Welcome to Top10Archive!
We dine on its food and enjoy their festivals,
but what do we really know about the beautiful,
European country of Greece?
For this Installment, journey with us as we
traverse the lands of the Greek, and dig into
10 Amazing Facts About Greece!
10.
Greek Cuisine
There’s nothing like a freshly put together
gyro complete with seasoned sliced lamb topped
with a delectable tzatziki sauce to make us
feel like we’ve made the journey overseas
to Greece… the softness of the pita, the
crunch of the greens... 
(JIM!)
Oh, sorry..
Greek cuisine is more than just gyros, of
course!
There’s the sweet treat of baklava, creamy
and crumbly feta cheese, flaky filo dough,
and an abundance of grape leaves.
Common dishes hailing from Greece also include
bakaliaros, fasolada, spanakopita, karydopita
and strapatsada.
Looking for something to wash your meal down?
Try alcoholic beverages like tsipouro, Tentura
and Mastika.
Although originally Turkish in origin, the
Greek Coffee - Elliniko Cafe, is the most
treasured brew among the Greek people.
9.
Greek Exports
Do you enjoy the look of that sleek white
marble that adorns most high-end hotel room
bathrooms?
Yeah… we’re sure we would too… but more
important than our lack of luxury accommodations
is where this marble comes from.
Annually, Greek exports approximately 830,000
tons of marble, falling behind only Turkey,
Italy and Spain.
Additional to marble, Greece is known for
its olive and natural sea sponge exports.
According to the OEC, in 2014, Greece exported
an estimated $33.2 Billion, with refined petroleum
making up 32% of that.
Among other notable exports include non-fillet
fresh fish, cheese, aluminium, pure olive
oil and Grapes, which combined, make up about
7% of their exports.
8.
Tourist Spots in Greece
A place known to be beautiful is bound to
have plenty for tourists to enjoy, right?
Greece has so many places you’ll want to
see that listing all would take some time,
but to list the most notable; Parthenon, Acropolis
of Athens, Colossus of Rhodes, Heraklion Archaeological
Museum, National Garden of Athens, Myrtos
Beach, Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki,
Byzantine & Christian Museum, Arch of Hadrian,
Mount Pantokrator, Zappeion, and Palace of
the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes
are all great places to start.
That may have been a mouthful… but we barely
scratched the surface.
7.
Famous Greeks
The Greeks line-up of notable folk begins
long before any of us were around.
We’re talking about when wise words were
scribbled on tablets and not on Facebook walls;
the age of Homer, Aristotle, Plato, Pericles,
Plutarch, Euripides and Socrates.
Creeping through history, other Greek natives
include singer Nana Mouskouri; Duke of Edinburgh,
Prince Philip; musician Tommy Lee; composer
and pianist Giannis Chrysomallis, better known
as Yanni; football players Georgios Samaras,
Giorgos Karagounis, and Konstantinos Mitroglou;
Queen Sofia of Spain; and Arianna Huffington,
the author behind one of the internet’s
largest news platforms, The Huffington Post.
If you're looking to check out big YouTubers
from Greece, be sure to check out the likes
of ComedyLab GR, firekreve2J, and BrutalBass!
6.
Great Greek Philosophers
We just mentioned names like Homer, Aristotle,
Socrates and Plato, some of Ancient Greece’s
most well know philosophers, but the early
years of this European country had more than
just a handful of philosophers spewing wise
anecdotes about life and the world.
From as early as the 6th century BC, Greek
philosophy - including Pre-Socratic, Classical,
Hellenistic, and Imperial - dealt with topics
that few considered touching on, including
metaphysics, biology, rhetoric, aesthetics,
and political philosophy.
If you’re looking to catch up on your ancient
Greek philosophy, you’ll want to pay attention
to Democritus, Heraclitus, Epicurus, Zeno
of Elea, Solon, Hypatia, and Glaucon.
Some philosophies you may recognize include
the Atomism, or the development of the atomic
theory; Pythagoreanism; and the concepts of
logic, materialism, and skepticism.
5.
Greek Inventions
We have a lot to thank Greece for besides
laying the building blocks for modern philosophies.
When 
you have no excuse for being late to work,
you can thank Plato for inventing the first
clock attached to an alarm device.
Greek’s have also been attributed to the
very first construction crane, the steam engine,
levers, catapults, central heating, and the
water mill.
You can also thank Greece for early geometry,
advancement in disease studies, and, as we’ll
discuss soon, the Olympic Games!
4.
Grecian Wildlife
Beautiful expanses of land and crisp coastal
waters make a great home for plenty of wildlife,
from about 90 different species of mammals
to over 240 different types of birds and 107
kinds of fish.
You’ll get to observe 235 species of butterfly,
reptiles like the Milos Viper, the Peloponnese
Wall Lizard, Greek tortoise, and fire salamander.
Making up the large number of land mammals
include the parti-coloured bat, gray wolf,
fallow deer and golden jackal.
While the Striped dolphin, false killer whale,
beluga, North Atlantic right whale and the
humpback whale will appease any seafaring
tourists.
Greece’s mass of mammals is slowly dwindling,
though, with 15 species ranging from near-threatened
to critically endangered.
3.
Greek Mythology
Despite the abundance of mythology that’s
out there, there’s one that always seems
to pop up and remains one of the more popular
sources of fantastical stories.
With no singular text to refer back to like
an Ancient Greek bible, much of the broad
mythology is believed to stem from oral traditions
– like wondrous bedtime stories of gods,
goddesses, the Underworld, heroes, monsters,
and battles of will and strength.
Names like Gaia, Homer, Zeus, Hercules, Aphrodite,
Poseidon, Hades, Ares, Chaos and Mount Olympus
speckle Greek Mythology, framing the creation
of man, epic journeys and incredible stories
that make Hollywood writers blush.
For monster lovers, Greek mythology is filled
with abominations like the Centaur, Polyphemus,
Sirens, Cerberus, Medusa, Cyclops, harpies,
hydras and nemean lions.
2.
Records Held by the Greek
Greece is the proud holder of the world’s
largest olive oil production…
Okay, maybe not quite the kind of “World
Record” you expected to hear, but Greece
has laid claim to a fair share of records
over time.
Greek ultramarathon runner Yiannis Kouros,
or the “Running God,” has held 11 different
records for distance and timed races, including
running 1,000 miles or 1,609 kilometers in
under 11 days.
In 2011, Kostas Karipidis and his team broke
three records, including most cuts with a
“katana” sword against stable objects
within one minute.
And finally, the world's largest lollipop,
which weighed in at 3,600 kilograms, beating
out the previous record of 3,200 kilograms
by the United States.
1.
The Olympic Games
The Olympic Games as we know them today aren’t
just some marvel of modern sports.
They’re a call-back to an ancient tradition
started in 776 BC.
Held in the honor of Zeus, to whom 100 oxen
were sacrificed during each festival, the
Greeks rooted the games in their own mythology,
attributing their creation to beings of their
own lore.
One account, recounted by historian Pausanias,
tells of a race held in Olympia between Herakles,
Paeonaeus, Epimedes, Iasius and Idas to entertain
a newborn Zeus.
Whether in mythology or real-world roots,
the games were a massive celebration warranting
an “Olympic Truce” among the city-states
and other countries so that athletes could
travel to the games safely.
Despite the religious overtones, the Olympics
were also manipulated by politics, with city-states
using them to show dominance over rivals
