We're overwhelmed with gratitude for the immense support you've shown us on this journey regarding the Roman Republic Episodes. Today, we are happy to show you the Full History of the Roman World since its beginning until the start of the Empire. Your engagement, enthusiasm, and passion have truly made this project come alive. Crafting this documentary was a labor of love, and your constant comments about when will the next part be uploaded has been the driving force behind every scene and every frame. We're immensely thankful for each view, like, share, and comment that has fueled our motivation. If you would like to support our work even more, you can by joining our membership community: ruclips.net/channel/UCuCuEKq1xuRA0dFQj1qg9-Qjoin You will not only be supporting the creating of more and better documentaries but also unlocking exclusive perks and behind-the-scenes content that’s reserved just for our cherished members. Membership Perks Include: - Early access to upcoming documentaries - Exclusive behind-the-scenes footage - Custom badges and emojis - Voting on topics You can also support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/Knowledgia. New Episodes about the Roman Empire are in production. Stay tuned! Thank you for being the heartbeat of our channel! -Knowledgia
We of the history community have been exceedingly blessed these past few weeks. Multiple hour long documentary videos from OSP, Epic History TV, and now Knowledgia provides this amazing work. I just wish I had more time to enjoy all of it! Alas, I shall take in as much as I can. God bless you Knowledgia and to all of the history community watching with me!
@@Longfellowdeeds. We will never really know for sure anyway. However, AI just considers sources and info that is readily available online for its "conslusions", and they are often superficial. So is its language and its "narration". Afterwards, you just find a program to read the Ai-crafted material and find some movie clips and pictures, and then score easy money on RUclips.
I learned a lot about the founding of Rome, the transition from a monarchy to a republic, the Punic Wars, the rise of Julius Caesar, and the fall of the republic. I would highly recommend this video to anyone interested in learning more about this fascinating period of history.
First part is a founding myth of Rome, not history 😊like Viking sagas som of it might be true but lots of it is not, they didn’t dislike monarchy for no reason in Rome for no reason I suspect but the wolf story is probably not true, and dragons in sagas are definitely not true 😂 the children being persecuted and put in a basket in a river is a classic myth told many places
But I agree this is a very good video about posts empire, one of the most interesting parts of history and that they give both myths and different opinions on the pre proven history is also nice.
I've read so many books including the classics, watched so many documentaries as well as taken courses when I was in college on the history of Rome and I have to say...this is the most concise video I've ever seen on the subject. No asides, no distractions, very little of the major points missed. Well done. The only criticism I might have is that like most documentaries it focuses almost exclusively on the military and political history and very little on the civil and economic history. Of course that would have more than doubled the length of the video, and it is simply a fact that the things that really defined Rome's history were the military and political events. Superb work!
Who would have thought that a map, a few flags, and a passionate storyteller could turn the entire history of the Roman Republic into such an enthralling experience? I was hooked from start to finish!
Acts 16 30 And brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? 31 And they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house. Titus 3:5-7 5 Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost; Ephesians 2:8-9 - For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Romans 3 23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; 24 Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: 25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; 26 To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus. 27 Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith. 28 Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. Christ taking our penalty Colossians 2:13 “And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he quickened together with him, having forgiven you all trespasses;” 14 “Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross;”
@@Hello-ig1px The narrator erroneously painted him as some random farmer dude, when in reality he was a patrician who hated plebs. He completely butchered the story which is wild considering how important cincinnatus was
Because they were all badass people so you link the name and concept. If all Romans were named like Pookie and Snuggles, you would consider that badass too.
It is the same empire. Not a different one.the terms Byzantine was a retcon to differentiate it from the "holy" Roman Empire. Eastern Rome was the true Roman empire. Imagine the US lost territory up to the Mississippi River. The rest of it doesn't suddenly become a different nation. It is just smaller. Same with Rome. The western half fell but the east was alive and well.
A thrilled narrative introduction of(2) hours ...about Roman Empire history, which was full of wars ,tyranny, and historical glory ...thank you for sharing
This may well be the best video you have produced. The history is presented at a nice pace. Moreover, you go into details most people do not. Bless you and please keep focusing on those primary sources! Excellent.
