The ruins in Rome are examples of that. The ruins of the Roman forum and the Colosseum are still standing, along with other buildings and columns. Other European cities have ruins in them, from the time of the Roman Empire, as well.
The Carthaginians and Romans were both competing for commercial interests and hegemony in the Mediterranean.
The legal rights of citizens and the class structure remained the same in both forms of government.
The Holy Roman Empire had nothing to do with the Romans. It was a medieval institution centred around Germany. The Roman republic became an empire by expansion both before and after the Punic wars.
The legal rights of citizens and the class structure remained the same in both forms of government.
Both the Tigris and the Euphrates are in the eastern part of the Roman Empire.
apon founding it was roman traditional, it converted to Christianity with the rest of the roman empire. it was then captured by Turks and Arabs sucesivley, both being Muslim. it is today Muslim.
Legions was a common name for the armed forces of both the Roman republic and Roman Empire
He wanted to emulate both ancient Greek and Roman empires.The Roman Empire .
they're both latin speaking, both lived by roman law, both expanded through conquest.
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.
One way in which the Han dynasty and the Roman Empire were similar is that both built a strong system of roads.
Charlemagne was crowned Emperor of the Roman People on December 25, 800 AD, by Pope Leo III, in St. Peter's Basilica, in Rome. His empire, however, is not usually considered the same as the Holy Roman Empire. Today, the empire of which he was crowned is usually called the Carolingian Empire. In the past, historians sometimes equated the Holy Roman Empire with the Carolingian Empire. Today, they are less likely to do that, and most commonly the first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire is counted as Otto I. According to this newer view, the Holy Roman Empire was not equal to the Carolingian Empire, but descended from it. I should point out that the facts of events are not being disputed, but rather what names should be used. Medieval people did not use the name Holy Roman Empire until long after both Charlemagne and Otto I were gone, and they never used the name Carolingian Empire at all.