Geography
Persian and Peloponnesian Wars
Alexander the Great
Famous Dead Guys
Vocab
100

A piece of land nearly surrounded by water.

Peninsula

100

They were the two main city-states that fought each other in the Peloponesian War.

Athens and Sparta

100

He was the father of Alexander.

King Phillip II

100

He was the Greek messenger who raced from the site of Marathon to Athens, with the news of an important Greek victory over an invading army of Persians in 490 B.C.

Pheidippides

100

A person who searches for wisdom or enlightenment, "lovers of wisdom"

Philosopher

200

A narrow water passage.

Strait

200

This was the Spartans type of government. Ruled by a few.

Oligarchy

200

Alexander was from this country.

Macedonia

200

This philosopher was once a tutor for Alexander the Great.

Aristotle

200

A story meant to teach a lesson.

Fable

300

 It is theorized that the volcanic eruption from the island of Thera would create this and cripple the Minoan civilization.

Tsunami

300

An alliance of ancient Greek city-states formed in  478–77 BCE to defend the city-states against Persia.

Delian League

300

This was the name of Alexander's horse.

Bucephalus

300

He wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey.

Homer

300

A professional teacher in ancient Greece.

Sophist

400

This was the capital city of the Minoan culture.

Knossos

400

A Persian religion based on the belief of one god.

Zoroastrianism

400

The city where Alexander the Great died.

Babylon

400

An Athenian stonemason and philosopher, he questioned everything. All that we know of him came from his pupil Plato.

Socrates

400

What were the two types of Greek drama?

 Tragedy and Comedy

500

An individual Greek city-state.

Polis

500

Athens would win this naval battle over a much larger Persian fleet.

Strait of Salamis

500

The time period after Alexander's death  during witch Greek culture spread through the known world.

Hellenistic Era

500

Considered the greatest historian of the ancient world. He saw war and politics as the activities of humans, not gods.

Thucydides

500

A tall ancient Greek or Roman jar with two handles and a narrow neck.

Amphora

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