Was Alexander the Great really great?
A great conqueror, in 13 short years he amassed the largest empire in the entire ancient world — an empire that covered 3,000 miles. And he did this without the benefit of modern technology and weaponry. In his day, troop movements were primarily on foot, and communications were face to face. Not bad for a kid who became the King of Macedon at the age of 20.
Many of Alexander's accomplishments were made possible by his father, Philip of Macedon. Macedon, which existed roughly where the modern country of Macedonia lies today, was a kingdom located that lay geographically north of the Greek city-states.
Alexander's the Great's tutor was the Greek philosopher Aristotle.
In 338 B.C.E., King Philip of Macedon invaded and conquered the Greek city-states. Philip took advantage of the fact that the Greek city-states were divided by years of squabbling and infighting. Philip succeeded in doing what years of fighting between city-states had not done. He united Greece.
Conquering the World
Philip's next goal was to defeat Greece's age-old enemy to the east: Persia. For years, the massive Persian Empire threatened the very existence of the Greek way of life. But before he was able to pursue his second goal, Philip was assassinated.
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looks good man, keep up the good work
The death of Kublai Khan in 1259 marked a major turning point because up to his death, the Mongol Empire was more or less constantly expanding. However, with his death, things started becoming worse and worse eventually as the empire became to big for one emperor to hold it.
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This a hard question to answer because there are two correct answers; the Romans did establish the first code of law around 200 B.C. but they also lasted for 1000+ years. it is up to you one which to choose of the two but i know they were definitely not a socialist government. (explanation on why the answer isn't socialist government)
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There were some precursors in ancient societies to modern systems like capitalism and socialism but ancient Rome was neither capitalist nor socialist. The economy was, at its core, agrarian and based on systems of tribute, patronage, and, to a lesser extent, commerce. This proves that the answer is most definitely not they had a socialist government
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In 1950 there were only four independent countries on the continent: Egypt, South Africa, Ethiopia, and Liberia.
Hope this could help, friend.