The models are quite different.
Greek democracy was direct - regular Assemblies of male citizens passed laws and policies and a council implemented them precisely as passed.
The US system is representative government where elected representatives pass laws without the citizens having a direct say, and presidents exercise executive authority as well, again without the citizens having a say.
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a democracy government is what the Aztecs had in grees just, like the United States of America has a democracy government.
Greece's government used to be a government where everyone votes but, now Greece has a government like us. We in the United have a government where we have representatives. So to answer your question, there is no difference in governments beetween the U.S ans Greece.
Ancient Greece was made up of a lot of small city states, which were each ruled by their own individual ruler. There was no ruler of all of Ancient Greece until the time of Phillip II, Alexander the Great's father, who united all of Greece and Macedonia.
War in Ancient Greece led to displacement of people and the loss of lives and property. The war in Ancient Greece also to the rise of women into various leadership positions.
Ancient Greece was not a country or nation, but a collection of city states with a common ethnic, cultural and linguistic identity. The tough terrain of Greece (including Mt. Olympus, home of the gods) kept them separate and fiercely independent. This competitive environment eventually lead them to there demise. Greece was briefly united as one nation under Macedonian Hegemony under Philip II and then his son Alexander III also known as Alexander the Great.