Greek culture welcomes Greece. I am about to go on a ten-day trip through one of the oldest historical sites in the world. As we begin our journey, you will soak in history and contemporary culture. Unlike many other places in Greece, the ancient and modern world stands side by side. The area of the Greek peninsula is 131,944 square kilometers with a population of about 10 million. Greece is made up of continents and islands. Both contents are displayed on this trip.
Greek culture began with Greek Mycenae for thousands of years, continuing into the classical Greece under the influence of the Roman Empire and its successor Byzantine Empire. The Republic of Venice, the Republic of Genoa and the British Empire also influenced the modern Greek culture, but historians revived Greece and attributed the Greek Revolution to the single existence that produced that multiculturalism .
In the ancient times, Greece was on the brink of the up-and-coming New Assyrian Empire, but it can be understood as the East era that was not influenced by it. Greece incorporates a number of Oriental cultural elements in art, religion, and mythology. Archaeologically, ancient Greece was characterized by geometrical pottery. The basic unit of politics of ancient Greece is a city state, sometimes translated as a city state. The word "politics" literally means "city nation". Each city state is independent, at least in theory. Some city states are subordinate to other cities (traditionally colonies that span their mother city), and may allow the government to completely rely on other cities, but a nominal advantage There are in every city in the city. This means that when Greece began a war (against the Persian empire, for example) it took the form of an alliance war.
2) Ancient Greece's political pluralism but cultural unity; Ancient Persia is politically unified but cultural diversity. In ancient Greece, city poles of "polar" (odd: "city state"), various political regimes, and constantly changing alliance and hostile structures were included. At the same time, the states of each city use the same language, have a similar religious tradition (although not identical), and share a cultural origin with other people. I think that the reason can reach the first point. Even the largest Greece is a relatively small and tightly integrated culture.
How do you compare the political regime of ancient Greece and the Persian empire, and the factors that explain these differences and similarities?