Homer,.....
The Greeks wrote on stone.
Yes, ancient Greeks wrote essays. Look up Plato.
The Greeks wrote on stone.
Because those are the people who named them. Our science and literature originates in ancient Greece, Egypt and Babylon. Some of what we know today was known back then and there and is still known. Those civilizations wrote things down and thus were able to pass knowledge on to later generations.
The Ancient Greeks used a slab of wood covered in wax and wrote on it with a pointed wooden or metal sick which was called a stylus.
they wrote
Write it? No, not often, the great poets and story tellers wrote down the myths they knew so there is a record of sorts of the myths that people spoke of among each other in ancient times.
Plato
The ancient Greeks wrote tragedy and comedy. Drama is a part of both.
The Greeks wrote on stone.
It's ancient greek mythology. No one actually "wrote" it. It just came to be.
They explained all the things that happen in nature. Such as, the 4 seasons. (Persephone). Poems were often how the Greeks wrote the myths.
They explained all the things that happen in nature. Such as, the 4 seasons. (Persephone). Poems were often how the Greeks wrote the myths.
A constellation is a huge clump of start forming a shape. Many Greeks wrote Ancient Greek myths.
The upper classes of Ancient Greeks studied, held feasts, wrote, attended theatrical productions, and engaged in public debates and oration. They led complex and multi-faceted lives.
Shakespeare... he wrote plays about English Kings from 'Henry the IV' to 'Richard the III' and tragedies about ancient Romans such as 'Julius Caesar' and 'Marc Antony and Cleopatra,' 'Coriolanus' and 'Titus Andronicus' He also wrote plays about Ancient Greeks as well.
A birthplace for Hestia was not put down in the books Greeks wrote about their ancient gods and goddesses.