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Why didn't ancient Rome have city walls at the empire's peak?

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Answer: The legions WERE the wall — defense was offensive depth

The legions WERE the wall — defense was offensive depthCorrect! For 600+ years, Rome's defense doctrine was strategic depth: enemies were stopped at the frontier (Hadrian's Wall, Limes Germanicus) by professional legions, hundreds of km from the city. A wall around Rome itself would have meant the empire had failed. The Aurelian Walls were only built in 271 AD when crisis-era Rome admitted it could no longer guarantee the frontier — a stunning reversal after 700 years of wall-less confidence.

Roman engineers couldn't build walls big enoughWrong. Roman engineers built the Colosseum, the Pantheon, and 80,000 km of paved roads. Walls would have been trivial. They CHOSE not to build them — confidence in the legions, not technical limits.

Rome had no enemies between 100 BC and 300 ADWrong. Rome fought constant wars throughout this period — Parthia, Germania, Dacia, Britannia. The point is those wars happened FAR from Rome. Defense in depth meant fighting was always somewhere else.

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