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Macedonia
ancient Hellenic kingdom
Frankokratia
thumb|250px|The beginning of Frankokratia: the division of the Byzantine Empire after the [[Fourth Crusade ]] thumb|250px| Greek and Latin states in southern Greece, 1210 thumb|250px| The Eastern Mediterranean 1450 AD, showing the Ottoman Empire, the surviving [[Byzantine Empire (purple) and the various Latin possessions in Greece]]
Locris
Locris (; ; ) was a region of ancient Greece, the homeland of the Locrians, made up of three distinct districts.
Hellenic State
1941-1944 client state of the Axis Powers
Lordship of Negroponte
former country
Battle of Sybota
433 BCE battle during the Peloponnesian War
Battle of Cumae
naval battle between Cumae and the Etruscans (474 BCE)
Diocese of Asia
diocese of the Roman Empire
Ioannina vilayet
Ottoman province
Northern Greece
NUTS Region of Greece
Battle of Crocus Field
bloodiest battle in Greek history
Byzantine Greece
historical period of Greece
Battle of Abydos
naval engagement during the Peloponnesian War (411 BC) Athenian victory
Moria refugee camp
refugee camp in Lesvos, Greece
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Corfu, Zakynthos and Cephalonia
Catholic archdiocese in Greece
Trachis
Trachis (, Trakhís) was a region in ancient Greece. Situated south of the river Spercheios, it was populated by the Malians. It was also a polis (city-state).
Battle of Thermopylae
1941 World War II battle during the German invasion of Greece
Battle of Lemnos
1913 naval battle during the First Balkan War
Archipelago eyalet
Ottoman province
massacre of Thessalonica
390 Roman massacre under Theodosius I
Battle of Chios
201 BC battle of the Cretan War
Battle of Crannon
322 BCE battle
Despotate of Arta
former state
Peloponnese
Byzantine military-civilian province c 800 CE
Battle of Spercheios
997 battle of the Byzantine-Bulgarian Wars
Nicopolis
Byzantine district (theme)
Cephallenia
Byzantine district (theme)
Pindus Mountains mixed forests
european ecological region
Battle of Matapan
1717 battle
Battle of Tanagra
battle in the Pelopponesian War
Kingdom of the Morea
Venetian rule over the Peloponnese (1685-1715)
Battle of Sepeia
494 BCE battle between Spartan forces led by Cleomenes I and Argos
Byzantine Crete
Province of the Byzantine Empire
Battle of Malka Nidzhe
1916 opening battle of the Monastir Offensive
Proastiakos
The Proastiakos (; "suburban") is Greece's commuter rail service, run by Hellenic Train, on rail infrastructure owned by the Hellenic Railways Organisation (OSE) (lines) and GAIAOSE (buildings and Trains). These services connect a participating city's central railway station to important locations such as a city's port or airport, as well as its suburbs and occasionally nearby towns and cities.
Greek destroyer Vasilissa Olga
1938 G and H-class destroyer
Metropolis of Thessaloniki
Battle of Syme
411 BCE naval battle during the Peloponnesian War
Battle of Andros
Hellenistic naval battle
Chech
thumb|400px|right|The Chech region in Bulgaria and [[Greece.]] Chech () or Chechko () is a Bulgarian term describing a geographical and historical region of the Balkan peninsula in southeastern Europe in modern-day Bulgaria and Greece. It consists of about 60 settlements and was traditionally mostly Pomak with Orthodox Greek and Bulgarian minorities.
Lordship of Salona
crusader state in central Greece
Vasilissis Sofias Avenue
avenue in the east side of Athens, Greece
Battle of Eretria
411 BCE naval battle between Sparta and Athens
Battle of the 300 Champions
battle between Argos and Sparta (546 BCE)
Battle of Chios
1319 naval battle
TWA Flight 840 bombing (1986)
1986 airliner bombing
Battle of the Olive Grove of Koundouros
1205 battle of the Fourth Crusade
Battle of Demotika
1352 battle during the Second Balkan War
Boleron
thumb|Seal of Andronikos, protospatharios and [[krites of Boleron, Strymon, and Thessalonica]] Boleron () was the name of a region and a Byzantine province in southwestern Thrace during the Middle Ages.
National Conservatory of Athens
music educational institution in Greece
Thessalian plain
plain in Greece
Battle of Makryplagi
1263 battle
Phaedriades
thumb|'Delphi' by Edward Lear, watercolor, 12 by 19 cm.. In Greece, the Phaedriades (Φαιδριάδες, meaning "the shining ones") are the pair of cliffs, ca 700 m high on the lower southern slope of Mt. Parnassos, which rise above the sacred site of Delphi. Strabo, Plutarch and Pausanias all mentioned the Phaedriades when describing the site, a narrow valley of the Pleistos (today Xeropotamos) formed by Parnassos and Mount Cirphis. Between them rises the Castalian Spring. Even nowadays, at noontime, the rock surfaces reflect a dazzling glare.
Siege of Coron (1533–1534)
1533–1534 siege during Ottoman–Habsburg wars
Battle of Idomene
426 BCE battle during the Peloponnesian War
Battle of Dervenakia
1822 battle in the Greek War of Independence
Dikili Tash
prehistoric archaeological site in northern Greece
Caesaropolis
Caesaropolis () was a Byzantine city on the coast of eastern Macedonia. It was founded in 836 by the Caesar Alexios Mosele to consolidate Byzantine control over the Slavic tribes of the area.
Trikala sanjak
Ottoman province in Thessaly
Battle of Achelous
on the Aetolian Achelous river, between the Despotate of Epirus and Albanian chiefs