It's like Netflix for History: the world's finest documentary streaming service -- use the code 'Odyssey' to get 50% off your History Hit subscription! bit.ly/3AQ8pPJ
Not a mystery to me, and I don't have to study it. Today, any nation that does not protect individual liberty and free enterprise will collapse much in the same way, but to communism today. The USA is standing next in line now. We have not learned a thing---that lasted.
The Roman Empire did NOT collapse with Mary Beard. The Western Empire collapsed about 1,500 years before she was born, the Eastern Empire, about 500 years before she was born !
"Why Did The Roman Empire Collapse With Mary Beard"? I don't think Mary Beard was around at the time. It's a bit mean to blame her for the empires collapse. :D
READ the 6 volumes, of THE FALL OF ROME by Edward Gibbon. TAKE C A R E Author Edward Gibbon Country England Language English Subject History of the Roman Empire and Fall of the Western Roman Empire Publisher Strahan & Cadell, London Publication date 1776-1789
I took a course in grad school on the historiography of the Fall of the Roman Empire. As the professor said, "If I do my job right, by the end of this seminar you won't know what the word 'Fall' means, what the word 'Roman' means, what the word 'Empire' means, and you may have trouble with 'of' and 'the'."
Smart, sensitive, witty, and highly reliable. In short, definitely irreplaceable! Thank you so much for your passion and commitment, Prof. Beard. 🙏🏻🙏🏽🙏
@@tim7052 a wonderful communicator and her passion and deep knowledge is plain to see. I love that she doesn't infantilize, she assumes if you're watching that you are familiar with the basics and we can jump right in with the material. Her choice of artefacts to demonstrate her narrative are really impactful and feel so different from the usual documentaries which often limit themselves to busts, statues, paintings and the like.
The fact that an entire empire collapsed with her and Mary Beard was able to dodge all that debris and live to tell the story is truly extraordinary. GIBBON NEVER MENTIONED THIS!
Ummm….not to be impolite, but…respectfully, how old is she?…. I mean if she lived through all that she must have been born, at the latest, in 30 BC. Right? …..
Such a fascinating time. The bits we recognise today, armies, christinanity, trade, law, politics, but so much thats different too like the gladiator games, public executions, tribes roaming across Europe....all in about 15 minutes though, too rushed.
With the exception that she gets simple things wrong. Like the birth of Julias Ceasar. This is just literally the script from the previous programs about Rome. *yawn* its remarkable that she doesn't mention the plagues. Measles and Smallpox.
EXCEPT THAT she starts with the large premise of explaining the collapse of The Roman Empire and gets stuck in the Weeds of Judeo Christianity without getting any more macro than a pizza metaphor. GARBAGE STREAM OF CONSCIOUS aided by convenient talking heads
I learned more about Rome in 59 mins and 19 secs than I ever did through education. Mary beard should be on the school curriculum. She does for history what sister Wendy Beckett did for art. Superb.
@@theaxe6198 Nice, overall she is a friendly decent person. Somehow I imaging her on the late 60s and early 70s with bell bottom pants and tank top with a peace sign on it, little be of a rebel, just a hunch :).
@@bradrichards8122 Hm, a few things escapes everybody here and there, but I would like to hear where is she not a good historian. Keep in mind that I was born in Rome, Italy and understand quite a bit of Latin, maybe that's what you're referring to, I heard a coupe of times she was off a little bit there. Not an attack, just curious.
You can see the changing roles of centre vs periphery of the Empire also in the arts. Provincial styles started to influence Roman art instead of the earlier dominance of Roman aesthetic values influencing the Barbarians on the outskirts. Fascinating stuff.
The passion that Mary Beard expresses in relation to history of Ancient Rome and the real people is addictive to say the least, perhaps if more youngsters developed a truer understanding of the past, the world would be more tolerant of the present. LOVE hearing her talks and she is a go to for me ALWAYS learn new things about the world and myself listening to her talk. 😊
Mary Beards series about Rome and all the day to day lives of Romans has got to be one of if not the best informative documentaries out there. Her lectures must be wonderful.
Her book SPQR is one of the most engaging history books I have ever read. It concerns the history of the Roman Republic and it almost read like a thriller. @@darinarnold6976
So are her books. She is a wonderful, informative, and entertaining writer. She has just had a new book come now as I write this in early October 2023.
Love Mary Beard, she's taught me a lot. Love the pride and love in her voice as she introduces ' my tour guide, who knows more than me and he's my husband ' ❤
One of the many reasons to visit modern Istanbul is to see that this is where the Roman Empire went for several hundred years. It still has miles of Roman walls, Roman Aqueducts, and some Roman monuments and buildings, such as the great cistern through which James Bond paddles in "From Russia with Love", and the Hippodrome, featuring an immense Egyptian obelisk of Thutmose III, erected by Theodosius I in the 4th century AD. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obelisk_of_Theodosius
THE FALL OF ROME by Edward Gibbon. ( You could be one of his family ! ) TAKE C A R E Author Edward Gibbon Country England Language English Subject History of the Roman Empire and Fall of the Western Roman Empire Publisher Strahan & Cadell, London Publication date 1776-1789
@@petersack5074 Yes. Great work ... unfortunately a narrative that is increasingly destined to be consigned with the diminution of the human mind ... to history!
I would absolutely love to sit in a classroom with Mary Beard as my professor. I bet you she is absolutely enthralling and brings history to life even in a lecture hall!!!! I love her!
I've always wondered why the Roman empire collapsed with Mary Beard... Couldn't it have collapsed without her? It's a dangerous world, with all these people and things collapsing everywhere! I hope she'll be ok! (Mary, that is... Rome will be fine; she's been collapsing for centuries, we're used to it.)😆
Hi, Giuseppe. For a very detailed, examination of Rome, its' people; its past, its' downfall; check out '' The Fall of Rome '' by Edward Gibbon. Here, is a sample........... According to Gibbon, the Roman Empire succumbed to barbarian invasions in large part due to the gradual loss of civic virtue among its citizens.[8] He began an ongoing controversy about the role of Christianity, but he gave great weight to other causes of internal decline and to attacks from outside the Empire. The story of its ruin is simple and obvious; and, instead of inquiring why the Roman empire was destroyed, we should rather be surprised that it had subsisted so long. The victorious legions, who, in distant wars, acquired the vices of strangers and mercenaries, first oppressed the freedom of the republic, and afterwards violated the majesty of the purple. The emperors, anxious for their personal safety and the public peace, were reduced to the base expedient of corrupting the discipline which rendered them alike formidable to their sovereign and to the enemy; the vigour of the military government was relaxed, and finally dissolved, by the partial institutions of Constantine; and the Roman world was overwhelmed by a deluge of Barbarians.
My god, I had to pause when Mary Beard's husband came on screen. The sheer enthusiasm and joy for the discipline, in addition to that of her own fills my heart
This is the first time that Rome was ever presented as an "idea" rather than a physical place. Growing up as a Roman Catholic, the concept of Rome evolving (transcending) rather than disappearing really makes sense.
Mary Beard extraordinary. She is always creative and provocative. I so enjoyed the views of the Northern Gate. Never saw it before. Full of surprises, splendour and wonder. My regret is that when I was to University, I never attended a lecture by Mary Beard. Question. Which is more the treasure? The empire of Rome or she? Answer. Allow me a moment. I'm thinking.
I have to confess; I’m madly, wildly jealous of Ms. Mary Beard, professor and narrating goddess. She gets into so many lovely, rarefied places, and is able to be close to so many wonderful and obscure items from history, I can’t help but be a tad green about it! I’m so grateful that she shares with us. She pockets us and takes us with her, as intimately as is possible, along on her excursions. This is the closest and best I’ll ever experience, as far as having access to these wonderful places and things that teach us so much about ourselves… The small votive figures are absolutely fabulous! So often in her videos, we’re allowed to view things that are simply not on display in museums. But thanks to her, we are allowed to view them. Thank you, dear lady Beard!
_…the first time that the Roman’s actually seemed to speak to me…_ I don’t know why, but this line gave me chills. It’s as if I could imagine all of the people of the past trying to tell her their stories, so she could tell them to us. Also, whoever produces these documentaries always seems to pick some really good music! Especially for the end!
Mary Beard sure is a very old woman isn't she. She caused the Roman Empire to collapse and she remembers speaking to Romans. Blimey, some people live a long life, but THAT...
So GLAD she has done this. I love Roman History and her narrative of history in General, although I do NOT think she was DIRECTLY involved with Rome's fall.
Professor Beard and her Professor Husband make an absolutely unbeatable academic team. (And, the cutest couple - they remind me of my favorite aunt and uncle!).
