Download AW Final 2011 Jeopardy Review

Document related concepts

Food and dining in the Roman Empire wikipedia , lookup

Roman army of the late Republic wikipedia , lookup

Roman economy wikipedia , lookup

Classics wikipedia , lookup

Roman art wikipedia , lookup

Roman agriculture wikipedia , lookup

Romanization of Hispania wikipedia , lookup

Roman historiography wikipedia , lookup

History of the Roman Constitution wikipedia , lookup

Early Roman army wikipedia , lookup

Culture of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

History of science in classical antiquity wikipedia , lookup

Education in ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Travel in Classical antiquity wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Round 1
Round 2
Final
Jeopardy
Its all
Greek to
me
War, what
is it good
for?
That’s
Pretty
Famous
People
Chronology
Mixed
Bag
$100 $100
$100
$100 $100
$100
$200 $200
$200
$200 $200
$200
Round 2
Final
Jeopardy
Home
$300 $300
$300
$300 $300
$300
$400
$400
$400 $400
$400
$500 $500
$500
$500 $500
$500
$400
$100
Polis
1,1
$100
City-State
Home
$200
Arête
1,2
$200
Excellence
Home
$300
Res publica
1,3
$300
Of the people
Scores
Home
$400
Kouros
1,4
$400
Youth (Male)
Scores
Home
$500
Contrapposto
1,5
$500
Counterpoised (Italian)
Scores
Home
$100
This war was fought due to
the differences in cultures
between the two dominate
city-states of the classical
period and expansion of
Delian League dominance in
Greece
2,1
$100
Peloponnesian War
Scores
Home
$200
This war was really three wars
and resulted in the movement
of many farmers into the
urban areas as well as a flood
of wealth to the patrician
class all of which contributed
to the outbreak of civil wars
and downfall of the Republic
2,2
$200
Punic
Scores
Home
$300
This war began with a revolt in
Ionia, ended with a navel batter
fought at Salamis, and
contributed to the development
of the Golden Age of Athens
because the Delian League was
created during the war
2,3
$300
Persian
Scores
Home
$400
Stories about this war
formed the basis of Greek
Education and shed light of
the Greek ideal of Arête
$400
Trojan
Scores
Home
$500
This is the proper chronological
order for the four wars we
studied this term:
Peloponnesian
Punic
Trojan
Persian
2,5
$500
Trojan
Persian
Peloponnesian
Punic
Home
$100
The uneven
weight
distribution in
classical
sculpture
demonstrated in
this statue
3,1
(50 bonus points for
the statue’s name)
$100
Contrapposto
Bonus: Statue of
Diadoumenos
Scores
Home
$200 The ideal proportions found
throughout nature and in the
human body can be seen in the
building below (50 point bonus for the
name of the building and where specifically it is
located in Athens)
3.2
$200
Golden Ratio
Bonus: Parthenon, Acropolis in
Athens
Scores
Home
$300
The three
mains themes
found in
classical art
can be seen in
this Statue. (50 pt.
bonus for the name of the
piece, 50 pt. bonus for an
explanation of where each
theme is represented in
the piece.)
3,3
$300
Humanism, Realism,
Idealism
Bonus: Three Graces, Realism seen in
the contrapposto poses, Idealism in
the lack of imperfections and smooth
almost shiny skin, Humanism in the
subject matter
Scores
Home
$400
1) The time period
where the focus
moved from
idealism to
naturalism in
Art.
2) Explain how the
following piece
demonstrates
this change.
3,4
$400
1) Hellenistic Period
2) Technique (detail), emotion,
subject matter (polis to
cosmopolis)
Home
$500
Three orders of columns featured
below (named in order)
3,5
$500
Ionic, Doric, Corinthian
Scores
Home
$100
Wrote the epic poem the Iliad
about the Mycenaean culture and
the Trojan War
4,1
$100
Homer
Scores
Home
$200
Claimed that “our form of
government does not enter into
rivalry with the institutions of
others” when discussing the
Athenian government, which he
dominated during the Golden
Age of Athens
4.2
$200
Pericles
Scores
Home
$300
Reduced the size of the army,
paid 20 year vets, created the
