1 Greece Notes 2016
... considered harsh and cruel, rather they were seen as leaders who would work for the interests of the ordinary people. ...
... considered harsh and cruel, rather they were seen as leaders who would work for the interests of the ordinary people. ...
Oriental archer on an Attic red-figure bowl by
... • Set in train by the conflict between Greeks and Persians in late 6th century, leading to the Persian War of ca. 490-479 B.C. ...
... • Set in train by the conflict between Greeks and Persians in late 6th century, leading to the Persian War of ca. 490-479 B.C. ...
Ch.4 Greece and Persia powerpoint
... • Ionian cities and any cities on the mainland who wanted to continue the fight with Persia formed this alliance. • Athens became the leader of this alliance, while it had formerly been an equal • Sparta did not join, and became afraid • Two wars (Peloponnesian Wars) ensued between Athens and Sparta ...
... • Ionian cities and any cities on the mainland who wanted to continue the fight with Persia formed this alliance. • Athens became the leader of this alliance, while it had formerly been an equal • Sparta did not join, and became afraid • Two wars (Peloponnesian Wars) ensued between Athens and Sparta ...
Y3 Maisie Cochrane - Greek PowerPoint
... • The theatre had very good acoustics so the people at the back could hear what they were saying. • Greek people also said no girls aloud to play acts in plays. So unfair! ...
... • The theatre had very good acoustics so the people at the back could hear what they were saying. • Greek people also said no girls aloud to play acts in plays. So unfair! ...
Chapter 4 Study Guide
... deity—Ahuramazda—who engaged in a twelve-thousand year struggle with demonic forces before prevailing and restoring a pristine world. Emphasizing truth-telling, purity, and reverence for nature, the religion demanded that humans choose sides in the struggle between good and evil. Those whose good c ...
... deity—Ahuramazda—who engaged in a twelve-thousand year struggle with demonic forces before prevailing and restoring a pristine world. Emphasizing truth-telling, purity, and reverence for nature, the religion demanded that humans choose sides in the struggle between good and evil. Those whose good c ...
Athens
... • Less identity with culture of ancestors and more with local areas • Method of governing had changed from tribal or clan control to more formal governments ...
... • Less identity with culture of ancestors and more with local areas • Method of governing had changed from tribal or clan control to more formal governments ...
Greek Culture
... They made wine from GRAPES. The common drink of everyone was a mixture of wine and water. Even children drank it. Dionysius, the mythological god of the vine, oversaw and blessed everything having to do with growing grapes and making wine. BARLEY was used to make bread and was a staple part of the G ...
... They made wine from GRAPES. The common drink of everyone was a mixture of wine and water. Even children drank it. Dionysius, the mythological god of the vine, oversaw and blessed everything having to do with growing grapes and making wine. BARLEY was used to make bread and was a staple part of the G ...
would spread Greek civilization throughout the
... -fortified, called an acropolis -temples, palace, public buildings b. the city marketplace called an ...
... -fortified, called an acropolis -temples, palace, public buildings b. the city marketplace called an ...
Impact of Geography on Greece
... The Land Rugged mountains covered about threefourths of ancient Greece. The mountain chains ran mainly from northwest to southeast along the Balkan Peninsula. Mountains divided the land into a number of different regions. This significantly influenced Greek political life. Instead of a single govern ...
... The Land Rugged mountains covered about threefourths of ancient Greece. The mountain chains ran mainly from northwest to southeast along the Balkan Peninsula. Mountains divided the land into a number of different regions. This significantly influenced Greek political life. Instead of a single govern ...
Battle of Salamis Bay
... 2. Persians were crashing into their own ships and were very disorganized. 3. If the ships sank the Greeks could swim the Persian could not. 1. More Persians died from drowning than from the actual battle. 1. For weeks, even months after the battle, Persian bodies were washing up on the shores aroun ...
