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Chapter 4: The Rise of Ancient Greece
"The First Peloponnesian War" |
Introduction
Students have read about Sparta and Athens, the two major
city-states of ancient Greece. They know that at times the
two would unite, as they did to hold off the Persians. Students
have also learned that this unity was not constant. The two
city-states finally found themselves on opposite sides of
a lengthy war that eventually led to a decline in the power
of city-states as political entities.
Lesson
Description
Students will go to The First Peloponnesian War Web site.
They will then answer four questions about what they have
read.
Instructional
Objectives
1. Students will learn more about the causes and results of
the first Peloponnesian War.
2. Students will learn about other participants involved in
the first Peloponnesian War.
Student Web Activity Answers
1. Athens supported Corcyra in a controversy with its mother
city, Corinth, and Corinth called on Sparta for help.
2. Athens knew it could not defeat Sparta on land.
3. Syracuse was the most powerful Greek colony in Sicily,
and if the Athenians could conquer it, they would have more
power in Sicily and increased access to grain.
4. Students' answers will vary but should include such points
as the different cultures, an ongoing rivalry, and the concern
of each that the other would become too powerful.
GO TO STUDENT ACTIVITY
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