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 |   |   ATHENS
    : ATTICA |  
  
    | In the fifth century before Christ, at the Apogee
      time, Athens was the most prosperous city in Greece; its county was called
      “Attica”: it is a peninsula  of
      2650 square kilometres which extends to the Aegean Sea and where there
      used to live about 300 000 inhabitants. Victories in the Medic Wars
      enforced a military supremacy, but the province had many resources as well:
      the Laurion silver mines and the magnificent marble of Pentelique. The sea
      trade reinforced/swelled/strengthened the power of the city; its harbour,
      the “Piree”,  permitted profitable exchanges. Athens used to export marble,
      handicraft (weapons, pottery) and some agricultural exceeding goods: oil,
      wine. These liquids were shipped in earth-ware: ceramics, thus the
      prevailing role of potters in Athens. But the most
      job for the Greeks was farming; however, only citizens (born of an
      Athenian father and mother) were entitled to own some land. In spite of
      their attachment to their land, cereals were not produced in sufficient
      amount and wheat had to be imported. There was not enough of raw material
      such as wood or metal. |  
  
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