... 2. Persians were crashing into their own ships and were very disorganized. 3. If the ships sank the Greeks could swim the Persian could not. 1. More Persians died from drowning than from the actual battle. 1. For weeks, even months after the battle, Persian bodies were washing up on the shores aroun ...
ALEXANDER OF MACEDON
... Greece and caused havoc in our country, though we had done nothing to provoke them. As supreme commander of all Greece I invaded Asia because I wished to punish Persia for this ...
... Greece and caused havoc in our country, though we had done nothing to provoke them. As supreme commander of all Greece I invaded Asia because I wished to punish Persia for this ...
Greece and Iran - Willis High School
... • Attack on Athens foiled when Athenian forces defeated Persians at Marathon. – A messenger named Philippidès ran from Marathon to Athens to tell of the victory. He died from exhaustion. • The marathon is now run to celebrate his heroism. ...
... • Attack on Athens foiled when Athenian forces defeated Persians at Marathon. – A messenger named Philippidès ran from Marathon to Athens to tell of the victory. He died from exhaustion. • The marathon is now run to celebrate his heroism. ...
Ancient Greece unit test
... 10. After the eruption of Santorini, the Minoan civilization a. Ceased to exist ...
... 10. After the eruption of Santorini, the Minoan civilization a. Ceased to exist ...
File
... The Aegean Area 3/4 of Greek mainland = mountains ◦ Protected Greeks from foreign invaders/attackers ◦ Kept Greeks isolated from other communities ◦ Prevented Greeks from uniting under one government ...
... The Aegean Area 3/4 of Greek mainland = mountains ◦ Protected Greeks from foreign invaders/attackers ◦ Kept Greeks isolated from other communities ◦ Prevented Greeks from uniting under one government ...
chapter 5 - greece and iran, 1000–30 bce.
... This internal conflict among the Greeks gave Persia the opportunity to recover its territory in western Asia, including the Greek communities of the Anatolian coast. 3. As the Greek city-states declined in power, the backward northern Greek kingdom of Macedonia was developing into a great military p ...
... This internal conflict among the Greeks gave Persia the opportunity to recover its territory in western Asia, including the Greek communities of the Anatolian coast. 3. As the Greek city-states declined in power, the backward northern Greek kingdom of Macedonia was developing into a great military p ...
Curriculum coverage map - Lady Margaret Primary School
... History History of ancient Greece. Timeline Army and warfare. Daily life in ancient Greece. Greek theatres, marathon and universities. Modern and Greek influences. Geography Geographical features – mountains, sand banks. (Create a story map include geographical ...
... History History of ancient Greece. Timeline Army and warfare. Daily life in ancient Greece. Greek theatres, marathon and universities. Modern and Greek influences. Geography Geographical features – mountains, sand banks. (Create a story map include geographical ...
Greco TEST PREP 2012: ANSWERS 2 1 5 4 9
... phalynx is a tight military formation used by the Macedonians and Greeks. 31. Issus They met at a great Battle called _X_. Though outnumbered 40,000 to 140,000, he was able to defeat the Persians by getting Darius to flee the battle. 32. . Tyre wanted to conquer Egypt, but to do this, he had to defe ...
... phalynx is a tight military formation used by the Macedonians and Greeks. 31. Issus They met at a great Battle called _X_. Though outnumbered 40,000 to 140,000, he was able to defeat the Persians by getting Darius to flee the battle. 32. . Tyre wanted to conquer Egypt, but to do this, he had to defe ...
Chapter 9 Reading Guide Section 1, Greece and Persia 1. Complete
... 2. Who became king of Macedonia in 359 BC? _Philip II_ Who was his main target initially?_Greece_What did this lead to eventually? __Few Greeks responded to Athens’ plea to fight. Athens & Thebes were defeated & the rest of the Greeks agreed to let Philip II be their leader.____ 3. What was Philip I ...
