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Re: ZZ Conquered Lands 

By: zzstar in FFT4 | Recommend this post (2)
Sat, 02 Dec 23 11:37 PM | 35 view(s)
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Msg. 10058 of 13306
(This msg. is a reply to 10057 by Zimbler0)

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The Persians were ousted. Basically no “conquering.” When they came back, they were annihilated.

The Romans came hundreds of years later when Athens was in decline. They were the only conquerors, a new empire. Yet, they were awed by what they found and the Roman emperor Hadrian built a gate that still stands in the center of Athens to this day, to honor the Athenians and their culture, which they brought over to Rome.

http://athens-tourist-information.com/things-to-do/ancient-monuments/hadrians-gate

The conqueror of Persians was Alexander the Great. They were vanquished after that. He also was the only conqueror of Afghanistan, being the only army in history to go through the Khmer pass, that no other army has done to this day and on to India and China.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: ZZ Conquered Lands
By: Zimbler0
in FFT4
Sat, 02 Dec 23 10:49 PM
Msg. 10057 of 13306

ZZZ > Greece was never conquered by the Persians(they tried and died), but Alexander put an end to them for good.

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Greece Vs Persia: When the Ancient Empires Destroyed Athens and Persepolis

Around 540 BC, the cities of Ionia (Aegean coast of Asia Minor) had been conquered by Persia and thereafter were ruled by native tyrants nominated by the Persian satrap in Sardis.
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Greece in the Roman era

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greece_in_the_Roman_era

The Greek peninsula fell to the Roman Republic during the Battle of Corinth (146 BC), when Macedonia became a Roman province. Meanwhile, southern Greece also came under Roman hegemony, but some key Greek poleis remained partly autonomous and avoided direct Roman taxation.

In 88 BC, Athens and other Greek city-states revolted against Rome and were suppressed by General Lucius Cornelius Sulla. During the Roman civil wars, Greece was physically and economically devastated until Augustus organised the peninsula as the province of Achaea, in 27 BC. Initially, Rome's conquest of Greece damaged the economy, but it readily recovered under Roman administration in the postwar period. Moreover, the Greek cities in Asia Minor recovered from the Roman conquest more rapidly than the cities of peninsular Greece, which had been much damaged in the war with Sulla.

As an empire, Rome invested resources and rebuilt the cities of Roman Greece, and established Corinth as the capital city of the province of Achaea, and Athens prospered as a cultural hub of philosophy, education and learned knowledge.
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