Cool fact, America's founding fathers were admires of Roman culture and institutions. They adapted Rome's representative democracy as their own, named their legislature after the Roman Senate, and so many liberal ideas like "due process".
This is my first time coming around you and just wanna say this video so far is excellent. I also wanna say I hope you do more long videos that's what I'm always looking for and love so I'm hoping but I'm only one person so don't change whatever your doing for me lol just my opinion is all
9:48 Cincinnatus was a Patrician, not a Plebeian. It doesn't take much Googling to find numerous sources confirming this. As you yourself stated just prior in the video, the Patricians in the early Republic maintained a stranglehold on power, and there's no way the Senate would have voted a Plebeian into the office of Dictator.
This is the most precice video that i could find on the net: if you need to study or you just want to know about the roman republic, this is the right video.
The Roman Fabian strategy against Hannibal proved to be very effective. To borrow a few words from ‘the art of war’ which are “Fight the enemy where they are not”, the Romans instead go after Hannibals’ allies and they deprive him any reincforcements.
The worst part is they hated him for it and couldn’t be happier once his consulship was over so funny even though they were doing so much damage to Hannibal the Roman army and especially senators couldn’t bare the “embarrassment” of avoiding Hannibal and letting him walk all over them taunting them those Roman’s are a stubborn lot
@@thelimon4338Until the aftermath of the battle of Cannae, then all of the senators supported Fabius and his strategy which became Roman policy until the last year of the 2nd Punic War.
Good documentary overall. But there were some glaring mistakes still. Up the top of my head, the Aeneid does not say that Aeneas founded Rome. He founded Alba Longa from which Romulus and Remus originated. Tite Live reiterated this point in his work Ab Urbe condita libri as well. Another point to consider is that the Germanic Tribes are quite different from the Celts, whereas you said that the Cimbri were Celts. Lastly, ‘Scipio’ is a family name, not a personal name. Both Scipio Africanus and Scipio Aemilianus technically have the same personal name, ‘Publius’. Therefore, their proper name is ‘Publius’, not ‘Scipio’. You've done a great job summarizing the History of Rome in just over two hours, but I just wanted to point out these mistakes although it may seem like nitpicking. Keep up the good work !!!
@35:00 The Romans were easily able to recreate the Carthage ship because Carthage had 'serial numbers' on the parts that made the ship. It was far easier to order a number in stock than it was to say 'make us another portside x.' Their own ingenuity was Carthage's downfall
@@thebigmanskeet6969 and why would you think about it through the Germanic perspective? The only thing I think u could learn from the Germanic perspective. Is that diversity and inclusion doesn't work it only leads to war. The Roman's were always outnumbered but what they excelled at was pitting tribe against tribe. The Germanic tribes if they would have put their petty disputes aside for longer than 5 mins they would have conquered the world. Which they did under the Frank's but that lasted all of 5 mins. Then you have the Holy Roman empire where they still fought each other like cats and dogs not until the 20th century were they united and then they did almost take over world twice in 20 years. So what exactly do u learn
"In the midst of battle, when chaos reigns and fear grips the heart, remember this: the true battlefield lies within oneself. Conquer the doubts, the temptations of weakness, and the tumult of emotions. For it is not the external foe that defines victory, but the inner strength and resilience of the warrior's spirit." - Marcus Aurelius
One thing to remember about the second punic war is that Carthage wasn't a participant and didn't provide any assistance. It was literally just Hannibal VS the entire Roman republic and he almost won. Makes you wonder how the world would have turned out if Carthage had pulled their finger out
This video glossed over the 1st Gracchi brother and completely ignored the 2nd. One of the most commonly ignored aspects of the Roman Republic is the constant degradation of norms and structures leading to the constant civil wars and eventually Caesar and the Empire.
This video was a total rome history revision for me since school. I spent much time watching it. Thank you a lot. Hope to see more rome history series.
Good video. I'm sorry to say though that any historical narrative without enough mention of dates on which events happened is severely lacking in my opinion. It would make your video 8/10 if you did this. Thanks for reading
That darkness spell basically what it is is that you can see better than your enemies enemies can so you can fight them better, and it probably also demoralizes them making them making them weaker
Someone seriously needs to make an entire series, either tv or movies, of the history of Rome from beginning to end, but set in modern times going into the future. Or alternatively an alternative history series that shows the history of rome, with details changed to make the empire last to modern day. I can’t even imagine what modern Roman technology might look like if it kept the same aesthetics.
