Between the Second and the Third Century A.D., After Hundreds of Years Described By About Constant Development and After a Period Where a Definitive Point of Every One of Its Natives Was the Propagation of the Social and Monetary Conditions Wherein They Lived, the Roman Empire Encountered a Significant Emergency. Proof of This Emergency Originates from Significant Monetary Sign, For Example, the Fineness of Coins and the Quantity of Wrecks In the Mediterranean Sea (To Be Translated As an Agent Test of the Size of Mediterranean Exchange). Both These Viewpoints Point In Truth to a Genuine Breakdown, In Concomitance, Additionally, With a Steady Diminishing of Populace, Due As We Would See It Not Exclusively to the Plague and War Occasions, Yet Additionally to the Arrival of the Financial Framework to Less Coordinated Creation Models Which Were In This Way Less Specific and Profitable. In the Following Segments, In the Wake of Demonstrating That the Empire's Financial Decay Had Just Started In the Second Century A.D., We Will Learn About the Reasons For the Fall, In Light of the De-Specialization of the Roman Monetary Framework, Which Kept It from Proceeding With Its Development Towards Innovation, Driving It Rather Along a Way of Dynamic Implosion.