
Warring City-States
... In 480 B.C. Persians launch a new invasion of Greece. Greeks are divided; many stay neutral or side with Persians. Greek forces hold Thermopylae for three days before retreating. Athenians defeat Persians at sea, near island of Salamis. Victories at Salamis and Plataea force Persian retreat. Many ci ...
... In 480 B.C. Persians launch a new invasion of Greece. Greeks are divided; many stay neutral or side with Persians. Greek forces hold Thermopylae for three days before retreating. Athenians defeat Persians at sea, near island of Salamis. Victories at Salamis and Plataea force Persian retreat. Many ci ...
Early Greece - Birmingham City Schools
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
Chapter 5, Early Greece
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
Chapter 5, Early Greece
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
Chapter 5, Early Greece
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
... the main reason for the strict war-like society… • Breakdown of Spartan Social Structure Spartiates Perioeci (Perioikoi) Helots ...
File - Mr. Banks` AP World History Page
... laws for the assembly to vote on. Unlike the Assembly in Athens, they did not debate issues. Members of the Assembly could only vote yes or no laws suggested by the Council of Elders. ...
... laws for the assembly to vote on. Unlike the Assembly in Athens, they did not debate issues. Members of the Assembly could only vote yes or no laws suggested by the Council of Elders. ...
document based question: pre-history
... temporarily allied to halt the Persian invasions, their rivalries were too fundamental to make them permanent friends. Tension between Sparta and Athens had been building for years. Many people in both cities thought conflict was unavoidable. Instead of trying to avoid war, leaders on both sides beg ...
... temporarily allied to halt the Persian invasions, their rivalries were too fundamental to make them permanent friends. Tension between Sparta and Athens had been building for years. Many people in both cities thought conflict was unavoidable. Instead of trying to avoid war, leaders on both sides beg ...
Lead Up to peloponnesian wars
... Most towns had sworn to subordinate their foreign policy to Spartan wishes and received protection in return. ...
... Most towns had sworn to subordinate their foreign policy to Spartan wishes and received protection in return. ...
The Olympics , Athens and Sparta.
... turned 7 they would be able to train for battles, war and the olympics. The women in Sparta could not become a citizen, vote or hold public office. They could represent themselves in court and they were aloud to own their own home. When a boy turned seven they would leave home and start at the milit ...
... turned 7 they would be able to train for battles, war and the olympics. The women in Sparta could not become a citizen, vote or hold public office. They could represent themselves in court and they were aloud to own their own home. When a boy turned seven they would leave home and start at the milit ...
the golden age part i
... Athens' Relations with Sparta: Despite their differences, Sparta and Athens had cooperated closely since the first Persian invasion, and Athens acknowledged Sparta as the military leader of the Hellenic League. However, with the defeat of the second invasion, two major points of contention arose. Th ...
... Athens' Relations with Sparta: Despite their differences, Sparta and Athens had cooperated closely since the first Persian invasion, and Athens acknowledged Sparta as the military leader of the Hellenic League. However, with the defeat of the second invasion, two major points of contention arose. Th ...
The Persian Wars
... 6. Who did Leonidus consult for advice on whether to join with the other Greeks against Persia? How many Spartan warriors was he allowed to choose to go into battle with him? ...
... 6. Who did Leonidus consult for advice on whether to join with the other Greeks against Persia? How many Spartan warriors was he allowed to choose to go into battle with him? ...
PELOPONNESIAN WAR:
... o Athenian League = northern & eastern shores of Aegean o Peloponnesian Alliance (Peloponnese Region of southern Greece) = led by Sparta, central Greece, Corinth (naval) ...
... o Athenian League = northern & eastern shores of Aegean o Peloponnesian Alliance (Peloponnese Region of southern Greece) = led by Sparta, central Greece, Corinth (naval) ...
Section 4
... • Spartan boys were raised to endure pain and learn to survive with very little food • Life was harsh and cruel • The Spartans were tough, silent and grim • Because of many wars, Sparta turned into ...
... • Spartan boys were raised to endure pain and learn to survive with very little food • Life was harsh and cruel • The Spartans were tough, silent and grim • Because of many wars, Sparta turned into ...
Athens - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
... mathematics, music, poetry, sport and trained in the art of warfare. They were only give a gymnastics. Based upon their birth and the cloak - no shoes or other clothes, and not enough wealth of their parents, the length of food so they had to steal (to learn survival skills). education was from the ...
... mathematics, music, poetry, sport and trained in the art of warfare. They were only give a gymnastics. Based upon their birth and the cloak - no shoes or other clothes, and not enough wealth of their parents, the length of food so they had to steal (to learn survival skills). education was from the ...
Excerpts from The Last Stand of the 300 Spartans
... 4. “The enemy of my enemy is my friend.” Explain the significance of this statement. At the time, Greece was not yet a unified country, and the largest two city-states – Athens and Sparta – were rivals. The Spartans believe that Persia’s King Xerxes had decided to occupy Greece and thus Sparta must ...
... 4. “The enemy of my enemy is my friend.” Explain the significance of this statement. At the time, Greece was not yet a unified country, and the largest two city-states – Athens and Sparta – were rivals. The Spartans believe that Persia’s King Xerxes had decided to occupy Greece and thus Sparta must ...
ANCIENT GREECE
... everyone in Athens was a citizen. -Women could NOT vote & had very few rights. ...
... everyone in Athens was a citizen. -Women could NOT vote & had very few rights. ...
Peloponnesian War - Grade10AncientMedieval
... Sparta needed more land so they conquered Lacon. Messenians and Laconians worked for the Spartans and captured people they called helots. Spartan men were only allowed the vote in an assembly when at the age of 30. The Spartan government was headed by 2 kings and led all of the army. ...
