The city of Cairo was very involved in Greek learning during the many wars involving religion, and considering the location of the city on a map of religion you might see why.
They have always been known by the Egyptians. But you probably mean discovered by the western world. The Greek writer Herodotus mentions them in his writings when he visited Egypt around 450 BC.
The key to the translation of heiroglyphics was the discovery of the Rosetta stone. This was found by a Napoleonic soldier in Egypt in 1799. It was made around 196 B.C. and contains an edict of Ptolemy V. Essentially, the same text is written in three different scripts: heiroglyphics, Demotic, and ancient Greek. As we never lost the ability to read ancient Greek, the stone enabled scholars to start figuring out what the ancient Egyptians wrote.
There are approximately 227 inhabited Greek islands.
Apollo is also a significant figure in Greek mythology. He is the Greek god of music, poetry, prophecy, and healing. He is often depicted as a youthful and handsome god, associated with sunlight and enlightenment.
Yes, archaeology has an origin in ancient greece. It has to do with mythology. There were many archaeological discoveries based on Greek mythology, and any word that ends in "ology", which means "the study of" is from Greek mythology. Archaeology also came from the Greek word "arkhailogia".
The first city Alexander the Great named after himself was Alexandria in Northern Egypt. That city served as the Greek administrative capital of Egypt. It became, and remains today, one of Egypt's and the Mediterranean world's most important cities.
Greek Culture had been spread by Alexander, and even the Persian Empire was reformed more greek. Egypt's city of Alexandria, built by Alexander and in the greek style, became the seat of royal power of Egypt before Cleopatra's death.
The History of Ancient Egypt spans the period from the early paralinguistic settlements of the northern Nile Valley to the Roman conquest in 30 BC. The Paranoiac Period is dated from around 3200 BC, when Lower and Upper Egypt became a unified state, until the country fell under Greek rule in 332 BC.
It was the Largest city in the Mediterranean region by the 1st century B.C. Alexandria, Egypt- Center of the Hellenistic culture, adopted many Greek patterns and customs, Consisted of Egyptian, Persian and Indian cultures, Koine (a dialect of Greece) was the neutral language, Housed the Library at Alexandria which also incorporated the museum, center of trade via water, population exceeded half a million people,( place for scientists, mathematicians, Astronomers, and artists)
Alexander of Macedonia became a pharoah in Egypt and spread Greek culture to Egypt. He then went to Rome and spread the Greed culture there. Eventually he spread Greek culture around the Medditereanian sea and died of malaria, a disease caused by mosquitos.
The Arabs translated many Greek works in they found in the library of Alexandria when they conquered Egypt. They became interested in Greek philosophy and especially, science.
They ruled Turkey, many parts of northern Africa, Egypt, many parts of Europe.
She was queen of Egypt and born in Egypt but of Greek descent
Arabic became the official language of Egypt when the Islamic Caliphate conquered Egypt in the 640s C.E. Arabic became the dominant Egyptian language (as opposed to Koine Greek or Byzantine Latin) in the mid-900s C.E. when Muslims became the majority of the Egyptian population.
Rome was the conqueror of Cleopatra's Egypt and the government changed. After Cleopatra, Egypt became a Roman province and was governed under Roman law with Roman officials replacing the Greek officials. Taxes were paid to Rome rather than to a pharaoh.
The Greek letter for Northern Star is L
Ancient Macedonia was a Greek kingdom on the northern Greek peninsula. Modern Macedonia is a Greek province on the northern Greek peninsula. It's name in northern Greece, was and is, Macedonia.