Barbarian
None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.
The lands ruled by the Romans outside of Rome were referred to as provinces. The Roman Empire expanded its territory, establishing these provinces to maintain control over conquered regions. Each province was governed by an official appointed by Rome, and they varied in size and importance throughout the empire.
Conquered peoples could only trade in Rome if they were granted some type of citizenship. The right to trade was a part of the rights of citizens of the second class and of the third class. Otherwise their business was restricted to their native province.
The Romans never conquered the Seleucid Empire.
Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.Computers and aircraft would have helped the Romans to rule their empire, big time.
Ancient cultures played a huge role in the building of the Incan empire. The Incan people took over the other ancient cultures and made them their own. Their empire was every bit as widespread as the Romans.
No. The Greek Empire and the Roman empire had very different cultures. Although the Romans did adopt and borrow certain elements of Greek culture, their cultures were not the same.
Romans coins were used throughout the Roman Empire. They were the official currency of the empire. They were also used for trade outside the empire: Ethiopia, Arabia, India and China.
I think they called them Barbarians (i think)
the romans were worried about the people that lived there
None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.
The Romans never conquered the Seleucid Empire.
The lands ruled by the Romans outside of Rome were referred to as provinces. The Roman Empire expanded its territory, establishing these provinces to maintain control over conquered regions. Each province was governed by an official appointed by Rome, and they varied in size and importance throughout the empire.
Conquered peoples could only trade in Rome if they were granted some type of citizenship. The right to trade was a part of the rights of citizens of the second class and of the third class. Otherwise their business was restricted to their native province.
The Romans looked down on the peoples outside their empire. They called them barbarians (a term borrowed from the Greeks) and saw them as lower civilisations or as uncivilised.
Yes, the Byzantine empire did have some blinding cultures.
The Romans called the people who lived outside of Italy by their names, such as Egyptians, Britons, Greeks, etc. Sometimes they narrowed it down to tribal names such as the Helvitii, Batavii, etc. There was also a general term for the peoples outside Italy: provinciales (provincials). This name was derived from the term province. The Romans turned the territories they conquered into provinces of the empire. There is a misconception that the Romans called those living outside of Italy barbarians. The term "barbarian" was a Greek word meaning anyone who was not a Greek. It basically meant foreigners. The Romans adopted this term and called barbarian peoples who lived outside the empire and even some peoples who lived inside the empire, at its periphery. The emperor of the east Zeno was unpopular because he was considered a barbarian as he was from Isauria, in Turkey, close to Syria. Before Roman citizenship was extended to all freemen in the empire, the provinciales were the 4th category of citizenship in the empire. Through this, they enjoyed the rights of jus gentium (the law of nations). This meant that the provinciales enjoyed some legal protection by the Roman state. Their litigation cases against Roman citizens were judged by the praetor peregrinus (chef justice for foreigners) who was meant to make impartial and just rulings. The jus gentium regulated the interactions between Romans and non-Romans. The word nation had a different meaning back then. It referred to ethnic groups. This law was based on principles of natural law; that is, on the idea that justice came from the human mind, and therefore independently from ethnicity or citizenship status and could apply to the non-Romans of the empire.