Alexander the [blank_start]Great[blank_end] (356-323 BCE) of Macedon first followed in his father’s (King Phillip II) footsteps in subduing the city-states of Greece and then lead his army on a series of campaigns which successfully conquered the then-known world from Macedon, through Greece, down to Egypt, across [blank_start]Persia[blank_end], to India. Alexander’s tutor was the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 BCE) and, as Alexander travelled, he spread Greek thought and culture in his wake, thus "[blank_start]hellenizing[blank_end]" (to make `Greek’ in culture and civilization) those he conquered.
Complete the next Venn diagram using the options below. Drag and drop each option according if it is a difference or similarity between Greece and Rome contributions