In the year 106 a.d.
See also the link below.
1. The old name was Dacia.2. The Romans did not use the name Romania for the conquered territory.
Trajan conquered Dacia in 105-106. Dacia covered Romania and Moldova and small parts of Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria and Ukraine.
The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.
It was the Province of Dacia. The Romans retained the name of the kingdom they had conquered. It included Romania, Moldova, and parts of Ukraine, Bulgaria, Serbia and Hungary
Romania was not conquered in WW 2; Romania was occupied by Soviet Union after a disastrous armistice.
The Romans conquered Dacia (that's the name of the territory that used to be here) and turned it into a Roman province, in 109. Romanians and their language are pretty closely related to Romans and Latin, yes.
No, it was the other way around. The Romans conquered the Greeks.
The mysterious people who conquered the Romans were the Etruscans.
1. Romania was not discovered. 2. During the history the Romanian territory was conquered or only attacked by Romans, Byzantines, Goths, Slavish tribes, Bulgarians, Mongols, Tatars, Hungarians, Germans, Austrians, Cumans, Pechenegs, Ukrainians, Polish etc. Do you see, it is a very difficult history.
The ancient people who conquered the early Romans were the Etruscans.
It is an error; in the antiquity Romans invaded the territory of the today Romania.
The Romans conquered Belgium, of course!