Of course, but Roman roads were far superior. They were more durable (especially under heavy traffic for commerce or supplying an army), straighter, had good drainage, and they linked together to form a complete network.[0][1]
Earlier paved roads do exist,[2] but (due to their high material/labor cost) this was only sporadically feasible, between settlements with high traffic between them. Part of the genius of the Roman road network was the system of bureaucracy and taxation to pay for it. This meant that a traveller (or an army) could rely on the existence of a continuous, high-quality road linking distant locations.
Earlier paved roads do exist,[2] but (due to their high material/labor cost) this was only sporadically feasible, between settlements with high traffic between them. Part of the genius of the Roman road network was the system of bureaucracy and taxation to pay for it. This meant that a traveller (or an army) could rely on the existence of a continuous, high-quality road linking distant locations.
[0] http://engineeringrome.org/ancient-roman-roads-and-their-inf...
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_roads
[2] https://www.theguardian.com/science/2011/mar/15/britannia-ro...