@@patrickmccormack4318 I think that was irony from WizzardOfPaws ... he is alluding to her capacity to reinvent History and the Orwellian nature of how that might be cast into the world 24/7!
If you're a fan of Mary Beard's work, I recommend her book that this (originally a BBC) documentary series is based on, "SPQR" 🤓 ...Unfortunately the audiobook version is not read by her. Absolute travesty that. 🙃
@@frankyyaggabot6222 So where are your books on Roman history, where are your degrees, Professorship and PROOF of your learning from prestigious schools? Where is the EVIDENCE of your Scholarship?
"The conclusion that I come to is that the real heir of the Roman empire was Christendom - not an empire of political domination, or not only that, but an empire of the mind; and in its own ambitions at least, still an empire without limit." ~Dame Winifred Mary Beard, DBE, FSA, FBA, FRSL I love how she began the story at Hadrian's wall and stating its limit, and ended up with her conclusion. What a powerful closing of a documentary!
Mary is very likely a crypto... so her view of history is likely to be somewhat tainted.Keep in mind a Damehood is as much about who you know as what you know.....The Windsors are notorious for interfering in the honors system.Given Prince Charles association with Saville who would have given Nero a run for his money the Windsors being poorly equipped in brain cells department the twits should be kept at arms length. We're any Roman leaders recorded as having conversations with plants. Luckily it is highly unlikely Charles will do more than ten years ruling. His son could rescue the Windsors from extinction.....theyre past their sell by date..and Camillas crown looked like something you would find at kids party.Preposterous.
A decaying Empire: 1261-1453 By the fourteenth century, the J’3ωι5Η question of Byzantium seemed to be most concerned with Venetian J’3ω5. Venetians had come to reside in the Empire in large numbers by the early 14th century, and treaties between the Empire and Venice granted the Venetians living in the empire, including J’3ω5 of Venetian origin, special privileges, though they also carried certain minor economic prohibitions. Under the aegis of these treaties, Venetian J’3ω5 could buy, sell or rent land anywhere in Constantinople. They also enjoyed a more favorable tax structure than Byzantine citizens, as well as the freedom of movement and settlement anywhere in the Empire.[47] Further complicating this legal status, some J’3ω5 obtained Venetian citizenship either "by coming from areas subject to the Republic or by purchasing naturalization", thus obtaining the same privileges as Venetian nationals in the Empire.[48] At this time, the Empire was in rapid decay, and could not seriously enforce laws intended to curtail these rights and regain economic control within its borders. Thus, an exception to the general trend of Byzantine history emerged during this century, whereby J’3ω5 were entitled to a broader set of rights than Christians..
@@The_Space_Born No, usually because of economics. The Roman Empire existed on the basis of Multiculturalism, bringing in groups of diverse cultures and making local big-wigs Romans to administer their Empire for them. It was a process of assimilation that worked until the Empire just got too big to manage.
I could listen to this lady all day every day. I would have had strait A’s in school if she taught me. She just captivates and demand your attention and in return I learn so much from her like a sponge I just soak up every word of hers… just an amazing talented lady….
If I had 3 wishes, one of them would be to be gifted for a day with Mary's brilliant mind, and walk through Rome being able to read ALL the old words etched in stone.
Actually I would delight in that fantasy myself with the condition that Mary was at my side. The juxtaposition between the realities of the Roman World and the picture that exists in Mary's mind would be actually something worth observing.
And if while standing next to Mary, you touch her arm, perhaps it's like being transported through an historic "wormhole" back in time. The people will become alive again....
I took Latin at school but I wasn’t clever enough to absorb anything further than the vocabulary. All the declensions and conjugations were above me, sadly.
As a teenager I sometimes used to dream about what would have been if the Roman Empire lasted up to our days… how would the world look like today…and I always concluded that our advancement and progress would have been infinitely faster, like the trains of Japan are today compared to many other countries…something like that.
🐍🇻🇦🐆🕳️empire has Never departed = KJV Revelation 13: & 17: & 18: , how do you like the way 🐍🇻🇦🐆🕳️1st beast whore,🇺🇸2nd beast and 🐍🇻🇦🐆🕳️ puppets 🏴🇺🇳🌐👣🐙🕸️💉🍕👹 are controlling the 🌐 ?
@@lw3646 Technology wasn’t held back by Roman civilisation but by invaders and barbarians and the Christian religion, remember the Inquisition , remember what they did to Galileo Galilei, remember book burning in the public square and the persecution of any scientific research, remember the witch-hunting, the church anathema and curses and control and suppression of all science and philosophy and even music?!? What are you talking about?! The Roman civilisation provided even social housing for some poor concitadines, their “social security system” provided food and vine for the poor, their roads and architecture and aqueducts were second to none then and still are today, their literature and art were as good if not better than everything produced in the next 1000 years to follow, their public libraries and public baths were equaled only 2000 years later. We were pushed 1000 years back by barbarians and Christianity the exact way Putler could push back the world today with his cannon fodder. When barbarians have imperial ambitions, entire civilisations and advancements are destroyed by mind-narrowness, envy, corruption and ideologies of grandeur of such tyrants.
The Roman Empire fell in 1453 AD, which was less than 600 years ago. Some of the later inventions by Rome after Antiquity is Greek Fire, which was essentially a napalm flamethrower mounted on naval vessels, they also created hand grenades, and the modern fork came from the Roman Empire during the Medieval Age. The Romans also created highly advanced siegeworks in the 10th Century. It wasn't as long ago as you may think.
@@robs2579 Of course, back then things were expected to take longer than nowadays, but we aren't talking about casual communication. It was about fighting with constant rebels and invaders that could organize quickly on the local level they operated in while you where a very big chunky empire which headquarters were weeks away. To me decentralization was basically inevitable, honestly, it just makes more sense for fighting with enemies below the size of Rome (pro tip, there weren't any enemies the size of Rome, just lots and lots and lots of smaller local enemies).
@@robs2579 Sorry, I forgot to ask for the 12.43.45 form at the desk 109 in the Cunt Department for Very Very Very Important Opinions that Should Never Ever Ever be Challenged (C.D.V.V.V.I.O.S.N.E.E.C.). May the law be merciful with me!!!
Absolutely theee best doc so far. Love your work Mary. Taking us into niches and places not yet seen. Hidden corners and tucked away places. Insights into the minds of those who coloured our history. Awesome facts and stories.
That gate is in my mothers home town of Trier Germany. It’s called Porta Negra or Black Gate. My father loved that building and did several oil paintings of it.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again - I’m such a ridiculous Mary Beard groupie that I even embarrass myself at times. It’s the angle Mary looks at history from. Mary shows you what the average citizen was like, how they lived what they ate, how they loved etc. For me this is the most fascinating aspect. To look at historical events through the eyes of its people. It’s all this and, to be honest it’s the clothes that Mary wears. Mary is incredibly knowledgeable but so approachable at the same time. You can imagine having Mary as a neighbour, as a friend or family member. I’m kinda envious of anyone that can clam those things. I’m not saying that she’s perfect, far from it. It’s her “real person” language and appearance that has me listening and learning more than ever before in my life. Thanks HC and thanks Ms Mary Beard. Ha ha I told you that I’m a big fan. I’m gushing and I’m embarrassing myself. ❤
Yes when we did history at school it was all about kings and wars. Nothing about the lives of ordinary people. Also no videos of locations or buildings and no Googlemaps. Which is why history at school was so boring. Mary makes history relatable.
good lord, i'm so sorry. where are you going to go once you realize that mary beard is an utter fraud, a poor historian, and a creation of the affirmative action state?
I'd like to thnak Mary Beard because your book SPQR was of great benefit to me having read it before I read Mommsen's History of Rome. So thanks again.
@@frankyyaggabot6222 So where are your books on Roman history, where are your degrees, Professorship and PROOF of your learning from prestigious schools? Where is the EVIDENCE of your Scholarship?
It was an absolutely fantastic treat for me to watch this video, because of Mary Beard! Such a passionate and intelligent woman with realistic perspectives to say the least. I like your bicycle-riding. Unfortunately I got to know of this channel only now. I wish I knew it long before. Very satisfying to see your husband along with you in the same field of work. Above all, you look a bit like my mother and I love it!❤
Very good documentary. A good description of the religious changes in the later Empire. Not a lot, however, about the political collapse and cultural change which brought about the end of the Western Roman Empire...
