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Maurya rulers built it to connect the empire
They built straight roads
Rhine and Danube Rivers.
It is most extremely unlikely that a tribe (which by definition is not a big social group) would build thousands of miles of roads. It takes an empire to build thousands of miles of roads. This empire was the vast Roman Empire, which was the second largest empire antiquity saw and was and the 17th largest in history. The Romans built 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) or roads throughout the Roman Empire. Of these, 20% (80,500 kilometres, 50,313 miles) were the famous stone-paved roads. Of course, most of these roads did not go to Rome, the capital of the empire. Not surprisingly, the roads which went directly to Rome were in Italy. There were nineteen of them. Many of these had only a regional reach.
Simple answer is to travel. More elaborate is to make their Empire more efficient and therefore more prosperous. Goods were delivered faster on roads then off roads similar to present days.
If you mean the Roman empire, the Roman army built the roads, as they did almost all other major constructions.
the roads that were built
they built roads
the roads that were built
the roads that were built
Maurya rulers built it to connect the empire
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.
The Inca roads were built by the Inca civilization, a pre-Columbian civilization that existed in South America. The roads were constructed primarily by the labor of thousands of Inca workers, who painstakingly built and maintained the extensive network of roads that connected the Inca Empire.
They built straight roads
The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.The Romans built a strong and unified empire by their army, their law and their language. The army conquered and built roads, the law ruled and the language made communication easy.
He built the Royal Roads
The roads built by the Inca empire were primarily used by the Inca people and their armies for transportation, communication, and trade. These roads were also used by other indigenous groups, messengers, and traders. After the Spanish conquest, the roads were used by the Spanish colonizers and later by indigenous and mestizo populations during the colonial period.