Metal
A shield and helmet
It is a circular shield that the Romans used scum tum is a Latin word for shield
orieThat depends. A border that touches the edge of the shield all the way around is known by the Norman French name bordure. If the border is inset and away from the edge of the shield it is termed an orle.
No , the Yetholm-type shield from the Bronze Age is among the first known to historians .
boreal shield
Their fighting style was a form of teamwork. They would move as one unit and stand shield to shield making a wall of protection.
a shield made out of your aura,chakra.ect
The entire Iberian peninsula was called Hispania by the Romans, the border that exists today between Portugal and Spain did not exist when the Romans ruled the peninsula. The border that did exist however, made up by the Romans that contained most, but not all, of modern day Portugal was the province they called Hispania Lusitania. So the answer I think you are looking for is Lusitania. Hope this helps.
The Romans once controlled all around the border of the Mediterranean sea, it was once call the roman lake
The daggers of the Romans were made of steel.
The Romans did not invent the shield. Shields were a part of human weaponry before the dawn of civilization.
The Roman shield was made of three layers of strips of wood glued together. The back and front strips were vertical and the middle strips were horizontal. The wood core was estimated to be about 2 inches thick. There was a horizontal handgrip. The back and front of the shield were covered in leather and reinforcing leather pieces were stitched on the corners and edges. This leather stitching on the edges and corners replaced the earlier brass binding which was too easily damaged. Along with the shield went a leather shield cover used on the march or whenever the shield was not needed. The man's name and unit were marked on the inside and the outside was many times decorated with the legion's insignia.