s territorial possessions outside of Italia Roman Empire Italy . The word province in modern English ... and Hispania Ulterior , propraetorial provinces imperial from 27  BC 167 BC Illyricum Romanprovince Illyricum , propraetorial province imperial from 27  BC 146 BC Romanprovince of Macedonia ... province senatorial from 27  BC 129 BC Asia Romanprovince Asia , proconsular province senatorial ...  BC 64 BC Cilicia et Cyprus , propraetorial province senatorial from 27  BC 64 BC Syria Roman ..., the strategically important provinces of Roman Gaul Gaul , Hispania and Syria Romanprovince Syria ... provinces for example Syria Romanprovince Syria and Moesia were subdivided into smaller provinces ... the Principate 27 BC Achaea Romanprovince Achaea separated from Romanprovince of Macedonia Macedonia , senatorial propraetorial province 25 BC Galatia Romanprovince Galatia , imperial propraetorial ... , imperial procuratorial province 18 Cappadocia Romanprovince Cappadocia , imperial propraetorial later proconsular province c. 20 50 Illyricum Romanprovince Illyricum divided into Illyricum ... province 43 Roman Britain Britannia , imperial proconsular province 43 Lycia et Pamphylia ... province 107 Roman Dacia Dacia , imperial proconsular province split into Dacia Superior and Dacia ... provinces proconsular and propraetorial respectively c. 115 Armenia , Assyria Romanprovince Assyria and Mesopotamia Romanprovince Mesopotamia , formed by Trajan , abandoned by Hadrian in 118 ... 193 Syria Romanprovince Syria divided into Syria Coele and Syria Phoenicia, imperial provinces ... propraetorial province c. 197 Mesopotamia Romanprovince Mesopotamia , imperial praefectorial ... and Asia Romanprovince Asia through those governed by consularis consulares and corrector es to the praeses ... of the whole Iberian Peninsula . It covered Hispania and the westernmost province of Roman Africa ... of Italia Romanprovince Italia , but it was eventually split into a northern section and a southern ... more details
Image Roman Empire 125.png thumb right 400px The Roman empire under Hadrian ruled 117 38 , showing the senatorial province of Cilicia in southern Anatolia Cilicia was the name of a Roman provinces province of the Roman empire . See also Cilicia Roman Cilicia Cilicia Roman Cilicia Roman provinces AD 117 Late Roman Provinces Category Ancient Roman provinces ... more details
Liguria was a late Antiquity late Roman Empire RomanRomanprovinceprovince in Italian peninsula Italy in the 4th 6th centuries. Despite its name, it encompassed most of the modern Regions of Italy Italian region of Piedmont and parts of Lombardy , but not the medieval and modern region Liguria , which was included in the province of Alpes Cottiae . The province s capital was Milan Mediolanum , and it was governed by an official of consularis rank. Administratively, it was subject to the Diocese of Anonnarian Italy and to the praetorian prefecture of Italy . AncientRome stub Late Roman Provinces state collapsed Category Ancient Roman provinces Category Geographical, historical and cultural regions of Italy ... more details
Infobox Former Subdivision native name aut Provincia Rhodopeia conventional long name Province of Rhodope common name Rhodope continent Europe subdivision RomanprovinceProvince nation the Roman Empire era Late Antiquity capital Traianopolis Thrace Trajanopolis title leader image map Dioecesis Thraciae 400 AD.png image map caption Rhodope within the Diocese of Thrace ca. 400 AD. life span 314 640s year start 314 event start year end 640s event end Thema tic reforms Rhodope lang el Polytonic , was a Late Antiquity late Roman Empire Roman and early Byzantine Romanprovinceprovince , situated on the northern Aegean Sea Aegean coast. A part of the Diocese of Thrace , it extended along the Rhodope Mountains range, covering parts of modern Western Thrace in Greece and south western Bulgaria . The province was headed by a governor of the rank of praeses , with Traianopolis Thrace Trajanopolis as the provincial capital. According to the 6th century Synecdemus , there were six further cities in the province, Maroneia , Maximianopolis Thrace Maximianopolis , Nicopolis ad Nestum Nicopolis , Kereopyrgos unknown location and Topeiros mod. Toxotai in Greece . The province survived until the Slavic invasions of the 7th century, although as an ecclesiastic province, it continued in existence at least until the 12th century. The thema theme of Boleron covered most of the area in later Byzantine times. Sources citation editor first Alexander editor last Kazhdan editor link Alexander Kazhdan title Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium publisher Oxford University Press year 1991 isbn 978 0 19 504652 6 page 1793 Late Roman Provinces state collapsed Category Ancient Roman provinces Category Roman Thrace Category Roman Greece Category History of Bulgaria Category Provinces of the Byzantine Empire Category Rhodopes ca R dope prov ncia romana fr Rhodope province romaine ... more details
