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Greek Colonization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2011
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Greek colonization had a long and varied history; it had begun indeed had already accomplished its first great period of expansion before the first Greek historians wrote; it continued in different forms intermittently throughout the classical period, had a second great era under Alexander the Great and the early Hellenistic monarchies, and again persisted with modifications after Rome became mistress of the eastern Mediterranean. The result we all know: the Greek polis, that closely integrated self-governing community of citizens, became the dominant political unit and political ideal of the Mediterranean world, and left its indelible imprint, for good or ill, on the Western World.
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References
1 Roebuck, C., Ionian Trade and Colonization (New York: Archaeological Institute of America, 1959), Monograph LX, 24–41,Google Scholar with the bibliography there cited; Sakellariou, M. B., La Migration Grecque en lonie (Athens: Centre d'études d'Asie mineure, 1958), andGoogle ScholarCook, J. M., “Old Smyrna,” Annual of the British School in Athens, 53–54 (1958–1959), 1–34Google Scholar.
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