The Greeks, who were a series of independent city-states, continued to fight amongst themselves, individually and grouped in leagues. The persians were just another threatening factor in their constantly-changing alignments. In fact a hundred years later the Persian king had to impose a 'peace' on the warring cities to stop it disrupting the Greek cities within his empire.
Not a bit. The Persiaans went home, and the Greeks went back to their usual fighting each other.
There is no connection between the wars of 2,500 years ago between Persia and the Greeks, and today's Middle East wars between different sects of Islam.
politics kills relationships
The Persian Gulf supplies most of the US's oil needs.
amphetamines do
By the 5th Century BCE when the conflict between Persia and the eastern Greek city-states began, the Greek cities had spread all around the Mediterranean and Black Seas. Only the eastern cities were involved in the conflict. The Persian attempt to force peace on the ever-warring Greek cities failed, and these cities went back to their normal fighting amongst themselves, greatly weakening themselves in the Peloponnesian War between Athens and its empire and the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta. The Persians became an interested spectator of this mutual destruction. It took MMacedonia under Philip II to bring them under control, and his son Alexander then carried out his father Philip's plan to seize the Persian Empire. So the Persian Wars did not greatly affect Western civilisation - that arose on the back of Greek, Macedonian and then Roman control and culture in the West. The Persian Wars are part of history, not civilisation.
Philosophers began to make people think for themselves. Also they gave more books to the society. Along with new types of governments and accurate history
that questions needs more deatail
It makes them stronger.
I DONT KNOW THE ANSWER
According to certain religions, interpersonal, as well as interracial,relationships are sinful.
suck it...