Greek City-States Politics and Society Characteristics of City
... Around 800 BCE the polis (poleis) begin to form Allowed people to diversify in occupations The towns become walled cities Each city-state had a guardian deity ...
... Around 800 BCE the polis (poleis) begin to form Allowed people to diversify in occupations The towns become walled cities Each city-state had a guardian deity ...
Classical Greece The High Point of Greek civilization is the time
... forming a defensive alliance against the Persians called the Delian league. Its main headquarters was on the island of Delos, but its chief officials were from Athens. Eventually the Greek states wanted to leave the league because they saw that the Persian threat was over. However, the Athenians for ...
... forming a defensive alliance against the Persians called the Delian league. Its main headquarters was on the island of Delos, but its chief officials were from Athens. Eventually the Greek states wanted to leave the league because they saw that the Persian threat was over. However, the Athenians for ...
Chapter 5 Section 1-4 True/False Indicate whether the statement is
... ____ 13. Study the map titled “The Peloponnesian War.” What statement about the Peloponnesian War is best supported by the map? a. Athens and Sparta were both members of the Delian League. b. The Persian Empire sent a navy to aid Athens. c. Athens needed ships to communicate with its allies. d. Ioni ...
... ____ 13. Study the map titled “The Peloponnesian War.” What statement about the Peloponnesian War is best supported by the map? a. Athens and Sparta were both members of the Delian League. b. The Persian Empire sent a navy to aid Athens. c. Athens needed ships to communicate with its allies. d. Ioni ...
Persian_Peloponnesian Wars_Golden Age
... called the Ionian Revolt. The Ionian Revolt lasted from 498 - 493 B.C.E. when the Greek cities surrendered to Persia. ...
... called the Ionian Revolt. The Ionian Revolt lasted from 498 - 493 B.C.E. when the Greek cities surrendered to Persia. ...
Greece, Persia, and Alexander 546
... 3. Xerxes sends world’s largest army against Athens 480 BCE 4. Hellenic League 480BCEalliance of Phalanx formation of hoplites city-states led by Sparta defeats Persians 5. Delian League 477BCE- alliance led by Athens drives Persians from Greece ...
... 3. Xerxes sends world’s largest army against Athens 480 BCE 4. Hellenic League 480BCEalliance of Phalanx formation of hoplites city-states led by Sparta defeats Persians 5. Delian League 477BCE- alliance led by Athens drives Persians from Greece ...
Test: Ancient Greece
... Athens aids Ionian city-states (modernday Turkey) in their battles with the Persians (why?) Persia defeats the Ionians and wants revenge on the Athenians for helping them ...
... Athens aids Ionian city-states (modernday Turkey) in their battles with the Persians (why?) Persia defeats the Ionians and wants revenge on the Athenians for helping them ...
Origins of Classical Greece
... colonies quickly! Darius I (Persians) versus Themistocles (Athenian) Persians attack at Marathon (490 BC) Athenians WIN at Marathon! ...
... colonies quickly! Darius I (Persians) versus Themistocles (Athenian) Persians attack at Marathon (490 BC) Athenians WIN at Marathon! ...
Classical Greece
... Because the Athenian navy had helped the Ionian Greek cities in Western Asia Minor with a revolt against the Persians, ...
... Because the Athenian navy had helped the Ionian Greek cities in Western Asia Minor with a revolt against the Persians, ...
Persian Wars
... 490 Battle of Marathon 480 Battle at Thermoplyae Persians march toward Athens – Themistocles evacuates city, lures them to Salamis Strait, Athens destroys Persian fleet – Sparta and Athens unites and defeats Persia ...
... 490 Battle of Marathon 480 Battle at Thermoplyae Persians march toward Athens – Themistocles evacuates city, lures them to Salamis Strait, Athens destroys Persian fleet – Sparta and Athens unites and defeats Persia ...
File - World History with Ms. Byrne
... Consequences of the Persian Wars • New self-confidence in Greece due to victory • Athens emerges as leader of Delian League • Athens controls the league by using force against opponents • League members essentially become provinces of Athenian empire • Stage is set for a dazzling burst of creativit ...
... Consequences of the Persian Wars • New self-confidence in Greece due to victory • Athens emerges as leader of Delian League • Athens controls the league by using force against opponents • League members essentially become provinces of Athenian empire • Stage is set for a dazzling burst of creativit ...
Ancient Greece - Wikispaces.net
... • Citizens were given the right to participate in the Athenian government, though the participation varied on what class you fell in whether it be Aristocratic or middle class • Metics were freemen that were not citizens of Athens • Slaves did not have any rights at all • Women lack rights as well ...
... • Citizens were given the right to participate in the Athenian government, though the participation varied on what class you fell in whether it be Aristocratic or middle class • Metics were freemen that were not citizens of Athens • Slaves did not have any rights at all • Women lack rights as well ...
