Black-Figure Neck Amphora - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
... done in Corinth) such as the white on the game board and on Athena’s face and arms in this example. In black-figure vase painting, figures and decoration were painted with a slip (liquefied clay) that would turn black when the pot was fired in a kiln. The background, which initially retained the nat ...
... done in Corinth) such as the white on the game board and on Athena’s face and arms in this example. In black-figure vase painting, figures and decoration were painted with a slip (liquefied clay) that would turn black when the pot was fired in a kiln. The background, which initially retained the nat ...
2. Athens After the Persian Wars
... The jury found Socrates guilty and sentenced him to death. Friends encouraged him to escape from Athens, but Socrates insisted on honoring the law. He died by drinking hemlock, the juice of a poisonous plant. The example of Socrates inspired many other important Greek thinkers, especially his studen ...
... The jury found Socrates guilty and sentenced him to death. Friends encouraged him to escape from Athens, but Socrates insisted on honoring the law. He died by drinking hemlock, the juice of a poisonous plant. The example of Socrates inspired many other important Greek thinkers, especially his studen ...
Persian Wars - Lyons
... Athens. The Persians had a lot more soldiers (90,000 men with 2,000 cavalry). The Athenians had somewhere between 10,000-20,000 men between the different city-states. The Persians had long-distance archers while the Greeks had heavily armored h eavy infantry of hoplites with their large round shie ...
... Athens. The Persians had a lot more soldiers (90,000 men with 2,000 cavalry). The Athenians had somewhere between 10,000-20,000 men between the different city-states. The Persians had long-distance archers while the Greeks had heavily armored h eavy infantry of hoplites with their large round shie ...
Greek City - States
... and hardship to become a superior Spartan soldier and citizen! • Sparta's government was an oligarchy. The people were ruled by a small group of warriors. The Spartans spoke Greek, wrote Greek, thought of themselves as Greeks, but they were very different from the other Greek city-states, and proud ...
... and hardship to become a superior Spartan soldier and citizen! • Sparta's government was an oligarchy. The people were ruled by a small group of warriors. The Spartans spoke Greek, wrote Greek, thought of themselves as Greeks, but they were very different from the other Greek city-states, and proud ...
Persia Attacks the Greeks - 6th Grade Social Studies
... Both Sparta and Athens played roles in defeating the Persians. As the Greeks set up colonies in the Mediterranean area, they often clashed with the Persians. By mid-500s, Persia controlled the Greek cities inside Asia Minor. 499 – Athenian army helped the Greeks in Asia Minor rebel --- it failed but ...
... Both Sparta and Athens played roles in defeating the Persians. As the Greeks set up colonies in the Mediterranean area, they often clashed with the Persians. By mid-500s, Persia controlled the Greek cities inside Asia Minor. 499 – Athenian army helped the Greeks in Asia Minor rebel --- it failed but ...
Athens and Sparta PPT
... enjoyed such luxury only a few special days a year. They slept, in packs, on beds which they got together on their own, made from the tops of the rushes to be found by the river Eurotas. These they broke off with their bare hands, not using knives." ...
... enjoyed such luxury only a few special days a year. They slept, in packs, on beds which they got together on their own, made from the tops of the rushes to be found by the river Eurotas. These they broke off with their bare hands, not using knives." ...
Chapter 15 Section 2 Greek Art and Literature
... • Thucydides was also a historian who lived during the time of conflict between Athens and Sparta (The Peloponnesian War) • He served as a naval commander in the war • Before writing about a battle he would go visit it and interview the people who had be present • He wanted his history to be accurat ...
... • Thucydides was also a historian who lived during the time of conflict between Athens and Sparta (The Peloponnesian War) • He served as a naval commander in the war • Before writing about a battle he would go visit it and interview the people who had be present • He wanted his history to be accurat ...
Hester Bonnie Hester Elena Bianchelli CLAS 1020H 20 November
... Parthenon in Athens (the entirety of which included 92 highly-detailed carvings on metopes) featured an Amazonomachy notable for its sophistication, since after all the Parthenon was one of Athens’ biggest undertakings and greatest triumphs. Physical details like tension in muscles and veins standin ...
