How Did The Romans Defeat The Greeks?

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Metatron

Metatron

Күн бұрын

Let's talk about one of the most epic clashes of titans in history.
The Roman Empire[a] was the post-Republican state of ancient Rome and is generally understood to mean the period and territory ruled by the Romans following Octavian's assumption of sole rule under the Principate in 31 BC. It included territory around the Mediterranean in Europe, North Africa, and Western Asia, eventually extending as far north as Britain, and was ruled by emperors. The adoption of Christianity as the state church in 380 and the fall of the Western Roman Empire conventionally marks the end of classical antiquity and the beginning of the Middle Ages.
Rome had expanded its rule to most of the Mediterranean and beyond, but became severely destabilized in civil wars and political conflicts which culminated in the victory of Octavian over Mark Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC and the subsequent conquest of the Ptolemaic Kingdom in Egypt. The Roman Senate granted Octavian overarching power (imperium) and the new title of Augustus, marking his accession as the first Roman emperor of a monarchy with Rome as its sole capital. The vast Roman territories were organized in senatorial and imperial provinces.
Link to my video about Greek and Roman gods
• Top 10 Myths of Ancien...
#ancientrome #ancientgreece #vs

Пікірлер: 1 200
@HellenixSWGoH
@HellenixSWGoH Жыл бұрын
As a native Greek speaker, I must congratulate you on doing a great job and, yes, I did quite enjoyed hearing it. 👏😃
@throatwobblermangrove8510
@throatwobblermangrove8510 Жыл бұрын
I don't know. It was Greek to me. ;-)
@allrequiredfields
@allrequiredfields Жыл бұрын
​@@throatwobblermangrove8510 Alright, it's nap-time, grandpa 😂
@st0rmrider
@st0rmrider Жыл бұрын
Me too
@throatwobblermangrove8510
@throatwobblermangrove8510 Жыл бұрын
@@allrequiredfields Don't forget your binky, youngster. ;-)
@Likexner
@Likexner Жыл бұрын
Kalos!
@realDonaldMcElvy
@realDonaldMcElvy Жыл бұрын
As an Irishman, I don't know what it feels like to be conquered by the Roman Empire. Somebody give me a hug.
@Idkwhythemilkmmanleft
@Idkwhythemilkmmanleft Жыл бұрын
Honestly would have been better than having the British conquering you
@woodsmand
@woodsmand Жыл бұрын
well at least they left behind patricius to cure you of your primitive ways 😆
@ragnarthorson2066
@ragnarthorson2066 Жыл бұрын
and normans@ZoomerStasi
@filmandfirearms
@filmandfirearms Жыл бұрын
No, but you do know what it's like to be invaded. Actually, the Romans are pretty much the only foreign nation to reach England and not invade Ireland
@cwg9238
@cwg9238 Жыл бұрын
come out ye romans come out and fight me like a man
@parmenides432
@parmenides432 Жыл бұрын
As a Greek, i want to say that you nailed the Greek accent. Keep making these High-Quality Content videos.
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
Which Greek accent?
@y.s7787
@y.s7787 Жыл бұрын
He spoke Greek
@OrphicPolytheist
@OrphicPolytheist Жыл бұрын
You also have to factor in that the different Greek cities hated so much each other, unlike the Romans who had unity. Greece was conquered by Rome slowly and strategically, and it's mostly the fault of Greek themselves, as many of the Greek cities invited the Romans to come and fight with them against other Greek cities. They where so focused on hating each other they went as far to ally themselves with the Romans against the other Greek cities, and the Romans took advantage of it and conquered half of Greece with the help of the other half of the Greeks. And then after the rest of the Greeks had been weakened from battle, they had to pay the Romans for mobilizing and fighting with them, but they were broke, and the Romans confiscated the rest half of Greece as a result... Even after the Romans had conquered all of Greece besides the Peloponnesian peninsula, the Peloponnesian cities like Sparta and Corinth thought of forming an alliance against the Romans, but they never formed it because each city wanted to have the leading role, and ended up disbanding the alliance as a result, and some cities like Corinth fought to the last man without any help, and others just gave up and surrendered to the Romans at that point.
@wedgeantilles8575
@wedgeantilles8575 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, Rome was always great at diplomacy too. We often see Rome as the military power, but fail to see how they managed to ally with one faction against others. "Divide et impera" is a very fitting description and history proves that Rome not only excelled at military but on diplomatic territory too.
@binbows2258
@binbows2258 Жыл бұрын
​@@wedgeantilles8575 It's crazy how they managed to do this despite their extreme arrogance and sense of superiority when dealing with foreign nations. Surprised anyone ever listened to them, considering how rude they were.
@spiritusIRATUS
@spiritusIRATUS Жыл бұрын
Greeks always hate and fight each other. You just have to look at Mycenaen times, city states, hellenistic kingdoms, Byzantium, the Greek Revolution (during which Greeks fought THREE civil wars while rebelling against the Turks), WWI and the national schism, WWII and its bloody infighting that led to the aftermath of the Civil War to understand how self destructive the mindset of Greeks has always been. Ironically, it's the best proof for the Greek cultural continuity in the Millenia. My belief is that the Romans adopted this as well from the Greeks, although some infighting/factions tend to appear in most major empires that defeat all external enemies.
@dariovirga7711
@dariovirga7711 Жыл бұрын
United we stand, divided we slowly fall while fighting each other to the bitter end and blaming the others for the defeat? (In short, we fall)
@wedgeantilles8575
@wedgeantilles8575 Жыл бұрын
@@dariovirga7711 And ironically, that is one of the main reasons for the breadown of the Empire. Constant civil wars. Sure, there are a lot of reasons for the decline (und ultimately fall) of Rome. And historians argue a lot about how important each factor was. But in the end, nobody can argue that it severly weakens your empire, if your legions constantly fight each other. If you loose legions to civil war, if you have to strip your bordres to fight your civil war... Whatever other reasons there was, IMO without the civil wars the Empire would have been easily strong enough to wither all storms caused by those other reasons. Germanic invasons and stuff like that? Yeah, a serious factor - but with the legions NOT weakend, those invasions would have never been successful. Especially because constant civil war leads not only to a drain in bodies and equipment. It is a drain on "brain" too. Because if you have to constantly fear another civil war, you will never choose the best people for the job but people who you think you can trust. Or who are just not too good to be a threat to you. (Corbulo as an example - he was too good and Nero got rid of him.) Without the constant civil wars, Rome would still exist today IMO.
