Answer :
The cities of the Roman Empire were different from the cities that developed during the Middle Ages because it didn't only rise and became great...it also fell terribly!
Actually, Augustus was a competitive Roman emperor or ruler who established an effective government and generously paid the civil servants to oversee governmental operations, which was the main reason the Romans were able to control such vast empire. The senate was operational, and the empire was actually run by civil servants drawn from plebeians and even former slaves.
Different from the cities during those days, Roman Empire basically secured the frontier and adorned Rome with magnificent public structures. Because of the structure of government Augustus had established, the empire remained stable during the Middle Ages.
Image: Statue of Augustus, the first Roman emperor (27BC - 14AD). The sculpture was from around 30 BC.
Learn more about the 200-year span of stability during the Roman Empire, beginning with emperor Augustus: https://brainly.com/question/4640280
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