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Everything posted by caldrail
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Which Province Was Most Valuable To Rome
caldrail replied to FLavius Valerius Constantinus's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Agree again. However, the stability of egypt and its produce was of enormous benefit to Romes burgeoning population. It should be remembered the climate was wetter 2000 years ago and crops were easier to grow than now. If I remember right, Sardinia had a very nasty culture (even for roman tastes) and output wasn't guaranteed. Wasn't there a pirate problem in Sardinia? -
Sulla really did believe he had saved Rome, hence his retirement to ordinary life. Of course, he had his own interest in mind. Very few people take enormous risks politically without a good reason, without something to gain. As with any culture, including ours, laws apply to those who get caught bending them. Traditions are often cast aside when expedient - the romans were past masters at that!
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I think trying to understand something by intense analysis of the finer points of latin isn't going to solve it. Understanding what it really meant to romans means understanding roman minds and circumstances, which is what I tried to do in my previous answer. Latin is a language with complex grammar, and unless you're born to it the nuances tend to be lost. I doubt ordinary romans ever spoke or wrote correct grammar 100% of the time, which is one reason why so many roman kids got whacked by their teachers.
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Which Province Was Most Valuable To Rome
caldrail replied to FLavius Valerius Constantinus's topic in Imperium Romanorum
I agree. Egypt was a vital breadbasket for Rome. -
Rome had a policy of preparing the way. Before this territory was invaded, deals were done and one tribe set against another. A case of divide and conquer. Also, barbarians aren't usually united. It takes a leader like Arminius to present a unified obstacle. Sorry, I missed the point. I agree with most of what you said, particularly since Rome as an empire didn't have the same appeal with romans that it once did. But it did for the barbarians. They were keen to be in on the deal to improve their living standards etc. Its just when they finally got there they didn't really like running it, and weren't to good at it
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What's Up With That?!
caldrail replied to amcrazyjus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
LOL! This is a forum, not a english exam. Besides, I prefer to treat peoples opinions with respect whether I agree or not. I'm entitled to an opinion too. In a sense I agree provided the tribune to be promoted has actually commanded in battle. Commanding say, a cohort or an army is different, largely due to less coherence with increasing size. Hey... I used a clever word! -
Unarmed Combat Training
caldrail replied to Legionnaire's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
I thought I was -
Quite so, but remember the Magna Carta was won by gathering a bunch of nobles and threatening the king with rebellion.
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He was a lawyer. Admin was something he gave his officers.
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As far as I'm aware, the original battle site, which extended a considerable distance, was deforested centuries ago. A small area has been restored to natural condition in recent years but I'm not sure if thats at the location where the battle took place.
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Imitation Legions
caldrail replied to Neos Dionysos's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
Its interesting that Hannibal copies roman arms and armour, but were they really up to legionary standards? I doubt it. Its more likely they came close but no cigar. -
Not quite. Gladiators were of varying standard. A criminal sent out was going to die, and I suspect the crowd wanted to see how much he suffered. In that respect, the arena could be '8 out of 8'. Prisoners of war were often used for fake battles since they had plenty to get rid of, but I can't really see how umpires controlled the fight, so that too was bloody by neccessity. Professional gladiators on the other hand were highly trained from the start. The real obstacle for them was surviving their first fight, giving them useful experience and improving their survival chances a lot. These fights were rigidly controlled. Romans wanted a fair fight, an interesting fight, an exciting fight. It should be noted that most gladiators armour was arranged so that a fatal wound would cause the most spectacular blood loss. This was for entertainment. No 'scratches above the eyebrows' to stop the fight. For their own part, gladiators were very proud of the entertainment they provided - it brought them fame, fortune, and in some cases some very desirable perks for a slave. So although the audience might have persuaded the games editor (or emperor) to spare 90% of losers they did so because the man involved had literally fought for his life. Had he been a wuss, then a kill was demanded. He was not worthy to be spared. Blood was less important than the excitment of two men going toe-to-toe, but it served to dramatise the defeat of the loser. There were even fights without mercy, where a losing gladiator was automatically executed. Imagine the curiosity of watching two women fight as gladiators. They may have been the fairer sex in a mans world, but they were called upon to fight to the death too for the crowd. With animals, the audience wanted to see nature from a safe distance. They wanted big cats leaping at their victims, bears tearing their victims apart, elephants throwing victims like rag dolls, or rhino's and bulls smashing victims aside. They wanted speed, agility, ferocity, sheer danger. With bestiarii (animal fighters) in the ring, then we return somewhat to the gladiator, since now the audience has someone to cheer, and see how bravely he faces a creature that can kill him instantly. So many of these animals were slain to demonstrate the power of Rome over nature that blood was indeed very visible, but again, it wasn't an end in itself, rather a advertisment that this creature had died. Having said that, entertainment was paramount. Not all the acts were fatal. We see one-on-one fights to the first blood, or practice bouts with wooden swords. We see clowns pretending to fight badly, or displays of animals doing things rather like the circus of recent times. The arena was indeed sometimes a bloody place, but only when blood was called for.
