The phalanx comprised the core of ancient Greek armies.
Philippi
a common enemy being the Persians in which they united armies to fight a common enemy
The four generals that ruled the armies of Alexander the Great divided the kingdom after the death of Alexander because Alexander had no sons to give it to. They were Cassander, Lysimachus, Ptolemy and Seleucus.
There was more than one: both Athens and Sparta held armies at various points throughout their lifespans, and all of the City-States of the Hellenic League had some sort of army.
Dunkirk
Philippi
The polis/ kingdom that was famous in ancient Greece for its army organization and training was Sparta.
'towers,armies and weapons' no. what it means is what are the human made things in Greece? Such as: landmarks, famous buildings or man made rivers/lake etc.
a common enemy being the Persians in which they united armies to fight a common enemy
The Persian army and a much smaller army made up of combined forces from the city-states of Greece.
it was fought between the armies of Greece led by king agamemnon and troy led by king priam
Greece was comprised of several hundred independent city-states, so there was no 'general of Greece'. At Marathon there were two city-state armies - Athens and Plataia. The force was commanded by ten generals commanding the ten tribal contingents, under the overall command of the polimarch Callimachos.
There were no Germanic soldiers within a thousand miles of Greece, and the Greeks provided their own amies from their citizens anyway.
There were no Germanic soldiers within a thousand miles of Greece, and the Greeks provided their own amies from their citizens anyway.
They developed superior sea power to augment and transport their armies to points of conflict throughout the five decades of war..
The bulk of the population of the Greek city-states were 'peasants', that is independent small-farmers, who were also the backbone of their armies, with a good motive to turn out to protect their farms from invaders.
In both invasions of Greece by Persia, the Persian armies were defeated by Greek hoplites and soldiers. The major losses were the famous 300 Spartans and 1,000 Thesbians who defended Thermopylae to protect Athens.