And a liar or fantasist which ever you prefer. the is in reality very little that exists in evidence to prove what she says , she does not mention immigration and how it culturally diluted Rome
Reading SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, Mary's book, currently and it's a great introduction into Roman Socieity highly recommend it as essential reading for everyone
Ummm, the title of the video was "Why did the Roman Empire Collapse". Anyone notice that she really didn't address the question directly at all? The whole gist of the video was the Roman Empire didn't really go away but just morphed into Christianity? Sigh. No details on the series of Roman civil wars and their impact on Rome's ability to defend itself from barbarian invasion. No discussion of the nightmare consequences of "dividing the empire into smaller pieces" theme. (Like the massive increase in Roman administrative bureaucracies with corresponding increase in taxes) No discussion of the large trade deficits that led to the depletion of physical specie (ie. export of gold/silver to far away lands). No discussion of the crushing tax burden on Romans at the end of the empire, that led many to WELCOME the barbarians, anything to escape the Roman tax machine. No mention of corruption and inefficiency of the later empire. The list goes on and on. Marxists don't actually believe the Roman Empire collapsed, but rather just transitioned into Feudalism as a natural part of the dialectic of history. But the collapse of Rome did occur and it did set civilization back more than a thousand years technologically. (Medicine and engineering for sure, we forgot how to make concrete and toilets for Pete's sake.) This video was a fluff piece PERIOD.
Mostly agreed, the gist is unconvincing and I would have expected more stuff about social and military aspects, but Marxists have nothing to do with this. It isn't true that most Marxists somehow deny that the Roman Empire collapsed - the standard Marxist idea that the slavery-based *mode of production* was replaced by feudalism does not entail that the Roman *state entity* didn't collapse. If anything, the notion that an entire mode of production collapsed with the fall of Rome presents that fall as more profound and significant than in typical non-Marxist understandings, not less. (Not that Marxism necessarily entails that notion in the first place. Marxists have long recognised that here were a lot of 'feudal' elements already in the late Roman Empire, and it is well-known that there was still quite a lot of slavery in the early Middle Ages and even later.) And while Beard has, like me, broadly left-wing views, her argument here had nothing to do with Marxism.
She is no historian. Anyone with knowledge of the time she is talking about recognizes she is just telling a story. Not quite fiction but in no way history or documentary.
Curious fact: in Portuguese we have a word MAÇADA (the Ç reads like two Ss), it means something boring: a situation, a book, a piece of music, a person is a MAÇADOR male or MAÇADORA female, or anything else that is boring. In the sources I consulted it does come from Masada...no one is really really certain. Best wishes to all from Lisbon Portugal
More emphasis need to be on the manpower shortages starting in the late 2nd century; the why & how. "THE FATE OF ROME" makes some very convincing arguments. Among many other things, Harper has a very new & different take on why Christianity became the popular religion of the people. A history book for our time as much as a new explanation of Rome's fall.
I love that the title is worded like it was her fault. I forgot who Mary was at first and saw it in my feed and thought "OMG what did she DO?!" I still watched of course cause Mary rocks, even if she did bring upon Rome's collapse.
It collapsed because its 'citizens' finally realized the empire cared nothing for the empire's vast majority. Much like today, it was impossible for the ruling class to maintain the respect and support of the vast plebeian class. Nobody would serve in the armies. Nobody would pay taxes. Nobody respected the emperor, the imperial administration that rapaciously overtaxed citizens, or the senatorial and equestrian classes. Not one of the members of these classes had any respect for the people who bled, fought, farmed, and created the empire. This collapsed the intricate commercial and social networks necessary to make any civilization possible.
Ya, you aren't going to hold an empire together by making citizens of everyone you conquer also. Your culture becomes less homogeneous and agendas become divided.
@@muddyhotdog4103 Yes! Which is precisely why our Western civilisation is collapsing now. Our borders have been destroyed. Our culture is being taken over and crushed. Our religion and language and ethnicity are being dissolved. Give it 50 to 100 years and we’re finished.
Loved your presentation. One name that should also be listed is Emperor Galerius. He wrote the Edict of Tolerance 2 years prior to the Edict of Milan. Its a very interesting document and has a sadness to it. He seems to be handing over the keys to a new generation as the temples to the old Gods are bankrupted. He appeals the the new keepers to respect the older Roman traditions.
One reason the empire "collapsed" was its adoption of Christianity-- a foreign religion turning the culture upside down from within. It wasn't just the Gauls and Visigoths "invading"-- the very nature of the empire was to fold its margins into the center, and so its very essence was self-transformation. Christianity helped to correct some of the cruelty of pagan Rome, so this "collapse" was also good in some ways.
@@SuperRobertoClemente "...fold its margins into the center..." Very profound and succinct observation. I think also many Romans wanted to distance themselves from the cruelty, cultural and martial arrogance of the past. Christianity offered a political/religious compromising-peace to the various demographics who already had converted and controlled so much of the empire. By the late 5th century Romans turned on paganism of their ancestors as demonic, burning down temples and smashing statues.
@@CHAS1422 Yes, it's a complicated story, as befits the duality of Christianity: one part God's mercy personified, one part righteous vengeance. Fast forward to the Crusades, and its "Christendom" that has the monopoly on cruelty and imperialism.
@@SuperRobertoClemente The Crusades also have a context. In the end Christianity was ubiquitous in the final stages of the Roman Empire. In the post Rome Byzantine Empire the eastern provinces, Levant, Egypt and North Africa remained Roman hands. By the sword the Rashidun warriors removed 2/3 of the territories. They invaded the underside of Europe conquering Andalusia and nearly conquering Gaul. They persistently raided south Europe for plunder and Slaves. They even tried to take Rome in 846 AD. There was precedent to the Crusades. Prior to that time, they were not the imperialists, they were the subjects.
@@CHAS1422 Given that the subsequent millennium was one of crusade, conquest and colonialism mostly led by Christian nations, one does forget those periods of Muslim expansion and occasional Empire. Certainly, plunder doesn't justify plunder, right? And what did the indigenous peoples of the Americas do to the Catholics, Puritans and other visitors who merrily genocided them? I'm personally always curious why the Revolutions of the Enlightenment so idealized the Romans. Perhaps, deep down, they were already yearning for Empires of their own.
it had an awful record of savagery by our standards, and even by those of their time. but what they left behind in architecture, law, politics, logistical network... truly left it as the inspiration for all that followed. no wonder Europe, even today, is so attached to its legacy. either inside or outside its frontiers, Rome was and still is Europe.
@@anaseijas3923 No, Roman art and architecture and form of government was based on that of the Greeks. All their gods and goddesses were Greek gods and goddesses renamed. What they didn't have was Greek philosophy, which made Greece the greater civilization.
@@Gertyutz Bearing in mind the Romans eagerly borrowed many things from many other peoples and made it their own, they always had. Not all their gods were Greek, many were Etruscan or more obscure local Italic origin. In fact Indo-Europeans all over had many deities rooted in a shared pre-history that Greek polytheism only reinforced as it came into contact with polytheistic non-Greeks. They certainly did give much to Rome and the wider world, yet were never unified for long, outside of Alexander's brief empire. Rome brought that sense of unity, it cemented the very notion of Greco-Roman antiquity as foundational civilizations to the Christian European west. And the Greeks would, throughout the Middle Ages, call themselves Romaioi after all. So I feel like saying one is better because you have a preference is a bit reductive and somewhat misses the fact that the two essentially syncretized over the centuries. Romans became Hellenized yet spoke Latin while the Greeks Romanized and continued to speak Greek.
Thank you for such an interesting approach to the transformation of the Roman Empire. Actually there was not an abrupt fall, it has been more a transformation of centuries and centuries. It makes me rethink about other examples such as the civilizations of America that quickly transformed in less than a century, or those of lost civilizations there, and elsewhere, that left no traces to understand them or to know how they were, and their remains are so much misterious. A very interesting History lesson. Thank you
The province of Africa and about half of the grain supply was lost in a matter of months. There were many sudden, and highly damaging events and dislocations caused by migration
I am from Brazil, and I am an American. America is a whole continent containing many countries and are members of the Organization of American states. United States is also a member.
@@jvaikido1 That is clear enough. Thank you. My my point is that is common USA citizens tend to call USA as America, as if all America is USA. That is not so, that is imperialism
Give us a break mate. It's not imperialism ,it's just sloppy language. I guess north America would suffice. Just as Americans call UK ,England. . that's just sloppy language too. Stop being so woke. It's tedious and a bit like 16th century puritans looking for evil in every thought. So yes by all means accuse them of sloppy language ,of which too much nowadays ,but imperialism ,nah !
