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Sparta and Athens
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Sparta and Athens

Feb 24, 2016

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Sparta and Athens. Warm Up!!!. Before our study on the city-states of Sparta and Athens, please answer the following questions in complete sentences: How did mountains affect the development of Ancient Greece? Define the two governments ‘oligarchy’ and ‘direct democracy’. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Sparta and Athens

Sparta and Athens

Page 2: Sparta and Athens

Warm Up!!! Before our study on the city-states of

Sparta and Athens, please answer the following questions in complete sentences: How did mountains affect the

development of Ancient Greece? Define the two governments ‘oligarchy’

and ‘direct democracy’. Briefly, explain which government YOU

think is more efficient, oligarchy or direct democracy.

Page 3: Sparta and Athens

Did You Know?!? John Quincy Adams, sixth president of the United

States, loved to skinny dip in the Potomac River.

Rats multiply so quickly that in 18 months, two rats could have 1 million descendents.

An Astronaut can be up to 2 inches taller returning from space. The cartilage disks in the spine expand in the absence of gravity.

In Ancient Egypt, priests plucked every hair from their bodies, including their eyebrows and eyelashes.

Page 4: Sparta and Athens

Emergence of Democracy City states controlled primarily by monarchs

between 1000 and 700 BCE. Power then shifted to men who owned land

and had money - nobility/aristocracy. Greedy, not concerned with the welfare of

lower classes.

Page 5: Sparta and Athens

As wealth spread through increased trade and militaries emerged into more effective forces, power shifted to small groups of citizens in some (oligarchy - Sparta) and to the citizens in others (democracy - Athens).

Slaves played a major role in Greek city-states. Worked as builders, miners, craft producers,

farmers, and house servants.

Page 6: Sparta and Athens

Emergence of Democracy (cont.) Mainly became slaves

when captured during wars.

Among Greek city-states, Thebes and Corinth were largest, but Sparta and Athens were the most powerful.

Page 7: Sparta and Athens

Sparta Along with Athens, one of the strongest Greek city-states. Located in Southern Greece. Descended from the Dorians. The city was landlocked (no access to water), forced to

depend on a large slave population and agriculture for wealth.

Page 8: Sparta and Athens

Created a powerful military state Conquered the Messenians in 725 BCE

and forced them to become helots. Forced to live as peasants on their

land and give half of their crops to the Spartan government each year.

Page 9: Sparta and Athens

Spartan Government Spartan government consisted of two groups:

1. Assembly: All free adult males Elected officials and voted on major issues

2. Council of Elders: Proposed laws that the assembly voted on Included Ephors - Five individuals carried

out the laws and controlled education and served as judges, the most powerful people in Sparta

Two kings controlled the military.

Page 10: Sparta and Athens

Spartan Society Rigid social structure

with several groups: Citizens - those who

descended from original inhabitants Ruling families who

owned land. Noncitizens - free

individuals who worked in commerce and industry.

Page 11: Sparta and Athens

Helots - Unfree individuals who farmed the land for the state.

Slaves - household servants and those who worked for warriors

Had the most powerful military between 600 and 371 BCE.

Spartans had few individual liberties.

Page 12: Sparta and Athens

Spartan Society Men’s life centered

around military training. Boys left home at

the age of seven, did not leave the military barracks until the age of 30, and retired at the age of 60.

Goal was to create a dominate military.

Page 13: Sparta and Athens

Spartan Society, Cont’d This focus on the military led to a lack of arts

and discouraging individualism, the focus was on Sparta.

Women managed family estates while men served Sparta. Unlike other Greek city-states, women were

visible (but could not vote).

Page 14: Sparta and Athens

Did YOU Know?!?, Pt. 2 How does a shark find fish? It can hear their

hearts beating!

Pregnant women can smell up to 2,000 times better than when they aren’t.

Some toothpastes and deodorants contain the same chemicals found in antifreeze.

In 21 U.S. states, WALMART is the single largest employer!

Page 15: Sparta and Athens

Athens Located in eastern

Greece, north of Sparta.

Had access to the Aegean Sea and established wealth based on trade. Developed a

dominate navy to protect trade

Page 16: Sparta and Athens

Developed a limited democracy - rule by the people. Citizens played a role in decisions. Citizens = free adult males Women, slaves, foreigners were not

citizens and had few rights.

Page 17: Sparta and Athens

Athenian Society Slaves constituted 1/3 of

the population - worked in mines, farms, and as house servants.

