answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer
User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the sea you would cross to get from Greece to Israel?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What sea would you cross to get from Greece to israel?

Mediterranean


What sea would you cross to get from Greece to Turkey?

The Aegean Sea.


Do both Israel and Greece border on the Mediterranean Sea?

Yes they do.


What country is north Israel?

There is no country called North Israel, there is just one Israel. If you intended to ask what country is north of Israel, the answer is Lebanon and Syria. The Mediterranean Sea is north of Israel. Greece or Turkey are north, but separated by the sea.


What body of water did the Persians cross to attack Greece?

Aegean Sea


What is the country that borders the Mediterranean Sea to the west?

Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Greece.


Is Israel close to Greece?

No. They are at least 500 miles apart, across the Mediterranean Sea. Israel is on the eastern shore and south of western Turkey.


Which sea did the Greeks have to cross in order to reach the Crimean Peninsula?

The Aegean sea is the sea that separates Greece from Troy.


What sea did the Athenians cross to get to Troy?

They would cross the Sea of Marmara.


On which Sea would you sail from Greece to Spain?

The Mediterranean Sea.


What countries form the boundaries of the Mediterranean sea?

Alboran Sea - Spain, Morocco, Algeria Balearic Sea - Spain Ligurian Sea - France, Italy Tyrrhenian Sea - Italy Adriatic Sea - Italy, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia (Gulf of Trieste) Ionian Sea - Italy, Albania, Greece Aegean Sea - Greece, Turkey Sea of Crete - Greece * Ionian Basin - Italy, Greece, Libya * Levantine Basin - Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Cyprus, Greece


Are there islands between Turkey and Greece?

There are more than 100 islands in the Aegean Sea, which is located between eastern Greece and western Turkey. Only three of them belong to Turkey: Cunda, Imbros, and Tenedos.