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Geography, Religion and People all contribute to or influence history.
Anicent Greece was quite mountainous and rugged; which resulted in them traveling by sea.
The geography of Greece influenced where people settled and what they did. Greece's geographic features influenced where people lived because of the high and many mountains made it hard to travel.
In general terms, the relationship of geography to different world events and developments (or, the 'phenomena' of human history) is significant; in many cases, it is decisive. For example, the rugged mountains and pervasive waters of ancient Greece had a direct impact on that civilization's growth and influence, while the island-status of Great Britain had an equally powerful impact upon its historical character and influence.
names greece geography
Katherine Clarke has written: 'Between Geography and History' -- subject(s): Ancient Geography, Civilization, Geography, Ancient, Greece, Greek influences, Historiography, Rome
The mountainous terrain of Greece made it so that the city-states were separated In which case made it so that they didn't have the same form of governments.
The mountainous terrain of Greece made it so that the city-states were separated In which case made it so that they didn't have the same form of governments.
it was not the Geography of Greece which influenced western civilisation. It was Greek civilisation and the fact that the Greeks migrated out of Greece. They migrated to western Turkey, southern Italy and Sicily and they founded Marseilles in southern France. Thus, they created a Greek world which extended beyond mainland Greece. The Greeks influenced the peoples who lived near then. They also influenced the Romans. It is though this influence of the Romans that the Greeks later influenced western civilisation.
The country is generally poor agriculturally, and settlement was confined to fertile river valleys and coastal plains.
No.
there where many mountains unlike other places