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Jun 9 20 tweets 7 min read Read on X
We talk about modern progress.
But what if we're still living in a Roman world?

Because 2,000 years ago, Rome built more than an empire.
It built the foundation of modern civilization.

This isn’t nostalgia. It’s fact.
Let me show you how Rome shaped your world 🧵👇 Roman emperor in Ancient Rome Credit: Ivan Livinskyi
Roads that still work.

Rome built over 250,000 miles of roads, most paved with stone.

They connected a continent and became the model for modern highways.
Some are still visible, even walkable, today.

Mobility was power. Rome understood that. Road in Pompei Credit: Bernard on Flickr
Concrete that outlasted empires.

The Pantheon still stands because of it.

Roman concrete wasn’t just strong, it healed itself. A mix of volcanic ash and lime made it durable beyond belief.

Modern engineers are still studying the formula.
The arch that changed architecture.

Romans didn’t invent it, but they mastered it.

The arch made aqueducts possible.
It made stadiums massive.

And it laid the groundwork for cathedrals, domes, and bridges. Credit: 2000 yr old roman Bridge crossing koprulu canyon Credit: @Trad_West_Art ·
Gravity-powered water systems.

Aqueducts brought clean water across miles of terrain with no pumps.

Rome's plumbing system was so advanced, some cities had cleaner water than parts of the world today. Roman Aqueduct in Segovia, Spain. by @Archeohistories
The first organized fire department.

Meet the Vigiles.

Rome’s firefighters patrolled streets, stopped arson, and kept order.

Your local fire service? It started here. Image
Industrial power before steam.

Roman engineers harnessed watermills to grind grain, saw wood, and run factories.

This was pre-modern industry in the 1st century. Model of the water mills at Barbegal in Musée de l'Arles antique. By Carole Raddato from FRANKFURT, Germany - Museum of Ancient Arles, Arles, France, CC BY-SA 2.0
Central heating, ancient style.

The hypocaust system channeled heat under floors and through walls.

Bathhouses and villas were kept warm without fireplaces.

It’s the ancestor of modern HVAC. Ruins of the hypocaust under the floor of a Roman villa at La Olmeda, Province of Palencia (Castile and León, Spain). By Valdavia - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
Scrolls were old news.

Rome popularized the codex—bound pages instead of scrolls.

Easier to copy. Easier to read.
And the reason books look like books today. The scroll was the document form which was replaced by the codex during the late Roman Empire.
The calendar you still use.

Julius Caesar’s Julian calendar standardized time across the empire.

It’s the basis for the Gregorian one we use today.

Time itself was unified by Rome. Image
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Twice a week I share cultural deep dives you won’t get on X:
newsletter.thecultureexplorer.com/subscribeReconstruction of the Baths of Caracalla by @Romanhistory1
Breaking news—carved in stone.

The Acta Diurna was posted daily in Roman forums.

Public announcements, laws, and events shared with citizens.

It was the prototype for newspapers. Image
Roman medics saved lives with surgical tools.

They had scalpels, forceps, and bone drills.

Wounds were treated quickly on the battlefield—sometimes even sterilized.

A glimpse into the roots of modern medicine. From the house of the Surgeon, Rimini, 3rd Century. Credit: Kelli Stanley
A welfare system that fed millions.

Rome’s Annona distributed grain to the poor.

This wasn’t charity—it was policy.

A state-run safety net to keep order and peace. A bread stall, from a Pompeiian wall painting By Marie-Lan Nguyen (2011), Public Domain,
Apartment complexes? Not new.

Rome built insulae, multi-story buildings for urban living.

They could house dozens of families. Some were over five stories tall.

Rome was dense before it was trendy. Credit: Work and Money on pinterest /pin/20547742046433774/
Let there be light through glass.

Romans used glass windows in bathhouses and homes.

What started as luxury became standard utility.

Architecture was never the same. A window on an ancient Roman wall in Barcelona. Photo by David Chu; flickr/photos/hhchu/1238043996/
Urban planning with precision.

Grids, zones, wide roads, sewage—Rome’s cities were designed for growth.

You can still see the influence in city layouts across Europe and the Americas. Credit: architecturecourses - urban-planning-ancient-rome
Image
Image
The Roman postal service.

The Cursus Publicus moved letters across the empire in days.

Couriers, stations, roads—all with official seals.

It wasn’t fast for today—but it was revolutionary then. Cursus publicus shown in the Tabula Peutingeriana
Main roads in the Roman Empire under Hadrian (ruled 117–138) Credit:  User:Andrein - Own work CC-BY-3.0 Wikimedia
Rome fell, but its system didn’t.

Law, roads, books, plumbing, cities—you’re still living in Rome’s shadow.

The question isn’t "What did Rome leave behind?"

It’s: "Have we ever really moved on?"
if you enjoyed this, share the first post with others and follow @CultureExploreX for more history that still shapes your world. The Basilica Cistern, Istanbul's largest ancient underground reservoir, was built in the 6th century during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I. Located near the Hagia Sophia, it now serves as a historical site open to the public with minimal water remaining.

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More from @CultureExploreX

Jun 7
They tell us that “history is written by men.”
But here’s what they don’t tell us

Some of history’s most powerful forces were women.

They ruled empires. Sparked revolutions. Reshaped the world.

Here are 20 women who didn’t just make history, they rewrote it... 🧵👇 Queen Eleanor by Frederick Sandys, 1858 in National Museum Cardiff
1. Mary, Mother of Jesus

She didn’t hold a sword or a crown.

But she holds a place in the hearts of billions.
Revered in both Christianity and Islam.

