
History of Ancient Greece: up to the Death of Alexander the Great (complete Two Volumes)
by I
About This Novel
"History of Ancient Greece" takes the migration, development, rise, and decline of the Greeks as the main line, and uses population migration, geography, civilization, and war as clues to analyze the development of ancient Greece and present us a magnificent historical picture of ancient Greece. Where did the Greeks come from? Why did they establish colonies in Asia Minor and Italy? Who founded Athens and Sparta? And what are their political forms? Why did Athens and Sparta emerge as overlords of Greece? And how did the two overlords engage in war and alliance, until they all suddenly declined in the end? What kind of entanglements were there between the Greek and Persian empires? What was the famous Battle of Thermopylae like? Why did Athens become the soil that gave birth to ancient Greek philosophy? What impact did the Greco-Persian War and the Peloponnesian War have on Greece? Why was the rise of Thebes so short-lived? How did the Macedonian Kingdom conquer Greece? What did Alexander the Great's Eastern Expeditions bring to the world? In this book, these questions will be answered. As one of the brightest stars in human history, the history of ancient Greece is worth savoring.
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Official(1)Scraped 1mo ago
The Epirus were often excluded from the Greeks. However, as time went by, the people of Epirus gradually absorbed Greek culture and civilization. Epirus consists of a series of mountains and valleys. As the branches of the Pindus Mountains move south or west, the trends of these mountains are either parallel or perpendicular to the Pindus Mountains.
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Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 1mo ago
The Epirus were often excluded from the Greeks. However, as time went by, the people of Epirus gradually absorbed Greek culture and civilization. Epirus consists of a series of mountains and valleys. As the branches of the Pindus Mountains move south or west, the trends of these mountains are either parallel or perpendicular to the Pindus Mountains.
