Ancient Greece: Difference between revisions
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[[File:448px-Aristotle Altemps Inv8575. | [[File:448px-Aristotle Altemps Inv8575.png|right|thumb|330px|[[Aristotle]], inventor of formal logic, a foundation of [[mathematics]] and [[science]], considered by the author of the book ''[[Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950]]'' to possibly be the most important innovation ever made.]] | ||
'''Ancient Greece''' was a civilization originating in [[Greece]], following invasions/colonizations by [[Indo-Europeans]], and spreading to other areas around the [[Mediterranean Sea]] in association with trade, colonies, and conquests. | '''Ancient Greece''' was a civilization originating in [[Greece]], following invasions/colonizations by [[Indo-Europeans]], and spreading to other areas around the [[Mediterranean Sea]] in association with trade, colonies, and conquests. | ||
==History== | ==History== |
Revision as of 13:53, 22 February 2024
Ancient Greece was a civilization originating in Greece, following invasions/colonizations by Indo-Europeans, and spreading to other areas around the Mediterranean Sea in association with trade, colonies, and conquests.
History
The influence of Ancient Greece, in part through its influence of Ancient Rome, on Western civilization is enormous. Hellenic culture evolved over several thousand years, with its earliest known civilization being in the Mycenean and Minoan era, continuing into Classical Greece, the birth of the Hellenistic era and through the influence of the Roman Empire and its Hellenic Eastern successor the Byzantine Empire.
There are various less politically correct views on Ancient Greece, on issues such as race and the causes of the initial success and later decline. See the "External links" section.
See also
- Ancient Rome
- Democratic peace theory - On wars between Greek democracies.
- Greco-Persian Wars - Won by the Ancient Greeks despite having vastly less resources.
- Indo-Europeans - In particular, the section "Possible causes of the Indo-European expansion".
- Sea Peoples - Possibly having various associations with the Ancient Greeks and their also seafaring competitors, the Phoenicians.
External links
The Occidental Observer
- A Review of โThe Mighty Dead: Why Homer Mattersโ by Adam Nicolson, Part 1
- Adaptive Barbarism: Politics and Kinship in the Iliad, Part 1
- Ancient Athens: A Spirited and Nativist Democracy
- Ancient Sparta: The First Self-Conscious Ethnostate? Part 1: Educating Citizen Soldiers
- Aristotle on Immigration, Diversity, and Democracy
- Biopolitics, Racialism, and Nationalism in Ancient Greece: A Summary View
- Aristotle on Immigration, Diversity, and Democracy
- Aristotle: The Biopolitics of the Citizen-State, Part 1
- Culture and Nationhood in the World of Herodotus: An Evolutionary Analysis, Part 1
- Greek Biopolitics and Its Unfortunate Demise in Western Thinking
- Herodotus on the Challenge of Hellenic Unity
- Homerโs Odyssey: The Return of the Father; Part 1 of 2
- Platoโs Racial Republic
- The Laws: Platoโs Sacred Ethnostate, Part 1
- The Wisdom of the Ancients, Part 1: Greek City-States as Ethnostates