None, they were two totally different empires.
There are no similarity. We are talking about totally different historical times: antiquity and the Middle Ages.
No similarities whatsoever.
No similarities. The Roman Empire was an ancient empire and the Carolingian Empire was a medieval one and therefore related to two totally different societies. The only thing was that Latin was the language of the church, bureaucrats and intellectuals.
Both the Chinese and the Roman empire had substantial building blocks of life: Each had bypass canals Messenger roads emperors and military
One of the differences is that the US is not an empire, it is a country. An empire is a region ruled by an emperor. The US doesn't have an emperor. Yet.
The Roman Empire had large territorial holdings in Europe and around the Mediterranean. The term is used to describe the Roman state during and after the time of the first Roman emperor, Augustus.
No similarities whatsoever.
No similarities whatsoever.
No similarities whatsoever.
No similarities whatsoever.
Mongols
No similarities. The Roman Empire was an ancient empire and the Carolingian Empire was a medieval one and therefore related to two totally different societies. The only thing was that Latin was the language of the church, bureaucrats and intellectuals.
Either the Italians, Greeks, Mongols or British. Italians because of the Roman Empire, Greeks because of Alexander the Great, Mongols because of Gengis Khan and British because of our Empire.
Both the Chinese and the Roman empire had substantial building blocks of life: Each had bypass canals Messenger roads emperors and military
One of the differences is that the US is not an empire, it is a country. An empire is a region ruled by an emperor. The US doesn't have an emperor. Yet.
There both idiots
The only connection between the two was the name "Roman Empire" . The Roman empire was (mostly) pre-Christian and Mediterranean in culture, although absorbing other cultures in their expansion, while the "Holy" Roman empire was Germanic and Christian in culture.
the u.s. can: •vote • has a senate as the roman republic did too