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The Roman Empire. Rome: Geography Italy – peninsula Long and narrow (750 miles from N-S, 120 miles E-W) Apennine Mountains run N-S separating the east.

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Presentation on theme: "The Roman Empire. Rome: Geography Italy – peninsula Long and narrow (750 miles from N-S, 120 miles E-W) Apennine Mountains run N-S separating the east."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Roman Empire

2 Rome: Geography Italy – peninsula Long and narrow (750 miles from N-S, 120 miles E-W) Apennine Mountains run N-S separating the east and west halves of Italy

3 Geography (cont’d.) Fertile plains:  Po River Valley in north  Plain of Latium (holds Rome)  Campania, south of Latium Po River in North; Tiber River runs from Etruria through Rome to Tyrrhenian Sea

4 Geography (cont’d.) Surrounded by: Adriatic Sea, Ionian Sea, Tyrrhenian Sea, and Mediterranean Sea Many small islands surround Italy in its seas Includes land in Africa, NW of Egypt known as Carthage

5 Geography (cont’d.) 3 big islands  Corsica  Sardinia  Sicily (the boot of Italy kicks Sicily; separated from Italy by the straight of Messina) g

6 Geography: Do now Based on the map, what can you infer about Italy before the establishment of the Roman Empire?

7 Geography (cont’d.) Rome ideally situated 18 miles inland from Tyrrhenian Sea Situated on 7 hills; easily defendable At narrow point of Tiber River, making it the crossing point for travel N-S/S-N

8 Geography (cont’d.) Italy juts into Mediterranean making it a crossroads from E. Med to W. Med Rome became powerhouse; unified the regions of Italy Roman Empire established and controls much of Mediterranean affairs

9 Geography: Impact Mountains less rugged than Greece Mountains didn’t divide the country into multiple sections like Greece (less isolation) More land for farming (more of a demand for agriculture than Greece) could support large population


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