What makes an empire great and what makes an empire stay great are not necessarily the same thing. I think there were times of crisis which Rome survived and I think chance played a part. However change is inevitable, the luck was inevitably going to run out.
@VK RGFAN Point taken. However, "evil" is subjective too. But I will concede, "great" in terms of the Roman Empire means big and significant in size and duration. Everybody should know Rome did cruel and horrible things to its enemies. The crime for a slave escaping was crucifixion! On the other hand, we should probably not discount the cruel and horrible things done by Rome's enemies to Romans and the cruel and horrible things that would have been done to Romans by their enemies if they had been able to. We might not think so, but historically, we live in privileged times.
Romans never had much interest in religion themselves, as can be seen from them adopting many Greek gods. Zeus became Jupiter, Heracles became Hercules, on and on. So as they spread, they spread their cavalier attitude to religion. But it was only a matter of time until they either encountered a religion they couldn't ignore, or one such religion arose among their ranks. And once this Uber religion burst out from Rome it made sense it would take the world by storm.
@nosuchthing8 I don't think Christianity was a religion they couldn't ignore until the emperor became a convert. Post hoc rationalisation is hard not to do, but I suspect religions came and went, and what made and still makes Christianity special was its adoption as the official religion of Rome.
I remember a time when the title of Professor had gravitas. Please know this narrative isn't factual. It isn't quite fiction but it is widely inaccurate.
@@bradrichards8122 History should be written with care and precision so that it is only comprehensible to other scholars. With fewer readers hopefully less public funding will be available for this field of research and greater priority will be allocated to more important disciplines. As for involving the plebs, their understanding of Roman history should be satisfied by the output of Hollywood and its ilk. The last thing we need are actual academically qualified professors who feel it's important to share their passion outside the educated elite by selection and simplification in order to give the general public at least some understanding of the subject in which they specialise
Rome hadn't died out. Rome is still within us. I use so many Latin-origin words, we write our languages with Roman scripts, we use Roman architectural style, we still have the Roman ambition to the world, and we have the same religion that has evolved within Rome itself. Every empire that came after Rome imitated Roman values. Did Rome die? No, Rome is still among us.
Auntie Pls tell us more about Syrmium and all the emperor's born in there ...Probably more about " Illyrian emperor's" ,places where they were born and how many of them were there
I like the way Mary Beard talks about ancient Rome. Does anyone know the actual total number of people who have quietly walked away from ancient Rome? Instead of stubbornly holding onto the belief that all highways lead to Rome.
It's like Netflix for History: the world's finest documentary streaming service -- use the code 'Odyssey' to get 50% off your History Hit subscription! bit.ly/3AQ8pPJ
Not a mystery to me, and I don't have to study it. Today, any nation that does not protect individual liberty and free enterprise will collapse much in the same way, but to communism today. The USA is standing next in line now. We have not learned a thing---that lasted.
rubbish.
The Roman Empire did NOT collapse with Mary Beard. The Western Empire collapsed about 1,500 years before she was born, the Eastern Empire, about 500 years before she was born !
netflix' documentaries suck, don't make that comparison!
Did you see what Netflix did to Cleopatra? I wouldn’t use them as a marker for something good.
"Why Did The Roman Empire Collapse With Mary Beard"? I don't think Mary Beard was around at the time. It's a bit mean to blame her for the empires collapse. :D
READ the 6 volumes, of THE FALL OF ROME by Edward Gibbon. TAKE C A R E
Author Edward Gibbon
Country England
Language English
Subject History of the Roman Empire and Fall of the Western Roman Empire
Publisher Strahan & Cadell, London
Publication date 1776-1789
Bit cruel, to describe Mary as “collapsed”! 😂
@@Woodman-Spare-that-tree Nobody said Mary had collapsed, lol.
She knows what she did.
@Ray Dziesinski ...though one made in China.
I took a course in grad school on the historiography of the Fall of the Roman Empire. As the professor said, "If I do my job right, by the end of this seminar you won't know what the word 'Fall' means, what the word 'Roman' means, what the word 'Empire' means, and you may have trouble with 'of' and 'the'."
@@angusmacdonald7187 let me hope that he mentioned a certain city with impregnable walls and Justinian.
@@southpolesurfer6936 Actually, he followed it all the way to the Romanovs ;-)
@@angusmacdonald7187 let’s just say the British Empire on Home turf is about to relive the First World War
@@southpolesurfer6936 really, not enough Segregation?
@@ClannCholmain the natives are restless
Mary Beard has such a light touch when discussing what is really dense material. Such a talent and she always takes it in interesting directions.
She is an outstanding historian and teacher. 👍
Smart, sensitive, witty, and highly reliable. In short, definitely irreplaceable!
Thank you so much for your passion and commitment, Prof. Beard.
🙏🏻🙏🏽🙏
@@fabiengerard8142 Agreed!👍
@@tim7052 a wonderful communicator and her passion and deep knowledge is plain to see. I love that she doesn't infantilize, she assumes if you're watching that you are familiar with the basics and we can jump right in with the material. Her choice of artefacts to demonstrate her narrative are really impactful and feel so different from the usual documentaries which often limit themselves to busts, statues, paintings and the like.
@@speedtrls Agreed!! 👍
The fact that an entire empire collapsed with her and Mary Beard was able to dodge all that debris and live to tell the story is truly extraordinary. GIBBON NEVER MENTIONED THIS!
Yeah, I just saw that too. Beard survived the Fall well, and writes regularly for the UK Times Literary Supplement (TLS) She's a joy to read.
That is because she was behind the downfall. Naughty Mary.
Ummm….not to be impolite, but…respectfully, how old is she?…. I mean if she lived through all that she must have been born, at the latest, in 30 BC. Right? …..
@@williampaz2092 That is exactly what I thought on reading the title. If only she could/would explain how she has managed such amazing longevity.
@@sharcon3891 Yes, Gibbon! Thanks.
Mary Beard has to be one of the most legendary historians ever absolutely adore her
Yes, I just love to listen this lady
Such a fascinating time. The bits we recognise today, armies, christinanity, trade, law, politics, but so much thats different too like the gladiator games, public executions, tribes roaming across Europe....all in about 15 minutes though, too rushed.
With the exception that she gets simple things wrong. Like the birth of Julias Ceasar. This is just literally the script from the previous programs about Rome. *yawn*
its remarkable that she doesn't mention the plagues. Measles and Smallpox.
EXCEPT THAT she starts with the large premise of explaining the collapse of The Roman Empire and gets stuck in the Weeds of Judeo Christianity without getting any more macro than a pizza metaphor. GARBAGE STREAM OF CONSCIOUS aided by convenient talking heads
Meh, just reading.
I learned more about Rome in 59 mins and 19 secs than I ever did through education. Mary beard should be on the school curriculum. She does for history what sister Wendy Beckett did for art. Superb.
Wow, your easy
The slaughter of Gods innocent animals for your lust for flesh destroys all Empires america is next!
@@healthyone100 So I take it you're a vegetarian?
@@healthyone100 and actually, if you watched the video you'd know Rome didn't collapse. It just transformed into something different. So you're wrong.
@@jamesjefferies3762 No i'm not wrong where are the Roman Ceasers today they all gone!
She did it again with the Romans, fantastic every time. I'm lucky enough to have her book "SPQR" autographed by her, very nice person.
I emailed Mary Beard after getting SPQR and she emailed me back!
@@theaxe6198 Nice, overall she is a friendly decent person. Somehow I imaging her on the late 60s and early 70s with bell bottom pants and tank top with a peace sign on it, little be of a rebel, just a hunch :).
SPQR. Lucky you to have a personal volume!
She does seem very nice. However she isn't very accurate. Storyteller, 100%. Historian, unfortunately not.
@@bradrichards8122 Hm, a few things escapes everybody here and there, but I would like to hear where is she not a good historian. Keep in mind that I was born in Rome, Italy and understand quite a bit of Latin, maybe that's what you're referring to, I heard a coupe of times she was off a little bit there. Not an attack, just curious.
Mary Beard's outstanding storytelling has created in me an interest of history where none existed before. Thank you for such an enriching gift!
I love her too !
She is brilliant
she is the lightweight historian for the causal viewer, story teller is about right
@@clivebaxter6354
If you are so well informed, make a video.
Otherwise, keep your judgmental thoughts to yourself.
@@redpoppy4816 Are you the owner of Google then? People can say what they like about second class woke historians so far without being cancelled
You can see the changing roles of centre vs periphery of the Empire also in the arts. Provincial styles started to influence Roman art instead of the earlier dominance of Roman aesthetic values influencing the Barbarians on the outskirts. Fascinating stuff.
