The first empire included Tarsus, Halab, Harran, Mari, Ashur, Akkad, Kish, Ur, Babylon, Uruk, Susa, Lagash, Nineveh, and Tigris and Euphrates river.
The sapa inca would first ask the people to join his empire so he could avoid war.
The world's first empire was the Akkadian Empire, established around 3,000 BC by Sargon.
Sargon is the creator of the world's first empire (:
I don't know if the Ancient Egyptian system counts as an Empire as such. Alexander the Great conquers Persia & other places 300 years BC..... It might be Akkadian empire sargon was the builder of the first world empire.
Sargon of Akkad was the first person to unite and reign over Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia was the first empire in the world.The ruler of the first empire was King Sargon of Akkad.he created the Akkadian empireSargon, leader of the Akkadian Empire, was the first person to establish the first empire.
Sargon, Mesopotamia.
It is Sargon, a soldier from a powerful city and state in northern Mesopotamia, created the first empire in the world and the area of the ancient mesopotamia.
It is Sargon, a soldier from a powerful city and state in northern Mesopotamia, created the first empire in the world and the area of the ancient mesopotamia.
the empire was the ruler
He Created the first world empire & he extended this empire to include all Mesopotamia
Sargon created the first empire and it included: Tarsus, Halab, Harran, Mari, Ashur, Akkad, Kish, Ur, Babylon, Uruk, Susa, Lagash, Nineveh, and Tigris and Euphrates river.
Sargon created the first empire and it included: Tarsus, Halab, Harran, Mari, Ashur, Akkad, Kish, Ur, Babylon, Uruk, Susa, Lagash, Nineveh, and Tigris and Euphrates river.
Sargon created the first empire and it included: Tarsus, Halab, Harran, Mari, Ashur, Akkad, Kish, Ur, Babylon, Uruk, Susa, Lagash, Nineveh, and Tigris and Euphrates river.
The sapa inca would first ask the people to join his empire so he could avoid war.
everyone that liveed there died a terrible death in a crashing earthquake in 1654
The Second and First Centuries BCE.
No.