Part of the Middle East was in the Roman Empire: Turkey, Armenia (which back then was in the east of modern day Turkey) northern Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel/Palestine, Jordan and the northern part of Saudi Arabia's coast on the Red Sea. Much of North Africa was also part of the Roman Empire (Egypt, coastal Libya, Tunisia, coastal Algeria and northern Morocco).
No. Italy is considered a Southern European country and a Mediterranean country, but it is not part of the Middle East.
The period after the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire is the Middle Ages. It is divided into Early Middle Ages (5th to 10th century) High Middle Ages (1001 to 1300) and Late Middle Ages (1300 to 1500). The eastern part of the Roman Empire was not affected by the invasions by Germanic peoples which caused the western part of the Roman Empire to fall and continued to exist until 1453. Historians call the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part Byzantine Empire.
None. There was no Roman empire during the middle ages. The western part of the empire fell roughly in 476. The eastern part hung on until 1453 but their religion was Christianity. They were conquered by the Ottoman Turks who were Muslim, but were not part of the Roman empire.
At the time of the Roman Empire the church of the eastern part of the empire was called Eastern or Greek. Later it came to be called Orthodox.
During the medieval period, the empire called the Roman Empire was centered in Greece and covered only the eastern Mediterranean. It is the empire that we now call the Byzantine empire, to distinguish it from the ancient Roman Empire that was centered on Rome and Italy and came to encompass the entire Mediterranean, as well as lands well beyond.
No China was not part of the Roman Empire. This empire did not go beyond Turkey, Armenia and northern Iraq, in western Asia. China was too far away, in the Far East, on the opposite side of Asia.
In 395 the Roman empire split into two pieces: the west and the east. Rome and Italy were part of the west and Greece was part of the east.
At its peak, south and west of the Rhine and Danube Rivers, the Middle East and North Africa.
The period after the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire is the Middle Ages. It is divided into Early Middle Ages (5th to 10th century) High Middle Ages (1001 to 1300) and Late Middle Ages (1300 to 1500). The eastern part of the Roman Empire was not affected by the invasions by Germanic peoples which caused the western part of the Roman Empire to fall and continued to exist until 1453. Historians call the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part Byzantine Empire.
None. There was no Roman empire during the middle ages. The western part of the empire fell roughly in 476. The eastern part hung on until 1453 but their religion was Christianity. They were conquered by the Ottoman Turks who were Muslim, but were not part of the Roman empire.
The entourage of the emperor dominated the imperial courts of both the western part of the Roman Empire and the eastern part of the Roman Empire in antiquity and the Holy Roman Empire of the Middle Ages.
The population of the Roman Empire was multi-ethnic. The Empire covered a large part of western Europe, southeastern Europe, part of the Middle East and North Africa. Therefore, it had many European ethnic groups Middle Eastern groups, such as the pre-Arab Syrians, the Phoenicians and the Jews, and the Egyptians and the Berbers in North Africa.
At the beginning of the Middle Ages, Mediterranean Africa west of Egypt was mostly a Vandal kingdom. Egypt was still part of the East Roman Empire. The East Roman Empire took over the Vandal kingdom, but then the whole area was taken over by Arabs as part of the empire called the Caliphate. Sub-Saharan Africa included the Kingdom of Ethiopia, which was Christian throughout the Middle Ages. It also include other monarchies and empires, such as the Ghana Empire, along with a multitude of tribal groups, but the records for these are sparse.
At the time of the Roman Empire the church of the eastern part of the empire was called Eastern or Greek. Later it came to be called Orthodox.
During the medieval period, the empire called the Roman Empire was centered in Greece and covered only the eastern Mediterranean. It is the empire that we now call the Byzantine empire, to distinguish it from the ancient Roman Empire that was centered on Rome and Italy and came to encompass the entire Mediterranean, as well as lands well beyond.
The middle east benefited from Roman rule in many ways. They enjoyed Roman protection, trade with the western part of the empire, and most of all Roman technology of the aqueduct, giving them fresh and plentiful water for both personal use and irrigation. The Romans benefited by taxes, military recruits, and also trade.
There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.There is no founder of the eastern Roman empire. The Roman empire was divided into east and west by historians, not Romans. This was done for ease in relating events that occurred in either the west or the east. For example, when the western part of the empire fell to the barbarians, the Romans considered it a loss of territory, not a loss of half of an empire as some historians did.
The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.The eastern part of the Roman empire fell in 1453.