Rome was attacked by the Gauls in 387 BC, and then by other peoples as well. As they fought off the invaders, they took over the land of the people they conquered. This was the main reason of their expansion.
133/5% = 133/0.05 = 2660
It is (102.4+133)/2 = 117.7
133/100
133/100013.3%= 0.133 in decimal= 133/1000 in a proper fraction
516 - 133 -133 = 250
There was no Roman Empire in 200 BC, in those days Rome was a Republic ruled by the Senate
mediterranean
133/5% = 133/0.05 = 2660
Its origins were in the assassination of Tiberius Gracchus in 133 BCE.
Carthage was destroyed in 146 BCE, leaving Rome the dominant power in the Western Mediterranean.
It is (102.4+133)/2 = 117.7
133/100
133/100013.3%= 0.133 in decimal= 133/1000 in a proper fraction
117.7
Julius Caesar
Asia minor Spain Greece France Britain and north amrica
No. The term "Empire" only applies to Rome between the periods 44BC - 1453 AD. It was, however, a republic, for 500 years before 44BC, and did control several territories during that time, with an area of 1,950,000 km2 (752,899 sq mi). If you look up the definition of "empire" in the dictionary, you will find that Rome actually was an empire in 133 BC. There is a mistaken belief that the empire began with Augustus. Historians never refer to the reign of Augustus and those after him as the empire, they use the proper name, the principate.