Warring City-States - Loudoun County Public Schools
... Control of the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas and the economic advantages that go along with controlling the seas. ...
... Control of the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas and the economic advantages that go along with controlling the seas. ...
2.6 Persian Wars
... in 483 BC he persuaded the Athenians to build a fleet of 200 triremes; these would prove crucial in the forthcoming conflict with Persia. ...
... in 483 BC he persuaded the Athenians to build a fleet of 200 triremes; these would prove crucial in the forthcoming conflict with Persia. ...
Persian War
... traitor telling of a secret passage way through the mountains that allowed the Persian to enclose the army. All of the Spartan warriors were killed. After the hard fought battle with the Spartans, Xerxes pushed on to Athens. It was decided that the best way to defend the city was by sea because of y ...
... traitor telling of a secret passage way through the mountains that allowed the Persian to enclose the army. All of the Spartan warriors were killed. After the hard fought battle with the Spartans, Xerxes pushed on to Athens. It was decided that the best way to defend the city was by sea because of y ...
Ancient Greece - The Lesson Builder
... into a oligarchy - Spartan leaders made decisions for the polis at meetings held in the agora Spartans had many more slaves than other Greek cities and slaves did the majority of the field work ...
... into a oligarchy - Spartan leaders made decisions for the polis at meetings held in the agora Spartans had many more slaves than other Greek cities and slaves did the majority of the field work ...
Persian Wars PPT
... vowed revenge. • Brought between 100,000-300,000 troops through a narrow mountain pass. ...
... vowed revenge. • Brought between 100,000-300,000 troops through a narrow mountain pass. ...
Chapter 9 - TeacherWeb
... city-state. After the defeat of the Persians, the leaders of Athens began unwisely. They formed an alliance, an agreement to work together, called a Delian League. Athens forced some city-states to join the alliance. It used the Leagues funds to put up public buildings in Athens. Athenian generals b ...
... city-state. After the defeat of the Persians, the leaders of Athens began unwisely. They formed an alliance, an agreement to work together, called a Delian League. Athens forced some city-states to join the alliance. It used the Leagues funds to put up public buildings in Athens. Athenian generals b ...
File - Mrs. RODAS` World History Class
... (present day Turkey). In 490 B.C. 25,000 Persians under their king Darius were defeated by 10,000 Persians at the Battle of Marathon. Persians lost 6000 while the Athenians lost fewer than ...
... (present day Turkey). In 490 B.C. 25,000 Persians under their king Darius were defeated by 10,000 Persians at the Battle of Marathon. Persians lost 6000 while the Athenians lost fewer than ...
Ancient Greece - Harrison High School
... If a child was born sickly or deformed, they were left in hills to die ...
... If a child was born sickly or deformed, they were left in hills to die ...
1st Persian War - Culture, Conflict and Civilization
... • The Persian’s expand their empire and conquer Ionia. • They charge high taxes and impose strict and brutal rulers. • Some Greek city states got together to help the Ionians revolt against the Persian Empire. • The revolt ultimately failed and made the Persians want to conquer Athens (instigator). ...
... • The Persian’s expand their empire and conquer Ionia. • They charge high taxes and impose strict and brutal rulers. • Some Greek city states got together to help the Ionians revolt against the Persian Empire. • The revolt ultimately failed and made the Persians want to conquer Athens (instigator). ...
The Ancient Greeks
... than their social standing More Athenians than ever before were involved ...
... than their social standing More Athenians than ever before were involved ...
Heather Balogh, 8th - Crestwood Local Schools
... destroyed Attica's fields, but the Athenians sat behind their walls. Because of jam-packed quarters, however, a plague broke out which killed many people. Athens surrendered to Sparta in 404 BC. Persian Wars - from 546 BC through 479 BC Greece was at war with Persia. Darius sent an army towards Gree ...
... destroyed Attica's fields, but the Athenians sat behind their walls. Because of jam-packed quarters, however, a plague broke out which killed many people. Athens surrendered to Sparta in 404 BC. Persian Wars - from 546 BC through 479 BC Greece was at war with Persia. Darius sent an army towards Gree ...
File
... unable to respond immediately to his defeat because of rebellions on the other end of his empire. While he was quelling these, he was killed in battle. King Xerxes, son of Darius, ascended to the throne of Persia after his father's death in 486 BC. After securing his throne, Xerxes began to muster f ...
... unable to respond immediately to his defeat because of rebellions on the other end of his empire. While he was quelling these, he was killed in battle. King Xerxes, son of Darius, ascended to the throne of Persia after his father's death in 486 BC. After securing his throne, Xerxes began to muster f ...
The Greeks at War!
