The Rise of Athens and the Greco-Persian Wars
Across
- 3. (490 BCE) the first battle where the Greeks defeated the Persians / demonstrated the effectiveness of the Greek hoplite army / 26.2 mile race named after Pheidippides - the day-long runner who ran from Athens to Sparta (150 miles) in two days
- 5. (499-493 BCE) marked the beginning of the Greco-Persian Wars / Greek city-states along the western coast of Anatolia - supported by troops from Athens, captured and burnt Sardis - the western capital of the Persian Empire / these city-states were reconquered by the Persians
- 7. "triple-rower" or three-banked warship / highly specialist - lightweight, rapid, and agile / about 120 feet long and 15 feet wide / main weapon was a heavy bronze battering ram designed to piece an enemy ship's hull
- 10. (524-460 BCE) an Athenian politician and general / responsible for building the first large Athenian navy, which was made up of mostly triremes - built in response to the threat of a Persian invasion / "Father of Naval Warfare" - used trickery and deception to lure the Persians into the narrow straits at Salamis
- 11. city-state in Ancient Greece that probably originated from the natural divisions of the country by mountains and the sea
- 12. (630-560 BCE) described by Aristotle as the “the first people’s champion” / made all citizens (free men) equal before the law and reduced the influence of the landed aristocracy / establishment of his jury courts laid the foundations for Athenian democracy
- 13. Dikasteria or popular courts / the ________ branch of government that Aristotle argued "contributed the most to the strength of democracy" because the jury had almost unlimited power
- 14. body of water btw. the Greek mainland and Anatolia / contains hundreds of islands and became a critical maritime zone for trade, naval warfare, and colonization during the Classical Age
Down
- 1. (570-508 BCE) “father of Athenian democracy” / ousted the tyrant Hippias (w/ Sparta’s help) and passed a series of reforms designed to increase the power of the Athenian citizens’ assembly (the ekklesia) over the aristocracy
- 2. (appointed in 622 or 621 BCE) replaced the system of oral law and blood feud with the Draconian constitution, a famously harsh written code to be enforced by a court of law
- 4. (480 BCE) naval battle fought between an alliance of Greek city-states under Themistocles and the Achaemenid Empire under King Xerxes / Themistocles pointed out that the entire strategy for a Greek victory was predicated on fighting the battle in the Salamis Straits - a particularly narrow body of water - where the massed Persian ships had difficulty maneuvering
- 6. (480 BCE) where the 300 Spartans and their allies fought to the death in an effort to prevent the Persians from entering central Greece / King Leonidas of Sparta told his men, "Have a quick breakfast, for you will be eating dinner in the underworld tonight, in Hades."
- 8. Ekklesia or citizens' assembly / the ________ or law-making branch of government
- 9. Boule or Council of Five Hundred / the ________ branch of government that met every day and did most of the hands-on work of governance