... Sparta needed more land so they conquered Lacon. Messenians and Laconians worked for the Spartans and captured people they called helots. Spartan men were only allowed the vote in an assembly when at the age of 30. The Spartan government was headed by 2 kings and led all of the army. ...
Script: Slide 1: The three ancient cities of Greece were Sparta
... democracy was invented in Athens in the early 500 BC. However, Athens was a patriarchal society, so women, slaves, and foreigners did not have many of the same rights as men. Slide 5: Thebes was an ancient city-state in Greece that is not as prominent as the other two city-states, Sparta and Athens. ...
... democracy was invented in Athens in the early 500 BC. However, Athens was a patriarchal society, so women, slaves, and foreigners did not have many of the same rights as men. Slide 5: Thebes was an ancient city-state in Greece that is not as prominent as the other two city-states, Sparta and Athens. ...
2311.Fall2010.Exam2
... Choose two of the following to answer. Write a COMPLETE essay, including an introduction, points of discussion, and a conclusion. Remember that plagiarism will not be tolerated. Each essay is worth 50 points. Use this page as a cover sheet. The success of Alexander the Great really starts with his f ...
... Choose two of the following to answer. Write a COMPLETE essay, including an introduction, points of discussion, and a conclusion. Remember that plagiarism will not be tolerated. Each essay is worth 50 points. Use this page as a cover sheet. The success of Alexander the Great really starts with his f ...
File
... was located on the Peloponnesus (peh-luhpuh-NEE-suhs) Peninsula in southern Greece. Descended from the Dorians. Economy was based on Agriculture. Did not set up colonies. ►Invaded local city-states and enslaved the people calling them helots (Greek word for “capture”) ...
... was located on the Peloponnesus (peh-luhpuh-NEE-suhs) Peninsula in southern Greece. Descended from the Dorians. Economy was based on Agriculture. Did not set up colonies. ►Invaded local city-states and enslaved the people calling them helots (Greek word for “capture”) ...
Southern Colonies
... was located on the Peloponnesus (peh-luhpuh-NEE-suhs) Peninsula in southern Greece. Descended from the Dorians. Economy was based on Agriculture. Did not set up colonies. ►Invaded local city-states and enslaved the people calling them helots (Greek word for “capture”) ...
... was located on the Peloponnesus (peh-luhpuh-NEE-suhs) Peninsula in southern Greece. Descended from the Dorians. Economy was based on Agriculture. Did not set up colonies. ►Invaded local city-states and enslaved the people calling them helots (Greek word for “capture”) ...
greece the greek polis
... music and gymnastics, the Iliad and Odyssey • At later ages, rhetoric was added – 2 years of military training at age 18 ...
... music and gymnastics, the Iliad and Odyssey • At later ages, rhetoric was added – 2 years of military training at age 18 ...
Women in Sparta – packages of information 1. The role and
... were ripe for it”, which probably means when they were in their late teens. This is in contrast to Athenian women, who married at just 14. Marriages in Sparta were arranged by the woman’s male guardian, but mothers appear to have had some influence over the decision as well. The putative groom wou ...
... were ripe for it”, which probably means when they were in their late teens. This is in contrast to Athenian women, who married at just 14. Marriages in Sparta were arranged by the woman’s male guardian, but mothers appear to have had some influence over the decision as well. The putative groom wou ...
Ancient Greece
... Avoids civil war & strife by increasing democratic rule; funds for farm equipment, ...
... Avoids civil war & strife by increasing democratic rule; funds for farm equipment, ...
Sparta

Sparta (Doric Greek: Σπάρτα, Spártā; Attic Greek: Σπάρτη, Spártē) or Lacedaemon (/ˌlæsəˈdiːmən/; Λακεδαίμων, Lakedaímōn) was a prominent city-state in ancient Greece, situated on the banks of the Eurotas River in Laconia, in south-eastern Peloponnese. It emerged as a political entity around the 10th century BC, when the invading Dorians subjugated the local, non-Dorian population. Around 650 BC, it rose to become the dominant military land-power in ancient Greece.Given its military pre-eminence, Sparta was recognized as the overall leader of the combined Greek forces during the Greco-Persian Wars. Between 431 and 404 BC, Sparta was the principal enemy of Athens during the Peloponnesian War, from which it emerged victorious, though at great cost of lives lost. Sparta's defeat by Thebes in the Battle of Leuctra in 371 BC ended Sparta's prominent role in Greece. However, it maintained its political independence until the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC. It then underwent a long period of decline, especially in the Middle Ages, when many Spartans moved to live in Mystras. Modern Sparta is the capital of the Greek regional unit of Laconia and a center for the processing of goods such as citrus and olives.Sparta was unique in ancient Greece for its social system and constitution, which completely focused on military training and excellence. Its inhabitants were classified as Spartiates (Spartan citizens, who enjoyed full rights), mothakes (non-Spartan free men raised as Spartans), perioikoi (freedmen), and helots (state-owned serfs, enslaved non-Spartan local population). Spartiates underwent the rigorous agoge training and education regimen, and Spartan phalanges were widely considered to be among the best in battle. Spartan women enjoyed considerably more rights and equality to men than elsewhere in the classical world.Sparta was the subject of fascination in its own day, as well as in the West following the revival of classical learning. This love or admiration of Sparta is known as Laconism or Laconophilia. At its peak around 500 BC the size of the city would have been some 20,000 – 35,000 free residents, plus numerous helots and perioikoi (“dwellers around”). At 40,000 – 50,000 it was one of the largest Greek cities; however, according to Thucydides, the population of Athens in 431 BC was 360,000 – 610,000, making it unlikely that Athens was smaller than Sparta in 5th century BC.