File Roman Empire 125.png thumb 300px The Roman empire in the time of Hadrian ruled 117 138 AD , showing, in western Asia, the imperial province of Cappadocia, with 2 Roman legion legions deployed in AD 125. Cappadocia was a Romanprovinceprovince of the Roman empire in Anatolia modern central eastern Turkey , with its capital at Caesarea Mazaca Caesarea . It was established in 17 AD by the emperor Tiberius ruled 14 37 AD , following the death of Cappadocia s last king, Archelaus of Cappadocia Archelaus . It was an imperial province , meaning that its governor legatus Augustus honorific Augusti was directly appointed by the emperor. During the latter 1st century, the province also incorporated the regions of Pontus and Armenia Minor . As the Empire s north easternmost province, it retained a permanent military garrison of two Roman legion legions and several Roman auxiliaries Auxiliary troops. Following the provincial reorganization of Diocletian , the Pontic and Armenian territories were split off, and the province was reduced to the region of Cappadocia proper. It was headed by a consularis and came under the Diocese of Pontus . The province was the site of a great number of imperial estates, as contemporary legislation testifies. In the late 330s, the eastern half of the province was split off to form the provinces of Roman Armenia Armenia Prima and Roman Armenia Armenia Secunda . In 371, emperor Valens split off the south western region around Tyana , which became Cappadocia Secunda under a praeses , while the remainder became Cappadocia Prima , still under a consularis . In the period 535 553, under emperor Justinian I , the two provinces were rejoined into a single unit under a proconsul . Throughout late Roman times, the region was subject to raids by the Isaurians ... and Armeniakon . Roman provinces AD 117 Late Roman Provinces Category Ancient Roman provinces Category States and territories established in 17 Category Roman Pontus Category Roman Cappadocia ... more details
Infobox Former Subdivision native name aut Provincia Europae conventional long name Province of Europa common name Europa continent Europe subdivision RomanprovinceProvince nation the Roman Empire era Late Antiquity capital Marmara Ere lisi Perinthus title leader image map Dioecesis Thraciae 400 AD.png image map caption Europa within the Diocese of Thrace ca. 400 AD. life span 314 640s year start 314 event start year end 640s event end Thema tic reforms Europa was a Roman Empire Romanprovince within the Diocese of Thrace . Established by Roman Emperor Diocletian in 314, the provinces capital was Marmara Ere lisi Perinthus . The province largely corresponds to what is modern day European Turkey . Bordering only the provinces of Rhodope and Haemimontis to the west and northwest, Europa was a peninsula and was surrounded by water on three sides the Black Sea to the northeast, the Bosphorus to the east, and the Sea of Marmara and Aegean Sea to the south and southeast. The largest city along the Black Sea was Kirklareli Salmydessus . Along the coast of the Sea of Marmara were the cities of Perinthus later known as Heraclea , Silivri Selymbria , Tekirdag Raidestus , and Gelibolu Callipolis . On the coast of the Aegean and at the mouth of the Maritsa Hebrus river in the Gulf of Saros Melas Gulf was the city of Aenus Thrace . Category Ancient Roman provinces ... more details
Unreferenced date October 2009 Sicilia was the first Romanprovinceprovince acquired by the Roman Republic , organized in 241 BC as a proconsul ar governed territory, in the aftermath of the First Punic War with Carthage . It included Sicily and Malta . Sicilia remained a province of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire for six centuries. It was regarded as something of a rural backwater, Citation needed date October 2009 important chiefly for its grainfields which were a mainstay of the Grain supply to the city of Rome food supply of the city of Rome . The empire did not make much effort to Romanization cultural Romanize the region, which remained largely Greek. A notable event affecting Sicilia in the Late Republic was the notorious misgovernment of Verres , as prosecuted by Cicero in 70 BC in his speech In Verrem . The historian Diodorus Siculus and the poet Calpurnius Siculus came from Sicilia, as indicated by the surname Siculus . The most famous archeological remains of this period are the mosaic s of a nobleman s Roman villa villa in present day Piazza Armerina . Sicilia was home to one of the Early Christianity earliest Christian communities and some of the earliest Christian martyrs , including Saint Agatha of Catania and Saint Lucy of Syracuse. In 440, Sicilia fell to the Vandals Vandal King Geiseric . After the Byzantine conquest of the Vandal Kingdom, it became again a Romanprovince. See also History of Sicily Roman provinces AD 117 Late Roman Provinces DEFAULTSORT Sicilia RomanProvince Category History of Sicily Category Ancient Roman provinces Category States and territories established in 241 BC ar bg ca Prov ncia romana de Sic lia es Sicilia provincia romana eo Sicilia eu Sizilia erromatar fr Sicile province romaine it Sicilia provincia romana he la Sicilia provincia Romana nl Sicilia Romeinse provincie pt Sic lia prov ncia romana ro Sicilia provincie roman ru sv Sicilia ... more details