This video is great, amazing even...but my criticism is that it pins the rise and fall of Rome purely on good and poor military strategyn. I wish it would have discussed the more popular emperors and politicians and philosophers throughout the time that sought the true betterment of Rome. I wish it would have mentioned how religion played a role and it's rise and fall because that was an important part of it. I hope my criticism doesn't get taken the wrong way because the information presented from start to finish is very organized and thorough in its own right for its focus on military strategyn.
How can this documentary COMPLETELY gloss over the Battle of Metaurus, where Gaius Claudius Nero defeated and beheaded Hannibal’s brother Hasdrubal. This battle was called one of the 15 Decisive Battles of the World by the British historian Edward Creasy.
Early Roman history and the other current powers at the time, i never understood until i saw consecutive timelines, it was just too much information for my monkey boy brain. Once i figured out all the Western civilizations, then i worked my way backwards and learned middle eastern and fertile crescent and Levant, and then incorporated Asian history, it's so interesting to learn how civilizations rose in different eras, and different locations, and basically how mankind split into tribes and become races, and ffw to genetics and learning migration patterns of early man is so foggy but i think is the answer to many questions we ask about why we are here besides history channel ancient aliens, which i used to love until they started making things up. There's so much sci-fi that makes easy answers to long periods of time that we humans have no concept of in our lifetime, we can't concieve of our existence, it's similar to the distances between stars, and solar systems, vs galaxies. Its in the order of magnitude that takes wisdom to learn
1:42:30 So this wasn't because of how wonderful Caesar was as consul, but rather how he bullied Marcus into doing nothing with his consulship through his sheer popularity and supporters. Normally consuls pass power back and forth between each month, but Marcus withdrew from public life after the first month.
I could have sworn Brindisium was not a Greek town but Messapian.The etymology of the word "brini" is not Greek. It is related to Albanian "brin" meaning horn/rib in relation to the shape of the harbor.
@@Vegadoro “Mate” they didn’t drop out of thin air. Albania gets its name from the Illyrian tribe called Albanoi which was located in present day central Albania first mentioned by Greek historian Hecataeus of Miletus in the 6th century bc. Ptolemy also mentioned a city called Albanopolis existing in 2nd century AD roughly in the same region. Illyrians were a sea faring culture which is why they had colonies across the Adriatic in Italy. This is why the city of Brindisium shares cognates with Albanian.
A few points. first, you utilized the word utilize. this word means to use something in a way it was not intended for, such as utilizing a spatula to swat the dog off the picnic table. You can not 'utilize' a corvus for boarding an enemy ship, that is what it is for, you "use" it. second: The corvus was not an "upgrade" nor was it greatly beneficial. It was actually a clunky unwieldy device of very limited use with an extremally short reach, compared to conventional ropes and grappling hooks. It also concentrated boarding efforts to a single spot on the ship, which could be easily defended, with much fewer troops. It was further a devise which made the ships top-heavy and could easily catch a strong wind an overturn the ship. This is evidenced by the fact that it was removed and abandoned shortly after the war and never used by any other force in history. The only place in history where it was put to any effective use was in one area of Cape Ecnomus where the Roman Center force abandoned their towed bares and moved to the Sicilian shore, putting their stern to the shore and presenting their corvus equipped bows to the Carthaginian left force. The system itself did not defeat the Carthaginian force, it intimidated them holding them back from attacking until the Roman lead forces returned and surrounded these Carthaginians. As each Carthaginian ship carried around 40 marines while each Roman ship carried around 40 marines and additional 80 soldiers from the legions being transported (the true reason for the massively one-sided victory - ships were roughly 1-to-1 but troops per ship were 1-to-3). It is unlikely that this actually helped anything as battle between these two forces likely would have resulted in the same overwhelming Roman victory that occurred with each of the other fleet sections. The Corvus was unmitigated failed junk.
We're overwhelmed with gratitude for the immense support you've shown us on this journey regarding the Roman Republic Episodes. Today, we are happy to show you the Full History of the Roman World since its beginning until the start of the Empire.
