Caligula had a very short reign and really did not have time to contribute (or destroy) too much. Despite his personal irregularities, he maintained secure borders, both along the German frontier and in the east, where he came to an agreement with the Parthians. However his major contribution was his death. It was the first time that the Praetorian Guard took a hand in selecting emperors. It acted as a warning to other men aspiring to rule.
Great cheeses, wonderful cooking, fashion, perfumes, poets, writers, words added to the English language, and fantastic art.
I dun no.....
First, name two contributions, then I'll answer your question.
what were the two longstanding roman contributions to political theory
We need a who, where, when, question to answer.
caligula was killed by his protection guards because he had killed most of his citizens
it is medicine
The major contributions are * India as a single nation and * English
His Roman Guard and the Senators, a bunch of Roman husbands, and possibly his mother.
One of his major contributions was his innovated treatment of algebraic expressions.
Made more major contributions to science. And then he worked for the government, including mine safety, lighthouses, and pollution control.
Electricity of course!
he contributed his plays!
he glomped up.
Archimedes was not a chemist.
no
See the link below