Good point, that was the most German Roman Throne Room I ever done seen.
As a fellow ancient history enthusiast, I found your interpretation very insightful.
I WISH she had been one of my professors in college or grad school because I already love history, but she's like a rock star of the intellect!
The passion that Mary Beard expresses in relation to history of Ancient Rome and the real people is addictive to say the least, perhaps if more youngsters developed a truer understanding of the past, the world would be more tolerant of the present. LOVE hearing her talks and she is a go to for me ALWAYS learn new things about the world and myself listening to her talk. 😊
Agreed!! She makes me excited about history.
I went to college in the '60's, and I hated history. It was boring. Of course, 30 years before the invention of the video.
“It’s intriguingly complicated…so bear with me…” I was hooked. Delightful, informative, and fascinating documentary. Thank you! ❤
We wouldn't accept any less.
Admit it….the woman is a genius, beyond a genius. And I’m totally serious.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Mary Beards series about Rome and all the day to day lives of Romans has got to be one of if not the best informative documentaries out there. Her lectures must be wonderful.
There's several lectures of hers here on YT, they're good. She's very engaging
It must be pure confidence to not care about your appearance as Mary Beard does not. I find English women are like that.
@@taroman7100 huh? Have you been to Walmart?
Her book SPQR is one of the most engaging history books I have ever read. It concerns the history of the Roman Republic and it almost read like a thriller. @@darinarnold6976
So are her books. She is a wonderful, informative, and entertaining writer. She has just had a new book come now as I write this in early October 2023.
Love Mary Beard, she's taught me a lot. Love the pride and love in her voice as she introduces ' my tour guide, who knows more than me and he's my husband ' ❤
One of the many reasons to visit modern Istanbul is to see that this is where the Roman Empire went for several hundred years. It still has miles of Roman walls, Roman Aqueducts, and some Roman monuments and buildings, such as the great cistern through which James Bond paddles in "From Russia with Love", and the Hippodrome, featuring an immense Egyptian obelisk of Thutmose III, erected by Theodosius I in the 4th century AD. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obelisk_of_Theodosius
Actually what was Rome and their eastern empire became Byzantium and that went on for a further 1000 years.
Mary Beard is one of my favorite story tellers her take on the romans is so overwhelming i love this series thank you
She's an old hag
"There's a little bit of the Romans inside the heads of every one of us." Wonderful.
They should go home in my opinion.
You mean "lead poisoning"?
Especially if you studied Latin at school and then ended up marrying a Roman
@@briancohenthepfjmassive.4769 so Romanes eunt domus?
I don't think so
Ook what will we do without our Professor Mary narrating and knowledge. I love her
Wish I knew of her early works .
I am enjoying her now .
THE FALL OF ROME by Edward Gibbon. ( You could be one of his family ! ) TAKE C A R E
Author Edward Gibbon
Country England
Language English
Subject History of the Roman Empire and Fall of the Western Roman Empire
Publisher Strahan & Cadell, London
Publication date 1776-1789
@@petersack5074 Yes. Great work ... unfortunately a narrative that is increasingly destined to be consigned with the diminution of the human mind ... to history!
I would absolutely love to sit in a classroom with Mary Beard as my professor. I bet you she is absolutely enthralling and brings history to life even in a lecture hall!!!! I love her!
I've been waiting for her next story!! I cherish this woman and her passion for history and for the way she tells it. Thank you!!
Beard writes regularly for the UK Times Literary Supplement (TLS) She's a joy to read.
I could listen to Mary all day 🤓❤️
I've always wondered why the Roman empire collapsed with Mary Beard... Couldn't it have collapsed without her? It's a dangerous world, with all these people and things collapsing everywhere!
I hope she'll be ok! (Mary, that is... Rome will be fine; she's been collapsing for centuries, we're used to it.)😆
Hi, Giuseppe. For a very detailed, examination of Rome, its' people; its past, its' downfall; check out '' The Fall of Rome '' by Edward Gibbon. Here, is a sample...........
According to Gibbon, the Roman Empire succumbed to barbarian invasions in large part due to the gradual loss of civic virtue among its citizens.[8]
He began an ongoing controversy about the role of Christianity, but he gave great weight to other causes of internal decline and to attacks from outside the Empire.
The story of its ruin is simple and obvious; and, instead of inquiring why the Roman empire was destroyed, we should rather be surprised that it had subsisted so long. The victorious legions, who, in distant wars, acquired the vices of strangers and mercenaries, first oppressed the freedom of the republic, and afterwards violated the majesty of the purple. The emperors, anxious for their personal safety and the public peace, were reduced to the base expedient of corrupting the discipline which rendered them alike formidable to their sovereign and to the enemy; the vigour of the military government was relaxed, and finally dissolved, by the partial institutions of Constantine; and the Roman world was overwhelmed by a deluge of Barbarians.
@@petersack5074 I don't think you got the joke. Reread the title and what it _might_ mean.
@@zodwraith5745 ty 👍🤣
We Mammals will reclaim our world again
Rise up all fury Mammals 🦊🐺
😂
Love anything by Mary Beard, her knowledge is outstanding and although getting on a bit, hope she does more of these documetaries.
My god, I had to pause when Mary Beard's husband came on screen. The sheer enthusiasm and joy for the discipline, in addition to that of her own fills my heart
This is the first time that Rome was ever presented as an "idea" rather than a physical place. Growing up as a Roman Catholic, the concept of Rome evolving (transcending) rather than disappearing really makes sense.
Has Rome evolved? I see little difference, spiritually, between pagan Rome and papal Rome.
"This is the first time"? No one has ever expressed such a thought before this? Really?
How can a murder cult transcend ? 😂 ah now I remember into pedophile priesthood and a solid hate for Jesus Christ 🤠
@@williammitchell5058 there is none - murder then & now
The killers of Jesus.
Mary Beard extraordinary. She is always creative and provocative. I so enjoyed the views of the Northern Gate. Never saw it before. Full of surprises, splendour and wonder. My regret is that when I was to University, I never attended a lecture by Mary Beard. Question. Which is more the treasure? The empire of Rome or she? Answer. Allow me a moment. I'm thinking.
I have to confess; I’m madly, wildly jealous of Ms. Mary Beard, professor and narrating goddess.
She gets into so many lovely, rarefied places, and is able to be close to so many wonderful and obscure items from history, I can’t help but be a tad green about it! I’m so grateful that she shares with us. She pockets us and takes us with her, as intimately as is possible, along on her excursions.
This is the closest and best I’ll ever experience, as far as having access to these wonderful places and things that teach us so much about ourselves…
The small votive figures are absolutely fabulous!
So often in her videos, we’re allowed to view things that are simply not on display in museums. But thanks to her, we are allowed to view them.
Thank you, dear lady Beard!
Isn’t she just the best?! Pockets us, yes!
_…the first time that the Roman’s actually seemed to speak to me…_
I don’t know why, but this line gave me chills. It’s as if I could imagine all of the people of the past trying to tell her their stories, so she could tell them to us.
Also, whoever produces these documentaries always seems to pick some really good music! Especially for the end!
they're crying out "don't do what we did in our dying days"
Mary Beard sure is a very old woman isn't she. She caused the Roman Empire to collapse and she remembers speaking to Romans. Blimey, some people live a long life, but THAT...
Great to see Mary's husband make an appearance in this documentary! And it looks like he's a ancient civilisations expert too!
Don't be unkind. She's not that old!
No Mary’s husband is a historian too, I don’t think Mr H was referring to her as old lol
@williamwilliam5066 I was referring to them both being historians, not their ages😂😂😂
@@mrh8279 I know!! It's my dry sense of humour!
So GLAD she has done this. I love Roman History and her narrative of history in General, although I do NOT think she was DIRECTLY involved with Rome's fall.
She is a fraud and a diversity hire.
I don't know. She is getting on a bit now isn't she.
Professor Beard and her Professor Husband make an absolutely unbeatable academic team. (And, the cutest couple - they remind me of my favorite aunt and uncle!).
The ebb and flow of power. A non-ending story.
I could watch her 24/7/365 Oh how I wish she would make a million documentaries!
Her deliver is awesome. She was destined to do what she does.
@@patrickmccormack4318 I think that was irony from WizzardOfPaws ... he is alluding to her capacity to reinvent History and the Orwellian nature of how that might be cast into the world 24/7!
Simp
Really
Ancient History’s answer to David Fletcher.
Such a pleasure to follow someone making imaginative, well-founded sense of history.
