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- Alexandria (28378 bytes)
15: ...e Arab city from [[641]] until [[1798]] when Napoleon arrived (yellow).
23: ...illages scattered along the strip between Lake Mareotis and the sea, according to a history of Alexand...
27: After Alexander departed, his viceroy, [[Cleomenes]], continued the creation of Alexandria. Th...
29: ...arliest inhabitants was the geometer and number-theorist [[Euclid]]. From this division arose much of ...
31: ...he largest in the world). Ongoing [[maritime archaeology]] in the harbor of Alexandria, begun in [[199... - Byzantine Empire (29975 bytes)
7: ... eagle.JPG|280px]]<br/><small>Emblem of the [[Palaeologus]] dynasty, as preserved today at the entranc...
13: ...tern and Western halves, following the death of Theodosius I.
41: ... the Byzantine emperor of [[Nicaea]], Michael Palaeologus.
46: ...st sole imperial authority. In any case, the changeover was gradual and by 330, when [[Constantine the...
68: Caracalla's decree in 212, the ''Constitutio Antoniniana'',... - Timeline of Ancient Rome (22347 bytes)
25: ... BC]] – [[Roman assemblies|Assembly of the People]] created: two [[quaestor]]s elected for the f...
111: ...rk Antony|Antony]] and [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|Cleopatra]]
112: ...rk Antony|Antony]] and [[Cleopatra VII of Egypt|Cleopatra]] commit suicide; Egypt becomes a Roman prov...
163: ...ions in Scotland, Antonine Wall is abandoned and reoccupied several times
176: *[[211]] – Severus dies. His son '''[[Caracalla]]''' becomes emperor - Roman Empire (59037 bytes)
3: ...nt Roman]] polity in the centuries following its reorganization under the leadership of Octavian (bett...
5: Augustus' reorganization survived mostly unchanged until the [[...
9: ...nd of the Empire in the West. According to this theory, during the Principate (from the [[Latin]] word...
40: ... Roman life. Archeology, including [[maritime archeology]], [[aerial surveys]], [[Epigraphy|epigraphic...
56: At the time of Tiberius's death most of the people who might have succeeded him had been brutally... - Rome (33048 bytes)
15: ...omanus – [[SPQR]]''<br>(The Senate and the People of Rome)</small>
45: ...gin of the city's name is unknown, with several theories already circulating in Antiquity; the least l...
49: ...for another [[Italic languages|Italic]] speaking people the [[Sabines]]. At this location the Tiber fo...
51: ====Peoples of Early Italy====
52: ...blending of these peoples with [[Mediterranean]] people, perhaps from [[North Africa]]. In the [[8th c... - Ankara (15129 bytes)
21: ...Empire]] captured the city in [[1356]]. [[Turkic people|Turkic]] leader [[Timur Lenk]] besieged Ankara...
28: ...ey|among others]]. The National Library, the Archaeological Museum and the Ethnographical Museum are l...
39: ...d now houses a unique collection of Paleolithic, Neolithic, Hatti, Hittite, Phrygian, Urartian, and Ro...
47: ===Archeological sites===
55: ...ath was built in the reign of Emperor [[Caracalla|Caracalla]] in 3rd century AD to honour the [[Asclepios]], ... - History of Greek and Roman Egypt (25856 bytes)
12: ... but it was with another female, Berenice IV. [[Cleopatra VII]] officially co-ruled with [[Ptolemy XII...
26: ...s]], keeper of the [[Library of Alexandria]], [[Theocritus]] and a host of other poets, glorified the ...
38: ...intly with their sister [[Cleopatra II of Egypt|Cleopatra II]]. They soon fell out, however, and quarr...
41: ...he kingdom to his wife [[Cleopatra III of Egypt|Cleopatra III]] and her son [[Ptolemy IX of Egypt|Ptol...
43: [[Image:ac.cleopatra.jpg|right|frame|Cleopatra VII, last Queen of Egypt]] - Roman economy (23678 bytes)
27: ...n." Although the writer did not seriously expect people to get rid of their coins, this quotation demo...
37: ...ical weight of approximately 4.5 [[gram]]s. The theoretical standard, although not usually met in prac...
39: ...[antoninianus]] by numismatists after the emperor Caracalla, who introduced the coin in early in 215. Althoug...
43: ...nt debasement is not known, but the most common theories involve inflation, trade with India, which dr...
61: *Greene, Kevin. ''Archaeology of the Roman Economy''. Berkeley, California:...
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