The Allies fought together. By numbers they were British, American, Canadian, Australian, Polish, New Zealand, French, Dutch, Belgian and Greek.
The Native American warrior fought to keep his homeland. Odysseus was a warrior in Greek mythology.
an ancient Greek city famous for military prowess; the dominant city of the Peloponnesus prior to the 4th century BC
The Roman Empire, in its earlier years, had a religion derived from what we now refer to as Greek mythology (formerly it was the Greek religion) as well as the worship of the Emperor, since some Roman emperors proclaimed themselves to be gods. Later, the Roman Empire adopted Christianity as its official religion.
Polis is the Greek word for political city-state. The term refers to the political, social and cultural center of the different Greek city-states.
there were many, but the answer is Troy
The most famous of the early mapmakers was a Greek geographer named "Ptolemy"A+
The most famous of the early mapmakers was a Greek geographer named "Ptolemy"A+
greek and latin obviously
Phyruss
Hercules
Muslim doctors studied translations of Greek medical texts and a work by a famous Muslim Doctor Who lived in Persia in the early 1000s. Avicenna described how some diseases could cause stomach problems and that cancer could be fought with surgery
Yes they did and quite violent wars at that the most famous war was the titanomachy where the gods fought their parents the titans.
what family fought the syrians and greeks
No. Wars between Greek city-state alliances were fought by the citizen armies of the states.
So the greek gods could rule. The greek gods fought the titans to gain control and won. The greek gods then ruled. The titans went to tarturas.
It was Greek nature to be territorial and combative. They fought themselves and others throughout their history. In particular, they fought the Persians in two wars in the early fifth century B.C.E. (490 and 480) and then sparked a Greek "world" war between Athens and Sparta in the late fifth century (432-404 B.C.E.).