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#16 (permalink) | |
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Senior Contributor
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There are a number of exhibits, documents arrowheads and the like, in the British Museum, that point to there being non-Roman troops posted there.
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When we blindly adopt a religion, a political system, a literary dogma, we become automatons. We cease to grow. - Anais Nin |
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#17 (permalink) | |
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Defense Professional
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By the following year he was planning again to attack Rome. But he died of a nosebleed before they even began the march. |
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#18 (permalink) | |
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Actus Reus
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"Any relations in a social order will endure if there is infused into them some of that spirit of human sympathy, which qualifies life for immortality." ~ George William Russell |
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#19 (permalink) | |
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Senior Contributor
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#20 (permalink) |
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Actus Reus
Senior Contributor
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The point of using auxilleries was that they knew the lay of the land, were acclimatized and they could well be motivated against whatever adversary the Romans were fighting then. Syrian Archers and the unspellable Heavy Cavalry one can understand, the British afterall use Gurkhas even now, but the point of using say, tribemen from Arabia Petrea in Britannia, unless of course they were legionairres any way? Using them against the Persians would be pretty useful, good motivation but in Britain?
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#21 (permalink) | |
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Senior Contributor
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As for using units like the Syrians, and Cataphracts (no trouble spelling it, but it sprains the tongue pronouncing it,) wouldn’t you think that they would be used as assault troops, rather then in garrison? Apropos “out-of-place” units, at the British Museum they had a Berber camel saddle dated back to early A.D., they had retrieved from some dig or the other. Now it was probably something someone had brought over as a souvenir. But still can’t you imagine the sight of a Berber Camel unit charging a line of blue painted Britons or Picts? It would have scared the crap out of ‘em! ![]() |
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#22 (permalink) | |
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Actus Reus
Senior Contributor
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We know that legionairres came from all over the empire. So if you find a piece of Mesopotamian pottery say, most likely a soldier from that region brought it over to remind him of home.
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Syrian Archers seem to have been an inherent part of the Roman ORBAT from almost as soon as Pompey conquered that area. Finding them and to a lesser extent th C A T A P H R A C Ts would be unsurpising anywere. |
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#23 (permalink) |
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Banished
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IF you had to pick the biggest reason, I would pick that the roman government ignored the peasants too long and failed to take to include them as part of the government.
If they did, the goverment would have been more resilient to the internal factors and be able to change without destroying itself. It was getting too expensive to field well trained professional Roman legions and thus the Romans didn't have the stamina anymore. |
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#24 (permalink) | |||
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It appears that auxilia sometimes stayed in their place of origin, such as Caesar's Gallic and German cavalry, or went abroad. Quote:
Last edited by Bulgaroctonus : 04-14-2006 at 18:31 PM. |
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#25 (permalink) | ||
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#26 (permalink) | ||
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Last edited by Bulgaroctonus : 04-15-2006 at 11:51 AM. |
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#27 (permalink) |
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Actus Reus
Senior Contributor
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It was a process not an event.
I think if the Arabs had not come on the scene, the Empire would have survived, recovered from the war with Persia and lasted longer then it did. I know Bulgaroctonus (and others) hold it to have lasted till 1453, but I believe that is pushing it a lot. I would say the "Roman" Empire died somewhere between Battle of Yarmuk and the Seige of Constantinople. Arabs were not the only cause of the demise, but they sure hastened it. |
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#28 (permalink) | |
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A Self Important
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#29 (permalink) | |
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Military Professional
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Up until the 2nd century, Roman life was largely urban. That was what their republic was based around, and that feature did last longer than the Republic. Over the course of the 2nd and 3rd centuries, the population gradually shifted to become much more agricultural. When that population began to decline, the measure used to counter-act a declining labor force in agriculture was serfdom. And so the peasants of the later Roman Empire were just that, peasants. They were not citizens anymore, and they weren't too concerned with who ruled over them. So whereas before they had been citizens of Rome, working their own land and willing to fight to preserve the way of life that was distinctly Roman, in the 4th and 5th centuries they became indifferent. And that was what enabled the Empire to fall to outsiders. The vitality of a motivated populace (and the discipline that was funnelled into) was what built the Empire, and a loss of that vitality and motivation was what caused it to end. Last edited by lwarmonger : 04-15-2006 at 21:59 PM. |
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#30 (permalink) | |
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Senior Contributor
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Imagine that! Alas, it was not to be. Troung is also correct that it was ultimately the Turks that ended the Roman Empire. Their assault came in two main periods. The first was the campaigns of the Seljuk Turks, who were able to inflict severe defeats on the imperial army at Manzikert in 1071 and Myriokephalon in 1176. If the Comnenian Emperors had succeeded in driving the Turks from the Anatolian plateau in the 12th century, I think the Empire would have done very well. The second period of Turkish aggression was the Ottoman expansion that began in 1299 AD with the rise of Osman I. Of course, it was this final wave of Muslim expansion that ended the Empire. The Fourth Crusade was also responsible for the weakness of the Empire in this period, since the Latins had rerouted the trade routes to the Italians' advantage and very much compromised the strength of the Empire with their capture of Constantinople in 1204. I don't know what the Empire could have realistically done to stave off the Ottoman Turks, since the Empire had little strength left at that point. |
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