The Sociology of Leaders “Befriending” Followers in Late Fifth
... friendship between certain people unlikely can be overcome through a principle called “essentialism,” according to which people can overlook certain differences if they see an essential commonality between themselves (e.g., Hamilton 2007). While friendships based on these principles are identifiable ...
... friendship between certain people unlikely can be overcome through a principle called “essentialism,” according to which people can overlook certain differences if they see an essential commonality between themselves (e.g., Hamilton 2007). While friendships based on these principles are identifiable ...
The Melian Dialogue
... archers waited at the shores of Melos ready for action as the Melians deliberated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------It was the sixteenth year of the Peloponnesian War, but for the last six years the two great feuding empires headed by Athens and S ...
... archers waited at the shores of Melos ready for action as the Melians deliberated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------It was the sixteenth year of the Peloponnesian War, but for the last six years the two great feuding empires headed by Athens and S ...
The Peloponessian War 431 – 404 BC
... Eventually, about half of the population escaped, but the other half eventually surrendered These were brought before a Spartan court, where they were asked simply "Whether, during the present war, they had rendered any assistance to the Lacedaemonians and their allies?" These 200 citizens & 25 Athe ...
... Eventually, about half of the population escaped, but the other half eventually surrendered These were brought before a Spartan court, where they were asked simply "Whether, during the present war, they had rendered any assistance to the Lacedaemonians and their allies?" These 200 citizens & 25 Athe ...
The Peloponnesian War
... Read the following passage. Use the passage and your knowledge of world history to answer the following multiple-choice questions. The Peloponnesian War Athens and Sparta had always competed for power. During the Persian Wars they worked together to defeat a common enemy. After the war, Athens and o ...
... Read the following passage. Use the passage and your knowledge of world history to answer the following multiple-choice questions. The Peloponnesian War Athens and Sparta had always competed for power. During the Persian Wars they worked together to defeat a common enemy. After the war, Athens and o ...
Athenian Rec. Final2
... that any former magistrate must if they choose to return to Athens and seek sanctuary (Carnes et al, 2015, Faction Sheet). We need to forgive and forget the actions of the Thirty to restore these Periclean ideals that will in turn revive the values of the great Athenian society that once was before ...
... that any former magistrate must if they choose to return to Athens and seek sanctuary (Carnes et al, 2015, Faction Sheet). We need to forgive and forget the actions of the Thirty to restore these Periclean ideals that will in turn revive the values of the great Athenian society that once was before ...
ATHENS vs SPARTA – THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR
... •Athens’s land & naval forces annihilated •Sparta & allies don’t go for the kill •Athens recovers, Navy rebuilt •Many gifted Athenian Naval commanders executed after successful battle- ran away from storm •With support of Persia, Sparta defeats Athens at Sea ...
... •Athens’s land & naval forces annihilated •Sparta & allies don’t go for the kill •Athens recovers, Navy rebuilt •Many gifted Athenian Naval commanders executed after successful battle- ran away from storm •With support of Persia, Sparta defeats Athens at Sea ...
Melian Dialogue
... demanded a tribute of fifteen talents (equivalent of 6,000 drachmae), but Melos refused to pay.[1] In the summer of 416 BCE, during a truce with Sparta, Athens sent a fleet of 38 ships carrying an army of 3,000 men, led by the generals Cleomedes and Tisias, to conquer the island. After setting up ca ...
... demanded a tribute of fifteen talents (equivalent of 6,000 drachmae), but Melos refused to pay.[1] In the summer of 416 BCE, during a truce with Sparta, Athens sent a fleet of 38 ships carrying an army of 3,000 men, led by the generals Cleomedes and Tisias, to conquer the island. After setting up ca ...
Peloponnesian War: 418 BCE - International Relations Organization
... recently begun to push toward the Spartan line of maintaining peace in order to avoid potential Athenian incursion. 33. Megaran Leader - Orsippus* A crucial city in the Peloponnesian League, located closest geographically to Athens. Additionally, it has access to the port city of Pagae, but is unabl ...
... recently begun to push toward the Spartan line of maintaining peace in order to avoid potential Athenian incursion. 33. Megaran Leader - Orsippus* A crucial city in the Peloponnesian League, located closest geographically to Athens. Additionally, it has access to the port city of Pagae, but is unabl ...
Book 1 HPW: Dr. Kenney`s notes Brief Outline
... 29: Neither side is willing to “stand down”; Corcyra wins the battle of Leukimme 30: Cocyra and Corinth maintain a 2 year “stand off.” 31: Cocyra and Corinth eventually deem it important to seek aid from Athens 32-36: The Corcyrian speech to Athens 32: admits embarrassing position of asking for help ...
