Ancient Athens Essay

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    Athens and Sparta were great cities in ancient Greece time. Most of today’s countries owns some of their success to the ideals and examples left behind by those great cities. Even though these cities were similar in greatness, they were different in some ways. Athens was opened to other ideals while Sparta was focused on the path of a warrior. But how were their government structured to have such impact on modern society? Before democracy in Athens, wealthy aristocrats were the one to hold power

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    Lemesis Reyes Sec: 27 Although, Ancient Athens is known to be the birthplace of democracy. Nevertheless, in this paper I argue that there are aspects that show that Athenians were not truly democratic because of the restrictions imposed on citizenship such as; age requirement, only males allowed, and the requirement of a birth measure meaning that double descent was required from both an Athenian mother and an Athenian father to be recognized as a citizen regardless of one’s birthplace. It is antithetical

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    an event that they have went through in their lives. Art allows us to express ourselves and also makes us feel better about expressing our feelings. The Classical ideal of ancient Athens pertains to the standard of excellence proposed by the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome, beginning in the Golden Age of Greece. The ancient Greeks aspired to perfection in both body and mind, and sought a synthesis of the two poles of passion and reason. Through athletic behavior, they were able to exercise the

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    Thousands of years ago, in ancient Athens, the city was relatively a paradise, they had civilization, they had theater, they had the arts; they also had an absolute flat tax, everyone paid the exact same tax. If a citizen did not pay the tax, he or she would be sent outside the city which was likely a death sentence. For the vast majority of people, this tax was their greatest burden and caused terrible social problems. For centuries, ancient Athenians explored this issue and discovered a moral insight;

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    Both of these civilizations were patriarchies, causing a suppression of women throughout ancient Athens and Egypt. According to Turner: A patriarchal relationship is one in which the male head of household dominates the members of the house whether these are male, female, adult of juvenile. This patraiarchal structure is legitimized by legal, political and religious norms which give the adult male a virtual monopoly over the subordinate groups within the traditional household. In such a system, the

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    States, previous junior U.S. Senator of New York, and past U.S. Secretary of State, once said, “Human rights are women’s rights, and women’s rights are humans rights.” Even if women understood this concept in ancient times, they were unable to do anything because men were superior to them. Athens, a large city-state and the capital of Greece, is home to many underprivileged women. They were unable to leave the house under almost any circumstance, and were forced to do housework and run errands until

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    According to Brand (2010) there were very different political models in ancient Sparta and Athens. Indeed, he advises that Athens was a much more developed powerhouse, where today’s democracy initiated, whereby Sparta was, conversely, a fierce warmongering state where only male warriors participated in politics. However, Brand also acknowledges elements of democracy in both city states. In the case of Sparta, the ‘ecclesia’, or the ‘apella’ were the eligible voting public (Larkin, n.d.) Only Spartan

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    people in Athens and Sparta obtain the right to participate in public life and make decisions affecting the community? Who held public office? What rules governed the selection of public office holders? How were the two city-states similar in their governmental structures? How did they differ? The paper should be at least 500 words long with proper formatting and use of APA standards for citation. The paper should also include an introduction, body and conclusion. Introduction Ancient Greece

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    Ancient Athens Vs Sparta

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    the right to vote in Athens. Then at the age of thirty wealthy male citizens would be able to serve in public office. So between Athens and Sparta both forms of Government were similar in ways but as time passed Sparta countered with the thought of two kings on the throne and letting one person gain absolute control. This is where the two separated until later. Even with similarities there were also difference between the two city's. Sparta was one to be ruled by few and Athens was all men are given

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    Athens Vs Ancient Sparta

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    with the rest of Greece was surely different in that Sparta consisted of the most feared fighters and held military supremacy over the land. However, Sparta seemed satisfied in keeping to itself and provided military assistance when necessary. Where, Athens was hegemonic and felt the need to dominate and the necessity to have more and more control ultimately led to the war between all Greeks. The role of women between both city-states also varied greatly, Spartan woman were viewed almost as equals to

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