Ancient Rome. Maps of Ancient Rome, the Roman Empire and the Roman provinces.
Maps of the Roman Empire.
The geography of Italy included an Alpine border to the north, a ridge of Apennine Mountains running down its length dividing Italy east and west, and a n extended coastline bordered by three seas.
Thumbnails of 16 historic maps of ancient Rome. Click on the thumbnails to see larger versions. Maps show Italy, Rome, and the provinces.
List of 54 provinces of the RomanEmpire in 120 A.D.
The Forma Urbis Romae is a detailed map of Rome.
Historic maps of Roma (Rome) and Italia (Italy), showing the extent of the Roman Empire at various period, its provinces, and cities.
A collection of maps of Ancient Rome during the Republic and Empire.
Geographical Table or Index of the names of places and rivers mentioned in The Works of Cornelius Tacitus, edited by Arthur Murphy Esq.
Maps of ancient Rome and the Roman Empire.
Map of the Roman Empire of A.D. 395 divided into the Eastern Empire and the Western Empire.
From your Guide. Maps of Rome and the Empire at various periods.
Gallic sites and people in the following areas:Alpes Maritimae/Graiae, Aquitania I, Aquitania II, Belgica I, Belgica II, Germania I, Germania II, Maxima Sequanarum, Lugdunensis I, Lugdunensis II, Lugdunensis III, Lugdunensis IV, Narbonensis I, Narbonensis II, Novempopulana, Viennensis.
Roman Empire about 120 AD focusing on the 54 provinces.
Map of the Roman Empire at its largest extent.
Shockwave map shows the spread of Christianity from centers in Rome, Antioch, Jerusalem, Ephesus, and Alexandria, from the second to fourth century.
Monograph on 1st C AD
cartogram by Castorius showing roadways of Roman empire.
Interactive map site showing locations/routes of 4 phases of the fighting. Uses Macromedia Shockwave.
Twenty-seven maps of Rome and the Roman Empire from A.D. 116 to 1328.
Map from a 1925 Atlas shows the empire in the third century A.D., with the exception of Mesopotamia, which was part of the empire only briefly, during the reign of Trajan.
Map of the Roman Empire after the western half had fallen.
From the Association of College and Research Libraries' Rare Books and Manuscripts Section, an alphabetical list of place names in Latin with their vernacular equivalents.
Maps from A.D. 1-900 showing political boundary changes for each century.
Stops along the routes of Roman Gaul with ancient name and modern equivalent.
Photographs and information on twenty-three edifices from the forum, including schematic of each location.
Map of the Eastern Empire in A.D. 395, showing Egypt, Dacia, Macedonia, Asia, Pontus, Aegyptus, and Orientis.
From Bill Thayer's site, a 19th Century map of Northern Gaul, with Latin place names. Also see
Southern Gaul, and
Germania.
1,500 sites and peoples relating to Roman Gaul. The places include both ancient place names and modern archaeological sites (including villas, cemeteries, aqueducts, and so on).
Page bottom lists ancient and modern equivalents of scores of places in the Roman Empire.
Ever wonder where the vaunted Roman roads were or when they were built? This interactive map shows the progress from 300-1 BC.