If you really meant provenience ( a source or origin of something), then the answer is that everything cultured about Roman civilization was borrowed from the Greeks, sometimes called "Achaeans" in poetic language. If you meant " province," ho-hum, the answer is 27 B.C.
The Roman Empire became ancient history.
The Holy Roman Empire had nothing to do with the Romans. It was a medieval institution centred around Germany. The Roman republic became an empire by expansion both before and after the Punic wars.
Because of TRADING
Yes. He was the first emperor of the Roman Empire
In 30 BC, after death of Cleopatra VII Philopator, Egypt became a province of Roman Empire, called Aegyptus.
Achaea - Roman province - was created in 146.
The Roman Empire became ancient history.
The Byzantine Empire.
It never did. The so-called Holy Roman Empire was a mid-European entity.
The Holy Roman Empire had nothing to do with the Romans. It was a medieval institution centred around Germany. The Roman republic became an empire by expansion both before and after the Punic wars.
Augustus Caesar became emperor of the Roman Empire in 27 B.C.
Egypt became part of the Roman Empire in 30 bc
After the Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, that became the official religion of the Roman Empire.
Christianity was forced upon the people of the Roman empire by the emperor Theodosius I in 380 AD.
Syria became a province of the Roman empire in 64 BC, after the Third Mithridatic War.
Because of TRADING
133 b.C.e