A | B |
frescoes | paintings made on wet plaster walls |
Minoans | an early Greek civilization located on the island of Crete, who's citizens many times became sailors and traders |
Mycenaeans | an early Greek civilization from the mainland of Greece who conquered the Minoans |
polis | a Greek independent city-state |
acropolis | a hill on which a city-state built its fort |
agora | a city-state's marketplace |
myths | traditional stories about gods, goddesses and heroes |
orales | special places where the Greek people believed the gods spoke through priests and priestesses |
hoplites | nonaristocratic soldiers or heavy infantry who carried long spears and who fought in closely spaced rows |
tyrant | people who illegally took power but had the support of the people |
popular government | the idea that people can govern themselves |
democracy | a government in which citizens take part |
Iliad | an epic that tells the legend of the Trojan War |
Odyssey | an epic that tells the legend of the what happened after the Trojan War |
Homer | a blind poet who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey |
Olympics Games | an important contest which showed strength and bravery held every four years in honor of the the Greek God Zeus |
aristocracies | Greek city-states that were controlled by nobles |
ephors | Spartan government officials that were elected by the assembly |
metrics | a group of people in Athenian society who were noncitizens because they were born outside Athens |
archons | nine elected rulers elected by the Athenian assembly |
Draco | an archon who is believed to have created Athen's first writte law code |
Solon | an archon who settled the disputes between creditors and debtors |
Peisistratus | a tyroant ruler who iimproved Athens economy |
Cleisthenes | a Athenian ruler who turned it into a democracy |
direct democracy | a form of government in which all citizens participated directly in making decisions. |
representative democracy | a form of democracy in which citizens elected representatives to govern for them |
import | a good or service bought from another country region |
export | a good or service sold to another country or region |
pedagogue | a male slave who cared for and accompanied a male child after the age of seven teaching him manners |
Sophists | Athenian men who opened schools for older boys |
ethics | deals with what is good and bad and moral duty |
rhetoric | the study of oratory, or public speaking, and debating |
Perian Wars | a series of wars between Greece and Persia |
Battle of Marathon | a battle won when the Perians invaded Greece |
Battle of Thermopylae | a battle in which the Spartans were badly out numbered and defeated by the Greek bying the other city-states tiime to prepare their forces |
Themistocles | a Greek leader who tricked the the Perian navy into attacking them and defeated them |
Pericles | an Athenian leader who was a great general, orator, and statesman |
Peloponnesian War | A war between Sparta and Athens |