War and Peace ...and War (35 to 32 B.C.E.)

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2022
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    Sources:
    Plutarch, "The Life of Antony" | tinyurl.com/2dsyxz6d
    Suetonius, "The Life of Augustus" | tinyurl.com/3d4bw934
    Cassius Dio, "Roman History: Book 50" | tinyurl.com/m8nd6t5x
    Cassius Dio, "Roman History: Book 51" | tinyurl.com/m8nd6t5x
    --
    Barry Strauss, "The War That Made the Roman Empire: Antony, Cleopatra, and Octavian at Actium" | tinyurl.com/4h23x888
    Stacy Schiff, "Cleopatra: A Life" | tinyurl.com/y9fytw3h
    Joyce Tyldesley, "Cleopatra: Last Queen of Egypt" | tinyurl.com/ycyy2y93
    Adrian Goldsworthy "Antony and Cleopatra" | tinyurl.com/mrd3rr6r
    Adrian Goldsworthy, "Augustus: First Emperor of Rome" | tinyurl.com/mtdxb5vs
    Anthony Everitt, "Augustus: The Life of Rome's First Emperor" | tinyurl.com/ydec2m87
    Tom Holland, "Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar" | tinyurl.com/yc8xybpc
    Tom Holland, "Rubicon" | tinyurl.com/49a4nf9c
    Music:
    "XY," by Nctrnm
    "Infados," by Kevin MacLeod
    "March of the Victors," by Benjamin Botkin
    "Thomas Neutrality," by Enrique Molano
    "Hitchcock Would Have Fucked Up Charade," by Chris Zabriskie
    "Hallon," by Christian Bjoerklund

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @abdulrahmanalzaidi
    @abdulrahmanalzaidi Год назад +4441

    The reason why it took so long for HC to put this video out wasn't because of research or editing, he was just waiting for tribune Aquila to grant him permission to upload it.
    Edit- thank you all so much for getting my comment to 3k likes, this has never happened before. If I made someone smile and happy then that’s a reward that’s enough for me but still thank you for the likes.

  • @lennox285679
    @lennox285679 Год назад +3207

    Octavian taking Antony’s will and reading it aloud is like someone stealing your diary and reading it aloud at lunch 🤣

    • @123four...
      @123four... Год назад +7

      nice pfp

    • @minnumseerrund
      @minnumseerrund Год назад +121

      After having the jocks knock out the school librarian

    • @budwyzer77
      @budwyzer77 Год назад +137

      The whole thing is frighteningly cynical- once Octavian understood how to frame the situation he couldn't lose.. An overlooked "benefit" to committing a violent extreme sacrilege to obtain evidence against one's opponent is that no one will question the veracity of said evidence. After all, does it make sense to attack *Vestal Virgins* if you're just going to lie about the will anyway?
      Antony's will said *exactly* what Octavian needed it to say.

    • @davidleonard3887
      @davidleonard3887 Год назад +6

      it was considered illegal

    • @quintusantell2912
      @quintusantell2912 Год назад +10

      @@budwyzer77 I think you make an interesting and thought-provoking comment. I think I understood the first part-- that the act of such sacrilegious violence could be reframed to demonstrate Octavian's willingness to do anything for the Roman state (including taking on the "Deep State?"

  • @LordMazafeff
    @LordMazafeff Год назад +1018

    Octavian really lucked out meeting Agrippa, he found the perfect subordinate. Someone unbelievably competent but also trustworthy and unambitious.

    • @ultra-papasmurf
      @ultra-papasmurf Год назад +249

      unambitious is probably the wrong term, he was more then happy to elevate his station when he could and took initiative constantly, id say content. He would comb to the top if the path was clear but he didnt need to psychologically and was happy to stay no.2

    • @LordMazafeff
      @LordMazafeff Год назад +33

      @@ultra-papasmurf Good take.

    • @kekero540
      @kekero540 Год назад +78

      Octavian and Agrippa really have a Justinian and Belisaurius dynamic. Although I think Agrippa wore the pants more often than not. While Justinian had tighter control over Belisaurius

    • @OuhHey
      @OuhHey Год назад +46

      Aggripa just knew he could not be Avgvstvs
      He was from a "low" Equestrian Family
      And he was not an Heir of Caesar like Octavian, Caesarion, and Marc Antony

    • @littlekuribohimposte
      @littlekuribohimposte Год назад +21

      Octavian was a political mastermind, While he didall the wheeling and dealing, Agrippa seemed to be much better at getting down and dirty and going work with more tangible results.

  • @GrubyTolek
    @GrubyTolek Год назад +1879

    I'm glad Agrippa gets the historical recognition he deserves. Just think of how many people like him were the brains before the successful reigns of other famous historical figures.

