Ancient Greece

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    The Beginning of Ancient Greece Ancient Greece began in 800 B.C and ends in 500 B.C. As a country located in Southeastern Europe. Greece advanced in art, poetry and technology. People begin to move to Greece in the 2000 BC they started to farm and settle down in villages. Then more people started to come to Greece.They started to make governments, set of laws Had armies, and collected tax .Also all Greek city state have a god or a goddess which all The citizens had great respect and…

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    geography of Ancient Greece impacted Greeks and their civilization in a variety of ways. Greece is a small country in Southern Europe shaped like an outstretched hand, with fingers for land that reach into the Mediterranean Sea. The peninsula of Ancient Greece is bordered on the east by the Aegean Sea, on the west by the Ionian Sea and the south by the Mediterranean Sea. A peninsula is a land that is bordered on three sides by water just like the mainland of Greece. The mainland of Greece is…

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    Social Status Affects Storytelling in Ancient Greece Around the world everyone is grouped into a certain social status which is mostly based on the amount of wealth you have. Social status has been around since Ancient Greek times and social status has been written in various pieces of literature.The purpose of this paper is to define social status and the types of social status in ancient Greece, and how social status affects storytelling from ancient Greece to stories of today. Social status…

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    The topic chosen for this discussion post was the religious aspect of Ancient Greece, the Pantheon of Gods. Ancient Greece, as in so many other ancient societies, was polytheistic and each god or goddess corresponded to some natural phenomena. There were twelve “main” gods each representing some element of society that the Greeks deemed important. The King of the gods was Zeus, who ruled over the sky, and controlled the weather. Next there was Poseidon, who ruled over the seas, and then there…

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    Pallas Athena was a Greek goddess who was born fully grown with full armor from the head of Zeus. She was Zeus’ favorite child and he trusted her with an aegis that held the head of Medusa and his devastating weapon: the thunderbolt. Athena has a temple dedicated to her in Athens called the Parthenon. She was described as “gray-eyed” and because of her chasteness, Athena was called “Maiden Parthenos”. Athena was known to be the protector of civilized life, goddess of the city, handicrafts and…

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    Citizens of Ancient History The relationships between the citizens and the state in classical Greece, the Roman Empire, and the Mesoamerican civilization has a lot of common traits that helped with development. The roles of the citizens in these different locations are essential to understanding because they represent how people survived and lived in these times. The power the state had over its citizens contributed to how the people in the communities lived. They have common traits and…

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    Ancient Greece is one of the most influential civilizations in the ancient world. They created practically everything that we use today, what we believe in today’s society, and what we do in our every day to day. The point of this paper is to summary the achievements of Greek Civilization and explains its rise from the local cultures of the Mycenaean Civilization through an imperial power of the Athenian Empire to a dominant cultural model of the Hellenic Civilization in the Ancient World.…

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    Most countries have an army to protect their countries values and citizens, but not all countries run their military the same way. Between ancient Greece and Rome, there were many similarities and differences between the two armies. Ancient Greece and Rome both had wars that contained similar and different tactics including: the weapons/objects brought to the fight, along with the formation of the soldiers fighting in battle, and how the outcome of the wars affected their civilization after the…

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    Was ancient Greece the epitome of European culture and all its glory, or a culmination of Ancient Egyptian cultural influence? In Martin Bernal’s article “The Roots of Ancient Greece,” he argues that ancient Greece was not a result of influences from Hellenes, but actually Egyptian culture that was a result of the interactions between “Greek statesmen, scientists and philosophers who had studied in Egypt.” Through these interactions ancient Greece adopted Egyptian and western Asian principles…

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    “The Ancient City” is a lengthy, very well thought out and researched book about the differences between Ancient Rome and Ancient Greece, however it was mostly on their similarities. It was written apparently in 1873, and was republished in 2001. The author, Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges, was a French historian who was born in 1830 and died in 1889, and was a history professor at the faculty letter of Strasbourg, where he later wrote the book. He also wrote two theses, of which he called “Quid…

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