I think well before. Tacitus in 98 AD does separates many of the present people as various Germanic tribes living in the North quite accurately (talks about Swedes and Finns or Sami for example). Of course he hadn't visited the place, but still.But did these regional distinctions take place before or after the Viking era? — schopenhauer1
I doubt we of the West will ever get over the Roman Empire. We've always looked back to it, and I think we always will. — Ciceronianus the White
What was, or rather, what is the Roman Empire? — Gus Lamarch
what makes a concept of state legitimate so that it has influence over territories that it does not control — Gus Lamarch
In the end, the thought that may arise in the mind is that we did not develop anything, nor did we build anything, we just destroyed a great civilization that was the world, and now we try to reconstruct it through the little pieces that remain... — Gus Lamarch
But I think we can claim to have surpassed the ancients in some ways, at least, since the development of the sciences. Technologically, certainly. But those achievements are secular. — Ciceronianus the White
When the Roman erne/earn (eagle) cast its shadow over the countries of the Eastern Mediterranean, Greek thought began to wilt. The imperial clods of dirt took pride in, unlike the quirky “Greeklets”, doing the sciences only as far as bidden by immediate need (and that means not doing them at all). Cicero reports that among the Greeks, nothing was more renowned than mathematics, “but we have cared for this art only so far as it is handy in measuring and reckoning (calculating)” (Tusc. 1, 5). Thus, the Romans indeed only interfere once with the development of mathematics: through murdering Archimedes. In the year 47 BC, Caesar set the Egyptian fleet in the harbour of Alexandria alight; the fire spread to the city and annihilated the most important bookhouse in the ancient world. — Harro Heuser, translated from German into English by me, ᛏᚱᛁᛊᛏᚨᚾᚨᛁ᛫ᛚ
Later empires, Spanish, French and British, imitated it — Ciceronianus the White
The Alaric sack of Rome is only some 40 years after a Christian emperor (Gratian) removed the victory statue and altar in the senate, and a mere 13 years after the cult of idols was forbidden. This is the thesis of Edward Gibbon, and I think he is right. Religious division and internecine hatreds between pagans and christians is what brought them down. — Olivier5
So, for that matter, did the barbarian nations which took its place in the West, through Charlemagne to the rather absurdly named Holy Roman Empire. — Ciceronianus the White
Its success and lasting influence can be attributed to several things. Roads, an unmatched military for many years — Ciceronianus the White
But I don't think the influence of a state beyond its borders is a question of legitimacy. Legitimacy maybe denied or disputed. Maybe the Latin word imperium best describes what creates it. Authority, or perceived authority, in the creation and imposition of standards governing various aspects of our lives. — Ciceronianus the White
No states are morally legitimate; all any state ever has is its effective control over a territory. — Pfhorrest
Firstly, how can you speak for all “Westerners”? — Tristan L
Thirdly, yearning for the Roman Empire — Tristan L
Also, by ending the Roman Empire, we ended slavery. — Tristan L
Did the Romans have human rights? Did they have animal rights? — Tristan L
Didn’t their bloodthirsty masses love to watch humans and animals butcher each other? — Tristan L
Regarding religious matters, which Roman can hold a candle to Theech (German) mystics like Meister Eckhart? — Tristan L
"I doubt we of the West will ever get over the Roman Empire" doesn't mean "We of the West will never get over the Roman Empire." Nor does "I think you're being pedantic and fractious" mean "You are being pedantic and fractious." — Ciceronianus the White
Who's this "we"? — Ciceronianus the White
Legal rights, you mean? In fact, Roman citizens had quite a few of what we'd now call legal rights. — Ciceronianus the White
As for animal rights, what animal rights do you maintain we have? — Ciceronianus the White
You must enjoy Hollywood movies. — Ciceronianus the White
I'm not very fond of mystics generally, nor of German mystics in particular, sorry. — Ciceronianus the White
Philo and Plotinus just for the hell of it (I speak of Rome and its Empire, which included quite a few different people, you know). — Ciceronianus the White
The fact remains that people were trying to reconstruct the Western empire long after it was gone, that there was quite some nostalgia for it during the centuries that came after its fall. — Olivier5
Another fact that was raised here is that none of the Goths who raided Rome wanted the end of the empire. They wanted to boss the empire, or sometimes to get gold out of it it, but not to destroy it. — Olivier5
its riches — Olivier5
... which were mostly Egyptian, Babylonian, and Greek.its sciences — Olivier5
the pregnancy that this empire has had on people's minds even beyond its borders and beyond its time. — Olivier5
