Statua romana
Crete was a strategic point in the eastern Mediterranean and one that the Roman Empire needed. In 74 B.C. the consul Mark Antony began a campaign against the island, but the Cretans were well-prepared and defeated him at sea. Yet, in 69 B.C., Crete fell to the Romans and was a Roman province until 369 A.D.
Gortyn, which had always been an ally of Rome, became the island's capital. Other important Roman cities existed in Eleftherna, Polirinia, Limin Hersonisou and Aptera. Living conditions slowly improved and the population increased. But the Cretans did not play an active role in the political and cultural activities of the Roman Empire.
Foto di Roman Period:
The Greco-Roman Bridge in Vrises
Ruderi del porto greo-romano Limin Hersònisou
La torre romana e l'acquedotto nel paese di Polirinia
Il sito di Gortyn
Il Pretorio, il palazzo del governatore romano, Gortyn
Cisterne romane ad Àptera
Testa coronata ed obolo di Caronte proveniente dalla necropoli di Potamòs, I sec. d.C.
Pavimento mosaicato di un'abitazione privata, ora al Museo di Chanià
Statua romana
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