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Two contributions are building modern like canals and waterways and developing the Latin language which is the basis for many modern languages
He is an important part of Roman history. In the jigsaw of History, take Julius Caesar out, and you would have a piece of the historical history of the world - missing.
Historians use the terms empire of Roman Empire. They make a confusing use of this term. They use it both in the usual sense of territorial possessions and to indicate the period of rule by emperors which followed the fall of the Roman Republic. In territorial terms, the Romans already had an empire during the Republic. In fact the greater part of Rome's imperial expansion took place during the republican period.
i think the roman empire was the strongest empire but the largest to me was the british empire
Hannibal contributed actually nothing for world history. I guess you could say he was one of the best generals in worlds history (for Carthage). You could say that he was the first person to come close to destroying the Roman Empire, but that's pretty much it
Frank Pentland Chambers has written: 'The age of conflict, a contemporary world history, 1914 to the present' -- subject(s): History, History, Modern, Modern History 'This age of conflict, a contemporary world history, 1914 to the present day' -- subject(s): History, History, Modern, Modern History
go to clubpenguin
J. Hampden Jackson has written: 'Man, God, And Civilization' 'A short history of the world since 1918' -- subject- s -: World War, 1914-1918, Influence, History, Modern, Modern History 'The postwar world, 1918-1939' -- subject- s -: History, Modern, Influence, Influence and results, Modern History, World War, 1914-1918 'The Baltic' 'Introduction To African Civilizations' 'Problems of modern Europe' -- subject- s -: Peace, Economic conditions, World War, 1939-1945, History
Ancient Greece influenced much of the modern world and other civilizations of the time. The Roman Empire would have a very different religion without the Ancient Greeks.
Richard Munthe Brace has written: 'The making of the modern world' -- subject(s): History, Modern, Modern History
No, AP European History is only based on European History with a little bit on the world. To get a complete view of World History, I suggest AP World History, which goes over history from way back into the modern world.
Some of the effects that Roman technology had on world history include the introduction of aqueducts, printed news media, bound books, and maintained roads and highways. Roman arches and battlefield surgery also came from Roman technology.
Hutton Webster has written: 'Modern European history' -- subject(s): History 'History of the Far East' -- subject(s): History 'Primitive secret societies' -- subject(s): Secret societies, Primitive societies 'Magic, a sociological study' -- subject(s): Magic 'History of civilization' -- subject(s): Civilization, History, World history 'World history' -- subject(s): World history 'Rest days' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Ethnology, Holidays, Sabbath, Sunday, Religious aspects, Rest 'World civilization' -- subject(s): Civilization, History, World history 'Readings in early European history' -- subject(s): History, Readers and speakers 'History of the modern world' -- subject(s): History 'Medieval and modern history' -- subject(s): Modern History, Middle Ages, History
Duncan Townson has written: 'Spices and Civilizations (Greenhaven World History Program)' 'Atlas of the modern world' 'Atlas of the world in the age of discovery, 1453-1763' -- subject(s): Historical geography, History, Modern, Juvenile literature, Maps for children, Modern History
In History, it would have been Cicero(Roman).
Neil DeMarco has written: 'The World This Century' -- subject(s): Sources, History, Modern, Modern History
Alfred J. Andrea has written: 'The human record : sources of global history' -- subject(s): History, Modern, Modern History, World history