@nikfisto4100
@nikfisto4100 Жыл бұрын
Hey Metatron. I am a Greek viewer of 8+ years. You are my favorite channel, keep it up.
@enjoyingend1939
@enjoyingend1939 Жыл бұрын
I am greek and i was really surprised at the excellent pronunciation and accent when you spoke greek. Like so good that i wouldn't notice a difference between you and a regular greek person on the street! Great work, keep it up!
@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ
@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ Жыл бұрын
Let's be honest the difference between a regular Greek and him IS there but he was really good at the pronunciation regardless
@enjoyingend1939
@enjoyingend1939 Жыл бұрын
@@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ shhh I'm being as supportive as possible.
@havocgr1976
@havocgr1976 9 ай бұрын
He does that with many languages!No idea how.
@elasolezito
@elasolezito Жыл бұрын
Greek here, bless you for all the knowledge these years. The Greek sentences were spot on, with very good accent too. Love Roman content.
@magistermagus1211
@magistermagus1211 Жыл бұрын
The way Ares and Mars are interpreted can also be applied to Athena and Minerva: Ares was the attacking god, violent and bloodthirsty, beaten in fights by other gods and sometimes even mortal, almost as if he were the laughing stock. Athena was the godess of defense, strategy, she was smart and praised for her knowledge. Mars was the war god, not only when attacking but also when defending. He also was asociated with agriculture, soldiers sonetime became farmers after serving their duty. Mars was the god of the soldiers.Minerva was still a goddes of war, but she was the godess of the generals, people who stayed away from the battlefield and guided the troops. She had more to do with knowledge, the pursuit of wisdom and arts like knitting.
@whiteeye9584
@whiteeye9584 11 ай бұрын
basiclly romas compared to grece were not feared death i battle
@magistermagus1211
@magistermagus1211 11 ай бұрын
@@whiteeye9584 i think is more likely because the romans were more used to attacking other tribes than the greeks.
@hydrolito
@hydrolito 10 ай бұрын
Aphrodite was less a goddess of war than was Venus how did you leave that out? Artemis and Diana hunted with bows and arrows sometimes even humans.
@magistermagus1211
@magistermagus1211 10 ай бұрын
@@hydrolito true.
@gazlator
@gazlator Жыл бұрын
Superbly detailed and thorough analysis of the major elements of the issue right there, Raff. Excellent stuff, presented in thoroughly academic, rigorous fashion.
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!
@yiannchrst
@yiannchrst Жыл бұрын
As a Greek, I liked this very much! And your Greek pronunciation was really quite good!
@drewpooters62
@drewpooters62 Жыл бұрын
This is a teacher I would enjoy taking a class with.
@vasnikitaras1981
@vasnikitaras1981 Жыл бұрын
You speak my language so bloody well I had to replay the clip a few times. Very pleased as a native Greek to hear your dedication towards getting it right and making sure the pronunciations are spot on.
@AdamosDad
@AdamosDad Жыл бұрын
"Just because technology is improving doesn't mean our humanity is." -John Lovell (Warrior poet)
@Dowlphin
@Dowlphin Жыл бұрын
I'd go further. Technology is an externalized power trip borne out of existential fears and feeling of facing overwhelming dangers that distracts us from developing our vast innate human potential. We have traditionalized ancient existential fears into abstract, recreated phantasies. We give up on love and settle for toys. And the popular claims that technological progress is unstoppable is madness in the ears of sages; a self-weakening, cultist concept, also immature because it rejects responsibility which is fully in the hands of humankind and everybody's choices. People of cold heart want to live in interesting times and are using such ideas as excuses for the disaster emerging from them.
@GuitarsRockForever
@GuitarsRockForever Жыл бұрын
Sadly we are going backward for decades now (I'd say more than half century). We have better tech, but humanity itself goes worse and worse.
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
Usually has an inverse relationship
@AdamosDad
@AdamosDad Жыл бұрын
@@yoeyyoey8937 🔨( >﹏
@AdamosDad
@AdamosDad Жыл бұрын
@@GuitarsRockForever The spirit of man has always been evil, we must choose good and that's not in our nature. So, more powerful weapons are put into the hands of the monsters of the id.
@aaronrowell6943
@aaronrowell6943 Жыл бұрын
Darn it, thought of the Roman empire again
@batboy49
@batboy49 Жыл бұрын
Like every day or two...I was a day away from my next one
@culturecanvas777
@culturecanvas777 Жыл бұрын
Try balancing your mind's diet by... ... thinking of the Mongol Empire and the Aztec Empire too.
@gameforce514
@gameforce514 Жыл бұрын
As a native Greek I enjoyed your take on this topic. However I’d like to see a video on how the Greeks defeated Italy in world war 2 😂
@PinkDevilFish
@PinkDevilFish Жыл бұрын
The channel warpgraphics, I believe, did one recently. The defense of Crete was a wonder
@brucetucker4847
@brucetucker4847 Жыл бұрын
Check out the World War Two channel, they've been doing a week-by-week 79 years ago coverage of the war. There was a good bit of coverage of the Italian-Greek War in the episodes covering late 1940 and early 1941.
@jaysukhwinder7340
@jaysukhwinder7340 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I’d look forward to some more modern stuff from metatron but I can’t lie he knows his stuff about ancient times very well. If it ain’t broke don’t try to fix it……
@brucetucker4847
@brucetucker4847 Жыл бұрын
@@JokerX350 "modern warfare is nowhere near as interesting as ancient." Yeah, well, that's just, like, your opinion, man.
@buzter8135
@buzter8135 Жыл бұрын
​@@brucetucker4847He's right though?
@C_B_Hubbs
@C_B_Hubbs Жыл бұрын
Im surprised Metatron hasnt made this video yet. A very core topic, Ancient Greece & Rome coming together. A great topic for a video!
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
I did many years ago, so this is a sort of high quality remake :)
@Miner-dyne
@Miner-dyne Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the mini-rant on Italia. It was overdue.
