The Persians took Armenia and reconquered central and southern Iraq from the Romans. The Huns who were from Central Asia attacked the Empire, but did not invade it. The Visigoths and Ostrogoths came from Ukraine, but were allowed to settle in the Roman Empire. Therefore, the easternmost European people who invaded the empire were the Alans, an Iranian-speaking people original from Ukraine who had been pushed into central Europe by the Huns and invaded Gaul in 406 together with three Germanic peoples who also had been pushed into central Europe by the Huns, the Vandals (they were originally from eastern Poland and Belarus) Sueves (the were originally from eastern Germany and western Poland) Burgundians (they were originally from southern Poland
When the Holy Roman empires was obliterated, it was destroyed by tribes of Slavs, Vandals, and other Gothic tribes, who made a point of coming in from a north-east or north-west direction and BYPASSING the northern areas of the Empire, since it had no great value to them aside from random plundering due to it being a branch-off and was mainly used as farming and small towns; the "meat" of the Empire lay in the East and West. As such: there was, in fact, no "northern" roman empire. The empire, when it was eventually split and destroyed due to a huge number of causes -best outlined in the book The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, written by Edward, Gibbon- was separated into the Western and Eastern halves. The Eastern half came to be known as The Byzantium Empire. The Western half became known as Mediolanum. This last attempt at a more wide-reaching "civiliaztion" ended in ~480AD. After that time, it would become informally, and then formally known as "The Dark Ages."
Antarctica was the only continent without a British connection during its Empire stage.
Under Frankish law, a kingdom did not pass to a single heir, but was distributed among the heirs. Under the Carolingian Empire, this was modified only to the point of having the empire go to a single heir, but there were numerous kingdoms controlled by different kings. The various kings quarrelled, and the overall emperor was only able to get support from his own kingdom, not from the empire as a whole, so the empire passed to a powerless state. Later, it was revived, but France remained separate from it; in this revived form, it was called the Holy Roman Empire.
Source A argues that colonial expansion has ruined Great Britain, whereas Source B argues that Great Britain has a duty to continue expanding its empire.
The Mexican Empire invaded by Hernando Cortés in 1519 was the Aztec Empire. Cortés led a Spanish expedition that ultimately resulted in the fall of Tenochtitlán, the capital of the Aztecs, in 1521. His conquest was driven by the desire for wealth, territory, and the spread of Christianity. The invasion marked a significant turning point in the history of Mexico and the Spanish colonization of the Americas.
Lowerstoft
Maine
It was the medditerian sea
Cromwell in Central Otago is reputed to be the farthest from the sea.
No. It passes through eastern Spain. The farthest-east point in Portugal is at about 6.2
The farthest eastern point of California is located in the small community of Needles, situated along the Colorado River in San Bernardino County. This point is near the California-Arizona border, where the state extends furthest eastward. Needles is often recognized as the easternmost city in California, making it significant in terms of the state's geography.
The South Pole is the farthest point south.
The Mongol Empire, at its height in the 13th century, stretched from the northern regions of modern-day Mongolia to the southern parts of the empire in the Indian subcontinent. The farthest northern point is often considered to be around modern-day Russia, while the southern extent reached into parts of present-day India and Southeast Asia. This distance is approximately 3,000 miles (about 4,800 kilometers) apart, showcasing the vast expanse of the empire.
The farthest point in an orbit from the parent object is called apoapsis.
The South Pole is the farthest point from the North Pole.
The farthest point north is the North Pole, south is the South Pole, east is the point on the Earth's surface farthest from the Prime Meridian in Greenwich, and west is the point on the Earth's surface farthest from the 180th meridian.
The point farthest north on Earth is the North Pole, located at approximately 90 degrees north latitude. The point farthest south on Earth is the South Pole, located at approximately 90 degrees south latitude.