Merge branch 'master' of https://git.etud.insa-toulouse.fr/rees/progWeb
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811fe8afa3
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body{
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background-image: url(./photos/athens.jpg);
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background-image: url(../photos/athens2.jpg);
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background-repeat: no-repeat;
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background-size:cover;
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faq.html
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faq.html
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<html lang="en">
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<head>
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<meta charset="UTF-8">
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<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
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<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
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<title>FAQ</title>
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</head>
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<body>
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<ol>
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<li>
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<h4>How do I get to Greece ?</h4>
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<p>The orography of Greece makes flying the easiest and cheapest option.
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The main airport is Athens International Airport Eleftherios Venizelos. A round trip ticket from France costs around 200€.
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From there you can fly to the most popular greek islands, which have their own airport.
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Alternatively, you can get to Patras port by ferry from Venice, Italy.
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It is also possible to get from Paris to Athens in 3 stops which takes around 3 days : Paris → Zurich → Belgrade → Thessaloniki.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>Do I need a Visa ?</h4>
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<p>Provided that your stay doesn't extend 3 months, French citizens only require a passport or a national identity card to go Greece.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>How can I get around in Greece ?</h4>
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<p>If you’re interested in utilizing public transit on the mainland, stick to buses and avoid the unreliable rail service.
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Although trains are cheap, they are slow and not as well maintained as other lines in Europe.
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However, buses are clean, affordable, and connect to a broad network of destinations throughout the country.
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Athens has an accessible, affordable and modern Metro that will take you to key points of interest and the port of Piraeus.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>How long should I stay ?</h4>
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<p>Ideally, you want to plan at least a week or two in Greece to have enough time to take in the major island groups and ancient cities.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>What currency does Greece use ?</h4>
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<p>Greece uses the Euro (€).</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>What is the weather like ?</h4>
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<p>Depending on the time of year, Greece can swing from chilly winters to scorching hot summers that top 40°C.
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Scheduling your vacation in spring or autumn can help you beat summer’s heat and avoid tourist-packed high season.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>Can I get by with English alone ?</h4>
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<p>English is widely spoken in the heavily touristed areas and road signs in big cities are typically bilingual.
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Nonetheless it is respectful to learn a few basic Greek words like "Please" (parakalo) and "thank you" (efharisto), to better conect with locals.
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</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>What should I pack ?</h4>
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<p>If your itinerary is heavy on cobblestone-lined cities and rocky ruins, pack good shoes and breathable clothing.
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When travelling in winter, pack an umbrella and lightweight raincoat.
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In summer don't forget sunscreen, sunglasses and a hat.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>Can you drink tap water ?</h4>
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<p>Tap water is safe to drink on the mainland in larger cities like Athens and Thessaloniki, but stick to bottled water if you’re in a smaller town off the beaten track or if you’re exploring the islands.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>Do I need an international driver's license to rent a car ?</h4>
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<p>Greece being part of the European Union, the French driver's license is sufficient to rent a car.</p>
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</li>
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</ol>
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</body>
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</html>
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<a href>Main Page</a>
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<a href>Where To Go</a>
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<a href>History</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestile</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestyle</a>
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<a href>Frequently Asked Questions</a>
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</nav>
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</header>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="#History">History</a></li>
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<ul>
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<li> <a href="#Introduction1">Introduction</a></li>
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<li><a href="#Ancient_Greece">Ancient Greece</a></li>
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<li><a href="#Middle_Ages">Middle Ages and Independence</a></li>
