The Greeks colonized much of the Eastern Mediterranean, southern Italy, and in the times of Alexander the Great, much of the Middle East and his empire.
No, he never had complete control of the European Continent.
Great Britain gained control of much of Southern Africa during the 1800's
51 countries have land in Europe, and there are much more counties than 5. Maybe you mean regions, in which Europe could be split into Southern Europe, Western Europe, Northern Europe, Central Europe, and Eastern Europe.
Greek geography has much to do with the way early Greeks lived. Mainland Greece lies on the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula.
Greek geography has much to do with the way early Greeks lived. Mainland Greece lies on the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula.
The attached link explains on a month by month basis the course of the war in 1940 in Europe.
In ancient Greece.
Answer 1Central to Southern Europe.France is a large country with its Northern borders close to the center line of Europe while the South of France meets the Mediterranean Sea. It would therefore qualify as one of the Southern countries of the continent.Answer 2France would be regarded as being in Western Europe, so neither the north or the south of Europe. France has coastlines on both the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. The western end of Europe is much narrower on a north to south basis, than further east, and France spans a lot of that area.
The warmest part of Europe right now is most likely Southern Europe (along the Mediterranean). This is the warmest part of Europe year round. However, it is pretty much warm all throughout Europe right now because it's summer.
assuming you mean places it started in Italy and moved along the trade routes through southern Europe (France, Spain) only hitting Northern Europe (Germany) decades later and with a much more religious tone
That would be generally true, but Europe is a continent, and different parts of it experience different kinds of weather. Southern parts of Europe would be much warmer than northern parts, for example.