Yes
No.
Olympia was part of the city-state of Elis. Elis and Sparta were in the Peloponnese Peninsula of mainland Greece.
The parts of Alexander's empire that were never part of the Persian Empire primarily include regions in the northwest, such as Greece and Macedonia, where Alexander originated. Additionally, areas in the far west, like parts of modern-day Italy and the western Mediterranean islands, were also not under Persian control. Alexander's conquests extended into Persia, Egypt, and parts of Central Asia, but his homeland and some adjacent territories were independent of Persian rule.
They were descended from a warrior people called the Dorians who invaded Greece from the north, and they settled in the southern part of Greece, the Peloponnese, where they founded the city of Sparta.
Ancient Greece expanded to an Empire under the leadership of Alexander the Great between the years 332 and 323 BCE. Part of this Empire was absorbed by the Roman Empire at 56 BCE [last area conquered Egypt]
Sparta is located on the southern part of the Peloponnese Peninsula in Greece.
Sparta was part of Greece-it was a city in it.
Alexander conquered hi
Sparta is located in Europe, in South west Greece. A land called Laconia. Its because of this that Spartans are often called Lacedaemonians and Sparta, Lacedaemon.
the lower half of Greece
No.
Your mom is part of it.
it was in the main part of ancient Greece like Athens or Sparta
Olympia was part of the city-state of Elis. Elis and Sparta were in the Peloponnese Peninsula of mainland Greece.
Currently there is no king of Sparta. The city of Sparta no longer exists. If it did exist it would be part of Greece and it would have a mayor, not a king.
It is in the southern Peloponnese Peninsula in Greece.
In the first part, Miletus. In the second part Sparta. In the third part, Athens.