers to ...
c MILTIADES - Maclean High School
... - 513: advised Ionians to desert Darius at the Danube during his campaign against the Scythians. The other Ionian leaders declined. - 499: took part in the Ionian Revolt - 493: escaped the Phoenician fleet, fled to Athens, where his knowledge of Persian military tactics proved invaluable. - 490: his ...
... - 513: advised Ionians to desert Darius at the Danube during his campaign against the Scythians. The other Ionian leaders declined. - 499: took part in the Ionian Revolt - 493: escaped the Phoenician fleet, fled to Athens, where his knowledge of Persian military tactics proved invaluable. - 490: his ...
Classical Greece-2014
... Geography Shapes Greek Life• The Sea- The Greeks rarely had to travel more than 85 miles in order to reach the coastline. – As a result the Greeks became skilled sailors, and linked them with other societies. – Due to the fact that Greece lacked natural resources trade became a vital part of Greek ...
... Geography Shapes Greek Life• The Sea- The Greeks rarely had to travel more than 85 miles in order to reach the coastline. – As a result the Greeks became skilled sailors, and linked them with other societies. – Due to the fact that Greece lacked natural resources trade became a vital part of Greek ...
View/Open
... There were the oligarchies, in which political authority remained principally in the hands of a council of landowners and rich men; and the “democracies,” in which the Homeric assembly of all male freemen took control of the magistracies, and participated as a whole in the making of important decisi ...
... There were the oligarchies, in which political authority remained principally in the hands of a council of landowners and rich men; and the “democracies,” in which the Homeric assembly of all male freemen took control of the magistracies, and participated as a whole in the making of important decisi ...
Greece
... asked why he had fixed the punishment of death for most offences, answered that he considered these lesser crimes to deserve it, and he had no greater punishment for more important ones." All his laws were repealed by Solon in the early 6th century BC, with the exception of the homicide law ...
... asked why he had fixed the punishment of death for most offences, answered that he considered these lesser crimes to deserve it, and he had no greater punishment for more important ones." All his laws were repealed by Solon in the early 6th century BC, with the exception of the homicide law ...
Athens and Sparta: Different, Yet the Same
... to fight back with all their might against the invading Persians. Athenian and Spartan fought side by side in the Battle of Plataea, which ended Persian invasions of Greece. One way that Athens and Sparta really differed was in their idea of getting along with the rest of the Greeks. Sparta seemed c ...
... to fight back with all their might against the invading Persians. Athenian and Spartan fought side by side in the Battle of Plataea, which ended Persian invasions of Greece. One way that Athens and Sparta really differed was in their idea of getting along with the rest of the Greeks. Sparta seemed c ...
Unit 2: Greeks, Romans, the Rise of Christianity 4-6
... 5) The Mycenaean’s capital city was _________________ and was located on steep ridge surrounded by a________________, which is also known as a __________________ city. It was ruled by a ___________________-king. 6) The Mycenaean’s learned the value of ____________________ from the __________________ ...
... 5) The Mycenaean’s capital city was _________________ and was located on steep ridge surrounded by a________________, which is also known as a __________________ city. It was ruled by a ___________________-king. 6) The Mycenaean’s learned the value of ____________________ from the __________________ ...
Chapter 8 The Ancient Greeks
... “school of Greece” but also its most powerful city-state. • After the Peloponnesian War there were still many great thinkers and teachers and teachers in Athens. ...
... “school of Greece” but also its most powerful city-state. • After the Peloponnesian War there were still many great thinkers and teachers and teachers in Athens. ...
File - EDSS Ancient Civilizations
... architecture, science, and political systems have all been influenced by the ancient Athenians featured in these films. Despite their meteoric rise to power and brilliance, the Athenians found themselves vanquished in 415 BC. Write a formal essay of 5 paragraphs explaining how the cause of Athenian ...
... architecture, science, and political systems have all been influenced by the ancient Athenians featured in these films. Despite their meteoric rise to power and brilliance, the Athenians found themselves vanquished in 415 BC. Write a formal essay of 5 paragraphs explaining how the cause of Athenian ...
Early Greece
... called Macedonia is on the rise. • King Philip II begins to establish his power by conquering Greece. – Philip is an accomplished assassin and kills off other competitors for the throne – He is captured by the Thebans 369-367, and learns Greek military tactics here. King Philip II was the father of ...
... called Macedonia is on the rise. • King Philip II begins to establish his power by conquering Greece. – Philip is an accomplished assassin and kills off other competitors for the throne – He is captured by the Thebans 369-367, and learns Greek military tactics here. King Philip II was the father of ...
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.