It is most extremely unlikely that a tribe (which by definition is not a big social group) would build thousands of miles of roads. It takes an empire to build thousands of miles of roads. This empire was the vast Roman Empire, which was the second largest empire antiquity saw and was and the 17th largest in history. The Romans built 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) or roads throughout the Roman Empire. Of these, 20% (80,500 kilometres, 50,313 miles) were the famous stone-paved roads. Of course, most of these roads did not go to Rome, the capital of the empire. Not surprisingly, the roads which went directly to Rome were in Italy. There were nineteen of them. Many of these had only a regional reach.
The West wanted government-built roads and canals.
Augustus built roads aqueducts and many building
Inca
The Romans built around 250,000 miles of roads in total.
Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.Roman roads were built primarily for military purposes.
The Romans built stone-paved roads.
The Inca roads were built by the Inca civilization, a pre-Columbian civilization that existed in South America. The roads were constructed primarily by the labor of thousands of Inca workers, who painstakingly built and maintained the extensive network of roads that connected the Inca Empire.
roads are still being built
Roads were built in Roman colonies so they can ride chariots on them.
It is most extremely unlikely that a tribe (which by definition is not a big social group) would build thousands of miles of roads. It takes an empire to build thousands of miles of roads. This empire was the vast Roman Empire, which was the second largest empire antiquity saw and was and the 17th largest in history. The Romans built 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) or roads throughout the Roman Empire. Of these, 20% (80,500 kilometres, 50,313 miles) were the famous stone-paved roads. Of course, most of these roads did not go to Rome, the capital of the empire. Not surprisingly, the roads which went directly to Rome were in Italy. There were nineteen of them. Many of these had only a regional reach.
Your question is too vague as roads have been built by many societies worldwide for millennia.
The West wanted government-built roads and canals.
The Inca roads were built for Government and military only.
Actually. Toll Roads Were Built By Companies And They Charged Fee To Use The Roads.
The Native American group did built vast system of roads. The Native American's did the roads by hand.
every tribe built their own long houses for their families