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<li><a href="#Balkan_Wars">Balkan Wars and WWII</a></li>
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<li><a href="#Government">Government and Dictatorship</a></li>
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<li><a href="#Byzantine">Byzantine Greece</a></li>
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<li><a href="#Greece">New Greece</a></li>
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</ul>
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<section>
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<h1 id = "History">History</h1>
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<article>
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<p id = "Introduction1"><b>Introduction</b></p>
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<p>The history of Greece can be traced back to Stone Age hunters. Later came early farmers and the Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations. This was followed by a period of wars and invasions, known as the Middle Ages. Around 1100 BC, the people of the Dorians invaded from the north and spread along the west coast. In the period 500-336 BC, Greece was divided into small city-states, each of which consisted of a city with the surrounding countryside.</p>
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<p>The ancient Greek classical and Hellenistic eras are without doubt the most beautiful times, having left behind a myriad of ideas, concepts and the basics of what we now call "Western civilization". However, the previous two millennia leading to these ancient times, as well as the following two millennia, are all part of the history of Greece after leaving an equally rich cultural imprint on the territory. Much of the Greek civilization has survived either directly or through changes to the present day.</p>
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<p>The dialects of ancient Greece have greatly influenced both the modern Greek language and the vocabularies of other languages spoken in the world today. The art and architecture of ancient Greece have proved highly influential in our time for the inner western society. The much-celebrated Renaissance was driven in large part by the rediscovery of ancient Greek ideas through texts and works of art, which until then had been repressed from the recognition of the authority of the church and the supernatural power.</p>
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<p>It should be noted that history is a discipline that has been conceived for the first time in ancient Greece. Herodotus (484-425 BC) is considered the "Father of History" and was the first to record the events and human actions for the sole purpose of handing down to future generations. Not much later than Herodotus, Thucydides (460-395 BC) in his History of the Peloponnesian War, he enrolled his name in the discipline of history, in an attempt to present the story in an "objective", creating links between human actions and events. Their approach and method for recording the historical events would become the guiding light for historians of the following two thousand years.</p>
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</article>
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<article>
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<p id = "Ancient_Greece"><b>Ancient Greece</b></p>
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<p>In many moments of its history Greece included Epirus, Macedonia and Thrace, part of Asia Minor and Magna Graecia. Archaeological remains show that Greece has had a long prehistory, dating from the Neolithic (4000 BC). With the Bronze Age (2800 BC) important cultures developed. In fact, the Aegean civilization had several phases, two of the most important being the Minoan civilization and the Mycenaean civilization. These cultures disappeared in 1100 BC while the Greek-speaking Achaeans migrated in the Peloponnese during the 14 th and 13 th century. B.C. The Aeolians and the Ionians apparently preceded the Dorians, who migrated into Greece before 1000 BC The Ionians, moving back, perhaps as refugees or as conquerors, settled in the Ionian islands and the coasts of Asia Minor, which became part of the greek world. After the Doric invasion, the peoples of Greece, under the influence of geographical division and in relation to the great variety of tribes, developed the city-state, small settlements that grew into minor kingdoms.</p>
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<p>Homeric Greece (named after the great epic poet Homer) was based on agriculture in areas relatively unproductive, but it was already open to the sea. Although the Greeks did not rival as sailors with the Phoenicians, Carthaginians and Romans, the sea offered them an opportunity for expansion and trade. In '8 th, 7 th and 6 th century BC the Greeks founded important colonies, many of which became autonomous city-state, starting from the Black Sea and the Bosphorus (Byzantium, where it was founded) up in Sicily, southern Italy (Magna Graecia), Mediterranean France, the northern coasts of Africa and Spain. These colonies had a great influence on the history of the Greek mainland, where the city-states were fighting for liberation. Because of their independence, the cities developed separate</p>
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<p>However, there was a general pattern of development, with the necessary changes. Monarchies transferred to aristocracies, which were in turn replaced by tyrants, who usually gained power espousing the cause of the underprivileged and by using force. Although the tyrants usually tried to establish dynasties, their families have always had short-lived. Pisistratus, Hipparchus and Hippias in Athens, Gelo, Dionysius the Elder, and Dionysius the Younger in Sicily were typical tyrants. Greek tyranny on the continent will soon have given way to democracies, oligarchies or limited by the low of citizenship and of slavery. It was in Greece that the idea of political democracy was light. </p>
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<p>The conflicts of the city-state had a sense of unity, all their citizens considered themselves Hellenes, and religious unity gave rise to alloys known as Amphictyon, in particular Amphictyon the great center of Delphi (the Amphictyons was a confederation of neighboring cities, linked by a common worship at the shrine itself for which you collected the money for religious ceremonies. later in the assemblies of Amphictyon is discussed, as well as of religion, including economic affairs, trade and political interests in common. Finally, the original sacred significance disappeared entirely and Amphictyon turned into a political-military alliances). The celebration of contests such as the Olympic Games also fostered unity.</p>
