Saturday, December 1, 2018

Paris Sunrise


Geography has played an important role in the development of France. France looks like a hexagon. The country is located in the western border of Eurasian continent. France is the only European country with its borders up to the Mediterranean in the south and north of Europe. France is the only European state on one side of the Atlantic Ocean and on the other hand Central Europe. This geographical location has played a role in the development of France's economy, government and culture. Due to its geographical location, France has always tried to protect itself from both the land and the sea. The country has formed a strong land army and has come up in modern times to form a one-time navy navy. Before the introduction of rail transport due to the long coastline of France and many long and navigable rivers, the areas of France could easily be reached in the hexagon. The absence of high mountains inside the French territories eases political and economic integration.
Nevertheless, it is not possible to limit the history of France to geography only. The cultural and political power, not the natural force, was the main driving force behind the consolidation of the French hexagon. The ancient Romans first came together and gathered the region. In the 1st century BC, the Romans encompassed the region of the present-day France region or the Gaul region as part of their large empire. When the Roman Empire collapsed in the 5th century, the region was associated with Western and Central Europe as a way of Roman Catholicism.
In the Middle Ages, many dynasties ruled France continuously. But none of them could establish an efficient administration here for many centuries. In the early days of the modern era, the Balaoya and Buraboli dynasties were able to build a large military and civil bureaucracy, with which the Rajara was able to increase the boundaries of the Bong France to bring peace to the region. Through these efforts of establishing a single state, the dynasties were able to build a unique culture of the French.

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