Dear friends:
I have never heard of the phrase–“mesopotemia was the cradle of western civilization”.
Greek is a Indo-European ‘root tongue’ and Armenian is totally in a linguistic position of being all by itself.
When the Roman Empire was initially split in the 300s, actually having a Caesar & an Augustus in both parts----one can readily argue that this marked a major step in identifying what unalterably would become forever the demarkation of what was East & what was West. Additionally, it already planted the seeds for Ecclesiastical disunion with the Greeks being the most ‘influential race’ within the East. This, even though the time of Constantine had not yet come. To put it very crudely, it is as though some higher authority had made a dividing line between what had been a rather unified ‘gang turf’ and the most vocal/ready to take over ‘gang’ would take over the newly created halves. Though my analogy is crude, if one looks at a map of the period, with a dividing line splitting the Adriatic Sea and on upwards through the European land mass, this marked a division with which we live with today; a religious, political, & cultural divide.
When Constantine made Christianity the official religion of the Empire and subsequently moved the capitol to Constantinople—(the new Rome)—the seeds had thoroughly flowered. The Greeks immediately took advantage of this situation in attempting to be the primary controlling agents of the East; what was seen as building a new Greek-controlled Empire upon the bones of the Roman empire in the East. The Catholic Encyclopoedia itself refers to the first 200 yrs or so after Constantine’s momentous move, as a primarily Roman period of influence re culture/language/etc., then giving way to a Byzantine/Greek Empire!
Need I point out that along with the 200 yr slow but, inevitable with each passing year change, the emphasis was placed to make the Greek See of Contantinople, the primary seat in the EAST, slowly diminishing the See of Alexandria which had been of much greater distinction & influence.
Why does the Orthodox Church have Constantine the Great revered as a Saint? – A man who literally committed murder? --To put it simply because he gave the Eastern world—(led by the Greeks as the primary Eastern influence)—the gift that does not stop giving; the chance to inherit an Empire which they had not built, elevate a rather minor Sea, and eventually seek to be the political & religious masters of what had been one-half of the Roman Empire.
As I stated in my initial post, the HISTORICAL facts of what we now face and whether Greeks are Western or Eastern may be a bit ‘touchy’ but–yes–Greece is most certainly part of the EAST.