Actually, Atawulf did originally try to erase the Roman Empire, but later found the task to hard for him to achieve. — Tristan L
One great vice of the Romans and even more so the Greeks was their ethno-supremacism. — Tristan L
As Rome wasn't alone and didn't just face "barbaric" tribes and the celts in the north, it would be interesting to learn how much the Persian Empire (Sassanid Empire etc.) of the same age left it's mark on the later era. Unfortunately the Mongols devastated the area of modern Iran and Iraq later while Western Europe avoided the Mongol scourge. Later Chinese culture and society obviously got similar influence from the age of Antiquity.Due to the Roman Empire's vast extent and long endurance, the institutions and culture of Rome had a profound and lasting influence on the development of language, religion, art, architecture, philosophy, law, and forms of government in the territory it governed, and far beyond. — Gus Lamarch
As Rome wasn't alone and didn't just face "barbaric" tribes and the celts in the north, it would be interesting to learn how much the Persian Empire (Sassanid Empire etc.) of the same age left it's mark on the later era. — ssu
Unfortunately the Mongols devastated the area of modern Iran and Iraq later — ssu
Later Chinese culture and society obviously got similar influence from the age of Antiquity. — ssu
Who's this "we"?
— Ciceronianus the White
The dwellers of the modern free Western Eurasia and their forebears and descendents. — Tristan L
I mean laws that reflect objective moral law in respecting the wirthe (dignity) of all human beings (the only humans that lack it are those who have forfeited it by freely choosing to do very evil deeds). — Tristan L
You might want to read about something called gladiator fights, and the disgusted report that Seneca wrote about the brutality and perversion of gladiatorial games and the raw bloodthirst of the spectators. — Tristan L
With what can the Romans match the beyond-being of Plato’s One or the Godhead of Meister Eckhart? — Tristan L
When last I looked, Philo was Jewish and Plotinus likely Egyptian. By your reasoning, it seems, all the peoples who lived under Mongol rule should be regarded as Mongols, making a big part of all Eurasians Mongols. — Tristan L
Rome's republican institutions have left an enduring legacy, influencing the Italian city-state republics of the medieval period, as well as the early United States and other modern democratic republics. — Gus Lamarch
You to have no qualms about speaking for all of them, it seems. — Ciceronianus the White
As to slavery, for example, the jurist Ulpian maintained that everyone is born free according to natural law, regardless of the civil law; the jurist Florentinus stated that slavery is an institution against nature. — Ciceronianus the White
The ideal Roman douths (virtues) were also rather admirable, and if most Romans had actually had them and the other douths, Rome would likely have have been a good state — Tristan L
deaths of gladiators have been wildly exaggerated [...] by Hollywood and other manufacturers of titillating fantasies enjoyed by too many. — Ciceronianus the White
we don't have much basis on which to condemn them, given that there are many of us who it seems enjoy seeing others beaten senseless in ultimate fighting and cage matches, or concussed to the point of disability or death in American football and other modern "sports." — Ciceronianus the White
Then of course there's the peculiarly Spanish ritualistic and ceremonial torture and killing of bulls. Until fairly recently, bear-baiting had its fans. Dog fights are popular among some. — Ciceronianus the White
Seneca, of course, wasn't the only ancient Romans who loathed gladiatorial contests. Marcus Aurelius hated them as well. — Ciceronianus the White
I have no idea what is meant by them. — Ciceronianus the White
You seem [...] and sway. — Ciceronianus the White
As Rome wasn't alone and didn't just face "barbaric" tribes and the celts in the north, it would be interesting to learn how much the Persian Empire (Sassanid Empire etc.) of the same age left it's mark on the later era. Unfortunately the Mongols devastated the area of modern Iran and Iraq later while Western Europe avoided the Mongol scourge. Later Chinese culture and society obviously got similar influence from the age of Antiquity. — ssu
Let's not forget. Let's try to look at them with the same objectivity (and criticism) that we look at our own "Western" history. If we do that, many interesting question arise.Also, let’s not forget the great Arab and other Islamic thinkers, scientists, and mathematicians like Omar Khayyam and Al-Khwarizmi, who greatly contributed to the modern world with their fruits of the mind (such as the discovery of algebra), or the Indians, who discovered the number zero, or the Chinese, who invented paper, the compass, gunpowder, and printing. — Tristan L
