Caveat

Things Rome Did Not Invent

Popular history credits Rome with a lot it merely adopted. Honest attribution clarifies what their real contribution was: organisation, standardisation and scale.

The arch

From: Mesopotamia / Etruria
Voussoir arches by c. 2000 BC.

Concrete (idea of binder + aggregate)

From: Egypt / Greece
Lime mortar is far older; Roman novelty was pozzolana hydraulics.

Sewers

From: Indus Valley / Etruria
Mohenjo-daro had brick sewers c. 2500 BC.

Aqueducts

From: Assyria / Greece
Sennacherib's Jerwan, 691 BC.

Public baths

From: Greece
Romans scaled the gymnasium-bath into the thermae.

Roads

From: Persia
Royal Road across the Achaemenid empire predates Rome.

Glassblowing

From: Syria-Palestine
1st c. BC — adopted and industrialised in Italy.

Coined money

From: Lydia
Croesus, mid-6th c. BC.

The wheel & axle

From: Sumer / Eurasian steppe
Roughly 4th millennium BC.

The alphabet

From: Phoenicia → Greece
Latin alphabet is a derivative of the Etruscan/Greek script.

Surgery

From: Egypt / Greece
Smith Papyrus, c. 1600 BC, predates Rome by 1,500 years.

Calendars

From: Egypt
The Julian calendar is an Egyptian solar calendar reformed by Caesar.
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