Ancient Greece was comprised of about 2000 independent city-states. Thy had no flag.
The Mesopotamia and the Egypt in Ancient Greece
There were not just 14 states. At different times, there were different numbers. Here are some of them: Athens, Corinth, Thebes, Argos, Mycenae, Sparta, Knossos, Gortys, Phaestos, Pella, Potidea They spanned the entire Aegean sea. Look at slide # 2 on this website: http://www.scribd.com/doc/9266839/Ancient-Greece-CityStates
the geography of Greece made more independent communities (city states) which helped foster participation in political affairs which gave them their own laws and military power.
citystate
The Greek archipelago.
Spartains ate this discusting mix of pork blood vinigar and salt. Other citystates ate cheese, wine, grapes, and bread.
They split the population into separate communities leading to the development of separate independent city-states.
Ancient Greece comprised over 2,000 independent city-states spread around the Mediterranean and Black Seas.
Yes.
Ancient Greece comprised several hundred independent city-states, each of which had its own laws. Can you refine the question.
Ancient Greece was comprised of about 2000 independent city-states. Thy had no flag.
Ancient greece was divided into isolated communities because of the mountains in Greece. Over 70% of Greece is mountains, and the mountains made communication between cities hard. This blocked the exchange of ideas, which resulted in all of the cities having different societies, governments, and values
The Mesopotamia and the Egypt in Ancient Greece
In this time period huge economic development occurred in Greece
The Mesopotamia and the Egypt in Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece was not united - it was comprised of about 2,000 independent city-states spread around the Mediterranean and Black Seas. These city-states were fiercyl independent, and fought each other with monotonous regularity and destruction.