Home
My Puzzles
FAQ
Report bug
Collected Puzzles
User listed puzzles
Random Puzzle
Log In/Out

AP Chapter 6 Vocabulary Misery Meter

Dr. Reimer

1
   
2
         
 
3
4
                 
   
5
 
6
7
 
         
8
                         
         
9
                           
     
   
   
10
                 
11
   
12
13
 
14
                 
15
                 
     
16
 
17
                         
       
18
                     
 
19
               
20
                   
 

Across
1.A book, probably dating to c. 1000 B.C.E. and first recorded in writing around 600 B.C.E. whose title means “The Injunction of Zarathustra,” the founding prophet of Zoroastrianism. Contains hymns attributed to Zarathustra himself, which provide our best guide to his original thought. (2 Words)
4.Elements of the various Persian empires that lived on after the fall of the Sasanians, including the ideals of rulership, truth-telling, and justice, and the recitations of Persians and epic poems.
8.The ruling dynasty in Iran between 550 and 330 B.C.E. The Achaemenids, whose founder was from the region of Persia in the southwest of modern-day Iran, ruled the Persian Empire and at its height in the fifth century B.C.E. Governed a population estimated at 30-35 million people
9.Iranian religion named for Zarathustra, (in Persian, Zoroaster in Greek), who taught that a host of good deities and evil demons, all in perpetual conflict populate the spiritual world.
10.The name of the supreme deity of Zoroastrianism, the Lord of Truth, who created heaven and earth, day and night, and darkness and light (2 Words)
14.(flourished 480 B.C.E.) the woman ruler of Helicarnassus, on the Aegean coast of Modern-day Turkey, who fought with the Persians against the Greeks at the Battle of Salamis
15.(r. 522-486 B.C.E.) The Third Achaemenid ruler, who succeeded to the throne by coup. He conquered much territory in Eurasia but was unable to defeat the Scythians north of the Black Sea or the Greeks. He also reformed the Empire’s administrative structure. (2 Words)
17.the first metal coins in the world, dating to 600 B.C.E. Made from Electrum, a naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver collected from the river beds in Lydia, a region on the Aegean coast of modern day Turkey (2 Words)
18.(384-322 B.C.E.) A Greek philosopher who encouraged his students to observe the natural world and explain logically how they proceeded from their starting assumptions. This system of reasoning shapes how we present written arguments today.
19.the ruling Dynasty (224-351 C.E.) of Iran who defeated the Parthians and ruled for more than four centuries until the Islamic conquest of Iran. Introduced innovations such as nonsatrap royal lands and government support of Zoroastrianism
20.(c.485-425 B.C.E.) Greek speaking historian born in Helicarnassus. Author of The Histories, an investigation of the history, folklore, geography, plants, and customs of the known world. Known as the”father of history.”
Down
2.(r. 33-323 B.C.E.) Also known as Alexander the Great; son of Phillip of Macedon, he defeated the last Achaemenid ruler in 331 B.C.E (3 Words)
3.Formerly seen as a one-way stream of influence in which non-Greek people adopted Greek language, education, sculpture, architecture, and other customs, but more recently understood as a two-way process, with non-Greeks and Greeks influencing each other.
5.(429-347 B.C.E.) A student of Socrates and a teacher of Aristotle who used the Socratic Method in his teaching which emphasized ethics. He believed that students should use reason to choose the correct course of action.
6.A seagoing people, who, around 900 B.C.E. , expanded outward Freon their base on the Mediterranean coast of modern-day Lebanon. Their alphabet, which used only letters with no pictorial symbols, is the ancestor of the Roman (Latin) alphabet.
7.(r. 558-530 B.C.E.) Founder of the Achaemenid Dynasty in Iran. A native of Persia, Cyrus staffed his administration with many Persians as well as Medes, the tribe he defeated when he took power.
11.(460-395 B.C.E.) Author of History of the Peloponnesian War, a pioneering work.
12.(247 B.C.E. -224 C.E.) The ruing dynasty of Iran, who defeated the Seleucids and took over their territory in 140 B.C.E. Famous for their heavily armored cavalry, they posed a continuous problem for the Roman Empire.
13.(469-399 B.C.E.) A great philosopher who believed that virtue was the highest good. He developed a method of instruction still in use today, in which teachers ask students questions without revealing answers
16.the Third Achaemenid ruler, Darius, divided his empire into provinces called satrapies, each administered by a governor, or satrap. The officials under the satrap were recruited locally a hallmark of the Persian system.

Use the "Printable HTML" button to get a clean page, in either HTML or PDF, that you can use your browser's print button to print. This page won't have buttons or ads, just your puzzle. The PDF format allows the web site to know how large a printer page is, and the fonts are scaled to fill the page. The PDF takes awhile to generate. Don't panic!




Google
 
Web armoredpenguin.com

Copyright information Privacy information Contact us