Your engagement, enthusiasm, and passion have truly made this project come alive. Crafting this documentary was a labor of love, and your constant comments about when will the next part be uploaded has been the driving force behind every scene and every frame. We're immensely thankful for each view, like, share, and comment that has fueled our motivation.
If you would like to support our work even more, you can by joining our membership community:
ruclips.net/channel/UCuCuEKq1xuRA0dFQj1qg9-Qjoin
You will not only be supporting the creating of more and better documentaries but also unlocking exclusive perks and behind-the-scenes content that’s reserved just for our cherished members.
Membership Perks Include:
- Early access to upcoming documentaries
- Exclusive behind-the-scenes footage
- Custom badges and emojis
- Voting on topics
You can also support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/Knowledgia.
New Episodes about the Roman Empire are in production. Stay tuned!
Thank you for being the heartbeat of our channel!
-Knowledgia
Yay
Nice video! Can I ask for a video in how the English built its empire? From the beginning, like this video, please 🙏
Can you do a video like this but about Charlemagne and his French empire.
@@closetmonster4471 Interesting Idea. We have already a few videos regarding English formation, Norman Conquest and British Formation. More to come!
@Knowledgia I have come across them and just watch the one from 2 years ago I'm thinking a more up to date one would be fantastic 😀
who knew a map, some flags & symbols and some dude talking about Rome could keep me hooked for so long.
Haha I laughed so hard because it’s so true
He has a great voice! If they animated the troop numbers and movements even more I wouldn’t be able to stop looking away!
Seriously 😂
@@DauthEldrvariaopo
I remember when I used to be a virgin.
We of the history community have been exceedingly blessed these past few weeks. Multiple hour long documentary videos from OSP, Epic History TV, and now Knowledgia provides this amazing work. I just wish I had more time to enjoy all of it! Alas, I shall take in as much as I can. God bless you Knowledgia and to all of the history community watching with me!
Or they have all suddenly gain access to IA ... the channels now sound unnervingly similar.
Can’t forget the 🐐 Kings and Generals. 3-4hour docs regularly. It’s amazing to see another channel follow suit, it’s the future. Keep it up man
Oversimplified uploaded recently
@@andreascj73now we will never know what is fact or fiction with ai
@@Longfellowdeeds. We will never really know for sure anyway. However, AI just considers sources and info that is readily available online for its "conslusions", and they are often superficial. So is its language and its "narration".
Afterwards, you just find a program to read the Ai-crafted material and find some movie clips and pictures, and then score easy money on RUclips.
I learned a lot about the founding of Rome, the transition from a monarchy to a republic, the Punic Wars, the rise of Julius Caesar, and the fall of the republic. I would highly recommend this video to anyone interested in learning more about this fascinating period of history.
First part is a founding myth of Rome, not history 😊like Viking sagas som of it might be true but lots of it is not, they didn’t dislike monarchy for no reason in Rome for no reason I suspect but the wolf story is probably not true, and dragons in sagas are definitely not true 😂 the children being persecuted and put in a basket in a river is a classic myth told many places
But I agree this is a very good video about posts empire, one of the most interesting parts of history and that they give both myths and different opinions on the pre proven history is also nice.
A republic was just an excuse for another group to rule - the oligarchs. We were lied to! We are not free!!
School discussion board ass comment lol
@@kimmogensen4888 hmm so who was the first king
I've read so many books including the classics, watched so many documentaries as well as taken courses when I was in college on the history of Rome and I have to say...this is the most concise video I've ever seen on the subject. No asides, no distractions, very little of the major points missed. Well done. The only criticism I might have is that like most documentaries it focuses almost exclusively on the military and political history and very little on the civil and economic history. Of course that would have more than doubled the length of the video, and it is simply a fact that the things that really defined Rome's history were the military and political events.
Superb work!
Do U have any recommendations for someone just starting to learn Roman history regarding the more anthropological side of things?
Seconding what the other person said, I’d love to learn more about this, just hoping this notification makes it through
TBH, I wished you talked more about the Gracchi brothers. They are synonymous with the many reasons for why the Roman republic fell.
Who would have thought that a map, a few flags, and a passionate storyteller could turn the entire history of the Roman Republic into such an enthralling experience? I was hooked from start to finish!
