sophie
Break My Heart
Which year is this? Which emperor? Which barbarians?
Not really. One of the main reasons Adrianople is remembered is because of how rare it was for a 'barbarian' army to defeat a Roman army in a pitched battle. IIRC, all of the other major battles that consisted of 'Romans v. Barbarians' were in actuality "Romans & Barbarians v. Other Romans & Barbarians."By the way, this is just an example. This happend many times.
The Sassanids were never a major threat. They fought Byzantium mainly for Mesopotamia and Armenia. Only in the 6th century, when ERE was really weak they tried to take over a large part of the Empire.
Thanks and I appreciate the explanation, but still is hard for me to accept how can the ERE only slightly richer than WRE while the ERE control a vast fertile area, and connected with trade route that can provide them rich spices, silk and tons of other commodity to trade. It is like the WRE get both riches city and act as a key for the rest of Europe to be able to have access to Eastern commodity. They have Sinai, border with Persia, access to silk road, also Constantinople.
I think you're underestimating what the West had access to, and possible overestimating what the East had.
And while the ERE would indeed have had access to the eastern trades, the WRE had an enormous amount of mineral wealth, primary from Hispania. Vast quantities of gold and silver were pulled out of Spain.
Well possibly I will not going to defend myself on that, I also learning about these issue for curiosity, history for me is a pieces of puzzle that might be useful sometime for me to make a clear picture about something. As I only follow master narrative or you may say popular narrative regarding to what really happen back then. But master narrative in many manners can be also misleading and far from the truth, so I appreciate any challenge and alternative narrative.
Commodities and trading weren't really that important a part of the imperial exchequer. They were, of course, there, but hearth taxes on tens of millions of people and receipts from working millions of acres of state land were far more relevant. Population was the closest analog to wealth for states as large as the Roman Empire.Thanks and I appreciate the explanation, but still is hard for me to accept how can the ERE only slightly richer than WRE while the ERE control a vast fertile area, and connected with trade route that can provide them rich spices, silk and tons of other commodity to trade. It is like the WRE get both riches city and act as a key for the rest of Europe to be able to have access to Eastern commodity. They have Sinai, border with Persia, access to silk road, also Constantinople.
Will you give me a link that direct me to an essay or article that explaining the condition of WRE economy it will be better if the article act as a comparison between WRE and ERE economy. Or maybe you can explain it yourselves how can they only slightly better?
I am not saying that because the Roman Empire was a large state, therefore it was rich and had a good army. I am saying that the Roman Empire was all three of these things, period. The Roman Empire was large and populous; it was reasonably adept at extracting wealth from that populace; it had the largest army of any contemporary state in the world (estimates ranging as high as over half a million soldiers of various kinds for the two halves of the Empire put together).Wrong. Wrong. Because a state its large, it does not mean that it is rich or has a very good army. The Ottomans in the 19th century were large. So, by your logic, they were very rich in the 19th century and had a strong army, right?
Within several years of its establishment, the Sasanian Empire had already sacked Antiocheia and raided widely in Anatolia. The Emperors of the East continued to view Sasanian Iran as their greatest military threat even when Attila was tromping around in the Balkans.christos200 said:The Sassanids were never a major threat. They fought Byzantium mainly for Mesopotamia and Armenia. Only in the 6th century, when ERE was really weak they tried to take over a large part of the Empire.
Meanwhile, the Barbarians did not fight for a province. They wanted to settle inside the Empire.
Quite so.I think you're underestimating what the West had access to, and possible overestimating what the East had.
I would like to know why you think "the barbarians" wanted to settle inside the Empire. Was there some sort of giant magnet on the Palatine Hill to which unlettered savages were inexorably drawn, as though by a force of nature? Or was there an actual reason?
I would like to know why you think "the barbarians" wanted to settle inside the Empire. Was there some sort of giant magnet on the Palatine Hill to which unlettered savages were inexorably drawn, as though by a force of nature? Or was there an actual reason?
In the main, two reasons - one, the empire contained good, fertile farmland...
How mobile were "barbarian" peoples? People seem very casual talking about them bouncing around Europe like pinballs, but these were agrarian peoples, so they can only either have been so mobile, or have moved in very limited numbers.
How mobile were "barbarian" peoples? People seem very casual talking about them bouncing around Europe like pinballs, but these were agrarian peoples, so they can only either have been so mobile, or have moved in very limited numbers.
The Cimbri and Teutones are said to have travelled all over Europe during the Cimbrian War, but then again I barely believe anything the Romans claimed about the Germanic/Celtic/whatever peoples.
I'm still rather unclear about how large overland population movements were even possible before innovations like supply depots. Unless they specifically planned a march years ahead and thus bred an insane amount of livestock, it seems like migrations that are like 20,000+ people would have to just go out and harvest all of the nearby farmland to even survive (let alone have enough food to siege fortified positions). But that means the pack would have to move really slowly since they'd all be spread out to gather fruits and grains.
It really blows my mind when I think about the Huns,Dothraki,and Mongols, who supposedly were traveling with hundreds of thousands of men, women, children, horses and cattle.
The overwhelming majority of "barbarians" would not have known that the Empire contained "fertile farmland", even where it did exist, except possibly in the case of agricultural areas in the immediate vicinity of the border. That might suffice to explain small-scale, short population movements. It does not suffice to explain hordes of savages swarming into Aquitania, Italy, and North Africa, which is the usual claim.In the main, two reasons - one, the empire contained good, fertile farmland, and two - perhaps more importantly - it didn't contain rampaging nastier barbarians. Many nations were driven from their homelands by aggressive expansion, notably by the Huns, and found that the only way to run was through the Roman frontier. That does not mean that the barbarians were the main cause of the Empire's collapse, but it does to some extent explain what they were doing there in the first place. Of course, I don't doubt that a fair few barbarian kings quite fancied the international kudos that taking on the world's greatest power and sacking its greatest city would have brought them.
How mobile were "barbarian" peoples? People seem very casual talking about them bouncing around Europe like pinballs, but these were agrarian peoples, so they can only either have been so mobile, or have moved in very limited numbers.
They can't have been all that mobile, no. Most average people weren't.I can't understand how these "Germanic migrations" allegedly took place. They seem extremely unlikely and poorly documented, if at all. I mean, how are settled agricultural societies supposed to travel hundreds of miles? Food and shelter would be scarce, as they normally had farms and more or less permanent hoousing. The terrain often difficult, and I can't imagine the inhabitants of their destination welcoming huddled masses of roving foreigners with open arms. So I'm not even sure they happened.