    • @Zmok
      @Zmok Год назад

      Many wives of lazy or disinterested rulers were true brains of the empires.

    • @blackbaron9544
      @blackbaron9544 Год назад +35

      without agrippa there would not be Augustus

    • @mortache
      @mortache Год назад +18

      @Nik Nikkersoon Alexander basically started an Age of Empires "death match", with piles of resources and only war in front of him. Although he did abolish all taxes and most of his conquest was funded by the said conquest and mining, which almost made the campaign end near the very beginning. Alexander's dad was also the first person to create a "Greece" through the League of Corinth or Hellenic league

    • @reconnectingtryagain6986
      @reconnectingtryagain6986 Год назад +11

      well let’s not forget he’s 100% complicit in putting that sicko octavian in power

    • @zes3813
      @zes3813 Год назад

      wrrr

  • @ChandlerTV100
    @ChandlerTV100 Год назад +4788

    I genuinely look forward to Historia Civilis uploads more than I do most shows

    • @BlitzerXYZ
      @BlitzerXYZ Год назад +51

      The only thing I look forward to as much is Oversimplified History.

    • @simeonlewis4915
      @simeonlewis4915 Год назад +6

      @@BlitzerXYZ same

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Год назад +6

      Watch more or better shows lmao

    • @chumpchimp1976
      @chumpchimp1976 Год назад +24

      Give me history shows like this channel I'm absolutely down for more content like this

    • @AirSnipers96
      @AirSnipers96 Год назад +10

      I look forward to these videos more than the House of Dragons episodes…

  • @resileaf9501
    @resileaf9501 Год назад +2233

    Aggripa has to have been an absolute genius of his time. Modern military mind, incredible city manager and planner, is there anything he couldn't do?

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Год назад +483

      Save the Republic lol. He was the only person who could have and instead he bowed down to his friend and married into the first imperial family.

    • @dane1382
      @dane1382 Год назад +387

      @@geordiejones5618 i mean, why settle for being a consul when you can be an imperial royal?

    • @GrandMarshalGarithos
      @GrandMarshalGarithos Год назад +178

      @@dane1382 Integrity.

    • @georgeptolemy7260
      @georgeptolemy7260 Год назад

      @@GrandMarshalGarithos The republic was corrupt and rotten, it's institutions weren't sufficient for the problems of the time.

    • @zealousdoggo
      @zealousdoggo Год назад +536

      Don't forget the cool zoomy noises Agrippa makes when he moves

  • @joetraw2110
    @joetraw2110 Год назад +346

    Octavian: Let's go Agrippa, in and out. One year campaign.
    *3 years later*
    Octavian: I did NOT have control of that situation AT ALL.

    • @garybrown2039
      @garybrown2039 Год назад +46

      Agrippa: WHY DO YOU KEEP DOING THIS TO US!

    • @outerspace7391
      @outerspace7391 Год назад +36

      Octavian: I DON'T KNOW AGRIPPA, MAYBE I HATE MYSELF, MAYBE I THINK I DESERVE TO DIE, I-I-I DON'T KNOW!

    • @garybrown2039
      @garybrown2039 Год назад +34

      @@outerspace7391 Agripa: (starts crying)
      Octavian: We need a vacation.

    • @paulcalixte2223
      @paulcalixte2223 11 месяцев назад +5

      Senate: Let's celebrate! Tell us all the awesome things you did there!
      Octavian: Um... I'm feeling tired, and you all see my knee's acting up. Just postpone it, we'll get to it later

    • @occam7382
      @occam7382 3 месяца назад +1

      @@garybrown2039 Lepidus: You know, I'm starting to think getting de-facto exiled was a good thing. For me, that is. Not for you.

  • @Joe-zq4ex
    @Joe-zq4ex Год назад +286

    Crassus’ battle plans: March out into the desert in a square and die 🤷‍♂️
    Caesar’s battle plans: Go behind the enemy lines with a small amount of soldiers and no food for the 50th time and build forts
    Octavian and Brutus’ battle plans: what are battle plans?
    Agrippa’s battle plans: Big brain time

    • @Iwanwahid1969
      @Iwanwahid1969 10 месяцев назад +57

      Ceaser's be like:
      Oh my god my troops is starving quick we have to build 40 kilometer wall or we all gonna die......
      ...holy shit that work?

