Vocab
Alexander the Great
Athens v Sparta
Peloponnesian war
Culture and Achievements
100

What is a Monarchy?

A government ruler whose ruler, a king or queen, inherits the position from a parent

100
This man became king after his father Philip died.

Alexander the Great

100

This city-state had a democracy.

Athens

100

This leader, led Athens in the early stages of the war.

Pericles

100

Greek thinkers who studied life and ideas

Philosophers 
200

What is an Oligarchy?

A few wealthy people hold power over the larger group of citizens

200

The empire Alexander the Great built stretched across these 3 regions.

Greece, India, Egypt

200

This city-state focused on military strength and discipline.

Sparta

200
Athens demanded loyalty and regular payments from these groups.

City-states

200

Greek stories performed for entertainment and storytelling

Drama

300

What is a Democracy?

Rule by the people

300

Alexander spread this culture throughout his empire.

Greek culture

300

Athens's military strength came from this.

Navy

300

Athens moved this to their city, angering others.

Delian leagues treasury

300

Three types of Greek columns

Doric, Ionic, Corinthian

400

What is the Delian League?

Defensive league or protective group, to defend its members against the Persians.

400

The people Alexander defeated to expand his empire.

The Persians

400

Spartan military strength came from this type of fighting force.

Ground soldiers

400

Athens sent troops to help this group rebel.

Common people

400

Greek historians tried to do this when recording history.

Separate fact from fiction, be accurate and impartial

500

What are fables?

A story meant to teach a lesson

500

The time period after Alexanders death in which Greek culture spread throughout the known world.

Hellenistic era

500

This city-state treated others like test-subjects, leading to the Peloponnesian war.

Athens

500

The victor of the war between Athens and Sparta.

Sparta

500
A religion in Persia that believed in good vs evil.

Zoroastrianism