The Visigoths and the Vandals.
persians. I just answerd this.
Barbarians.
Alaric successfully besieged Rome and the Visigoths sacked the city.
Greek city-states invaded other city-states. Outside nations that invaded or tried to invade were Macedonia, Thrace, Persian and Rome.
No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.No, Hannibal was an enemy of Rome. He was the Carthaginian leader in the second Punic war who invaded Italy from the north.
Rome was never a little settlement. The foundation of Rome involved the unification of a number of independent settlements on what were to become the seven hills of Rome. Therefore, it was a sizable city-state from the beginning. The date given by the Roman tradition for the foundation of Rome is 853 BC. The city of Rome was never invaded. It was sacked four times, but it was not invaded or taken over. What was invaded was the western part of the Roman Empire. Its invasions started in 406 AD. The conventional date used by historians for the fall of the western part of the empire is 476. The invaders eventually took over the lands of this part of the empire, but did not take the city of Rome.
vandals and visigothes
The city of Rome itself was never invaded. Rome was sacked four times during antiquity (by the Gauls, Visigoths, Vandals and Ostrogoths but it was never actually invaded or conquered. The peoples who sacked it left before Roman legions gathered from elsewhere in the empire caught up with them. It was the western part of the Roman Empire which was invaded. It was invaded by much more than two peoples. It was invaded by the Vandals, Alans, Sueves, Burgundians, Alemanni and Franks. Britannia was invaded by the Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians. All of these peoples, except for the Alans who were Iranian speakers, were Germanic peoples.
What people? You'll have to be specific as to the people that you mean. There were many provincials and ethnic groups trading in the city of Rome.
Rome was a city-state. The rest was its empire, so the countries which Rome invaded were those which it incorporated into its empire in Western Europe and around the Mediterranean Sea.
If by Rome you mean the city of Rome, it was sacked by the Gauls in 390 BC, the Visigoths in 410 AD, the Vandals in 455 AD, the Ostrogoth in 546, the Normans in 1084, and the troops of the Holy Roman emperor in 1527. The Arabs also sacked the Vatican (but not Rome) in 846. If by Rome you mean the Roman empire, the western part of the empire was invaded by various Germanic peoples: the Vandals, Sueves, Alans, Burgundians, Alemanni, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians.
Carthage was a self-governing city-state. Eventually it was conquered by Rome.
The western part of the Roman empire was invaded by the Vandals, Alans and Sueves in 406 AD. Later the Ostrogoths took over Italy. The Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians migrated to Rome in waves and took it over. The city of Rome was sacked three times, by the Visigoth, the Vandals and the Ostrogoths.