    • @shuttlecrossing7084
      @shuttlecrossing7084 9 месяцев назад +26

      Caesar: I said we building a wall today

    • @hardatworktom2244
      @hardatworktom2244 9 месяцев назад +10

      When in doubt build walls

  • @bb_arcadia5752
    @bb_arcadia5752 Год назад +896

    That letter from Antony to octavian is hilarious I guess he really was as funny in real life as he was in the show😂

    • @dariusgunter5344
      @dariusgunter5344 Год назад +228

      it feels so real to me and also so stupid that these powerful men from 2100 years ago, are so petty they write one another letters to insult one another over their sexual relationships, like that's something petty people do even today, it's like the lowest you can go when you fight with someone and they do it over fucking letters, we have the internet nowadays.
      really shows that regardless of power or time humans are really all the same.

    • @SOCMAR09
      @SOCMAR09 Год назад +83

      Twitter fingers over parchment is dangerous my boi

    • @zealousdoggo
      @zealousdoggo Год назад +84

      @@dariusgunter5344 sometimes you realize that we are, in fact, the same humans that emerged from the caves tens of thousands of years ago. We just know more stuff

    • @condor237
      @condor237 Год назад +22

      @@dariusgunter5344 Romans loved gossip, same as politics today lol

    • @KaguroDraven
      @KaguroDraven Год назад +76

      @@dariusgunter5344 Read up on the graffiti from Pompei, it helps prove this even more.
      You have everything from people complaining about a tavern owner watering down his wine, to bragging about their sexual accomplishments, to someone threatening whoever keeps shitting on his lawn.

  • @J069FIX
    @J069FIX Год назад +793

    I must be really tired if I'm constantly laughing at every time Agrippa starts spinning and/or flying like a Jetson. And yet, I am still fully awake to acknowledge the absolute genius of the man.

    • @krissp8712
      @krissp8712 Год назад +16

      Ohhh, that's what the funny noise was! I guess Agrippa was pretty ahead of his time.

    • @DiviAugusti
      @DiviAugusti Год назад +37

      There was another video he made where it zoomed in on an elephant and it trumpeted for some reason. It caught me so off guard i almost pissed myself.

    • @jtgd
      @jtgd Год назад +13

      @@DiviAugusti mines was the “happy birthday” one that went from partying to a dead skull

    • @goblincomic4522
      @goblincomic4522 Год назад +2

      Agrippa is like " Doraemon " of Octavian "Nobita"

    • @alexkaplan6581
      @alexkaplan6581 Год назад +4

      @@jtgd happy
      Happy
      H a p p y
      B i r t h d a y

  • @ZumbaMarx
    @ZumbaMarx Год назад +97

    “These wounds probably stayed with Octavian for the rest of his life.”
    Same is true for Caesar and his wounds, to be fair.

  • @Colddirector
    @Colddirector Год назад +640

    That "academics being prudes" thing is really true. I went around looking for that "we pissed away your gold in Gaul" song from one of Caesar's triumphs and a most of the translations online basically obscured what was actually being said behind needlessly flowery language.

    • @hx5525
      @hx5525 Год назад +185

      Which is sad, because vulgarity and the actual translation would make historical figures much more human.

    • @eewweeppkk
      @eewweeppkk Год назад +136

      Its honestly criminal that they take this position as well. You'd think that a historian, one dedicated to uncovering/displaying the past, would be entirely faithful to the past. We harp on history so much so we are not "doomed to repeat" it, so any censoring of it is ridiculous, especially when it comes to something so stupid such as a "bad word"

    • @GillianSeed
      @GillianSeed Год назад +21

      There's a debate between Livy and Pollo in I, Claudius that addresses this point

    • @Moonlitwatersofaqua
      @Moonlitwatersofaqua Год назад +34

      I imagine the floweryness used to be neccisary in eras where censorship was more common. and now the trend is stuck.

    • @hyperion3145
      @hyperion3145 Год назад +38

      It also hurts texts like the Bible, the weird flowery language also obscures things like puns and references while also making it hard to understand. Sometimes it's to keep the rhythm of a poem or song but goddamn does it make things hard to read.

  • @hurricanemeridian8712
    @hurricanemeridian8712 Год назад +1061

    Agrippa seems to me like the only person in this entire second triuverate phase who actually knows what he's doing and genuenly benefitted the roman citizenry

    • @yessir7147
      @yessir7147 Год назад +174

      Thats why Hadrian put his name big as fuck across the top of the Pantheon

    • @kargaroc386
      @kargaroc386 Год назад +10

      @@yessir7147 the portico with the inscription was part of the original building pre-fire though

    • @yessir7147
      @yessir7147 Год назад +2

      @@kargaroc386 really? I know Agrippa put his name there first but I didn’t know it survived the fire.

    • @jarlborg1531
      @jarlborg1531 Год назад +43

      @@kargaroc386 No it wasn't. The whole building was new from the ground up, nothing is preserved from Agrippa's original temple, not even the bronze inscription.

