It was ruthless in collecting the annual financial contributions from the majority of cities which elected to provide money rather than warships to stave off Persian intrusions. This was carried out by force where necessary - the Delian League fleet went around the couple of hundred cities of the League collecting it; there are records of cities being attacked to extract the money. The people of Naxos were sold into slavery, as were the Melians; those of Samos were branded with the letter S on their foreheads; all to remind the cities to pay up.
After peace was made with Persia, Athens continued to extort the money, but now used it to spend on itself, glorifying its city (Parthenon etc), put half its population on the public payroll, and send out 100 ships for the annual collection. Athenian leader Pericles admitted that Athens had turned the League into an empire of its own.
It then dragged them into a war with he Peloponnesian League which lasted 27 years and devastated the Greek world from Sicily to Asia Minor. Athens lost and was stripped of its empire, thereafter having to co-exist as a lesser power and on its own money.
Mostly all - like Sparta and Athens. Mycenaean and Minoan city-states also had democracy. Other city-states and eventually other countries like Rome and U.S adapted to democracy from the Greeks.
The reason that some city states were semi democratic and others weren't is because the city states were constantly at war with one another, and didn't communicate with each other that much as is
Athens and its allies and Sparta and its allies.
Athens, Thebes, and Sparta were the three most powerful Greek City-States.
The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.The Greeks never had an empire, they were a collection of city-states, each with its own interests. There were actually three major city-states or cities that were important in ancient Greece. They were Athens, Sparta and Corinth.
Athens was one of the 2,000 city-states which fought each other over a thousand years.
by starting a war
by starting a war
they didn't like the Athens because they the other city state pay them money and give them lands for colonies.
yes
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The city-states of Athens and Sparta fought each other in the Peloponnesian War .
Athens formed the Delian League with other city states including Sparta
They each had their own armies and military units. The city-states also had their own government, which in Athens, their government was a democracy. The culture in the city-states are different from other city-states as well.
Athens, Thebes, and Sparta were the three most powerful Greek City-States.
Peloponnesian War