nothing,they cant spell!
A Roman patriot would be an ancient Roman citizen who took pride in being a member of the Roman Empire.
No. The ancient Greeks believed in a completely different group of Gods then the ancient Egyptians. In Greek culture, the tradition was to sprinkle dust on the deceased and place a coin under their tongue for passage on the river Styx to get to the underworld. It was considered complete disrespect to the Gods if a family did not do this and the deceased's soul would not be allowed into the underworld and be left to wander around for all eternity.
7.5 pounds of cotten It's close to impossible to compare ancient prices with today's prices because of the value of the coins. Ancient coins had a standard amount of pure silver/gold in them, making them, in some cases, more valuable than any denomination of ours. In other word, a few Roman coins would buy much more than today's dollars.
In order to help the poor and to calm any unrest, the Roman government provided the poor with grain and oil which supplemented their diets. They also held entertainments for them. These acts were what caused the expression "bread and circuses" in regard to the poor people of Rome.
The representations of Roman houses all show them with tiled roofs. This makes sense because tiles would allow the rain water to drain off quickly and if one were damaged, it would be simpler to replace a single tile than an entire roof.
A windmill in Ancient Roman times would be unscrambled as "niskefllau."
No newspapers were published in Ancient Rome.
The Caesarian. idk really bbut that's my best guess.
Kids in the ancient roman time wold go to school the girls would only learn reading And writing The boys would learn math reading and writing
Roman Republic
Today's way of writing 1795 in Roman numerals is MDCCXCV. But in ancient times the Romans themselves would have probably wrote 1795 as MDCCLXXXXV.
Today's way of writing 1962 into Roman numerals is MCMLXII. But the Romans themselves in ancient times would have probably wrote 1962 as MDCCCCLXII.
Today's way of writing 1988 into Roman numerals is MCMLXXXVIII. But the Romans themselves in ancient times would have probably wrote out 1988 as MDCCCCLXXXVIII.
Two highly successful empires from ancient times would be the Roman empire and the Persian empire. There was also the Egyptian and Assyrian empires that could count as being successful in their own times.
Yes the in the Tudors time they had Blacksmiths. If the ancient roman and Greeks did, so did the Medival English.
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In todays modern notation of Roman numerals it is LXXXIX = 89 but in ancient times it would have been LXXXXV = 95