Originally posted by Ned
I wonder just how large a city you must have to discover the benefits of sewers, aqueducts, paved road, harbors, concrete buildings, central heating, plumbing and other do-dads that the Romans had long become used to and which vanished when the "noble" German arrived to take care of things.
I wonder just how large a city you must have to discover the benefits of sewers, aqueducts, paved road, harbors, concrete buildings, central heating, plumbing and other do-dads that the Romans had long become used to and which vanished when the "noble" German arrived to take care of things.
The Empire was able to create astounding innovations in its time, but it was never really able or willing to propegate them in a way that would ensure their longevity. Cookie-cutter Roman cities and fortresses were given baths, plumbing, Roman construction methods, and so on, but they were always a rather artificial veneer upon the backdrop of a society that didn't depend on these cities. Their construction was part of a "civilizing mission" that never really civilized; the increasing fiscal and political troubles of the Empire, long before the invasions of the Germanic tribes, served to cripple whatever urban culture had developed. Europe, whether under the Roman Empire or under its Germanic inheritors, simply never had the kind of society that could support such cities. The Empire imposed them by fiat upon the landscape, and when the Empire began to age and crumble, they withered away.
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