dablink This article is about the Romanprovince Achaea. For other uses see Achaea disambiguation . Refimprove ... conventional long name common name Achaea continent Europe subdivision RomanprovinceProvince nation the Roman Empire era ancient history Antiquity capital Athens title leader image map REmpire Achaea.png image map caption The province of Achaea within the Roman Empire, ca. 117 AD life span year ... Balkans invaded by Slavs Theme of Hellas established File Roman Empire 125.png thumb 250px The Roman Empire under Hadrian ruled 117 38 , showing the senatorial province of Achaea southern Greece File HADRIANUS RIC II 938 789065.jpg thumb 250px Sestertius of Hadrian celebrating Achaea province. Achaea was a Romanprovinceprovince of the Roman Empire , consisting of the Peloponnese , eastern Central ... Romanprovince Macedonia . The region was annexed to the Roman Republic in 146 BC following the sack of Corinth, Greece Corinth by the Roman general Lucius Mummius Achaicus Lucius Mummius , who was awarded ... references See also History of Roman and Byzantine Greece RomanprovinceRoman provinces AD 117 DEFAULTSORT Achaea RomanProvince Category Roman Achaea Category Ancient Roman provinces Category ... peaceful part of the Roman world until Late Antiquity , when it suffered from barbarian invasions. Nevertheless the province remained prosperous and highly urbanized, as attested in the 6th ... administered by Rome, as a Senatorial province . Some cities, such as Athens and Sparta , even retained .... Roman legions under Lucius Cornelius Sulla forced Mithridates VI of Pontus Mithridates out of Greece .... Sulla s depredations on Greek works of art were notorious. Roman punishment of all the rebellious cities ... BC , the Emperor Augustus separated Macedonia from Achaea, though it remained a Senatorial province ... Greek cities. List of Roman governors Gaius Calpurnius Piso 1st century Vettius Agorius Praetextatus ... production was not as great as the mines of other Roman controlled areas, such as Noricum , Roman ... more details
File Roman Empire 125.png thumb 400px The Roman empire under Hadrian ruled 117 38 , showing the imperial province of Dalmatia Croatia Bosnia in southeastern Europe File REmpire Dalmatia.svg thumb 250px Province of Dalmatia highlighted File Ancient balkans 4thcentury.png thumb 250px Dalmatia in the 4th century Dalmatia was an ancient Romanprovince. Its name is probably derived from the name of an Illyrians Illyrian tribe called the Dalmatae which lived in the area of the eastern Adriatic coast in Classical ... century BC until the Illyrian Wars in the 220s BC and 168 BC when the Roman Republic established its protectorate south of the river Neretva . Area north of the Neretva was slowly incorporated into roman possessions until the province of Illyricum was formally established c. 32 27 BC Dalmatia region then became part of the Romanprovince of Illyricum Romanprovince Illyricum . Between 6 and 9 AD ... crushed and in 10 AD Illyricum was split into two provinces, Pannonia and Dalmatia. The province .... Dalmatia was the birthplace of the Roman Emperor Diocletian , who, upon retirement from Emperor, built ... ref The historian Theodore Mommsen wrote in his The Provinces of the Roman Empire that all Dalmatia ... social political tribal organization which was adapted to Roman administration and political ... ref After the Western Roman Empire collapsed in 476 , with the beginning of the Migration Period, the region ... . The first modern account of Roman Dalmatia in English was J.J. Wilkes, Dalmatia Harvard University ..., based primarily on the evidence of inscriptions and the ancient historians. See also Roman Empire ... in english.com images maps 3 5cen.jpg Map http www.euratlas.com big big0400.htm Map Roman provinces AD 117 DEFAULTSORT Dalmatia RomanProvince Category History of Dalmatia Category Roman Croatia Category Ancient Roman provinces Category States and territories established in the 1st century BC br Dalmatia provi s roman bg ca Dalm cia prov ncia romana cs Dalm cie provincie ... more details
File Roman Empire 125.png thumb 250px The Roman empire in the time of Hadrian ruled 117 38 AD , showing, in western Asia, the imperial province of Galatia Galatia was the name of a province of the Roman Empire in Anatolia modern central Turkey . It was established by the first emperor, Augustus sole rule 30 BC 14 AD , in 25 BC, covering most of formerly independent Galatia Celtic Galatia , with its capital at Ancyra . Under the reforms of Diocletian, its northern and southern parts were split off to form the southern part of the province of Paphlagonia and the province of Lycaonia , respectively. In ca. 398, during the reign of Honorius emperor Honorius , it was divided in two provinces, Galatia Prima and Galatia Secunda or Salutaris . Galatia Prima covered the northeastern part of the old province, retaining Ancyra as its capital, and was headed by a consularis , while Salutaris comprised the southwestern half of the old province, and was headed by a praeses with seat at Pessinus . Both provinces were part of the Diocese of Pontus . The two provinces were briefly reunited in 536 548 under Justinian I . Although the area was eventually incorporated in the new thema of Anatolikon in the latter half of the 7th century, traces of the old provincial administration survived until the early 8th century. Roman provinces AD 117 Late Roman Provinces Category Ancient Roman provinces Category Galatia Romanprovince Category States and territories established in 25 BC Category Provinces of the Byzantine Empire bg ... more details
