athens and sparta

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Transcript athens and sparta

Athens vs. Sparta
GREEK VS GREEK
location
How would people describe your
country’s…
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Government
Education
Social Structure
Allies
Military Strength
Lifestyle
Cultural Achievement
Comparison Activity
• In groups you will complete a chart comparing different
features of Athens and Sparta
• In groups of 2 you will create a chart comparing:
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Location
Government
Education
Social Structure
Allies
Military Strength
Lifestyle
Cultural Achievement
Role of Women
Food
Population
Athens
Sparta
Population /
Location
Government
Social Structure
Allies/Military
Lifestyle/Values
Education
Role of Women
Cultural
Achievement
Food
Population
Athens
By 432 B.C. largest citystate
– 150,000 Athenians
– 50,000 non-citizens and
100,000 slaves
Sparta
• 8,000 adult males
• Over 100,000 slaves
and semi-enslaved
people
Government
Athens
• Direct democracy
• Elected officials
including 10 generals,
magistrates
• Council of 500:
administer decision
made by Assembly
• Assembly: all male
citizens; passed laws
• Trial by jury
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Sparta
Oligarchy: rule by few
Combination of different
forms of gov.
Two kings: led army
5 Overseers: ran day-today operations of Sparta;
had veto power
Senate: 28 men over 60;
elected for life; acted as
judges; proposed
legislation
Assembly: all Spartan
males
Social Structure
Athens
• Freemen: all male citizens
• Upper: Aristocrats
– Land owners
– Naval captains and military
leaders
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Middle: small farmers
Lower: craftsman
Metics: foreigners
Slaves: treated less harshly
than other Greek citystates
Sparta
• Spartiates: Land owning
military professionals
• Perioeci: foreigners who
were craftsman, artisans
• Helots: serfs (farmers) who
worked on the Spartiates
land
– Gave 1/2 of all their produce
to Spartiates / military
Social structure
• ATHENS
– FREEMEN
• ARISTOCRATS
• SMALL FARMERS
• URBAN CRAFTSMEN &
TRIREME ROWERS
– METICS – CAME
FROM OUTSIDE
ATHENS; NOT
ALLOWED TO OWN
LAND
– SLAVES – LOWEST
CLASS, NO RIGHTS,
PROPERTY OF
MASTERS
• SPARTA
– SPARTIATES –
MILITARY
PROFESSIONALS/
CITIZENS
– OUTSIDERS –
FREEMEN; ARTISANS,
CRAFTSMEN,
MERCHANTS
– HELOTS –
CONQUERED
PEOPLES; TREATED
LIKE SLAVES; OWED
50% OF PRODUCE TO
SPARTIATES
Allies/Military
Athens
• Delian League:
collection of city-states
that pledged loyalty to
Athens
– Athens taxed them for
protection
• Athens had very strong
navy
Sparta
• Peloponnesian League:
• Superior army on land
• Entire culture was
focused on the art of
war
MILITARY
• The Spartan warrior
was the most feared
soldier in Greece
• The Athenian trireme
allowed the navy to
protect the Athenian
way of life
Lifestyle / Values
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Athens
Democratic values
Participation in
government a civic
responsibility
Many religious holidays
Theatre / sporting
events
Trading empire brought
contact with many
other cultures
Sparta
• Militaristic values
• Citizens were not
permitted to own
luxuries
• Children were taught
to respect elderly,
women, and warriors
Education
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Athens
Schools taught reading,
writing and mathematics,
music, poetry, sport and
gymnastics
Ages 5-14 (wealthy went
until 18)
Academies were set up to
study philosophy, rhetoric,
and ethics
Girls were taught
homemaking skills
Sparta
• Boys: at age 7 they were
taken from their parents
and taught the art of war
– Had to steal to survive
– At age 20 they entered the
military
– At age 20 they were able to
marry
• Girls: at age 7 they were
reading and writing,
gymnastics, athletics and
survival skills
EDUCATION
• Athens
– No formal education for
girls
– Boys learned rhetoric,
mathematics, reading
writing, poetry, music,
gymnastics
• Sparta
– Military school at age 7
for boys
– Lived in barracks and
stole to survive
– Girls learned athletics
Role of Women
Athens
• Women were kept at
home
• Could not participate
in athletics
• Some women held
high posts at religious
ceremonies
Sparta
• Girls were educated
• Could participate in
sports
• Goal was to produce
healthy babies
• Married at 18
• Enjoyed a great deal of
freedom
• Could own and control
their property
• Expected to protect land
while husband was at
war
Women’s roles
• Athenian:
– sequestered in the
home
– not educated
– responsible for
handicrafts and textiles
• Spartan:
– Controlled home and
land when husbands
were fighting
– “Come back with your
shield, or on it.”
Food
Athens
• Enjoyed food from all
over the empire
• Trade brought goods
from all over the
Mediterranean region
Sparta
• Spartan Broth: pork,
blood, salt, vinegar
• Trained to dislike
luxuries and fancy food
• Men lived separate
from wives for much of
the time
Cultural Achievement
Athens
• Art
– Sculptures
– Pottery
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Architecture
Drama
Literature
Philosophy
Science
Medicine
Mathematics
Democracy
Sparta
• Military supremacy
• Simple lifestyle
• “ideal” community
Athenian legacy – Philosophy,
architecture, drama, art
Athens – birthplace of
democracy
• Adult male citizens
directly participated in
affairs of the state
• Trial by a jury selected
by lot
• Ostracism – people
could be banished
from Athens by vote
• Council of 500, the
Assembly
Discussion
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If you were a young teenage girl of the citizen
class, in which city-state would you rather live?
Why?
If you were a slave, in which would you rather
live? Why?
If you were a boy of the citizen class, in which
would you rather live? Why?
If you were a young soldier, in which would
you rather live? Why?
If you were a very wealthy person of the citizen
class, in which would you rather live? Why?