Byzantine Empire,Eastern Roman Empire,Roman Empire and Romania
The name Romania is derived from Roma (Roman Empire).
Romania
Yes, Romania is considered a Latin country due to its historical and cultural connections to the Roman Empire.
Romania is founded after the Roman Empire conquered Dacia, after the second great war with Roman Empire and Dacia (101-102, 105-106 B.C.) The independent state of Romania was founded after the war (1877-1878) with the Turk.
The strange fact is that Romania is very isolated and was only partially occupied by the Roman Empire.
Britain was part of the Roman Empire from about the year 49 AD until about 410 AD. The Romans called it Britannia.
You need to say what you think Romania "doesn't belong" TO.
It was not Rome which collapsed. It was the western part of the Roman Empire The conventional date set by historians for the end of the western part of the Roman Empire is 476. In this year the last emperor in the west, Romulus Augustus was deposed. The western part of the Roman Empire fell under the weight of the invasions by the Germanic peoples. The eastern part of the Roman Empire was not affected by these invasions and continued to exist for nearly 1,000 years. Historians call it Byzantine Empire. This is a term which has been coined to indicate the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part. The Romans did not use this term, they called it Roman Empire or Romania (this referred to this empire and not the country which was later called Romania).
The Byzantine Empire never officially changed its name; it was known to its inhabitants as the Roman Empire (Romania) throughout its existence. The term "Byzantine Empire" was coined by modern historians to describe the eastern continuation of the Roman Empire after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD. The empire lasted until the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
The Eastern Roman Empire is known as Byzantine Empire. However, this is a term which had been coined by historians. So are the term Eastern Roman Empire and Western Roman Empire. The Romans had only one term: Roman Empire. Historians use the term Byzantine Empire to indicate the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire. The Romans did not use this term, they called it Roman Empire or Romania (this referred to this empire and not the country which was later called Romania). The term Byzantine is derived from Byzantium, the Greek city which was redeveloped, turned into the imperial capital of the eastern part of the Roman Empire and renamed Constantinople by emperor Constantine the Great in 330. It is used to indicate the fact that not long after the fall of the western part, this empire became centred on Greece and Greek in character after it lost most of its non-Greek territories. Greek replaced Latin as the official language of this empire in 620, some 150 years after the fall of the west
A farmer who sold his produce in Rome.