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How did distance affect the city-states of ancient Greece?

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User Franckl
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Answer:

It made city-states ununited, since they formed independently from each other. City-States were constantly fighting and going to war with each other.

Step-by-step explanation:

Since city-states had distance between them, they adopted different lifestyles from one another; their economies depended on different recourses because their terrain was different from one another (ex: states by the coast would often fish as a main source of income and food). The mountanous terrain of Greece only separated city-states further and encouraged the independent growth of city-states. This meant Greece was ununited and city-states would constantly go to war with each other.

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User Piotr
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