Women managed the household (raised children, wove clothing, cooked, etc.).

Common clashes between aristocrats and common people led to a shift towards democracy.—Peasants demanded a

written code of laws.

Page 18: Sparta and Athens

On the Road to Democracy• Draco (a judge) wrote the

first code of laws around 622 BCE that favored the upper classes.

• In 594, Solon wrote a code that did the following:— Outlawed slave debt.— Allowed more citizens to

participate and debate policies in the Athenian assembly.

— Allowed citizens to bring charges against wrongdoers.

— Encouraged the export of grapes and olives, which started an overseas trade that was profitable.

— Limited the power of the nobility.

Page 19: Sparta and Athens

On the Road to Democracy (cont.) General Pisistratus

took over as a tyrant in 546 BCE by gaining the support of the poor: Provided money to

help peasants to buy farm equipment.

Taxed agriculture production.

Launched building program to employ the poor.

Page 20: Sparta and Athens

Cleisthenes continued reforms in 508 BCE, establishing the first true democracy-“the father of Athenian democracy.” Took away power from

the nobility in the assembly -more equality.

Allowed all citizens to submit laws for debate in the Athenian Assembly.

Created the Council of 500, which administered the laws and performed the everyday business of government.

Established a jury system for court trials.

Page 21: Sparta and Athens

Warm Up!! In complete sentences, please answer the

following questions: What are the two city-states that we covered

last class and what governments do they practice?

What are the Spartans most remembered for?

Explain the ideas of Solon. Who did he try to help?

Page 22: Sparta and Athens

Did YOU Know?!? Billy goats urinate on their own heads

to smell more attractive to females. Following Thanksgiving, Super Bowl

Sunday is the largest food consumption day in the United States.

There is a town in Texas called ‘Ding Dong’.

Page 23: Sparta and Athens

Major EventsPersian Wars First Persian War:

Around 500 BCE the Ionian Greek colonies rebelled against the Persians.

The Greek city-states united against the Persian King Darius.

In 492 BCE, Darius attacked Greece and was eventually defeated by Athens at the Battle of marathon in 490 BCE.

Page 24: Sparta and Athens

First Persian War – Maps and Events

Page 25: Sparta and Athens

Major Events (cont.) Second Persian War:

Darius’ successor, Xerxes, invaded Greece in 480 BCE with a superior army and navy.

300 Spartan soldiers led by King Leonidas I held off Persians at the Battle of Thermopylae.

Page 26: Sparta and Athens

Athenians destroyed the Persian navy at the Battle of Salamis.

Athenians and Spartans joined together to defeat the Persians and end the war at the Battle of Platea.

Page 27: Sparta and Athens

After the wars, fearing another Persian invasion, Athens created the DelianLeague - a defensive alliance of several Greek city-states. Did not include Sparta so they could lead it. Led to tensions between the two.

Page 28: Sparta and Athens

In response to the creation of the Delian League, Sparta created its own alliance - the Peloponnesian League.

Page 29: Sparta and Athens

Did YOU Know?!? The Average American eats at

McDonalds more than 1,800 times in their life.

The average person spends three years of his or her life on a toilet.

Banging your head against the wall uses 150 calories per hour.

Page 30: Sparta and Athens

Golden Age Athens during the

reign of Pericles - also known as the Age of Pericles between 461 and 429 BCE.

A period when drama, sculpture, poetry, philosophy, architecture, and science peaked in Athens.

Page 31: Sparta and Athens

Pericles had three goals for Athens: Strengthen Athenian democracy - expand the

number of officials and allow people to rule directly, not through representatives (direct democracy).

Hold and strengthen Athens’ empire - increased the size and strength of the navy.

Rebuild Athens after the Persian Wars and glorify it - had the Parthenon rebuilt.

Page 32: Sparta and Athens

Peloponnesian War A rivalry emerged between

Athens and Sparta. Sparta declared war on Athens

in 431 BCE as Athens continued to increase its power.

While Athens had the best navy, Sparta had the best army.

Athens attempted to avoid fighting the advancing Spartan armies on land by pulling people from the countryside behind the city walls.

Page 33: Sparta and Athens

Plague struck the city in 430 BCE killing between 1/3 and 2/3 of the population, including Pericles.

Forced to surrender in 404 BCE.

The wars left Greece devastated and all city-states seriously weakened. Athens lost its empire,

power, and wealth and people questioned the democratic government.

Greece was left vulnerable to attack from outsiders.

Slowed the advancement of Greek culture.