File
... A. Why was the military so important? 1. Spartans needed to be strong to conquer their neighbors and to keep the helots from rebelling. 2. At age 7 boys left to live in military barracks. 3. At age 20, men entered the military. They stayed until age 30 when they could return home, but had to remain ...
... A. Why was the military so important? 1. Spartans needed to be strong to conquer their neighbors and to keep the helots from rebelling. 2. At age 7 boys left to live in military barracks. 3. At age 20, men entered the military. They stayed until age 30 when they could return home, but had to remain ...
Engineering An Empire: Greece Viewing Guide
... What is the greatest empire the world has ever known that lies just outside of Greece? ...
... What is the greatest empire the world has ever known that lies just outside of Greece? ...
section 2
... Citizens elect people to make laws for them. They choose candidates whose values and opinions appear to be closest to their own. Having elected representatives who get paid to be knowledgeable and make decisions for the rest of the citizens is more convenient in our complicated nation. ...
... Citizens elect people to make laws for them. They choose candidates whose values and opinions appear to be closest to their own. Having elected representatives who get paid to be knowledgeable and make decisions for the rest of the citizens is more convenient in our complicated nation. ...
Chapter 8: The Ancient Greeks
... Although the city-states were independent, according to their mythology, the people of all the city-states shared a common ancestor His name was _________. Hellene __________. For this reason, they called themselves Hellenes. In English, their language and civilization are known as Greek. Their myth ...
... Although the city-states were independent, according to their mythology, the people of all the city-states shared a common ancestor His name was _________. Hellene __________. For this reason, they called themselves Hellenes. In English, their language and civilization are known as Greek. Their myth ...
Social Studies Study Guide: Chapter 6
... -What did the Greeks give the Trojans as a gift that helped them win the war? -Who wrote about the Trojan War? -What two epics he did write? The Dark Ages of Greece: p. 172 -What happened to Greece after the Trojan War? -Did people still trade for food and goods? -This period of time was known as Gr ...
... -What did the Greeks give the Trojans as a gift that helped them win the war? -Who wrote about the Trojan War? -What two epics he did write? The Dark Ages of Greece: p. 172 -What happened to Greece after the Trojan War? -Did people still trade for food and goods? -This period of time was known as Gr ...
5.1 Notes
... _________and begin to value trade. Minoans also share their writing system and art with Mycenaens • Minoans influenced Greek religion, art politics, and literature • Westernized civilization begins here! ...
... _________and begin to value trade. Minoans also share their writing system and art with Mycenaens • Minoans influenced Greek religion, art politics, and literature • Westernized civilization begins here! ...
Chapter 9, Section 2 Student Note Form
... 1. The Delian League was __________ the only ________________ in Greece. 2. Many cities in southern Greece, including ___________________, banded together as well. 3. This alliance was called the ______________________ __________________. 4. To stop Athen’s _________________, Sparta declared _______ ...
... 1. The Delian League was __________ the only ________________ in Greece. 2. Many cities in southern Greece, including ___________________, banded together as well. 3. This alliance was called the ______________________ __________________. 4. To stop Athen’s _________________, Sparta declared _______ ...
Athens
... citizens as well as richer ones could take time off from their work to take part in the governing of their city-state. The biggest flaw in the Athenian democracy was its limited citizenship. Only males over 18 could become citizens and this was usually only if their father had been a citizen. Thus, ...
... citizens as well as richer ones could take time off from their work to take part in the governing of their city-state. The biggest flaw in the Athenian democracy was its limited citizenship. Only males over 18 could become citizens and this was usually only if their father had been a citizen. Thus, ...
The Persian Wars - Orangefield ISD
... __________________________________—Indo-Europeans who settled on Greek mainland in 2000 B.C. ...
... __________________________________—Indo-Europeans who settled on Greek mainland in 2000 B.C. ...
Where is Greece?
... • With both sides wellmatched only a masterful scheme could end the war: The Mycenaeans would give Troy a gift… ...
