| ▲ | PaulDavisThe1st 7 hours ago | |||||||
> for a long time and for the most part, they provided a better quality of life to many of the subjugated people and provided a path to citizenship. Further, they were adaptable about the places they governed, at least relative to other options at the time, keeping established powers in play, so long as they pledged allegiance to the Roman empire. Sounds quite a lot like Ghengis Khan, who oversaw the largest empire in history until the British one. | ||||||||
| ▲ | alecco 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I keep reading this online and I find it to be nonsense. Over a thousand years earlier the Romans developed all the conquered lands. They built massive infrastructure projects: roads, ports, aqueducts, buildings. And brought sanitation and education. Ghengis Khan only brought peace and trade networks, something Rome also brought with them. Next up, how Carthaginians were actually the good guys and child sacrifice was not that bad. | ||||||||
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