... 2. Who became king of Macedonia in 359 BC? _Philip II_ Who was his main target initially?_Greece_What did this lead to eventually? __Few Greeks responded to Athens’ plea to fight. Athens & Thebes were defeated & the rest of the Greeks agreed to let Philip II be their leader.____ 3. What was Philip I ...
Breakdown of the Persian Wars
... They vowed to fight the Persians and free the Greek lands still under Persian rule. The members also agreed to pay tribute to Athens in the form of money or ships. In return, Athens promised to protect the city-states with its powerful navy. 467 B.C. – The Battle of Eurymedon River: the league freed ...
... They vowed to fight the Persians and free the Greek lands still under Persian rule. The members also agreed to pay tribute to Athens in the form of money or ships. In return, Athens promised to protect the city-states with its powerful navy. 467 B.C. – The Battle of Eurymedon River: the league freed ...
Ancient Greece and the Formation of the Western Mind
... with one another in an effort to gain more productive land for growing populations. • In the 8th and 7th centuries BC, the landless Greeks founded new cities all over the Mediterranean coast • Many of these new cities experienced a faster economic and cultural growth than the older cities of the mai ...
... with one another in an effort to gain more productive land for growing populations. • In the 8th and 7th centuries BC, the landless Greeks founded new cities all over the Mediterranean coast • Many of these new cities experienced a faster economic and cultural growth than the older cities of the mai ...
Greece
... Trade allowed for a new wealthy class to rise, leading to tyrants – these were people who fought against the aristocrats and took away some of their power – they used to be liked Fell out of power because they weren’t the Greek ideal, but they did some pretty things when in power… (new marketplaces, ...
... Trade allowed for a new wealthy class to rise, leading to tyrants – these were people who fought against the aristocrats and took away some of their power – they used to be liked Fell out of power because they weren’t the Greek ideal, but they did some pretty things when in power… (new marketplaces, ...
THE PERSIAN WARS
... city-states that would not submit. They met at Corinth in 481 B.C., where the plan was ultimately made to abandon territories in northern Greece. The Greeks debated and considered retreating down to Corinth and abandoning Athens. Finally a plan was devised to send a military force to defend a pass a ...
... city-states that would not submit. They met at Corinth in 481 B.C., where the plan was ultimately made to abandon territories in northern Greece. The Greeks debated and considered retreating down to Corinth and abandoning Athens. Finally a plan was devised to send a military force to defend a pass a ...
Pontic Greeks
The Pontic Greeks, also known as Pontian Greeks (Greek: Πόντιοι, Ελληνοπόντιοι, Póntioi, Ellinopóntioi; Turkish: Pontus Rumları, Karadeniz Rumlari, Georgian: პონტოელი ბერძნები), are an ethnically Greek group who traditionally lived in the region of Pontus, on the shores of the Black Sea and in the Pontic Alps of northeastern Anatolia. Many later migrated to other parts of Eastern Anatolia, to the former Russian province of Kars Oblast in the Transcaucasus, and to Georgia in various waves between the Ottoman conquest of the Empire of Trebizond in 1461 and the second Russo-Turkish War of 1828-1829. Those from southern Russia, Ukraine, and Crimea are often referred to as ""Northern Pontic [Greeks]"", in contrast to those from ""South Pontus"", which strictly speaking is Pontus proper. Those from Georgia, northeastern Anatolia, and the former Russian Caucasus are in contemporary Greek academic circles often referred to as ""Eastern Pontic [Greeks]"" or as Caucasian Greeks, but also include the Greco-Turkic speaking Urums.Pontic Greeks have Greek ancestry and speak the Pontic Greek dialect, a distinct form of the standard Greek language which, due to the remoteness of Pontus, has undergone linguistic evolution distinct from that of the rest of the Greek world. The Pontic Greeks had a continuous presence in the region of Pontus (modern-day northeastern Turkey), Georgia, and Eastern Anatolia from at least 700 BC until 1922.