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Warring City-States
Warring City-States

... – Small group of noble, land-owning families – Gained control by working in kings military ...
ANCIENT GREECE NOTES_PT2
ANCIENT GREECE NOTES_PT2

... • Spartans ______________________ Athens hoping for an open battle – Athens __________________ any battles on land – Knowing they can’t compete in open battle, they ______________ behind their city walls, relying on _________________________ from their navy and colonies • In 430 BC a terrible ______ ...
Greece Test Review Power Point
Greece Test Review Power Point

... They enslaved the farmers who were there and called them helots. There was one Spartan to every five Helots The Spartan army was so fierce the Spartans didn’t build a wall around the city, it was said they had a wall of men. The Helots rebelled in 600 B.C. and were defeated by the Spartans, after th ...
Ancient Greece
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... freedom was built partly on the oppression of others. Here the Athenians are imposing their democratic system on the people of Erythre. Most of the Aegean was forced by Athens’ navy to cough up money and ruthlessly suppressed if it refused. At home slaves and women had no vote, which prompted the co ...
Greek Mythology
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... gods and goddesses as very human like. There is often time a moral to the myths. These Myths were some of the first written novels of the Classical world. Ex.) Zeus, Hercules, Atlas. ...
Persian Wars - Warren County Public Schools
Persian Wars - Warren County Public Schools

... Persian Empire weakened. *After Xerxes dies other Kings raise taxes and spend money on themselves. *common people rebelled *Brothers plotted against each other. ...
The Greeks at War!
The Greeks at War!

... He encouraged the Athenians to build up their fleet and prepare for battle with the Persians. In 480 B.C. Darius’ son Xerxes sent a larger force to conquer Greece. He sent 200,000 soldiers and nearly 1,000 ships. ...
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The Persian Wars

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Chapter 4 Ancient Greece 1 ppt

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Athens: Greek city-state located on the Aegean Coast About 750 BC

... Oligarchy – a form of government in which a few people have the ruling power Draco- an Athenian noble who tried to make reforms to change the government -he was considered too harsh and his reforms failed Solon – a rich merchant, prepared a constitution, a wet of principles and rules for governing - ...
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... experienced decline. However, two things changed life in Greece. First, Dorians and Mycenaeans alike began to identify less with the culture of their ancestors and more with the local area where they lived. Second, by the end of this period, the method of governing areas had changed from tribal or c ...
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The importance of Greek unity in the Persian Wars

... dispatched a runner to Sparta requesting assistance, but it was late in coming due to a Spartan religious festival. In the meantime, Miltiades persuaded the Assembly to send troops to Marathon to block the two routes leading south. In the battle that followed, 11,000 Greeks defeated Darius’ force of ...
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Greek History - Orem High School
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THE PERSIAN WARS: PART I I. 546 B.C. Cyrus II of Persia conquers

... III. Thermopylae- a mountain pass North of Athens a. 7,000 Greeks led by King ______________ of Sparta fought the Persians for 3 days. b. Greek traitor showed Persians a way to attack Greeks from the rear. IV. Leonidas Decision a. He knew he was about to be surrounded, so he sent most of his troops ...
MS Word - Ancient Greece
MS Word - Ancient Greece

... Persia waited for political strife within Athens to give them a helping hand in the battle. But Athens remained strong. The Persians eventually decided to sail to Sounion hoping that when they landed their supporters in Athens would make a move. Miltiades realised that this was the perfect time to a ...
Adobe Acrobat - Ancient Greece
Adobe Acrobat - Ancient Greece

... Persia waited for political strife within Athens to give them a helping hand in the battle. But Athens remained strong. The Persians eventually decided to sail to Sounion hoping that when they landed their supporters in Athens would make a move. Miltiades realised that this was the perfect time to a ...
SECTION 2: THE RISE OF GREEK CITY-STATES
SECTION 2: THE RISE OF GREEK CITY-STATES

... The fierce resistance of the Spartan-led army offered Athens the invaluable time to prepare for a decisive naval battle that would come to determine the outcome of the war. ...
section 2: the rise of greek city-states
section 2: the rise of greek city-states

... The fierce resistance of the Spartan-led army offered Athens the invaluable time to prepare for a decisive naval battle that would come to determine the outcome of the war. ...
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... defeated by better navigable Greek ships. ...
Persian_Wars_G-4 - Miami Beach Senior High School
Persian_Wars_G-4 - Miami Beach Senior High School

... Leonidas, one of the two Spartan kings, is in command of the Greek army when the confrontation comes. His Spartan contingent is as yet only an advance guard of 300 men. He stations them under his immediate command at the narrowest part of the pass. The glittering Persian army has at its head the emp ...
Greece #3
Greece #3

... defeated by better navigable Greek ships. ...
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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.
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