Classical Greece Powerpoint
... force to fight the Persians – beat them in 467 BCE • After this success, Pericles of Athens freed the Greeks on the island of Cyprus and helped in a revolt in Egypt – Persians wiped out the Greek fleet on the Nile – In 454 BCE, Pericles moved the treasury to Athens League now an empire controlled ...
... force to fight the Persians – beat them in 467 BCE • After this success, Pericles of Athens freed the Greeks on the island of Cyprus and helped in a revolt in Egypt – Persians wiped out the Greek fleet on the Nile – In 454 BCE, Pericles moved the treasury to Athens League now an empire controlled ...
10th BJU Ancient Greece
... Said freedom and liberty without restraint leads to anarchy Nature of true reality: things must be permanent to be truly “real.” True Reality lies outside the physical world. – Earthly things are “shadows” of eternal “forms” from an unseen realm ...
... Said freedom and liberty without restraint leads to anarchy Nature of true reality: things must be permanent to be truly “real.” True Reality lies outside the physical world. – Earthly things are “shadows” of eternal “forms” from an unseen realm ...
From Classical to Contemporary
... reason to accuse him. Not only does he tell us about the good regime, but we see his effect on the young men he was said to have corrupted. Socrates, in leading them to a justice which is not Athenian, or even Greek, but is rather human, precisely because it is rational, shows the way to the truth a ...
... reason to accuse him. Not only does he tell us about the good regime, but we see his effect on the young men he was said to have corrupted. Socrates, in leading them to a justice which is not Athenian, or even Greek, but is rather human, precisely because it is rational, shows the way to the truth a ...
Democracy and the Golden Age
... Athens = strongest sea power in Greece Sparta could not easily be attacked from sea Sparta attacks Athens ▪ Citizens brought into Athens city walls for protection ...
... Athens = strongest sea power in Greece Sparta could not easily be attacked from sea Sparta attacks Athens ▪ Citizens brought into Athens city walls for protection ...
Athens* Age of Glory - St. Anne`s School (Garden City)
... Because Athens had such a strong navy, they were able to win the battles in the sea. Sparta won many battle's on land. ...
... Because Athens had such a strong navy, they were able to win the battles in the sea. Sparta won many battle's on land. ...
Chapter 5 - world history
... Your name, which the story is, label each characteristic, if it is missing one ...
... Your name, which the story is, label each characteristic, if it is missing one ...
Golden Age of Athens
... Delian League– Athens dominated all city-states in it Used $$$ from League to build up Athenian Navy Athens needed trade (waterways) to obtain grain and raw materials to support the city-state Athens military strength= Pericles treated members of league as part of an empire Peloponnesus city ...
... Delian League– Athens dominated all city-states in it Used $$$ from League to build up Athenian Navy Athens needed trade (waterways) to obtain grain and raw materials to support the city-state Athens military strength= Pericles treated members of league as part of an empire Peloponnesus city ...
Gender and Sexuality in Ancient Greece
... with skill in the arts of music, dancing, conversation and poetry. Coveted for banquets/symposiums as escorts, they may engage in sex, but they are equivalent to high-priced escorts and call girls today. • Prostitutes could be and were anything from street walkers to workers in brothels, but their s ...
... with skill in the arts of music, dancing, conversation and poetry. Coveted for banquets/symposiums as escorts, they may engage in sex, but they are equivalent to high-priced escorts and call girls today. • Prostitutes could be and were anything from street walkers to workers in brothels, but their s ...
Greece Webquest Reading Material
... by Plato), who found Alexander to be a brilliant pupil. Early on Alexander showed his military prowess. At the age of fourteen he thwarted a rebellion while his father was away campaigning, and at sixteen he led a squadron of troops against the Athenians. After the death of his father, Alexander imm ...
... by Plato), who found Alexander to be a brilliant pupil. Early on Alexander showed his military prowess. At the age of fourteen he thwarted a rebellion while his father was away campaigning, and at sixteen he led a squadron of troops against the Athenians. After the death of his father, Alexander imm ...
Athens` Age of Glory
... The Greeks were eventually defeated after the Persian soldiers were shown a secret mountain way around the pass. Spartan king ,Leonidas, with his Royal Guard of 300 men delayed the Persians at a narrow pass at Thermopylae where they held out for three days before being overwhelmed and killed. Ever ...
