"At the touch of love everyone becomes a poet-" Plato.
The landscape in Greece contained a lot of mountains and rolling hills. The landscape also included some canyons and other natural landforms that made it difficult to cross to other city-states. Greece is and was a peninsula which means it's surrounded on three sides by water. To the East was the Aegean Sea, West was the Inoian Sea, and South was the Mediterranean Sea. The temperatures during the month of August in Athens, a major city in Greece, is 84 degrees F. During the coldest month of January the average temperature falls to be about 50 degrees F. Those averages are from today so they may have differed a little from Ancient Greece. I would state the averages from 3,000 years ago but Meteorologists did not exist to calculate those averages in temperature. In the Greek city-states they lots of different crops including barley, olives, grapes, they had vegetable gardens and orchards. The gardens and orchards included produce like cabbage, onions, garlic, lentils, chick peas, beans, pomegranates, figs, almonds, and some herbs, too.
Ancient Greece's landscape made it very difficult for the Greek people. The mountains separated them from the other Greek city-states as well as enemies. The mountains caused each city-state to have its own government, money, and language but the mountains did help protect them from enemy attacks. All the nearby water did create amazing sailors from the Greeks. They were also terrific traders with several trading posts on the surrounding islands. The people were defiantly affected by the terrain because they were separated from other Greeks, but I don't think they really cared that much about the other city-states.
Ancient Greece's landscape made it very difficult for the Greek people. The mountains separated them from the other Greek city-states as well as enemies. The mountains caused each city-state to have its own government, money, and language but the mountains did help protect them from enemy attacks. All the nearby water did create amazing sailors from the Greeks. They were also terrific traders with several trading posts on the surrounding islands. The people were defiantly affected by the terrain because they were separated from other Greeks, but I don't think they really cared that much about the other city-states.