ancient Rome conquered most of modern-day western and central Europe, all of North Africa into Egypt and the Middle East, and all of the Mediterranean islands. They did not, however, extend their control beyond the far Near East, that is, beyond eastern portions of what is now known as Iran, hence cannot be properly said to have conquered Asia at all.
The Romans decided to conquer all of Italy because they wanted to expand their empire.
The Romans took Italy and conquered each piece of it a little at a time.
Of course the Romans did not conquer the US. The US did not exist at the time of the Roman Empire, and in any case, the Romans had no idea that the American continents existed.
The Romans never conquered the Seleucid Empire.
The Romans improved travelling conditions by building roads and bridges.
No, Rome did not successfully conquer all of Germany during its expansion. While the Romans did make some incursions into Germanic territories, they were never able to fully conquer and control the region.
The Romans did not conquer anything in 1948.
Gnaeus Pompey conquered all of Syria and parts of Asia Minor.
To conquer it.
200000
No because the Romans came in an AD date which means after Christ.
The Romans did not conquer the Middle East in one shot. It took over two centuries for the Romans to conquer the Middle East (from 132 BCE to 117 CE). Please see the map in the Related Links.