ODB1999 See also History of Syria Ottoman Syria Assyria RomanprovinceRoman governors of Syria List of governors of Roman Syria References reflist Roman history by territory Late Roman Provinces Timeline ...otheruses Syria disambiguation File Roman Empire 125.png thumb 250px The Roman empire in the time of Hadrian ruled 117 138 AD , showing, in western Asia, the imperial province of Syria Syria Lebanon , with 4 Roman legion legions deployed in 125. File REmpire Syria.png thumb 250px Province of Syria highlighted File Mosa que Ph nix 03.JPG thumb 250px Roman mosaic from Antiochia detail , Mus e du Louvre . Syria was a Romanprovince , annexed in 64 BC by Pompey , as a consequence of his military presence after pursuing victory in the Third Mithridatic War . It remained under Roman, and subsequently Byzantine , rule for seven centuries, until 637 when it fell to the Islamic conquests . Principate The Syrian army accounted for three legions of the Roman army , defending the Parthia n border. In the 1st century, it was the Syrian army that enabled Vespasian s coup. Syria was of crucial strategic importance during the crisis of the third century . From the later 2nd century, the Roman senate included several notable Syrians, including Claudius Pompeianus and Avidius Cassius . In 193, the province was divided into Syria Coele . In the 3rd century, Syrians even reached for imperial power, with the Severan dynasty . From 260 to 273, Syria was part of the breakaway Palmyrene Empire . Dominate ... likely ca. 341 , the province of Euphratensis was created out of the territory of Syria Coele along ... province Theodorias province Theodorias out of territory from both provinces. ref name ODB1999 The region ... Category Roman Syria Category Fertile Crescent Category States and territories established in 64 BC Category Seleucid Empire successor states ar br Syria provi s roman bg ... de Syria es Siria provincia romana eo Syria eu Siria erromatar probintzia fr Syrie province romaine ... more details
About the Romanprovince the Roman Prefecture Praetorian prefecture of Illyricum Infobox Former Subdivision ... RomanprovinceProvince nation the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire era ancient history Antiquity capital Salona p1 Illyria s1 Dalmatia Romanprovince s2 Pannonia image map Province of Illyricum.png image map caption Province of Illyricum year start 167 BC year end after 20 AD event end Divided in 2 provinces History of Albania state expanded History of Bosnia and Herzegovina The Romanprovince ... name Encyclopedia Britannica 2002 Encyclopedia Britannica,2002,ISBN 0852297874,The Romanprovince of Illyricum ... considered ... ref of Roman Macedonia Romanprovince Macedonia . Background The Roman Navy s first ... King Gentius Gentius . From 167 BC, southern Illyria became a formally independent Roman protectorate. Romanprovince The region had considerable strategic and economic importance for the Romans. It possessed ... rather than a province as understood today to Julius Caesar . The Roman administration did not establish a province until Augustus Octavian s wars in Illyricum in the period 35 33 BC. The first mention of the province of Illyricum occurs in the context of Augustan settlement of 27 BC, when it was assigned as a propraetorial province to imperial control. File Roman provinces of Illyricum, Macedonia, Dacia, Moesia, Pannonia and Thracia.jpg thumb right The Romanprovince of Illyricum ... Belgrade Epigraphy blog DEFAULTSORT Illyricum RomanProvince Category Ancient Roman ... Croatia in the west and to the Sava river Bosnia and Herzegovina in the north. Salona ref The Roman ... through the centuries though a great part of ancient Illyria remained part of Illyricum as a province ... 19807 5,Page 160, ... The Roman invasion of Illyria in 229 sc appears to have caught Teuta and the Illyrians ... expedition ... ref involved Rome s first invasion of Illyria, the First Illyrian War . The Roman Republic ... bureau in Salona . Illyria also became the starting point of the Via Egnatia , the great Roman ... more details
