Assignment #2
... Main task: prepare proposals to a group of five men known as the ephors. Main task: Supervising the young and conduct of all people o Foreigners were prohibited from visiting Sparta. o Forming an alliance with other states in the Peloponnesia. o Powerful military was organized by 500 B.C.E. 3. W ...
... Main task: prepare proposals to a group of five men known as the ephors. Main task: Supervising the young and conduct of all people o Foreigners were prohibited from visiting Sparta. o Forming an alliance with other states in the Peloponnesia. o Powerful military was organized by 500 B.C.E. 3. W ...
Greece Section 2 Text only in color
... Spartan girls also led hardy lives. Although they did not receive military training, they ran, wrestled, and played sports. Like the boys, they also learned to put service to Sparta above even love of family. As adults, women managed the family estates while their husbands served the polis. Although ...
... Spartan girls also led hardy lives. Although they did not receive military training, they ran, wrestled, and played sports. Like the boys, they also learned to put service to Sparta above even love of family. As adults, women managed the family estates while their husbands served the polis. Although ...
Ancient Greece - Fairfield Public Schools
... 750 B.C. city-states of Athens, Sparta, Argos, and Corinth Greek city-states were called a polis Polis is where we get the word politics All people were free citizens unless parents were foreign Philosopher Aristotle believed it was natural for people to live in citystates Most polis had 5,000 peo ...
... 750 B.C. city-states of Athens, Sparta, Argos, and Corinth Greek city-states were called a polis Polis is where we get the word politics All people were free citizens unless parents were foreign Philosopher Aristotle believed it was natural for people to live in citystates Most polis had 5,000 peo ...
Art History 1 Greece Art Study Guide After Aegean cultures
... Probably a great deal of warfare going on as Dorians and Ionians consolidate their positions. 776 BC is the first specific date for the Greeks. GEOMETRIC PERIOD: 8th c. BCE. So-called because of the geometric style of art at this time. This was the first truly “Greek” style and can be seen in the “D ...
... Probably a great deal of warfare going on as Dorians and Ionians consolidate their positions. 776 BC is the first specific date for the Greeks. GEOMETRIC PERIOD: 8th c. BCE. So-called because of the geometric style of art at this time. This was the first truly “Greek” style and can be seen in the “D ...
CMJ 7-2 Summer
... chapter on Disease. The plague that cut down almost 30 percent of the population of Athens (including its most capable leader, Pericles) early on in the campaign had a profound influence on how the democracy conducted itself in the following 20 years. The disease was the product of the seemingly uns ...
... chapter on Disease. The plague that cut down almost 30 percent of the population of Athens (including its most capable leader, Pericles) early on in the campaign had a profound influence on how the democracy conducted itself in the following 20 years. The disease was the product of the seemingly uns ...
ancient greece - Palmdale School District
... by uniting behind a leader, they could gain the power to make changes. Citizens in Athens proposed new laws, voted on laws, and served on juries. Several other city-states in Greece also developed democracies, but Athens’ version was the most successful. ...
... by uniting behind a leader, they could gain the power to make changes. Citizens in Athens proposed new laws, voted on laws, and served on juries. Several other city-states in Greece also developed democracies, but Athens’ version was the most successful. ...
SWBAT compare and contrast the lives of individuals in Athens and
... lot, or at random, to serve for a term of one year. Members could be reelected only once. The yearly turnover allowed for a greater number of Athenian citizens to participate in their government at a high level. Laws were passed by a majority vote in the assembly. ...
... lot, or at random, to serve for a term of one year. Members could be reelected only once. The yearly turnover allowed for a greater number of Athenian citizens to participate in their government at a high level. Laws were passed by a majority vote in the assembly. ...
SWBAT compare and contrast the lives of individuals in Athens and
... lot, or at random, to serve for a term of one year. Members could be reelected only once. The yearly turnover allowed for a greater number of Athenian citizens to participate in their government at a high level. Laws were passed by a majority vote in the assembly. ...