Praetorian Guard, and
consolidated the frontiers after
taking control of Rome
4.3
$300
Augustus Caesar
Scores
Home
$400
Believed that the best form of
government was by philosopher
Kings who knew the forms.
4.4
$400
Plato
Home
$500
Two rulers that came to power
according to the following process.
Senate vs. the
masses (fear of
masses vs.
resentment of
privilege)
4.5
Appear as a
solider/Hero
Create a
personal army,
march on Rome,
Restore peace
and prosperity
$500
Gaius Marius, Sulla, Pompey,
Julius Caesar
Home
$100
Battle of Salamis
Trojan War
Golden Age of Athens
Octavian adopts the name Augustus
5.1
$100
Trojan War
Battle of Salamis
Golden Age of Athens
Octavian adopts the name Augustus
Home
$200
Homer writes his epics
Roman Republic Collapses
Alexander invades India
Minoan Civilization
5.2
$200
Minoan Civilization
Homer writes his epics
Alexander invades India
Roman Republic Collapses
Scores
Home
$300
Xerxes is defeated
Hannibal destroyed fields
during his advance
Marc Antony dies
Plato writes The Republic
5.3
$300
Xerxes is defeated
Plato writes The Republic
Hannibal destroyed fields during his
advance
Marc Antony dies
Scores
Home
$400
Laocoon and His Sons
Calf-Bearer
Pantheon
5.4
Statuette of Man and Centaur
$400
Statuette of Man and Centaur
Calf-Bearer
Laocoon and His Sons
Pantheon
Home
$500
Building of Parthenon
Delian League Forms
Gracchus Brothers are killed
5.5
Rise of city-states
$500
Rise of city-states
Delian League Forms
Building of Parthenon
Gracchus Brothers are killed
Scores
Home
$100
Early Greek Civilization on
whom Homer based his epic
poetry
6.1
$100
Mycenaeans
Scores
Home
$200
Roman tribunes who tried to reform
the wealth gap caused in part by the
Punic Wars with a land distribution
plan during the Roman Republic
6.2
$200
Gracchus Brothers
Home
$300
Military formation used by the
Greeks, perfected by the Spartans, and
enhanced by Philip II
6.3
$300
Phalanx
Scores
Home
$400
Government run by the few
6.4
$400
Oligarchy
Scores
Home
$500
Estates owned by wealthy patricians
after the Punic Wars that led to the
huge wealth gap during the Roman
Republic
6.5
$500
Latfundia
Scores
Home
Myth/Rel
igion
Philosophy
101
Potpourri
Map
Quest
It
takes
Two
C/C
Round 1
$200 $200
$200
$200 $200
$200
$400 $400
$400
$400 $400
$400
$600 $600
$600
$600 $600
$600
$800 $800
$800
$800 $800
$800
$1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000
Final
Jeopardy
$200
Greek god of the sea
R1,1
$200
Poseidon
Home
$400
Goddess of the Underworld
(100 point bonus for naming the fruit she ate while in
the underworld and what eternal truth this helped
explain)
R1,2
$400
Persephone
Bonus: Pomegranate, seasons
(fall/winter)
Scores
Home
$600
Married gods one of love and other
of fire & metal working
R1,3
$600
Aphrodite and Hephaestus
Scores
Home
$800
Roman name for the Greek
goddess of the the hunt
R1,4
$800
Greek: Artemis
Roman: Diana
Scores
Home
$1000
Greek and Roman names of the
messenger to the Gods
R1,5
$1000
Greek: Hermes
Roman: Mercury
Scores
Home
$200
This naturalist philosopher is still
credited today for developing an ethical
code for doctors
R2,1
$200
Hippocrates
Scores
Home
$400
This explains how society is bound
and blinded by their own ignorance
can be freed with the help of someone
who has broken away from their
chains of ignorance and seen the true
light versus the false light to which
society is subjected
R2,2
$400
Allegory of the Cave
Scores
Home
$600
This idea was create by Aristotle to
explain the best way for humans to
live and extols the virtues of
avoiding extremes
R2,3
$600
Golden Mean
Scores
Home
$800
The school of thought that began in the
Hellenistic age and then was favored during the
Roman period.
(50 bonus points for explaining what this
school of thought believed)
R2,4
$800
Stoics
Bonus: Believed in removing
themselves from human passions and
emotion to be closer to the divine and in
line with natural law
Scores
Home
$1000
He was the first philosopher in the Greek
