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How did Ancient Rome pay its bills?

When you hear the phrase "the fall of Rome," it's easy to imagine a single grand and terrible battle that brought an arrogant city to its knees. The city of Rome was conquered by invaders in 476 CE, but the empire's loss of power was a more gradual process, a slow but steady decline lasting many years before and after the city of Rome itself was sacked.

What role did Rome's love of riches and luxury play in its decline? Some of the causes explained in this Hidden Answer activity may sound similar to issues you hear people discussing today when they talk about money and its relationship to power. Click on the Roman solution to reveal how each item contributed to the fall of Rome.

The Problem The Roman Solution How did it contribute to the Fall of Rome?
Rome ran out of lands to conquer. The emperor raised taxes and/or debased the Roman currency.
Constantine had no cash coming in from conquered lands. He looted Rome’s own temples.
Pagans from northern Europe attacked the fringes of the western Roman empire. Many Roman peasants joined their attackers.
The western Roman empire was crumbling. Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I conquered the West and expanded it.
The western Roman empire finally collapsed. The Roman people broke down into small, regional bands.

Question

Emperors used their armies to appropriate wealth, or seize it for their own use. How might this practice of plundering your own empire lead to its downfall?

Eventually the "empire" would grow huge but impoverished, and the people whose lands were being plundered would try to fight back in order to survive.