Roman Empire (27 BC – 476 AD). The Roman Empire was founded when Augustus Caesar proclaimed himself the first emperor of Rome in 31BC and came to an end with the fall of Constantinople in 1453CE. An empire is a political system in which a group of people are ruled by a single individual, an emperor or empress.
Bunu mu demek istediniz:
Arama sonuçları
Roma İmparatorluğu
- en.wikipedia.org Roman EmpireRoman territorial evolution from the rise of the city-state of Rome to the fall of the Western Roman Empire.
- tr.wikipedia.org Roma İmparatorluğuThe Fall of the Roman Empire, (1964) Fragman6 Temmuz 2009 tarihinde Wayback Machine sitesinde arşivlendi.
- medium.com the-collector/the-roman-empire-an-epic…This article provides an overview of the Roman Empire, its history, culture, and legacy, under the following headings
- youtube.com watch10 milyon görüntülemeYayınlandı6 Nis 2023
- thecollector.vercel.app roman-republic/Any discussion of Rome is bound to include one particular name: Julius Caesar. Standing at the balance point from the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire.
- dizigom1.tv dizi-izle/roman-empire/Roman Empire dizisine Genel Bakış. Roman Empire: Reign of Blood Sezon 1 Bu belgesel-tarihi efsane karışımı yapımda, hükümdarlığı ile Roma'nın...
- crystalinks.com romanempire.htmlThe Roman Empire emerged from the Roman Republic when Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar transformed it from a republic into a monarchy.
- humanidades.com en/roman-empire/We explain what the Roman Empire was, its characteristics and the dynasties that ruled it. In addition, we discuss the fall of the empire and its culture.
- livescience.com Archaeology RomansFall of the Roman Empire. During Constantine's reign he ordered the construction of a new city called Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul).
- conservapedia.com Roman_EmpireThe Roman Empire was the direct successor to the Roman Republic which had already established Rome as the dominant force in the west.
Kısa bilgiler
- Nüfusu:60.000.000
- Başkenti:Konstantinopolis (476-1453 yy.), Roma (MÖ 28 y. - MS 395 y.)