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Reading FocusWhat were the characteristics of Athenian democracy?How did the Greeks manage to win the Persian Wars?What advances were made in the golden age of Athens?What led to the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War?. Main IdeaThe Classical Age of ancient Greece was marked by great achievements, including the development of democracy, and by ferocious wars. .
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Main Idea / Reading Focus
Athenian Democracy
The Persian Wars
Map: Persian Wars
The Golden Age of Athens
Faces of History: Pericles
The Peloponnesian War
Map: Greece Before the Peloponnesian War
Quick Facts: Causes and Effects of the Peloponnesian War
4. Draco (not Malfoy) Around 620 BC, Draco, the lawgiver, wrote the first known written law of Ancient Greece. Draco was an Athenian lawgiver whose harsh legal code punished both trivial and serious crimes in Athens with death--hence the continued use of the word draconian to describe repressive legal measures. Today the word draconian means harsh or severe. Draco's laws were shockingly severe, so severe that they were said to have been written not in ink but in blood. Solon succeeded him in about 594 BC
6. Solon Solon's great contribution to the future good of Athens was his new code of laws. The first written code at Athens, that of Draco, was still in force.. Solon revised every statute except that on homicide and made Athenian law altogether more humane. His code, though supplemented and modified, remained the foundation of Athenian statute law until the end of the 5th century, and parts of it were embodied in the new codification made at that time.
8. Cleisthenes took over Athens after Peisistratus
Reforms set stage for Athenian democracy
Cleisthenes broke up power of noble families
Divided Athens into 10 tribes based on where people lived
Made tribes, not families, social groups, basis for elections
Each tribe elected 50 men to serve on Council of 500, proposed laws
Each tribe elected one general to lead Athenian army
10. Rhetoric, oratory, and debate Rhetoric, oratory, and debate were all part of the education of a Greek leader, who often had to address assemblies and gatherings of townsmen. In a world without pictures, language was the only instrument of influence and information
25. Trade brought great wealth to Athens.
Merchants from other parts of world moved to city, bringing own foods, customs
Athens very cosmopolitan as result
Grand festivals, public celebrations, events
Athletic games and city theaters
Athens was the heart of Greek culture
30. After victory, Sparta’s army tried to act as Greece’s dominant power
Sparta’s wealth, resources badly strained, power worn down
Spartans could not keep control of Greece
City-state of Thebes defeated Sparta, could not maintain control either
Struggle for power led to long cycle of warfare that left all Greece vulnerable to attack
340s BC, Macedonia, Greek-speaking kingdom to north, swept in, took control of all Greece