This is the name of the ruler of the gods in Greek mythology.
Answer: Who is Zeus?
These are long poems that tell stories of adventures.
Epics Poems
This is the term for a Greek city-state
Polis
Name a way in which Athens and Sparta were similar.
Both were Greek city-states
Answer: Myth
This is the name of the blind man who composed the most famous Greek epics.
Homer
This type of government is ruled by a king or queen.
Monarchy
This was the main rival of Sparta.
Athens
Name the three seas that played a major role in the life of ancient Greece.
Mediterranean, Ionian, and Aegean Seas
This is the name of the mountain where the Greeks believed the 12 major gods and goddesses lived
Name Homer's two famous epic poems.
Lliad and The Odyssey
This type of government is ruled by a small group of citizens.
Oligarchy
In Sparta, these enslaved people were forced to farm the land.
Helots
Answer: What is farming?
Name two gods or goddesses of Ancient Greece.
Zeus, Athena, Apollo, Aphrodite, Ares, Artemis, Hephaestus, Hera, Hermes, Hestia, or Poseidon?
This is a short story, usually involving animals, that teaches a moral lesson.
Fable
This is the term for a person who had the right to take part in ruling the city-state.
Citizen
This is the type of government that Sparta had
A mix of monarchy, oligarchy, and democracy
Name the body of water that the Greek peninsula extends into.
Answer: Mediterranean Sea
This is the hero from Greek myth who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humans.
Prometheus?
This storyteller is credited with writing down many ancient Greek fables
Aesop
This Athenian leader introduced reforms that moved Athens towards democracy.
Cleisthenes
This city-state had a Council of Four Hundred and an Assembly as its governing bodies.
Answer: Athens