... • With both sides wellmatched only a masterful scheme could end the war: The Mycenaeans would give Troy a gift… ...
Ancient Greece - James M. Hill High School
... civilization- The first Greek civilization) Earthquake or Mycenaean?? The Mycenaeans were warrior people. They had monarchies and extensive commercial network. ...
... civilization- The first Greek civilization) Earthquake or Mycenaean?? The Mycenaeans were warrior people. They had monarchies and extensive commercial network. ...
Marathon, Thermopylae, Salamis
... The vastness of the Persian Empire The empire's northwestern frontier: Medes unable to conquer Lydia Rich as Croesus: Resources of Lydian kingdom The view from Ionia: Greek cities of the eastern Aegean Major cities: Halicarnassus (Bodrum), Miletus, and Ephesus Key islands: Samos, Chios, and Lesbos T ...
... The vastness of the Persian Empire The empire's northwestern frontier: Medes unable to conquer Lydia Rich as Croesus: Resources of Lydian kingdom The view from Ionia: Greek cities of the eastern Aegean Major cities: Halicarnassus (Bodrum), Miletus, and Ephesus Key islands: Samos, Chios, and Lesbos T ...
Vocab: city
... 2. Why did Ulysses say Polyphemus wouldn’t enjoy 2. Why did Ulysses say Polyphemus wouldn’t enjoy the sailor? _________________________________ the sailor? _________________________________ 3. Do you feel Polyphemus liked Ulysses in the 3. Do you feel Polyphemus liked Ulysses in the beginning of the ...
... 2. Why did Ulysses say Polyphemus wouldn’t enjoy 2. Why did Ulysses say Polyphemus wouldn’t enjoy the sailor? _________________________________ the sailor? _________________________________ 3. Do you feel Polyphemus liked Ulysses in the 3. Do you feel Polyphemus liked Ulysses in the beginning of the ...
The City -State of Sparta
... The City -State of Sparta The original Spartans were Dorians who moved onto the Peloponnesus around 1200 B.C. They made Sparta their capital, and enslaved the locals, who they called helots. The Spartans were boastful and warlike. The Spartans had a type of caste system, citizens, neighbors, and hel ...
... The City -State of Sparta The original Spartans were Dorians who moved onto the Peloponnesus around 1200 B.C. They made Sparta their capital, and enslaved the locals, who they called helots. The Spartans were boastful and warlike. The Spartans had a type of caste system, citizens, neighbors, and hel ...
CHAPTER 2 - THE RISE OF GREEK CIVILIZATION
... A more serious problem was Athens's agrarian crisis. By planting wheat as a staple crop every year, Athenian farmers exhausted their land and were forced to borrow from wealthy neighbors, pledging first their land and then themselves and their families as collateral. As a result of many defaults, se ...
... A more serious problem was Athens's agrarian crisis. By planting wheat as a staple crop every year, Athenian farmers exhausted their land and were forced to borrow from wealthy neighbors, pledging first their land and then themselves and their families as collateral. As a result of many defaults, se ...
The Greek Adventure - A Cultural Approach
... • Indian Hindu/Buddhist world introduced to the Western world • Direct trade contacts between India and the Mediterranean ...
... • Indian Hindu/Buddhist world introduced to the Western world • Direct trade contacts between India and the Mediterranean ...
Chapter 5 Study Guide Questions
... What is the Delian League? City states run by groups of nobles were known as whom? Who defeated the Persian Navy at Salamis straight? The Iliad tells the story of what? Most city-states develop around what? What was the purpose of the Olympic Games? Who is the earliest known Greek civilization? How ...
... What is the Delian League? City states run by groups of nobles were known as whom? Who defeated the Persian Navy at Salamis straight? The Iliad tells the story of what? Most city-states develop around what? What was the purpose of the Olympic Games? Who is the earliest known Greek civilization? How ...
ABOVE EVERYTHING How was daily life different for Spartan
... Now weapons are not only for the rich. Fearsome formation, phalanx became the most powerful fighting force in the ancient world ...
