The constitution of the Roman Republic was a set of guidelines and principles by which the Roman Republic was governed. The constitution evolved over time and was largely unwritten and uncodified, being passed down mainly through precedent.[1] Nevertheless, the constitution was also shaped by the body of written Roman law.[2]
Rather than creating a government that was primarily a democracy (as in ancient Athens), an aristocracy (as in ancient Sparta), or a monarchy (as in the Roman state before and, in many respects, after the Republic), the Roman Republic had a mixed constitution, with three separate branches of government:<span>[3]</span>
The steep rise in salinity is one of the curses that hit the Aral Sea<span> region when the </span>Sea<span> started </span>shrinking<span>, and is, with the visible water loss, the element which alters landscape the most. </span>
<span>I only know that the wealth of the Spanish colonies and the diverse opportunities of the English colonies attracted settlers more easily than did the cold climate of New France</span>