Greek civilization
There is an old saying “Rome wasn’t built in a day.” It could also be said that “Rome wasn’t built by the Greeks in a day.”
To this day the Greeks and Italians often point out the similarities between their cultures. Roman architecture and Greek architecture are strikingly similar. The mythology is nearly the same, though the names are different, both sets of Gods reside on Mount Olympus. Western historians talk about Magna Grecia, a period beginning in the 8th Century BC in which the Greeks colonized what is now known as modern day Sicily, Calabria, Apulia, and Salento. This could account for some of the similarities. However, we need only look to the pages of Rome’s own mythology for further insight into the Greek influences on Rome.
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D. Mannerism, baroque, rococo, neoclassicism
Mannerism is a vogue in European art that developed in the succeeding times of the Italian High Renaissance nearby 1520. The Baroque is an extremely elegant and frequently exaggerated vogue of structure, painting, and music that prospered in Europe from the preceding 17th till the late 18th century. Rococo was an exuberantly ornamental 18th-century European form which was the final interpretation of the baroque journey. Neoclassicism is the title awarded to Western campaigns in the ornamental and visible paintings, literature, cinema, music, and design that draw influence from the "traditional" art and knowledge of ancient Babylon.