Hangon are you saying that an empire that started in Rome and that had so much influence it will recreate it self in Post-apocalyptic america is overrated?
Well, no. You see, China and the Mongols are certainly both worthy of note, as is the Caliphates. So let's handle these one at a time:Warforger said:I mean it didn't conquer too much to make an impact on the world, yah it had great engineering feats but so did the Chinese, the Arabs, the Indians etc. Yah it conquered alot but the Islamic Caliphates conquered more, ALOT more that had a greater impact on world history and scientific development, and yet in history classes they're just skimmed over while the Roman Empire is raved about alot. Moving on the Mongol Empire conquered MUCH more and had an even greater impact then the Roman empire, all the way from Korea to The Ukraine to Egypt, a testament to this is that Baghdad before the Mongol invasion was one of the most prosperous cities in the world, after the Mongol invasion however it never got to the richness and prosperity it once had. And yet again they're not as talked about in detail as say Greece or the Roman Empire.
As an individual, he didn't do that much. But, his key achievement was in creating an aggressive empire that could survive his death, which is actually much harder than it sounds, just ask Genghis Khan.Warforger said:I might even move onto say Caesar is even MORE overrated, he just conquered a big country of barbarians by laying seige to its capital, not a huge strategic masterpiece at all considering he did it by walling it in, he tried to conquer Britain, but failed. He changed the Republic to an Empire, but I can't think anything else he did or anything to make him the iconic leader of Rome. Later leaders would conquer much more then he did and again, I don't recall any of them making a difference in world history beyond Europe.
Russia would actually be a very poor allegory. Their power didn't emerge until the 20th century. Before that they were often viewed as the backwater edge of Europe. They didn't become relevant as a world power until the aftermath of World War II.Warforger said:It could be arguable that the Roman Empire inspired the European ones, Russia more then any other, so in that sense its important as these empires would basically conquer most of the world and bring into submission the rest barring a few exceptions.
lKahunaburger said:Yeah, man, I liked the Romans better when they were underground. Then they conquered Greece and sold out.
Scarily so. This was a full on consumer culture that even had CELEBRITY CHEFS. I want you to think about that for a moment. While other people were still making houses out of animal skins these guys had celebrity chefs. To say nothing of people who made their entire living by satirizing things, conducting experiments, designing clothes or reviewing plays. Intellectual property and image as a commodity? Wow.thiosk said:Yeah, other ancient societies did stuff too, but Rome was damn near modern.
I'm sorry? Julius Augustus Caesar is well known by his last name alone.Rayne870 said:I stopped reading after this line Caesar was a title not an individual. The rest of the posters pretty much nailed what you missed as well.Warforger said:I might even move onto say Caesar is even MORE overrated, he...
Lol. I'm sorry this phrase is so good, i can't place my thoughts in this thread.Kahunaburger said:Yeah, man, I liked the Romans better when they were underground. Then they conquered Greece and sold out.
It conquered almost all of the known world. It layed the foundation's of all modern civilized societies. It had irrigation, plumbing, and hot water centuries before other people, and lasted longer than any other empire in history, not by years, or decades, by CENTURIES. Say what you want but the Roman Empire is ANYTHING but over rated. It had one of the most sophisticated systems of roads of any nation in history, dwarfed only by the current system in the United States. I dont think you understand anything about what Rome accomplished.Warforger said:I mean it didn't conquer too much to make an impact on the world, yah it had great engineering feats but so did the Chinese, the Arabs, the Indians etc. Yah it conquered alot but the Islamic Caliphates conquered more, ALOT more that had a greater impact on world history and scientific development, and yet in history classes they're just skimmed over while the Roman Empire is raved about alot. Moving on the Mongol Empire conquered MUCH more and had an even greater impact then the Roman empire, all the way from Korea to The Ukraine to Egypt, a testament to this is that Baghdad before the Mongol invasion was one of the most prosperous cities in the world, after the Mongol invasion however it never got to the richness and prosperity it once had. And yet again they're not as talked about in detail as say Greece or the Roman Empire.
I might even move onto say Caesar is even MORE overrated, he just conquered a big country of barbarians by laying seige to its capital, not a huge strategic masterpiece at all considering he did it by walling it in, he tried to conquer Britain, but failed. He changed the Republic to an Empire, but I can't think anything else he did or anything to make him the iconic leader of Rome. Later leaders would conquer much more then he did and again, I don't recall any of them making a difference in world history beyond Europe.
