No.
A) Rome is a city of just over 1,200 square kilometres in Italy.
B) The country of Italy has an area of just over 300,000 square kilometres.
C) Turkey is a country. It is a little over 750,000 square kilometres. And is about 650 kilometres away from the nearest part of Italy.
Rome is a city in Italy. Turkey is a country in the Middle East several hundred miles away from Rome.
its in turkey
Troy is in turkey and Rome is in Italy
Marble for ancient Rome came from Italy, Greece and Turkey.
Milan is the capital city of Italy.
Armenia was older than turkey.. and bigger than turkey.. one of the things that resulted the genocide
The Distance between Rome (Lazio,Provincia di Roma,Italy) and Izmir (Izmir,Turkey) is : 810.03 miles or 1303.62 kilometers.
The driving distance from Rome, Italy to İstanbul, Turkey is 1746km
Tarsus of Cilicia is in south-central Turkey
No, the two cities are far apart. Rome is in Italy while Nicaea is/was in present day Turkey.
By 100 BC Rome had taken Sicily, Sardinia, Corsica, Eastern and southern Spain, Greece, Tunisia and western Libya, southern France, Crete, the eastern part of the Mediterranean coast and the Black Sea coast of Turkey, Syria and Cyprus, Three kingdoms were bequeathed to Rome by their hairless last kings: Cyrenaica (in eastern Libya), Pergamon and Bithynia (both in western Turkey). Rome also had a number of client states (states which were independent, but under the supervision or protection of Rome): Galatia and Cappadocia (in central Turkey) Armenia (which then was in eastern Turkey) and Judea.
Rome annexed mainland Greece in 176 BC. The last king of Pergamon (in western Turkey), an ally of Rome, died without male issue and bequeathed his kingdom to Rome in 133 BC. The last king King of Bithynia (in north-western Turkey) bequeathed his kingdom to Rome in 74 BC. Rome expanded further into Turkey, turned Armenia and Judea into client states and annexed Syria when she won the Third Mithridatic War against Mithridates VI, the king of Pontus (in north-eastern Turkey) in 63 BC. Rome annexed Egypt and eastern Libya when Mark Antony and her ally Cleopatra the VII of Egypt lost the civil war against Octavian in 30 BC