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Most of the northern borders of the empire in Europe were marked by the rivers Rhine and Danube. Dacia (Romania) was a Roman province beyond the Danube, but it was also given up by Aurelian between 271 and 275 due to continuous attacks from outside . The Romans had lands beyond the Rhine in Germany, but they were given up in 340-341 by Constans for the same reasons. Thus, eventually these two rivers became the whole of the northern frontier. The source of the Danube is close to the Rhine The above only takes continental Europe into consideration. However the Roman empire extended much further north into Scotland. There were rivers there and the Romans had marching camps as far north a the Firth of Clyde and the Clyde river and even further up to the Amrick river.
At its largest extent, the Persian Empire reached the river Indus (in present day Pakistan). This was not always the eastern border as the size of the empire varied. Save
Missouri, Kentucky, and Virginia are the northern boundary states for Tennessee. Kentucky is along most of the "straight line" northern border, with Virginia in the northeast corner and Missouri along the upper western border. The northern border is mainly near the 36° 38' 30" parallel for most of the state. However, this is higher along part of the border with Virginia, and drops lower to 36° 30' N between Kentucky Lake (Tennessee River) and the Mississippi River, yielding some territory to Kentucky. There is a "notch" at the Misissippi where part of Missouri is east of a loop belonging to Kentucky, rather than contiguous Tennessee.
In Europe the borders of the Roman Empire followed the river Rhine from its mouth to Mainz (in Germany). The limes Germanicus (a fortification) crossed part of central and southern Germany and reached the river Danube. It followed the Danube up to Bratislava. Then it roughly corresponded to the present day northern borders of Hungary, Romania and Moldova. In Asia the frontier followed the Caucasus Mountain and the southern-western shore of the Caspian Sea. It crossed northern Iran up to Lake Urmia and run to the east of the present day Iran-Iraq border and was roughly parallel to it. It comprises the whole of the northern coast of the Persian Gulf. The Arabian Desert was the southern border. In Africa the empire included Morocco down to Agadir. The Sahara Desert was the border of Roman Algeria, Tunisia and Libya. The southern border of Egypt was similar to the current one.
Many people say it might be alot. poplition is 2011___ 6,549
Danube River
Danube River
Danube River
Most of the northern borders of the empire in Europe were marked by the rivers Rhine and Danube. Dacia (Romania) was a Roman province beyond the Danube, but it was also given up by Aurelian between 271 and 275 due to continuous attacks from outside . The Romans had lands beyond the Rhine in Germany, but they were given up in 340-341 by Constans for the same reasons. Thus, eventually these two rivers became the whole of the northern frontier. The source of the Danube is close to the Rhine The above only takes continental Europe into consideration. However the Roman empire extended much further north into Scotland. There were rivers there and the Romans had marching camps as far north a the Firth of Clyde and the Clyde river and even further up to the Amrick river.
The Indus River.
Danube.
The Indus River.
The Indus River.
The Rhine River (French: le Rhin, German: der Rhein)The southern part of the French-German border follows the river Rhine. The northern part does not follow any river.
This river is called Danube. Its a northern border to Bulgaria and for Romania the south bound.
The Rio Grande, the Red River and the Sabrine apparently :)
The River Rio Grande is 1,885 miles long. The Rio Grande also forms part of the Northern border of Mexico.