The Aegean Sea.
Black Sea
Black Sea
Pompey conquered the people of Phonecia, Coele-Syria, and Judea for the Roman Republic.
The Aegean sea is the sea that separates Greece from Troy.
If they took a land route to Crimea the Greeks wouldn't need to cross any seas. But water routes would require crossing the Black Sea and perhaps the Aegean Sea depending on the route taken.
King Xerxes' fleet of ships from Phonecia, Egypt and Asian-Greeks was defeated at the Battle of Salamis by the Greek fleet led by Spartan Admiral Eurybiades.
In Phonecia they A horizontally.
the Greeks lived on the Mediterranean Sea... so I would say that one. They knew of the Black sea and the Caspian sea; and the ancient Greeks believed the Atlantic Ocean to be a world encompassing sea.
It was not an empire. It was a collection of independent city-states in the Levant. The chose to expand through successful trade around the Mediterranean Sea rather than conquest.
The Mediterranean Sea.
the Balkan peninsula (where the early Greeks settled around) is right next to the Aegean Sea
Greeks are from the country of Greece which sits in the Mediteranian Sea.