At this website you will find your answer: http://www.unrv.com/government/emperor.php
places to vist in 30bc rome
Yes, the word Roman is a noun, a person of Rome. Roman is a proper noun and also a proper adjective that describes a noun as of or from Rome, for example Roman architecture.
St. Paul was being tried by the Roman governor of Israel. He told them that, since he was a Roman citizen by birth, he had a right under Roman law to appeal to the emperor in Rome. He was thus sent to Rome for trial.
There are too many famous women from ancient Rome to list, but some of them are: Octavia, Livia, Julia the Elder, Agrippina the Younger, Agrippina the Elder, Fulvia, and the wives of almost all the emperors. To find them, and to see their pictures use your browser and type in something like "Roman Women" or "Roman Empresses" and see what you find. You can also go to a photo site such as Flicker and search for the pictures of the Roman women.
Rome was the conqueror of Cleopatra's Egypt and the government changed. After Cleopatra, Egypt became a Roman province and was governed under Roman law with Roman officials replacing the Greek officials. Taxes were paid to Rome rather than to a pharaoh.
St. Paul was being tried by the Roman governor of Israel. He told them that, since he was a Roman citizen by birth, he had a right under Roman law to appeal to the emperor in Rome. He was thus sent to Rome for trial.
The Roman Empire was not a kingdom. It was Empire. Empires have Emperors.
A farmer who sold his produce in Rome.
the bad rulers of the roman empires was commodus and emperor tiberius, they caused terror among the people
the roman empires greatest achievements included military, architecture, and government or art
The Roman Empire split into two pieces, the Western Empire whose capitol was still in Rome, and the Eastern with its capitol in Constantinople, modern Istanbul.
Rome was started by Romulus and Remus, it was split into two different empires by Diocletian.
No. Rome did not exist at the time.
It is galloroman. He is from ancient rome he was in politics and after he died a century was used to honor his hardwork by naming the empires ethics by his name. Gallo-Roman.
Firstly empires are not people and therefore they do not invent things. Secondly inventing things is what people do, whether Roman or not.
I'm afraid not. There was not even a Rome in 4000 BC. You may be confused with the Egyptian or other Mideast empires.
some of Rome's greatest zcheivments are having the first population of a million building the coloseum and having one of the biggest empires ever
Rome and Constantinople