Question
Which of the following conclusions does this map support?
* 1 point
This map shows the location of some early Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan settlements around the 9th century BCE. It also shows where early Rome's large defensive wall, called the Servian Wall, would be built many centuries later. Look at the map. Then answer the question below.
The Early City of Rome in the 8th Century BCE
Field of Mars
Tiber River
Capitoliné HIl
Palatine Hill
Caelian HItl
Aventine HIlt
• Sabine settlement
Latin settlement
* Etruscan settlement
— Servian Wall
Hills
Which of the following conclusions does this map support?
The city of Rome was likely the result of early Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan settlements merging together.
The city of Rome was likely founded by the Latins, with little influence form the Sabines and Etruscans.
* 1 point
This map shows the location of some early Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan settlements around the 9th century BCE. It also shows where early Rome's large defensive wall, called the Servian Wall, would be built many centuries later. Look at the map. Then answer the question below.
The Early City of Rome in the 8th Century BCE
Field of Mars
Tiber River
Capitoliné HIl
Palatine Hill
Caelian HItl
Aventine HIlt
• Sabine settlement
Latin settlement
* Etruscan settlement
— Servian Wall
Hills
Which of the following conclusions does this map support?
The city of Rome was likely the result of early Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan settlements merging together.
The city of Rome was likely founded by the Latins, with little influence form the Sabines and Etruscans.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The conclusion that the map supports is: **The city of Rome was likely the result of early Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan settlements merging together.**
This conclusion is supported by the presence of multiple settlements (Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan) indicated on the map, suggesting that these cultures coexisted and likely interacted in the region, which could have contributed to the development of early Rome.
This conclusion is supported by the presence of multiple settlements (Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan) indicated on the map, suggesting that these cultures coexisted and likely interacted in the region, which could have contributed to the development of early Rome.