Overtaken.
Brought in in the early 3rd Century, it initially was a unifying force, but then the peoples began to pour in from Eurasia and it diluted the existing peoples in the Empire, who were progressively supplanted.
Different government people feel respected, opinions listed to allowed to be in the government, equality based on talent.
There's quite a big story behind the fall of the Western Roman empire, but let's keep it simple and short and say the invasion on Huns into Europe was the starting point, the first domino to start the fall of allready wakened Western Roman empire. Eastern Roman empire feel some 1000 years later by Otoman empire.
The Romans attempted to impose their state religion on the people they conquered. They obviously gave up doing this to the Jews and reached some sort of accommodation with the Jews. Originally they persecuted Christians, then the entire empire converted Christian. Romans also absorbed religions from other countries such as Greece, Egypt, and Persia. romans were tolerant of other religion as long as their followers were respectful of the roman religion
He wanted to restore Italy to what it was like during the time of the Roman Empire.
Brought in in the early 3rd Century, it initially was a unifying force, but then the peoples began to pour in from Eurasia and it diluted the existing peoples in the Empire, who were progressively supplanted.
As the Romans expanded their empire they came across many people who did not follow the same religion as them. They referred to these people as Barbarians and enslaved them.
Different government people feel respected, opinions listed to allowed to be in the government, equality based on talent.
There's quite a big story behind the fall of the Western Roman empire, but let's keep it simple and short and say the invasion on Huns into Europe was the starting point, the first domino to start the fall of allready wakened Western Roman empire. Eastern Roman empire feel some 1000 years later by Otoman empire.
No, for they feel like it!
I'm sorry, but I don't have access to specific crossword puzzles or their answers, including the "Roman Empire - lab" crossword. However, I can help with general information about the Roman Empire or suggest common crossword clues related to it. If you have specific clues, feel free to share them!
The Romans attempted to impose their state religion on the people they conquered. They obviously gave up doing this to the Jews and reached some sort of accommodation with the Jews. Originally they persecuted Christians, then the entire empire converted Christian. Romans also absorbed religions from other countries such as Greece, Egypt, and Persia. romans were tolerant of other religion as long as their followers were respectful of the roman religion
He wanted to restore Italy to what it was like during the time of the Roman Empire.
The king of Egypt sought Rome's assistance primarily due to internal strife and threats to his rule, which made him feel vulnerable. By aligning with Rome, he aimed to secure military support and political legitimacy, leveraging the power of the Roman Empire to stabilize his reign. Additionally, the relationship with Rome could provide economic benefits and strengthen Egypt's position in the region.
The western part of the Roman Empire feel under the strain of the invasions by the Germanic peoples. The eastern part of this empire was not affected by these invasions and continued to exist. However, it, too, continually lost lands to invaders: the Arabs, , Bulgarians, Crusader and Turks. In its later days this empire had hardly any lands left. Byzantine Empire is a term which has been coined by historians to indicate the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part of this empire. The people in question did not know this term and called their empire Roman Empire
'Byzantine empire' is a word used to describe the eastern portion of the Roman Empire that existed until the fall of it's capital Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 1453. Hence it was always an empire as it's name is used in modern scholarship to differentiate the Vestigial eastern remnant from the earlier and better known western half of the roman Empire, which despite debate essentially seeced to exist as a Roman political entity in 476 with he dispossession of Romulus Augustulus (the last Roman Emperor) from power.
Mussolini had a great affinity for the Roman Empire and he wanted to revive it in the modern age as much as possible. It was not the only time a dictator has looked to the past in order to give his regime a perception of historical legitimacy. Hitler did it with the heroic German myths, and the Japanese did it with the samurai tradition.