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 Greece| Facts & Figures |
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| President: Karolos Papoulias (2005) Prime Minister: Antonis Samaras (2012) Land area: 50,502 sq mi (130,800 sq km);
total area: 50,942 sq mi (131,940 sq km) Population (2012 est.): 10,767,827 (growth
rate: .06%); birth rate: 9.08/1000; infant mortality rate: 4.92/1000;
life expectancy: 80.05
Capital (2009 est.):
Athens, 3.252 million Other large cities:
Thessaloníki, 834,000 Monetary unit: Euro (formerly drachma) More Facts & Figures |
GeographyLocated in southern Europe, Greece forms an
irregular-shaped peninsula in the Mediterranean with two additional large
peninsulas projecting from it: the Chalcidice and the Peloponnese. The
Greek islands are generally subdivided into two groups, according to
location: the Ionian islands (including Corfu, Cephalonia, and Leucas)
west of the mainland and the Aegean islands (including Euboea, Samos,
Chios, Lesbos, and Crete) to the east and south. North-central Greece,
Epirus, and western Macedonia are all mountainous. The main chain of the
Pindus Mountains extends from northwest Greece to the Peloponnese. Mount
Olympus, rising to 9,570 ft (2,909 m), is the highest point in the
country.
GovernmentParliamentary republic.
HistoryIndo-European peoples, including the Mycenaeans,
began entering Greece about 2000
B.C.
and set
up sophisticated civilizations. About 1200
B.C.
, the Dorians, another Indo-European people,
invaded Greece, and a dark age followed, known mostly through the Homeric
epics. At the end of this time, classical Greece began to emerge (c. 750
B.C.
) as a loose composite of city-states with
a heavy involvement in maritime trade and a devotion to art, literature,
politics, and philosophy. Greece reached the peak of its glory in the 5th
century
B.C.
, but the Peloponnesian War
(431–404
B.C.
) weakened the nation, and
it was conquered by Philip II and his son Alexander the Great of
Macedonia, who considered themselves Greek. By the middle of the 2nd
century
B.C.
, Greece had declined to the status
of a Roman province. It remained within the eastern Roman Empire until
Constantinople fell to the Crusaders in 1204. In 1453, the Turks took
Constantinople and by 1460, Greece was a province in the Ottoman Empire.
The Greek war of independence began in 1821, and by 1827 Greece won
independence with sovereignty guaranteed by Britain, France, and
Russia.
The protecting powers chose Prince Otto of
Bavaria as the first king of modern Greece in 1832 to reign over an area
only slightly larger than the Peloponnese peninsula. Chiefly under the
next king, George I, chosen by the protecting powers in 1863, Greece
acquired much of its present territory. During his 57-year reign, a period
in which he encouraged parliamentary democracy, Thessaly, Epirus,
Macedonia, Crete, and most of the Aegean islands were added from the
disintegrating Turkish empire. Unfavorable economic conditions forced
about one-sixth of the entire Greek population to emigrate (mostly to the
U.S.) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. An unsuccessful war
against Turkey after World War I brought down the monarchy, which was
replaced by a republic in 1923.
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