Athens is famous for the Olympics held there in 2004.
It is important for being the first democracy in the world (they invented the word some 2600 years ago), for creating the still in force artistic standards, for founding and hosting the Ancient Olympic Games, as well as the first modern ones (at the turn of the last century).
The Golden Age of Athens
Fifth Century Athens refers to the Greek city-state Athens in period of roughly 480 BCE-404BCE. This was a period of Athenian political hegemony, economic growth and cultural flourishing formerly known as Classical Greece, the Golden Age of Athens, and The Age of Pericles. The period began in 480 BCE when an Athenian-led coalition of city-states, known as the Delian League, defeated the Persians at Salamis. As the fifth century wore on, what started as an alliance of independent city-states gradually became an Athenian empire. Eventually, Athens abandoned the pretense of parity among its allies and relocated the Delian League treasury from Delos to Athens, where it funded the building of the Athenian Acropolis. With its enemies under its feet and its political fortunes guided by legendary statesman and orator Pericles, Athens produced some of the most influential and enduring cultural artifacts of the Western tradition. The playwrights Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides all lived and worked in fifth century Athens, as did the historians Herodotus and Thucydides and the physician Hippocrates.
During the golden ages, Athenian military and external affairs were mostly run by the 10 strategoi (or generals) who were elected each year by the 10 clans of citizens, and whose supreme command was rotated daily. These strategoi had duties which included planning military expeditions, receiving envoys of other states and directing diplomatic affairs. During the time of the ascendancy of Ephialtes as leader of the democratic faction, Pericles was his deputy. When Ephialtes was assassinated by personal enemies, Pericles stepped in and was elected strategos in 445 BCE, a post he held continuously until his death in 429 BCE, always by election of the Athenian Assembly.
Pericles was a great speaker; this quality brought him great success in the Assembly, presenting his vision of politics. One of his most popular reforms was to allow thetes (Athenians without wealth) to occupy public office. Another success of his administration was the creation of the misthophoria(μισθοφοÏία, which literally means paid function), a special salary for the citizens that attended the courts as jurors. This way, these citizens were able to dedicate themselves to public service without facing financial hardship. With this system, Pericles succeeded in keeping the courts full of jurors (Ath. Pol. 27.3), and in giving the people experience in public life. As Athens' ruler, he made the city the first and most important polis of the Greek world, acquiring a resplendent culture and democratic institutions.
The sovereign people governed themselves, without intermediaries, deciding the matters of state in the Assembly. The Athenian citizens were free and only owed obedience to their laws and respect to their gods. They achieved equality of speech in the Assembly: the word of a poor person had the same worth as that of a rich person. The censorial classes did not disappear, but their power was more limited; they shared the fiscal and military offices but they did not have the power of distributing privileges.
The principle of equality granted to all citizens had the danger of constituting a fraud, since many of them were incapable of exercising political rights due to their extreme poverty or ignorance. To avoid this, the Athenian democracy applied itself to the task of helping the poorest in this manner:
Most importantly, and in order to emphasize the concept of equality and discourage corruption and patronage, practically all public offices that did not require a particular expertise were appointed by lot and not by election. Among those selected by lot to a political body, specific office was always rotated so that every single member served in all capacities in turn. This meant to ensure that political functions were in such a way instituted as to run smoothly, regardless of each official's individual capacity.
These measures appear to have been carried out in great measure since the testimony has come to us (among others) from the Greek historian Thucydides (c. 460 - 400 BCE), who comments: Everyone who is capable of serving the city meets no impediment, neither poverty, nor civic condition...
Athens is significant to Greece because that was where Zeus controlled the weathers
Athens was the center of Greek civilization.
It started the "Golden Age"
its cool
The Acropolis is an ancient monument in Athens which is the capital of Greece. Greece is a European country.
Athens is the capital of Greece
Yes, Athens is in Greece.
Athens is a city in Greece.
in Athens in Greece
Yes, the capital of Greece is Athens.
Yes, Athens, Greece is a city.
No Athens is a city in Greece, and Greece is a republic.
Athens is the capital city of Greece
Athens is the capital city of the country of Greece.
You would find the Parthenon in Athens, Greece.
What was the poplation of athens greece in 2008?