The United States Senate compares to ancient Greece's ______ Council of 500 The Assembly The Law Courts The Archon I really don't know about this one :/
@pinkcandyrosez882
can someone help me please I will fan and medal!?
@gabbyalicorn
I don't know....Sorry!
That's okay thank you anyways!:)
@just_one_last_goodbye
@pinkcandyrosez882
@MilanItaly1618
I know it is probably A or B
C is the judicial branch relation.
I agree with @MissSmartiez
Which do you think it is? :)
It's my last question so I wanna get it correct :)
I was thinking assembly. Council seems like congress and such
I can be wrong let me check.
I'm not too sure because I'm not too good with history. Really sorry I can't be of more help to you! I hope you get your answer soon though!
That's okay! Thank you so much anyways!
Thanks too :)
@MissSmartiez Did you get the answer c:
"Meetings. Agenda for Meetings. Procedure for Meetings. Council Decrees. Independent Action. Introduction to Probouleumata. Exceptional Decrees. Probouleumata Voted Down. Open and Closed Probouleumata. Expiration of Probouleumata. Legislation. Jurisdiction. Powers to Punish. Administration of Attica. Public Finance. Foreign Policy. Secondary Works Cited. — Index of Citations General Index — Demos Home The Council Christopher W. Blackwell, edition of January 23, 2003 page 1 of 24 · Summary · Plot on a Map Athens. The Council of 500 (ἡ βουλὴ οἱ πεντακόσιοι) represented the full-time government of Athens. It consisted of 500 citizens, 50 from each of the ten tribes, who served for one year. The Council could issue decrees on its own regarding certain matters, but its main function was to prepare the agenda for meetings of the Assembly. The Council would meet to discuss and vote on “Preliminary decrees” (προβουλεύματα), and any of these that passed the Council’s vote went on for discussion and voting in the Assembly. " "· Summary · The Assembly (ἐκκλησία) was the regular gathering of male Athenian citizens (women also enjoyed the status of “citizen,” but without political rights) to listen to, discuss, and vote on decrees that affected every aspect of Athenian life, both public and private, from financial matters to religious ones, from public festivals to war, from treaties with foreign powers to regulations governing ferry boats." http://www.stoa.org/projects/demos/article_council?page=1
So it's the Assembly?
I don't know why it sent again
so it's assembly right?
1st article, the council. 2nd article, the assembly. I am good at history documents, however, not Greek ones, so not sure.
Okay thank you! :))
:)
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