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About Greece
Article Index
About Greece
Aegean civilization: prehistoric Greece
Mycenaean Greece (Bronze Age)
Greek Dark Ages
Ancient Greece
Hellenistic Greece
Roman Period
Byzantine Empire
Economic prosperity
Artistic revival
The Fourth Crusade
Ottoman Rule and the Rise of Modern Greece
The modern Greek state
The page title
World War II
Postwar recovery
Restoration of democracy
Greek language
List of museums in Greece
Human rights in Greece
Greek cuisine
Transport in Greece
Hydrothermal vent
Exploration
Physical properties
Biological communities


Greek (Ελληνικά, IPA: [elini'ka] — "Hellenic") has a documented history of 3,500 years, the longest of any single language within the Indo-European family. It is also one of the earliest attested Indo-European languages, with fragmentary records in Mycenaean dating back to the 15th or 14th century BC, matched only by the Anatolian languages and Vedic Sanskrit. Today, it is spoken by approximately 17 million people in Greece, Cyprus, Albania, Bulgaria, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Italy, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, Ukraine, Moldavia, Romania, Egypt and emigrant communities around the world.

Greek has been written in the Greek alphabet (the first to introduce vowels) since the 9th century BC in Greece (before that in Linear B), and the 4th century BC in Cyprus (before that in Cypriot syllabary). Greek literature has a continuous history of nearly three thousand years.



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