No one other than the father of the mighty Alexander the great, Philip II! Philip originally conquered Greece - after his assassination, his son Alexander (born in 356 BC in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedonia) had to fight a handful of battles to re-establish control, as many Greek cities took the opportunity to revolt.
In the mid 330s BC Athens was conquered by the Macedonians from north of Greece.
The Romans conquered Spain, Asia Minor, Macedonia, and Greece.
Rome annexed mainland Greece in 146 BC
i dnt know
NO. From the time of the Macedonian conquest of Greece in the 330s B.C.E. until Greece became independent in the 1820s, Greece was ruled by the Macedonian Empire, the Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire, the Republic of Venice, and the Ottoman Empire. The Nazi Germans also conquered Greece for a short time in the 1940s. During these periods, Greece was not independent.
Other than the Greeks themselves, from the Macedonian conquest of Greece in the 330s B.C.E. until Greece became independent in the 1820s, Greece was ruled by the Macedonian Empire, the Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire, the Republic of Venice, and the Ottoman Empire. The Nazi Germans also conquered Greece for a short time in the 1940s.
The Romans ruled Greece for nearly 1500 years from 30 BC when Augustus conquered the last great city of Greece until nearly to the fall of Constantinople in 1453
The Greeks inhabited city-states in Greece, with the "classical period" beginning about 500 BC and ending in 146 BC when they were conquered by Rome.
True - the 330s.
Well, the Mycenaeans conquered Creete around 1400 BC. They spoke Greek and came from a city in what we now call Greece, so does that count?
The Kushite King Piye conquered Egypt in 750 BC.
The Mycenaeans, a civilization from mainland Greece, conquered Crete and the Minoans around 1600 BC. They were influenced by Minoan culture but eventually established their dominance, leading to the decline of the Minoan civilization. This transition marked a significant shift in the cultural and political landscape of the Aegean region.