An Overview of Classical Greek History from Mycenae to Alexander
Thomas R. Martin
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0009&query=head%3D%2338
The Archaic Age - 5.5. V Early Colonization
Some Greeks
had emigrated from the mainland eastward across the Aegean
Sea to settle in Ionia
as early as the ninth century B.C. Starting around 750 B.C., however, Greeks
began to settle even farther outside the Greek
homeland. Within two hundred years, Greek
colonies were established in areas that are today southern France, Spain,
Sicily
and southern Italy,
and along North
Africa and the coast of the Black
Sea. Eventually the Greek
world had perhaps as many as 1,500 different city-states. A scarcity of arable
land certainly gave momentum to emigration from
Greece, but the revival of
international trade in the Mediterranean in this era perhaps provided
the original stimulus for Greeks
to leave their homeland, whose economy was still struggling. Some Greeks
with commercial interests took up residence in foreign settlements, such as
those founded in Spain
in this period by the Phoenicians
from Palestine.
The Phoenicians
were active in building commercially-motivated settlements throughout the western
Mediterranean. Within a century of its foundation sometime before 750 B.C.,
for example, the Phoenician settlement on the site of modern Cadiz
in Spain
had become a city thriving on economic and cultural interaction with the
indigenous Iberian population.