{"id":9848,"date":"2023-10-26T00:40:10","date_gmt":"2023-10-25T23:40:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/?p=9848"},"modified":"2023-10-26T00:40:10","modified_gmt":"2023-10-25T23:40:10","slug":"when-did-ancient-rome-begin-to-gain-power","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/when-did-ancient-rome-begin-to-gain-power\/","title":{"rendered":"When Did Ancient Rome Begin To Gain Power"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Ancient Rome is one of the most powerful civilizations in human history. It emerged as an invincible force in the Mediterranean region during the mid-Republican period, around the 3rd century BC. It eventually became the most influential and powerful empire in the ancient world and the core of the ancient Western world. From the illustrious Roman Senate and civil bureaucracy to its legal system, coins, monuments and its engineering feats, Roman civilization has had an incalculable influence on the modern world.<\/p>\n

The shift to imperial power began when Rome transformed itself from a republic to an empire in the 1st century BC. This was the beginning of a period of Roman domination that lasted for a millennium – until 476 AD, when the Western Roman Empire was delebrated by the capture of Rome by Germanic Ostrogoth forces. This period saw the Roman Empire expand its borders in the Mediterranean and beyond, as well as establishing significant trading links with Europe, North Africa and the Near East.<\/p>\n

Under Julius Caesar (100–44 BC), one of the most famous Roman leaders and the first Roman Dictator, the expansion of the Roman Empire began. Starting in Gaul (now France, Belgium and part of Germany), the empire rapidly spread toward current day England, Spain, and conquered parts of the Middle East, including Israel, Jordan and parts of Western Turkey. Caesar also started a period of internal reform and social reform in Rome with the aim of rationalizing, simplifying and standardizing government processes and the legal system.<\/p>\n

The reign of Augustus (63 BC – AD 14), Julius Caesar’s successor, saw the full transformation into an imperial structure, including the building of monumental architecture and engineering feats such as aqueducts and roads, which would help Rome rise to great power and prosperity. Under Augustus, internal reforms and expansion conquered the entire Mediterranean region and nearby lands, creating the most tightly controlled empire in the ancient world.<\/p>\n