Not directly. After the war the city-states continued their sporadic warfare, Thebes became temporarily ascendant, Persia imposed peace on them to stop the spillover into its own territories. Macedonia gained power in the context of this ongoing strife.
The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BCE devastated Greece. Sporadic warfare continued to weaken the city-states, enabling Persia to regain control of the Greek cities in Asia, and the weakness opened the way for Philip of Macedonia to establish hegemony over the cities of mainland Greece. His son Alexander conquered the Persian Empire and after his death his generals carved his empire up amongst themselves, dominating the Greek world.
In its 27 years' duration it spread and devastated the Greek world from Sicily to Asia Minor. Even after the war ended, there was sporadic on-going warfare between the cities, and this so weakened the Greek city-states that it opened the way for Macedonia to gain indirect control over it.
A war 431-404 BCE between the cities and their allies which wrecked most of the Greek world. Athens lost its empire and dominance, Sparta became the leading power for 30 years until overturned by Thebes. The weakening and instability gave a free ride to Persian influence over Greece, but subsequently opened the way for Macedonia to dominate Greece, and finally mount a campaign to destroy the Persian empire.
Athens converted the Delian League which it had led against the Persians in the latter phase of the war into and empire of its own. Athens ripped off this empire and spent the proceeds on glorifying itself and putting half its citizens on the public payroll. It also used the fleet it maintained to control its empire to intrude into other Greek cities and provoked the Peloponnesian War, which it lost and was stripprd of its empire.
Yes there was an Industrial Revolution in Greece. It was not as big as in the UK, but there was a massive change. By 1856, 50% of the population of the Hellenic Republic was living in cities, as people abandoned agriculture for work in the factories. Most factories in Greece were opened by forigen venture capitalists. Major coal mining projects were started int he North of the country, including the introdution of the cable car into industrial use. A steam railway was built in 1790, and construction began on the Athens underground in 1896. 1,000,000 people were living in Athens by 1890. During the period of expansion of the Hellenic Republic (1860-1925), Greece was at its terretorial height. The Hellenci Republic ruled over Greece, Cyprus, Western Turkey, Macedonia, Bulgaria and Southern albania. There were various social changes as well as economic change.
The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BCE devastated Greece. Sporadic warfare continued to weaken the city-states, enabling Persia to regain control of the Greek cities in Asia, and the weakness opened the way for Philip of Macedonia to establish hegemony over the cities of mainland Greece. His son Alexander conquered the Persian Empire and after his death his generals carved his empire up amongst themselves, dominating the Greek world.
It reduced previously dominant Athens to second-rate status after being stripped of its empire, and the losses to the Greek world opened the way for the rise and dominance of Macedonia.
A war 431-404 BCE between the cities and their allies which wrecked most of the Greek world. Athens lost its empire and dominance, Sparta became the leading power for 30 years until overturned by Thebes. The weakening and instability gave a free ride to Persian influence over Greece, but subsequently opened the way for Macedonia to dominate Greece, and finally mount a campaign to destroy the Persian empire.
He reduced the cities to accepting Macedonian leadership, which opened the way for his son Alexander the Great and the general who succeeded him and divided the Greek world up amongst themselves.
Boris Trajkovski Sports Center is an indoor arena in Macedonia and was opened on 2008.
In its 27 years' duration it spread and devastated the Greek world from Sicily to Asia Minor. Even after the war ended, there was sporadic on-going warfare between the cities, and this so weakened the Greek city-states that it opened the way for Macedonia to gain indirect control over it.
A war 431-404 BCE between the cities and their allies which wrecked most of the Greek world. Athens lost its empire and dominance, Sparta became the leading power for 30 years until overturned by Thebes. The weakening and instability gave a free ride to Persian influence over Greece, but subsequently opened the way for Macedonia to dominate Greece, and finally mount a campaign to destroy the Persian empire.
No. It occurred because all the indpendent city-states were addicted to warfare as a means of settling problems. This serial warfare brought destruction and poverty, and opened the way for Macedonia to impose control on a deeply divided and degraded people.
Helliniko Olympic Arena is an indoor arena in Greece and was opened on 2003.
Peace and Friendship Stadium is an indoor arena in Greece and was opened on 1983.
PAOK Sports Arena is an indoor arena in Greece and was opened on 1990.
OAKA Olympic Indoor Hall is an indoor arena in Greece and was opened on 1995.