... The Greeks were eventually defeated after the Persian soldiers were shown a secret mountain way around the pass. Spartan king ,Leonidas, with his Royal Guard of 300 men delayed the Persians at a narrow pass at Thermopylae where they held out for three days before being overwhelmed and killed. Ever ...
Ancient Greece - World History
... Greece map In your own opinion, what factors affect the development of communities? Name 3. What conclusions can be drawn of how these characteristics influenced or impacted Ancient Greece? Does the geography of Greece give any clues why, historically, it was difficult for Greeks to ...
... Greece map In your own opinion, what factors affect the development of communities? Name 3. What conclusions can be drawn of how these characteristics influenced or impacted Ancient Greece? Does the geography of Greece give any clues why, historically, it was difficult for Greeks to ...
Name - Waunakee Community School
... rhetoric, the art of skillful speaking. They used rhetoric to help in their careers. The philosopher Socrates was a critic of the Sophists. He believed in seeking truth and self-knowledge. Most of what we know about Socrates comes from the writings of his student Plato. Plato set up a school called ...
... rhetoric, the art of skillful speaking. They used rhetoric to help in their careers. The philosopher Socrates was a critic of the Sophists. He believed in seeking truth and self-knowledge. Most of what we know about Socrates comes from the writings of his student Plato. Plato set up a school called ...
Hist 100 Q`s for: "Greece: The Crucible of Civ."
... 3) What impact did geography have on Greece's particular political development? ...
... 3) What impact did geography have on Greece's particular political development? ...
classical civilizations and democracy
... The Peloponnesian War weakened the citystates which led to Philip of Macedonia's victory over Greece in 338BC When Phillip was assassinated his son Alexander took over and spread Greek ideas throughout the Mediterranean Beginning of the Hellenistic Age ...
... The Peloponnesian War weakened the citystates which led to Philip of Macedonia's victory over Greece in 338BC When Phillip was assassinated his son Alexander took over and spread Greek ideas throughout the Mediterranean Beginning of the Hellenistic Age ...
The Rise of Democratic Ideas
... •The Greeks developed direct democracy in order that citizens could actively participate in political decisions. •They were the first to think of 3 branches of government •Legislative branch – to pass laws. ...
... •The Greeks developed direct democracy in order that citizens could actively participate in political decisions. •They were the first to think of 3 branches of government •Legislative branch – to pass laws. ...
Study Guide Classical Greece Chapter 12
... - Political power is held by all citizens - Government has 3 branches - Laws-making branch passes laws ...
... - Political power is held by all citizens - Government has 3 branches - Laws-making branch passes laws ...
Name Ancient Greece 6.1 1. peninsula A body of land surrounded
... It was the beginning of democracy A. the polis (city-state) independent, male dominate communities bound together by race, citizenship was Hereditary, 5040 citezens max, everyone must know each other’s personal qualities in order to judge officials B. civic participation & voting rights only to f ...
... It was the beginning of democracy A. the polis (city-state) independent, male dominate communities bound together by race, citizenship was Hereditary, 5040 citezens max, everyone must know each other’s personal qualities in order to judge officials B. civic participation & voting rights only to f ...
Hellenistic Era
... Aristarchus claimed that the sun was at the center of the universe and that Earth circled the sun but other astronomers rejected his ideas In ancient times, most astronomers believed that the Earth was the center of the universe. ...
... Aristarchus claimed that the sun was at the center of the universe and that Earth circled the sun but other astronomers rejected his ideas In ancient times, most astronomers believed that the Earth was the center of the universe. ...
PBS DVD - socialstudiesNCUHS
... 4. Athens was built around the Acropolis / Olympia 5. The life of an Athenian: “Peaches and Cream” / “Nasty, Brutish and Short” 6. Athens common people: “They had no part or share in anything” – Aristotle / Hippocrates 7. Greece did not have a significant mountain range / river system or fertile pla ...
... 4. Athens was built around the Acropolis / Olympia 5. The life of an Athenian: “Peaches and Cream” / “Nasty, Brutish and Short” 6. Athens common people: “They had no part or share in anything” – Aristotle / Hippocrates 7. Greece did not have a significant mountain range / river system or fertile pla ...