@woodsmand
@woodsmand Жыл бұрын
I think its fair to say that the Roman military tradition all the advantages of the greek style of warfare with fewer of its liabilities. By organizing their armies into smaller units like centuries maniples and later cohorts they had greater flexibility especially when you factor in that commanders of those units had some liberty to act on their own judgement and press advantage where he saw it, where as a commander of a syntagma ( a phalanx unit 0f 256 men) could only keep his men in formation and push them forward. By emphasizing swords over spears legionaries would have more mobility than Phalangites and would have a clear advantage once the gap between the romans and an enemy phalanx had been closed.
@spiritusIRATUS
@spiritusIRATUS Жыл бұрын
Greek/Macedonian cavalry and peltasts could have countered that but they were underused or misused on most of the encounters. Eastern Rome - Byzantium would combine the two systems later, fielding formidable heavy infantry with heavy shock cavalry.
@nazarnovitsky9868
@nazarnovitsky9868 Жыл бұрын
Thank You very much for this video !! 😊
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
You're welcome
@kaizokujimbei143
@kaizokujimbei143 Жыл бұрын
I hadn't thought about the Romans today so thanks for the video.
@LuxisAlukard
@LuxisAlukard Жыл бұрын
Maybe Greeks weren't thinking about Roman Empire every day, therefore they fail to prepare for the attack?
@rodneyjohnson5457
@rodneyjohnson5457 Жыл бұрын
Happened to Kemet.
@ugurcannalbant
@ugurcannalbant 8 ай бұрын
We always fought with our own kind and even sided with outsiders which caused the invasion
@eatdabutt
@eatdabutt 8 ай бұрын
A unification of people. We're all descendants of Atlantis.
@YipYop-w6i
@YipYop-w6i Ай бұрын
Greece fell cuz of globalism
@MrInstict
@MrInstict Жыл бұрын
Both your Modern and Ancient Greek are perfect, bravo! Greetings from Greece
@axelsandi
@axelsandi Жыл бұрын
Greek noble one here! Your efforts are being appreciated 👍
@300fusionfall
@300fusionfall Жыл бұрын
As a Greek, great video and great Greek pronunciation
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
Modern Greek pronunciation?
@DimitrisTziounis
@DimitrisTziounis Жыл бұрын
You speak greek correctly and so fast! This is REALLY amazing!
@leemastro9904
@leemastro9904 Жыл бұрын
Another excellent video. As someone with the blood of Rome, on one side, and Greece, on the other, I have always been fascinated by the history, culture, and mythology of my ancestors. Your videos are, by far, the best, on this subject, and every other subject I have seen you cover. I am working my way through all of them, and I have really enjoyed every single one. Your students were extraordinarily lucky to have you as a professor. Regarding the comment about you not being Italian, because of Sicily being your birthplace, it’s pretty likely that you, like me, have some Greek ancestry, if you go back far enough, as they did colonize Sicily, which, I have no doubt, you already knew. Anyway, thanks again for making this, and all of the other amazing videos on your channel.
@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ
@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ Жыл бұрын
Except Roman and Greek mythology aren't exactly the same. I mean sure the Romans took the cultural mythology of ancient Greece but they turn the gods into Villains (especially the poet Ovid who hated gods) and sadly enough a decade ago the school system banned the original version of Greek mythology and they kept the Roman version in order to be "inclusive" with other countries such as Italy...we also done other things for inclusivity that now costs us greatly. Still I applaud metatron, he's a great guy
@alessandrom7181
@alessandrom7181 Жыл бұрын
@@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ In Italy we could give a heck, what you do with your Gods we are not African Americans. LOL
@RayGamingChannel10
@RayGamingChannel10 Жыл бұрын
Been really enjoying your videos the past few years just wondering when is that next video on Egypt coming keep up the honourable work
@elessarKP
@elessarKP Жыл бұрын
I don't know what you are doing studying Greek, but keep doing it! Your pronunciation and grammar has improved dramatically! It shows that you are actually trying and not just reading the words with English pronunciation. Like many others. I especially hate when they pronounce xiphos as [zifos] when it really is [ksípʰos]. Thank you.
@tictacmoe6227
@tictacmoe6227 Жыл бұрын
I didn't know much about Roman or greek history love learning from you. Atleast you try to be 100 % accurate when you talk about history... its refreshing.
@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ
@Aki-kh2qe-StreetKidZZZ Жыл бұрын
I agree, it's something that many many other people don't actually do. Most people try to spread misinformation and propagandas about my country's history and mythology (Greece not Rome).
@SpartanLeonidas1821
@SpartanLeonidas1821 Жыл бұрын
Greek with a Capital G 👍🏻
@margaretmaynard7
@margaretmaynard7 Жыл бұрын
I love your language of hand movement. I've learned that Sicilians speak with such gestures. Beautiful.
@KPH444
@KPH444 Жыл бұрын
All hypotheses of the origin of the name Italia come down to one latin word: Vitulus - which means calf. The latin word derives from the Osco - Umbrian (Center-South Italian region) word Vitlus, again meaning calf. When the Greeks colonized parts of South Italy the refered to it as the "Land of calfs". Later and after they mixed with the locals, they refered to them selves as Italoi, meaning 'People in the land of calfs" . Ancient Greek dropped the letter V, thus Vitulus was pronounced "Itulus". Later Greeks refered to those colonized regions (not including Sicily) as Italia, basically meaning the central-south region of the "Italian boot", however the boot's tip for some reason was not included. So, not to confuse things, Greeks did not invent the name, they simply named the region by the use of a local word, they did not create one based on a Greek word. All of this happened way before Rome became what we know it to have been. Later the Romans expanded the name to describe the whole of the Roman penincula. Yet there is another theory, again going back to the Ancient Greeks. It is possible that the name may have it's origins in the ancient Greek word "ΑΙΘΑΛΙΑ" (AETHALIA). Aithali means ashes. Land of the ashes, because of the volcanos. Then there is another hypothesis about a king named Italus, who united the Oscans and turned them from a nomadic people to farmers and city settlers. Nevertheless and regardless of which of all theories is the right one, Ancient Greeks refer to the Land as Italia from at least he 5th century bc, so any theory that claims Italy is a more recent term is bogus.
@viperbot2k9
@viperbot2k9 Жыл бұрын
This video should of been 1h at minimum. This was great!!!❤
@evaggelosfeideropoulos3807
@evaggelosfeideropoulos3807 Жыл бұрын
The answer here is that Rome wasn’t alone.. Greeks fought with Rome against other Hellenistic kingdoms
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
True. They had strategic abilities that Greeks didn’t. Which is mainly to say that the Greeks were interested in maintaining city states while the Romans were interested in building an empire
@DivineHellas
@DivineHellas Жыл бұрын
Thank you….
