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PersianWars4
PersianWars4

... Before this, Themistocles’ judgment had proved the best at an important moment; it was when the commonality of Athens had received great sums that came to them from the mines at Laurium, and they were disposed to share them out, with each citizen getting ten drachmas apiece. It was then that Themist ...
Babylonia and Assyria
Babylonia and Assyria

... Under the Chaldeans, Babylon rose again to even greater splendor. It became the New Babylonian Empire. King Nebuchadnezzar II rebuilt the city of Babylon, putting up huge walls for protection. Neb II also built a royal palace that was 350 feet tall. On top of the palace hung huge gardens. The “Hangi ...
MesoAmericans
MesoAmericans

... • Developed in Mesoamerica around 1000 BC • Lived in an area of thick forests making farming hard • Grew to more than 40 cities of 5,000 to 50,000 people each during the classic age from AD 250 to 900 • Spread throughout the Yucatan Peninsula • Traded goods to different areas of Mesoamerica ...
document
document

... The Assyrians • About 1,000 years after Hammurabi, a new empire arose in Mesopotamia. • It was founded by a people called the Assyrians, who lived in the north near the Tigris River. • Assyria had fertile valleys that attracted outside invaders. • To defend their land, the Assyrians built a large ar ...
Ancient Egypt - Waringstown Primary School
Ancient Egypt - Waringstown Primary School

... journey through the underworld. The fingers and toes are wrapped Individually. For a dead persons soul to survive and prosper in the next world the Egyptians believed that the persons body must be preserved and not allowed to rot away. More lien strips are Wrapped around the body at every layer, the ...
Bigbury Iron Age fort
Bigbury Iron Age fort

... chariots and cavalry of the Britons met them. Caesar's description of the battle at Bigbury is as follows: “We marched by night (from Deal) for about 12 miles before coming in sight of the enemy forces. They had moved with their cavalry and chariots down from the higher ground (Bigbury) to a river ( ...
Bigbury Camp - Walk Awhile
Bigbury Camp - Walk Awhile

... chariots and cavalry of the Britons met them. Caesar's description of the battle at Bigbury is as follows: “We marched by night (from Deal) for about 12 miles before coming in sight of the enemy forces. They had moved with their cavalry and chariots down from the higher ground (Bigbury) to a river ( ...
VikupitzColeRomanResearchPaper - 2010
VikupitzColeRomanResearchPaper - 2010

... Carthage. He then was elected governor of Germania in 7 AD. Varus then became a widely popular leader throughout Rome. He also became a famous ruler to historians because of all the political positions he held. “Everything we know about him derives from his connections with Augustus and his politica ...
introduction
introduction

...  Ptolemy – One of Alexander’s chief generals who after Alexander’s death became King of Egypt  Nearchus – Alexander’s admiral who accompanied the expedition and sailed around the coast of Persia  Onesicritus – A sailor on the expedition  Aristobulus – A Macedonian soldier and engineer who went w ...
341
341

... The Germanic: a selective chronology ? 3000 BC dispersal of the Indo-European linguistic community 1500-1000 BC establishment of the Germanic as a specific north-western branch of Indo-European c. 750 BC Archaeological evidence suggests that about 750 BC a relatively uniform Germanic people was loca ...
The first Roman expedition (55 BC) Text in red is assumed to be
The first Roman expedition (55 BC) Text in red is assumed to be

... yards towards shore. facing a barrage of fire from the British archers and the slingshots. Caesar recorded : The soldiers. oppressed with the great weight of their arms, ignorant of the ground, and with their hands encumbered, were obliged to jump from their ships to engage the enemy standing close ...
Decline of Rome
Decline of Rome

... that would eventually result in its downfall. These problems can be summarized in 3 main categories: ...
Map of Sea Battle of
Map of Sea Battle of

... In the early spring of 31 BC, Marcus Agrippa, Octavian’s boyhood friend and brilliant military commander, sailed his fleet southeast from the port of Brundisium, Italy, to the port of Methone on the southwest coast of Greece. Not long after he departed and the seas were calm, Octavian sailed his fle ...
ancient greece - Phillipsburg School District
ancient greece - Phillipsburg School District

... Julio-Claudians and Flavians ruled Rome. The Good Emperors followed and the empire grew tremendously Pax Romana • After Augustus, there is a 200 year peaceful period called the Pax Romana, or Roman Peace. Roman’s Early Road System • Rome was able to expand because of its well trained and organized a ...
Goal 2 - tsmithworld
Goal 2 - tsmithworld

... • Between 3000 and 2000 BC, there were several city states in Sumer and they were almost always at war with each other. • In 2350 BC a conqueror names Sargon defeated the city state states of Sumer. • By taking control of all the city-states, Sargon had created the worlds first empire. • An Empire i ...
EARLY CIVILIZATIONS, 8000 BC * 500 BC (TEST REVIEW)
EARLY CIVILIZATIONS, 8000 BC * 500 BC (TEST REVIEW)

