No I can't answer this question
the location of the peninsula contributed to roman control of the mediterranean region.
the location of the peninsula contributed to roman control of the mediterranean region.
The Iberian peninsula. In the times of the Roman Empire the entire region was called Iberia.
The Roman Empire.
The never was/is a Roman peninsula. Rome was/is in the Italian peninsula. Italy has lies in between the western basin and the eastern basin of the Mediterranean. This made it easier for the Romans to expand into both the western and the eastern Mediterranean and to control both basins of the Mediterranean.
The buttburbanb
The Iberian peninsula is now where Portugal and Spain are located. When the Romans successfully took control of this vast area, they influenced the peoples they conquered by bringing laws and a governmental structure that to a degree was a positive influence. The conquest also brought the establishment of Roman colonies to the peninsula. As with most of the areas conquered by Rome, the peoples in the Iberian peninsula benefited by the construction of Roman roadways and a new commercial economy to this area.
the Etruscans
The length of three hands.
A city cannot be a peninsula. A peninsula is a protuberance into the sea which is surrounded by water on three sides, but is still attached to the mainland on the fourth side. A city can be built in a peninsula. Italy, Spain and Portugal, the Balkans and Turkey are peninsulas. Therefore, a large part of the Roman empire was in peninsulas and many cities of the Roman Empire were in peninsulas.
There were not many differences in geographical challenges in the eastern and western parts of the Roman Empire. In the Mediterranean sea there was the challenge of storms. In the Alpine area and in the Balkan Peninsula and in Turkey there was the challenge of mountain chains.
Iberian.