No woman in history has had more spiritual influence. Madonna of the Book by Sandro Botticelli in Milan in the Poldi Pezzoli Museum.
2. Hatshepsut

She rebranded pharaohs of Egypt.

Dressed as a king. Ruled like a titan.
She made Egypt rich through trade and built temples that still stand.

A woman carved in stone literally. Statue of Hatshepsut on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art  By This file was donated to Wikimedia Commons as part of a project by the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Read 23 tweets
Jun 6
You think you know ancient history?
Egypt. Persia. Greece. Rome.

But that’s just the surface.

There were other empires: older, stranger, forgotten.
They shaped our world... then vanished.

Here are 15 ancient civilizations you’ve never heard of but should have. 🧵👇 Delphi: The Center of the World Credit: theelegantaesthetic
The Kingdom of Aksum (Ethiopia)

They built obelisks that rivaled Rome.
Minted coins. Ruled trade routes. Converted to Christianity before Europe did.

And now? Archaeologists just found their Moon temple. Aksum's obelisks and royal tombs reveal the grandeur of the ancient Kingdom of Aksum, a major trading power. Credit: @AvatarDomy
The Nabataeans (Jordan)

Yes, Petra. But they weren’t just architects of beauty.

They engineered secret cisterns in the desert, turning sand into city.
2,000 years later, some still work.

They didn’t find water. They built it. Hegra, also known as Mada’in Salih, is Saudi Arabia’s first UNESCO World Heritage Site, carved into rock by the Nabataeans before the 1st century AD. Once a bustling trade hub, its 111 rock-cut tombs and unique blend of Greek, Roman, and Egyptian influences now captivate travelers seeking its mysteries. Credit: @histories_arch
Read 19 tweets
Jun 5
We’re taught to see empire as evil.
Oppression. Exploitation. Nothing more.

But history doesn’t live in slogans.

Some empires-built libraries, roads, and laws that still shape our world.

So, here’s the uncomfortable question:
Were they ever a force for good? 🧵👇 Painting from the Empire Series by Thomas Cole.
Start with the British Empire.

It built railways. Linked continents. Turned cities like Bombay, Cairo, and Singapore into global hubs.

It claimed to spread order and progress.

But that wasn’t the full story. Peak: Late 19th/early 20th century.
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus formerly Victoria Terminus in Mumbai, India.
A Colossus computer, developed by British codebreakers in 1943–1945
Image
It also brought famines, massacres, and apartheid-like systems.

Racial hierarchies were law. Wealth was extracted. Dissent was crushed.

It connected the world while dividing it.

Was it civilization… or control?

That depends on where you stood. Image
Read 16 tweets
Jun 4
When a civilization forgets what made it great, can it still survive?

Europe has traded faith for guilt, beauty for convenience, pride for apology.

Where is it heading now? 🧵👇 Duomo del Milano, Milan, Italy
This isn’t nostalgia.
It’s a warning.

Europe once led the world in art, architecture, music, and literature.

Now, it questions whether those things even matter.
Cathedrals once pointed toward the divine.
Now many are silent or repurposed into cafés and nightclubs.

The faith that moved mountains now struggles to light a single candle. Image
Image
Read 15 tweets
Jun 3
Many still associate Bucharest with gray communism and concrete blocks.

But that image hides the truth.

This city was once called “Little Paris” and its beauty never fully disappeared.

Today, it's one of Europe’s most underrated gems. Let me show you why... 🧵 Romanian Athenaeum Credit: designedtotravel.ro on IG
1. Romanian Athenaeum

A cultural temple where music and memory echo. Survived wars. Romanian Athenaeum is an elegant neoclassical concert hall that celebrates Romania's rich cultural heritage with its exquisite dome and lavish interiors.
2. CEC Palace

A glass dome and ornate façade, it’s a symbol of Bucharest’s Belle Époque movement. Photo by Capricon Traveller on Pinterest  pin/658370039307057221/
Read 20 tweets
Jun 1
For centuries, humans have killed for them.
Kings and Queens have flaunted them.
Thieves have risked everything to steal them.

But what makes a gemstone truly priceless?

Let’s explore 12 of the world’s most legendary gems and why they’re worth more than money...🧵 The Sovereign's Sceptre with Cross that is set with the largest of the Cullinan diamonds known as the Star of Africa or Cullinan I that weighs 530.2 carats. The Sceptre is part of the Crown Jewels. Image via: The Jewellery Editor
1. The Cullinan Diamond – $400M

The largest rough diamond ever found—3,106 carats.

It was so massive it was cut into 9 major stones. One now sits in the British royal scepter.

They called it “The Star of Africa.” Rightfully so. The Cullinan diamond, discovered in South Africa in 1905, weighed an unmatched 3,106 carats. It was cut into nine major gems and 96 smaller ones. The largest two—Cullinan I (530.20 ct) and Cullinan II (317.40 ct)—are part of the British Crown Jewels. The remaining major stones (Cullinan III–IX) were privately owned by Queen Elizabeth II and often worn as brooches. In 2023, Queen Consort Camilla honored the late queen by resetting Queen Mary’s Crown with the Cullinan III, IV, and V diamonds. A one-carat diamond is often shown for scale next to replicas of the Cullinan stones. Image: GIA
2. The Hope Diamond – $250M

It’s stunning, it’s cursed, and it’s seen centuries of power plays.

The 45.52-carat blue diamond once belonged to French royalty and was rumored to bring death to its owners.

Today, it rests in the Smithsonian, watched by 7M people a year. Image
Read 15 tweets

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