I totally agree
If you're a fan of Mary Beard's work, I recommend her book that this (originally a BBC) documentary series is based on, "SPQR" 🤓
...Unfortunately the audiobook version is not read by her. Absolute travesty that. 🙃
Imaginative…
Yeah ... well that's the problem with Mary: Imagination -> History = !(not) History; and Mary's imagination always appeals to the 'current thing'.
@@frankyyaggabot6222 So where are your books on Roman history, where are your degrees, Professorship and PROOF of your learning from prestigious schools? Where is the EVIDENCE of your Scholarship?
"The conclusion that I come to is that the real heir of the Roman empire was Christendom - not an empire of political domination, or not only that, but an empire of the mind; and in its own ambitions at least, still an empire without limit."
~Dame Winifred Mary Beard, DBE, FSA, FBA, FRSL
I love how she began the story at Hadrian's wall and stating its limit, and ended up with her conclusion. What a powerful closing of a documentary!
Mary is very likely a crypto... so her view of history is likely to be somewhat tainted.Keep in mind a Damehood is as much about who you know as what you know.....The Windsors are notorious for interfering in the honors system.Given Prince Charles association with Saville who would have given Nero a run for his money the Windsors being poorly equipped in brain cells department the twits should be kept at arms length.
We're any Roman leaders recorded as having conversations with plants.
Luckily it is highly unlikely Charles will do more than ten years ruling. His son could rescue the Windsors from extinction.....theyre past their sell by date..and Camillas crown looked like something you would find at kids party.Preposterous.
A decaying Empire: 1261-1453
By the fourteenth century, the J’3ωι5Η question of Byzantium seemed to be most concerned with Venetian J’3ω5. Venetians had come to reside in the Empire in large numbers by the early 14th century, and treaties between the Empire and Venice granted the Venetians living in the empire, including J’3ω5 of Venetian origin, special privileges, though they also carried certain minor economic prohibitions. Under the aegis of these treaties, Venetian J’3ω5 could buy, sell or rent land anywhere in Constantinople. They also enjoyed a more favorable tax structure than Byzantine citizens, as well as the freedom of movement and settlement anywhere in the Empire.[47]
Further complicating this legal status, some J’3ω5 obtained Venetian citizenship either "by coming from areas subject to the Republic or by purchasing naturalization", thus obtaining the same privileges as Venetian nationals in the Empire.[48] At this time, the Empire was in rapid decay, and could not seriously enforce laws intended to curtail these rights and regain economic control within its borders. Thus, an exception to the general trend of Byzantine history emerged during this century, whereby J’3ω5 were entitled to a broader set of rights than Christians..
@@tomcarlosimborio7528 Christendom belongs to Jesus not the empire of church. ⛪️
In reading the title, I had no idea that Mary was present there at the time or even she's that old. No wonder she's so knowledgeable on the subject!
LOL. Came to say exactly that. What a difference punctuation makes. One comma after ''Collapse'' and we'd have been saved the confusion.
Her documentaries are excellent, especially the one on the Roman slums.
all empires fall. facts of life. LOVED the video
Because of multiculturalism.
@@The_Space_Born No, usually because of economics. The Roman Empire existed on the basis of Multiculturalism, bringing in groups of diverse cultures and making local big-wigs Romans to administer their Empire for them. It was a process of assimilation that worked until the Empire just got too big to manage.
I could listen to this lady all day every day. I would have had strait A’s in school if she taught me. She just captivates and demand your attention and in return I learn so much from her like a sponge I just soak up every word of hers… just an amazing talented lady….
Enthusiastic.for.the.anwers.to.life.a.to.z.fantastic.
If I had 3 wishes, one of them would be to be gifted for a day with Mary's brilliant mind, and walk through Rome being able to read ALL the old words etched in stone.
Mary Beard reading Latin on epitaphs and monuments and art is always revelation.
Ask her what the Lemnos stele says 😂
Actually I would delight in that fantasy myself with the condition that Mary was at my side. The juxtaposition between the realities of the Roman World and the picture that exists in Mary's mind would be actually something worth observing.
And if while standing next to Mary, you touch her arm, perhaps it's like being transported through an historic "wormhole" back in time. The people will become alive again....
I took Latin at school but I wasn’t clever enough to absorb anything further than the vocabulary. All the declensions and conjugations were above me, sadly.
Absolutely loving this stream of Mary Beard content on Rome!
Why did the Roman Empire collapse? Judging from the title picture of this video, they were not feeding their soldiers very well.
As a teenager I sometimes used to dream about what would have been if the Roman Empire lasted up to our days… how would the world look like today…and I always concluded that our advancement and progress would have been infinitely faster, like the trains of Japan are today compared to many other countries…something like that.
🐍🇻🇦🐆🕳️empire has Never departed = KJV Revelation 13: & 17: & 18: , how do you like the way 🐍🇻🇦🐆🕳️1st beast whore,🇺🇸2nd beast and 🐍🇻🇦🐆🕳️ puppets 🏴🇺🇳🌐👣🐙🕸️💉🍕👹 are controlling the 🌐 ?
I doubt that, the empire lasted about 800 years but their technology didn't move on that fast, compared that to 1100-1900, massive change.....
@@lw3646 Technology wasn’t held back by Roman civilisation but by invaders and barbarians and the Christian religion, remember the Inquisition , remember what they did to Galileo Galilei, remember book burning in the public square and the persecution of any scientific research, remember the witch-hunting, the church anathema and curses and control and suppression of all science and philosophy and even music?!?
What are you talking about?!
The Roman civilisation provided even social housing for some poor concitadines, their “social security system” provided food and vine for the poor, their roads and architecture and aqueducts were second to none then and still are today, their literature and art were as good if not better than everything produced in the next 1000 years to follow, their public libraries and public baths were equaled only 2000 years later.
We were pushed 1000 years back by barbarians and Christianity the exact way Putler could push back the world today with his cannon fodder.
When barbarians have imperial ambitions, entire civilisations and advancements are destroyed by mind-narrowness, envy, corruption and ideologies of grandeur of such tyrants.
The Roman Empire fell in 1453 AD, which was less than 600 years ago. Some of the later inventions by Rome after Antiquity is Greek Fire, which was essentially a napalm flamethrower mounted on naval vessels, they also created hand grenades, and the modern fork came from the Roman Empire during the Medieval Age. The Romans also created highly advanced siegeworks in the 10th Century. It wasn't as long ago as you may think.
To me, it's incredible that the Empire held together as long as it did, without the benefit of modern electronic communication.
Without technology creating more impatient people, people were more patient
@@robs2579 Of course, back then things were expected to take longer than nowadays, but we aren't talking about casual communication. It was about fighting with constant rebels and invaders that could organize quickly on the local level they operated in while you where a very big chunky empire which headquarters were weeks away. To me decentralization was basically inevitable, honestly, it just makes more sense for fighting with enemies below the size of Rome (pro tip, there weren't any enemies the size of Rome, just lots and lots and lots of smaller local enemies).
@@robs2579this is RUclips. You don’t need permission.
@@robs2579 Sorry, I forgot to ask for the 12.43.45 form at the desk 109 in the Cunt Department for Very Very Very Important Opinions that Should Never Ever Ever be Challenged (C.D.V.V.V.I.O.S.N.E.E.C.). May the law be merciful with me!!!
@@robs2579 I did, actually.
Thanks Signo
Absolutely theee best doc so far. Love your work Mary. Taking us into niches and places not yet seen. Hidden corners and tucked away places. Insights into the minds of those who coloured our history. Awesome facts and stories.
"To ravage, to slaughter, to steal, this they give the false name of empire; and where they create a desert, they call it peace." ― Tacitus
No one conquered Calgacus
@@mrnice7570 Couldn't cope with the weather. The soldiers posted on Hadrian's wall complained about it constantly.
Not very tactful from Tacitus...
@@mrnice7570 dougie McClean wrote a beautiful song called Caledonia. If you’re into all things Scottish then it’s worth a listen…
@@TNord. he comes from my hometown of Perth, Caledonia's calling me now I'm.going home 😊👍
That gate is in my mothers home town of Trier Germany. It’s called Porta Negra or Black Gate. My father loved that building and did several oil paintings of it.
Just excellent. What finesse and grace at discussing so many really "Byzantine" aspects of the history of Rome. Thank you!
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again - I’m such a ridiculous Mary Beard groupie that I even embarrass myself at times.
It’s the angle Mary looks at history from. Mary shows you what the average citizen was like, how they lived what they ate, how they loved etc. For me this is the most fascinating aspect. To look at historical events through the eyes of its people. It’s all this and, to be honest it’s the clothes that Mary wears. Mary is incredibly knowledgeable but so approachable at the same time. You can imagine having Mary as a neighbour, as a friend or family member. I’m kinda envious of anyone that can clam those things. I’m not saying that she’s perfect, far from it. It’s her “real person” language and appearance that has me listening and learning more than ever before in my life.
