The north-eastern part of the Roman Empire was formed by only one river: the Danube. The whole of the northern boundary of the Roman Empire was demarcated mostly by two rivers: the Danube and the Rhine. The latter marked the north-western frontier.
Yes. Type "Roman Empire" on Google and you'll see. In fact Europe was part of the Roman Empire since about half of it was in "Europe" as now defined, but the non-European parts - Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, N Africa - had more than half the population, and the Eastern Empire (largely outside Europe) became the more important part over time.
The territory belonging to the Byzantine empire was the eastern half of the Roman Empire. This included much of central Europe and had Constantinople as it's capital.
The emperor of the Franks who conquered much of Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire was Charles the Great, also known as Charlemagne.
#1 - The British Empire as they controlled 36.6 million km² of the Earth in 1922. #2 - The Mongolian Empire as they controlled 33.2 million km² of the Earth in 1268. #3 - The Russian Empire as they controlled 24.8 million km² of the Earth in 1866. #4 - The Spanish Empire as the controlled 19 million km² of the Earth in 1788. #5 - The Umayyad Arab Caliphate controlled 13.2 million km² of the Earth in 743 AD. #6 - The Qing Empire. This could be counted as the Chinese Empire and controlled 13 million km² in 1760. #19 The Roman Empire as they controlled 5.9 million km² in 117 AD.
Genghis Khan.
The yalu and Tumen rivers
the indus river
At least from an American perspective, it defines much of the US-Mexico border.
Most of the northern borders of the empire in Europe were marked by the rivers Rhine and Danube. Dacia (Romania) was a Roman province beyond the Danube, but it was also given up by Aurelian between 271 and 275 due to continuous attacks from outside . The Romans had lands beyond the Rhine in Germany, but they were given up in 340-341 by Constans for the same reasons. Thus, eventually these two rivers became the whole of the northern frontier. The source of the Danube is close to the Rhine The above only takes continental Europe into consideration. However the Roman empire extended much further north into Scotland. There were rivers there and the Romans had marching camps as far north a the Firth of Clyde and the Clyde river and even further up to the Amrick river.
Many and many of them. The Romans did not take over the whole world. The took over the north African coast, much of the middle east and Europe south of the Rhine and Danube rivers. A few areas north of these rivers were also taken over, such as the Back Forest in Germany, western Slovakia, the Carpathian area in Romania and much of Moldova. England and Wales, but not Scotland, came under the empire.
There are a lot of water are found in rivers.
They were the stone-paved roads and bridges wit arches which were longer than ever before and could cross much wider rivers and valleys.
chaldeans ruled much of the former assyrisn empire
it is really more sinuous than purely zigzag since it includes only 2 straight lines & actually wiggles about far more than it zigs or zags but in any case it is because the political decision was made in 1842 that the international border should follow in parts the saint francis & saint john rivers & also in much greater part the watershed divide between the saint Lawrence & the rivers that flow into the gulf of Maine & this latter southwesternmost portion of the border is presumably the area you find so extreme but all rivers & watershed divides do tend to wander about quite a bit & these are no exception to the general rule
Yes, Minnesota borders Canada. The other states that border Canada are Alaska, Washington, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Michigan, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
Usually wet and flowing, much like other rivers.
Spain was very much an empire.