Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - What Have the Romans Ever Done for Us?
Episode Date: June 3, 2026Tell me your favorite episode for the 6th anniversary show! Rome did not simply vanish when its empire fell. Its roads, laws, languages, calendars, architecture, engineering, and political ideas s...urvived, adapted, and became part of the foundation of the modern world. From the courtroom to the Capitol building, from the alphabet you read to the cities you live in, Rome is still with us in ways both obvious and invisible. Learn more about the legacy of Rome in the modern world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors ButcherBox Get your choice between chicken breast or top sirloin for a year OR ground beef for life, PLUS $20 off when you go to ButcherBox.com/everything Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Save 50% on Unlimited premium wireless plans starting at $15/month at MintMobile.com/EED TrueWerk Get 15% off your first order at truewerk.com with code everything DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code everything for 20% off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Rome didn't just simply vanish when its empire fell.
Its roads, laws, languages, calendars, architecture, engineering, and political ideas all survived
and became part of the foundation of the modern world.
From the courthouse to the Capitol building, from the alphabet you read and the cities
you live in, Rome is still with us in ways both obvious and invisible.
Join me as I asked the question, what have the Romans ever done for us?
On this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The process of creating an episode for this podcast has had many different routes. I've had some episodes that I thought of in the morning and recorded later that evening.
Then there are some that have taken years from the original ideas.
to the final recording.
This episode is one of the first 100 ideas I came up with when I first attached the idea
of this podcast almost six years ago.
And it's been sitting at the top of my list for a long time now, so I figured it was
time to finally do it.
There are bits of this episode that appear in dozens of previous episodes, so I'm not
going to individually go through every previous episode when it comes up, but suffice it to
say there are a lot of them.
What I want to do is provide you with some of the first.
understanding of why this civilization that existed for 2,000 years ago still influences our world
today and still has people interested in it. And this shouldn't be taken as a love letter to ancient
Rome. While I think it's worth studying and there are things we can learn, I wouldn't want to live there.
They had a host of cultural practices that thankfully died out that everyone listening to this
would find abhorrent today. Also, many of the things that have been handed down for
Rome aren't in the same form as they were back then. They've evolved over time into modern institutions.
And so with that, the first and perhaps biggest way in which Rome has influenced the modern world
is law. Law certainly didn't originate with the Romans. There are examples of written laws
going back thousands of years in other civilizations. However, the Roman approach to law was unique
and still exists in most Western or Western influence countries today.
The idea that law should be written, organized, interpreted by specialists, and applied through
recognized procedures owes an enormous amount to Rome.
Important Roman legal concepts include contracts, property rights, wills, corporations,
or legal associations, citizenship, legal personhood, public law, private law,
and the distinction between civil and criminal matters.
Even when modern legal systems are not directly Roman,
they often use categories that Roman jurists help define.
Rome's legal influence begins with the 12 tables,
traditionally dated to the mid-fifth century BC.
These were Rome's first major written laws,
and their importance lay not in being especially humane or even complete,
but in making the law public.
The rules were no longer supposed to exist
only in the memory or discretion of aristocratic officials.
Another major Roman legacy is the concept of legal personality.
Roman law recognized that certain associations, municipalities, and institutions
could have legal identities distinct from the individuals composing them.
This helped lay the groundwork for later ideas of corporations,
municipalities, universities, churches, nonprofit organizations,
and other entities that can own property, sue, be sued,
and continue beyond the lives of their members.
Rome's idea of citizenship was also crucial.
Roman citizenship was a legal status carrying rights, duties, privileges, and protections.
Over time, it expanded from just the city of Rome to Italy, and then eventually to nearly
all free inhabitants of the empire.
This helped establish the idea that political belonging could be defined by law rather than
by tribe, ethnicity, or birthplace.
A major turning point came under the Emperor Justinian in the 6th century.
His government compiled centuries of Roman legal material into the Corpus Juris Civillus,
or the body of civil law.
