Was ancient Athens truly democratic ? To say about how Athens was more of a democratic civilization, it was not because of how most things that certain people are allowed to do in the city it was because there was not much laws and our order between one another. but between the democracy and the city of Athens it was not so secure about their laws or order because of how most people were citizens at some weren’t because of how they were born in the city with their parent but their parents…
(Mathisen 2012, 167). Two of the most powerful city states in Greece during the time of the Classical Age (500-387 BCE) were Spartans and Athenians, conflicting with one another during their highest point in their own civilizations. Neither Sparta nor Athens were considered the ideal polis because both city states had their own characteristics that made their political structures completely different from each other. While Spartans valued its soldiers (basing its civilization specifically on its…
be better off as a citizen of Athens than as a citizen of Sparta. During this time, Athens was swimming in cash. Where did they get all this money from? Athens got all of it from the Delian League. At first the league was created so that if Persia chose to ever attack again Greece would be ready. City-states apart of the Delian League would have to give contributions. This would typically be either money, men, or ships. The dilean seemed like a great idea until Athens took it over. They did this…
“ Athens and Sparta ” by Mr. Duckworth states,” Where they differed was that while Spartans had militaristic values, Athenians were democratic.” This means that Sparta was more focused on their military. At the age of seven boys would go through military school. In Athens, though, they wanted to expand their infrastructure. Athens would have been a better place to live because men told women what to do, Athenian women had chores, and in Athens they used Limited Democracy. First, family…
After heroic roles in the defeat of the Persians (480-479 B.C.), for the next half-century, Athens and Sparta assumed preeminence among the city-states, and their rivalry slowly led to the long-expected showdown. Thucydides, a contemporary historian, believed that the war broke out because of Spartan fear of the rising power of Athens, whose empire and capital increasingly isolated less imaginative and less adventurous rivals. Both were unusually powerful, atypical–and antithetical–Greek states…
Not only did it have value itself but it produced grain, at the time there was no coin so grain was used for trade. (Trumbach) There were four basic classes of people at the time. The aristocrats who owned a lot of fertile land. Second is the “rich peasants” who owned smaller amounts of land but the land was also of poor yield, the mostly lived on the hill. Though they are richer than the other peasants they were still poor. Third are the peasants who worked the land owned by the aristocrats and…
Sparta and Athens have many differences, but Sparta has one of the best military powers of that time. Some people may think that Athens was a better place to live because their type of government was a direct democracy but, Sparta knew how to maneuver and win many more battles. Sparta would be a better place to settle down and live in because they provided what their army needed and provided it whenever needed, women could play sports and have many more opportunities than women in Athens, and…
city-states, of which includes Sparta and Athens. Athens and Sparta were two of the most predominant, conspicuous, and celebrated city-states in Ancient Greece. Although both city-states allowed the government to be elected by the people, Sparta was ruled by two kings while Athens government served to be the first ever democracy. Inside of these two city-states there was much resemblance and contrasts whether it was socially, politically, or economically. Sparta and Athens, aside from the way…
about the causes of the war and he looks at previous wars such as the Trojan War and correlates their abilities and impact with the war between Athens and Sparta. Thucydides believed that the Trojan War lasted so long because of the flaws and weaknesses in the Greek politics and military. Thucydides writes about the rivalry between the two cities of Athens and Sparta, two great states of Hellas, which were, then at the peaks of their power. Thucydides…
cultural hubs and variations between government structures and organizations. Two of the most heavily influential societies during the era of Ancient Greece was Sparta and Athens. In the following paragraphs, the governments and organizational structures of these two very different cities will be analyzed. First, Sparta and Athens had different ways of dealing with the right to participate in public life, especially regarding government, as well as who held public office. In Sparta, the…