The Roman Empire: How Rome Ruled the Ancient World
Fexingo History · Mediterranean
The Roman Empire: How Rome Ruled the Ancient World
The Roman Empire’s thousand-year dominion reshaped the Mediterranean world and laid foundations for Western civilization. This series traces Rome’s evolution from a small settlement on the Tiber to a sprawling imperium that stretched from Britain to Mesopotamia. We’ll explore the Republic’s political machinery, the Punic Wars that eliminated Carthage, and the tumultuous transition to imperial rule under Augustus. Key figures like Julius Caesar, Cicero, and Marcus Aurelius will be examined alongside critical institutions—the Senate, legions, and provincial administration. The show delves into Rome’s engineering marvels like aqueducts and roads, its legal codes that influenced modern jurisprudence, and the complex religious landscape from traditional cults to the rise of Christianity. We’ll analyze the empire’s economic systems, from slave labor to trade networks across the Silk Road, and confront the persistent debates about its decline—whether due to barbarian invasions, internal corruption, or overextension. Lucas and Luna guide listeners through these intricate narratives, connecting Rome’s legacy to contemporary governance, law, and culture. Discover how an empire built on military might, pragmatic politics, and cultural assimilation continues to echo in our institutions and imaginations.