It included the Code, which collected imperial laws,
the Digest, which gathered opinions of major Roman jurists,
the institutes, a legal textbook, and later laws called the novels.
This compilation preserved Roman law after the Western Empire had collapsed.
The rediscovery and study of Justinian's laws in medieval Europe, especially at university such as Bologna,
transformed Western legal history. Medieval scholars treated Roman law as a rational system that could be
studied, analyzed, taught, and applied. And this helped create the modern legal profession,
legal education, and the idea of law as an intellectual discipline.
Rome's contribution to modern Republican government was not that it created democracy as we understand it,
because it didn't. Rather, it gave political theorists one of history's most influential
working models of a state without a king, governed through offices, assemblies, laws, and competing
centers of authority. The word republic itself comes from the Latin res publica, meaning the public
thing or public affair. The idea was that the state was not the personal property of a monarch. It
belonged, at least in theory, to the community of citizens. That concept became one of Rome's
biggest political legacies. Rome's most important contribution to this was the idea of mixed
government. The Republic had consuls, which served as executives, the Senate, which was an aristocratic
body, and popular assemblies that gave citizens a formal role in elections, legislation, and
public decisions. Rome also gave modern republics the idea of checks and balances. No single office
was supposed to hold all power permanently. Consuls served limited terms. There were usually
two consuls at a time, so each could restrain the other through vetoes. Tribunes of the plebs
could veto certain actions to protect ordinary citizens. Magistrates had defined powers and
offices were arranged in a hierarchy known as the Curses Honorum. Law and government weren't the only
contributions to the modern world by the Romans. They have also heavily influenced language. The
Romance languages all developed from spoken Latin, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Romanian, and
others. Through the Roman Empire, the Catholic Church, scholarship, law, and science, Latin also became
a major source of vocabulary for English and many other languages. English is Germanic and structure,
but much of its formal, legal, scientific, religious, and intellectual vocabulary all comes
from Latin, often through French. The biggest contribution comes from the Latin alphabet. The Latin
alphabet is used in some form by most languages in the world today, even those that are not
descended from European languages. The Latin alphabet has become a widespread linguistic operating
system, adapted for languages as diverse as Vietnamese, Swahili, Hawaiian, and Navajo.
Another major innovation used almost everywhere in the world today is the calendar. The calendar that
almost the entire world uses is the Gregorian calendar, which is a slight modification.
of the Julian calendar, which was implemented by Julia Caesar.
It was a solar calendar, which made it much easier to time the planting and harvest seasons.
Moreover, all of the names of the months that we use in English come from the Roman names of the month.
Rome also had major contributions to modern roads and infrastructure.
Roman roads were among the most important infrastructure systems in history.
They connected cities, forts, ports, mines, farms, farms,
and provincial capitals across the entire empire.
At their height, the Romans built tens of thousands of miles of paved roads,
with many more miles of secondary roads.
These roads allowed armies to move quickly,
officials to administer distant provinces,
merchants to transport goods,
and information to travel with unusual speed for the ancient world.
Not every Roman road was a perfectly paved stone highway,
but the best ones were durable enough
that some routes remained in use for central,
after the Empire fell. Many modern roads in Europe today still follow Roman alignments because the
Romans often chose the most practical routes through the landscape. Rome also helped establish
the idea of a road network rather than isolated roads. The famous saying, all roads lead to Rome
reflects the fact that the empire's roads are part of an integrated system. Roman bridges were
another major legacy. They made heavy use of the arch, which,
allowed them to span rivers and valleys with great strength and durability.
Roman bridge building influenced later European engineering,
and some Roman bridges still stand or remain in use today.
Roman aqueducts, sewers, and baths influenced the modern world
by less providing exact technologies to copy and more by establishing a civic ideal.
A city should provide large-scale public systems for water, waste, and hygiene.