... Parthenon in Athens (the entirety of which included 92 highly-detailed carvings on metopes) featured an Amazonomachy notable for its sophistication, since after all the Parthenon was one of Athens’ biggest undertakings and greatest triumphs. Physical details like tension in muscles and veins standin ...
Chapter 29
... Dionysus was the god of merriment. Greek plays grew out of the songs and dances that the Greeks performed at harvest time to honor him. As Greek playwrights developed their art, they began to write plays that told stories. The plays included a few main characters and a chorus. The chorus was a group ...
... Dionysus was the god of merriment. Greek plays grew out of the songs and dances that the Greeks performed at harvest time to honor him. As Greek playwrights developed their art, they began to write plays that told stories. The plays included a few main characters and a chorus. The chorus was a group ...
Ancient Greek Civilizations
... eastern coast of Greece called Thermopylae. At the other end of this narrow pass, the Greeks were waiting for him. The Greeks knew that Xerxes’s army could not spread out to its full width to attack here, for there simply was not enough room in the narrow pass between the mountains and the ocean. In ...
... eastern coast of Greece called Thermopylae. At the other end of this narrow pass, the Greeks were waiting for him. The Greeks knew that Xerxes’s army could not spread out to its full width to attack here, for there simply was not enough room in the narrow pass between the mountains and the ocean. In ...
Unit 4 Mediterranean Empires
... 33. At what age were Spartan boys sent to military camps to begin training for the army e. Women in Sparta (page 256) Main Idea: Spartan women had more rights and responsibilities than women in other Greek city-states. 34. How did the state view women? 35. (√) Why did the state expect Spartan women ...
... 33. At what age were Spartan boys sent to military camps to begin training for the army e. Women in Sparta (page 256) Main Idea: Spartan women had more rights and responsibilities than women in other Greek city-states. 34. How did the state view women? 35. (√) Why did the state expect Spartan women ...
The Early Greeks
... The Ancient Greeks 3. People in the United States elect representatives to make government decisions in their interest. 4. Inside problems made the Persian Empire weak. ...
... The Ancient Greeks 3. People in the United States elect representatives to make government decisions in their interest. 4. Inside problems made the Persian Empire weak. ...
the battle of marathon and the spirit of the west
... other, there were the Spartans, with their deliberate ignorance of coinage, their contempt for art (their former artistic aristocracy being in headlong decline by the time of the classical period), and their dislike of trade. The Athenians came to regard women as mere articles of property, while the ...
... other, there were the Spartans, with their deliberate ignorance of coinage, their contempt for art (their former artistic aristocracy being in headlong decline by the time of the classical period), and their dislike of trade. The Athenians came to regard women as mere articles of property, while the ...
Lecture 7
... (477) Confederacy formed to protect Greek member states from Persians Athens versus Sparta as leader Initial successes: Fairness of assessments (Aristides, Hellenotamiae) Military victories (Cimon, Eurymedon) Corruption: Carystus, Naxos, Thasos Cleruchies Athenian law trumps allies’ law Movement of ...
... (477) Confederacy formed to protect Greek member states from Persians Athens versus Sparta as leader Initial successes: Fairness of assessments (Aristides, Hellenotamiae) Military victories (Cimon, Eurymedon) Corruption: Carystus, Naxos, Thasos Cleruchies Athenian law trumps allies’ law Movement of ...
EQ: What have been the contributions of classical civilizations to the
... ***Sparta was ruled by an “oligarchy” a system ruled by a few individuals and was a military state (had two kings) ***Athens became a limited democracy where all citizens could take part in the government and make laws. Only free adult males were citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners were not citi ...
... ***Sparta was ruled by an “oligarchy” a system ruled by a few individuals and was a military state (had two kings) ***Athens became a limited democracy where all citizens could take part in the government and make laws. Only free adult males were citizens. Women, slaves, and foreigners were not citi ...
Kids Discover
... 10. What does the Hippocratic oath require? ______________________________________ ...
