History of Europe, ancient and medieval: Earliest man, the Orient, Greece and Rome . Sequence Map showing the Expansion of the Roman P TO THE DeA. iisfu ^^OM THE Beginning of the Wars with Carthage (264 ) ^.l DEATH^ C^SAR (44 ) JO Tnt World Dominion and Degeneracy 219 empires which succeeded Alexander in the East — Macedonia andSyria (see map, III, p. 218). As for Egypt, the third, a littleover thirty years after a Roman army had first appeared in theHellenistic world, Egypt also acknowledged herself a vassal ofRome (168 ). 340. Subjection of the Greeks. Although defeated, the east


History of Europe, ancient and medieval: Earliest man, the Orient, Greece and Rome . Sequence Map showing the Expansion of the Roman P TO THE DeA. iisfu ^^OM THE Beginning of the Wars with Carthage (264 ) ^.l DEATH^ C^SAR (44 ) JO Tnt World Dominion and Degeneracy 219 empires which succeeded Alexander in the East — Macedonia andSyria (see map, III, p. 218). As for Egypt, the third, a littleover thirty years after a Roman army had first appeared in theHellenistic world, Egypt also acknowledged herself a vassal ofRome (168 ). 340. Subjection of the Greeks. Although defeated, the east-ern Mediterranean world, including the Greeks, long continuedto give the Romans trouble. Then the Romans began harshmeasures. The same year which saw the destruction of Carthagewitnessed also the burning of Corinth by the Romans (146 ).Greek liberty was ended, and while a city of such revered mem-ories as Athens might be given greater freedom, those Greek stateswhose careers of glorious achievement in civilization we havefollowed were all reduced to the condition of Roman vassals. 341. Romes Great Task of Imperial Organization. TheRo


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