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Late Emperor

Plebes
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  1. Another one: a banknote. At first my roman interlocutor would look at it as a worthless piece of colored paper but once I'd explain him that where I come from, we use it as money...he would probably find it one of the funniest thing he has never heard.
  2. Since they were a militaristic culture, then I think that a gun or a rifle would REALLY impress a roman guy. Focusing on a small thing that a casual time traveller could have in his pockets, I think that a multi-function swiss knife would impress them too.
  3. Wonderful pictures : the comparison with high-medieval Europe was humiliating. Byzantium was really the last remnant of the splendid greco-roman civilization: IMHO european medieval scholars visiting Costantinople felt like they were brought back in time to a golden age that they knew only through literature and ruins. Criminal fourth-crusaders.
  4. I think that the answer is yes. Without a professional military divided in self-sufficient legions, it would have impossible for Caesar to have a private army and seize the power with it.
  5. @caldrail, thanks for the answers: do you know if the navy fleets frequently mutinied too?
  6. Caracalla killing his own brother Geta and then killing several thousands of Geta's supporters in 211. After that massacre, Caracalla moved to Egypt in 215 and killed thousands citizens in Alexandria, allegedly for making fun of him about his fratricide. Another roman atrocity are the tens of thousands citizens killed by Justinian and Theodora in 532 (Nika Revolt), although the hooliganist costantinopolians actually deserved it by rejecting the Justinian's attempts to peacefully placate them and going on to riot and devastate the City.
  7. Then conquering it would have been a walk in the park compared to conquering the heavily forested Germania. Roman legions excelled in open and flat terrain: Ireland was a perfect playground for them and besides I doubt that the irish had a cavalry that could create problems to the roman infantry. Didn't Ireland have anything of value to export regarding agricultural products? So why they didn't try to bring the irish under the roman taxation system in order to raise state revenues? This is particularly surprising regarding the late empire because AFAIK since Diocletianus rule, the roman state became even greedier than before looking desperately for everything they could tax to sustain the huge army: since Ireland was an easy prey, then I would have expected Diocle and Costantine (or later IVth century emperors) to try to conquer Hibernia and heavily taxate the natives. Yes, this is true: absence of a blood based hereditary monarchy (like in medieval/modern era Europe) was the main handicap of the Roman Empire. Without it and the resulting devastating power struggles, it could have gone on existing much longer.
  8. There's something I don't understand: the romans became unused to large battles and fighting with large armies along the border marked by the rhine/danube rivers but along the border with the parthian empire, the situation was very different: the parthians weren't uncivilized raiders like the IVth century germanics but an organized and civilized state deploying large armies on the battlefied. The romans had still to mantain and use large old style armies along the middle-eastern border, otherwise the parthians would have wiped out the empire: so how is possible that they lost the expertise to manouver large armies and fight large battles?
  9. I like frontier societies, so I think that i would have lived in Roman Britain or along the rhine or danubian border.
  10. A very interesting thread caldrail. I've some questions regarding the issue if these rebellion against army officers and commanders were as frequent in the late empire as in the previous centuries (of course I know that legionaries still followed their want-to-be-emperor general against "Rome"). 1) AFAIK since the Aurealianus' reform, the Roman Army became more democratic allowing the low rank soldiers to climb ALL the military hierarchy to the top office of general and from general even to emperor (the best example is Diocletianus, son of poor illirian peasants): I guess that this reform could have made the soldiers more loyal to the army which offered the possibility of great social climbing and especially loyal to their officers, commanders and even generals who were "like them", as opposite to the first/second centuries legions in which the common soldier could hope at best to become only a centurion and officers/commanders/generals were only recruited from the aristocracy. Is my assumption correct? 2)Were the huge self-sufficient legions abandoned for smaller mobile "regiments" of comitatenses and fixed limitanei units of farmer-soldiers by Diocletianus/Costantine, also in order to make rebellions more easily suppressible and in the case of limitanei to give the soldiers a personal reason to defend the border (their own land)? 3)Could it be speculated that Diocletianus turned the office of Emperor in a sacred, divine oriental style leadership also in order to raise troop loyalty and decrease the rate of rebellions? 4)How christianity, a monotheistic religion similar to an ideology, affected the loyalty of the troops since Theodosius the Great turned it in a state religion? Were they brainwashed into fight to defend the Faith against the pagan barbarians and parthians (despite many soldiers being christianized germanics themselves) and at the same time convinced that rebellion against he Imperial Army was a rebellion against God himself, incarnated by the Empire? 5)Regarding questions 3 and 4, were rebellions a frequent event also among the regular troops (not the mercenaries) of the very christian eastern roman/byzantine empire, during its long post-western roman history?