other uses Assyria disambiguation File Roman Empire Assyria.svg 300px thumb Romanprovince of Assyria , 117 AD. Assyria or Assyria Provincia was one of three Roman provinces provinces Armenia, Mesopotamia, and Assyria created by the Roman emperor Trajan ref Trajan s Parthian War and the Fourth Century Perspective Author s C. S. Lightfoot Source The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 80 1990 , pp. 115 126 .... Despite continued Roman activity in the region, no further reference is made to a Romanprovince ... and Mesopotamia at the end of the 2nd century, no mention is made of a Romanprovince of Assyria ... the Tigris and Euphrates, but makes no reference to a current Romanprovince bearing that name. ref ... to this day. See also Asuristan Osroene Assyria Persian province Syria Romanprovince History ... history Territories with limited Roman Empire occupation & presence DEFAULTSORT Assyria RomanProvince ... established in 116 br Assyria provi s roman es Asiria provincia romana fr Assyrie province ... Rome s military victory, Trajan s province was plagued with difficulties from the start. In 116, a Parthian prince named Santruces organized an armed revolt by the natives in the new Roman provinces. During the revolt, Roman garrisons in Assyria and Mesopotamia were driven from their posts, and a Roman ..., Roman Rule in Asia Minor to the End of the Third Century After Christ , Princeton, NJ Princeton University ... policy with respect to the recently acquired territories in the east. Hadrian believed that the Roman Empire empire was overextended, and wanted to retract Roman rule to more easily defensible borders ... Although many sources cite the creation of a province named Assyria during Trajan s Parthian campaign ... that is corroborated by the text of the 4th century Roman historian Festus. ref C.S. Lightfoot, Trajan s Parthian War and the Fourth Century Perspective, The Journal of Roman Studies, Volume 80 , 1990 , p. 121 122. ref However, other sources contend that the province was located east of the Tigris ... more details
Mesopotamia was the name of two distinct Romanprovince s, the one a short lived creation of the Roman ... enlarging and completing the province of Mesopotamia and across the river Tigris to Adiabene , which he annexed into another Romanprovince, Assyria Romanprovince Assyria . ref Bennett 1997 , p ... a province of Mesopotamia in 198, with Nisibis, elevated to the status of a full colonia Roman .... 42 ref Unlike Trajan s province, which encompassed the whole of Roman occupied Mesopotamia between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, the new province was limited between the province of Osroene to the south ... DEFAULTSORT Mesopotamia RomanProvince Category Ancient Roman provinces Category Mesopotamia ... lasted until the Muslim conquests of the 7th century. Trajan s province File RomanEmpire 117.svg thumb right 250px The Roman Empire at Trajan s death in 117 In 113, Emperor Trajan r. 98 117 launched ... was made into a province, and by the end of 115, he had conquered northern Mesopotamia . This too was organized as a province in early 116, when coins were minted to celebrate the fact. ref Bennett ... throne. Never again would the Roman Empire advance so far to the east. As soon as Trajan died ... became again the Roman Empire s eastern boundary. ref Bennett 1997 , pp. 206 207 ref ref Mommsen, Dickson & Purdie 2004 , p. 72 ref Severus province Northern Mesopotamia, including Osroene , came again under Roman control in the Roman Parthian War of 161 166 expedition of Lucius Verus in 161 166 ..., although Roman garrisons were maintained, notably at Nisibis . This control was threatened in 195 ... Osroene as a full province. ref Mommsen, Dickson & Purdie 2004 , pp. 77 78 ref ref Southern 2001 ... to the east. ref name ODB Kazhdan 1991 , p. 1348 ref For the remainder of its existence, the new province ... in the recurrent Roman Persian Wars . In the turmoil that followed the Year of the Six Emperors , in 239 ..., the Persian shah Shapur I r. ca. 240 270 attacked Mesopotamia, and fought with the Roman emperor ... more details
dablink For other uses, see Asia disambiguation . File Roman Empire 125.png thumb 400px The Roman empire in the time of Hadrian ruled 117 138 AD , showing, in western Anatolia , the senatorial province of Asia southwestern Turkey File Roman Empire Asia.svg thumb Province of Asia highlighted File Asia minor roman power.jpg thumb Roman conquest of Asia minor The Romanprovince of Asia or Asiana Greek , in Byzantine times called Phrygia, was an administrative unit added to the late Roman Republic Republic . It was a Senatorial province governed by a proconsul . The arrangement was unchanged in the reorganization of the Roman Empire in 211. Geography Asia province originally consisted of Mysia ... province was later reassigned to the Cilicia Romanprovinceprovince of Cilicia . During the empire, Asia province was bounded by Bithynia to the north, Lycia to the south, and Galatia to the east. ref Asia, Romanprovince. The Oxford Classical Dictionary . 