No. Paved roads cam long after the wheel.
The Romans perfected the paved road. Many of them are still in use almost 2000 years after their construction.
In Rome, the world's first paved streets were laid out in 170 B.C. The new streets were popular, as they were functional in all types of weather and were easy to keep clean, but they amplified the city's noise level.
Good intentions (so wrong if you ask me... I am catholic, so i don't believe that)
It paved the way for many inventions useful to mankind and started a revolution in movements .
siruka
The printing press, invented by Johannes Gutenberg in the 15th century, greatly facilitated the mass production of books and information distribution. This led to increased access to knowledge, sparking a surge in interest in education and learning during the Renaissance.
The Renaissance never really ended. Instead, it paved the way for the Scientific Revolution to begin and in some areas, brought religious doctrines to an end.
During the Renaissance, cartographers (mapmakers) rediscovered the teachings and writings of the ancient Greeks and Romans, which led to advances in navigation (and therefore exploring the world).
One key scientist from the Renaissance period who made significant contributions was Nicolaus Copernicus. His heliocentric model of the solar system, proposed in his work "De revolutionibus orbium coelestium," challenged the geocentric view and laid the groundwork for future astronomers like Galileo and Kepler. Copernicus's ideas stimulated critical thinking and paved the way for the Scientific Revolution, fundamentally altering humanity's understanding of the cosmos.
The Harlem Renaissance resulted in a flourishing of African American arts and culture in the 1920s-1930s, leading to a greater recognition of African American contributions to literature, music, and visual arts. This period also gave rise to influential figures like Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Duke Ellington, who paved the way for future generations of African American artists.
His work paved the way for the later artists of the Renaissance. More information at: sites.google.com/site/botticellisuseofneoplatonism/home
should be paved. Better is an adverb
Science was important to the Renaissance because it sparked curiosity, innovation, and exploration of the natural world. It led to advancements in areas such as anatomy, astronomy, and cartography, which laid the foundation for modern scientific inquiry. The scientific revolution during the Renaissance challenged traditional beliefs and paved the way for new discoveries and technologies.
Niccolo Machiavelli stressed this in his masterpiece The Prince. This idea paved the way for modern political science.
Yes, paved can be used as an adjective -- a paved road. It's also the past tense and past participle of pave.
The Renaissance was a time of looking back as it revived interest in classical art, literature, and culture from ancient Greece and Rome. It was also a time of looking forward as it sparked intellectual and artistic innovations that paved the way for the development of humanism, science, and technology in the centuries to come.