... He paid salaries to men who held public office. This enabled the poor to serve in the government. The assembly met several times a month and needed at least 6,000 members present to take a vote. This was direct democracy, a large number of citizens took part in the day to day affairs of the governme ...
... He paid salaries to men who held public office. This enabled the poor to serve in the government. The assembly met several times a month and needed at least 6,000 members present to take a vote. This was direct democracy, a large number of citizens took part in the day to day affairs of the governme ...
SWC1_s6
... > Reconstruction of the city walls; > Strategos Cimon leads to further victories against Persians at sea; > Athens coerces the subject poleis into the alliance; by force; exploitation; slave society; > Social unrest: more power to the thetes (people); > Pericles, 460, aristocrat & populist, enfranch ...
... > Reconstruction of the city walls; > Strategos Cimon leads to further victories against Persians at sea; > Athens coerces the subject poleis into the alliance; by force; exploitation; slave society; > Social unrest: more power to the thetes (people); > Pericles, 460, aristocrat & populist, enfranch ...
- A Moment in Time | with Dan Roberts
... sent a large invasion force with Athens as its major target. After several preliminary skirmishes in the outer islands of the Aegean Sea, the Persians landed at the Bay of Marathon, twenty miles from Athens and began staging for the final assault. In the face of this threat the Athenian military lea ...
... sent a large invasion force with Athens as its major target. After several preliminary skirmishes in the outer islands of the Aegean Sea, the Persians landed at the Bay of Marathon, twenty miles from Athens and began staging for the final assault. In the face of this threat the Athenian military lea ...
Early Greece - Birmingham City Schools
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
Chapter 5, Early Greece
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
Chapter 5, Early Greece
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
Chapter 5, Early Greece
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
Ancient Greece
... – The city-states of Greece united against the Persians during the Persian Wars – The Greek victory in the war and the leadership of Pericles contributed to a golden age in Athens ...
... – The city-states of Greece united against the Persians during the Persian Wars – The Greek victory in the war and the leadership of Pericles contributed to a golden age in Athens ...
ancient greece - Bibb County Schools
... Military – being a military society, Sparta discouraged all artistic and individual expression. Men from age 7 – 30 live in the barracks as soldiers. At 30, they were free to move out and marry. Military service was required until 60 yrs. old. Women received some training, and were given many more f ...
... Military – being a military society, Sparta discouraged all artistic and individual expression. Men from age 7 – 30 live in the barracks as soldiers. At 30, they were free to move out and marry. Military service was required until 60 yrs. old. Women received some training, and were given many more f ...
Early Greece
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
... After 1628 BC, much of the Minoan Civilization is reduced to ruins. On the island of Thera/Santorini, a volcano erupted causing world wide upheaval. According to scientists, the volcano ranked at a VEI-6 or 7. • The destruction at Akrotiri may be the origins of Atlantis. • There also may be a connec ...
Persian Wars
... Darius, king of the Persians, came to power and continued to extend the Persian Empire across Asia Minor. The Persians had already taken control of most Greek colonies, and Darius would conquer Ionia (ī-ō'nē-ə), a Greek sister state. ...
... Darius, king of the Persians, came to power and continued to extend the Persian Empire across Asia Minor. The Persians had already taken control of most Greek colonies, and Darius would conquer Ionia (ī-ō'nē-ə), a Greek sister state. ...
Corinthian War
The Corinthian War was an ancient Greek conflict lasting from 395 BC until 387 BC, pitting Sparta against a coalition of four allied states, Thebes, Athens, Corinth, and Argos, who were initially backed by Persia. The immediate cause of the war was a local conflict in northwest Greece in which both Thebes and Sparta intervened. The deeper cause was hostility towards Sparta provoked by that city's ""expansionism in Asia Minor, central and northern Greece and even the west"".The war was fought on two fronts, on land near Corinth (hence the name) and Thebes and at sea in the Aegean. On land, the Spartans achieved several early successes in major battles, but were unable to capitalize on their advantage, and the fighting soon became stalemated. At sea, the Spartan fleet was decisively defeated by a Persian fleet early in the war, an event that effectively ended Sparta's attempts to become a naval power. Taking advantage of this fact, Athens launched several naval campaigns in the later years of the war, recapturing a number of islands that had been part of the original Athenian Empire during the 5th century BC.Alarmed by these Athenian successes, the Persians stopped backing the allies and began supporting Sparta. This defection forced the allies to seek peace. The Peace of Antalcidas, commonly known as the King's Peace, was signed in 387 BC, ending the war. This treaty declared that Persia would control all of Ionia, and that all other Greek cities would be independent. Sparta was to be the guardian of the peace, with the power to enforce its clauses. The effects of the war, therefore, were to establish Persia's ability to interfere successfully in Greek politics and to affirm Sparta's hegemonic position in the Greek political system.