Roman Empire: Difference between revisions
Deleted User (talk | contribs) (Created page with "thumb|380px|The Roman Empire in 395 AD, being divided into a [[Western Roman Empire|western part (red_ under Germanic rule, mainly Goths, Burgundians and Suebi) and an eastern part.]] '''Ancient Rome''' was a fascist civilization centered on the city of ancient Rome. ==History== The state and city of Rome was according to its own history founded in 753 BC and was a mo...") |
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[[File:Partition_of_the_Roman_Empire_in_395_AD.png|thumb|380px|The Roman Empire in 395 AD, being divided into a [[Western Roman Empire|western part]] (red_ under [[Germanic peoples|Germanic rule]], mainly [[Goths]], [[Burgundians]] and Suebi) and an [[Byzantine Empire|eastern part]].]] | [[File:Partition_of_the_Roman_Empire_in_395_AD.png|thumb|380px|The Roman Empire in 395 AD, being divided into a [[Western Roman Empire|western part]] (red_ under [[Germanic peoples|Germanic rule]], mainly [[Goths]], [[Burgundians]] and Suebi) and an [[Byzantine Empire|eastern part]].]] | ||
'''Ancient Rome''' was a fascist civilization centered on the city of ancient Rome. | '''Ancient Rome''' was a[[fascist]]civilization centered on the city of ancient Rome; founded in 753 B.C. by [[Romulus]], the first King. Ancient Rome's history can be divided into three parts: the [[Roman Kingship]], [[Roman Republic]], and [[Roman Empire]]. | ||
Romans had extensive knowledge of roads, mining, irrigation and masonry. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
The state and city of Rome was according to its own history founded in 753 BC and was a monarchy, became in 509 BC a republic that conquered or controlled all the areas around the Mediterranean Sea, became an empire in the first century BC, split into two parts in 395 AD. | The state and city of Rome was according to its own history founded in 753 BC and was a monarchy, became in 509 BC a republic that conquered or controlled all the areas around the Mediterranean Sea, became an empire in the first century BC, split into two parts in 395 AD. | ||
The influence of Ancient Rome, and the influence of [[Ancient Greece]] that influenced Ancient Rome, on Western civilization is enormous. Roman civilization put into practice the [[fascist]]> ideas originally penned by [[Plato]], which in turn were largely based on the fascist practices of [[Sparta|Spartans]]. | The influence of Ancient Rome, and the influence of [[Ancient Greece]] that influenced Ancient Rome, on Western civilization is enormous. Roman civilization put into practice the [[fascist]]> ideas originally penned by [[Plato]], which in turn were largely based on the[[fascist]]practices of [[Sparta|Spartans]]. | ||
==Further reading== | |||
* Hibbert, Christopher. ''Rome: The Biography of a City.'' (1985). 386 pp. good introduction | |||
* Scheidel, Walter, Ian Morris and Richard P. Saller, eds. ''The Cambridge Economic History of the Greco-Roman World'' (2008) 942pp 942 pp. advanced essays by scholars | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
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*[[Ancient history]] | *[[Ancient history]] | ||
*[[Edward Gibbon]] | *[[Edward Gibbon]] | ||
*[[Holy Roman Empire]] | |||
=External links= | =External links= |
Latest revision as of 16:39, 27 January 2023
Ancient Rome was afascistcivilization centered on the city of ancient Rome; founded in 753 B.C. by Romulus, the first King. Ancient Rome's history can be divided into three parts: the Roman Kingship, Roman Republic, and Roman Empire.
Romans had extensive knowledge of roads, mining, irrigation and masonry.
History
The state and city of Rome was according to its own history founded in 753 BC and was a monarchy, became in 509 BC a republic that conquered or controlled all the areas around the Mediterranean Sea, became an empire in the first century BC, split into two parts in 395 AD.
The influence of Ancient Rome, and the influence of Ancient Greece that influenced Ancient Rome, on Western civilization is enormous. Roman civilization put into practice the fascist> ideas originally penned by Plato, which in turn were largely based on thefascistpractices of Spartans.
Further reading
- Hibbert, Christopher. Rome: The Biography of a City. (1985). 386 pp. good introduction
- Scheidel, Walter, Ian Morris and Richard P. Saller, eds. The Cambridge Economic History of the Greco-Roman World (2008) 942pp 942 pp. advanced essays by scholars
See also
External links
American Renaissance
The Occidental Observer
- Decline and Empire in Ancient Rome and the Modern West: A Review of David Engels’ Le Déclin, Part 1
- Faustian Rome: The Indo-European Nature of the Roman Republic, Part 1
- The “New Dark Ages” in Western Europe and North America: Comparisons with the Fall of Rome
- The Roman Variant of Indo-European Social Organization: Militarization, Aristocratic Government, and Openness to Conquered Peoples. Part 1