An ancient Roman farmer was a farmer, someone who grew things. If you mean the word for farmer, it could be one of three, agricola, arator, or colonus.
A Roman peasant farmer was called a colonus. Coloni worked on large Roman estates and could never leave. Coloni came from from impoverished small free farmers, partially emancipated slaves, and barbarians.
The Roman Empire.Rome
A farmer who sold his produce in Rome.
a roman camp is called a camp !!
A patrician's house was called a domus, the same as any other Roman house. In ancient Rome, a house was a house, its size didn't give it a special name. The only special indication of housing was the "insulae" or apartment houses, which connoted multi-family dwellings rather than private homes for one family.
A farmer or producer.
A common farmer in Roman tiles was a peasant smallholder or tenant like all common farmers in all pre-industrial times. The coloni were tenant farmers who paid a rent in the form of sharecropping.
A farmer or producer.
It is not called a farmett it is still just a farmer whichever gender it is. de de de.
Man or woman, a farmer is called a farmer.
A farmer with no enslaved workers is called an independent or free farmer.
'Farmer' is called 'Kisaan' in Hindi.
Man or woman, a farmer is called a farmer.
An Egyptian farmer is called "fallah" in Arabic.
Legions was a common name for the armed forces of both the Roman republic and Roman Empire
Nope
A Roman peasant farmer was called a colonus. Coloni worked on large Roman estates and could never leave. Coloni came from from impoverished small free farmers, partially emancipated slaves, and barbarians.