The Etruscans brought all of their art and culture to Rome when the ancient civilization conquered the then-infant city. The Etruscans and Romans fought a series of wars called the Roman-Etruscan Wars during the early part of ancient Romeâ??s history.
It may have happened at a certain battle, but Rome eventually conquered Etruria and all of Italy.
1) You need to specify what the following is if you want to make it possible to answer your question. 2) The fashionable theory that Rome was conquered by the Etruscans in the 6th century BC is just that, a theory. It has been challenged. It evidence base if flimsy to say the least and it is based on unproven assumptions. Recent archaeological evidence suggests a different picture.
The Etruscans were an Italian state which existed prior to the rise of the Roman Republic & were incorporated into it when the Roman state conquered all of mainland Italy. Their influence on Roman culture was in itself minimal.
Rome treated conquered people in Italy as full Roman citizens with the right to vote. In territories furhter from Rome, conquered people were given the status as "half-citizen". They enjoyed all the rights of a Roman citizen except the privilage to vote.
they conquered the Greeks and Carthage all of the meaderanian sea
Initially the Romans gave Roman citizenship to elite men of the conquered peoples who were loyal to Rome. Then in 215 AD the emperor Caracalla extended Roman citizenship to all the freeborn (that is, all except the slaves) in the empire.
All governments were hostile then, so it was pretty much conquer or be conquered. Rome had an advanced civilization and could bring the rule of law to conquered territories, making them in theory better off than before. Rome also wanted territories to trade in, and would exploit resources such as iron ore and minerals. The conquered may not be better off as a consequence but Rome was.
Rome did not try to defend any body of water. She conquered all the lands on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea.
Between those dates, Rome conquered all of Italy, including the territory of the Sabines and the Greek colonists. It also conquered all of the lands belonging to the Carthagineans, the third and final Punic War ended in 146 B.
Rome was (and still is) on the Mediterranean Sea. This is why the Roman Empire was centred on the Mediterranean. Rome conquered all the lands on the shores of this sea, which they called mare nostrum (our sea).
The ancient Romans eventually conquered all of Italy, but Rome started out as a small city-state founded on seven hills next to the River Tiber.
Rome took advantage of the Etruscans during this time. The Etruscan people had been weakened by the invasion. This gave the Romans the opportunity to eventually expand and take over their territory. Within 100 years, Rome controlled all of Etruria. During that time, it also conquered central Italy and much of northern Italy. In addition, Rome sent its forces south, where Greek settlers had founded a number of city-states. By 275 BCE, Rome had defeated those Greek city-states as well. Rome now ruled all of Italy. ( this answer was possible by Connexus, A school for virtual children, thanks to them)