Jump to content
UNRV Ancient Roman Empire Forums

Gladius Hispaniensis

Equites
  • Content Count

    365
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Gladius Hispaniensis


  1. Ave

     

    I just purchased and am working on Wheelock's 6th edition. Translating English to Latin is a lot harder than vice versa. For some reason the answers to exercise questions are not given. I am trying to translate the following sentence:

     

    You ought not to praise me

     

    I am translating this as Non debit me laudar.

     

    Is this correct?


  2. Ave

     

    There is a well known conflict between the dating of the census conducted by the procurator Quriinius in the writings of Josephus and the author of the Gospel of Luke. While Josephus dates the census as 6 C.E the latter would have it in the reign of Herod the Great, which would mean no later than 4 B.C.E.

    Luke's narrative has come under some criticism in the past but lately I came across one apologetic version: that the relevant passage is just a mistranslation. The original Greek rendition:

    αὕτη ἀπογραφὴ πρώτη ἐγένετο ἡγεμονεύοντος τῆς Συρίας Κυρηνίου which can be translated thus: "Done first survey when he was ruler of Syria Cyrene". The apologist in question has the viewpoint that what is being referred to here is the city of Cyrene not Quirinius the procurator and the "he" refers to Augustus himself. In other words it refers to the previous census taken by Saturninus in 8 B.C.E during the reign of Augustus when the latter was ruler of Syria Cyrene.

    This obviously begs the question of why Cyrene the city would be mentioned along with Syria in the first place, but I would love to get some input on this apologia from fellow forum members.

    Any thoughts? Thanks in advance.


  3. A recent rerun of Military History channel documentary had a Canadian war collage prof saying there wasn't evidence for that fate, and V. was probably quietly killed (in lieu his army and people, which Caesar had more typically killed afterward in Gaul)

     

    Wow, I'll take that with a dose of sodium chloride but I'll still look into it with an open mind.


  4. What was Cato's beef with Carthage anyway? That's one thing I never understood. Was it paranoia as in paranoia of a post-war unified Germany I wonder.

     

    Best I can tell from Plutarch, Cato the Elder was concerned that the geographic position of Carthage gave it an enduring competitive advantage in maritime trade and made it a permanent military threat to Sicily and the western Mediterranean. Moreover, Carthage was in constant conflict with Numidia, a good Roman ally. I don't think either of these factors required razing the city (nor did most Roman senators either), but it does explain Cato the Elder's beef with Carthage, against whom he had personally fought.

    Thanks for the info. Any details on Cato's military career against the Carthaginians? What battles etc?


  5. Personally, I'm pretty appalled by the whole Third Punic War. Carthage needn't have been destroyed.

     

     

    I agree it is hard to justify the destruction of a beaten, cowed enemy.

     

    What was Cato's beef with Carthage anyway? That's one thing I never understood. Was it paranoia as in paranoia of a post-war unified Germany I wonder.


  6. Personally, I'm pretty appalled by the whole Third Punic War. Carthage needn't have been destroyed.

    I completely agree.

    Of all the Roman atrocities, the one that makes me particularly sick is the idea of leading a defeated king out in a triumph and then having him ritually strangled. A brave warrior like Vercingetorix deserved more chivalry.

     

    Maybe if you were in Caesar's shoes you'd think differently. War has no sympathy or compassion my friend.

    Pompey was in Caesar's shoes more than once. This is one level he never descended to, quite uniquely among his compatriots I might add. The war fought in the North African desert in WW2 between the Allies and the Axis is witness that in war there is room for sympathy, compassion and chivalry - Krieg ohne hass. Otherwise this whole thread would be pointless.


  7. Auxillaries retained an oval shield if I remember right.

     

    You're right. I wonder about the weight differences between the oval shield and the rectangular versions. Perhaps it was easier to manouver with the oval shields in comparison with other types?

     

    I remember reading that the scutum weighed around 20 to 25 pounds but I can't remember where. It may have been Goldsworthy. But I'm not sure which design was being referred to. I imagine there wasn't much difference in weight.

    Does anyone remember when the earliest dated rectangular scutum was found?


  8. Just finished reading 'The Last Battle'. It is about the battle for Berlin in 1945. It shows all sides, and talks about the western allies, German army, Russian army, along with civilians at the time. It is a great book, and it is packed with information. If you are into World War 2 I suggest you read it. It gives detailed accounts of Russian preparations and assaults, and it also tells of how General Henrici tried to rally the Germans to hold them, which he did for two days with only two understrength armies against a million Russians. It also talks of Hitlers last days in the Fuhrer bunker.

    You must be referring to the Cornelius Ryan book. It's a good primer. Some of the information is dated though.


  9. Personally, I'm pretty appalled by the whole Third Punic War. Carthage needn't have been destroyed.

    I completely agree.

    Of all the Roman atrocities, the one that makes me particularly sick is the idea of leading a defeated king out in a triumph and then having him ritually strangled. A brave warrior like Vercingetorix deserved more chivalry.


  10. Ave

     

    I believe Roman persecution of Jews was more sporadic than anything else. It got progressively worse with the passage of time but there were some visceral reasons for that. As Nephele pointed out, there was a substantial Jewish population in Rome itself at the time of Julius Caesar and they apparently even mourned his death.

    Part of the problem, from the point of view of Roman rule at least, was the lack of separation between church and state, or sacred and secular, in traditional Judaism. All the kings, rulers and judges of Biblical Israel and later Judah were Divinely appointed. Even much of the topography and the landscape were somehow imbued with a sacred quality. The rule over God's Chosen People by pagan potentates and their minions was naturally seen as an offense in Jewish eyes. This was a situation unique among the ancients and didn't contribute towards a stable political chemistry. Hence the rebellions, the assassinations, the defiance and the increasingly brutal Roman response.

    This separation of church and state (for lack of a better term) had to be forced down their throats at the point of the Roman sword and did not take effect until the final defeat of the Bar Kokhba revolt and the renaming of Jerusalem to Aelia Capitolina. Thereafter the religious institution at Jamnia was established and formed the basis for modern Rabbinical Judaism.

    I think the idea propagated in many circles that the Romans persecuted the Jews (and Christians) because they refused to worship the Emperor is extremely simplistic and caution has to be exercised in making blanket statements. I am also convinced that part of the reason Christians were so reviled was their deification of a person who was purportedly crucified for political sedition and defiance of Roman rule. People back then had a much better understanding of crucifixion than we do. I always like putting forward the following analogy: The US executed the Rosenbergs for spying for the Soviet Union. What if a cult suddenly sprang up out of nowhere that deified the Rosenbergs and used a symbol of the electric chair as an icon. How would Americans in the 50s and 60s have reacted to that?


  11. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_of_the_Papyri

     

    I really, really hope they get the permission and the funds to fully excavate this building.

     

    If we're lucky it might contain Punic literature or even other lost invaluable texts.

     

    Phoenician and its daughter language Punic were around for at least a thousand years. Imagine what their texts could tell us?

    If we're really lucky we might get a different perspective on events such as the Punic Wars and the more unsavoury aspects of Carthaginian culture that we only know about through the medium of Roman and Greek authors. This is a really fascinating thread. Punic civilisation IMO hasn't gotten the attention it truly deserves and this is nobody's fault. Just one of those vagaries of history. Much of what we know about the Philistines is through the writers of the Old Testament and practically all we know about Carthage and its minions is through it's detractors. Crying shame.

×