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I think this practice had died out during the periods of my interests, 220's BC to 80'sAD No it hadn't. We know from remains found at Ephesus that women left their children in the sewers to die. Also, when Nero had Agrippina killed, protestors left babies outside the palace as a gesture of disgust. If a roman child was disabled, it was unlikely to survive anyway so the average father would probably not waste time rearing it to adulthood. Since these unwanted children were a ready source of slaves, the actual percentage of infanticides isn't as high as it seems.
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If Celts Or Germanic Tribes Use Of Cavalry
caldrail replied to rvmaximus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
Its easy to see the celts/germans as Hells Angels with swords and furry swimming trunks. But despite that, lets remember that they also raised families and provided for them even if they were somewhat brutish. -
What's Up With That?!
caldrail replied to amcrazyjus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
I'd be more interested in the guy who knows how to win a battle and inspire men to do just that. Your viewpoint is probably similar to the romans, but then some roman commanders had indeed risen from the ranks. An emperor or two as well. -
Its animal behaviour. By putting on a display (in this case fastidious grooming) you advertise to your rivals that you are.. well... better somehow. Until they beat you in confrontations that is.
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Romans: What Made Them Better Fighters ?
caldrail replied to rvmaximus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
The word means 'malingerer', or someone who decides not to turn up when required. -
If Celts Or Germanic Tribes Use Of Cavalry
caldrail replied to rvmaximus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
Plunder was something the romans took for granted, but then it was pretty well accepted by any army that your soldiers took what they wanted after your enemies defeat. I'm not sure if celtic/german cavalry would halt and throw coins in the air rather than pursue their target to his grave. Tacitus certainly wouldn't have thought that - his perception of germanians was that they preferred to fight and get drunk above all else. Perhaps his educated upper class roman viewpoint is biased, but he had a point. -
Imitation Legions
caldrail replied to Neos Dionysos's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
Are there any other examples? -
What's Up With That?!
caldrail replied to amcrazyjus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
Can you imagine? There you are, commanding your first battle. You've handed out orders, the troops are in position, and the enemy begins to manoever. At this point you feel excited. You're probably confident of victory. Then it all starts getting out of hand. A unit breaks, others chase the enemy, some are clearly in the wrong place sitting on the hill chewing grass stems. Officers are shouting at you for orders and you discover the enemy prepared a suprise attack. Its at that point that your suitability for battlefield command really does get tested - or are you up to it? Is there a senior officer taking initiative from you to save the day? Or is this a disaster for Rome? Armchair debates about battles are great because no-one gets hurt! -
If Celts Or Germanic Tribes Use Of Cavalry
caldrail replied to rvmaximus's topic in Gloria Exercitus - 'Glory of the Army'
The key here is the need for celts/germans to show individual prowess in combat. There wasn't much teamwork - they would rather shout loudly, swing swords around their heads, and run full pelt toward the enemy. Rather like a rioting mob toward police lines. Cavalry require close control to be effective. Thats something the celts/germans rarely had so I've decided that I was initially wrong. Their cavalry wouldn't be particularly effective since most of it would disappeared over the horizon chasing anyone in sight. Thats not a slur on the courage of those men - they had plenty - but a lack of command and control -
I think you have to view the praetorians as an elite unit by status, not ability. Pay and perks were definitely better than the legions so entry into the praetorians would be seen as desirable. I don't think their training was any different, and given the relative lack of practice in combat possibly offset any advantage a newbie praetorian had by merit (apart from the occaisions when they did go to war that is, but their ability was still at the legionary level)
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Single Biggest Contributor To Rome's Collapse
caldrail replied to tflex's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Disagree, there were still plenty of Italics in the army, but all were in Italica, The Army of stilicho against the Visigoths was entirly italic, the Army of Aurelianus against the Alemannics was entirly italic. Records and documents are being hold in the Communale Library of Milan and Piacenza and in the Cathedral Archive of Arezzo. Further More The Germanic mercenaries were also very discaplined, and were not known as troublemakers. Well, I freely admit the final days aren't my strong point, but I have seen records of some very undesirable behaviour of germans. They weren't 'roman'. Some clearly couldn't care less, although I would expect many did want to be. Standards of behaviour simply weren't up to roman standards. But I accept your correction about the numbers of italics with good grace sir. -
Single Biggest Contributor To Rome's Collapse
caldrail replied to tflex's topic in Imperium Romanorum
I would like to add that the 'civilisation' of the roman soldier is a bit of a misnomer. Toward the end the legions were nowhere near the standard they had been, with german mercenaries en-masse, many of whom bullied the locals as a matter of course. Few italians would have liked life in the army by then, and most avoided it at all costs including a big increase in the practice of cutting off one's thumb so a sword could not be held.