Greece

Today we looked at Greece in more detail. The Greek land borders some key waterways. As previously mentioned, three key seas which we have to know are the Adriatic, Ionian and Aegean Seas. On to the notes: Greece is a mountainous peninsula. Mountains cover three-quarters of Greece. They had many skilled sailors and shipbuilders. Greece had limited resources and therefore needed to trade with their neighbors. A key idea of today's notes was that all the city-states could not be united as one Greece because of terrain. The Greeks developed small, independent, communities known as city-states. Relative to our U.S. States, North Carolina is fifty-three thousand square miles while Pennsylvania is forty-six thousand square miles. Greece, on the other hand, is only fifty thousand square miles. Mr. Schick had placed Greece over the Delaware-Maryland-Virginia area to show us a size comparison. The entire country of Greece is no larger than the above mentioned American States. 

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