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They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

They didn't, because they never had an empire. Ancient Greece consisted of a collection of independent city-states, each with their own laws, customs and armies. The only time they united was when there was a threat to the entire area, such as the Persians. When the crisis was over, each city-state went back to its own territory and its own way of living. Phillip of Macedon managed to conquer Greece and his son Alexander the Great added massive territories that could have become a Greek empire, but he made no political provisions and his gains fell apart at his death.

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14y ago

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