The Ottoman Empire bordered several significant bodies of water. To the north, it had access to the Black Sea, while the Aegean Sea lay to the west. The Mediterranean Sea bordered the southern part of the empire, facilitating trade and naval power. Additionally, the Sea of Marmara connected the Aegean Sea to the Black Sea through the Dardanelles and Bosporus straits.
A lot of the Moslem Moors of North West Africa were being driven out of spain by the Christians during the rise of the Holy Roman Empire. They moved towards East Africa Southern Asia and the now Middle East were the ottoman empire was forming with the Moslems there and the retreating Moors from the West. In terms of Empires, there was actually an alliance between the Moors (Amazigh) in Morocco and the Ottomans to better contain the Portuguese and Spanish. The two empires did not compete. (The Ottoman Empire extended up to the Algerian/Moroccan border.) Also, the Islamic Spanish Empires ended before the Ottoman Golden Age, so the Empires did not coexist at their heights (8th-13th centuries and 16th-18th centuries, respectively).
The Bay Campeche was the body of water that did not border the Mayan Empire
Vienna is the capital city of Austria. During the medieval era of Europe, the Ottoman Empire was a very large and powerful country in the Middle East, and was difficult for the European countries to stop. In 1453 the Ottomans conquered the city of Constantinople and officially ended the Roman Empire. In less than 100 years, they had conquered the entire region known as the Balkans, right up to Vienna. So Vienna, in a way, marked the border between the Ottoman Empire and the rest of western Europe. In 1529 the Ottoman Empire made a major effort to conquer Vienna but failed, and historians generally consider that battle to have been the peak of their empire- they never again would be as powerful as they were up to that point. Again, in 1683, allied armies from Poland and Germany fought the Ottomans against near Vienna, defeating them and ushering in the long decline of the Ottoman Empire, which would ultimately end with the empire being dismantled after World War I. During World War I, Austria and the Ottoman Empire were allies as part of the "Central Powers" along with Germany and Bulgaria. They fought together against the Allies (England, France, Russia until 1917, USA starting in 1917, and so on).
The Roman Empire was the largest empire in the western world. It began with Caesar Augustus and ended with Constantine who split the empire into Eastern and Western parts. At its height, the empire stretched from the border of Scotland in the North to Egypt in the South, from Iberia in the West to Syria in the East, and most lands in between. The West fell in 476 CE (AD) falling to the barbarians, and the East fell in 1453 with the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Empire.
The southernmost border was the one between southern Egypt ad Numidia
Russia was located to the northeast of the Ottoman Empire. The two empires shared a lengthy border, particularly in areas such as the Caucasus region. Throughout history, their relationship was characterized by both conflict and cooperation, as they vied for influence over territories in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. The geopolitical dynamics between Russia and the Ottoman Empire played a significant role in shaping the history of both powers.
3 bodies of water border Russia
No bodies of water border the European Union. It is an organisation, not a place. It has 28 countries as members, and lots of bodies of water border them.
Two significant bodies of water that bordered the Holy Roman Empire were the North Sea to the northwest and the Adriatic Sea to the southeast. The empire's extensive territory included various rivers as well, such as the Rhine and Danube, which were crucial for trade and transportation. These bodies of water played an essential role in the economic and political life of the empire.
The physical feature that lies between the Muslim Empire's Northern border is the Caucasus Mountains. These mountains stretch between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, forming a natural barrier between the Muslim Empire and the surrounding regions to the north.
A lot of the Moslem Moors of North West Africa were being driven out of spain by the Christians during the rise of the Holy Roman Empire. They moved towards East Africa Southern Asia and the now Middle East were the ottoman empire was forming with the Moslems there and the retreating Moors from the West. In terms of Empires, there was actually an alliance between the Moors (Amazigh) in Morocco and the Ottomans to better contain the Portuguese and Spanish. The two empires did not compete. (The Ottoman Empire extended up to the Algerian/Moroccan border.) Also, the Islamic Spanish Empires ended before the Ottoman Golden Age, so the Empires did not coexist at their heights (8th-13th centuries and 16th-18th centuries, respectively).
Germany had large changes in its borders, which eventullty did cause WWII when they tried to recapture what they once ruled. Also the Ottoman empire lost some territory and was replaced with turkey
The Bay Campeche was the body of water that did not border the Mayan Empire
Briefly: Open peace based on diplomacy, freedom of the sea, an open economy, arms reduction, reduction in colonialism, return of Russian lands, a free Belgium, return of French territory plus Alsace-Lorraine, realignment of the Italian border, an autonomous Austria Hungary, Rumania, Serbia and Montenegro restored, reduction of the Ottoman Empire, a free Poland and the creation of the League of Nations.
Vienna is the capital city of Austria. During the medieval era of Europe, the Ottoman Empire was a very large and powerful country in the Middle East, and was difficult for the European countries to stop. In 1453 the Ottomans conquered the city of Constantinople and officially ended the Roman Empire. In less than 100 years, they had conquered the entire region known as the Balkans, right up to Vienna. So Vienna, in a way, marked the border between the Ottoman Empire and the rest of western Europe. In 1529 the Ottoman Empire made a major effort to conquer Vienna but failed, and historians generally consider that battle to have been the peak of their empire- they never again would be as powerful as they were up to that point. Again, in 1683, allied armies from Poland and Germany fought the Ottomans against near Vienna, defeating them and ushering in the long decline of the Ottoman Empire, which would ultimately end with the empire being dismantled after World War I. During World War I, Austria and the Ottoman Empire were allies as part of the "Central Powers" along with Germany and Bulgaria. They fought together against the Allies (England, France, Russia until 1917, USA starting in 1917, and so on).
Evangelos Zappas was an ethnic Greek who was born in Ottoman-occupied north-western Greece. He was a citizen of the Ottoman Empire. If he had a passport from birth he might have had an Ottoman passport. But Christians were treated as third-class citizens in the Ottoman Empire, no better than peasants, and little better than slaves. But he also lived on the border of Wallachia (now part of Romania) and Moldavia (now Moldova). The question is phrased badly and Zappas had an amazing life and the geography of eastern Europe where he lived changed considerably during the 19th and early 20th Century. It is better to ask where he was born or what was his ethnicity. He was born in Ottoman-occupied north-western Greece. His ethnicity was Greek. He was an ethnic Greek soldier in the Greek War of Independence (from the Ottoman Empire). Prior to that he was a mercenary soldier of the Ottoman Empire (who occupied and controlled the region) getting food and pay for soldiering. Today his birthplace is within a country called Albania. But that doesn't give him Albanian nationality because Albania did not exist when he was born or when he died.
Scotland and England share a common border.