The athens upper class.
Poor siding with upper class in ancient greece.
The fight against poverty has recently been a hot topic in contemporary societies and often in the press.
The ancient greece divided themselves into four classes.
Most houses in ancient greek towns were built from stone or clay.
Ancient greece a phenomenal civilisation and a important part of the greek history.
The three main staple foods of the greek diet were wheat oil and wine.
The upper class the upper middle class the lower middle class the working class and the poor.
However far from being a result of capitalist societies poverty existed in pre industrial societies even in ancient ones.
The people of this class possessed the uppermost power and position in the society.
No clothes have survived from this period butt there are descriptions and artistic depiction of how it looked like.
Likewise the poor no doubt loathed the upper classes in athens as they restricted their freedom by enslaving them and limited their rights.
Being poor in ancient greece.
Clothing in ancient greece didn t change much during time.
Ancient greece was fully equipped with social class hierarchy system which divided people on the basis of the classes.
One has to be born in athens to be a part of the upper class as the rights for this class could only be inherited on the hereditary basis.
The greeks typically ate three meals a day.
The ancient greeks ate fairly simple foods.
What meals did they eat.
Athens the upper class.
History ancient greece.
Although we thing that most of the clothing in ancient greece was white they were of elaborate design and of bright colors.
For rome see keith.
1 for further reading on slavery in greece see nicholas jones ancient greece.
Research in ancient history is often linked to current social issues.
In these fragments we.
State and society chapter citizens resident aliens and slaves.
The house was made of sun dried mud brick.
For example in the u s.
Mud houses crumbled away in a few years and had to rebuild the roofs were covered with tiles or reeds and the houses had one or two stories.
The topmost class in the ancient greek government hierarchy was the upper class.
The ancient greeks believed that they were born with no equality and that there were the superior class the upper class and the inferior class the slave class.
To get money the poor would work days and nights just to get enough to feed their children.
The ancient greece hierarchy includes four classes namely upper class or the athens the middle class or the metics the lower class or freemen and the last ones as slaves.
Information abut life in ancient greece comes decorations on pottery.