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Aurelia

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Posts posted by Aurelia

  1. Archaeologists in Italy have uncovered a cemetery in the 2,700-year-old ancient port of Rome where they believe the variety of tombs found reflects the bustling town's multi-cultural nature.

     

    Ostia "was a town that was always very open, very dynamic," said Paola Germoni, the director of the sprawling site -- Italy's third most visited after the Colosseum and Pompeii.
     
    "What is original is that there are different types of funeral rites: burials and cremations," she said this week.
     
    More on AFP news site.
  2. Designed and executed by Walter Scheidel and Elijah Meeks in collaboration with a group of IT specialists and students at Stanford University, ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World reconstructs the time cost and financial expense associated with a wide range of different types of travel in antiquity. The model is based on a simplified version of the giant network of cities, roads, rivers and sea lanes that framed movement across the Roman Empire. It broadly reflects conditions around 200 CE but also covers a few sites and roads created in late antiquity.

     

    To access the map, click here!

  3. Rome had no police force. Some of the praetorian cohorts had been seperated and formed the Urban Cohorts, of which three were designated by Augustus in ad12, whose duties were closer to those of a police force, but even they were not so fully engaged unless necessary.
    There were no specialist intelligence units in Roman times. None. Period. Any man could see with his own eyes and the Romans were customarily prone to gossip and information passing as a rule.
    Prisoners might be held by anyone so ordered. Praetorians were not specialist gaolers, and for that matter, no were they specialist interrogators. A man being questioned, particularly with a heavy hand, might just as easily be beaten by slaves.

     

    The Praetorian Guard has been used for different purposes through the centuries, and that is the point of the article. Nobody said they were created for the purpose of serving exclusively as a police force, or intelligence units, or prison guards. These were probably temporary / ad hoc duties, but duties nevertheless. And I'm not disputing the fact that soldiers from the regular legions were also used in such activities when necessary. That was not my point.

     

    The were not however a regular legion. There's no dispute that pratrians did at times march on campaign, but please realise that a primary reason for seeking service as a Praetorian was that they did less than ordinary legionaries. 

     

    Once again, I never said they were a regular legion but that it was not uncommon for them to go on campaign with the Emperor, in reply to your statement that

     

    They served in a few campaigns to protect a Caesar campaigning in person, which ordinarily did not happen

     

     

     

    Peace.

  4. Hey Caldrail, interesting input from your part but I'm wondering if you actually read the whole article? It expands a bit on the first paragraph I posted.

     

    Regarding the different roles played by the Praetorian Guard, it tended to vary through the centuries. Some Emperors expanded their powers, others restricted them, and so it went until Constantine finally disbanded them.

     

    The Praetorian Guard was a military class composed of amalgamated bodyguard units from the civil wars. They had no official intelligence or administration role.

     

    That's not entirely true. The Praetorian Prefects were the commanders of the Praetorian Guard but would also eventually have an administrative role.

     

    From UNRV:

     

    At the onset, Augustus recruited 9 cohorts of about 500 men each, essentially equal to the size of an imperial legion. Each cohort was eventually swelled to equal that of the double-strength first cohort of an Imperial Legion, so that each cohort, from this time on, was generally made up of 1,000 men. Three of these initial 9 units were stationed in Rome while the other six were garrisoned throughout Italy. At first each cohort was under the command of an Equestrian rank Tribune, but by the turn of the millennium, Augustus had created the overall command position of the Praetorian Praefectus. The Prefects eventually became incredibly powerful political players themselves, and in some cases wielded more direct control and power over the empire than the Emperor. Set up as an institution with supreme loyalty to the emperor, they eventually became a formidable political force, in many cases, both eliminating the current Emperor and dictating ascension to the throne.

     

    Encyclopaedia Brittanica:

     

    The praetorian prefect, being responsible for the emperor’s safety, rapidly acquired great power. Many became virtual prime ministers to the emperor, Sejanus being the prime example of this. Two others, Macrinus and Philip the Arabian, seized the throne for themselves.
    By ad 300 the praetorian prefects virtually directed the civil administration of the empire. They executed judicial powers as delegates of the emperor, organized tax levies, and supervised provincial governors. They also commanded troops and served as quartermasters general to the emperor’s court.
     
    As for intelligence gathering, a group within the Praetorian Guard known as Speculatores, sort of played the role of "secret agents". There's an interesting book entitled "The Praetorian Guard: A History of Rome's Elite Special Forces" by Sandra Bingham, which describes the Speculatores as "employed in matters that involved issues of national security or where there was a need for covert activity".
     

