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- Ancient Greek theatre (7531 bytes)
1: ...400px|Panoramic view of the Greek theater at [[Epidaurus]]]]
3: ...ent Greece]] between c. 600 and c. 200 BC. The [[polis]] of [[Athens]], the political and military power...
15: ...elf a theatre. The best-preserved one is in [[Epidaurus]]. Greek theatre in every city probably kept...
17: ...stophanes]]. Their plays, along with some [[secondary source]]s such as Aristotle, are the basis of w...
27: ...ion. Greek plays normally took place in a single day, happened at a single location, and had one plot... - Greece (54754 bytes)
1: ... tip of the [[Balkan peninsula]]. It has land boundaries with [[Bulgaria]], the [[Former Yugoslav Repu...
50: ...e''', ({{lang-el|Ελλάδα}}, {{lang|el|''Elláda''}} ([[IPA]]: [{{IPA|e̞ˈlaða}}]), or {{lang|el...
52: ...], [[Northern Africa]] and the [[Middle East]]. Today, Greece is a [[developed nation]], member of the...
59: ...Chinese language|Chinese]] {{lang|zh|希臘}} (Mandarin: Xīlà, Cantonese: Hei-laap).
65: ...ntil around [[800 BC]], when a new era of Greek [[polis|city-states]] emerged, establishing colonies alon... - Ancient Greece (23806 bytes)
4: There are no fixed or universally agreed dates for the beginning or the end of the Ancient Gr...
6: ...e term back to about [[1000 BC]]. The traditional date for the end of the Ancient Greek period is the ...
8: These dates are historians' conventions and some writers t...
10: ...ce is considered by most historians to be the foundational culture of [[Western world|Western Civiliza...
15: ...only scant archaeological evidence, survive. Secondary and tertiary texts such [[Herodotus]] "Historie... - Politics (7193 bytes)
11:
16: ..." is derived from the Greek word for city-state, "Polis". Corporate, religious, academic and every other...
18: ... was supplanted by monarchy, and a system of [[Feudalism]] as an arrangement where a single-family dom...
23: ...llapse of the Roman Empire, Europe reverted to feudal monarchy.
30: ...wer in accordance with recognized or accepted standards or principles. - Zeus (17267 bytes)
2: '''Zeus''' (descendant of [[Cronus]]is the leader of the gods and [[go...
6: ...do-European religion]], also continued as [[Rig-Veda|Vedic]] '''[[Dyaus Pita]]r''' (cf. [[Jupiter (god...
25: Outside of the major inter-[[polis]] sanctuaries, there were certain modes of worshi...
33: .... With the [[Kouretes]], a band of ecstatic armed dancers, he presided over the rigorous military-athl...
42: ...ro or an underground Zeus. Thus the shrine at Lebadaea in [[Boeotia]] might belong to the hero [[Troph... - Acropolis (1763 bytes)
1: ...own example of the kind, see the article on [[Acropolis, Athens]].''
3: [[image:Athens_Acropolis.jpg|thumb|250px|Acropolis in [[Athens]]]]
4: '''Acropolis''' (Gr. ''akros,'' top, ''polis,'' city), literally the upper part of a town. For...
6: The word "Acropolis", though Greek in origin and associated primarily...
8: ...ly known without qualification as simply "The Acropolis". - Acropolis, Athens (7462 bytes)
1: ...polis-panorama-night.jpg|none|thumb|805px|The Acropolis of Athens lit up at night, seen from Phillopapus ...
2: [[image:ac.acropolis3.JPG|thumb|200px|The Acropolis of Athens, seen from the hill of the [[Pnyx]] to ...
3: [[image:ac.acropolis4.JPG|thumb|200px|The Acropolis of Athens, seen from the north, with the restored...
4: ...opolis2.JPG|thumb|200px|The south wall of the Acropolis of Athens, seen from the [[Theatre of Dionysus]]]...
5: [[image:ac.acropolis2.jpg|thumb|200px|The Acropolis of Athens, seen from the [[Temple of Olympian Zeu... - Architectural history (13369 bytes)
9: ... historians have changed approaches across time — the changing frameworks traced across the many...
17: ...the mortal cycles of generations, years, seasons, days and nights. [[Harvest|Harvests]] for example we...
28: ==Western Architecture — Classical to Eclecticism==
33: ...pace, in the paths that wound towards the ''[[acropolis]]'' for example. Each place had its own nature, s...
41: ...donia|Macedonian]] to [[Carthage|Carthaginian]] — Roman rule had extended itself across the brea... - Ankara (15129 bytes)
17: ... 6th century, it remained an important crossroads polis within the Byzantine Empire until late 11th centu...
34: ...yday, and the adjacent museum every day except Mondays).
41: ...art from the late [[19th century]] to the present day. There are also galleries which host guest exhib...
49: '''Ankara Citadel''': The foundations of the citadel were laid by the Galatians on...
53: ...nstructed by the Romans on the ancient Ankara Acropolis in the 2nd century. It is important for the "Monu... - History of Greek and Roman Egypt (25856 bytes)
26:
55: ...n]], who twice visited Egypt, founded Antinoöpolis in memory of his drowned lover [[Antinous]]. From...
57: ...rs of fighting. This [[Bucolic War]] caused great damage to the economy and marked the beginning of Eg...
74: ...e of Egyptian Christianity and remains so to this day.
83: The reign of [[Justinian]] ([[482]]–[[565]]) saw the Empire recapture [[Rome]] and ... - Greek theatre (7531 bytes)
1: ...400px|Panoramic view of the Greek theater at [[Epidaurus]]]]
3: ...ent Greece]] between c. 600 and c. 200 BC. The [[polis]] of [[Athens]], the political and military power...
15: ...elf a theatre. The best-preserved one is in [[Epidaurus]]. Greek theatre in every city probably kept...
17: ...stophanes]]. Their plays, along with some [[secondary source]]s such as Aristotle, are the basis of w...
27: ...ion. Greek plays normally took place in a single day, happened at a single location, and had one plot... - Jerusalem (61585 bytes)
2: ...ity of key importance to the [[religion]]s of [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]].
6: ...ity. Since Israel's victory in the [[1967]] [[Six-Day War]], it has controlled the entire city and cla...
16: ...|[[Archaeology|Archaeological]] ruins from [[King David]]'s time]]
18: ...war and captured the city without destroying it. David then expanded the city to the south, and decla...
20: ...pital of the southern kingdom, the [[Kingdom of Judah]].
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