No. An empire is a single entity. The Roman Empire was divided into provinces, each with its own governor who ruled in the name of Rome.
kingdoms
There was no Greek empire. After Alexander the Great's death, his generals divided the empire amogst themselves, forming what we call today the Hellenistic kingdoms - Macedonia, Egypt, Syria and Pergamon. These kingdoms were progressively absorbed into the Roman Empire in the Second and First Centuries BCE.
The Persian Empire ceased to exist after Alexander the Great took it over. It became the Macedonian Empire. After his death it was divided into the Hellenistic Kingdoms by the generals who succeeded him. These kingdoms included Macedonia, Egypt, Syria and others in Asia Minor and Greece.
The Roman Empire was divided into eastern and western Rome
The Eastern Empire would have probably fallen along with the Western Empire.
Roman Empire fell, and divided among weak kingdoms.
kingdoms
The Carolingian Empire divided because the tradition at that time was that a kingdom was divided among the sons of the king. The imperial title could be divided or not, so there could be co-emperors, but there were a number of kingdoms within the empire. These kingdoms went to war with one another for various reasons, and after a lot of changes, the empire was divided with the largest pieces being the Kingdom of the Franks and the Holy Roman Empire. Both of these changed their methods of monarchic succession.
The treaty that divided Charlemagne's empire was the Treaty of Verdun.
Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.Diocletian was the emperor who divided the Roman empire.
There was no Greek empire. After Alexander the Great's death, his generals divided the empire amogst themselves, forming what we call today the Hellenistic kingdoms - Macedonia, Egypt, Syria and Pergamon. These kingdoms were progressively absorbed into the Roman Empire in the Second and First Centuries BCE.
The Eastern Roman Empire and the Western Roman Empire.
Medieval. It's a congregation of Germanic kingdoms and has nothing to do with ancient Roman Empire.
When the western Roman empire collapsed in 476 AD, the unifying force for most of Europe was gone. Along with the loss of the government, much of the engineering abilities and modern amenities were also lost. The Barbarians of Europe did not, for the most part, have the abilities or knowledge to build roads, aqueducts or the other marvels of the Roman Empire, which is why the period immediately after Rome's collapse is often referred to as the "Dark Ages".
The Western Roman Empire and the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.
Diocletian divided the empire
Diocletian.