Athens.
However, it is worth noting that during the Era of Ancient Greece, the city-states were not united in anything other than local alliances. As a result, Athens was only the capital of the Attica region.
Athens.
However, it is worth noting that during the Era of Ancient Greece, the city-states were not united in anything other than local alliances. As a result, Athens was only the capital of the Attica region.
Athens
Attica is indeed a prefecture of Greece. This is the prefecture were the Capital city of Greece, Athens, belongs too.
In ancient Greece there were city-states each with his own capital. Usually the biggest town (and the richest) was the capital. The area of Attica (modern southcentral mainland Greece) had Athens, the area of Lacedemonia (modern Pelloponisos) had Sparta.
city
Attica and Peloponnese.
about 5 million people out of 11.5m. are located in Attica (capital of Attica is Athens)
An ancient region of Greece north of Attica and the Gulf of Corinth.
No. Ancient Greece did not have any capitals. During the Era of Ancient Greece, the city-states were not united in anything other than local alliances. As a result, Athens was only the capital of the Attica region. Corinth, Thebes, Delphi, Sparta, and numerous other city-states were wholly independent politically from Athens. The idea of a united Greece is a much more recent idea that comes out of a restoration of the Byzantine Empire.
Sophocles was a famous Greek playwright who was born in Attica in rural Greece and later moved to Greece's capital city of Athens.
Asia minor, Thessaly ,and Attica
The city-state of Megara was and still is a part of the Attica peninsula
Greece is made up of 3 peninsulas, the Balkan Peninsula, Attica, and Peleponnesus. At least that's what Ancient Greece was made up of.
Attica, the smaller peninsula in the Peloponnese in southern Greece and the Chalkidiki peninsula in Macedonia, northern Greece