Landless citizens or citizens with insufficient land in Rome's own territory (Latium, most of the present day region of Lazio) were sent to colonies (settlements) were they were given plots of land. The first colonies were in central and southern Italy when Rome expanded into Italy in the 4th century BC. As the emprie grew, they were also established in the provinces/conquered territories outside Italy. There were many of them and these settlement contributed to latinise ther conquered peoples.
The Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius (121-180 AD).
The Roman name for London is Londinium
Any emperor; it is probable a confusion.
The people were sold into slavery, and it was used to settle retired Roman soldiers.
Nobody in particular. The rulers of Pressburg/Pozsony/Bratislava continuously granted permission for the Jews to settle in the city throughout its history from the Roman Period to the Holocaust.
To spread the Roman Catholic religon to the native people and to establish schools for boys.
It was captured, its people sold into slavery, and it was taken over to settle retired Roman military veterans.
The earliest groups to settle in Rome were the Latins, who established the city around the 8th century BCE. They were followed by the Sabines, an Italic tribe, and the Etruscans, who significantly influenced Roman culture and governance. The combination of these groups laid the foundation for the development of early Roman society and its eventual expansion into a powerful civilization.
Well for one, they were going to the new world to escape the Roman Catholic Church and make their own church.
Any and all in the last couple of hundred years, but Roman Catholics have become the majority religion.
The conquest of Gaul (France) was completed by 50 BC. However, the exact date of the beginning of Roman settlement in Normandy is not known.
Crindall in Hampshire? It is not known, no references to it by the Romans have been found. Achaeological remains of a Roman settlement have been found.