no
No, Galileo only read about the Roman empire. He was born about a thousand years after the fall of the western Roman empire. He is a scientist from the renaissance period.
No. Although the Roman Empire did expand south into Africa,it did not get as far as what is now modern day Kenya. It only included Egypt.
There was no Roman Empire in these centuries.
No, the Romans did not go beyond Egypt.
The Roman Empire was truly the empire of a city: Rome. This would make Rome the oldest city in the empire. However, as the Roman Empire expanded, it conquered land all around the Mediterranean and beyond. Within its boundaries, the oldest city inhabited by humans was Jericho (first being settled 9,000 BC).
Yes, much further. The Roman empire stretched, roughly, from northern Africa to Scotland and from the Atlantic Ocean to the Black Sea.
he would make the roman empire more powerful
France
The Franks of France and he holy roman Christians
Roman empire
France was once called Gaul and was a Roman colony.
Gaul
Gaul
France.
At its greatest extent, the Holy Roman Empire included Germany, Austria, Italy, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, part of Poland, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, north-eastern France Savoy and part of Province.
Yes. Type "Roman Empire" on Google and you'll see. In fact Europe was part of the Roman Empire since about half of it was in "Europe" as now defined, but the non-European parts - Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, N Africa - had more than half the population, and the Eastern Empire (largely outside Europe) became the more important part over time.
After Julius Caesars final win at Alysia,Gaul (France) became apart of the Roman Republic, Gaul became a stronghold of the Roman Empire later on and was the edge of the Western Empire. France was one of the first (countries) to be ruled by the Romans and though out the time of the Empire until the fall of the Empire it remained under Roman control