I love that there’s no dramatic music playing throughout this vid like a lot of the other history channels. I can fall asleep to this one ❤
There is you just can't hear it
@@declanga1020 It's a rare thing when a youtube channel gets the audio levels right, especially when it comes to music.
I already fell asleep to this
As a Greek iv never felt before such intuitive connection with other people when visited Italy
Siamo un popolo diviso dal mare
"Una faccia, una razza"
I'm Turkish, and I feel the same, late DNA test found that Etruscan have very familiar DNA with south Anatolia!
With all do respect I demand this be remade. *Longer*
😂😂😂😂
Acts 16
30 And brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved?
31 And they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house.
Titus 3:5-7
5 Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost;
Ephesians 2:8-9 - For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
Romans 3
23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;
24 Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus:
25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God;
26 To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.
27 Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith.
28 Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Christ taking our penalty
Colossians 2:13
“And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he quickened together with him, having forgiven you all trespasses;”
14
“Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross;”
Who died and made you Ceaser?? Lmao I joke I joke 😃
Bro that took the dictatorship, won the emergency battle, then said nah I’m good I just want to farm is a a goat
For some reason the narrator calls him a plebeian, he wasn't. He was a patrician. That's a pretty big error
@@MeatGoblin88
are you saying that plebs can't own farms?
@@Hello-ig1px no
@@MeatGoblin88
then what are you saying?
@@Hello-ig1px The narrator erroneously painted him as some random farmer dude, when in reality he was a patrician who hated plebs. He completely butchered the story which is wild considering how important cincinnatus was
I'm amazed every day that we know as much as we do about rome and are ancient past.
The Roman republic was actually proclaimed in the year 509 BC. From 753 to 509 was the Roman kingdom
Empire
@@tarakabuddhanice try 😂
@tarakabuddha 27BC was when the Roman empire was founded.
Before that it was a republic. And before that, a kingdom.
@@Not_A_CatWonder how the wealth of a king compares to that of Imperator.
Empire with Augustus , for Iure in Fact
Dude why do they all have such badass sounding names?
Just add "-us" to the end of your name or any name
Gojo is to top g
@@darkplaysthis1916Gaius Gojus Satorus doesn't sound as bad i thought
@@jsifgonz4843glizzyus hendrixus maximus
Because they were all badass people so you link the name and concept. If all Romans were named like Pookie and Snuggles, you would consider that badass too.
Absolutely fantastic. Question; do you have as such/similar you have done or, in plans to do, for the Eastern Roman/Byzantium Empire??
That's in the works!
@@KnowledgiaGREAT, oh cannot wait. Any 'hints' on a timeline of when might be ready ??
It is the same empire. Not a different one.the terms Byzantine was a retcon to differentiate it from the "holy" Roman Empire. Eastern Rome was the true Roman empire.
Imagine the US lost territory up to the Mississippi River. The rest of it doesn't suddenly become a different nation. It is just smaller. Same with Rome. The western half fell but the east was alive and well.
A thrilled narrative introduction of(2) hours ...about Roman Empire history, which was full of wars ,tyranny, and historical glory ...thank you for sharing
This may well be the best video you have produced. The history is presented at a nice pace. Moreover, you go into details most people do not. Bless you and please keep focusing on those primary sources! Excellent.
now you know why there is still a fierce competition between Rome and Lazio!
History of the Roman kingdom, republic, and empire intrigues me to no end. I’ll never get sick of these videos!
Please start a series on Roman Empire's history...
Already in works!
Already in works!
@@Knowledgia Thank you for your videos, I've watched every compilation on your channel.
glitched comment
Carthage : *exists*
One too many Romans : “We won’t tolerate this”
Fr
I am so sorry to hear that about your Mom. My Mom is the most important person in my life.
Your mom is the most important person in my life too
1:42:48 “it was no secret that Caesar and his friends use DEVIOUS ways to achieve there goals” 💀
Thanks! I'd love to see a part to covering the rest of the western rome's lifespan
2 hours of Rome history ❤❤
I wish it was bigger to be honest
Cool fact, America's founding fathers were admires of Roman culture and institutions. They adapted Rome's representative democracy as their own, named their legislature after the Roman Senate, and so many liberal ideas like "due process".
