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2007-11-25 02:08:46 · 7 answers · asked by hkisrulz 1 in Arts & Humanities History

Correction: 1 BC (2000 years ago)

2007-11-25 02:13:59 · update #1

7 answers

Three cities are Roma, Carthege and Alexandria

2007-11-25 03:06:54 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

NY is known as "The Big Apple" because long ago a famous folk hero (Johnny Appleseed) planted a single seed in the middle of the city. Then, in a strange warp in space-time, a boy named Jack planted a seed he believed to be magical in the same spot. In what is still considered a marveling biological advancement, the two seeds fused together on a molecular level. After an impressive rain, the seed hybrid grew into an apple 300ft tall and approximatively 330ft wide. The strangest thing being the absence of a tree. It seems the apple was completely normal, except it grew straight from the ground with its own roots like a beanstalk of some sort. For decades to come, people would visit the city and look up at the impossible fruit and think "that is a big apple". After a while people began referring to the city itself as "The Big Apple". But then, 1943 Oct 11th, something strange happened. As the city laid to rest, the night once again upon them, there was a blinding flash of red light. The flash lasted for nearly 4-5 seconds. No one is certain what caused the flash, but once it was over the apple had simply disappeared. Not only had it vanished, the ground it had grown from had closed as if it were never there. Some say the apple had grown so large it created some sort of fruity supernova and collapsed in on itself in a black hole. Some say the aliens responsible for the death of the dinosaurs came back and destroyed the apple as well. We may never know exactly what happened that night, but one thing is for sure. That was a big-*** apple.

2016-05-25 07:47:11 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The Holy Roman Empire was a medieval entity; it did not exist in 1 BC. If you're thinking of the Roman Empire, there were more than three. The biggest ones were Rome and Alexandria, but other sizeable ones existed. Byzantium was not an important city until much later when Diocletian split the empire.

2007-11-25 03:08:11 · answer #3 · answered by blakenyp 5 · 1 1

1 B.C. is still too early for the Holy Roman Empire, which was founded by Charlemagne in 800 A.D. If you mean the Roman Empire, the ranking went:

1. Rome - over 1,000,000
2. Alexandria (Egypt) - between 500,000 and 750,000
3. (close tie) Antioch, Ephesus and Carthage - between 350,000 and 500,000

2007-11-25 03:41:32 · answer #4 · answered by The one next to the blond 4 · 0 0

There wasn t Roman empire during 2000 b. c.Look www.wikipedia.org/Roman empire/

2007-11-25 02:22:28 · answer #5 · answered by ivan i 3 · 1 0

If you really mean 2000BC - Sumer, Babylon, Nineveh

2007-11-25 05:09:05 · answer #6 · answered by rdenig_male 7 · 0 0

Rome
Byzantium
Alexandria

2007-11-25 02:50:12 · answer #7 · answered by jimbob 6 · 0 3

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