@elliskaranikolaou2550
@elliskaranikolaou2550 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating video. As someone of Greek (Samos) and Italian (Campania) Heritage, I thoroughly enjoyed it. Thank you.
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
This was a great analysis you should do a series on this, or more content like this, and I wouldn’t mind longer videos on this topic from you either. Thanks! 🙏
@sparedhorizon5396
@sparedhorizon5396 Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the rant about the Italian peninsula I am no expert historian but seeing people claim that Italy is a modern concept infuriates me. Anyways enjoyed the video immensely have a good week mister
@Pavlos_Charalambous
@Pavlos_Charalambous Жыл бұрын
The sort answer is that the Greeks hated more each other than the Romans allowing gradually Rome to interfere and eventually conquer one by one the " diadochi" states EDIT :By the way.. με εντυπωσίασες με τα ελληνικά σου! Εξαιρετική και φυσική εκφορά λόγου ❤
@DivineHellas
@DivineHellas Жыл бұрын
Very correct ✅
@taylorfusher2997
@taylorfusher2997 Жыл бұрын
To Metatron: Can a Japanese Kanabo hurt the Spartan even if the Spartan had a Aspis shield? Would the Kanabo and club weapons damage the Aspis-shield? Thegnthrand proved It.
@cursedkei66
@cursedkei66 Жыл бұрын
Eh thats a trivial reason tbh. I doubt a united Greece would have triumphed against Rome. The problem essentially lies in the system of government; city states and the kingdoms used by Greeks and their successors could not survive the shock of heavy defeats in comparison to the Roman system. Through the baptism of fire that was the Punic Wars, Rome reinvented its military and logistical capabilities to be able to disgorge obscene amount of military force. If Phillip V won Pydna, Rome would just send more the next season.
@ruas4721
@ruas4721 Жыл бұрын
​@@cursedkei66 A united greece would have destroyed rome without any problems. Just the numbers alone are enought to say this without a reason to argue more.
@Pavlos_Charalambous
@Pavlos_Charalambous Жыл бұрын
@@cursedkei66 the Macedonian kingdom, the selucid empire, Egypt, and the " leagues" of the southern Greece was simply to much to handle butttttttt they was never united they often asked themselves for the Romans to intervening And ofc the Romans took advantage of it The " divide and rule" is literally a roman prohib
@chrismav3908
@chrismav3908 Жыл бұрын
man you speak greek?!? had no idea! μπράβο φίλε μου!
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
ευχαριστώ!
@Sp-zj5hw
@Sp-zj5hw Жыл бұрын
Every one who claims to be descendant of the Romans must speak Greek.
@chrismav3908
@chrismav3908 Жыл бұрын
@@Sp-zj5hw or else they must be descendants of the barbarians?🤣🤣
@Sp-zj5hw
@Sp-zj5hw Жыл бұрын
@@chrismav3908 What differentiates a barbarian from a non-barbarian is basic knowledge of Greek and Latin. Especially if you want to claim you are a Roman you have to know at least one of the two Roman languages well. Metatron speaks both of them well, so he is a senator level.
@nikoszaxarias5200
@nikoszaxarias5200 Жыл бұрын
As a Greek, I enjoyed much of this video. Of course, as everything that has to do with two superpowers that they clash, the wars between Greece and Rome also have some political issues, as the Greeks were far from being united, while Rome was one state. It was easy for the Romans to exploit the disputes and local wars and hatred between the Greek states, so as to intervene and put down their opponents one by one. I liked more the examine of the two styles of warfare, which is exactly what we have been taught here in Greece - and to reinforce it, I can say that after the integration of the Greek world in the Roman Empire, the Greeks also were trained and organised in Roman protypes and there were even Greek Legions, like the 4th and 5th Macedonian Legions, with rich historic of conflicts against the German incursions from the Danube in later years. As for Italy: Italy, aka Italia, is known in Greece with this name even from the Archaic Period, with the meaning (at least for the Greek world) of all the peninsula, including Sicily. The inhabitants there were called Ιταλιώτες (I-ta-li-ό-tes), meaning those who inhabit in Italy, among them the Greeks of Magna Graecia. This for knowledge, from a Greek. Have a nice time everybody!
@awesomehpt8938
@awesomehpt8938 Жыл бұрын
What also needs to be taken into account is that Alexander’s conquest catastrophically depleted Macedonian horse stocks. Meaning that by the battle of Cynoscephalae the Greeks didn’t really have that deadly companion cavalry that could deliver the killer blow against their enemies. Relying too much on the powerful but inflexible phalanx that the romans were able to undermine
@kerwinbrown4180
@kerwinbrown4180 Жыл бұрын
In the one battle I saw the Greeks undermined their own phalanx. The Romans were fast to take advantage of their opponents mistakes. Strategy and tactics win battle and so wars.
@jarlnils435
@jarlnils435 Жыл бұрын
not only that, but the romans had the largest cavalry force of their history, compared to the number of footsoldiers. They had recruited this gigantic cavalry in order to counter the massive cavalry forces of Hannibal. And after they defeated Hannibal, they took thousands of numidians as auxiliaries into their army. The even the seleucids who had the largest greek cavalry force, were dwarved in comparison of the huge roman cavalry during the second roman and macedonian war.
@BlackQback
@BlackQback Жыл бұрын
That's just plain dumb. The Battle of Cynoscephalae was fought in 197 BC, 125 years after Alexander's death (give or take some months). The reason why they didn't have the deadly Companion cavalry wasn't because Alexander's conquest depleted Macedonian horse stock, it was because they didn't have a commander of Alexander's calibre (or at least one such as Pyrrhos of Epiros) and then there was all that infighting between his generals, strategoi and satraps over who's going to inherit (and what) - which also included endless wars in Greece herself (as soon as Antipater died). That said, breeding and trading of horses in Macedonia, Thessaly etc. didn't stop when Alexander took his army and crossed the Hellespont, and, tragically, never returned. Also, Alexander didn't take all or even most of Macedon's horses with him, he left a good portion of horses and trainers at home with Antipater.
@RenegadeRanga
@RenegadeRanga Жыл бұрын
Top notch video as usual. Innovation, adaption and social, political and economic cohesion win the age.
