inca i took the test and that was the answer
The Inca Empire had a network of paved roads with messengers who took communications in relays to the capital and back.
A Roman soldier didn't "drive" because cars were not invented until 1889, so none existed two thousand years ago. Roman soldiers walked, in fact, most people did unless they rode a horse, had a cart, or were on a boat/ship. (Since there were an insufficient number of horses on the road to cause an issue, the rules of "driving on the right/left" were not invented during that period.)
Connected
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.
Trade flourished in the Assyrian Empire because there was a vast network of safe roads.
Roman roads were constructed by the ancient Romans, primarily during the Republic and Empire periods. The Roman engineers and laborers designed and built an extensive network of roads to facilitate military movement, trade, and communication across their vast territories. The famous saying "All roads lead to Rome" reflects the central role these roads played in connecting the empire.
The Persians in the 6th Century BCE established a road system to link those parts of the empire not accessibly by sea.
20% of the 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) of the road network of the Roman Empire were the stone-paved roads.
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Roads lol?
They say: "All roads lead to Rome." The Romans created an amazing network of roads all across the empire, initially to move troops to trouble spots (and back home again), but then also for speedy communication and ease of pre-motorized travel.
Roman roads allowed their army to move quickly to quell any rebellion by the native tribes.