There were no rivers in Ancient Greece.
A Peninsula is a piece of land that is surrounded by water but is connected to land, If you look at a map of Greece, the Peninsula begins near the city of Corinth, Sparta is located on the Peninsula and Athens is located on the main land. Here is a link to a map that shows the peninsula, the small passage or land near east of Corinth is the important part which defines it as a peninsula instead of an Island.
Water
I would say the Mediterranean Sea, because you could easily travel anywhere in the known world on it back then, and both Rome and Greece were world powers. It also served as a huge trade route.
in plains areas
There were no rivers in Ancient Greece.
becuse it was near a water source
Greece is a country in southeastern Europe. Water systems that contribute to ancient Greece's livelihood was trading through sea.
In ancient Greece, regions were organized into city-states.
Ancient Greece did not have hot beverages. Beer, wine and water were the beverages that they drank.
kids in ancient Greece often did house work like collecting water.
Were the ancient greece exposed to large bodies of water
In Athens, they had a strong navy because they were on the water. In Sparta, they had the strongest military in all of ancient Greece.
Greece got thire water not by the sea but by batering or buying it from other people
They needed water to survive.
The seas that boarder ancient Greece are; Aegean, and Mediterrean Sea
Basically, it was part way in between the area of the Roman/Gothic region, the Far East Asian powers, and the African powers. It was strategically located on the Mediterranean Sea, connecting it by water to other major empires.