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Troop Deployment


Guest spartacus

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Guest spartacus

When Rome was at its pinnacle of power and with a vast empire to guard and protect it must have stretched their manpower resources to the full!

 

Even recruiting non-romans into the legion, the number of troops serving at any one time must have been staggering!

 

Then, recruiting would have been carried out on a vast scale due to soldiers killed in battle, desertion, retirement etc

 

Also the wages bill must have been crippling, I just wonder what all the figures tally up to! Perhaps it will remain an unanswerable question

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Just the legionary count alone is difficult enough to determine, and this is with known legionary numbers. Whether it was 28 or 30 active legions, the full compliment of men would've equalled some 150,000 men. Of course legions were rarely if ever at full strength, but all we can really go on is the theoretic number. Of course some of those numbers are officers and cavalry which all have different pay scales.

 

Here's some info to get started though...

Military Pay (in denarii)

From Domitian to Severus

 

Garrison of Rome

Praetorians 1000

Urban 500

Vigiles 200

 

Legions

Foot Soldiers 300

Cavalry 400

 

Auxiliary

Cohort Infantry 100

Cohort Cavalry 200-266

Alae Cavalry 333

 

Fleets

Praetorian Fleet 200

Provincial Fleet 100

 

Officers

Temporary Tribune 2,500

Centurion and Cohort Prefect 5,000

Equestrian Tribune 10,000

Ala Prefect of a cavalry ala 15,000

First centurion, Camp Prefect and Double Ala 25,000

 

Yann Le Bohec, The Imperial Roman Army, p. 212

 

 

 

Roman Government expenditures in Millions of Denarii

circa 150 AD

 

The Army (salaries, supplies, discharges)

161-176

 

Civilian Employees (procurators, senatorial officials, equestrians officers)

19

 

Handouts (donatives and congiaria)

11

 

Building (in Rome and the provinces)

5-15

 

Other Items (Imperial household, Gifts, foreign subsidies)

12.5-25

 

Totals:

208.5-246

 

Richard Duncan-Jones, Money and Government in the Roman Empire, p. 37

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It's actually quite interesting. I remember seeing a documentry on barbarian invasions in Rome, and all up, the number of professional soldiers to auxilaries were 500,000 men. But to adequately protect their empire, the romans should have had an army of over a million, which would have been impossible. Particualry when you had cases such as the massacre at the Teutoberg Forest, and Boudicae slaughtering a couple of legions in Britain. it would have been a logistical nightmare. Particulary as in Marcus Aurelius's time, a plague sweeped through the empire killing hundreds of thousands.

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