Across
- 3. Author of the Iliad and Odyssey.
- 6. Greek historian.
- 10. A class of citizens holding exceptional privilege and rank, especially nobility.
- 12. Ancient city of Greece famous for strict discipline & training of soldiers.
- 13. Athenian statesman, lawmaker, and poet.
- 15. Greek philosopher: pupil of Plato; tutor of Alexander the Great.
- 17. An ancient Greek city-state.
- 18. Greek philosopher, mathematician, and religious reformer.
- 19. Greek geometrician and educator at Alexandria.
- 21. A seaport in N Egypt, in the Nile delta: founded in 332 b.c. by Alexander the Great; an ancient center of learning.
- 22. A Greek historian.
- 23. Greek mathematician, physicist, and inventor: discovered the principles of specific gravity and of the lever.
- 24. Long poetic composition centered around a hero.
- 25. A traditional or legendary story centered around a hero, deity or demigod.
- 28. Athenian philosopher.
- 29. A city and the capitol of ancient Greece.
Down
- 1. Hellenistic mathematician, astronomer, and geographer in Alexandria.
- 2. Greek sculptor.
- 3. The lowest class of ancient Laconia. Serfs who belonged to the state.
- 4. A mountain pass in eastern Greece, site of Spartan defeat.
- 5. Greek mathematician and astronomer at Alexandria.
- 7. Greek philosopher.
- 8. Military formation of foot soldiers using spears.
- 9. Greek physician, the "Father of Medicine".
- 11. A form of government in which all power is vested in a few persons or in a dominant class.
- 14. A heavily armed foot soldier of ancient Greece.
- 16. Sovereignty held by one person.
- 20. The citadel of Athens and site of the Parthenon.
- 26. A ruler who uses power oppressively or unjustly.
- 27. Wars A series of conflicts between the Achaemenid Empire and Greek city-states that started in 499 BC and lasted until 449 BC.