3rd ed. 1996 p. 189 90 ref Background Antiochus ... . Aegean islands except Crete, were part of the Insulae province of Asiana. Part of Phrygia was given to Mithridates V Euergetes before it was reclaimed as part of the province in 116 BC. Lycaonia ... as Asia province. ref name The Oxford Classical Dictionary p. 189 90 The Oxford Classical Dictionary ... VI . He would prove to be a formidable foe to Rome s success in Asia province and beyond. ref ... to members of the Equestrian Roman equestrian order . The privilege of collecting taxes was almost ..., they borrowed from Roman lenders but at exorbitant rates. This more often than not resulted in default on said loans and consequently led Roman lenders to seize the borrower s land, their last remaining asset of value. In this way and by outright purchase, Romans dispersed throughout Asia province ... all of Asia. Capitalizing on the hatred of corrupt Roman practices, Mithridates instigated a mass revolt against Rome, ordering the slaughter of all Romans and Italians in the province. ref http ... more details
conventional long name common name Macedonia continent Europe subdivision RomanprovinceProvince nation the Roman Empire era ancient history Antiquity capital Thessalonica br in Late Antiquity ... image map caption The province of Macedonia within the Roman Empire, ca. 117 AD life span year ... Balkan interior raided by Slavs The Romanprovince of Macedonia lang la Provincia Macedoniae , lang el was officially established in 146 BC, after the Roman general Quintus Caecilius ... right The Roman provinces of Epirus vetus and Epirus nova in relation to modern borders. Expand section date September 2009 Epirus vetus or Old Epirus was a province in the Roman Empire that corresponded to the region of Epirus region Epirus . Between 146 BC and 395 , it was incorporated into the Romanprovince of Macedonia.The capital ref The visible past Greek and Roman history from archaeology ... Durazzo ref or Illyris proper was a province of the Roman Empire established by Diocletian 244 311 during his restructuring of provincial boundaries. The province, belonged to the Romanprovince ... Province of the Roman Empire Bot generated title ref File Roman Empire 125.png thumb right 400px The Roman ... state collapsed DEFAULTSORT Macedonia RomanProvince Category Roman Macedonia Category Roman Greece ... by Rome in the region were dissolved. The province incorporated ancient Macedonia ancient kingdom Macedon ... was split off, and sometime in the 4th century, the province of Macedonia itself was divided into Macedonia ... of Illyricum , organized in 318. When the Prefecture was divided between the Western Roman Empire Western and Eastern Roman Empire Eastern Empires in 379, the Macedonian provinces were included in Eastern ... penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer E Roman Texts Procopius Buildings 4B .html The Loeb Editor s Notes , 28 Nova Epirus or Illyris Graeca ref ref A new classical dictionary of Greek and Roman biography, mythology, and geography partly based upon the Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology ... more details
image map First century palestine.gif era Roman Empire , Julio Claudian dynasty , Flavian dynasty , Parthia subdivision Province nation the Roman Empire year start 6 year end 132 p1 Tetrarchy Judea s1 ... Mithridatic War , when Rome made Syria Romanprovince Syria a province. After the defeat of Mithridates ... state client kingdom and then in 6 Common Era CE parts became a province of the Roman Empire . ref Benjamin Isaac The Near East under Roman Rule Selected Papers Leiden Brill 1998 ref Iudaea Province was the stage of three major rebellion s see Jewish Roman wars , including the Great Jewish Revolt ... Romanprovince Syria in antiquity Syria , split the former Hasmonean Kingdom of Israel into five ... Judea became part of a larger Romanprovince, called Iudaea , which was formed by combining Judea Judea ... in 6 CE, Judea proper, Samaria and Idumea were converted into a Romanprovince under the name ... it to distinguish the Romanprovince from the previous territory and history. Iudaea province did ..., 1976, page 247 When Judea was converted into a Romanprovince in 6 CE, page 246 , Jerusalem ceased ... , the Maccabees and Herod the Great . Quirinius became Legatus Legate Governor of Syria Romanprovince ... The Roman empire in the time of Hadrian ruled 117 138 CE , showing, in western Asia, the Romanprovince ... by territory DEFAULTSORT Judaea RomanProvince Category Ancient Roman provinces Iudea Category Ancient Jewish Roman history Iudea province Category New Testament history Category Periods in the history ... small Unicode Yeh h lang el lang la IVD A is the term used by historians to refer to the Romanprovince that extended over parts of the former regions of the Hasmonean and Herodian Dynasty ... in Judea Hadrian changed the name of the province to Syria Palaestina and Jerusalem to Aelia Capitolina ... and the land, Hadrian changed the name of the province from Iudaea to Syria Palestina, a name that became ... Rome made a province of Syria . After the defeat of Mithridates VI of Pontus , Pompey Pompey the Great ... more details