@rpgober3048
@rpgober3048 Жыл бұрын
So ready for this...
@ΠατούληςΦίλιππος
@ΠατούληςΦίλιππος Жыл бұрын
About war innovation, we should not forget Archimedes war machines. Machines that Romans would never imagine, or they would need many many decades to design and construct. The most important factor of Roman conquest against Greece was that Greeks were divided and they were against each other. The second reason is the fantastic organisation of Rome. Wonderful video. I learned much from it
@Dowlphin
@Dowlphin Жыл бұрын
Aussie headcanon: A hoplite is a rabbit and a hopheavy is a kangaroo. (And a hopsweet is a beer.) 3:13 As a cultured person I learned this bit of mythological history in my childhood from playing DooM.
@Purosangue94
@Purosangue94 Жыл бұрын
Well made video on this subject 👏 Bravo frate!
@DIY_Miracle
@DIY_Miracle Жыл бұрын
The Roman takeover of Greece and the greater Balkans is one of the most glossed over events in it's history. How remarkable of a nation that an empire's conquest of several modern nations is often merely considered a footnote.
@coot33
@coot33 Жыл бұрын
It's because of a lack of sources. We are missing all of Titus Livus books after the third Macedonian war. It's a footnote because the documents we have are pretty much footnotes compared to the amount of source from the two punics wars.
@fredazcarate4818
@fredazcarate4818 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video lecture Sir! Your over view of the Hellenic and Roman war culture was a complete bullseye. I await your next video lecture.
@rodrigodeangelis1275
@rodrigodeangelis1275 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a video of yours about Christopher Columbus: was he good or evil? I know the question isn't very meaningful per se, but I really appreciate how you dive into things and put history into perspective. Saluti dall'Italia ❤🇮🇹
@TheUltraGamer98
@TheUltraGamer98 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video! Excellent! Thank you for the greek segment! We appreciate it!
@morganhale3434
@morganhale3434 Жыл бұрын
Very well done for a short presentation. You could go on for hours and still have something left to say.
@Cosmic_Virtue
@Cosmic_Virtue Жыл бұрын
I think is important to say that the clash between Greece and Rome was not exactly Greeks versus Romans but some Greek city-states had already an alliance with Rome and it's a lot more complicated. However that's another great video. ΜΕΤΑΤΡΟΝ ΣE ΕΥΧΑΡΙΣΤΟΥΜΕ !!!
@jimakisspd
@jimakisspd Жыл бұрын
Same goes for the Greco-Persian wars though. Some cities also collaborated with the Persians but we can't say that it was not a clash between Greece and Rome because of that.
@johnclawed
@johnclawed Жыл бұрын
No matter the subject, I love hearing from somebody who really knows his stuff. Your history students are so lucky.
@Godlovesya-j4o
@Godlovesya-j4o Жыл бұрын
Nice, where did you get your sheild or can you make a video on how to make a roman sheild?
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
Fabrica Cacti on facebook
@techtech6289
@techtech6289 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the Italy rant :) (rest of the video is great as well)
@jvl4832
@jvl4832 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this informative video; especially as an Italo American with roots in Sicily, I truly enjoyed the meaning of ˋItalia ´, especially with itsˋ connection to Sicily. Thank you for combating ignorance. Love your competence and knowledge of history.
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
My pleasure, thanks for watching. Grazie
@makis7234
@makis7234 6 ай бұрын
Kudos for nailing the Greek pronunciation Metatron! Great video!!
@yuxomgaming9824
@yuxomgaming9824 Жыл бұрын
To any Greeks or Italians reading this, u don't have to pick which side is better or your favourite. Many Greeks have Roman blood and many Italians have Greek blood. The 2 areas have been exchanging population way earlier than the first recorded history about the 2. Both has the right to celebrate each other's achievements.
@dziosdzynes7663
@dziosdzynes7663 7 ай бұрын
italians arent romans. italians are germans. greeks are romans. only some southern italians have some roman blood.
@hmu05366
@hmu05366 2 ай бұрын
@@dziosdzynes7663what a load of absolute nonsense
@tiusernamenabalw
@tiusernamenabalw 2 ай бұрын
We are all Romans here in Greece!
@giokun100
@giokun100 Ай бұрын
Rome died in 1453 in Greek Constantinople.
@garrettandtammylauman3213
@garrettandtammylauman3213 2 ай бұрын
God bless you sir!!!! I really appreciate your knowledge and the style you present it in. I already love history but you make me love and appreciate it even more. Thank you for teaching us and striving for truth!
@aek1928
@aek1928 Жыл бұрын
A very valid and decisive point in fact, was that it wasn't only the Romans but a larger portion of other Hellenic city-states that fought against other Hellenic city-states that saw the fall of Hellas, however, this is never highlighted.
@NickariusSN
@NickariusSN Жыл бұрын
Eξαιρετικά Ελληνικά Μέτατρον, εύγε!
@lanceburris7850
@lanceburris7850 23 күн бұрын
Always a pleasure to listen to you, teacher.
@stefankwiatkowski5241
@stefankwiatkowski5241 Жыл бұрын
Quite an enjoyable digression on Italia!
@zadaofficial8091
@zadaofficial8091 Жыл бұрын
4:12 Holy crap, that was amazing & sounded effortless!
@Room-yu8yc
@Room-yu8yc Жыл бұрын
Man the greeks were really lucky that the roman empire didn't exist
@Vanillaqyoo
@Vanillaqyoo Жыл бұрын
I loved this video! Made with so much care, I also loved your Greek speaking! You spoke my language so beautifully. 😌🤍
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
It was my pleasure
@Carpediem357
@Carpediem357 Жыл бұрын
Can you make a video discussing why when we think of Greece we never think of Slavery? I think it would be a cool topic for you to dive into.
@helvete_ingres4717
@helvete_ingres4717 Жыл бұрын
we very much think of slavery when we think of ancient greece..
@user-cofee
@user-cofee Жыл бұрын
​@ZoomerStasiCorinthians would beg to differ
@trench01
@trench01 Жыл бұрын
For the most part, slaves in Ancient Greeks were more free than most free people today. They can buy their way out of slavery and they had rights.
