🔻 For 400 years, the Sassanids bled Rome dry. They captured emperors (Valerian), burned cities, and forced Rome to fight a two-front war.
Every great power meets its match. For the Roman Empire, the "Nemesis" wasn't just one enemy—it was a series of unstoppable forces.
🔻 A Roman-trained German chief who turned. In 9 AD, at the Teutoburg Forest, he annihilated three entire legions. Rome never again expanded beyond the Rhine. Nemesis of the Roman Empire Tai xuong mien phi
🔻 Attila terrified both Eastern and Western empires. Only a massive coalition and bribes stopped him from burning Rome to the ground.
🔻 In 410 AD, for the first time in 800 years, Rome fell to barbarians. Alaric didn't just defeat Rome—he humiliated it. 🔻 For 400 years, the Sassanids bled Rome dry
🔻 Civil wars, economic collapse, lead poisoning, and endless political betrayals—Rome's deadliest enemy was often itself. ⚔️ The Final Verdict: "Rome did not fall because of one sword. It fell because a thousand cuts—from Hannibal to Attila, from treason to taxes—finally bled the eternal city dry." 📥 Nội dung này được đăng tải miễn phí (tải xuống miễn phí) để bạn sử dụng, chia sẻ hoặc làm cảm hứng cho bài viết lịch sử của mình. 👉 Thái Xuống Miễn Phí = Free Download
🔻 Before Rome fell, Hannibal nearly stopped it from rising. At Cannae (216 BC), he slaughtered 50,000 Roman soldiers in a single day. Rome's greatest trauma. For the Roman Empire, the "Nemesis" wasn't just
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Below is a ready-made Facebook / Blog post in English (with a Vietnamese heading for context). (Nội dung dưới đây miễn phí để bạn chia sẻ / tải xuống)