The Greeks: Crucible of Civilization
... 4. Athens was built around the Acropolis / Olympia 5. The life of an Athenian: “Peaches and Cream” / “Nasty, Brutish and Short” 6. Athens common people: “They had no part or share in anything” – Aristotle / Hippocrates 7. Greece did not have a significant mountain range / river system or fertile pla ...
... 4. Athens was built around the Acropolis / Olympia 5. The life of an Athenian: “Peaches and Cream” / “Nasty, Brutish and Short” 6. Athens common people: “They had no part or share in anything” – Aristotle / Hippocrates 7. Greece did not have a significant mountain range / river system or fertile pla ...
Name - Boyertown Area School District
... A. Athens: The Acropolis 1. Why do you think the Greeks build their most important buildings on a hill? - built on a hill for protection (most important places) - built originally for military purposes - temples higher up (closer to the gods) 2. What material was used to make these buildings? ...
... A. Athens: The Acropolis 1. Why do you think the Greeks build their most important buildings on a hill? - built on a hill for protection (most important places) - built originally for military purposes - temples higher up (closer to the gods) 2. What material was used to make these buildings? ...
Greece Power Point
... 5. Using paragraphs 8-9 what does Socrates consider worse than death? And what favor does he ask of his fellow Athenians 6. Which paragraph best illustrates his method of teaching? Give an excerpt from the paragraph you chose as evidence. 7. What is ironic about the title of this speech? Why do you ...
... 5. Using paragraphs 8-9 what does Socrates consider worse than death? And what favor does he ask of his fellow Athenians 6. Which paragraph best illustrates his method of teaching? Give an excerpt from the paragraph you chose as evidence. 7. What is ironic about the title of this speech? Why do you ...
Origins of Classical Hellenism
... These Dorians founded the Mycenaean society • Capital city was in the Peloponnese , kingdom expand throughout much of what is the modernday nation of Greece… Sparta becomes center of martial life… renowned for their warriors and women ...
... These Dorians founded the Mycenaean society • Capital city was in the Peloponnese , kingdom expand throughout much of what is the modernday nation of Greece… Sparta becomes center of martial life… renowned for their warriors and women ...
File
... – Seafaring people, many merchants (traded throughout Med) • Spread their ideas and beliefs to others – Polytheistic – main god was goddess Earth Mother – Greatest king was King Minos ...
... – Seafaring people, many merchants (traded throughout Med) • Spread their ideas and beliefs to others – Polytheistic – main god was goddess Earth Mother – Greatest king was King Minos ...
Review guide - Lake Oswego High School
... with power to ruler over others. ___ believed that since the city is good, it must have the virtues of wisdom, courage, discipline and justice—his divine mission: “was to expose the ignorance of those who thought themselves wise”—credited for setting the standard for Western philosophy as we know it ...
... with power to ruler over others. ___ believed that since the city is good, it must have the virtues of wisdom, courage, discipline and justice—his divine mission: “was to expose the ignorance of those who thought themselves wise”—credited for setting the standard for Western philosophy as we know it ...
Ancient Greek philosophy
Ancient Greek philosophy arose in the 6th century BCE and continued throughout the Hellenistic period and the period in which Ancient Greece was part of the Roman Empire. It dealt with a wide variety of subjects, including political philosophy, ethics, metaphysics, ontology, logic, biology, rhetoric, and aesthetics.Many philosophers today concede that Greek philosophy has influenced much of Western culture since its inception. Alfred North Whitehead once noted: ""The safest general characterization of the European philosophical traditionis that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato."" Clear, unbroken lines of influence lead from ancient Greek and Hellenistic philosophers to Early Islamic philosophy, the European Renaissance and the Age of Enlightenment.Some claim that Greek philosophy, in turn, was influenced by the older wisdom literature and mythological cosmogonies of the ancient Near East. Martin Litchfield West gives qualified assent to this view, stating, ""contact with oriental cosmology and theology helped to liberate the early Greek philosophers' imagination; it certainly gave them many suggestive ideas. But they taught themselves to reason. Philosophy as we understand it is a Greek creation.""Subsequent philosophic tradition was so influenced by Socrates (as presented by Plato) that it is conventional to refer to philosophy developed prior to Socrates as pre-Socratic philosophy. The periods following this until the wars of Alexander the Great are those of ""classical Greek"" and ""Hellenistic"" philosophy.