Greek Essays and Term Papers

The Dead Sea Scrolls

Clearly and the schism that caused the Dead Sea sect to arise can only be understood in the context of Jewish history and the sectarianism of the Second Temple period in Judea. Across twenty centuries, the Scrolls speak to us of the pluralism that existed in ancient Judaism, each group competing ...

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Human Nature

Is there such thing as ? In my opinion, we as human beings, create our own nature. The Traditional Greek and Christian philosophers do not accept this view, known as existentialism. Darwin and feminists, along with the existentialists, have disregarded the views of the Greek and Christians and ...

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Ancient Greece

is a peninsula located off the Mediterranean Sea, and is surrounded by several islands. was made up of different types of government. There were two types of city states an oligarchy , which is ruled by a small group of citizens and a direct democracy ruled by the people . All citizens could ...

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"Woe Be To Thee, O Constantinople, Seated On Seven Hills, Thou Shall Not Continue A Thousand Years"

"Woe be to thee, O Constantinople, seated on seven hills, thou shall not What made the majority of people in Constantinople believe in prophecies saying that the city would not last forever and that they are doomed? In the years before the Turkish conquest it was known that the reign of ...

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Alexander The Great

Hypothesis – That the Greeks success and development as an empire was due mainly to their great war general, , who was a revolutionary ‘leadership’ figure. was born in 356 BC, and was the son of Philip II, king of Macedonia. He grew up with the example of Philip and the tutelage of Isocrates, ...

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Medea Is A Tragic Feminist Text

Medea is a tragic text due to it containing a tragic hero, Medea, who due to her harmartia challenges the dominant views of femininity in the patriarchal society of the epoch, thus furthermore making it a feminist text. While pursuing her ambition Medea disregards many of the feminine ...

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Iliad/Odyssey Summary

In the beginning of the Iliad, Agamemnon dishonored Apollo’s priest, which was an insult to him. He punished the Greeks for this and said he would stop the plagues only if Agamemnon gave up his prize of honor-Chryseirs. Achilles, a godlike Greek warrior, argued with Agamemnon that he should just ...

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Archimedes

was a Greek mathematician and scientist. He was born in Syracuse, Sicily in the year 287 B.C. He was educated in Alexandria, Egypt. Due to the lack of information about Greek mathematics, many Greek mathematicians and their works are hardly known. is the exception. was very preoccupied with ...

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Penelope As Moral Agent

In her essay "," Helene Foley attempts to discuss Penelope, a major character in Homer's the Odyssey, in terms of Classical Athenian portrayals of women and, as her title suggests, in terms of what she calls a "moral agent." In her introductory paragraph she lays out guidelines as set down by ...

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Dragons

Of all the mythical creatures found in stories, legends, and drawings it is the dragon that has captured my imagination. The Europeans saw the as an evil serpent-like creature. In an age of darkness, and ignorance the Europeans saw the world around them as evil and hostile. The dragon was used to ...

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The Production Histry And Cons

Beer: umption Of Beer The first and most important step in brewing is cleanliness. "Brewing is ninety percent janitorial," said Frederick Bowman, founder of Portland Brewing. (Bowman) The first step in the actual brewing process is malting. Malting is what is done to the barley to prepare it for ...

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Medea

The two Greek plays, and Antigone both exhibit opening scenes that serve numerous purposes. Such as establishing loyalties, undermining assumptions on the part of the audience, foreshadowing the rest of the play, and outlining all of the issues. and Antigone share many similarities in their ...

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Medea: Summary

Title of Work: Medea Country/Culture: Greek Literary Period: Classical Type Authorial information: Euripides was born in 484 BC and took up drama at the young age of 25. At most drama competitions, however his plays came in last place until he was about 45 or 50 years old. In his entire life, ...

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The Theater Of Dionysus

was Europe's first theater, and stood immediately below the Parthenon in Athens, Greece. It was originally built in the late 5th century B.C. The theater was an outdoor auditorium in the shape of a great semicircle on the slope of the Acropolis, with rows of seats on which about eighteen ...

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Antigone-Higher Law Vs. Laws O

Laws of the City-State vs. Higher Law as Seen in Sophocles' "Antigone" In Ancient Greece, after 800 bc., new ideas came to the forefront concerning the governing of society. These ideas led to a more organized leadership and a government whose decisions were primarily based on majority rule. ...

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Alexander The Great

, was born in June, 356 BC, in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedonia. His parents were Philip II and Olympia. Some say that Zeus was his father but it is probably just a myth. Aristotle taught Alexander in his early teen years. He stimulated his interest in science, medicine, and philosophy. In ...

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Sophocles

In 495 B.C. there was a child born about a mile outside of Athens. This child was to be named . He was a boy whose father was a wealthy merchant. He now had the opportunity to enjoy all of life's greatest expectations in the Greek empire. Being that he was from a wealthy family, he had the ...

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How Historic Context Shapes Celtic Myth's

Romeo and Juliette was turned into a poppy, romantic teen flick; gods, deities, and fairy tale creatures of varied religions and cultures are depicted in an extremely popular novel; the ring of the Niebelungen was turned into an epic opera; and the mythological gods of ancient Greece found a new ...

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Jesus-Son Of Man-A Christological Title

1. General Observation: 1.1. ‘Son of Man’ in the Hellenistic and Old Testament traditions: The ‘Son of Man’ title that derived from a Hebrew and Aramaic ?????? ?????? kebar ?enaš, reflects a Semitic idiom, which designates a collective (humanity) or an individual within the collective. ...

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The Story of Hanukkah

World Region The Story of Hanukkah In 168 B.C.E, the Jewish Tempe was seized by Syrian-Greek soldiers and dedicated it to the worship of their God Sues. This upset the Jewish people, however many were afraid to fight back. Then in 167 B.C.E the Syrian-Greek emperor Antiochus made the ...

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