Myceneans. the minoans were in Crete, the persions in persia and helots were Spartan slaves.
Bronze age Greece
There culture. Featured writing gold jewelry making bronze weaponx and also made fine pottery
Only the Minoan Culture, from Greece's Bronze Age, dates as far back as that 3500 BCE.
From Answers.com: Unetice culture Unetice, or more properly Únětice, culture, (German: Aunjetitz) is the name given to an early Bronze Age culture, preceded by the Beaker culture and followed by the Tumulus culture. The eponymous site is located northwest of Prague. It is focused around the Czech Republic, southern and central Germany, and western Poland. It grew out of beaker roots. It is dated from 2300-1600 BC (Bronze A1 and A2 in the chronological schema of Paul Reinecke).
The Mycenaeans conquered the Minoans in 2500b.c.
Bronze age Greece
The Mycenaean civilization of Ancient Greece took many of its cues from earlier Minoan civilization. It flourished in the late Bronze Age, but mysteriously collapsed and Greece did not experience such heights of civilization against for many centuries.Mycenaean civilization is described as the Culture of Bronze Age Greece.
There culture. Featured writing gold jewelry making bronze weaponx and also made fine pottery
Only the Minoan Culture, from Greece's Bronze Age, dates as far back as that 3500 BCE.
Iliad: Bronze Age in Troy Odyssey: Bronze Age in Greece
"Bronze grapes" were used in ancient Greece as tributes to the deity Malachi.
No. Mainland Greece was very poor in terms of useful resources to ancient peoples. There were not a lot trees nor many precious metals. Cyprus was rich in copper, but tin was elusive, making bronze very rare and special in Greece.'Greece's most abundant resources were olives, grapes, and bountiful seafood. Aside from foods, Greece had almost nothing but rocky outcroppings.
No. They were made from bronze
bronze grapes and clay
From Answers.com: Unetice culture Unetice, or more properly Únětice, culture, (German: Aunjetitz) is the name given to an early Bronze Age culture, preceded by the Beaker culture and followed by the Tumulus culture. The eponymous site is located northwest of Prague. It is focused around the Czech Republic, southern and central Germany, and western Poland. It grew out of beaker roots. It is dated from 2300-1600 BC (Bronze A1 and A2 in the chronological schema of Paul Reinecke).
Italian ( Florence)
It only mines bronze and a few other metles