This article is about the ancient Romanprovince of Africa. For other uses, see Africa and Africa disambiguation . Image Roman Empire 125.png thumb right 400px The Roman empire in the time of Hadrian ruled 117 138 AD , showing, in northern Africa, the senatorial province of Africa Proconsularis E. Algeria Tunisia Tripolitania . 1 Roman legion legion deployed in 125 Image Roman Empire Africa.svg thumb right Province of Africa highlighted File Roman Africa.JPG thumb right Northern Africa under Roman rule. The Romanprovince of Africa was established after the Romans defeated Carthage in the Third ... Annaba , Algeria . The province was established by the Roman Republic in 146 BC, following the Third ... in reestablishing Roman rule over the province. The restored Roman administration was successful in fending ... Africa Province, most importantly merchants, traders, and mainly Roman Army veterans in early retirement ... as Sallust 45 BC, Numidia Romanprovince Africa Nova Q. Cornificius 44 42 BC, Africa Vetus T. Sextius ... RomanProvince Category Ancient Roman provinces Category History of North Africa Category Romanprovince of Africa Category States and territories established in 146 BC Category Roman Libya ar ... . The Arab s later named roughly the same region as the original province Ifriqiya , a rendering of Africa . History See History of Tunisia History of Africa Numidia Mauretania The land acquired for the province ... in the domain of the Numidia n client king Massinissa . At this time, the Roman policy in Africa was simply ..., the romanization of Africa was firmly rooted. In 27 B.C, when the Roman Republic Republic had transformed into an Roman Empire Empire , the province of Africa began its Imperialism Imperial occupation under Roman rule. Several political and provincial reforms were implemented by Augustus and later by Caligula , but Claudius finalized the territorial divisions into official Roman provinces. Africa was a senatorial province. After Diocletian s administrative reforms, it was split into Africa Zeugitana ... more details
The Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Miami, Florida Miami jurisdiction covers the state of Florida . It includes the metropolitan bishop Metropolitan Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Miami Archdiocese of Miami and the suffragan bishop suffragan diocese dioceses of Roman Catholic Diocese of Orlando Orlando , Roman Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach Palm Beach , Roman Catholic Diocese of Pensacola Tallahassee Pensacola Tallahassee , Roman Catholic Diocese of St. Petersburg St. Petersburg , Roman Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine St. Augustine , and Roman Catholic Diocese of Venice in Florida Venice . History we re missing huge gaps in RC history of Metropolises starting with Newman in Baltimore I suppose. I think DC was the Metropolis for Miami in the late 1950s Pope Paul VI made Miami a metropolitan see in 1968. Education There were 218 Catholic schools in Florida in 2008. Elementary schools are accredited by the Florida Catholic Conference. Catholic high schools are accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools . ref cite book author title FYI publisher The Florida Catholic date January 16 29, 2009 ref In 2009, there were about 87,000 Catholic school students in Florida. ref cite news first Karen last Osborne title New Year, more reasons to love state s Catholic ... moz column count 2 column count 2 references div Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Miami Miami R C provinces in the United States Miami Catholicism US RC diocese stub Category Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Miami Miami pl Metropolia Miami ... served as Metropolitan bishop Metropolitans of the Province Archbishop Coleman Carroll 1968 1977 had ... States Province of Miami List of the Catholic bishops of the United States List of the Catholic ... Catholic Church hierarchy Roman Catholicism in the United States Catholicism and American politics History of Roman Catholicism in the United States Catholic Church by country Christianity in the United ... more details
a province was a territory or function that a Roman Magistrates Roman magistrate held control ... as a generic term for a jurisdiction under Roman law . Geology In geology , the term province refers ... in a more Roman sense , such as the Province of Canada and the South Australia Province of South ... was divided into provinces Romanprovince provinciae . In the Tartar Khanate of Kazan the five ...otheruses tooshort date January 2011 morefootnotes date January 2011 refimprove date January 2011 A province ... state state . Etymology The English language English word province is attested since about 1330 and derives from the 13th century Old French province , which itself comes from the Latin word provincia ... a geologic period . History and culture In France , the expression en province still tends to mean ... a variety of jurisdictions e.g., le de France province Ile de France , built around the early House ..., or agglomerations of such. Today the expression province is sometimes replaced by en r gion , r gion ... Europe . He asks, Was the province not its