... lot, or at random, to serve for a term of one year. Members could be reelected only once. The yearly turnover allowed for a greater number of Athenian citizens to participate in their government at a high level. Laws were passed by a majority vote in the assembly. ...
Greek Political Structure
... Since Aristotle was Plato’s student, did he succeed him as head of the academy? Did Aristotle agree with Plato’s theory of forms? What did Aristotle see as ultimate reality? How did Aristotle say we know the world around us? ...
... Since Aristotle was Plato’s student, did he succeed him as head of the academy? Did Aristotle agree with Plato’s theory of forms? What did Aristotle see as ultimate reality? How did Aristotle say we know the world around us? ...
Timeline for Ancient Greece
... 650 B.C. – Earliest Lyric Poets 630 B.C. – Lyric poet Sappho born in Lesbos 625 B.C. – Thales, Greek mathematician and founder of geometry born in Miletos 621 B.C. – Draco, an Athenian lawgiver, issues Draconian code making nearly every offense a capital crime 5. 569 B.C. – Pythagoras, Greek mathema ...
... 650 B.C. – Earliest Lyric Poets 630 B.C. – Lyric poet Sappho born in Lesbos 625 B.C. – Thales, Greek mathematician and founder of geometry born in Miletos 621 B.C. – Draco, an Athenian lawgiver, issues Draconian code making nearly every offense a capital crime 5. 569 B.C. – Pythagoras, Greek mathema ...
Ancient GREECE (lite) The Greek civilization was preceded by an
... Solon warned the Athenians to accept the reforms or the people would overthrow the system and support a tyrant and he lived to see his prediction come true. In 560 BC after a period of civil war Pisistratus a military hero and champion of the poor usurped power as the tyrant. He ended the power of ...
... Solon warned the Athenians to accept the reforms or the people would overthrow the system and support a tyrant and he lived to see his prediction come true. In 560 BC after a period of civil war Pisistratus a military hero and champion of the poor usurped power as the tyrant. He ended the power of ...
Democracy Ancient and Modern
... The greatest war in the past was the Persian War; yet in this war the decision was reached quickly as a result of two naval battles and two battles on land. The Peloponnesian War, on the other hand, not only lasted for a long time, but throughout its course brought with it unprecedented suffering fo ...
... The greatest war in the past was the Persian War; yet in this war the decision was reached quickly as a result of two naval battles and two battles on land. The Peloponnesian War, on the other hand, not only lasted for a long time, but throughout its course brought with it unprecedented suffering fo ...
Athenian empire - essay
... the council ceased to meet after 460. Athens also made members states swear an oath of loyalty to itself rather than to the League – something it could then use to justify punishing them if they opposed its leadership. Economically, Athens took control of the League’s finances, moving the treasury f ...
... the council ceased to meet after 460. Athens also made members states swear an oath of loyalty to itself rather than to the League – something it could then use to justify punishing them if they opposed its leadership. Economically, Athens took control of the League’s finances, moving the treasury f ...
SPARTA
... It may seem inhumane, but texts and drawings show how much pride the spartans had in becoming the perfect soldier We may never understand the true meaning or experience of their training, but can only hope to ...
... It may seem inhumane, but texts and drawings show how much pride the spartans had in becoming the perfect soldier We may never understand the true meaning or experience of their training, but can only hope to ...
File - World History
... state-run training centers. At 20, Spartan males entered military services where they needed to serve until age 60 (essentially their entire lives!). Spartan men could marry at the age of 20, however they were unable to live with their families until age 30 when they left active military service. Gi ...
... state-run training centers. At 20, Spartan males entered military services where they needed to serve until age 60 (essentially their entire lives!). Spartan men could marry at the age of 20, however they were unable to live with their families until age 30 when they left active military service. Gi ...
