the Rhine and Danube
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Rhine and Danube
No Rome equals no gladiators.
As the expansion of the Roman empire was ending, the conquests of new peoples left the legions with the primary objective of patrolling its borders. The areas most vulnerable were the boundaries along the Rhine and Danube rivers.
Rhine and Danube Rivers.
No rivers divided the western part of the Roman empire. If you mean what rivers formed the frontiers of the this part of the Roman Empire, they were the Rhine and the upper Danube. In between them there was the limes germanicus, a line of fortifications which crossed southern and central Germany.
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Northwest
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The natural borders in the northern parts of the Roman empire in what can be called "central Europe" were the Rhine and Danube rivers. Incursions by Germanic Tribes for example were an ongoing problem for Rome. In the ending years of the empire, these river boundaries were crossed en mass by barbarians.
Rhine, Danube, Euphrates.
The rivers which formed the frontier of the Roman Empire in Europe were the Rhine and the Danube.
The four rivers of the Underworld are a purely Greek notion.
The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.The North Sea and the Irish Sea formed the northern waterways that bounded the Roman empire.