Roman Aqueducts showed that cities,
Cities didn't have to depend only on nearby Wells rivers or rainwater.
Fresh water could be captured from distant springs and carried into urban centers through
carefully engineered channels, tunnels, bridges, reservoirs, and distribution tanks.
The modern city water system with reservoirs, main pipes, and public distribution is not a direct
copy of Roman aqueducts, but it follows the same basic principle.
Water supply is an engineered public network.
Roman sewer set a similar influence.
The Romans didn't understand germs as we do, and their sanitation systems were at best
uneven by modern standards. But they did understand that dense cities needed drainage and
waste removal. The Koloka Maxima in Rome became a famous symbol of urban engineering,
a massive drainage system that helped remove stormwater and sewage from parts of the city.
The Koloka Maxima is the world's oldest man-made object that is still used for its original purpose.
The key Roman contribution here was the idea that sanitation is part of urban planning.
Streets, latrines, drains, sewers, and water supply all had to work together.
Roman public baths were perhaps the most culturally influential institutions.
They weren't just places to go and get clean.
They were social centers, athletic facilities, libraries, meeting places, business venues,
and symbols of civilized urban life.
Their influence can be seen in later public bath houses,
Turkish baths, hamas, spas, saunas, health resorts, gymnasiums, and even modern recreation centers.
Rome also created some of the world's first planned cities. Rome itself was not planned,
but many of its provincial outposts were. They were created with a grid-like layout of city streets.
Many cities like Mara de Spain still use the same street layout created 2,000 years ago.
In well-preserved Roman cities such as Tim Gad, Algeria, you can still see the original layout.
The grid system used in places like Manhattan is the same basic system as the ones the Romans used.
Rome's influence on modern armies is less about battlefield tactics and more about organization,
professionalism, logistics, and engineering.
The Roman army helped establish the idea of a professional standing army.
Earlier, citizen militias were often raised for a campaign and then disbanded.
Over time, Rome developed long-service soldiers who were trained, paid, equipped, stationed,
promoted, and retired all through the state. Modern armies are much closer to that of the Roman
model than to temporary ancient armies. This model was very different than even cultures like Sparta.
In Rome, you could pursue the military as a career. They had contracts that soldiers had to sign,
tours of duty, which were often quite long, and pension plans that were usually in the form
of land. Rome's legacy isn't found in a single invention or institution.
But in the systems that it left behind, modern law, Republican government, roads, urban infrastructure, language, architecture, calendars, citizenship, and military organization, all still bear Roman fingerprints.
The Romans were not always original, and they certainly were not always admirable, but they were unmatched at taking ideas, organizing them, scaling them, and then making them last.
More than 15 centuries after the fall of the Western Empire,
we still live in a world partially built on Roman foundations.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show for on Patreon.
Your support helps make this podcast possible.
And I also want to remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord.
That's where everything happens.
outside the podcast, and links to those are available in the show notes.
As always, if you leave a review on any major podcast app or in the above community groups,
you two can have it read in the show.
And what have they ever given us in return?
The aqueduct?
What?
The aqueduct?
Oh, yeah, yeah, they did give us a...
That's true, yeah.
And there's sanitation.
Oh, yeah, the sanitation, Reg.
Remember what the city used to be like?
Yeah, I'll grant you, the aqueduct of sanitation are two things.
the Romans have done. And the roads.
Well, yeah, obviously the roads. I mean, the roads go without sand, don't they?
But apart from the sanitation, the aqueduct, and the roads.
Irrigation. Medicine?
Education. Yeah, you're all right, fair enough.
And the wine.
Yeah, that's something we'd really miss, Reg if the Romans left.
Public baths.
And it's safe to walk in the streets at night now, Reg.
Yeah, they certainly know how to keep order.
Let's face it, the only ones who could in a place like this.
All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation,
rows, a fresh water system of public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?
Brought peace?
Oh, peace!
Shut up!
