During the Dark Ages, Greece was isolated into small communities. After the Dark Ages ended, these isolated communities developed into city-states, rather than large kingdoms.
Ancient Greece was also separated by geography (mountains, rivers, seas), so it would make more sense for city-states to develop.
Because the persian empire had a larger population and thus a larger army. they thought that the could concour greece because they wanted the land, the buildings and knowlage,and the glory. Finally they thought that they could defeat greece because The athenians had been fighting with the spartans and that made the m concievably weak.
wellll........theres a lot of differences...like: Greece is in Europe, and Canada is in north America Canada is larger that Greece Greece's flag is blue and white striped with a cross in the top left corner Canada's flag has 2 vertical red stripes on the outside rim and is white in the middle, with a red leaf.
City-states formed in Mesopotamia and Greece due to factors such as geography, fertile land, and trade opportunities. The presence of rivers like the Tigris and Euphrates in Mesopotamia and the rugged terrain of Greece made it easier for communities to settle in distinct areas and develop independently. In contrast, India and China had vast landmasses and geographical features that promoted the development of larger, centralized states rather than city-states. Additionally, cultural and political factors unique to India and China also influenced their historical trajectories.
The loyalty to the city-states was greater than the loyalty to any larger conception of Greece. As a result, city-states would only fight or mobilize in cases where the individual city-state was jeopardized, not out of solidarity with other city-states.
The population of ancient Greece increased by a factor larger than ten during the period from 800 BC to 400 BC, increasing from a population of 800,000 to a total estimated population of 10 to 13 million, according to wikipedia. It really depends though on the geographical and temporal extent under consideration. In it's prime, it has been suggested that along with the colonies Greece had a population much higher than modern Greece, although it is hard to suggest a figure.
Ancient Rome was definitely larger than ancient Greece.
The early Greek kingdoms developed through a process of cultural diffusion and assimilation, as well as competition and conflict with neighboring city-states. They emerged from smaller tribal communities and evolved into larger city-states with organized governments, economies, and military capabilities. Trade, colonization, alliances, and conquests were all factors that contributed to the growth of these early Greek kingdoms.
Turkey
No. The Australian population is roughly twice the population of Greece.
Corinth, in particular, who supported the oligarchs within the city. Other Peloponnesian forces aided in the revolt, but withdrew due to fear of a larger Athenian navy fleet.
Domain is a larger and broader group than kingdom. There are only three domains, but five or six kingdoms, depending on your interpretation of kingdoms.
NO. Scandinavia is a region in the northern part of Europe. Greece is in the southern part of Europe. Greece is part of the larger region of the Balkans.
Develop
Genetics
to become more powerful and larger
Persia is the old name for what we now call Iran. It was MUCH larger than Greece.
north carliona