They imported their goods to trade and sell. Like grains, grapes, and olives to make wine they also traded thy idea of the alphabet :)
From the colonies they established in Italy, Sicily and Asia Minor.
They exported mainly: Olive wine grapes jewels some metals
Their countryside was rugged and poor, their population expanding, and they needed to import grain and metals.
Ivory from North Africa and gemstones from around the Mediterranean and Black Sea littorals.
They exported pottery, jewelry, olive oil and wine. They exported grain, timber, minerals, luxury goods such as ivory, glass and perfume.
They had their own mines but imported shortfalls from Spain, Africa, Asia and as far afield as tin from Cornwall.
In some cases, many explicit import statements equal only one implicit import statement. Would you rather type this:import java.util.ArrayList;import java.util.List;import java.util.Collection;import java.util.LinkedList;import java.util.Queue;import java.util.HashMap;import java.util.Map;import java.util.PriorityQueue;than this:import java.util.*;Well, the first group of statements is functionally equivalent to the first one.
you can import svr playerrs
Import duty is technically defined as a tax on an import
In most cases, maritime trade. Greeks would sell (and transport by sea) stuff like wine and timber and import or trade anything other countries had to offer.
1. how import duties can affect import/export business? 2. how import duties can affect potential business customers?
Spain import cars