The whole west
Greek as well. Many Greek "gods" and architecture in Washington D.C.
Thats why your flag have its origins in rome
Washington is a beautiful city
And eagle as a sign
I must take my time to watch this epic Roman Republic history since I am about to be sleeping right now at 3:51am,Tuesday morning,good friends!!!:-D
This is my first time coming around you and just wanna say this video so far is excellent. I also wanna say I hope you do more long videos that's what I'm always looking for and love so I'm hoping but I'm only one person so don't change whatever your doing for me lol just my opinion is all
9:48 Cincinnatus was a Patrician, not a Plebeian. It doesn't take much Googling to find numerous sources confirming this. As you yourself stated just prior in the video, the Patricians in the early Republic maintained a stranglehold on power, and there's no way the Senate would have voted a Plebeian into the office of Dictator.
This is the most precice video that i could find on the net: if you need to study or you just want to know about the roman republic, this is the right video.
The Roman Fabian strategy against Hannibal proved to be very effective. To borrow a few words from ‘the art of war’ which are “Fight the enemy where they are not”, the Romans instead go after Hannibals’ allies and they deprive him any reincforcements.
Card Game Art Work
The worst part is they hated him for it and couldn’t be happier once his consulship was over so funny even though they were doing so much damage to Hannibal the Roman army and especially senators couldn’t bare the “embarrassment” of avoiding Hannibal and letting him walk all over them taunting them those Roman’s are a stubborn lot
@@thelimon4338Until the aftermath of the battle of Cannae, then all of the senators supported Fabius and his strategy which became Roman policy until the last year of the 2nd Punic War.
@@jmwilliamsart when things are desperate, pride is lost.
Good documentary overall. But there were some glaring mistakes still. Up the top of my head, the Aeneid does not say that Aeneas founded Rome. He founded Alba Longa from which Romulus and Remus originated. Tite Live reiterated this point in his work Ab Urbe condita libri as well. Another point to consider is that the Germanic Tribes are quite different from the Celts, whereas you said that the Cimbri were Celts. Lastly, ‘Scipio’ is a family name, not a personal name. Both Scipio Africanus and Scipio Aemilianus technically have the same personal name, ‘Publius’. Therefore, their proper name is ‘Publius’, not ‘Scipio’.
You've done a great job summarizing the History of Rome in just over two hours, but I just wanted to point out these mistakes although it may seem like nitpicking.
Keep up the good work !!!
"Bro was founded on April 22nd 753 BC" 0:11
Rome was founded on my birthday let’s go!!!! 😂😂
W
@@timgora9116 The accepted date for Rome's founding is actually April 21...
21 april 753 BC not 22
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍
An amazing video from an amazing channel, great work
Thank you for watching! Enjoy!
Love the narration and the way it's presented :) Thank you, nice people for making this
This is thoroughly true and correct.This is the real history.
This is amazing. I didn't learn half of this in school.
@35:00 The Romans were easily able to recreate the Carthage ship because Carthage had 'serial numbers' on the parts that made the ship. It was far easier to order a number in stock than it was to say 'make us another portside x.' Their own ingenuity was Carthage's downfall
Very interesting stuff. Thank you!
very early, excited for this!
What software are you using for creating the pictures and video?
Great work and thanks
I can''t watch this right now but I'll give you the like already, can''t wait !
I'm just now reading the book Caesar and Christ: The Story of Civilization Volume III by Will Durant, and this pops up. Thanks!
Please boys no one let the girls know. We've been thinking of Rome again. They just got over our last time having an affair with Rome.
You're acting like we don't think about Rome either. But we think of it through the perspective of the Germanic tribes 💅
I’m Italian and North African but I only smash girls with Barbarian ancestry 😎 all of my baby moms have blue/green eyes and red or blonde hair
Ostrogoth girls have ruined me. 😩
@@vh4990 Idk them former Viking women with the red hair hit different 🥵
@@thebigmanskeet6969 and why would you think about it through the Germanic perspective? The only thing I think u could learn from the Germanic perspective. Is that diversity and inclusion doesn't work it only leads to war. The Roman's were always outnumbered but what they excelled at was pitting tribe against tribe. The Germanic tribes if they would have put their petty disputes aside for longer than 5 mins they would have conquered the world. Which they did under the Frank's but that lasted all of 5 mins. Then you have the Holy Roman empire where they still fought each other like cats and dogs not until the 20th century were they united and then they did almost take over world twice in 20 years. So what exactly do u learn
Absolutely LOVED this! Keep it up man, you earned my sub this day!