... Now weapons are not only for the rich. Fearsome formation, phalanx became the most powerful fighting force in the ancient world ...
Greece Rebuilds (review)
... •His reforms (end of the 6th Century BC) made possible the Golden Age of Athenian civilization (5th Century BC.) •Born into one of the city's foremost political dynasties (brother-in-law to Peisistratus:) an unlikely champion of the people when they rebelled against tyranny. ...
... •His reforms (end of the 6th Century BC) made possible the Golden Age of Athenian civilization (5th Century BC.) •Born into one of the city's foremost political dynasties (brother-in-law to Peisistratus:) an unlikely champion of the people when they rebelled against tyranny. ...
Chapter 10: Mediterranean Society: The Greek Phase Themes
... ultimately American societies. This temptation will probably be augmented by the fact that most teachers have training in western civilization and therefore this is familiar territory! In AP world history, however, the Greeks are no more or less important that the Qin, the Han, and the Achaemenids, ...
... ultimately American societies. This temptation will probably be augmented by the fact that most teachers have training in western civilization and therefore this is familiar territory! In AP world history, however, the Greeks are no more or less important that the Qin, the Han, and the Achaemenids, ...
TIMETABLE+OF+GREEK+HISTORY+and+archaeology
... Explanation on geographical terms Bronze Age the term based on time Geographical areas where major civilizations have been found: -Minoan (for Crete) -Cycladic (for the islands) Helladic or Mycenaean (for late Helladic) for mainland Greece ...
... Explanation on geographical terms Bronze Age the term based on time Geographical areas where major civilizations have been found: -Minoan (for Crete) -Cycladic (for the islands) Helladic or Mycenaean (for late Helladic) for mainland Greece ...
Timetable of Greek History (File) (English)
... Explanation on geographical terms Bronze Age the term based on time Geographical areas where major civilizations have been found: -Minoan (for Crete) -Cycladic (for the islands) Helladic or Mycenaean (for late Helladic) for mainland Greece ...
... Explanation on geographical terms Bronze Age the term based on time Geographical areas where major civilizations have been found: -Minoan (for Crete) -Cycladic (for the islands) Helladic or Mycenaean (for late Helladic) for mainland Greece ...
Dorians
The Dorians (/ˈdɔriənz, ˈdɔər-/; Greek: Δωριεῖς, Dōrieis, singular Δωριεύς, Dōrieus) were one of the four major ethnic groups among which the Hellenes (or Greeks) of Classical Greece considered themselves divided (along with the Aeolians, Achaeans and Ionians). They are almost always referred to as just ""the Dorians"", as they are in the earliest literary mention of them in Odyssey, where they already can be found inhabiting the island of Crete.They were diverse in way of life and social organization, varying from the populous trade center of the city of Corinth, known for its ornate style in art and architecture, to the isolationist, military state of Sparta. And yet, all Hellenes knew which localities were Dorian, and which were not. Dorian states at war could more likely, but not always, count on the assistance of other Dorian states. Dorians were distinguished by the Doric Greek dialect and by characteristic social and historical traditions.In the 5th century BC, Dorians and Ionians were the two most politically important Greek ethne, whose ultimate clash resulted in the Peloponnesian War. The degree to which fifth-century Hellenes self-identified as ""Ionian"" or ""Dorian"" has itself been disputed. At one extreme Édouard Will concludes that there was no true ethnic component in fifth-century Greek culture, in spite of anti-Dorian elements in Athenian propaganda. At the other extreme John Alty reinterprets the sources to conclude that ethnicity did motivate fifth-century actions. Moderns viewing these ethnic identifications through the fifth- and fourth-century BC literary tradition have been profoundly influenced by their own social politics. Also, according to E.N. Tigerstedt, nineteenth-century European admirers of virtues they considered ""Dorian"" identified themselves as ""Laconophile"" and found responsive parallels in the culture of their day as well; their biases contribute to the traditional modern interpretation of ""Dorians"".