In ancient Greece, naval warfare often involved tactics such as ramming and boarding. A warship could defeat another by utilizing its speed and maneuverability to outflank the enemy, aiming to ram the opponent's hull with a reinforced prow, causing damage and potentially sinking it. Additionally, skilled sailors could execute coordinated attacks to board the enemy vessel, overwhelming the crew with superior numbers and combat expertise. The strategic use of terrain and wind also played critical roles in determining the outcome of naval battles.
Greece was one
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"One is surely right in saying Greece was saved by the Athenians" (Herodotus). "The defeat of the Persian sea host meant the defeat of the land host" (Aeschylus)
Mountains, rivers, coastline and islands.
One pilot. One warship.
Broadside the simultaneous firing of all the armament on one side of a warship
they lived close to one another
The geographical setting of Greece.
Sparta was one of the city-states which existed in the Peloponnese, which is the peninsula which forms southern Greece. So they didn't fight the peninsula.
The designer, John Ericsson, proposed the name Monitor for the warship. Monitor means one who admonishes and corrects wrongdoers
There are and have been thousands of American warships. Which one are you asking about? Please repost your question with more clues, say, the name of a battle that the warship was in . . .
you have to defeat one challenger for another to appear