Roman Empire Map – Map of Ancient Roman Ruins

Our map presents an extensive collection of Roman sites spanning across Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. It encompasses sites associated with the Roman Empire until the establishment of the Byzantine Empire in 330 AD. The map includes sites in the west that remained under the control of the Western Roman Empire until 476 AD.

For ease of use, the map is categorized into various types of Roman sites:

  1. Roman aqueducts and water supply (Includes cisterns and aqueducts.)
  2. Roman amphitheatres
  3. Roman army / defences (Includes Roman city defences, legionary castellum, fortresses and for example Hadrian’s wall.)
  4. Roman baths
  5. Roman domus and villa
  6. Roman theatres
  7. Roman temples
  8. Roman / ancient history museums
  9. Roman cities / areas (Includes both minor and larger archaeological areas combining a mix of the above categories. In many cases these feature a museum, temples, bath complexes, an amphitheatre, housing and a theatre.)
  10. Other Roman ruins / remains (Includes Roman triumphal arches, Roman towers, Roman lighthouses, Roman mines, Roman mausoleums etc. In other words, everything not defined in the other 9 categories.)

Introduction

A short introduction to using the maps and to to the calculation of the weighted average score.

Table of all Roman Sites

Filterable table with all 1000+ sites. The page also features a split per type (acqueducts, temples etc.) and links to the overviews per country

Byzantine Sites Map

Map of Byzantine Sites. Even though the Byzantines referred to themselves as Romans until the end, this helps distinguish between the gradually changing cultures.

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