Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

1) ancient greece was not controlled by a single government. instead, a…

Question

  1. ancient greece was not controlled by a single government. instead, ancient greece was made up of separate city-states. a city-state typically included one city center and the surrounding land. each city-state in ancient greece had its own government and economy, or process of making, selling, and buying goods.
  2. read about the places described below. then decide whether or not each place is an example of a city-state.

3)

city-statenot a city-state
a small group of citizens governs a city and farms the land around it.
a city is ruled by a king. people in the city produce wheat on the nearby farm. they also trade with a neighboring city ruled by a different king

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

First, recall that an ancient Greek city-state is an independent political unit with its own government, economy, centered on a city and surrounding land.

  1. For the first place: It spans 3 continents, ruled by one king, so it is a large empire, not an independent city-based self-governing unit.
  2. For the second place: It is a small area with its own government over a city and surrounding land, matching the city-state definition.
  3. For the third place: The city is ruled by a distant king, so it does not have its own independent government, failing the city-state criteria.

Answer:

  1. An empire spanning 3 continents, ruled by one king: Not a city-state
  2. A small area with its own government over a city and surrounding land: City-state
  3. A city ruled by a distant king: Not a city-state