Judges of ancient Athens
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AnswerCrossword Clue
DICASTSJudges of ancient Athens.
AREOPAGITESJudges of ancient Athens.
DICASTSJudges of old Athens.
SPARTAAncient foe of Athens
AGORAPart of ancient Athens
AGORAHeart of ancient Athens
THEBESAncient rival of Athens
THIRTY... Tyrants of ancient Athens
SPARTAAncient rival of Athens
THEBESAncient rival of Athens.
THEBESRival of ancient Athens
ARCHONMagistrate of ancient Athens.
OBOLICoins of ancient Athens
CORINTHRival of ancient Athens
SPARTAAncient rival of Athens.
AGORAThe heart of ancient Athens
archona magistrate of ancient Athens
eupatridan aristocrat of ancient Athens
SPARTAAncient Greek rival of Athens
ACROPOLISThe citadel of ancient Athens.
AREOPAGUSHighest court of ancient Athens.
ODEAMusic hall of ancient Athens.
eupatridsEUPATRID, an aristocrat of ancient Athens
ARGOSAncient rival of Athens and Corinth.
archonsARCHON, a magistrate of ancient Athens
eupatridaeEUPATRID, an aristocrat of ancient Athens
EPHEBIYouths coming of age in ancient Athens
ELEUSISSite of ruins of ancient city, near Athens.
archonsEach of the nine chief magistrates in ancient Athens
knights(in ancient Greece) A citizen of the second class in Athens
thebescity of ancient Greece, in Boeotia: a rival of ancient Athens
thetesa member of the lowest order of freeman in ancient Athens
tetralogygroup of four dramas, three tragedies and one satyr play, performed consecutively at the festival of Dionysus in ancient Athens
eupatridone of the hereditary aristocrats of ancient Athens and other states of Greece, who at one time formed the ruling class
megaracity & port Greece on Saronic Gulf W of Athens pop 17,294; chief town of ancient Meg*a*ris ggmega04.wav'me-g?-r?s (district between Saronic Gulf & Gulf of Corinth)
epicureanismAn ancient school of philosophy founded in Athens by Epicurus. The school rejected determinism and advocated hedonism (pleasure as the highest good), but of a restrained kind: mental pleasure was regarded more highly than physical, and the ultimate pleasure was held to be freedom from anxiety and mental pain, esp. that arising from needless fear of death and of the gods