Tyrants.
Note: In Ancient Greece, the word "tyrant" meant "ruler," not "evil despot."
citystates
The correct phrase is "who hit a home run yesterday." This construction uses "who" as the subject of the verb "hit." The phrase "whom hit a home run yesterday" is grammatically incorrect because "whom" is used as an object, not a subject.
by the greek mathematician and philosopher 'Pythagoras'.
no one
Initially kings, then cliques of aristocrats, then assemblies of landowners, and then assemblies of citizens.ruled by citizens made such greek city states unique.
Citizen
Athens (smart, sporty, perfect) Megara (all about money) Sparta (TOTAL SPORT FREAKS lol) Corinth (crafts) Argos (acting and drama)
citystates
citystates
Athens-Athletic, academic, perfect Corinth-Crafts, arts, etc Sparta-Sports Megara-Money, money, money Argos-Acting, drama, etc
Athens and Sparta .
To gain land for farming
Whom = ος / η / ο . Hope that answers your question.
Run in Greek is τρέχω [treho]
er, who?
Sumerian citystates were originally theocracies.
At creation, the earth was called Gaia in greek mythology.