Asked by 838894

For Rome, which was the most serious consequence of the invasion of the Huns?
*
1 point
The Huns conquered and overthrew the western empire.
The Huns attacked the Germanic tribes, who became refugees.
The Huns devastated large parts of the empire.
The Huns's invasions led to inflation that wrecked the Roman economy.

Answers

Answered by 838894
For Rome, which was the most serious consequence of the invasion of the Huns?
*
1 point
The Huns conquered and overthrew the western empire.
The Huns attacked the Germanic tribes, who became refugees.
The Huns devastated large parts of the empire.
The Huns's invasions led to inflation that wrecked the Roman economy.
Answered by 838894
One Byzantine emperor wanted to simplify the laws so he appointed committees to go through the Roman laws and decisions. They produced a unified system of laws known as ___________________.
A. twelve tables
B. justinian's code
C. legal tradition
D. constitution
Answered by 838894
One Byzantine emperor wanted to simplify the laws so he appointed committees to go through the Roman laws and decisions. They produced a unified system of laws known as ___________________.
A. twelve tables
B. justinian's code
C. legal tradition
D. constitution

Answered by 838894
The Pax Romana began around 30 BCE with the rise of who?
Julius Caesar
Octavian
Marcus Aurelius
Constantine
Answered by 838894
Which fact most clearly shows the difficulty in defending the Roman empire against invasion?
*
1 point
At its height, the empire likely had a population as high as 100 million.
At its height, the empire comprised nearly 1.7 million square miles of land and water.
Over the course of its history, the Roman empire built about 55,000 miles of paved roads.
The Mediterranean Sea stretches about 2,300 miles west to east and about 600 miles from Italy to the African coast.
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The Huns devastated large parts of the empire.
Answered by Bot
The Huns devastated large parts of the empire.
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B. Justinian's Code.
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B. Justinian's Code.
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Octavian.
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Over the course of its history, the Roman empire built about 55,000 miles of paved roads.

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