1). Rome's Appenine mountains were less rugged than those in Greece
2). Rome was in the heart of the Mediterranean Sea
3). There were no small, isolated valleys like those in Greece
4). Rome had broad, fertile plains
The mountains in Italy, the Apennines, do not block easy land-travel between the different regions of Italy. Conversely, the mountains throughout the Greek Peninsula make it very difficult for pre-modern vehicles to traverse the entire country and militarily unite it.
Italy was much smaller and it was a monarchy while Greece was a democracy.
Italy was not as spread out. Greece covered a lot of ground.
certainly, Greeks still live in Greece, Italy, Cyprus, aegean islands and istanbul.
No, Greeks are not Italian. Greeks are people from Greece, while Italians are people from Italy. These are two distinct ethnic groups with their own cultures, languages, and histories.
Were the Romans from Greece? No, they were from Rome, which is a city of Italy. Hence, Romans rather than Greeks.
they lived in Southern Italy and were influenced by the roman culture
Florin
No, Italy and Greece are different countries.
Aramaic and Greek are completely unrelated languages. They have entirely different systems of writing, grammar, and vocabulary. Aramaic is closely related to Hebrew and other Semitic languages, while Greek is a European language.
greeks
it was not the Geography of Greece which influenced western civilisation. It was Greek civilisation and the fact that the Greeks migrated out of Greece. They migrated to western Turkey, southern Italy and Sicily and they founded Marseilles in southern France. Thus, they created a Greek world which extended beyond mainland Greece. The Greeks influenced the peoples who lived near then. They also influenced the Romans. It is though this influence of the Romans that the Greeks later influenced western civilisation.
The Etruscans changed Rome from a village of straw-roofed huts into a city of wood and brick buildings. They laid out streets, temples, and public buildings around a central square.Edit: The above one doesn't relate to geography though, and it doesn't mention Greece. Here is my answer:The landscape of Italy is similar to that of Greece, but the Apennines are not as rugged as Greece's mountains. As a result, the people in Italy were not split up into small, isolated communities like the Greeks. Italy had better farmland than Greece. With more capacity to produce food, Italy could support more people than Greece could.
Southern italy
Italy and Greece are completely separated countries.