... EARLY CIVILIZATION 8000 BC – 500 BC THE CAUSE-EFFECT IN RELATIONSHIP TO THE NEOLITHIC AGE WAS THE CLIMATE CHANGE , WHICH LED TO LONGER GROWING SEASON FOR FARMING. BUDDHISM AND HINDUISM ARE ALIKE IN A WAY THEY BOTH BEGAN IN THE SAME MODERN DAY COUNTRY. THE AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION OF THE NEOLITHIC AG ...
Introduction to Greek and Roman History
Introduction to Greek and Roman History

... Listing the names of 31 city states set up after the battle Platea, ...
Chronology
Chronology

... cast copper appear with the early tribes and civilizations of Egypt and Mesopotamia. c.3500 BC Early sundials are employed by the Egyptians, who use some sort of pillar to cast a shadow but do not use it with a dial that has markings. c.3500 BC The Egyptian number system reaches the point where larg ...
ancient greece - Phillipsburg School District
ancient greece - Phillipsburg School District

... • The land is mountainous and the civilization does not grow around a river. Archaic Greece: 1650 – 700 BC  Centered around ...
Key Events - MsGreensidesclass
Key Events - MsGreensidesclass

... Although during Philip’s time Athens preached against ‘uncivilised’ Macedonia and evil nature of Philip, and convinced other Greek states to be allies against Macedonia: * Athens & allies are defeated at Battle of Chaeroneia in 338BC *Philip then able to unite and befriend Greeks to form an allied a ...
From 500 BC to 1 AD, northern Africa was one of the
From 500 BC to 1 AD, northern Africa was one of the

... grown to be much more different from Egypt than it had been before. For one thing, queens were just as likely to be rulers as kings. In the north, two great cultures thrived during this time. Although Egypt was no longer independent, its basic culture continued, blending with those of its conquerors ...
Document 1 Hammurabi was a king of the Babylonian Empire
Document 1 Hammurabi was a king of the Babylonian Empire

... __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ ________________________________ ...
HFM 035 - Michael Rank
HFM 035 - Michael Rank

... Carthage’s side of the Second Punic War. The reason why this is such an extremely hard military maneuver to execute is that the double pincher requires extreme discipline of the cavalry forces not to retreat in fear since they’re facing down an infantry that’s oftentimes larger than them. Also, it’s ...
The 400 Silent Years
The 400 Silent Years

... Greeks should destroy the empire of the Persians, he supposed that himself was the person intended; and he was then glad. (Antiquities 11:8:5). ...
Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great

... Battle of Issus. However, he still doesn’t take Alexander seriously, and even brings his family to the battle site. • Darius loses the battle and flees without his family. Alexander captures them as prisoners of war, but treats them very well. ...
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Ancient warfare

Ancient warfare is war as conducted from the beginnings of recorded history to the end of the ancient period. In Europe and the Near East, the end of antiquity is often equated with the Fall of Rome in 476, the wars of the Eastern Roman Empire on its Southwestern Asian and North African borders, and the beginnings of the Muslim conquests in the 7th century. In China, it can also be seen as ending with the growing role of mounted warriors needed to counter the ever-growing threat from the north in the 5th century and the beginning of the Tang Dynasty in 618. In India, the ancient period ends with the decline of the Gupta Empire (6th century) and the beginning of the Muslim conquests there from the 8th century. In Japan, the ancient period can be taken to end with the rise of feudalism in the Kamakura period in the 12-13th century.The difference between prehistoric and ancient warfare is less one of technology than of organization. The development of first city-states, and then empires, allowed warfare to change dramatically. Beginning in Mesopotamia, states produced sufficient agricultural surplus so that full-time ruling elites and military commanders could emerge. While the bulk of military forces were still farmers, the society could support having them campaigning rather than working the land for a portion of each year. Thus, organized armies developed for the first time.These new armies could help states grow in size and became increasingly centralized. Early ancient armies continued to primarily use bows and spears, the same weapons that had been developed in prehistoric times for hunting. Early armies in Egypt and China followed a similar pattern of using massed infantry armed with bows and spears.Infantry were at this time the dominant form of war, partially because the camel saddle and the stirrup were not yet invented. This infantry would be divided into ranged and shock, with shock infantry either charging to cause penetration of the enemy line or holding their own. These forces would ideally be combined, thus presenting your opponent with a dilemma: group your forces and leave them vulnerable to ranged, or spread them out and make them vulnerable to shock. This balance would eventually change as technology allowed for chariots, cavalry, and artillery to play an active role on the field. Cavalry would, however, not play any major role until the invention of the stirrup (for shock and heavy cavalry, such as knights) or thumb ring (for horse archers).No clear line can be drawn between ancient and medieval warfare. The characteristic properties of medieval warfare, notably heavy cavalry and siege engines such as the trebuchet were first introduced in Late Antiquity. The main division within the ancient period is rather at the beginning Iron Age with the introduction of cavalry (resulting in the decline of chariot warfare), of naval warfare (Sea Peoples), and the development of an industry based on ferrous metallurgy which allowed for the mass production of metal weapons and thus the equipment of large standing armies.The first military power to profit from these innovations was the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which achieved a hitherto unseen extent of centralized control, the first ""world power"" to extend over the entire Fertile Crescent (Mesopotamia, the Levant and Egypt).
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