What If? – A Journey Through Alternate Histories

The Empire That Never Died


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Episode 11 imagines a world where the Roman Empire never collapsed in 476 CE. Instead of falling to corruption, invasions, and internal chaos, Rome reforms itself — decentralizing power, integrating barbarian tribes, and evolving into a stable federation across Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.In this alternate timeline, the collapse of civilization never occurs. With no Dark Ages, literacy, infrastructure, science, and engineering continue to advance. The Renaissance begins centuries early. By the year 1000, Europe is already a highly developed Roman world with paved roads, public education, advanced medicine, and major libraries.Technological innovation accelerates dramatically. Early steam engines appear in the 600s, mechanized factories in the 800s, widespread electricity by 1200. Human flight, advanced ships, and even preliminary rocket experiments emerge long before the modern era. By the 1500s, Rome reaches the Moon; by the 1700s, it plans missions beyond Earth.Without the fragmentation of Europe, colonialism looks very different. Rome explores the Americas peacefully, focusing on knowledge and trade rather than conquest. Indigenous civilizations meet diplomats instead of conquerors. Slavery ends earlier, and the world becomes more pluralistic, blending cultures across continents.Religion also evolves in a more tolerant direction. Christianity grows, but alongside Stoicism, Eastern philosophies, and other traditions. With no religious wars, the Enlightenment arrives sooner, shaped by Roman intellectual life rather than conflict.The modern world under an eternal Rome is unified, technologically advanced, and far more peaceful. Latin remains a global language. Public systems flourish. Humanity reaches space centuries earlier. Yet the episode also explores the downsides: reduced cultural diversity, less rebellion and artistic chaos, and a powerful central government that could suppress dissent.The story ends with a meditation on what Rome symbolizes. Its survival might have brought humanity to the stars earlier — but its fall shaped the world we know. The ruins remind us that even great empires fade, and that progress often grows from both stability and struggle.

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What If? – A Journey Through Alternate HistoriesBy Arran Gowdy