1 / 14

Sparta and Athens

Sparta and Athens. Sparta Beginnings. Descendents of the Dorians Located in Peloponnesus (peninsula of southern Greece Did not found overseas colonies Invaded/enslaved neighboring city-states True Spartans were outnumbered

tasya
Télécharger la présentation

Sparta and Athens

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sparta and Athens

  2. SpartaBeginnings • Descendents of the Dorians • Located in Peloponnesus (peninsula of southern Greece • Did not found overseas colonies • Invaded/enslaved neighboring city-states • True Spartans were outnumbered • Revolt of the Helots (slaves) lasted 30 years and turned Sparta into military society

  3. SpartaGovernment • Two kings ruled jointly with little power • Assembly: passed laws and made decisions concerning war and peace • Five overseers of administration • Council of Elders who proposed laws and acted as Supreme Court

  4. SpartaMilitary • Emphasis on military/athletic ability • Military school by age 7 • Soldier by age 20 • Retire from military by age 60 • Exceptional soldiers who defended Greece from outside invaders

  5. SpartaWomen • Schooled, sports • Could own property, move freely, express opinions • Could not take part in the government

  6. Sparta Results of Militarism • Suspicious of new ideas that might bring change • Lagged behind economically • Discouraged trade • Tried to remain self-reliant • Shunned philosophy, science, art

  7. Spartan Warriors

  8. AthensBeginnings • Located in Attica, peninsula of central Greece • Descended from the Mycenaeans • Named after Goddess Athena • 600’s BC -Farmers, merchants, artisans pushed for economic and political reform • In beginning citizenship was narrow but eventually included all free Athenian-born men, regardless of class or land ownership • Metics -free foreigners

  9. AthensEducation • Boys formal education, girls had none • Text: The Illiad and the Odyssy • School attended from age 7 - 18 • Two years of military service • Tutors for the wealthy

  10. Athenian LeadersDraco (621 BC) • First of four leaders to make change in government • Code of Laws -very severe - ‘Draconian’ -Laws written so aristocrats could not dictate what was legal or not

  11. Solon (594 BC) • Second leader poet/lawmaker • Improved economy -canceled land debt -freed debtors from prison -placed land limits -cash crops promoted trade -industry where fathers teach sons skills -extended citizenship to foreign artisans

  12. Peisistratus (546 BC) • Divided large land estates among landless • Extended citizenship to men who did not own land • Poor provided with loans • Public works for poor

  13. Cleisthenes (508 BC) • Instituted series of laws that established democracy (affected 20% -excluded women, slaves, foreign born) • Equal treatment under the law • Freedom of speech • Passed laws; appointed generals • Jury system (20 to 1001) -kept jurors from being influenced -majority vote -ostracism: exclusion/exile • Council of 500 -daily government business -any citizen (chosen by lot so not to favor rich)

More Related