Rome didn't fall in a day, and it wasn't built in a day. It was a process. And as we look at the legacy it left behind—from our legal systems to our languages—it’s clear that even when an empire 'falls,' it never truly disappears. It just becomes the soil for whatever grows next.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

Lena: You know, Miles, I was looking at a map of the Roman Empire at its peak in 117 CE, and it’s just mind-boggling. I mean, you could literally travel from Britain all the way to the Persian Gulf without ever leaving Roman territory.
Miles: It’s incredible, right? But what’s even wilder is that while we think of Rome as this eternal, solid block of power, it actually started as a city of clay. Augustus Caesar famously boasted that he found it made of clay and left it a city of marble.
Lena: That is such a vivid image. It’s interesting how that transformation from a Republic to an Empire in 27 BCE changed everything—shifting power from elected officials to a single emperor.
Miles: Exactly, and that transition set the stage for centuries of drama, from the "Five Good Emperors" to the eventual split into East and West. So let's dive into how this massive state actually began to take shape.