Rome and the Illusion of Empire
Rome has a way of resurfacing when you’re not looking for it. Not just in history books, but in places where it doesn’t quite belong at first glance. In science fiction empires that span galaxies. In fantasy legions marching under unfamiliar banners. In systems that feel vast, ordered, and strangely permanent. I have felt that pull for as long as I can remember. As a child reading Asterix , I was supposed to root for the unruly Gauls. But I often found myself staring instead at the Roman camps: the straight lines of tents, the palisades, the almost hypnotic order of it all. Later, much later, I remember watching lectures about the Roman grain economy—how food moved across the Mediterranean at scale, how the city of Rome itself depended on invisible systems of logistics and administration. That was probably the moment it clicked. Rome was not just an army or a culture. It was a machine for stability . From a distance, the system looks permanent. And once you start seeing that, you be...