Ancient Greece - Eli Gulsby
... ○ Valued war, strength, honor ○ Education: Trained youth in athletics-boys in military, girls in sports ○ Emphasized “Sparta over Family” "Either come back with your shield or on it" ...
... ○ Valued war, strength, honor ○ Education: Trained youth in athletics-boys in military, girls in sports ○ Emphasized “Sparta over Family” "Either come back with your shield or on it" ...
World History and Geography
... What aspects of culture did the Mycenaeans adopt from the Minoans? ...
... What aspects of culture did the Mycenaeans adopt from the Minoans? ...
Jeopardy Round One
... during the Peloponnesian War but ended up being a traitor to Athens, running to Sparta to explain the plan. ...
... during the Peloponnesian War but ended up being a traitor to Athens, running to Sparta to explain the plan. ...
Greek City
... • Athenians thought of themselves as the shining star of the Greek citystates. They were famed for their literature, poetry, drama, theatre, schools, buildings, and government. • Athens started as a small village, home to a tribe of Ionian people. It grew rapidly until Athens was one of the two most ...
... • Athenians thought of themselves as the shining star of the Greek citystates. They were famed for their literature, poetry, drama, theatre, schools, buildings, and government. • Athens started as a small village, home to a tribe of Ionian people. It grew rapidly until Athens was one of the two most ...
Jeopardy Round One - tep546
... during the Peloponnesian War but ended up being a traitor to Athens, running to Sparta to explain the plan. ...
... during the Peloponnesian War but ended up being a traitor to Athens, running to Sparta to explain the plan. ...
Sparta - Hale
... Conditions behind Athens’ walls are cramped and unsanitary Less than a year into the war, a plague strikes the city, killing 1/3 of the population Nevertheless the war drags on Athens makes enemies by attacking other islands and colonies (Sicily in particular) Sparta allies themselves with Sicily an ...
... Conditions behind Athens’ walls are cramped and unsanitary Less than a year into the war, a plague strikes the city, killing 1/3 of the population Nevertheless the war drags on Athens makes enemies by attacking other islands and colonies (Sicily in particular) Sparta allies themselves with Sicily an ...
Ancient Greece (Sarazin)
... Greece. Phillip greatly respected Greek culture and wanted to preserve it. Phillip died, his son Alexander took over as king at the age of 20. Alexander dreamed of world conquest. He created the largest empire of the time. ...
... Greece. Phillip greatly respected Greek culture and wanted to preserve it. Phillip died, his son Alexander took over as king at the age of 20. Alexander dreamed of world conquest. He created the largest empire of the time. ...
Guided Notes - Alvinisd.net
... A woman’s _________________ was to have kids to, take care of their family, and keep house. Women had to have a _____________________ at all times when _______________________ __________________. Notes: ...
... A woman’s _________________ was to have kids to, take care of their family, and keep house. Women had to have a _____________________ at all times when _______________________ __________________. Notes: ...
Epikleros
An epikleros (ἐπίκληρος; plural epikleroi) was an heiress in ancient Athens and other ancient Greek city states, specifically a daughter of a man who had no male heirs. In Sparta, they were called patrouchoi (πατροῦχοι), as they were in Gortyn. Athenian women were not allowed to hold property in their own name; in order to keep her father's property in the family, an epikleros was required to marry her father's nearest male relative. Even if a woman was already married, evidence suggests that she was required to divorce her spouse to marry that relative. Spartan women were allowed to hold property in their own right, and so Spartan heiresses were subject to less restrictive rules. Evidence from other city-states is more fragmentary, mainly coming from the city-states of Gortyn and Rhegium.Plato wrote about epikleroi in his Laws, offering idealized laws to govern their marriages. In mythology and history, a number of Greek women appear to have been epikleroi, including Agariste of Sicyon and Agiatis, the widow of the Spartan king Agis IV. The status of epikleroi has often been used to explain the numbers of sons-in-law who inherited from their fathers-in-law in Greek mythology. The Third Sacred War originated in a dispute over epikleroi.