This is actually a very good example why in order to understand history it's important to focus on more than just one narrative. Perhaps what we lack in our history education still is to say while meanwhile... and just pick the focus and the narrative we like.One of the biggest differences between the West and nations like Persia, was the situation in which one fell to the Islamic invasions - Sassanid Empire - completely, and the other resisted for more than 600 years - in the case of the Roman Empire -. — Gus Lamarch
This is actually a very good example why in order to understand history it's important to focus on more than just one narrative. Perhaps what we lack in our history education still is to say while meanwhile... and just pick the focus and the narrative we like. — ssu
The rise of Islam happened at the perfect time, when the Roman Empire (or the Byzantinians to us) just had with Emperor Heraclius finally delivered a crushing blow to Sassanid Empire only then to be also in a weak state to suffer a defeat to the Arabs and lose the crucial Nile valley, which basically was the only reason that Constantinople was able to be a megacity of it's time. With two empires being weak at the same time gave chance for a third to be formed. — ssu
Well, it is quite logical and understandable that history is taught from the viewpoint of domestic history, that people are interested in their own history, the part of history that has most effected you. The viewpoint, the chosen narrative and the bias isn't actually a problem when we simply understand that it exists. The bias really doesn't refute the fact that historical events did happen. Hence even in history you can make question that have definite yes / no answers. To the question "Was there a Roman Empire, yes or no?" you have either a true or a false answer, just as there is for the question "Is there a global pandemic happening right now?". Hence understanding there being a bias doesn't force us to embrace some post-modernist humbug of their not being that objective past. All isn't politics.The problem with this is that humanity is essentially biased. If everyone has different opinions, which one is the real one? — Gus Lamarch
A nation or empire losing it's values and absolute truths, which I would call losing faith in the nation, typically happens when the nation simply hits physical limitations and it's weakness is obvious, typically when you lose wars and lose the position that earlier the country has enjoyed.When a nation loses its base of values and absolute truths, most of the time, only with the introduction of new values by third parties - in the case of the Western Roman Empire, the Germans, and in the case of the East, the Arabs - that purpose can be reached again. I do not deny that the freedom of the ecumenical world is wonderful, but it seems that on the grand scale of history, hegemony and order is the most successful path. — Gus Lamarch
At least with these examples we don't judge people from a totally different era and World with the morals of the present, but see just what values have existed from centuries, if not a milennium. Still, it was the Cato the Elder that ended his speeches Ceterum autem censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.Contrast this with Cato the Younger’s conduct, who had the moral integrity to realize that Caesar was the true culprit and should be delivered to the tribes to purge away the violation of truce. Just as the Roman Caesar is to be condemned for his atrocities, so the Roman Cato is to be praised for his insight into who the true evil-doer was and for his fighting for democracy against the dictatorship of Caesar. — Tristan L
Yet those cultures that have succeeded in their imperialism have been able to create advanced societies and have brought integration to the World, where trade routes have been safe also for thoughts and ideas to spread. Perhaps only from the 20th Century onwards we've seen true international collaboration take place and peaceful integration, like the EEC/EU happening. Unfortunately saying something positive about historical empires seems today as denying the negative sides.More broadly, imperialism is by its very wist (nature, essence) very wrong and unrightwise (unjust) – in most cases –, for it involves one folk stealing another folk’s freedom and land. — Tristan L
At least with these examples we don't judge people from a totally different era and World with the morals of the present, but see just what values have existed from centuries, if not a milennium. — ssu
Roman citizenship expanded rapidly in the imperial period. In 212 C.E. or A.D. it was granted to all free people in the Empire. — Ciceronianus the White
Still, it was the Cato the Elder that ended his speeches Ceterum autem censeo Carthaginem esse delendam. — ssu
Unfortunately saying something positive about historical empires seems today as denying the negative sides. — ssu
. Just as the Earth was round back then as it is now, genocide, ethno-supremacism, and misogynism were just as wrong back then as they are now — Tristan L
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