Did the Roman navy keep track of the temperature
there is no records on the Jews because they stole them
The temperature in the Colosseum was the same as the outdoors temperature. It did not have a roof.
Because records of the Roman Empire were preserved in Europe, whereas the Parthian Empire was conquered by teh Caliphate and its records largely destroyed.
We know that the roman sewers were very large just by looking at them. Many of the Roman sewers or parts of them are still evident today. The main sewer for the city of Rome was the Cloaca Maxima and parts of it can still be seen. Some of the ancient sewers are still usable. We also have the literature left by some ancient writers on the makeup of the sewers and their dimensions.
According to Roman records, yes.
The legion disappears from surviving Roman records after ca. AD 120 and there is no extant account of what happened to it.
Praetors:Important government officials in ancient Rome.
Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.Well, people used Roman numerals the same way we use the Arabic numerals. They were used for arithmetic, for keeping numerical records, and for anything else that needed counting.
Yes, there was a real Spartacus. Historical records indicate that he was a Thracian gladiator who led a slave revolt against the Roman Republic in 73-71 BC. Spartacus and his followers fought against Roman forces before being defeated.
Roman records from about the time given for his death indicate that such a person was indeed crucified, on charges of disrupting the populace and supposedly inciting revolt against the Roman occupiers at the time.
In todays modern notation of Roman numerals it is: XIX-II-MCMXCI But the ancient Romans, as the records show, would have notated the equivalent of 19 and 1991 quite differently.
The temperature in the Roman baths was controlled by underground fires. the heat would then come up through he floors and heat the water.