King Philip II: United the Greek city states under his leadership after
... ✓ Know the following famous people and what they were responsible for: Alexander the Great: conquered Persia and Egypt; spread Greek culture Hippocrates: “Father of Medicine”; wrote about medicine and treatments; wrote “The Complicated Body” while in jail for 20 years; Hippocratic Oath Pericles: Ath ...
... ✓ Know the following famous people and what they were responsible for: Alexander the Great: conquered Persia and Egypt; spread Greek culture Hippocrates: “Father of Medicine”; wrote about medicine and treatments; wrote “The Complicated Body” while in jail for 20 years; Hippocratic Oath Pericles: Ath ...
Marathon: The first battle of the Persian
... needed. In other words, surrender was unconditional, and the Persian king was able to grant life to his new subjects. After the exchange of earth and water and the acknowledgement of Persian superiority, negotiations could begin about obligations and benefits. Herodotus mentions several nations and ...
... needed. In other words, surrender was unconditional, and the Persian king was able to grant life to his new subjects. After the exchange of earth and water and the acknowledgement of Persian superiority, negotiations could begin about obligations and benefits. Herodotus mentions several nations and ...
File
... 3. The Persians outnumbered the Athenians, but the Greeks were better soldiers a. After 4 hours, the Persians retreated i. 6,200 Persians dead ii. Only 192 Athenians 4. The Persians were defeated and retreated back to Persia ii. The city of Athens was defenseless, as the army was engaged at Marathon ...
... 3. The Persians outnumbered the Athenians, but the Greeks were better soldiers a. After 4 hours, the Persians retreated i. 6,200 Persians dead ii. Only 192 Athenians 4. The Persians were defeated and retreated back to Persia ii. The city of Athens was defenseless, as the army was engaged at Marathon ...
Guided Notes: Ancient Greece Early Civilization: Ancient Greece
... ____________ ran to warn the Athenians of the overwhelming forces still on their way and the Athenians were prepared and victorious as a result. Ten years later, after Darius II, Xerxes led the Persian attack when 300 Spartans led by one of their kings, Leoniedus, held off the entire Persian army ( ...
... ____________ ran to warn the Athenians of the overwhelming forces still on their way and the Athenians were prepared and victorious as a result. Ten years later, after Darius II, Xerxes led the Persian attack when 300 Spartans led by one of their kings, Leoniedus, held off the entire Persian army ( ...
The Persian Wars
... was defeated by a smaller Athenian force at the Battle of Marathon. • Legend: Greek runner carried the news running the 26 miles from Marathon to Athens. Nike! • Led by Themistocles, Athens prepared to repel further Persian attacks. Themistocles a)rushed the construction of 200 additional warships(t ...
... was defeated by a smaller Athenian force at the Battle of Marathon. • Legend: Greek runner carried the news running the 26 miles from Marathon to Athens. Nike! • Led by Themistocles, Athens prepared to repel further Persian attacks. Themistocles a)rushed the construction of 200 additional warships(t ...
The Persian Wars
... • A Persian-sympathizer & traitor named Ephialtes led the Persians around the pass showing them where to attack from behind. • Expecting defeat, Leonidas sent away most of his troops. • The remaining 300 Spartan warriors fought the Persians & blocked the pass long enough so the rest of the Greek arm ...
... • A Persian-sympathizer & traitor named Ephialtes led the Persians around the pass showing them where to attack from behind. • Expecting defeat, Leonidas sent away most of his troops. • The remaining 300 Spartan warriors fought the Persians & blocked the pass long enough so the rest of the Greek arm ...
File - Ms lukas` classes
... Phillipides – ran to Sparta to request aid (marathon) Sparta could not send help for ten days – “full moon” ...
... Phillipides – ran to Sparta to request aid (marathon) Sparta could not send help for ten days – “full moon” ...
The Greek Wars
... next year, 10,000 Spartans allied with other Greeks faced off with the ____________________________ The Greeks would defeat the Persians and force the invaders out of Greece. This would make Plataea the LAST land battle of the Greco-Persian War. ...
... next year, 10,000 Spartans allied with other Greeks faced off with the ____________________________ The Greeks would defeat the Persians and force the invaders out of Greece. This would make Plataea the LAST land battle of the Greco-Persian War. ...
- gst boces
... 5. Women—did not have the right to vote but managed the families estates while their husbands served the polis 6. 600-371 BC—Sparta had most powerful army in Greece. A. Cost= NO individuality, art or freedom III. Athens: 1. Government—Athens was s democracy A. Direct Democracy—a government ruled by ...
... 5. Women—did not have the right to vote but managed the families estates while their husbands served the polis 6. 600-371 BC—Sparta had most powerful army in Greece. A. Cost= NO individuality, art or freedom III. Athens: 1. Government—Athens was s democracy A. Direct Democracy—a government ruled by ...
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.