  11. Was Ireland densely wooded in Agricola time? Didn't they value also agricultural space since they were an agrarian economy? Besides they gained a lot of living space with the conquest of Gaul and Iberia that before being conquered were scarcely urbanized. Possibly but as far as I know before Teutoburg they were going to colonize the germanic wilderness. I agree that being the size of Hibernia unknown, first century emperors feared a new Caesar. I agree, there wasn't much glory in conquering it.
  12. Did they try to use indian elephants? They are known to be quite docile.
  13. Thanks for the very interesting infos: so it seems that conquering Ireland wasn't just cost effective. Regards
  14. Hi, I've wondered why the romans didn't incorporate elephants in their legions after defeating Carthage in the Second Punic War. War Elephants could be defeated but still they were (especially if armoured) fearsome war machines, real ancient tanks which could charge and smash enemy infantry and work as mobile towers for archers or scorpio artillery. Is there a reason that suggested the romans to not use them? Did the romans tried to employ them in some legions but gave up?
  15. Hi,I've a question. Why the romans didn't conquer the Emerald Island? Was it too well defended? Or was it too resourceless (from a roman point of view)?
  16. Very interesting thread, thanks for linking it: it answered my question and I learnt something else.
  17. I wrote rounded but I was mistaken. I actually meant oval and asked why during the third century there was the transition from this: to this: I'm curious to understand if there were practical reasons for this change or if it depended from the fact that during the third century turmoil the roman emperors started to recruit many german troops and they introduced their shield in the roman army. Personally I see the late empire oval shield as less efficient than the old rectangular one since it offers a smaller protecting surface and it makes the tactic of the testudo less efficient since during an enemy archery barrage some arrows can enter the empty spaces between the shields.
  18. How? I thouhgt that roman culture in republican and early imperial times was very trade oriented. I agree that politically and militarily he stabilized the empire and gave it 2 centuries more of life (even more if we consider the eastern empire) but I argued that he placed an heavy statalism on the imperial society and economy. So do you argue that his edicts remained largely on paper both regarding taxation and tying sons to the profession of their fathers?
  19. Why the roman military abandoned the traditional roman shield used in republican and early imperial times to adopt the germanic rounded shield typical of the late imperial army? What where the advantages of this kind of shield?
  20. This is what I meant: AFAIK he destroyed monetary trade by fixing prices, turning it partially in barter and he also halted social mobility crystallizing roman society. Plus Diocletianus placed a heavy taxation on citizens turning free farmers in people as poor as slaves and by applying taxes collectively on whole communities, enforced by a single functionary, he placed the bases of the medieval feudal economy. Therefore I wondered if Diocletianus can actually be blamed for breaking the back of a still thriving imperial economy in order to sustain heavy military expenses or he just increased the economic decadence of already very impoverished Empire.
  21. Hi, I've wondered if Diocletianus can be considered the main guilty for the fall of the Roman Empire due to his soviet-style economic reforms wich turned the Empire in an ancient USSR destroying its semi-capitalist economy. Am I right or the economic decline had started much earlier than him and was unstoppable when Diocletianus rised to power?
  22. The greedy idiotic crusaders which sacked Costantinoples and destroyed the Empire could not imagine that they were removing their only safeguard against deep muslim expansion in Europe (like it happened in the following centuries). Without that betrayal the byzantines would have probably halted the turkish westward expansion for a long time or even permanently.
  23. AFAIK the difference found in average IQ between the equally well fed caucasian-americans and african-americans (which are partially caucasian BTW) is about 15 points and there are significant differences even between european populations. The comparison with equally well fed africans isn't reliable IMHO because in those poor and undeveloped societies only the upper classes can be well fed while in western societies (e.g USA) even the lower classes are well fed. Regarding the Ancient's IQ I think that it can be said the same as modern third world societies: most inhabitants of the ancient world were illiterate and badly fed farmers and other manual workers while only a minority of the population was literate and well fed. The ancient science, phylosophy, technology, organization, etc... that we know were the intellectual product of this minority; I think therefore that it is possible that their average IQ was significantly lower than the modern one in the same countries (although 48 is exagerated IMHO) despite the intellectual achievements, infrastructure and organization of the ancient societies (which were quite technologically static BTW).
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