Civilizations rise and fall out of revolution (economic, political etc.). Usually a war of some kind where they are overtaken and the rule of that civilization is defeated. This may create the rise of a civilization where their is a new power ruling.
they rise and then they fall
nothing lives 4ever
the incas were in a civil war
The rise of the Aztec empire really began in 1150 with the fall of the Toltec empire.
The rive that ancient Egyptian kingdoms rose and fell on would be the Nile. The rive that ancient Egyptian kingdoms rose and fell on would be the Nile. The rise and fall of the ancient egyptians are enemies taking them over
he Aztec and Inca empires are very similar. The Aztec rise to power and formation of an imperial state was as spectacular as it was rapid. The Aztecs were simply one of the nomadic tribes that used the political anarchy to penetrate the area of sedentary agricultural peoples
They successively conquered and included them in their empires.
seljuk´s were muslim and byzantines were chrystian but theydid grow and fall in the same part of the world
All.
Greek conquered the neighboring empires
Greek conquered the neighboring empires
mostly through military dominance
All.
Age of Empires The Rise of Rome - 1998 VG was released on: USA: 24 November 1998
It does not rise or fall. It is an imaginary line.
Fall is the height of a slanted or diagonal straight surface. Gradient is the result of rise divided by fall (rise/fall) (rise over fall)
"Ruins of Empires" is a philosophical work by Constantin-Franรงois de Chassebลuf, comte de Volney, published in 1791. In this book, Volney explores the rise and fall of empires throughout history and reflects on the fate of civilizations. He discusses themes such as the impact of religion, government, and social structures on the longevity of empires.
Empires rise and fall due to political and military reasons. For example, the Roman empire rose because it had military might and still fell because of bad rulers and poor political decisions which led to economic downturn.
Roman Empire, Greek Empire, and Persian Empire