After the Persian invasion was repelled in 479 BCE it established impregnable walls around the city and port, and could import food when besieged. It also had the strongest navy in the Greek world, and if the city was attacked, it could raid the home cities of the raiders. It also converted the 180-city alliance (Delian League) it had led against the Persian Empire into an empire of its own, and used the annual contributions it forcibly collected for its own benefit, including maintaining its navy, which could threaten other city states.
Athens power grew by the treasury that was moved from Delos in 454 B.C.
Athens was the capital of ancient Greece so i was very important!
The cultural center was Athens, and Athens lost power.
The main cause of the Peloponnesian War was Sparta's fear of Athens' growth. Sparta feared the growth and the power of Athens. As Athens gained more control and power in the Delian League, a coalition of Greek states whose purpose was to provide a navy for defense against the Persians, Sparta was concerned its own power would be reduced and Athens would take over. The rivalry between Sparta and Athens. C. Sparta's fear and jealousy of the power and wealth of athens.
the power struggle between Athens and Sparta. Athens had emerged as a dominant naval power in the Aegean while Sparta was the leader of the Peloponnesian League. Tensions between the two city-states grew as they competed for influence and resources, eventually leading to the outbreak of the war.
Athens led a league of 180 Greek city-states after the Persian invasion had been driven back to preserve the independence of those cities which had been under Persian rule. After the Persian Empire gave up trying to impose peace on these Greek cities, Athens kept control of them, turned them into an empire of its own. It lived high on the proceeds and kept a large fleet which forcibly collected the annual funds levied for defence against Persia, but now used by Athens for its own benefit.
Athens
The law-making power in classical Athens was in the hands of _____.
Persia had a king. Athens had a direct democracy.
He Grown Up At Athens, Greece
victory over blank brought power to Athens
Athens was technically a democracy so the people held power. But women had very little power so they had no vote therefore no influence. Generally Athens would have one main citizen who would drive his policies, working as a dictator but the people always had the power to take him out of power or exile him. An example of this is Pericle who was this main citizen, was taken out of power and then brought back into power later when everyone was scared about the plague and the invading Spartan forces. He was then later exiled to Persia.
Plato grew up in Athens, Greece. He was born into a wealthy and influential family, and received a well-rounded education in a variety of subjects including philosophy, mathematics, and ethics. His upbringing had a profound influence on his later philosophical works and ideas.
Since Athens was a democracy the citizens won them over by politics.
Athens was the capital of ancient Greece so i was very important!
Sparta civilization was all about power and battle; every boy was trained to grow up and be a military weapon. On the other hand, Athens was all about advancements in technologies and not so much battle. Athens' military was mostly filled with potters, bakers, speakers, and so on. It was very much different than Sparta
Politics because they had democracy in Athens~i hoped this helped you
The cultural center was Athens, and Athens lost power.