Alexander III the Great conquered the Persian Empire of the Achaemenid House between 334 and 331 BCE
no one
phillip II
They made a giant wooden horse (the Trojan horse) and the Greeks got inside it. They then left it at the gates of Troy. Thinking it was a gift or a peace offering, the Trojans took the horse inside their walls and celebrated. By night the Trojans were drunk from their party and the Greeks came out, opened the gates for their comrades, and they overthrew the Trojans.
what is the synonymsof conquer
Archimedes did not conquer anything. He was a scientist, not a general or a politician.
The Romans named the Greeks in Greece.
Basically the greeks themselves, Persians, romans, goths, and that's about it.
Rome didn't conquer the Greeks.
He wanted to use the Greeks to augment his military power to take over the Persian Empire.
phillip II
It was a 'blessing' for the Greeks (and a 'curse' for the Trojans) because it enabled the Greeks to finally conquer the city of Troy.
10 years according to Homer's Iliad
Egypt was part of the empire conquered by Alexander the Great.
The Greeks conquered Troy (modern-day Turkey) in the Trojan War, and there were several civil wars within the country, mostly involving Sparta.
Persia did not conquer Greece. Persia attempted to conquer Greece but the invasion was repelled. Earlier, Greeks had fought against Persia in the Ionian Revolt, and the Persian invasion was intended as retribution for the violation of Persian temples.
the Greeks - much roman mythology and culture was taken from the Hellenistic peoples.
He was never king of the Greeks - he called himself Hegemon = Leader. He finished his campaign to conquer the Persian Empire in 324 BCE after his retreat from India.
They would clear timberland that was available to them, or conquer a nearby land and take it's territory for itself.