Chapter 13, Section 1 Notes/Vocabulary

Download Report

Transcript Chapter 13, Section 1 Notes/Vocabulary

Chapter 13,
Section 1
Notes/Vocabulary
1. What ended
Greece’s golden
age, making it
vulnerable to
invaders?
1.What ended
Greece’s golden age,
making it vulnerable
to invaders?
War between
Athens and Sparta
2. Pericles was an
Athenian
____________
.
2. Pericles was an
Athenian
leader.
3. ______________
held most power in
the Athenian
democracy.
3. Free men held
most power in
the Athenian
democracy.
4.
____________
_ conquered
Greece in the
330s BC.
4. Alexander the Great
conquered Greece in
the 330s BC.
5. One characteristic
of many examples of
Greek statues is
that they are
____________.
5. One characteristic
of many examples of
Greek statues is
that they are
lifelike.
6. The __________
were one of the
first people to use
voting to make major
decisions.
6. The Greeks were
one of the first
people to use voting
to make major
decisions.
7. The temple in
Athens which was
also a symbol of the
city was the
___________.
7. The temple in
Athens which was
also a symbol of the
city was the
Parthenon.
8. Socrates, Plato, and
__________ were
influential Greek
________.
8. Socrates, Plato, and
Aristotle were
influential Greek
philosophers.
9. The ancient Greeks
were the first
people to write and
perform _______.
9. The ancient Greeks
were the first
people to write and
perform plays.
10. ________ stopped
his conquest because
his troops
_______________
_____________.
10. Alexander stopped
his conquest because
his troops refused
to keep fighting.
11.Greece’s____
included
achievements in
politics, architecture,
art, science,
philosophy, and
literature.
11.Greece’s golden age
included
achievements in
politics, architecture,
art, science,
philosophy, and
literature.
12. A ___________ is
a political unit made
up of a city and all
the surrounding lands.
12. A city-state is a
political unit made up
of a city and all the
surrounding lands.
13. In the middle of
most Greek citystates was an
___________, or
fortress on a hill.
13. In the middle of
most Greek citystates was an
acropolis, or fortress
on a hill.