Ancient Grudge
Its all in this life
Britain becuase i come from there and im baised and thats my justification
Originally posted by Sir Oswulf
Hey, watch it! You're endangering my naive assumption that we Americans have a monopoly on conceited national self-aggrandizement!![]()
Originally posted by Ad Hominem
But, the Greek influence reached what we call today "West", filtered through Rome, the dominant power for several centuries and the empire that shaped the ancient world by it's actions. The Roman paternalism, pragmatism and positive thinking, heavily influenced the Greek culture they adopted (Xen, the indigenous Latin culture is a tiny dwarf compared to the classical Greece and you know it) from the Greeks, and that is what "the West" got from the Romans.
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Originally posted by thestonesfan
As far as the world the way it is today, Britain.
The Pre-Christian Romans had little effect on them - considering they didn't become a globally influential power until more than a millenia after the Romans left the Isles.
Had the formative years of Britain occurred during Roman rule, obviously the answer would be different. But they essentially had to rebuild from scratch. I would say the Normans had a much greater impact on Britain than the Romans did.
Originally posted by andrewgprv
OMG!![]()
Give me a break, Britain?! Rome ?!
This board is so western biased it is ridiculous.
Originally posted by andrewgprv
mesopotamia
Originally posted by Xen
mesopotamia isnt a single nation- it weas united under several empires, but those would be differtn nations wouldnt they![]()
Originally posted by andrewgprv
The Poll did not ask what nation influenced history most, it asked who influenced history most, and mesopotamia was on the poll.
Let's think of just a few things Mesopotamia gave us.....hmmm how about? Civilization itself!, cereal farming, writting, the first states, laws, domestication of farm animals, etc.....
Rome was great and all but it was not nearly as influential as the foundations of human civilisation.
Originally posted by Oda Nobunaga
Xen - I don't dispute that Rome was one of the greatest influence on the Western World. However, I hold by my earlier statements - there are simply too many "worlds" to this planet to designate anyone as being the most important influence upon all these worlds. The same goes for individual as well as religion. Certainly Jesus had a great influence upon the western world, but his influence upon the Eastern world is, to say the least, virtually inexistant compared to Confucius or Buddha.
Originally posted by Xen
take a look at the name of the thread there
as for mesopoatima- no, they did NOT invent civlization- the oldest known cites are OUTSIDE of mesopotami, mnore close to Modern turkey, and Syria- well out of mesopotamia, and considering that several other civlization deveoped indipendent of mesopotamia, its a DRASTIC overstatement to credit them with inventing civlization, as well as all the other things you attribute to it- like domestication of animals- I have news for you, by the time the the first civlizations arise, just about all the crops to be used, and all the animals to be domesticated have been, and all future domestications, and crop development do not come from mesoptamia, there is also a great deal of evidence that it was an archaic form of Ehyptian, and not a oreviouslly thought mesopatiman cuniform that was the first writtin language, and its been known for a long time that fuirst lage organized state was Egypt, and not a mesoptamian civlization- dose that make mesopotami unimportant/ no, by no means, it just means that theor role is more of a secondary "passer on" of knowledge, and not, as once thought and hekd holy the great developers of all mankind.