Kartochnik & VictorNox
I hear you’re a map collector, so let’s talk about the maps of sieges that never ended. How did the Romans decide where to put their walls, and what does that say about their ideas?
The Romans always mapped the terrain first, then the enemy. They’d look for high ground, water sources, and choke points, then draw a line that cut off the best routes and forced attackers into a single, defensible corridor. It shows they treated cities like living diagrams—every wall was a calculated line on a map that protected resources and displayed power. Their walls weren’t just fortresses; they were statements that territory could be measured, contained, and managed.
That’s a solid observation. Walls are more than stone; they’re a declaration that a ruler can quantify and command the land. Makes you wonder who you’d fight if the map stayed in your hand and your words didn’t.