inhabitants true fatherland ? ref The Perspective of the World ... the separatists in the province of Kosovo , the United Kingdom , under the political principle ... s, the province or state is not clearly subordinate to the national or central government. Rather ... agreements in areas where the state or province is sovereign, such as the environment or health ... fall under a province s or a federal state s competency, some states allow them to legally conduct ... of province is wojew dztwo , sometimes rendered in English as voivodeship . In Peru , provinces ... Hamilton and Dunedin . Modern provinces In many countries, a province is a relatively small non constituent ... of a federation or confederation , often with a large territory. In China, a province is a sub national region within a unitary state this means that a province can be created or abolished by the central government. A province is a distinct unit of government in the Philippines , Belgium , Spain ... more details
title ref References reflist External links http www.canada.com theprovince The Province official web site Postmedia DEFAULTSORT Province, The Category Newspapers published in Vancouver Category Postmedia ... in 1898 Canada newspaper stub de The Province fr The Province sw The Province pt The Province tr The Province ... more details
Wiktionary Roman or Romans may refer to A thing or person of or from the city of Rome TOCright History Ancient Rome 9th century BC 5th century AD Roman Kingdom 753 BC to 509 BC Roman Republic 509 BC to 44 BC Roman Empire 27 BC to 476 1453 AD Roman Britain , part of the island of Great Britain controlled by the Roman Empire between AD 43 and about 410 Roman citizenship Roman alphabet or Latin alphabet ..., Indonesia, Malay, and other areas once settled by European colonial empires Romanization Roman architecture Roman army Roman calendar Roman law , the legal system of both the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire Roman numerals , numeral system where certain letters are given a numeral value Imperial cult ancient Rome , Roman religion Byzantine Empire 330 476 629 to 1453 , a Late Antiquity and medieval continuation of the Greek speaking portion of the Roman Empire Romaioi , Greek speaking, Orthodox population of the Eastern Roman Empire dating to Late Antiquity the term translates literally to Roman Romioi , Greek speaking, Orthodox population of the Rum milet in the Ottoman Empire, or Greek speaking Orthodox people today the term translates literally to Roman Romanae or the Greco Roman s from Aetolia Acarnania that speak Romanesci Holy Roman Empire c. 900 to 1806 , a medieval state in Central Europe Geography Roman, Bulgaria , a town and a municipality in Vratsa Province Romans sur Is re , in the Dr me d partement of France Roman, Romania , a city in Neam county Romans, Ain , a town in France Roman, Eure , France Romans, Deux S vres , France Romans d Isonzo , a town in Italy Roman roads Roman Valley, Nova Scotia Saint Roman, Monaco Christianity Roman Catholic Church , a Christian church that professes the Catholic faith Roman Missal , a book containing prayers and readings for a Roman Catholic Mass Epistle to the Romans , a letter in the New Testament of the Christian Bible Typography Roman type , an upright typeface style, contrasted to italic or a synonym ... more details
For the fictional mobster Carmine Falcone The Roman is a fiction novel by Mika Waltari published in 1964 . Set in Rome, the book is a sequel to The Secret of the Kingdom , a novel about the early days of Christianity. The protagonist and narrator is Minutus, the son of Marcus, the main character of the previous novel. Minutus is a Roman citizen striving to survive without political entanglements. In the novel, he travels from Corinth to Britain, to Rome and then to Jerusalem. Through a boyhood friendship with Nero, he becomes a sometimes advisor, sometimes a tool, and sometimes a fool of the capricious emperor. A cruel fate makes him the commander of the menagerie which supplied the wild animals that tore his father and son to pieces, and the book was obstensibly written as a guide for his son, great grandson of the Emperor Claudius. As usual, Mika Waltari has a good grasp of human nature and of historical events, and can reproduce the feel of ancient Rome and the Roman world. Plagiarism of the novel In July 2008, news emerged that the novel had been plagiarism plagiarized by the tv producer Colin Slater in his novel Lindum Colonia , published in 2003. ref http svenska.yle.fi nyheter artikel.php?id 134516 yle.fi Waltari roman plagierades i USA 24.7.2008 ref References references DEFAULTSORT Roman, The Category 1964 novels Category Novels by Mika Waltari Category Historical novels Category Books about Nero hist novel stub fi Ihmiskunnan viholliset ... more details
Province of Armagh may refer to Province of Armagh Church of Ireland Province of Armagh Roman Catholic See also Ulster secular province whose territory corresponds roughly to that of the Roman Catholic ecclesiastical province disambig ... more details