The Romans were too adament to allow anyone who wasn't Roman born into their society.

The Romans were too adament to allow anyone who wasn't Roman born into their society.
Not sure : Without Christians, maybe not monotheim as "dominant" religion in the Empire. The others religions were far more tolerant, and monotheists have the habit to be more loyal to their priests than to their country.
Christianity was a big blunder to the liberties and to the progress in the Empire.
lol at "other religions were more tolerant than Christianity." Which ones? Judaism, perhaps, which had not been the state religion of any nation for a millennium. Otherwise, who?
Au contraire, the Catholic Church was the primary sponsor for the formulators of human rights and scientific achievements; as monks were the primary scientists in the Middle Ages, and the Church established several universities and observatories.
Tolerance is burying foreigners alive because totally unrelated foreigners are beating your armies?Greco-Roman polytheism, Roman mystery religions such as Mithra, Zoroastrianism. And really pretty much any polytheistic, animistic, shamanistic, and "pagan" religion.
Tell that to Julianus.
So...what was the point behind closing the Antiochene cathedral?He never attempted to destroy Christianity only remove it from the elite.
Not sure : Without Christians, maybe not monotheim as "dominant" religion in the Empire. The others religions were far more tolerant, and monotheists have the habit to be more loyal to their priests than to their country.
Christianity was a big blunder to the liberties and to the progress in the Empire.
I would make Archduke Ferdan not exsist so that WW1 would'nt happen, WW2, and so forth.
The notion that WWI was inevitable because of all that junk, flying in the face of a list of integrative and deterrent developments over the past several decades, is a bit silly.The notion that WWI would've been entirely averted hadn't it been for Gavrilo Princip is a bit silly. There's a reason the assassination is called the "powder keg" of the war: because it was really a result of several decades of militarism, nationalism, alliances, protectionism, diplomatic gaffes, revanchism, imperialism, so on and so forth.
I would make Archduke Ferdan not exsist so that WW1 would'nt happen, WW2, and so forth.
The notion that WWI was inevitable because of all that junk, flying in the face of a list of integrative and deterrent developments over the past several decades, is a bit silly.
Or you know. Socrates. I loved when a philosophy professor told me with a serious face that the reason the middle ages produced no one on par with Socrates was because the Greeks were more tolerant.Tell that to Julianus.
Britain was always threatened by somebody's navy and France was no more frustrated then it had been for the past 40 some-odd years. The very fact that the news of the assassination was met by such an underwhelming response shows that no one was thinking war was "innevitable."The Balkans were only getting more restless, the French more frustrated by Germany, and the British more intimidated by a threat to their naval power. Perhaps if miraculously nothing set the war off in 10-20 years, the situation might've started to improve.
Or you know. Socrates. I loved when a philosophy professor told me with a serious face that the reason the middle ages produced no one on par with Socrates was because the Greeks were more tolerant.
"Didn't the Greeks have Socrates put to death for his teaching?"
"Yes...But until they did that, they were tolerant of him."
He was a great teacher otherwise he just had a bit of the old misty eyed romanticism for the Greeks. Perfectly acceptable considering the man was 90 years old.
Some people shouldn't be allowed to teach.