they both got people killed
Christianity.
The plebians were the common people of ancient Rome, as opposed to the patricians who could trace their ancestors back to the founders of Rome, the one hundred Patriarchs.
No religion "inspired" the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire had Sunni Islam as its State Religion, but it was not a view or tenet of Islam to create an Ottoman Empire.
No, they did not. The Roman coins were minted at various locations in the empire, were used throughout the empire and acted as a common currency.
The Roman coins acted as the common currency throughout the empire, which made commercial exchanges in the various part of the empire easier. In a way, Roman money acted a bit like the Euro acting as a common currency for many European countries.
Christianity.
400 - 1400, during the era when the Roman Empire declined, the Byzantine Empire flourished, and Islam was founded.
Legions was a common name for the armed forces of both the Roman republic and Roman Empire
the arab empire that controlled 3/4 of the region and some of it was the Roman Empire
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The plebians were the common people of ancient Rome, as opposed to the patricians who could trace their ancestors back to the founders of Rome, the one hundred Patriarchs.
Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.Justinian was a Roman emperor and his empire was the Roman empire.
Roman Catholic, Calvinist minorities, Eastern Orthodox and Islam
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No religion "inspired" the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire had Sunni Islam as its State Religion, but it was not a view or tenet of Islam to create an Ottoman Empire.
No, they did not. The Roman coins were minted at various locations in the empire, were used throughout the empire and acted as a common currency.
The Roman coins acted as the common currency throughout the empire, which made commercial exchanges in the various part of the empire easier. In a way, Roman money acted a bit like the Euro acting as a common currency for many European countries.