Excellent narration and presentation!
"In the midst of battle, when chaos reigns and fear grips the heart, remember this: the true battlefield lies within oneself. Conquer the doubts, the temptations of weakness, and the tumult of emotions. For it is not the external foe that defines victory, but the inner strength and resilience of the warrior's spirit." - Marcus Aurelius
This channel IS my Roman Empire
One thing to remember about the second punic war is that Carthage wasn't a participant and didn't provide any assistance.
It was literally just Hannibal VS the entire Roman republic and he almost won.
Makes you wonder how the world would have turned out if Carthage had pulled their finger out
Thank you Mr Reagan
I love how you say "Silician" like I used to when I was little and didn't know it was Sicilian 😭😭 like damn u really are one of us 😂
Subscription earned for BC
I despise when people plagiarize the Gregorian Calender with "ce"
@@WhydoIsuddenlyhaveahandle Not a Christian myself but gotta give respect those who created the Calendar by using their namings.
This video glossed over the 1st Gracchi brother and completely ignored the 2nd. One of the most commonly ignored aspects of the Roman Republic is the constant degradation of norms and structures leading to the constant civil wars and eventually Caesar and the Empire.
great video!!!!
This is the best way to get knowledge
Roman General 1: There is no foe left to fight.
Roman General 2: There is. Ourselves. Let’s head back to Rome.
Roman General 3: Okay, let’s go.
Interesting video, nice introduction to the history of Rome
What is the flute music at 37:10?
Wow great Job guys 👍🏻
Thank you! Cheers!
Don’t let the ladies know we are thinking about Rome again 🤫
OMG this video is great! How can I learn those animation-making?
This video was a total rome history revision for me since school. I spent much time watching it. Thank you a lot. Hope to see more rome history series.
I love history ❤. This is my second time I am watching ❤
Good video. I'm sorry to say though that any historical narrative without enough mention of dates on which events happened is severely lacking in my opinion. It would make your video 8/10 if you did this. Thanks for reading
Great video and please make a series on sulla's civil war
Absolutely great video, historical work, edition, narrative, data and so far 👍 but I cannot help laughing at the Roman names 😅 ❤
Interesting RUclips recommendation as I often think about the Roman Empire.
Omg!! I literaly was looking for this and couldnt find... Thanks!!! Keep up the good job!!!
Thank you! Enjoy!
You should turn this into a podcast
Sick pfp
@@BrotherhoodofSteelRecruiter thx
Splendid
🇮🇪🎈🎊🎁✨🎉🌹
Nice Explanation
This is incredible.
Legends says that all man one day shall march back to Rome ....
Nice vid ❤
I sleep to this much love ❤
Isn't it so cool that we can study history from over 2,000 years ago now in the year 2024?!?!
very
I think about Rome everyday.
i like it. Good job
It's a lot of work to make a two-hour video in such a great quality. It reminds me of a computer game)
That darkness spell basically what it is is that you can see better than your enemies enemies can so you can fight them better, and it probably also demoralizes them making them making them weaker
Great video! Well done. Just glad that I don't have to look at Mary Beard constantly throughout the video......sorry....
Is that a Roman Bryan Cranston in the thumbnail? Made the 1000th like btw.
Someone seriously needs to make an entire series, either tv or movies, of the history of Rome from beginning to end, but set in modern times going into the future.
Or alternatively an alternative history series that shows the history of rome, with details changed to make the empire last to modern day. I can’t even imagine what modern Roman technology might look like if it kept the same aesthetics.
In some ways the Hunger Games had a little bit of this. It was based on late stage decadence on Rome
This video is great, amazing even...but my criticism is that it pins the rise and fall of Rome purely on good and poor military strategyn. I wish it would have discussed the more popular emperors and politicians and philosophers throughout the time that sought the true betterment of Rome. I wish it would have mentioned how religion played a role and it's rise and fall because that was an important part of it.
I hope my criticism doesn't get taken the wrong way because the information presented from start to finish is very organized and thorough in its own right for its focus on military strategyn.
