Geography
Bronze Age Greece
Sparta
Athens
Miscellaneous
100

_______________ explains why food stability was a concern in Bronze Age Greece? 

1. Rocky and not very fertile soil 

OR 

2. Mountainous terrain without major rivers

100

(1) _____________ wrote the Theogony. (2) ______________ wrote the Iliad and Odyssey

(1) Who is Hesiod? (2) Who is Homer? 

100

Sparta conquered its neighbors and turned them into slaves called ____________. 

Who are helots? 

100

Athens, unlike Sparta, did not form a state devoted to the military. It created a state devoted to _______________. 

What is democracy? 

100

City-states were the basic political institutional units in ancient Greece. Untranslated they are called ______________. 

What are poleis (plural)? polis (singular)

200

The Greeks called their land ____________. They still do. 

Where is Hellas? 

200

According to our textbook, the characters in the Iliad and Odyssey display ___________, human excellence or living up to one's fullest potential. 

What is arete

200

Sparta's famous lawgiver and reformer was named ___________________. Name at least two of his reforms. 

Who was Lycurgus? 

-Making all citizens legally equal

-The formation of the gerousia (senate)

-The redistribution of land

-Eating in common mess halls

(+100) Which did Plutarch say was most offensive to rich Spartans? 

200

A perpetual problem that plagued Athens was conflict between rich landowners and the landless poor. How did the ancient lawgiver Solon attempt to fix this problem? 

Answers may vary. 

1. Debt forgiveness

2. Outlawing debt slavery

3. Recalling exiles 

4. Non-landowners allowed in assembly

200

The marketplace in a Greek city was called _____________. 

The agora

300

How did geography lead to political fragmentation into city states in ancient Greece? 

Answers may vary. 

300

Why did Minoan and Mycenaean civilization fall apart and usher in the so-called "Dark Age" of ancient Greece? 

Answers may vary. Here are a few theories: 

1. Invasions by outsiders and migration. 

2. Changes in warfare and weaponry (iron weapons made foot soldiers just as important as nobles and kings fighting from chariots!)

3. Natural disasters and famine

300

The Spartan homeland could be found in a region known as ____________. 

A. Messenia

B. Arcadia

C. Attica

D. Laconia

Where is Laconia? 

300

The reforms of Solon of Athens did not satisfy everyone. Shortly after they were implemented, Athenians saw the rise of _______________, a tyrant who oversaw a building campaign and helped the city prosper. Strangely, his tyranny helped to weaken traditional Athenian elites and helped the city become more democratic. 

Who is Pisistratus? 

300

The elevated point in a Greek town was called ______________. On it you could find temples, altars, public monuments, and dedications to the gods. 

The acropolis

400
Beyond political fragmentation, another effect of Greece's unique geography was _______________. 
What is the rise of maritime commerce, trade, and (perhaps) colonization? 
400

Which of these was not an important city associated with Mycenaean civilization? 

A. Knossos

B. Thebes

C. Athens

D. Mycenae

What is "A"? 
400

Name at least three Spartan ideals, as laid out in Plutarch's Life of Lycurgus.

Enumerated

1. free-mindedness

2. self-sufficiency

3. self-control

Also

4. equality

5. fraternity

6. simplicity

7. leisure

400

Soon after the rise of Cleisthenes in 508 B.C.E., Athens became even more democratic because they formed demes and tribes and chose archons by lot. In this era, legislation was in the hands of two groups: the ____________ and the _____________. The former proposed laws and the latter had the final word in their passage. 

Council of 500 (boule) and assembly (ekklesia)

400
Armed citizens called __________ were the infantry who defended Greek city-states in warfare. 

Who are hoplites? 

500

If there was one region in Greece capable of supporting a large population with agriculture, it was __________________. 

Where is Boeotia and/or Euboea? (The central plains of Greece). 

500

A famous bull named the _______________ lived beneath the palace of King _________ and came to embody ___________ civilization. 

Minotaur

Minos 

Minoan

----

Gotcha! ;-) 

500

Spartan "Grab Bag" Question

1. The Spartans judged competitions in assemblies by ________________. (+200)

2. True or false? The Spartans were undisturbed by the presence of outsiders and welcomed immigrants to their lands.  (+200)

3. The Spartan secret service was called ___________. They would apparently cut the throats of helots who were out past curfew and kill the strongest helots in the fields. 

1. Acclamation (the loudness of the assembly's shout determined the outcome) 

2. False

3. The krypteia 

500
How did Solon rise to prominence in Athens? How did he earn the trust of both rich and poor people? 

An aristocrat by birth, he was also a poet. He read his poems in the Athenian agora for all to hear. His poems condemned the rich for their greed and dishonesty. They did so with good sense and sincerity rather than extremism. The nobles made him archon around 594 B.C.E. 

500

______________ are the three constitutions in ancient Greece. 

(+100) Can you name a synonym for each that is used depending on your political preferences? 

1. Tyranny 2. Oligarchy 3. Democracy 


(Kingship, Aristocracy, Mob Rule!) 

M
e
n
u