... 10. What does the Hippocratic oath require? ______________________________________ ...
Story of The Persian Wars
... Thermopylae, a town just north of Athens. Three hundred Spartans under the leadership of Leonidas I fought in this battle until the last Greek fell. The Persians then headed to Athens. The Athenians received news of the approaching army. The people left Athens before the Persians reached the city. T ...
... Thermopylae, a town just north of Athens. Three hundred Spartans under the leadership of Leonidas I fought in this battle until the last Greek fell. The Persians then headed to Athens. The Athenians received news of the approaching army. The people left Athens before the Persians reached the city. T ...
Greek annotated bibliography
... between the Greeks and the Romans, before the Greeks were conquered. It describes the in-fighting among the Greek states, and the important battles, such as the burning of Corinth. The author/editor has not cited any sources so the information may come from unreliable sources. Kirby, John T., ed. "L ...
... between the Greeks and the Romans, before the Greeks were conquered. It describes the in-fighting among the Greek states, and the important battles, such as the burning of Corinth. The author/editor has not cited any sources so the information may come from unreliable sources. Kirby, John T., ed. "L ...
File - MR. Sproul`s Social Studies Page
... that name before?) –Sparta and other city states did not arrive (100,000 Persians to 20,000 Greeks) At Marathon, the Greeks divided forces into three groups. They had the center pretend to run – the Persians chased them only to find themselves caught in a trap The Greeks locked their shields tog ...
... that name before?) –Sparta and other city states did not arrive (100,000 Persians to 20,000 Greeks) At Marathon, the Greeks divided forces into three groups. They had the center pretend to run – the Persians chased them only to find themselves caught in a trap The Greeks locked their shields tog ...
Student 2
... portrayed as white because an Athenians role in Greek society was to stay in the house and cook and clean. The most honourable thing that women could do was to make clothes and women were often portrayed in vases to be doing such things as weaving. Around the time period of 490 – 470 the Persians we ...
... portrayed as white because an Athenians role in Greek society was to stay in the house and cook and clean. The most honourable thing that women could do was to make clothes and women were often portrayed in vases to be doing such things as weaving. Around the time period of 490 – 470 the Persians we ...
Demosthenes and Isocrates Address Philip of Macedonia
... I observe, however, that all men, and you first of all, have conceded to him something which has been the occasion of every war that the Greeks have ever waged. And what is that? The power of doing what he likes, of calmly plundering and stripping the Greeks one by one, and of attacking their cities ...
... I observe, however, that all men, and you first of all, have conceded to him something which has been the occasion of every war that the Greeks have ever waged. And what is that? The power of doing what he likes, of calmly plundering and stripping the Greeks one by one, and of attacking their cities ...
The Battle of Marathon
... strategy. They would wait in the hills, and attack the Persians the next day. • When it was time to attack, the Athenians formed a long line, and ran full speed toward the Persians. It look foolish but it worked. ...
... strategy. They would wait in the hills, and attack the Persians the next day. • When it was time to attack, the Athenians formed a long line, and ran full speed toward the Persians. It look foolish but it worked. ...
Greece Webquest Reading Material
... duty. After this, he was free to return to civilian life, but was subject to "the draft" in times of emergency until he reached the age of sixty. When he returned home from his tour of duty, the young man (around the age of twenty now) was free to live a free life among his fellow citizens. ...
... duty. After this, he was free to return to civilian life, but was subject to "the draft" in times of emergency until he reached the age of sixty. When he returned home from his tour of duty, the young man (around the age of twenty now) was free to live a free life among his fellow citizens. ...
Ancient Greek cuisine
Ancient Greek cuisine was characterized by its frugality, reflecting agricultural hardship. It was founded on the ""Mediterranean triad"": wheat, olive oil, and wine.Our knowledge of ancient Greek cuisine and eating habits is derived from literary and artistic evidence. Our literary knowledge comes mostly from Aristophanes' comedies and quotes preserved by 2nd–3rd century AD grammarian Athenaeus; artistic information is provided by black- and red-figure vase-painting and terracotta figurines.