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<p>However, the Ionian cities of Asia Minor received little help from Greece when they revolted (499 BC) against Persia, which also threatened the Greek mainland, while mainland cities were poorly united in the Persian Wars that continued until 449 BC Successes in these wars, however, was the powerful impulse of Greek civilization. Athens, in particular, with the support of the Delian League as the basis of the empire, grew dramatically, and the time of Pericles (495-429 BC) developed a culture that would have left their mark in the Western and Eastern civilizations. Drama, poetry, sculpture, architecture and philosophy flourished, along with a vigorous intellectual life. </p>
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<p>The leader of the Greeks and 4 th 5 th century BC included Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Phidias, Myron, Polyclitus, Heraclitus, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle and Hippocrates. Even if Athens succumbed in the Peloponnesian War (431-404 BC) and Sparta triumphed briefly before continued fighting gave the hegemony over Greece to Corinth and Thebes, the civilization that had created continued to live. When Philip II of Macedon attacked the warring city-states and conquered Greece by defeating the Athenians and Thebans in the battle of Chaeronea (338 BC), his son, Alexander the Great, would soon spread Greek civilization in the Western world, Asia and India. After Alexander's death, his empire was torn by his generals in the ongoing conflict in the period 323-276 BC.</p>
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<p>Some Greek cities formed the League Aetolians to oppose Macedonian rule, but some members of the Achaean League took sides with the Macedonians. The Greek city-states continued their rivalries, and Macedonia under the Antigonidi became completely Hellenized. The continuing war in Greece made it increasingly weak, while Rome grew stronger. In 146 BC, after the Fourth Macedonian War, the remains of the Greek states fell definitively into the hands of Rome. Under Roman rule, cities have long maintained a certain independence and fervent intellectual life, but had little political or economic importance.</p>
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<p>The Hellenism, however, had triumphed, and Greek intellectual supremacy continued for many centuries. The Byzantine Empire was full of Greek origin, and Hellenistic civilization, centered at Alexandria, Pergamum, Dura, and other cities, spread Greek influence and preserved the heritage greek in later centuries. The Greeks were the first to write narrative secular history, and the works of Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon and Polybius were the sources of events and contemporary ideas, as well as the classics of world literature. </p>
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<p>From 7000 BC farmers used to live there. By 1950 BC, they knew how to write using hieroglyphS. Around 1600 BC civilization spread to the Greek mainland. They are called the Myceneans and they had city-states.</p>
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</article>
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<article>
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<p id = "Middle_Ages"><b>Middle Ages and Independence</b></p>
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<p>From the Division (395 AD) the Roman Empire in the East and West until the conquest (century 15th) of Greece by the Ottoman Turks, Greece shared the fortunes and vicissitudes of the Byzantine Empire. The victory of the emperor Valens Visigoths at Adrianople marked the beginning of the frequent and devastating barbarian invasions of Greece, followed by the Huns, Avars, Slavs and Bulgarians.</p>
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<p>The power and prestige of Greece have been restored by the Macedonian dynasty of Byzantine emperors (867-1025), but the center of the greek world was Constantinople, not Greece proper. In the 11 century. The Turks began to take hold in the empire, the Normans attacked Epirus, and began the Crusades. The Fourth Crusade in 1204 led to the temporary disintegration of the Byzantine Empire and the creation of a feudal state under the rule of the noble French, Flemish and Venetian.</p>
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<p>The restored Byzantine Empire (1261-1453) recovered only parts of Greece, most of which continued under the rule of French and Italian princes until conquered by the Ottoman Turks (completed in 1456). Genoa Khios held until 1566, Venice retained Crete until 1669 and the Ionian Islands until 1797. In its many wars with the Ottomans, Venice also held for short periods Athens, Evvoia, and several other ports and islands until 1718. Under the Ottoman Empire, Greece was merely one of many territories to exploit.</p>
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<p>The Turks practiced religious tolerance, but otherwise their regime was harsh and oppressive. Many Greek families were fundamental cornerstones of the administration of the empire, the Greek merchants living in Constantinople and the ports of Asia Minor, notably Izmir (Smyrna), were very rich, but Greece languished in obscurity and poverty.</p>
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<p>In the early 19 th century, the desire for independence of the Greeks was stimulated by growing nationalism, the influence of the French Revolution, by copovolgimento in favor of the Turks in the Russo-Turkish war, rebellion (1820) of Ali Pasha against 'Ottoman empire, and by the sympathetic attitude of Alexander I of Russia, whose foreign minister, Capo d'Istria, was greek.</p>
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<p>In 1821 the Greek War of Independence began under the leadership of Alexander and Demetrios Ypsilanti. The European sentiment was overwhelmingly in favor of the Greek cause, and many were dished out financial aid, many foreign volunteers (including Lord Byron was the most celebrated) joined the Greek forces. Russia and Britain decided by a composition (1826) to mediate conflicts between the Greeks and Turkey, and in 1827 the Greek political factions put aside their rivalries to elect Capo d'Istria president of Greece.</p>
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<p>Great Britain, Russia and France joined in demanding an armistice. Turkey refused, and the allied fleets attacked and defeated the fleet of Muhammad Ali, viceroy of Egypt and the Ottoman sultan's chief supporter against the Greeks at the Battle of Navarino (1827). Only Russia, however, declared war (1828) to Turkey. Defeated, Turkey accepted the Treaty of Adrianople (1829) and recognized Greek autonomy. In 1832, Greece won the European powers recognition of its independence. Europe chose a Bavarian prince as king of the Hellenes and Ggrecia accepted.</p>
