They had posting houses dotted along them to provide horses for couriers.
The question is "WERE there roads in the Persian empire". The simple answer is no, the Persians only had dirt paths they travelled on but not "roads" by definition being a paved path. The Romans invented roads.
darius used some of persian's great wealth to build roads across the empire
He built the Royal Roads
A system of roads to facilitate communications and trade.
It was a courier system, by roads and by sea for official use.
The question is "WERE there roads in the Persian empire". The simple answer is no, the Persians only had dirt paths they travelled on but not "roads" by definition being a paved path. The Romans invented roads.
darius used some of persian's great wealth to build roads across the empire
He built the Royal Roads
They had posting houses dotted along them to provide horses for couriers.
Darius improved economic life in the Persian empire by encouraging the development of a money economy
A system of roads to facilitate communications and trade.
Roads and shipping.
It was a courier system, by roads and by sea for official use.
The Empire was expanded by Cyrus the Great , its founder. It was further expanded into Africa by his son Cambyses, and then rounded out by Darius I. The roads were built progressively by them and their successor kings.
He had everyone in the empire use the same money system of weights and measurements.
It provided the basis for trade and purchasing.
He gave his people wealth, food, and more.