Thanks HC and thanks Ms Mary Beard.
Ha ha I told you that I’m a big fan. I’m gushing and I’m embarrassing myself. ❤
Yes when we did history at school it was all about kings and wars. Nothing about the lives of ordinary people. Also no videos of locations or buildings and no Googlemaps. Which is why history at school was so boring. Mary makes history relatable.
Her choice of footwear is a crime against humanity.
good lord, i'm so sorry. where are you going to go once you realize that mary beard is an utter fraud, a poor historian, and a creation of the affirmative action state?
Anything by Mary Beard is always worth watching
Bravo! What an impressive documentary. Mary is the quintessential classicist. I could listen to her speak all day.
LOL....EVERY time i get a pizza I think about this pizza scene.
I'd like to thnak Mary Beard because your book SPQR was of great benefit to me having read it before I read Mommsen's History of Rome. So thanks again.
So many layers to the fall of this empire. Great job pulling all these threads together.
Thanks Mary.
Love this Roman stuff.
What a time to be alive. Mary is incredible.
Indeed.
She certainly is ... must be god-awful to be History!
@@frankyyaggabot6222 So where are your books on Roman history, where are your degrees, Professorship and PROOF of your learning from prestigious schools? Where is the EVIDENCE of your Scholarship?
@@OdeInWessex 😂 Modesty prevents me replying to that ... but if you only knew!
I absolutely love watching anything presented by Mary Beard. She’s such an engaging personality.
It was an absolutely fantastic treat for me to watch this video, because of Mary Beard! Such a passionate and intelligent woman with realistic perspectives to say the least. I like your bicycle-riding. Unfortunately I got to know of this channel only now. I wish I knew it long before. Very satisfying to see your husband along with you in the same field of work. Above all, you look a bit like my mother and I love it!❤
Glad you having fun Mary God bless you and xo
Very good documentary. A good description of the religious changes in the later Empire. Not a lot, however, about the political collapse and cultural change which brought about the end of the Western Roman Empire...
Mary Beard's teaching style is great! The videographer and video editor are gifted as well.
Mary, you rock! I love your excitement the way you teach us history
Gorgeously presented. Mary Beard is one of the historical geniuses of our times.
For the Daily Mail readers perhaps
And a liar or fantasist which ever you prefer. the is in reality very little that exists in evidence to prove what she says , she does not mention immigration and how it culturally diluted Rome
@@rolandhawken6628 Yes she is very woke and even reuses to use BC and AD
@@clivebaxter6354 Glad some one else noticed
She is no historian. This borders on fiction.
Reading SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, Mary's book, currently and it's a great introduction into Roman Socieity highly recommend it as essential reading for everyone
12:12. Girl in the back: There is that crazy British lady playing with the pizza again. 😂😂
Ummm, the title of the video was "Why did the Roman Empire Collapse". Anyone notice that she really didn't address the question directly at all? The whole gist of the video was the Roman Empire didn't really go away but just morphed into Christianity? Sigh. No details on the series of Roman civil wars and their impact on Rome's ability to defend itself from barbarian invasion. No discussion of the nightmare consequences of "dividing the empire into smaller pieces" theme. (Like the massive increase in Roman administrative bureaucracies with corresponding increase in taxes) No discussion of the large trade deficits that led to the depletion of physical specie (ie. export of gold/silver to far away lands). No discussion of the crushing tax burden on Romans at the end of the empire, that led many to WELCOME the barbarians, anything to escape the Roman tax machine. No mention of corruption and inefficiency of the later empire. The list goes on and on. Marxists don't actually believe the Roman Empire collapsed, but rather just transitioned into Feudalism as a natural part of the dialectic of history. But the collapse of Rome did occur and it did set civilization back more than a thousand years technologically. (Medicine and engineering for sure, we forgot how to make concrete and toilets for Pete's sake.) This video was a fluff piece PERIOD.
I feel the main reason Rome collapsed is simple bureaucracy running out of funds from a hostile tax base
The empire. Meaning it stopped being an empire
Mostly agreed, the gist is unconvincing and I would have expected more stuff about social and military aspects, but Marxists have nothing to do with this. It isn't true that most Marxists somehow deny that the Roman Empire collapsed - the standard Marxist idea that the slavery-based *mode of production* was replaced by feudalism does not entail that the Roman *state entity* didn't collapse. If anything, the notion that an entire mode of production collapsed with the fall of Rome presents that fall as more profound and significant than in typical non-Marxist understandings, not less. (Not that Marxism necessarily entails that notion in the first place. Marxists have long recognised that here were a lot of 'feudal' elements already in the late Roman Empire, and it is well-known that there was still quite a lot of slavery in the early Middle Ages and even later.) And while Beard has, like me, broadly left-wing views, her argument here had nothing to do with Marxism.
One of my favorite historians. Thank for explaining what happened at the end Roman Empire. It’s very complicated but you really explained it.
She is a populist historian, not a serious one
She is no historian. Anyone with knowledge of the time she is talking about recognizes she is just telling a story. Not quite fiction but in no way history or documentary.
@@bradrichards8122 The ignorant are easily impressed though!
Oh good! That's all settled then (note to all Historians on Ancient Rome ... you can go home now)!
@@bradrichards8122 She has a PhD from Cambridge, and teaches there. Can't wait to hear what your qualifications are.
"Rome was built to last...
... But it didn't"
- Mary Beard, an absolute gangster
That pizza looks shocking, no wonder the empire collapsed
What an excellent production, well done Mary.
LOVE Mary Beard! Thank you for posting this episode.
I suggest The Fate of Rome
Climate, Disease, and the End of An Empire
by Harper, Kyle
as a current idea based on the most current science.
The murder - by Gratian - of Macsen Wledig (a.k.a. Magnus Maximus - true heir). 383 a,d.
Is that a book?
Curious fact: in Portuguese we have a word MAÇADA (the Ç reads like two Ss), it means something boring: a situation, a book, a piece of music, a person is a MAÇADOR male or MAÇADORA female, or anything else that is boring.
In the sources I consulted it does come from Masada...no one is really really certain.
Best wishes to all from Lisbon Portugal
Thank you for your great interpretation! Took my mind off things for awhile!
I did not know Mary beard collapsed! I wasn't aware she was as old as the Roman empire. Hopefully she will regain strength.
More emphasis need to be on the manpower shortages starting in the late 2nd century; the why & how. "THE FATE OF ROME" makes some very convincing arguments. Among many other things, Harper has a very new & different take on why Christianity became the popular religion of the people. A history book for our time as much as a new explanation of Rome's fall.
Love this channel.....and Love Mary Beard!
I love that the title is worded like it was her fault. I forgot who Mary was at first and saw it in my feed and thought "OMG what did she DO?!"
I still watched of course cause Mary rocks, even if she did bring upon Rome's collapse.
I read it like that too and got a little chuckle from it.
Very interesting how all these facts have modern parallels to what is happening in the west today.
She’s just amazing one of the few this days ..
It collapsed because its 'citizens' finally realized the empire cared nothing for the empire's vast majority. Much like today, it was impossible for the ruling class to maintain the respect and support of the vast plebeian class. Nobody would serve in the armies. Nobody would pay taxes. Nobody respected the emperor, the imperial administration that rapaciously overtaxed citizens, or the senatorial and equestrian classes. Not one of the members of these classes had any respect for the people who bled, fought, farmed, and created the empire. This collapsed the intricate commercial and social networks necessary to make any civilization possible.
Ya, you aren't going to hold an empire together by making citizens of everyone you conquer also. Your culture becomes less homogeneous and agendas become divided.
Interesting point. 🤔
@@muddyhotdog4103 Yes! Which is precisely why our Western civilisation is collapsing now. Our borders have been destroyed. Our culture is being taken over and crushed. Our religion and language and ethnicity are being dissolved. Give it 50 to 100 years and we’re finished.
You got it right when you said "Nobody would pay taxes". What happened was that the economy collapsed.
Loved your presentation. One name that should also be listed is Emperor Galerius. He wrote the Edict of Tolerance 2 years prior to the Edict of Milan. Its a very interesting document and has a sadness to it. He seems to be handing over the keys to a new generation as the temples to the old Gods are bankrupted. He appeals the the new keepers to respect the older Roman traditions.
