Were the Romans from Greece? No, they were from Rome, which is a city of Italy. Hence, Romans rather than Greeks.
Italy was much smaller and it was a monarchy while Greece was a democracy.
The Ionian Sea is between Greece and southern Italy.
The forms of government in ancient Greece tended to divide the people of Greece rather than unify them.
Italy has fewer foreign debts and is much better than Greece's economy. Greece accounts for less than 2 per cent of the EU economy.
Greece is very good but they aren't in form lately
No, Japan did not attempt to take over Greece and Italy during World War II. While Japan was an Axis power alongside Germany and Italy, its military focus was primarily on expanding its territory in East Asia and the Pacific. Japan's operations were largely centered on countries like China, Korea, and various Pacific islands, rather than in Europe. Italy, under Mussolini, and Germany, under Hitler, were responsible for the military campaigns in Greece and other parts of Europe.
Italy was not broken up into small,isolated valleys.
Italy was not broken up into small,isolated valleys.
The Etruscans changed Rome from a village of straw-roofed huts into a city of wood and brick buildings. They laid out streets, temples, and public buildings around a central square.Edit: The above one doesn't relate to geography though, and it doesn't mention Greece. Here is my answer:The landscape of Italy is similar to that of Greece, but the Apennines are not as rugged as Greece's mountains. As a result, the people in Italy were not split up into small, isolated communities like the Greeks. Italy had better farmland than Greece. With more capacity to produce food, Italy could support more people than Greece could.
Italy is a peninsula; it is centrally located on the continent (shape of a boot); city of Rome is the center of Italy.
The Etruscans changed Rome from a village of straw-roofed huts into a city of wood and brick buildings. They laid out streets, temples, and public buildings around a central square.Edit: The above one doesn't relate to geography though, and it doesn't mention Greece. Here is my answer:The landscape of Italy is similar to that of Greece, but the Apennines are not as rugged as Greece's mountains. As a result, the people in Italy were not split up into small, isolated communities like the Greeks. Italy had better farmland than Greece. With more capacity to produce food, Italy could support more people than Greece could.