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<p>Otto I proved authoritarian and unpopular, however, under pressure, the constitution promulgated in 1844, but was forced to abdicate in 1862. Otto I was succeeded by a Danish prince, who as George I (reigned 1863-1913) introduced (1864) a new constitution establishing a unicameral parliament. Great Britain ceded (1864) the Ionian Islands, and in 1881 Greece acquired Thessaly and part of Epirus.</p>
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<p>Due to British opposition, Greece was unable to annex Crete during the great uprising (1866-1869) against the Ottoman rule. The continuous irredentist agitation to absorb Crete led to the greek-Turkish War of 1897, during which Greece was defeated, but after strong pressure from the European Central Powers, Crete was finally declared independent and later (1913) attached to Greece.</p>
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</article>
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<article>
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<p id = "Balkan_Wars"><b>Balkan Wars and WWII</b></p>
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<p></p>
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</article>
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<article>
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<p id = "Government"><b>Government and Dictatorship</b></p>
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<p></p>
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<p id = "Byzantine"><b>Byzantine Greece</b></p>
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<p>The Great Emperor Justinian reigned from 527-565. In that time Romans' influence grew smaller and the Greeks' grew stronger. </p>
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</article>
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<section>
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<h1 id = "Mythology">Mythology</h1>
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<article>
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<p id = "Introduction2"><b>Introduction</b></p>
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<p>The history of Greece can be traced back to Stone Age hunters. Later came early farmers and the Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations. This was followed by a period of wars and invasions, known as the Middle Ages. Around 1100 BC, the people of the Dorians invaded from the north and spread along the west coast. In the period 500-336 BC, Greece was divided into small city-states, each of which consisted of a city with the surrounding countryside.</p>
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<p>The ancient Greek classical and Hellenistic eras are without doubt the most beautiful times, having left behind a myriad of ideas, concepts and the basics of what we now call "Western civilization". However, the previous two millennia leading to these ancient times, as well as the following two millennia, are all part of the history of Greece after leaving an equally rich cultural imprint on the territory. Much of the Greek civilization has survived either directly or through changes to the present day.</p>
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<p>The dialects of ancient Greece have greatly influenced both the modern Greek language and the vocabularies of other languages spoken in the world today. The art and architecture of ancient Greece have proved highly influential in our time for the inner western society. The much-celebrated Renaissance was driven in large part by the rediscovery of ancient Greek ideas through texts and works of art, which until then had been repressed from the recognition of the authority of the church and the supernatural power.</p>
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<p>It should be noted that history is a discipline that has been conceived for the first time in ancient Greece. Herodotus (484-425 BC) is considered the "Father of History" and was the first to record the events and human actions for the sole purpose of handing down to future generations. Not much later than Herodotus, Thucydides (460-395 BC) in his History of the Peloponnesian War, he enrolled his name in the discipline of history, in an attempt to present the story in an "objective", creating links between human actions and events. Their approach and method for recording the historical events would become the guiding light for historians of the following two thousand years.</p>
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</article>
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<img src="./photos/titanomachy.jpg" alt="titanomachy" width="2000px"/>
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</section>
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<a href>Main Page</a>
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<a href>Where To Go</a>
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<a href>History</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestile</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestyle</a>
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<a href>Frequently Asked Questions</a>
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</nav>
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</header>
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<hr>
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<main class="B">
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="main.css">
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/main.css">
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="text.css">
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/text.css">
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</head>
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<body>
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<a href>Main Page</a>
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<a href>Where To Go</a>
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<a href>History</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestile</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestyle</a>
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<a href>Frequently Asked Questions</a>
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</nav>
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</header>
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<p id = "History">History</p>
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<a href>Main Page</a>
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<a href>Where To Go</a>
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<a href>History</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestile</a>
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<a href>Food and Lifestyle</a>
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<a href>Frequently Asked Questions</a>
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</nav>
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</header>
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