Florence, Milan, Mantua, Venice, Rome, Naples, Urbino, Ferrara.
it is called the renaissance.
There were only two major Renaissances in Europe. There was the Northern Renaissance and the Italian Renaissance. If you want to know the differences, there is a link below to help you learn the difference between the two and what caused them to happen in different time periods.
The blitzkrieg was a strategy used by the Germans in much of Europe, except the Great Britain. All major cities of Europe and the cities of Western Russia suffered from this. However, the Germans realized that blitzkrieg wouldn't work for a big country like Russia, even though it proved to be overwhelmingly successful in the occupation of the rest of Europe.
Conquer Europe, build A-bombs, drop them on major u.s. cities and sue for piece.
Florence was were it started and then it spread across Europe
There are exactly 104 major cities in Europe.
Arts and learning
Belgium is a country with many cities within it. The country did go through the renaissance with the rest of Europe.
If you mean just two major cities in Europe, and two major cities in Asia, here are examples: Europe - Moscow & London Asia- Shanghai & Tokyo If you mean two cities that span the continents of Europe and Asia, two examples are Istanbul & Orenburg.
Paris and Rome
The major TRADE Cities were: Rome, Florence, Venice, Bologna, Naples and Milan.
Catholic Church no longer had any influence in Europe.
without learning you can't do art.
Some major industrial cities in Europe include Eindhoven (for electronics), London (a financial capital), Barcelona (also a financial capital of Spain). London is trying to become the health technology capital of Europe.
Two major cities that were key hubs for sea trade to Europe are Venice and Genoa. Both cities played crucial roles during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, facilitating the exchange of goods, culture, and ideas between Europe and the East. Venice was known for its extensive trade network across the Mediterranean, while Genoa was a significant maritime power that connected Europe to trade routes in the Atlantic and beyond. Their strategic locations and naval prowess made them vital centers of commerce.
The "silk" road.
It is the plains.