    These handpicked soldiers are most famous for serving as the sworn bodyguard of the Roman ruler, but they were also used as a Jack-of-all-trades force in the service of the Empire.

     

    Sadly, nope. No more than any other soldier was and probably less likely than frontier soldiers.

     

    Initially recruited as bodyguards, they came to perform additional duties:
     
    - Bodyguard of the Emperor
    - The palace guard
    - As the only military force allowed in the city of Rome
    - Policing Rome
    - To quell any riots in the city
    - As intelligence units
    - Guarding prisoners awaiting trial before the Emperor
    - Interrogations
     
    Not to mention administrators already mentioned above.
     
    Guardsmen fought alongside the legions on campaign, put down uprisings, pacified rioters and served as security at gladiator shows and chariot races.

     

     

    They served in a few campaigns to protect a Caesar campaigning in person, which ordinarily did not happen.

     

     

    Maybe not at first, but contrary to popular belief, the Praetorians, especially beyond the Julio-Claudian era, often went on campaign with the Emperor.
     
    More on UNRV
     
    Enemy incursions into Italy or nearby provinces were also often met by Praetorian defenders. As the deep interior of the Empire was bereft of troops in comparison to the frontier provinces, it could often fall upon the imperial guard to secure the interior empire. They also accompanied those emperors who functioned as generals while on campaign. Of notable example are Trajan in Dacia and Marcus Aurelius while he conducted the war on the Danube, and the Praetorians certainly were involved in heavy action.
  5. Equal parts secret service, special forces and urban administrators, Rome’s Praetorian Guard was one of the ancient world’s most prestigious military units. These handpicked soldiers are most famous for serving as the sworn bodyguard of the Roman ruler, but they were also used as a Jack-of-all-trades force in the service of the Empire. Guardsmen fought alongside the legions on campaign, put down uprisings, pacified rioters and served as security at gladiator shows and chariot races. As their influence grew, they also played a pivotal role in the intrigue and double-crossing that blighted imperial Rome. Explore eight facts about the men-at-arms who protected—and sometimes murdered—the Roman emperor.

     

     

    More interesting tidbits on the History Channel website.

     

  6. Forget gory shows and gladiatorial combat. In the late Middle Ages, Rome's Colosseum was a huge condominium, says the latest archaeological investigation into Rome's most iconic monument.

     

    Archaeologists from Roma Tre University and students from the American University of Rome unearthed evidence showing that ordinary Romans lived within the Colosseum from the ninth century until at least 1349, when the building was seriously damaged by an earthquake.

     

     

    Discovery News article continues here.

     


     

  7. Plus, its the only damn show the BBC has that has international export value.

     

    I think "Top Gear" is BBC's biggest export. I'm not exactly a fan but it seems to have worldwide appeal, especially amongst male viewers - what's not to like about a bunch of middle-aged men playing around with cars?

  8. You are right, caesar novus. Now that I've looked into the background history of the Domus Aurea, this article does indeed seem to be a rehash of former news reports dating back to 2009. So the "journalist" seems to have got the dates confused: as you said, the revolving dining room rather than the Domus Aurea itself was first "discovered" in 2009. Oops  :hammer:  :oops:

     

    Anyway, thanks for pointing it out!

  9. Racy inscriptions and phalluses carved into Astypalaia's rocky peninsula shed light on very private lives of ancient Greece

     

    Wild, windswept, rocky and remote, Astypalaia is not an obvious place for the unearthing of some of the world's earliest erotic graffiti.
     
    Certainly, Dr Andreas Vlachopoulos, a specialist in prehistoric archaeology, didn't think so when he began fieldwork on the Aegean island four years ago. Until he chanced upon a couple of racy inscriptions and large phalluses carved into Astypalaia's rocky peninsula at Vathy. The inscriptions, both dating to the fifth and sixth centuries BC, were "so monumental in scale" – and so tantalisingly clear – he was left in no doubt of the motivation behind the artworks.
     
     
    The Guardian article continues here.
     
    P.S. For chuckles, check out the comments section.  :naughty:
  10. The extravagant palace of Emperor Nero, the Domus Aurea, which boasts some 300 rooms covered in dazzling polished white marble, was first uncovered in 2009 by a team of French and Italian archaeologists. Now, the luxurious palace has just revealed another surprise – a revolving dining room which once served the illustrious guests of the infamous ruler. Archaeologists have called the 2,000-year-old revolving platform one of the most peculiar and sophisticated structures of antiquity. The discovery confirms a description of the palace by ancient historian Suetonius.

     

    News article continues here.

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