"All roads lead to Rome" is a proverb [a] meaning the same outcome can be reached by many ways. [2] [3] It was first written in Medieval Latin in 1175 by Alain de Lille and first written in English in 1391 by Geoffrey Chaucer. It references that in the Roman Empire, all major roads led to Rome.
The origin comes from the Medieval Latin proverb: "Mille viae ducunt homines per saecula Romam," the proverb translated into Modern English being: "A thousand roads lead men forever to Rome." The proverb was written in 1175 by Alain de Lille in the Liber Parabolarum (English: Book of Proverbs). [4] [5]
It was first written in English on A Treatise on the Astrolabe in 1391 by Geoffrey Chaucer. The proverb, written in Middle English, being: "Right as diverse pathes leden diverse folk the righte way to Rome." [6] [7]
The proverb is referencing the fact all major roads in the Roman Empire led to the Milliarium Aureum . [8] [9]