@Blox117
@Blox117 Жыл бұрын
its not part of the agenda. we can only ever talk about the atlantic slave trade
@robo5013
@robo5013 Жыл бұрын
@@trench01 BS! Slaves were slaves, period. There were some few house slaves that had some freedom of movement and even the ability to earn money and maybe buy their freedom. The vast majority of slaves remained that way until they died. Do you think that the slaves that generated the Greek's wealth, those working on the olive and grape plantations were 'freer' than slaves of other eras? What about the slaves that worked the mines? Being sent to the mines was a death sentence. Don't believe the SJW college professors who find a few exceptions to the average conditions of slavery throughout history and try to convince you that was how it worked in the majority of cases in order to make slavery in America look more horrendous by comparison. Some slaves in America were allowed those same freedoms as well and could even purchase their own and even family member's freedom. But just like in all of the history of slavery they were the rare exceptions not the rule.
@scipio7837
@scipio7837 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video. Always love when you make these.
@nemanjastevanov9980
@nemanjastevanov9980 Жыл бұрын
I am a simple man, with but a simple sense of importance. I see Metatrons' video - I give a like, and then I watch the video.
@kostassarafis2372
@kostassarafis2372 Жыл бұрын
Damn, you greek pronunciation is so spot on ! Very happy to hear someone foreign speak my language fluently
Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video, I would like you to make a video talking about the first confrontation that occurred between the Macedonian phalanx and the Roman manipuli, which happened during the famous Pyrrhic Wars (280 to 275 B.C.), because I think it would be a perfect complement to this video and by the way You can mention what lessons the Romans learned in those confrontations that they later applied against Carthage and Macedonia in later years. Commenting now on the subject of the video, I must say that the Greeks had the same problem as the Carthaginians and that was that they gave too much value to their citizens, preventing them from conceiving models of war that were more effective against a rival as impetuous as the Romans; The children of Mars, on the other hand, gave more value to collective achievement than to the individual, because they were capable of sacrificing each of their citizens to achieve final victory (something that is reflected in the Second Punic War) and they saw the honorable death in combat, while the Greeks saw it as a waste of life.
@neutronalchemist3241
@neutronalchemist3241 11 ай бұрын
That's pretty interesting. It has to be noted that Pirrhus, a refined and valued Hellenistic commander, faced a very "fresh" legionary model. The Romans had just adopted it, in the Samnitic wars, that had just ended when the Pyrrhic war begun. At that time, the Romans used the manipulary system as a way to fight frontal battles on rough terrain. there was not really a tactical use of the maniples. On the other side, having noticed that, in Italy, battles were not fought only on plains, Pyrrhus adapted the phalanx, intermixing the squares of phalangites with the more mobile formations of his Italic allies. As a result, Pyrrhus generally managed to inflict to the Romans more severe losses that he suffered, but not to gain a decisive victory, and his losses were less replaceable. Hannibal, that was an admirer of Pyrrhus, noted this weakness, and he made sure to fight vs. the Romans only "annihilation battles", where the entire enemy formation was destroyed for little cost of his own. If there was not that possibility, he preferred to concede a limited defeat that to gain a costly victory. Unfortunately (for the Hellenistic rulers) Hannibal "trained" the Romans to use their maniples tactically. To move them sideways, to encircle, to make faints and ambushes. As a result, when the Romans, right after the second Punic war, clashed with the Hellenistic rulers in Greece and middle east, it seemed a clash between professionals and amateurs. The phalanx could still held its own in a pure frontal battle, but too many things had to go its way for it to work and, as soon as something got wrong, it ended in a massacre. And those were still Republican Roman armies. A militia of citizens. In the last clashes, when the post-Marian reform professional Roman army clashed with the last phalanxes in the east, the legionaries won with ridiculous ease.
@nostalji93
@nostalji93 Жыл бұрын
LOVE these kind of videos of you! What a treat
@namesurname4080
@namesurname4080 Жыл бұрын
Fastest click on a metatron video ever!
@meansoftolerance
@meansoftolerance 3 ай бұрын
Impressed by your Greek as well as knowledge and viewpoints. Thumbs up.
@smoore6461
@smoore6461 Жыл бұрын
Another great and fascinating video Metatron! I really enjoy the way you not only inform but also tell stories at the same time. Usung a depth of historical, cultural and religious flavor to the overall examination of a subject. Id love to hear your thoughts on the story of Ceaser "bemoaning" that he had not accomplished as much as alexander following his conquest of Gaul. I imagined it was propaganda or just a story but on some level i could see him feeling that in spite of all he did accomplish..
@SpartanLeonidas1821
@SpartanLeonidas1821 Жыл бұрын
HE HE HE HE HE 🤣
@shegocrazy
@shegocrazy Жыл бұрын
Great video! I esp liked the visuals used. The analysis is top rate as usual.
@peterm4675
@peterm4675 Жыл бұрын
The Metatron is a Sicilian? Inconceivable!
@sanjivjhangiani3243
@sanjivjhangiani3243 Жыл бұрын
It would explain why he is so smart 😂.
@RheaOfSunshine
@RheaOfSunshine Жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your channel! I studied anthropology, history, and philosophy. And I love how precise and important accuracy is to you! Very satisfying to watch!
@geniusgameplay10
@geniusgameplay10 Жыл бұрын
I have been watching your channel for quite a while now and i have to say that your presentation is excellent as is your knowledge of civilizations. I am a big learner of history (Kings and Generals, History Marche, Epic history tv and others) and have studied the life of Alexander the Great since i was a child. As a Greek i admire your level of knowledge of the hellenic language and mindset. I really wish the best for this channel 🙏 Thank you, you are an enlightening individual :)
@metatronyt
@metatronyt Жыл бұрын
Thanks I very much appreciate
@RespectMyAuthoritaah
@RespectMyAuthoritaah Жыл бұрын
Another fine historical piece. Very informative. Thank you.
@SpartanLeonidas1821
@SpartanLeonidas1821 Жыл бұрын
The Short Answer: Disunity Greeks were used to fight other Greeks.. A United Hellenic World, with all their resources, manpower, & technology would have not only defeated Rome, but Conquered the West as well! 👍🏻
@SockAccount111
@SockAccount111 Жыл бұрын
Roman diplomacy too. Local Greek allies of the Romans (Aetolians, Pergamese, Rhodians etc.) played a key role in the wars (e.g. the Aetolians at Kynoskephalae, Pergamese at Magnesia)
@SpartanLeonidas1821
@SpartanLeonidas1821 Жыл бұрын
@@SockAccount111 Use, that’s true! But it was probably easy for them, considering they were already fighting each other like crazy at that time! 😂👍🏻
@andrewfilson6356
@andrewfilson6356 Жыл бұрын
Seen other content &, thank you for the unbiased way you describe history.