... 29: Neither side is willing to “stand down”; Corcyra wins the battle of Leukimme 30: Cocyra and Corinth maintain a 2 year “stand off.” 31: Cocyra and Corinth eventually deem it important to seek aid from Athens 32-36: The Corcyrian speech to Athens 32: admits embarrassing position of asking for help ...
Melian Dialog: Historical Context, Summary, and Results[1
... Melian Dialog: Historical Context, Summary, and Results1 Historical Context During the Peloponnesian War (431-404 BCE), between Athens and Sparta and their various allies, the island of Melos had stayed neutral, and refused to become a subject of Athens. As the war progressed, though, Athens encroac ...
... Melian Dialog: Historical Context, Summary, and Results1 Historical Context During the Peloponnesian War (431-404 BCE), between Athens and Sparta and their various allies, the island of Melos had stayed neutral, and refused to become a subject of Athens. As the war progressed, though, Athens encroac ...
World_History_Unit_4 - Chapter 9 Section 2
... This declaration of war began the EZadedccZh^VcLVg, a war between Athens and Sparta that threatened to tear all of Greece apart. In 431 BC the Spartan army marched north to Athens. They surrounded the city, waiting for the Athenians to come out and fight. But the Athenians stayed in the city, hopi ...
... This declaration of war began the EZadedccZh^VcLVg, a war between Athens and Sparta that threatened to tear all of Greece apart. In 431 BC the Spartan army marched north to Athens. They surrounded the city, waiting for the Athenians to come out and fight. But the Athenians stayed in the city, hopi ...
Ancient Greece: The Peloponnesian
... 415BCE – Athens tries to expand again o Attempt to conquer Sicily (an ally of Sparta) o Sicily defeats Athens and destroys its navy Sparta attacks Athens 404BCE – Sparta finally wins and ends the Peloponnesian War Greece falls into a period of civil warfare for many years ...
... 415BCE – Athens tries to expand again o Attempt to conquer Sicily (an ally of Sparta) o Sicily defeats Athens and destroys its navy Sparta attacks Athens 404BCE – Sparta finally wins and ends the Peloponnesian War Greece falls into a period of civil warfare for many years ...
The Peloponnesian War
... 1. The dispute at Epidamnus, 433 BCE. Epidamnus was a tiny colony of Corcyra, a neutral state in the Athens-Sparta conflict. Corcyra was a colony of Corinth, a major Spartan ally, but was now hostile to Corinth. A civil war erupts in Epidamnus. The losers appeal for aid first to Corcyra, then to Cor ...
... 1. The dispute at Epidamnus, 433 BCE. Epidamnus was a tiny colony of Corcyra, a neutral state in the Athens-Sparta conflict. Corcyra was a colony of Corinth, a major Spartan ally, but was now hostile to Corinth. A civil war erupts in Epidamnus. The losers appeal for aid first to Corcyra, then to Cor ...
Ancient Greece Jeopardy
... Persian Wars 300 Explain the results of the Persian Wars. Greece won, and Athens and Sparta became the two most powerful citystates ...
... Persian Wars 300 Explain the results of the Persian Wars. Greece won, and Athens and Sparta became the two most powerful citystates ...
Athenian Democracy: The Funeral Oration of Pericles
... eulogy given by Pericles in the winter of 431-430 B.C.E. to honor the Athenians killed in the first campaigns of the Peloponnesian War. The war was between the two powerful city-states of Sparta and Athens, which had created two very different kinds of societies and were unable to tolerate each othe ...
... eulogy given by Pericles in the winter of 431-430 B.C.E. to honor the Athenians killed in the first campaigns of the Peloponnesian War. The war was between the two powerful city-states of Sparta and Athens, which had created two very different kinds of societies and were unable to tolerate each othe ...
Introduction - The University of Michigan Press
... generals were elected on the basis of competence and thus could be reelected any number of times. While this office was Pericles’ constitutional base, his practical political effectiveness came from his forceful personality, his persuasiveness, his admitted foresight, his strategic talent, his recog ...
... generals were elected on the basis of competence and thus could be reelected any number of times. While this office was Pericles’ constitutional base, his practical political effectiveness came from his forceful personality, his persuasiveness, his admitted foresight, his strategic talent, his recog ...
File
... was a populist, manipulating the masses to enhance his own power, and an Athenian imperialist whose aggressive policies ultimately ruined the city. His famous speech in praise of Athens was delivered around 431-430BCE at the end of the first year of the Peloponnesian War against Sparta. The setting ...
... was a populist, manipulating the masses to enhance his own power, and an Athenian imperialist whose aggressive policies ultimately ruined the city. His famous speech in praise of Athens was delivered around 431-430BCE at the end of the first year of the Peloponnesian War against Sparta. The setting ...
