Ancient Greece: Ancient Greece included the Greek Peninsula, Aegean Islands, the west coast of Asia Minor and southern Italy. Around 2000 BC, a slave country appeared in Crete, Aegean Sea. Around 1500 BC, a slave state also appeared in Mycenae, Greece. The ancient civilizations of Crete and Mycenae are called Aegean civilization. Ancient Greece is the birthplace of western civilization, and Aegean civilization is the beginning of Greek history. From the eighth century BC to the sixth century BC, many slave city-states appeared in Greece, among which Athens and Sparta were the most famous. In the 5th century BC, Greece entered a period of all-round prosperity in economy, politics and culture, and slavery was fully developed.
Rome: Italy is the birthplace of Rome. In 5 10 BC, a Roman country with slavery and politics rose in the Italian peninsula. Ancient Rome inherited the cultural tradition of ancient Greece, and slavery prevailed. This is the modern man of slavery civilization in Europe. In 476 AD, the divided Western Roman Empire was destroyed under the impact of the Germanic invasion.
Middle Ages: After the demise of the Western Roman Empire, the Germans established a feudal country on the ruins of the Western Roman Empire. There are Britain, France, Germany and other countries. The Middle Ages generally began with the demise of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century and ended with the capture of Constantinople, the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire, by the Muslim Otto Turkmen in 1453.
Modern times: From the end of 15, Europe entered a modern period marked by great geographical discovery, religious reform and the rise of nation-states. . Modern times include three centuries from the Middle Ages to the Industrial Revolution, from 1500 to 1800, or from 1492 when the New World was discovered to 1789 when the French Revolution took place.