@GrecoByzantine1821
@GrecoByzantine1821 Жыл бұрын
As a Greek i can say that's one of the best history channels in KZbin 🇬🇷🇮🇹❤️
@aftermeta6556
@aftermeta6556 Жыл бұрын
As Greek i think at the end you said what i think is the real reason (Greece was in decline and Rome started rising).Thank you for your work.
@SpartanLeonidas1821
@SpartanLeonidas1821 Жыл бұрын
Greece wasn’t United, the Romans were. The Greeks fought each other. Thats the simplified reason..
@AmericanShia786
@AmericanShia786 Жыл бұрын
Your video did a good job of filling in some gaps in my knowledge of how the Romans conquered the Greeks.
@STVODVIL
@STVODVIL Жыл бұрын
I also remember an ancient account of how horrified the Greeks were of the battle wounds suffered when clashing with Rome. Specifically the effectiveness of the Gladius for severing limbs and the stabbing into Greek groins in combat. Such wounds would no doubt have a psychological effect on the Greeks.
@DivineHellas
@DivineHellas Жыл бұрын
Check what the Romans experienced on the Sarissa Phalanx…
@wankawanka3053
@wankawanka3053 Жыл бұрын
What's the source? I knew that some romans described the sight of a macedonian phalanx as frightening
@UrcadeLima
@UrcadeLima 11 ай бұрын
Respect for your Greek pronunciation!! It's literally amazing ! Μπράβο ! 🇬🇷🇮🇹
@mk14m0
@mk14m0 Жыл бұрын
One of the biggest factors in the Roman conquest of the Macedonian / Greek powers was population. By the 2nd century BCE, both sides had access to the oblong shields and javelins--the Greeks called such troops Thyreophoroi and Thorakitai, and they were armed in a manner that was very similar to the armament of the Polybian legions. What the Romans had that the Greeks lacked was depth of manpower. The late Hellenistic Greek kingdoms mostly raised their armies from mercenaries--being kingdoms, ruled by royal houses, they did not have a citizen class anymore. The Romans, though, did have a citizen army, and it gave them a huge manpower advantage. A defeat for a Hellenistic Greek kingdom left it with no army, and often with no money to hire a replacement army. A defeat for Rome meant that it needed to raise a new army, which was something it could do. This is how Rome could absorb multiple defeats in battles against enemies like Hannibal or Pyrrhus of Epirus, and still bounce back to win the war.
@Michael_the_Drunkard
@Michael_the_Drunkard Жыл бұрын
Using BCE is gay
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
@@Michael_the_Drunkardwhy
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
Great analysis.
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
I think it’s also the fact that Rome was more interested in fighting in general so they continued to develop their military tactics much more than anyone else
@krulak292
@krulak292 Жыл бұрын
@@yoeyyoey8937 Because the dates we currently use were invented by the Roman Church. Gregorian calendar. Those priests calculated the dates VEERY accurately, and it would be tough doing that even in our current times. So it's pretty disrespectful throwing BC out to appear more "scientific", when it's religious to begin with.
@MadAztec96
@MadAztec96 Жыл бұрын
One of the oddest and funniest things about learning Roman history, was the confusion over Hastati, Though it is so Roman to keep the name despite the reforms. Thank you for mentioning that, helped make my day! xD
@magister343
@magister343 Жыл бұрын
Italia comes from the Oscan "víteliú" meaning "Land of bull calves."
@alexisrichard8166
@alexisrichard8166 11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. Best channel on KZbin in my opinion.
@trench01
@trench01 Жыл бұрын
Nice video but some things not mentioned I feel. 1 The Greeks lost to the Greeks working with Romans. So no Romans alone did not defeat the Greeks. Greeks lose when they get outnumbers by great numbers. Romans evaluated the weakness of Greece and took advantage of Greece weaken state when Greece battled itself which oddly was not mentioned. 2 Roman poet Horace 65 BC[ said "Captive Greece took captive her rude conqueror and brought the arts to the rustic Latin lands" This quote reflects the idea that while Rome may have conquered Greece through military power, it was Greek culture and arts that eventually had a profound influence on Roman society. Which shows Greece took over Roman which Greeks did not mind as long as the Romans Hellenized towards them despite Romans messed up many times. Romans wanted to be identified as Greeks to say they are descendants of the Greek Trojans in a way. 3 Sicily was part of Greece and so was many parts of Italy. Greeks have been around the world over 2500 years as admitted by evidence in China, America, Easter Island, etc. Sicily is 2 Greek words (siké & elaia) FIG & OLIVE, based on the two plants typical of the island. 4 Greek language of the educated which is why Christ and the Apostles spoke Greek as various historians say and not a dead language as some assume. As John Adams said Greek is the perfect language and a shame Americans do not speak it. 5 When people say Roman architecture, Roman engineering, Roman etc. It means during the time of Roman in what Greeks have done since Romans hired Greeks to do most things. 6 This also reflects when Byzantium fell when the Greeks left and went to Italy and help started the renascence to bring more Greek knowledge to the region. 7 Italy has a saying "una faccia una razza" (one face one race) due to how many people in Italy were Greeks which is why some DNA tests at times gets can not tell the difference. Greek colonization had a significant lasting effect on the local genetic landscape of Southern Italy and Sicily (Magna Graecia). This shared history and genetic mixing make it challenging for DNA tests to distinguish between the two. 8 why was Greece always outnumbered? Due to barbarian nature of stealing, slaves, hareem, and oppression of its citizens. Greece did not do that to the extent others did and so it got outnumbered. In short the Machiavellian way of winning wars to make everyone appressed more than Free.
@yoeyyoey8937
@yoeyyoey8937 Жыл бұрын
You are right. The strategy of Rome was much different, which includes the fact that it’s Rome and Greece was dozens of different states
@krymsonuchiha14
@krymsonuchiha14 Жыл бұрын
As my first book literally begins around this time, I needed this video!!
@CrimsonNasferatu
@CrimsonNasferatu Жыл бұрын
Hello Great stuff. I got to point out some things though 1. According to sources Rome's population was much higher than Greece at the time which would have a major impact. 2. At the point Rome went off to fight in the Macedonian wars They had already fought the Greeks and Greek style armies for at least a century while the Greeks had no such experience fighting the romans. (Persians and Asians pretty much fought the polar opposite of how romans fought) Basically what you said but with a little extra insight.
