The Romans retained control over the empire through tolerating the religions and customs of the conquered peoples. They allowed them to continue to worship their religions, follow their customs and use their customary laws at the local level. They also let the local ruling classes run most of the local affairs. The role of the provincial governors of the provinces (conquered territories) was restricted to defence and maintenance of the legions stationed in the provinces, tax collection, public works and the arbitration of disputes the locals could not resolve by themselves. This policy had two advantages: it reduced the administrative load of the provincial governors and it facilitated the integration of the locals into the ideology and the economy of the empire. A less tolerant policy would have led to too many rebellions and would have threatened the stability of the empire.
The Ottomans conquered a number of territories using sophisticated modern armies. Afterwards, they installed millets to run the government locally and allied up with other nearby Muslim countries for support.
the armies of the people he conquered
if you are saying central government, presumably you mean over the empire. During the republic it was poor. In fact, Rome lost control over the Roman provinces (conquered territories). The governors treated the provinces as if they were their personal fiefs. With the rule by emperors strong central control was established . The emperors were absolute rulers who had a tight grip on the state, politics and the provinces.
The Romans turned the conquered territories into provinces of the Romans Empire which were administered by a governor. They allowed the conquered peoples to practice their religions, follow their customs and use their traditional laws at the local level. They stationed troops in the provinces but in most cases, after pacification, their role was the maintenance of order and security and the deference of trade routes. The soldiers also provided a market for the sale of goods they needed. The Romans also built infrastructure: roads, bridges, ports, dams, aqueducts, baths, warehouses and public buildings. Most of the conquered peoples befitted from being integrated in the thriving trading network of the empire. The Romans were ruthless in dealing with rebellions.
It allowed the national government to show its power to control the states and territories
Brutus what she has
to keep under control and a synonym is to 'stabilize'
It made it that the US government had direct control over territories.
The Ottomans conquered a number of territories using sophisticated modern armies. Afterwards, they installed millets to run the government locally and allied up with other nearby Muslim countries for support.
the armies of the people he conquered
When the Nazis conquered the large part of Europe, their territories incorporated the majority of the global Jewish population.
Scotland has never been conquered in its entirety. While various regions and territories within Scotland have been subject to invasions and control by different kingdoms and empires throughout history, the country itself has never been fully conquered.
if you are saying central government, presumably you mean over the empire. During the republic it was poor. In fact, Rome lost control over the Roman provinces (conquered territories). The governors treated the provinces as if they were their personal fiefs. With the rule by emperors strong central control was established . The emperors were absolute rulers who had a tight grip on the state, politics and the provinces.
Imperialism: He supported American control of territories
It was very powerful because it had an amazing army and wealthy leaders, they conquered many lands and could make anyone fall to their feet. They were outstanding engineers, able to build aqueducts and roads that allowed them to control conquered territories.
Rome treated conquered people generously. The knew the people would be more loyal to the government if treated like Romans.
The Romans turned the conquered territories into provinces of the Romans Empire which were administered by a governor. They allowed the conquered peoples to practice their religions, follow their customs and use their traditional laws at the local level. They stationed troops in the provinces but in most cases, after pacification, their role was the maintenance of order and security and the deference of trade routes. The soldiers also provided a market for the sale of goods they needed. The Romans also built infrastructure: roads, bridges, ports, dams, aqueducts, baths, warehouses and public buildings. Most of the conquered peoples befitted from being integrated in the thriving trading network of the empire. The Romans were ruthless in dealing with rebellions.