It could be arguable that the Roman Empire inspired the European ones, Russia more then any other, so in that sense its important as these empires would basically conquer most of the world and bring into submission the rest barring a few exceptions.
I'm sorry but while it does deserve credit for starting western culture, it was no where near as large as the Russian, Mongolian or British Empires, or even Macedonian Empire.Jegsimmons said:um the roman empire is credited for starting western culture and for having the largest empire ever and when it collapsed it sent Europe into the dark ages. saying that such a gigantic period in history is over rated doesn't make a lot of sense.
Two points: The Eastern Roman Empire ALWAYS identified itself as the Eastern Roman Empire, until maybe the last couple centuries, other people and historians use the Byzantine Empire to avoid confusion, they called themselves Romoi, meaning the Romans in GreekKargathia said:Technically the Roman empire did exist until 1453, but the Byzantines stopped identifying themselves as "Roman" around the fall of Rome. They still exerted influence in the eastern part of the mediterranean, but none at all in western Europe.doorofnight said:1)Longevity, there was a state that identified itself as Roman for almost 2000 years, only China can claim a longer use of the same name(so far as I am aware). More importantly the Roman Empire was the dominant power in Europe and the Mediterranean for 800 years(roughly 100BC to 700 AD), even losing Italy and Rome itself for the last 200 years of that didn't change their dominant status even if they weren't a huge empire any longer. No other empire or Dynasty can claim that kind of longevity of dominance.
And even when taking the 2000 years at face value you're forgetting somebody: the Egyptians. Admittedly they've been less enthusiastic conquerors than the Romans, but the same goes for the Chinese.
Again, I would like to question whether Egypt was an empire, although I concede that they are another power that stayed around for quite some time. However, my Egyptian history is weak but I seem to recall some very low periods were they were conquered or nearly so as well. Like the Greeks they had massive and far reaching cultural influences but I don't really think either would rightly be considered an Empire(the Greeks only had an empire when they were ruled by the Macedonians, and that fits the 'rose fast, fell fast' definition of most empires.Kargathia said:Once again the Egyptians would like to prove you wrong. This time around together with the Greek, whose influence in their diaspora took even longer to fade.doorofnight said:2)Related to that, virtually all other empires rise quickly and fall quickly, the Roman Empire rose slowly and fell slowly.
I didn't include the roads for two reasons, I didn't want to give every example I could think of, I could have mentioned their sewer systems, the bath complexes they built, their innovations in bridge design, and a number of other engineers renovations but I figured I'd save a little space. The other reason is that, while not as long lasting, the Romans were not the first great road builders, that would by the Achaemenid Dynasty of the Persian Empire, although, as usual, the Romans did make some revolutions to the design and built a lot more roads, but that was over several hundred years.Kargathia said:This one for once is absolutely true, even though you fail to mention one of their larger achievements in that field: roads. Even now we're actively using many Roman roads, and until we tarred them many of them were barely maintained. And yet they lasted two millennia.doorofnight said:3)Engineering, while not the only great builders and, again, they didn't invent most of what they used to so great effect, but there are a number of Roman engineering achievements that were not surpassed until the 18th century when steel reinforcing came into wide use. They built aqueducts stretching dozens if not hundreds of miles that were carefully built to only descend about 6 inches per mile and provided millions of gallons of water per day, they had running water on the third floor of the coliseum which could be emptied in less than 20 minutes, and the dome of the Pantheon is STILL the largest unreinforced concrete dome ever built(that has never cracked, others were built larger, all of them cracked) and no dome was made larger period until 1850.
I know, this all falls under my initial point about the Romans not being the only ones to do something or necessarily the best at everything, but the fact that the Roman legal system still has influence to this day and we still use some of their forms and concepts really says a lot(even though the legal system in our country is more based on English Common Law)Kargathia said:I'd take "influential" with a grain of salt here, as it is watered down quite a lot since then. The Romans inspired the Renaissance, which inspired the age of Reason, during which many of the laws as we know them today were written.doorofnight said:4)Law, even the Greeks recognized the Roman preeminence in Law, and as already noted their law codes are still hugely influential around the world.