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  1. The Roman provinces (Latin: provincia, pl. provinciae) were the administrative regions of Ancient Rome outside Roman Italy that were controlled by the Romans under the Roman Republic and later the Roman Empire.

  2. Sep 7, 2024 · Province, in Roman antiquity, a territorial subdivision of the Roman Empire—specifically, the sphere of action and authority of a Roman magistrate who held the imperium, or executive power. The name was at first applied to territories both in Italy and wherever else a Roman official exercised.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Oct 24, 2023 · The Roman provinces were geographical and administrative areas that were governed by Roman governors appointed by the Roman Senate and were mainly located outside of the city of Rome. These provinces were within the control of the Roman Republic and later the Roman Empire.

    • Varying Borders
    • Principate
    • Italian Provinces

    The number and borders of the provinces under Roman rule changed nearly constantly as conditions altered in the various locations. During the latter period of the Roman Empire known as the Dominate, the provinces were each broken into smaller units. The following are the provinces at the time of Actium(31 BCE) with the dates (from Pennell) they wer...

    The following provinces were added under the emperors during the Principate: 1. Rhaetia (Switzerland, Austria, and Germany, 15 BCE) 2. Noricum (parts of Austria, Slovenia, Bavaria, 16 BCE) 3. Pannonia (Croatia, 9 BCE) 4. Moesia (Danube river region of Serbia, the Republic of Macedonia, and Bulgaria, 6 CE) 5. Dacia (Transylvania, 107 CE) 6. Britanni...

    Latium et Campania (Regio I)
    Apulia et Calabria (Regio II)
    Lucania et Bruttium (Region III)
    Samnium (Regio IV)
  4. The Roman provinces played a central role in the expansion, consolidation, and eventual decline of the Roman Empire. They served as the administrative, economic, and cultural backbone of the empire, sustaining its growth and prosperity for centuries.

  5. Oct 7, 2020 · The differences between imperial Rome and the Roman provinces were vast. Find out what separated the capital of the Roman Empire and its huge numbers of provincial inhabitants.

  6. Roman provinces: administrative units in the Roman empire. Their number increased steadily, partly because the Romans conquered more territories, partly because large provinces were split up. A peaceful province, almost unarmed: relief from the temple of Hadrian in Rome.

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