Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Anyone who could afford it could go to school. There were no restrictions on education but it was not free. Therefore the very poor were sometimes barely literate while the more affluent were better educated.
Roman children went to school for the same reasons that modern children go to school-- to get educated and to get the rewards that an education can bring.
girls were required to go to public school in the Byzantine empire
No China was not part of the Roman Empire. This empire did not go beyond Turkey, Armenia and northern Iraq, in western Asia. China was too far away, in the Far East, on the opposite side of Asia.
idk who asks crap like this, go look up this question on wikianswers, garenteed fun: What happened after the roman empire fell in the Eastern half of the Roman empire? Have fun ;)
umm the vatican city and the roman empire...or center London and the british empire...id go with the first one i guess
The Roman Empire was founded by a lady called Marie Collines but then she let her husban go on with the tribe.
Roman boys went to school but believe it or not girls didn't go to school.
Roman Corrales goes by Nyx, Ro, Ramen, Roman, and "like the empire".
Roman children went to school for the same reasons that modern children go to school-- to get educated and to get the rewards that an education can bring.
It became the Byzantine Empire. Eventually it was conquered by the Ottoman Turks, ending the empire in 1453.
No, the Romans did not go beyond Egypt.
girls were required to go to public school in the Byzantine empire
yes they did
Yes. The roman empire went up into the british isles all the way to the Antonine wall, which is located in what is now southern Scotland.
No China was not part of the Roman Empire. This empire did not go beyond Turkey, Armenia and northern Iraq, in western Asia. China was too far away, in the Far East, on the opposite side of Asia.
idk who asks crap like this, go look up this question on wikianswers, garenteed fun: What happened after the roman empire fell in the Eastern half of the Roman empire? Have fun ;)
umm the vatican city and the roman empire...or center London and the british empire...id go with the first one i guess