He allowed slavery in ancient Greece.
Allowed slavery .
In ancient Greece, tyrants were influential opportunists
The person who takes power illegaly in Greece is the tyrant!
An ancient Greek tyrant was appointed by the majority of middle and lower class citizens to break the power of exploiting aristocratic oligarchs and rule for the benefit of all. A tyrant today generally seizes power for the benefit of himself and his followers and exploits the community for his own benefit. So the ancient tyrant spread benefits from a few to the many, the modern tyrant takes benefits from the many for the use of the few.
A tyrant in Ancient Greece means a ruler who had seized power without legal right to it. Today it means any person who exercises power in a cruel way.
Tyrants. Note: In Ancient Greece, the word "tyrant" meant "ruler," not "evil despot."
Its a Tyrant.
A Greek city-state which was unbearably oppressed by its ruling oligarchy would appoint a tyrant to rule instead, the idea being that the tyrant would rule fairly for all classes.
In democracies, the assembly of the people. of the city-state In oligarchies, the council of the city-state. In tyrannies, the tyrant. In monarchies, the king.
Well, that would be hard to compare, because two different lifestyles from two different time periods are not remotely the same.
he allowed slavey