The Anatolian provinces enjoy prosperity and security…
45 BCE to 99 CE
The Anatolian provinces enjoy prosperity and security after the accession of the Roman emperor Augustus (r. 27 BCE -CE 14), and for generations thereafter.
All of Anatolia except Armenia, which is a Roman client-state, is integrated into the imperial system by CE 43.
The cities are administered by local councils and send delegates to provincial assemblies that advise the Roman governors.
Their inhabitants are citizens of a cosmopolitan world state, subject to a common legal system and sharing a common Roman identity.
Roman in allegiance and Greek in culture, the region nonetheless retains its ethnic complexity.
People
Groups
Asia (Roman province)
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Bithynia et Pontus (Roman province)
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Armenia, Kingdom of Greater
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Corduene (Roman province)
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Cilicia (Roman province)
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Roman Principate (Rome)
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Galatia (Roman province)
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Roman Empire (Rome): Julio-Claudian dynasty
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Cappadocia (Roman province)
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Lycia (Roman Province)
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Roman Empire (Rome): Flavian dynasty
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Lycia et Pamphylia (Roman province)
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Roman Empire (Rome): Nerva-Antonine dynasty
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