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The Kingdom of Macedon was annexed in 148 BC. The whole of mainland Greece was annexed in 146 BC. Crete was annexed in 76 BC, during a war against piracy.
That point is on the mainland of Greece, near Athens.
Plateau
That would be Mount Vesuvius.
plateau
plateau
As for the whole USA landform, the supervolcano Yellowstone has had a few eruptions. Earlier than that was the Yucatan meteor impact.
Cyprus is an island in the Mediterranean Sea. Both Greece and Turkey have claimed to rules parts of the island or the whole island.
europe cant afford greece to leave euro, cause the whole off europe will fold
Greece never ruled Rome. Although there were Greek cities in Sicily and there were Greek colonies in southern Italy called Magna Grecia, the Greeks were never dominant and Rome overcame and absorbed them. 146 BC was actually the year of the Romans conquest of mainland Greece. In 148 BC the Romans defeated the Kingdom of Macedon, the largest and dominant state in Greece, in the Fourth Macedonian War. In 146 BC they annexed Macedon and turned it into a province of the Roman Empire. In the same year the city-states of the Achaean League fought the Romans. They lost and the whole of mainland Greece was annexed into the Roman Empire. As for the Greek city-states in mainland Italy, they were conquered by the Romans after the Pyrrhic War (280-275 BC). All but one of the Greek city-states in Sicily were conquered by Rome in the First Punic War (264-241 BC) which was fought in Sicily between the Carthaginians and the Romans. Syracuse, the last independent Greek city-state in Sicily, was conquered by the Romans in 212 BC.
The ancient Greek world comprised several hundred independent city-states spread from Massilia (modern Marseilles) through Sicily, North Africa, southern Italy, the eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea. Some of these from to time formed defensive alliances, but there was never a leader of Greece as a whole, other than when Phillip II of Macedon was accepted as Hegemon (leader) by many of the city-states of mainland Greece. His son Alexander succeeded him as Hegemon after his assassination.
The U.S. captured it in the island hopping strategy to prepare to attack Japan's mainland.