HIST 1421 April 17, 2018 Athens & Sparta As a part of Sparta’s community, you were either a slave, Spartan solider, or a mother. As a male spartan you trained for nearly your whole life to be a solider, and once you became a solider you would fight in battles for the rest of your life until you reached the age of sixty. Non-Spartans; also know as Periokoi, would fill “the roles of skilled craftsman and traders, occupations that the Spartan man themselves would reject.” (Web Text) If you wanted to…
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societies of Athens and Sparta The Athens, the capital and largest city in Greece, and Sparta were very significant in the ancient Greece because both were unique in their own way and extremely determined in being successful. Both Cities became very dominant and powerful in ancient Greece, although they each had their differences and similarities but they wanted to become authoritative cities. Between the two cities, Sparta had the strongest land dominance and the best military force. Sparta was known…
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in Athens and Sparta obtain the right to participate in public life and make decisions affecting the community? Who held public office? What rules governed the selection of public office holders? How were the two city-states similar in their governmental structures? How did they differ? Ancient Greece (ca 800-323 BCE) consisted of several hundred poleis or “city states”, acting in many ways as independent countries. The two largest, most powerful and influential Greek city states were Athens and…
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During the Hellenic experience, two Greek city-states were the most influential throughout Greece. Sparta and Athens, very similar yet very different proved to be the powerhouses of the time. Two heads seemed to be better than one for quite some time as Sparta and Athens worked together to win the Persian Wars for Greece. However, Greece soon began to be too small for both powers and they turned on each other in a civil war called the Peloponnesian War which would put an end to the Hellenic experience…
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Review: Foundations Test #2 2012 What defines a classical society? Similarities and differences between them? (article) What is the definitions AND significance of the following? Rome Etruscans Latins Republic Greeks- influence? Patrician Legions Plebeian Senate Consuls Centuriate Assembly Tribal Assembly Tribunes Veto- Who had it? Praetors- How many? Twelve Tables Citizenship- who had it? Women? Times of emergency, who ruled? “Real Power”…
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Cano Professor S. Wardinski History 1 January 12, 2015 Assignment 1- Greco Roman Documents Herodotus, Pericles, Xenophon, Plutarch and Polybius each provided us with an excerpt that helped us understand the ideas of the societies of Persia, Sparta, Athens, and Rome. They wrote these documents in an attempt to help us understand the history of each society’s government. These documents will give us an in depth of how each leader of each society believed about their government and how they compare…
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Adaptations, on the surface, seem like a way to better understand works of art, for example a dance routine or modern film. It gives the confused a chance to comprehend and the clear an opportunity to enhance what they already knew. Not only does this take place within generations, but adaptations can also give separate generations an attempt at connecting and understanding each other. In other words, someone from the 21st century can experience the perspective of an 18th century man/woman simply…
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Evan found the civilization in the turn of the 20th century • Evans excavations revealed a rich culture - The First Greek State: Mycenae • Civilization was excavated by Heinrich Schliemann • Mycenae civilization flourished between 1600 and 1100 B.C.E • Mycenaean’s were above all warrior people who prided themselves on their heroic deeds in battle • Supposed military adventures in homers books - Greeks in a Dark Age (1100-c.750 B.C.E) • 850- Greeks start to…
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Second Mid-term Study Guide 1. How the ancient Greek Polis develop? How did 2 of the greatest of these city-states, Athens and Sparta, shape the experience of the Greek world in its so-called classical age, and how was Greek culture spread throughout much of the Ancient Near East? The independent city sates that made up AG were small and often under threat. The polis The Greek Polis developed due to Ancient Greeks geographical conditions. They began surfacing in areas that could be defended (next…
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most punctual beginning stage of the New Kingdom around 1550 BCE to around 50 BCE. The main Egyptian name for the substance the Celts people in Iron Age and Medieval Europe who spoke Celtic vernaculars and had social similarities, in spite of the way that the connection between ethnic, semantic and social figures the Celtic world remains vague and sketchy. The Gilgamesh Epic A ditty from old Mesopotamia. Dating from the Third Dynasty of Ur (around 2100 BC), it is regularly seen as the soonest surviving…
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