Roman Empire (27 BCE–395 CE): Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox country|name=Roman Empire|native_name=Imperium Rōmānum<br>Βασιλεία τῶν Ῥωμαίων|year_start=27 BCE|year_end=395 CE|image_map=Roman Empire.png|map_width=290|map_caption=The Roman Empire in 280|common_languages=Latin<br>Ancient Greek|mode_of_production=[[Slavery]]|event_start=Empire established|event_end=East-West division|date_end=17 January|event_post=Fall of Western Roman Empire|date_post=4 September 476|population_estimate=56,800,000|population_estimate_year=25 BCE}}
{{Infobox country|name=Roman Empire|native_name=Imperium Rōmānum<br>Βασιλεία τῶν Ῥωμαίων|year_start=27 BCE|year_end=395 CE|image_map=Roman Empire.png|map_width=290|map_caption=The Roman Empire in 280|common_languages=Latin<br>Ancient Greek|mode_of_production=[[Slavery]]|event_start=Empire established|event_end=East-West division|date_end=17 January|event_post=Fall of Western Roman Empire|date_post=4 September 476|population_estimate=56,800,000|population_estimate_year=25 BCE}}


The '''Roman Empire''' was an ancient state that existed in [[Europe]], [[West Asia]], and [[North Africa]].
The '''Roman Empire''' was an ancient state that existed in [[Europe]], [[West Asia]], and [[North Africa]]. While the western part of the Roman Empire fell in 476 CE, the [[Byzantium|eastern part]] would live on for nearly a thousand years, untill 1453 CE.


== Mode of production ==
== Mode of production ==

Revision as of 05:35, 19 June 2022

Roman Empire
Imperium Rōmānum
Βασιλεία τῶν Ῥωμαίων
27 BCE–395 CE
The Roman Empire in 280
The Roman Empire in 280
Common languagesLatin
Ancient Greek
Dominant mode of productionSlavery
History
• Empire established
27 BCE
• East-West division
17 January 395 CE
• Fall of Western Roman Empire
4 September 476
Population
• 25 BCE estimate
56,800,000


The Roman Empire was an ancient state that existed in Europe, West Asia, and North Africa. While the western part of the Roman Empire fell in 476 CE, the eastern part would live on for nearly a thousand years, untill 1453 CE.

Mode of production

Ancient Rome was a slave society that relied on war for its supply of slaves. In the last two centuries of the empire, the slave mode of production began to decline. Population and production decreased and many large estates were broken into smaller ones. Slave owners freed many slaves because they could not profit from their labor and because many slaves intentionally destroyed or damaged the means of production. These people became small-scale producers called coloni, who later developed into the serfs of feudalism.

The Roman Empire was weakened by internal slave revolts and external invasions and eventually collapsed, ending slavery as the dominant mode of production in Europe.[1]

References

  1. Institute of Economics of the Academy of sciences of the USSR (1957). Political Economy: 'The Slave-Owning Mode of Production' (pp. 35–36). [PDF] London: Lawrence & Wishart.