tradition and actively sought ways to
explain the natural world through the use
of math and science versus mythology.
This move singled a major change in the
approach to discovering the meaning of
eternal truths and developing the Greeks
as “thinkers”
R2,5
$1000
Thales
Scores
Home
$200
Created the reforms that set
up the Athenian system of
democracy including dividing
the land into 10 demes each of
which elected 50 members to
the council of 500
R3,1
$200
Cleisthenes
Scores
Home
$400
The civilization that influenced the Roman development
of the arch and urban planning
R3,2
$400
Etruscans
Home
$600
Women in this civilization had
more rights since they could own
property, have jobs (including
being a prostitute), but could not
vote or be considered citizens
R3,3
$600
Rome
Scores
Home
$800
This ruler Hellenized the Greek world, conquered Asia Minor,
and helped change the focus from the polis to the cosmopolis
R3,4
$800
Alexander the Great
Scores
Home
$1000
Name the following sculpture and
explain what period it is from:
R3,5
$1000
Archaic
Kore: painted, clothed female, little
detail in carving technique, stiff
pose based off of the Egyptian
canon
Scores
Home
$200
A
R4,1
$200
A. Asia Minor
Scores
Home
$400
B
R4,2
$400
B. Aegean Sea
Scores
Home
$600
River
C
R4,3
$600
C. Nile River
Scores
Home
$800
D
R4,4
$800
D. Jerusalem (Palestine)
Scores
Home
$1000
Cities
a
b
R4,5
$1000
a. Rome
b. Athens
Scores
Home
$200
Two naturalist philosophers
R5,1
$200
Thales - Heraclitus - Leucippus Democritus - Pythagoras Hippocrates
Scores
Home
$400
Tw causes of the Peloponnesian War
R5,2
$400
Expansion of Athens
Spartan Fear of Athens
Delian League Dominance
Differences in culture
Scores
Home
$600
Two effects of the Persian Wars
R5,3
$600
Formation of the Delian league
(leading to the Golden Age of
Athens and eventual clash with
Sparta)
Greeks were left to own devices
(never to unite until Philip II)
Athens emerged as a maritime
power
Scores
Home
$800
Two rights won by the Plebeians
during the Struggle of the Orders
R5,4
$800
Lex Canuleia: Right to inter-marry
Licinian-Sextian laws: one counsel
per year must be a plebeian,
Praetor – serve as assistant
consul, law restricting how much
land one person could have
Lex Hortensia: Decision of the
Assembly of Tribes binding on the
whole state without action by any
other body
Home
$1000
Two examples of why Rome was
more effective in building
loyalty to Rome when they
conquered an area compared to
the Greeks/Macedonians
R5,5
$1000
Path to citizenship, allowed
conquered lands to keep
culture/religion as long as they
paid tribute (taxes and soldiers),
roman laws applied evenly to all,
encourage to join the army and
become Romanized over a longer
period of time
Scores
Home
$200
Unlike classical Greece city-states this
civilization eventually change into an
empire that spread through Europe, the
Mediterranean, North Africa, and Asia
Minor
R6,1
$200
Roman
Scores
Home
$400
Like in Rome class conflict led to
specific changes in government.
During the early formation of the citystates the people often supported rules
who took power illegally but with
populists support from this type of
government
R6,2
$400
Tyranny
Scores
Home
$600
Unlike the Romans who allowed their
conquered people a chance to keep
their own culture and language, this
ruler forced everyone to speak Greek
and by the end of his rule wanted to
be see as a god
R6,3
$600
Alexander the Great
Scores
Home
$800
Unlike the birth place of
democracy, this city state was an
oligarchy focused on the
development of soldiers
R6,4
$800
Sparta
Scores
Home
$1000
Unlike some forms of government
this civilization incorporated
elements of monarchical, democratic,
and aristocratic government systems
R6,5
$1000
Romans
Home
Home
Final
Jeopardy
Question
This philosopher came up with a
systematic approach to asking
questions called the dialectical
method which eventually got
him killed
Socrates