The empire that was destroyed by the thirty years' wars was the Roman Empire which was destroyed by Napoleon.
Destroyed it.
The conflict known as the Thirty Years' War lasted for about 30 years, from 1618 to 1648. It began as a religious conflict involving the Holy Roman Empire, and took place mostly in areas now part of modern Germany.
The determination of Persia to stop the Greek cities causing trouble in their empire, and the determination of the Greek cities within the Persian empire to gain and maintain their independence. Persia, after 50 years agreed to stay out of the cities. The wry ending was that Athens, leader of the anti-Persian league for the last thirty years of the wars, then turned the league into an empire of its own, leaving the 180 cities wondering what they had been fighting the Persians for.
There were not 36 wars between Athens and Sparta.
They didn't. The Punic Wars, fought in the second and third centuries BCE, were between Carthage and the Roman Republic. The empire began over a hundred years after the end of the third and last Punic War (149-146 BCE). The fall of the Roman Empire (in the West, anyway), occurred almost 500 years after its founding (27 BCE), by which time Carthage had been destroyed, rebuilt, made part of the Roman empire and abandoned to the Vandals.
There probably won't be one because the death star was destroyed and with it all who served the empire.
Yes There Are. They Appear on Speeder Bikes but When the Bike is Destroyed the Scout Trooper Will Walk.
Herodotus.
The Holy Roman Empire was dissolved by Napoleon, and became just a large number of small countries. In the years after the Napoleonic Wars ended, these countries came together in a confederacy called the Zollverein, or German Customs Union. This might be the best organization to call the replacement of the Holy Roman Empire.
It was defeated by Rome in three wars over 120 years.
Anglo-Spanish War Thirty Years War Seven Years War The Napoleonic Wars (The Peninsular War) Spanish-American War Spanish Civil War
Charlemagne formed what historians now call the Carolingian Empire, though it was called the Empire of the Romans at the time (the same title maintained by the Byzantine Empire at that time). His empire went moribund for a few decades, as no emperor was crowned, but it was revived, and in its new form came to be called the Holy Roman Empire. That later empire was destroyed during the Napoleonic Wars, in 1805, just over a thousand years after Charlemagne became emperor.