@DivineHellas
@DivineHellas Жыл бұрын
Nice points
@SpartanLeonidas1821
@SpartanLeonidas1821 Жыл бұрын
The United Hellenic World would have steam-rolled the Romans. To think otherwise, is delusional!
@bembelknecht
@bembelknecht Жыл бұрын
Could be worse if you were calabrian... funny how so many people always put about 600 years into 1 bag, while we witnessed how fast inovation can take place; pocketable mini computers are with us for roughly 15 years now and while most keyboard warriors will use those to watch and comment using a touchscreen, we still call it a phone
@TrueBasketball23
@TrueBasketball23 Жыл бұрын
Wow. Excellent as always. Very comprehensive explanation of all elements that caused the absorption and victory of rome over greece - How important mentality is in victory.
@user-sc5iv2rp2t
@user-sc5iv2rp2t Жыл бұрын
In the end the two cultures merged into one and we have a half Greek half Serbian with Greek surname Greek speaking Roman emperor defending Constantine's city in 1453.
@Michael_the_Drunkard
@Michael_the_Drunkard Жыл бұрын
*half-Greek and half-Illyrian. The Serbs would come in the 6th century.
@C_R_O_M________
@C_R_O_M________ Жыл бұрын
@@JokerX350 Serbian as in "born in today's Serbia" (which had a different name back then - the Serbians came in later) not ethnic Serbians or Slavs. They were Romans. Justinian for example was born in the 5th century A.D. and the Slavs came in about the 6th century A.D.
@GAMER123GAMING
@GAMER123GAMING Жыл бұрын
WE WUZ GREEKS AND SERBIANS WE WUZ ALSO ROMANS GERMANS CANT BE ROMANS CUZ WEZ SAID SO
@DemetriosKongas
@DemetriosKongas Жыл бұрын
​@@Michael_the_Drunkard1453 was the 15th century.
@BrianRPaterson
@BrianRPaterson Жыл бұрын
Glad to see Metatron back up and putting out content on KZbin. It's always entertaining and educational. I hope you are getting paid! Cheers
@GothPaoki
@GothPaoki Жыл бұрын
So it's pasta versus Moussaka!
@lupusHegemonia
@lupusHegemonia Жыл бұрын
Dear friend, greetings from Greece! I love your videos so much as they are absolutely historically accurate - and personally I am a History fanatic (Greek and world) and I like people like you who are SERIOUS about History. You said and showed many many details about the Greeks and Romans - and rightly so. Basically, however, there is ONE AND ONLY REASON why the Romans finally overcame and conquered the ancient Greeks: They adopted and copied everything from the Greeks - let's not forget that the ancestors of the Romans were TROJANS - but they UPGRADE them, there was an evolution in what they did! They adopted so many things from Greeks, but they CHANGED THEM ALL to much much better versions! Yes of course, the Romans also used "Phalanx", but it was MUCH DIFFERENT than the Greek, more clever designed! The Greeks simply had a phalanx of heavily armed infantrymen who tried to PUSH the enemy line until broke, while at the same time the first 2-3 lines were hitting with their spears. The Greeks rarely used AUXILIARY troops (spearmen, peltasts, slingers or archers) and EVEN more rarely used cavalry (except Alexander the Great, who promoted cavalry from an AUXILIARY WEAPON to a PRIMARY WEAPON of his army)! Especially my beloved ARROGANT Spartans, they disliked any other kind of military unit, other than a heavy hoplite phalanx! Originally, the Romans were fighting similar to the Greeks, but changed everything! They may had long spears too at the begining, but soon they created their clever designed "PILLUM" javelins! They had "Phalanx" too, but the Roman Legionnaires were BOTH auxiliary AND heavy infantry together! In the begining of a battle, the Romans were throwing them (1-2 javelin per man) towards the enemy line, hitting the shields and the thin metal points BENDED from the weight and practically making the enemy shields useless! Later, the redesign by the Roman armor played also an important role. The Greeks still used the heavy ROUND shields that had to be PERFECTLY placed together each other, so the Greek line had no gaps - while the Greek shield did NOT PROTECT the whole body PERFECTLY, when Romans made their own square curved large shield that perfectly protected the soldier, while didn't need to be perfectly attached side by side with the other shields! Also, the Roman shield, in addition to protection, was also used OFFENSIVELY, while the Greek shield could not be used in this way! Romans did adopt the Spartan short sword, but they also "upgraded" it into their own "Gladius", a far superior sword for hand-to-hand combat! Also, Romans invented a great system of "refreshing" the front line; they didn't letting the first line fight endlessly, but in period time the centurions were giving a signal (whistles) and the front lines quickly withdrew to last while the next line took their place, therefore the FRONT LINE WAS ALWAYS "FRESH" and capable to give all their mighty, non stop!!! Not mention the far better designed full plate (later period) armor, the MUCH MUCH BETTER designed helmets (with that superb neck protection), etc etc. ROMANS DID... WHAT ANCIENT GREEKS (AND MODERN GREEKS) DIDN'T / DON'T: They have changed themselves TO ADOPTE THE FUTURE. They've changed, because the future was changing!!! Ancient Greeks AND MODERN GREEKS refuced/refucing to change!!! Greeks DON'T LIKE new changes, they like their own old fashion way of life, way of culture, style, etc. THE MOST DIFFICULT thing to a Greek, is to tell him to CHANGE HIS MIND AND HIS WAYS, to adopt new MODERN ones! Ancient Greeks REFUCED to see the new ways, the future - they were KEEP TRYING to use their old-school ways, their old-school warefare tactics and units. Romans on the other hand, TOTALLY CHANGED their ways, they totally ADVANCED their ways and made them much much better - that's why they won, that's simple!
@patricialavery8270
@patricialavery8270 Жыл бұрын
This will probably tee off those Euros who like to scream about the US being aggressors all the time,(like a certain British dude who recently got a taste of cancel culture like Metatron)but like the Romans we were farmers who kept being pestered until they set their minds to learning war and got really,really good at it.The hunger for "more sophisticated" culture is something I also think Americans and Ancient Romans share.(this will probably get a horse laugh from bigoted snobs but Americans love European and Japanese stuff)
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