when and how greek civilization was formed ?how greeks had links with the Egyptians?
Answers
Answer:
I really don't know it sorry
The history of Greece encompasses the history of the territory of the modern nation-state of Greece as well as that of the Greek people and the areas they inhabited and ruled historically. The scope of Greek habitation and rule has varied throughout the ages and as a result, the history of Greece is similarly elastic in what it includes. Generally, the history of Greece is divided into the following periods:
Neolithic Greece; covering a period beginning with the establishment of agricultural societies in 7000 BC and ending in c. 3200 – c. 3100 BC.
Ancient Greece usually encompasses Greek antiquity, while part of the region's late prehistory (Late Bronze Age) is also considered part of it:
Bronze Age (Cycladic culture, Minoan and Helladic); chronology covering a period beginning with the transition to a metal-based economy in 3200/3100 BC to the rise and fall of the Mycenaean Greek palaces spanning roughly five centuries (1600–1100 BC).
Greek Dark Ages (or Iron Age, Homeric Age), 1100-800 BC
Archaic period, 800-500 BC
Classical period 500-420 BC
Hellenistic period, 420-146 BC.
Roman Greece; covering a period from the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC to AD 324.
Byzantine Greece; covering a period from the establishment of the capital city of Byzantium, Constantinople, in AD 324 until the fall of Constantinople in AD 1453.
Frankish/Latin Greece; (including the Venetian possessions) covering a period from the Fourth Crusade (1204) to 1797, year of disestablishment of the Venetian Republic.
Ottoman Greece; covering a period from 1453 up until the Greek Revolution of 1821,
Modern Greece; covering a period from 1821 to present.
At its cultural and geographical peak, Greek civilization spread from Egypt all the way to the Hindu Kush mountains in Afghanistan. Since then, Greek minorities have remained in former Greek territories (e.g. Turkey, Albania, Italy, Libya, Levant, Armenia, Georgia) and Greek emigrants have assimilated into differing societies across the globe (e.g. North America, Australia, Northern Europe, South Africa). At present, most Greeks live in the modern states of Greece (independent since 1821) and Cyprus.