Answer the question!
The geographical setting of Greece.
Mountains, rivers, coastline and islands.
The mountain ranges in Greece would create vallies where citys were built. Because the mountains were very hard to travel over they isolated the city to develope individully from the other citys making them city-states.
It isolated them from one another, so they became independent city-states, instead of a unified nation.
the mountainous terrain of Greece refulted in widely scattered settlements.
Geography - Greece has patches of arable land separated by mountains, rivers, lakes and seas, and this led to the different tribes being separated when they ceased to be nomads and settled on one of the patches of fertile land.
Geography - Greece has patches of arable land separated by mountains, rivers, lakes and seas, and this led to the different tribes being separated when they ceased to be nomads and settled on one of the patches of fertile land.
the mountainous terrain of Greece refulted in widely scattered settlements.
Steep, Rocky Almost entirely surrounded by turquoise- blue seas, farms and villages were isolated, or separated from one another by high mountains.Big
the geography
The ancient Greek cities were isolated from one another for two basic reasons. One was the hilly geography of Greece. This natural setting spawned several isolated communities. The second reason was that these communities grew into city-states, with the dominant community ruling the smaller ones. These city-states were concerned with their own problems and their own advancement and had little to do with each other unless it was for mutual defense or profit.
Rise of the City-States in Ancient Greece:The geography of Greece isolated settlements and strongpoints from one another, leading to the rise of the city-states. City-states had a contribution to the Acropolis, city-states built on a hill. Also with the agora.