Democracy In Ancient Greece

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Pages: 2

The ancient greeks were very smart people that created the idea of democracy, a system where people vote on laws and people are citizens. At one point some of the city-states were not a democracy but an oligarchy. In ancient Greece, the only people that were considered citizens were the 40,000 grown men. At about 800 BC Greece recovered and started learning about the arts. At about 650 BC the greeks developed chariots and fully understood the arts. A pattern of decline began in Greece around the 12th century BC. Eventually, Rome would invade and democracy would end.
The Greeks were also good warriors but their tactics were strange at times. They loved head on assaults where they charged into the fight. They used hand to hand combat and no ranged weapons. Athena had the largest army and navy, hundreds of ships and 170 oarsmen. They used a strategy called Phalanx Soldiers where soldiers used swords and spears. Most wars were fought head on but Alexander The Great came up with the idea of surprising his adversaries. He would create alternative paths and catch them off guard.
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Oligarchy was a system where religious figures had political control. The ancient greeks were very smart people that created the idea of democracy. Democracy was a system where people vote on laws and people are citizens. In ancient Greece, the only people that were considered citizens were the 40,000 grown men. “It has been argued that the ingredients that would eventually make democracy thinkable can be traced back to a latent ideology of egalitarianism that emerged in the course of the eighth century (Bach A Companion to Ancient Greek Government ).” At times things were a little bit