Chapter 5-Section 3-Democracy and Greece`s Golden Age
... Pericles’ Plan for Athens • Pericles' Three Goals for Athens– Strengthen Athens Democracy – Hold and strengthen the empire – Glorify Athens • Direct Democracy-A form of government in which citizens ruled directly and not through ...
... Pericles’ Plan for Athens • Pericles' Three Goals for Athens– Strengthen Athens Democracy – Hold and strengthen the empire – Glorify Athens • Direct Democracy-A form of government in which citizens ruled directly and not through ...
Greece - Barrington 220
... live their lives in a way that would action that men were enabled to win all this, make the sacrifice of fallen warriors andworthwhile. that no personal failure in an enterprise could make them consent to deprive their country of their valor, but they laid it at her feet as the most glorious contrib ...
... live their lives in a way that would action that men were enabled to win all this, make the sacrifice of fallen warriors andworthwhile. that no personal failure in an enterprise could make them consent to deprive their country of their valor, but they laid it at her feet as the most glorious contrib ...
Abstract
... suppliants and their Argive persecutors, bring these two concepts of freedom into conflict at the end of the play. Although it was commonly believed that a lacuna was present after line 1052 (for this argument see Wilkins 1993), Allan (2001) has recently provided strong arguments in favor of the int ...
... suppliants and their Argive persecutors, bring these two concepts of freedom into conflict at the end of the play. Although it was commonly believed that a lacuna was present after line 1052 (for this argument see Wilkins 1993), Allan (2001) has recently provided strong arguments in favor of the int ...
Democratic developments in Athens – packages
... power of the aristocratic elite and distributed political power across all classes in society. The two groups which benefitted the most from these reforms were the strategoi (generals) and the thetes (the lower classes). Their power grew hand in hand, as it was the thetes who rowed the ships of th ...
... power of the aristocratic elite and distributed political power across all classes in society. The two groups which benefitted the most from these reforms were the strategoi (generals) and the thetes (the lower classes). Their power grew hand in hand, as it was the thetes who rowed the ships of th ...
Greece
... What did this prevent Greeks from doing? Who were the mainland Greeks? How did the Mycenaean’s defeat Troy? Who was in charge during the “Dark Ages”? Why was that period of time called the “Dark Ages”? Who told/wrote epic poems about heroism? What was the name of at least one of these poems? Who is ...
... What did this prevent Greeks from doing? Who were the mainland Greeks? How did the Mycenaean’s defeat Troy? Who was in charge during the “Dark Ages”? Why was that period of time called the “Dark Ages”? Who told/wrote epic poems about heroism? What was the name of at least one of these poems? Who is ...
Ancient Greece
... After 10 years, a truce was reached – Athens keeps its empire, but will not expand – Sparta goes home ...
... After 10 years, a truce was reached – Athens keeps its empire, but will not expand – Sparta goes home ...
Classical Civilizations: Mediterranean Basin 2 WH011 Activity
... Soon Alcibiades designed a brilliant plan for a rather daring expedition. But the night before the expedition, sacred statues in Athens were vandalized, and Alcibiades and his friends were believed to be responsible. Alcibiades was arrested for sacrilege, but he escaped and fled to Sparta, where he ...
... Soon Alcibiades designed a brilliant plan for a rather daring expedition. But the night before the expedition, sacred statues in Athens were vandalized, and Alcibiades and his friends were believed to be responsible. Alcibiades was arrested for sacrilege, but he escaped and fled to Sparta, where he ...
Thrasybulus
Thrasybulus (/ˌθræsɨˈbjuːləs/; Greek: Θρασύβουλος, ""brave-willed""; c. 440 – 388 BC) was an Athenian general and democratic leader. In 411 BC, in the wake of an oligarchic coup at Athens, the pro-democracy sailors at Samos elected him as a general, making him a primary leader of the successful democratic resistance to that coup. As general, he was responsible for recalling the controversial nobleman Alcibiades from exile, and the two worked together extensively over the next several years. In 411 and 410, Thrasybulus commanded along with Alcibiades and others at several critical Athenian naval victories.After Athens' defeat in the Peloponnesian War, Thrasybulus led the democratic resistance to the new oligarchic government, known as the Thirty Tyrants, which the victorious Spartans imposed on Athens. In 404 BC, he commanded a small force of exiles that invaded Attica and, in successive battles, defeated first a Spartan garrison and then the forces of the oligarchy. In the wake of these victories, democracy was re-established at Athens. As a leader of this revived democracy in the 4th century BC, Thrasybulus advocated a policy of resistance to Sparta and sought to restore Athens' imperial power. He was killed in 388 BC while leading an Athenian naval force during the Corinthian War.