The Penguin Historical Atlas of Ancient RomeMore than fifteen centuries after its fall, the Roman Empire remains one of the most formative influences on the history of Europe. Its physical remains dot the landscape from Scotland to Syria. Its cities are still the great metropolises of the continent. Its law and institutions have shaped modern practice, and its ideal of a united Europe has haunted politicians ever since. Fully illustrated and featuring more than sixty full- colour maps, this atlas traces the rise and fall of the first great multinational state. It looks at its provinces and cities, its trade and economy, its armies and frontier defences; follows its foreign ward and internecine struggles; and charts its transformation into a Christian theocracy and its fall in 476. |
From inside the book
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Page 54
... right : the trappings of sophisticated urban life were established early in the southern parts of Gaul - the temple of Augustus and Livia at Vienne was built in the early 1st century AD . Far right : the foundations of a Celtic temple ...
... right : the trappings of sophisticated urban life were established early in the southern parts of Gaul - the temple of Augustus and Livia at Vienne was built in the early 1st century AD . Far right : the foundations of a Celtic temple ...
Page 74
... right is the Olympic stadium . Beyond it , a man rides up to a bath house . On the far right are the springs for which Daphne was famous . Far right : the temple complex at Philae in southern Egypt , situated on an island in the Nile ...
... right is the Olympic stadium . Beyond it , a man rides up to a bath house . On the far right are the springs for which Daphne was famous . Far right : the temple complex at Philae in southern Egypt , situated on an island in the Nile ...
Page 128
... Right : pottery oil lamps , widely used for lighting throughout the Roman world , represent an early form of mass production ; clay was pressed into stone moulds to form the upper and lower halves , which were then fixed together and ...
... Right : pottery oil lamps , widely used for lighting throughout the Roman world , represent an early form of mass production ; clay was pressed into stone moulds to form the upper and lower halves , which were then fixed together and ...
Contents
From City to Empire | 12 |
The Origins of Rome | 20 |
The Unification of Italy | 22 |
Copyright | |
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1st century 2nd century 4th century Africa Albinus Alexandria amphitheatre Antioch Antoninus Antony aqueduct Aquileia Asia Athens Augustus Aurelian baths battle BC Roman Britain built campaigns capital captured Caracalla Carthage Carthaginians centre century BC Christian Claudius Clodius Albinus conquered Constantine Corduba Cyrenaica Cyrene Dacia Danube defeated Diocletian east eastern provinces Egypt emperor Ephesus Etruscan Euxinus Black Sea Flavius Forum Gallic Gallic Empire Gaul Goths Greek Hadrian Hierosolyma Jerusalem imperial invaded invasion Ister Danube Italian Italy Julius Caesar king kingdom legionary legions major Mauretania Mediterranean Sea Mesopotamia miles military Moesia Nero Nilus OCEANUS Octavian Palatine Palmyra Pannonia Parthian Penguin Pergamum Persians Pompey Pontus Euxinus Pontus Euxinus Black Porta Raetia Ravenna reign Rhenus Rhine Roman Empire Roman frontier Roman province Roman rule Rome Rome's ruler sack Senate Septimius Severus Severan Sicily Spain Syria Tarraco temple territory theatre Theodosius Trajan Trier Vandals Vespasian victory villa Visigoths wall wars western