"The consulship of Julius and Caesar."
Nice one.
how did you get such a good map and all that information?
I remember as a younger student, learning about Rome's odium towards Carthage. They through salt on their soil so that they could never rise again.
Noice video 👍👍
How can this documentary COMPLETELY gloss over the Battle of Metaurus, where Gaius Claudius Nero defeated and beheaded Hannibal’s brother Hasdrubal. This battle was called one of the 15 Decisive Battles of the World by the British historian Edward Creasy.
There is too much history to cover everything.
6:00 I don't get that, that makes sense. Who else would fit in there?
I do agree.
Been thinking a lot about Rome lately
History! It's just one bloody thing after another!
Glorious
Awesome ❤
I just watched a truly magnificent movie
Early Roman history and the other current powers at the time, i never understood until i saw consecutive timelines, it was just too much information for my monkey boy brain. Once i figured out all the Western civilizations, then i worked my way backwards and learned middle eastern and fertile crescent and Levant, and then incorporated Asian history, it's so interesting to learn how civilizations rose in different eras, and different locations, and basically how mankind split into tribes and become races, and ffw to genetics and learning migration patterns of early man is so foggy but i think is the answer to many questions we ask about why we are here besides history channel ancient aliens, which i used to love until they started making things up. There's so much sci-fi that makes easy answers to long periods of time that we humans have no concept of in our lifetime, we can't concieve of our existence, it's similar to the distances between stars, and solar systems, vs galaxies. Its in the order of magnitude that takes wisdom to learn
2 am loading up assassins creed mirage this in the background with a phat crumble bowl packed 👌🏿👌🏿👌🏿 god is good
1:42:30 So this wasn't because of how wonderful Caesar was as consul, but rather how he bullied Marcus into doing nothing with his consulship through his sheer popularity and supporters. Normally consuls pass power back and forth between each month, but Marcus withdrew from public life after the first month.
I could have sworn Brindisium was not a Greek town but Messapian.The etymology of the word "brini" is not Greek. It is related to Albanian "brin" meaning horn/rib in relation to the shape of the harbor.
Mate, they were not a thing back then. It was Greeks, Romans and barbarians.
@@Vegadoro “Mate” they didn’t drop out of thin air. Albania gets its name from the Illyrian tribe called Albanoi which was located in present day central Albania first mentioned by Greek historian Hecataeus of Miletus in the 6th century bc. Ptolemy also mentioned a city called Albanopolis existing in 2nd century AD roughly in the same region. Illyrians were a sea faring culture which is why they had colonies across the Adriatic in Italy. This is why the city of Brindisium shares cognates with Albanian.
Delusional albanian trying to stole some greek history.. never mind bro @@Vegadoro
A few points. first, you utilized the word utilize. this word means to use something in a way it was not intended for, such as utilizing a spatula to swat the dog off the picnic table. You can not 'utilize' a corvus for boarding an enemy ship, that is what it is for, you "use" it.
second: The corvus was not an "upgrade" nor was it greatly beneficial. It was actually a clunky unwieldy device of very limited use with an extremally short reach, compared to conventional ropes and grappling hooks. It also concentrated boarding efforts to a single spot on the ship, which could be easily defended, with much fewer troops. It was further a devise which made the ships top-heavy and could easily catch a strong wind an overturn the ship. This is evidenced by the fact that it was removed and abandoned shortly after the war and never used by any other force in history. The only place in history where it was put to any effective use was in one area of Cape Ecnomus where the Roman Center force abandoned their towed bares and moved to the Sicilian shore, putting their stern to the shore and presenting their corvus equipped bows to the Carthaginian left force. The system itself did not defeat the Carthaginian force, it intimidated them holding them back from attacking until the Roman lead forces returned and surrounded these Carthaginians. As each Carthaginian ship carried around 40 marines while each Roman ship carried around 40 marines and additional 80 soldiers from the legions being transported (the true reason for the massively one-sided victory - ships were roughly 1-to-1 but troops per ship were 1-to-3). It is unlikely that this actually helped anything as battle between these two forces likely would have resulted in the same overwhelming Roman victory that occurred with each of the other fleet sections. The Corvus was unmitigated failed junk.