Class Project!

Today we were assigned a group/class project. The class is to divide into groups and make a section of the textbook on Ancient Greece. Later we will put all of the groups projects together. Here is what some of our project looks like so far:


The world’s greatest civilizations have all been born near waterways, and Greece is not an exception. From the Mesopotamians, to the Egyptians, and to the Indians and Chinese, all were located on waterways. For example, the Chinese had the Huang He River, the Indians had the Indus River, and the Egyptians had the Nile. The Greeks, however had the Mediterranean Sea which was their form of trade, which kept them thriving. The Mediterranean, and nearby seas helped the Greeks to supply food as well, like fish. The Ionian, Adriatic, and Aegean Seas are all neighboring seas of the Ancient Greek land. The Aegean sea is the one where most of the thousand of the Greek islands are located. The largest island of Ancient Greece was Crete. Peloponnesus is not an island, it is actually connected to the mainland by a very narrow strip. The sea shaped the civilization. Greece is a mountainous peninsula. Mountains cover approximately three quarters of Greece making it a very mountainous peninsula, along with the over two-thousand islands. This combination shaped Greece’s culture. They had many skilled sailors and shipbuilders as well as farmers, metalworkers, weavers, and potters. Greece, however, had poor and limited natural resources which means that they had to trade and the sea helped with that.

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