The hawk was an omen of death in ancient Greece.
Men simply did not refuse to join the military in ancient Greece. If they did, they would likely have been put to death or exiled.
Hades is a explication for ancient peoples of Greece that there was a place to go after death, and its King was Hades, ruler of the Underworld.
Aristarchus of Samos was an astronomer in ancient Greece. While he made great discoveries in math and science, very little is known about his life or death.
If someone broke the law in Ancient Greece, most of the time, the punishment would be death. If a slave were to break the law, then the punishment would probably be death. But, if someone like a a Queen, or King, or someone with a very important job, they would probably be let off with a warning.
PLATO
Socrates
Plato was not sentenced to death. It was his mentor, Socrates, who was sentenced to death by drinking hemlock. Plato himself was not sentenced to death but continued his philosophical teachings and writings.
rhodes
Please be more specific.
Socrates ,for one.
Socrates was arrested and sentenced to death in ancient Athens for corrupting the youth and introducing new gods. His philosophical teachings challenged the political and religious views of his time, leading to his trial and ultimately his execution by drinking hemlock.
Socrates was sentenced to death for impiety and corrupting the youth of Athens. He was accused of not believing in the city's gods and introducing new deities, as well as influencing the youth with his teachings.
Socrates, the ancient Greek philosopher, was sentenced to death in 399 BC in Athens for corrupting the youth and impiety. He was given the option to choose exile or drink poison hemlock, and he chose the latter as a way to uphold his principles and teachings.
Plato wrote his teachings about the teachings of his scholar, Scrate, who was sentenced to death or exertion but picked death for teaching young people to rebel yet his teachings taught about a way to live life.
You would be sentenced to death.
Hades