a province is a country controlled by an governor
The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.The governors ruled the provinces in the Roman empire.
No it had many provinces.
The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.The Mediterranean Sea was in the middle of the Roman empire an separated the African provinces from the European and Asian ones.
Provinces.
The border provinces in North Africa, Asia and along the Rhine-Danube.
The Roman provinces were governed by provincial governors. In some provinces they were appointed by the senate (senatorial provinces) and they were called proconsuls or propraetors. In other provinces they were appointed by the emperor (imperial provinces) and they were called imperial legates.
During the Republic all provinces were senatorial provinces. The senators appointed their governors. Under Augustus the older provinces remained senatorial, but the newer ones became imperial provinces; that is, the emperor appointed their governors. The number and size of the provinces changed. New provinces were added by new conquests. Over time provinces were also restructured and subdivided.
The Roman republic had 16 provinces. In the early imperial period there were 41 provinces. With Diocletian's reorganization of the empire the number of provinces was more than doubled by subdividing them
Spain and Carthaginian
Provinces.
Under the republic, the empire consisted of 17 provinces. The emperors added 16 more provinces making Rome control 23 provinces at the height of its power.
Damascus was in the Roman Empire. It was in the Roman province of Syria, one of the provinces of the Roman Empire