One reason the empire "collapsed" was its adoption of Christianity-- a foreign religion turning the culture upside down from within. It wasn't just the Gauls and Visigoths "invading"-- the very nature of the empire was to fold its margins into the center, and so its very essence was self-transformation. Christianity helped to correct some of the cruelty of pagan Rome, so this "collapse" was also good in some ways.
@@SuperRobertoClemente "...fold its margins into the center..." Very profound and succinct observation. I think also many Romans wanted to distance themselves from the cruelty, cultural and martial arrogance of the past. Christianity offered a political/religious compromising-peace to the various demographics who already had converted and controlled so much of the empire. By the late 5th century Romans turned on paganism of their ancestors as demonic, burning down temples and smashing statues.
@@CHAS1422 Yes, it's a complicated story, as befits the duality of Christianity: one part God's mercy personified, one part righteous vengeance. Fast forward to the Crusades, and its "Christendom" that has the monopoly on cruelty and imperialism.
@@SuperRobertoClemente The Crusades also have a context. In the end Christianity was ubiquitous in the final stages of the Roman Empire. In the post Rome Byzantine Empire the eastern provinces, Levant, Egypt and North Africa remained Roman hands. By the sword the Rashidun warriors removed 2/3 of the territories. They invaded the underside of Europe conquering Andalusia and nearly conquering Gaul. They persistently raided south Europe for plunder and Slaves. They even tried to take Rome in 846 AD. There was precedent to the Crusades. Prior to that time, they were not the imperialists, they were the subjects.
@@CHAS1422 Given that the subsequent millennium was one of crusade, conquest and colonialism mostly led by Christian nations, one does forget those periods of Muslim expansion and occasional Empire. Certainly, plunder doesn't justify plunder, right? And what did the indigenous peoples of the Americas do to the Catholics, Puritans and other visitors who merrily genocided them? I'm personally always curious why the Revolutions of the Enlightenment so idealized the Romans. Perhaps, deep down, they were already yearning for Empires of their own.
it had an awful record of savagery by our standards, and even by those of their time. but what they left behind in architecture, law, politics, logistical network... truly left it as the inspiration for all that followed. no wonder Europe, even today, is so attached to its legacy. either inside or outside its frontiers, Rome was and still is Europe.
What have the Romans done for us? Is an age old debate going back at least MMXXIII years ago.
@@briancohenthepfjmassive.4769That part isn't debated. Law, architecture, the basis of the English language, art
@@anaseijas3923 No, Roman art and architecture and form of government was based on that of the Greeks. All their gods and goddesses were Greek gods and goddesses renamed. What they didn't have was Greek philosophy, which made Greece the greater civilization.
@@Gertyutz Bearing in mind the Romans eagerly borrowed many things from many other peoples and made it their own, they always had. Not all their gods were Greek, many were Etruscan or more obscure local Italic origin. In fact Indo-Europeans all over had many deities rooted in a shared pre-history that Greek polytheism only reinforced as it came into contact with polytheistic non-Greeks. They certainly did give much to Rome and the wider world, yet were never unified for long, outside of Alexander's brief empire.
Rome brought that sense of unity, it cemented the very notion of Greco-Roman antiquity as foundational civilizations to the Christian European west. And the Greeks would, throughout the Middle Ages, call themselves Romaioi after all. So I feel like saying one is better because you have a preference is a bit reductive and somewhat misses the fact that the two essentially syncretized over the centuries. Romans became Hellenized yet spoke Latin while the Greeks Romanized and continued to speak Greek.
Wow. The parallels with what's happening in the UK 2023 is uncanny. I wonder if in 2000 years there will be a documentary on the fall of the west. .
What a beautiful lady. Her excitement and fascination is so contagious. I absolutely adore her and her videos.
Thank you for such an interesting approach to the transformation of the Roman Empire. Actually there was not an abrupt fall, it has been more a transformation of centuries and centuries.
It makes me rethink about other examples such as the civilizations of America that quickly transformed in less than a century, or those of lost civilizations there, and elsewhere, that left no traces to understand them or to know how they were, and their remains are so much misterious.
A very interesting History lesson. Thank you
The province of Africa and about half of the grain supply was lost in a matter of months.
There were many sudden, and highly damaging events and dislocations caused by migration
We are watching an empire fall,, it will probably fall very quickly.
I am from Brazil, and I am an American. America is a whole continent containing many countries and are members of the Organization of American states. United States is also a member.
@@jvaikido1 That is clear enough. Thank you. My my point is that is common USA citizens tend to call USA as America, as if all America is USA. That is not so, that is imperialism
Give us a break mate. It's not imperialism ,it's just sloppy language. I guess north America would suffice.
Just as Americans call UK ,England. . that's just sloppy language too.
Stop being so woke. It's tedious and a bit like 16th century puritans looking for evil in every thought.
So yes by all means accuse them of sloppy language ,of which too much nowadays ,but imperialism ,nah !
What makes an empire great and what makes an empire stay great are not necessarily the same thing. I think there were times of crisis which Rome survived and I think chance played a part. However change is inevitable, the luck was inevitably going to run out.
"Great" is such as subjective definition, most Empires were evil and still are.
@VK RGFAN Point taken. However, "evil" is subjective too. But I will concede, "great" in terms of the Roman Empire means big and significant in size and duration. Everybody should know Rome did cruel and horrible things to its enemies. The crime for a slave escaping was crucifixion! On the other hand, we should probably not discount the cruel and horrible things done by Rome's enemies to Romans and the cruel and horrible things that would have been done to Romans by their enemies if they had been able to.
We might not think so, but historically, we live in privileged times.
Romans never had much interest in religion themselves, as can be seen from them adopting many Greek gods. Zeus became Jupiter, Heracles became Hercules, on and on.
So as they spread, they spread their cavalier attitude to religion.
But it was only a matter of time until they either encountered a religion they couldn't ignore, or one such religion arose among their ranks.
And once this Uber religion burst out from Rome it made sense it would take the world by storm.
@nosuchthing8 I don't think Christianity was a religion they couldn't ignore until the emperor became a convert.
Post hoc rationalisation is hard not to do, but I suspect religions came and went, and what made and still makes Christianity special was its adoption as the official religion of Rome.
Mary Beard is great. I love her doing the narration. I will watch just because it's her doing the documentary.
For those who were ( rightly imho) critical of the chap doing The Odyssey- THIS is what an English academic looks like!
What an excellent presentation. Thanks much for this.
I’m thinking about the Roman Empire again.
Wonderful narration.It's like living in those time periods...my she had my full attention throughout...Thank you so much Professor Mary Beard!
What is she a professor of ?
I remember a time when the title of Professor had gravitas.
Please know this narrative isn't factual. It isn't quite fiction but it is widely inaccurate.
@@bradrichards8122 History should be written with care and precision so that it is only comprehensible to other scholars. With fewer readers hopefully less public funding will be available for this field of research and greater priority will be allocated to more important disciplines. As for involving the plebs, their understanding of Roman history should be satisfied by the output of Hollywood and its ilk. The last thing we need are actual academically qualified professors who feel it's important to share their passion outside the educated elite by selection and simplification in order to give the general public at least some understanding of the subject in which they specialise
@@giovanniacuto2688 More bloviating.
Pseudo intellectualism seems to be a theme in the commentary.
Rome hadn't died out. Rome is still within us. I use so many Latin-origin words, we write our languages with Roman scripts, we use Roman architectural style, we still have the Roman ambition to the world, and we have the same religion that has evolved within Rome itself. Every empire that came after Rome imitated Roman values. Did Rome die? No, Rome is still among us.
Auntie Pls tell us more about Syrmium and all the emperor's born in there ...Probably more about " Illyrian emperor's" ,places where they were born and how many of them were there
Yes, and, she might know where Mickey Mouse was born, too..
I like the way Mary Beard talks about ancient Rome. Does anyone know the actual total number of people who have quietly walked away from ancient Rome? Instead of stubbornly holding onto the belief that all highways lead to Rome.
Gotta love Mary Beard! The Roman Empire was one giant Pizza. Their Empire spanned from crust to crust
Roman Empire, my favorite historical subject along with Ancient Greece.
Love both eras , but they pale in comparison to the sengoku jidai.
i think i missed the bit about Why Did The Roman Empire Collapse
my thoughts exactly .. 40 minutes in and sill no mention of causation of collapse ..
I love Mary’s story telling. She has a knack.🙏🏻🇨🇦
A knack for story telling, not serious history
This was a story. That is about all however.
Beautiful footage, excellent host! Thanks for posting/sharing!
I find it fascinating that the Lion became a symbol of Jesus given the role lions played in early Christian persecution