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Macedonia, Egypt, Syria, Asia Minor, Mainland Greece.
The Hellenistic period, which began with the conquests of Alexander the Great, had a significant impact on Asian and African history. It brought Greek culture, language, and ideas to these regions, influencing local societies and creating a fusion of Greek and indigenous traditions. Hellenistic kingdoms emerged in areas like Egypt and Anatolia, which played a crucial role in trade, politics, and cultural exchange, shaping the history and development of these regions for centuries to come.
Macedomia, Syria in the east, the kingdoms of Pergamum in western Asia Minor, and Egypt.
No. The Hellenistic period was over a century later when Alexander the Great's empire was split up after his death by his generals into separate kingdoms, which have been given the modern name of Hellenistic Kingdoms - Egypt, Macedonia and Syria, and hence it was the Hellenistic period until they were absorbed into the Roman Empire in the First Century BCE.
After Alexander's early death, his generals divided his empire amongst themselves and formed their own kingdoms, where they established a veneer of Greek culture. These kingdoms fought each other, and eventually settled down to Egypt, Syria, Macedonia and Pergamum. We today call them Hellenistic (the Greeks called and still themselves Hellenes; and Hellenistic means 'like Greeks - the kingdoms were never fully Hellenised, the ruling class were, but the indigenes went on with their own cultures.
Hellenistic Macedonia, Hellenistic Syria, and Hellenistic Egypt.
Macedonia, Egypt, Syria, Asia Minor, Mainland Greece.
Antigonid kingdom of Macedonia, Seleucid Kingdom, Kingdom of Pergamum, and Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt
Alexander died unexpectedly without an obvious heir. With no clear direction, his generals fought for power. Eventually, three distinct Hellenistic kingdoms emerged: Macedonia (which included Greece), Syria, and Egypt. Although Hellenistic culture flourished in all three kingdoms-in particular, Alexandria in Egypt became a great center of culture and learning-all three kingdoms fell to the growing power of Rome between 60 and 30 BC.
The Hellenistic period, which began with the conquests of Alexander the Great, had a significant impact on Asian and African history. It brought Greek culture, language, and ideas to these regions, influencing local societies and creating a fusion of Greek and indigenous traditions. Hellenistic kingdoms emerged in areas like Egypt and Anatolia, which played a crucial role in trade, politics, and cultural exchange, shaping the history and development of these regions for centuries to come.
Macedomia, Syria in the east, the kingdoms of Pergamum in western Asia Minor, and Egypt.
His generals fought each other and slit up his empire into a number of kingdoms we call today the Hellenistic Kingdoms. These eventually settled down to Macedonia, Egypt, Syria and Pergamon.
There were several Hellenistic kingdoms carved out of Alexander's empire after he died. The ones which endured for a couple of hundred years or more were Macedonia, Egypt and Syria-Mesopotamia.
No. The Hellenistic period was over a century later when Alexander the Great's empire was split up after his death by his generals into separate kingdoms, which have been given the modern name of Hellenistic Kingdoms - Egypt, Macedonia and Syria, and hence it was the Hellenistic period until they were absorbed into the Roman Empire in the First Century BCE.
They resulted from the split up of the Persian Empire - settling down to Egypt, Syria, Pergamon, Macedonia.
After Alexander's early death, his generals divided his empire amongst themselves and formed their own kingdoms, where they established a veneer of Greek culture. These kingdoms fought each other, and eventually settled down to Egypt, Syria, Macedonia and Pergamum. We today call them Hellenistic (the Greeks called and still themselves Hellenes; and Hellenistic means 'like Greeks - the kingdoms were never fully Hellenised, the ruling class were, but the indigenes went on with their own cultures.
Formation of a Macedonian empire led by him, and after his early death, to the splitting up of the empire into separate kingdoms by his warring generals, which we today call the Hellenistic kingdoms.