The main routes were equipped with posting-houses, which provided relays of horses to speed up communications in a pre-electronic, pre-mechanical transport era.
The empire would take the roads easily past Persia
Roads and shipping.
They both served as a border, strengthened the central government, were used by postal messengers, and were located in the central region of the empires.
Roads
Roads.
Persians developed road systems to improve trade movement and communications with other areas with different cultures.
Because the problrmathecia
The roads connected various parts of the Empire making it faster and easier to deliver messages to the various parts, important in a pre-mechanical transport and electronic era.
The roads connected various parts of the Empire making it faster and easier to deliver messages to the various parts, important in a pre-mechanical transport and electronic era.
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.
Horse couriers on roads and ships on rivers and seas.
Darius the Great.