    • @nicolapodgornik6644
      @nicolapodgornik6644 Год назад +6

      Second triumvirate is nothing compared to first. The entirety of Ist century bc was all fucked.

  • @Arcian
    @Arcian Год назад +52

    The more I read and hear about Agrippa, the more I grow convinced that the man was the living personification of competence.

  • @josephlongbone4255
    @josephlongbone4255 Год назад +245

    Octavian -
    "That's why your shoes raggedy!"
    Anthony-
    "That's why Caesar dead!"
    "Dead as hell!"
    "How many daggers they pull out of him?!"

    • @gregrenox9644
      @gregrenox9644 Год назад +20

      Bro thats cold even for Anthony.

    • @PublicAnemone1
      @PublicAnemone1 9 месяцев назад +10

      That’s why yo knees got caved in with a rock

    • @josephlongbone4255
      @josephlongbone4255 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@PublicAnemone1"That's why you can't pray to Jupiter Optimus Maximus bitch!"

    • @Ham42069
      @Ham42069 3 месяца назад +1

      I ASKED+ MY CONTENT IS WAYY WORSE THAN HISTORY CIVILIS AND HIS FANS
      (I have come to the realization that I'm a huge history CIVILIS fan)

    • @JM-mg4el
      @JM-mg4el 3 месяца назад

      I don't think the Romans spoke like lobotomised zoomers

  • @Bongo1020
    @Bongo1020 Год назад +331

    As an Italian that unadulterated translation felt very, contemporary to modern Italian "discourse". Truly we descend from noble stock lol.

    • @rfkwouldvebeenaok1008
      @rfkwouldvebeenaok1008 Год назад +1

      Italian thoughts on how the Greeks kept your ancestors Empire going for another thousand years in the east? Further thoughts on how Greeks continued to call themselves Romans after 1453 and how you can still find some elderly Greeks in isolated pockets that still do today?

    • @ahumpierrogue137
      @ahumpierrogue137 Год назад +43

      @@rfkwouldvebeenaok1008 good for them I guess?

    • @rfkwouldvebeenaok1008
      @rfkwouldvebeenaok1008 Год назад +2

      @@ahumpierrogue137 you were not asked.

    • @windwaker105
      @windwaker105 Год назад +24

      Politics haven’t really evolved much in 2000 years it seems

    • @kitschydotpre4302
      @kitschydotpre4302 Год назад +14

      @@rfkwouldvebeenaok1008 good for them I guess?

  • @luisgeniole369
    @luisgeniole369 Год назад +318

    Agrippa thought like an Engineer. Unsurprisingly he also built the Pantheon, an Engineering marvel of the ancient world.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb Год назад +94

      It's not the same Pantheon as the one we can see today in Rome though. This one was built by Hadrian after the original one was destroyed by a fire, and Hadrian was kind enough to keep the original inscription attributing the construction to Agrippa

    • @lucascousins6934
      @lucascousins6934 Год назад +26

      "he's an engineer, that means he solves problems"-Dell Conager's friend

    • @tremedar
      @tremedar Год назад +10

      @@lucascousins6934 "Not problems like 'what is integrity'? Because that would fall within the purview of your conundrums of Roman politics. I solve practical problems"

    • @tritonlandscaping1505
      @tritonlandscaping1505 Год назад +8

      His original Pantheon burned down. The one you see was restored under Hadrian*.

    • @McMahonshaun
      @McMahonshaun Год назад +2

      @@tritonlandscaping1505 did you see the first reply and decide to say the same thing ?

  • @Lorkwondo1234
    @Lorkwondo1234 Год назад +254

    Please keep making these even after actium. At least a second "Rome's new political order" about how octavian solidified his power after antony's defeat

    • @Lorkwondo1234
      @Lorkwondo1234 Год назад +7

      Why is this not the most liked comment? What’s wrong with RUclips

    • @andreavoigtlander1087
      @andreavoigtlander1087 Год назад +4

      @@Lorkwondo1234 i think its a great comment (:

    • @tommyscott8511
      @tommyscott8511 Год назад +6

      Alternatively, after Actium go back to Sulla, Marius, and the Spartacus rebellion. The time before Caesar. Like a prequel.

    • @Lorkwondo1234
      @Lorkwondo1234 Год назад +5

      @@tommyscott8511 dude I would love a whole series on the decline of the republic. Sadly it would take 17 years. have you read "the storm before the storm"?

    • @matthewstuckenbruck5834
      @matthewstuckenbruck5834 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Lorkwondo1234Such a good book, I feel like it's an essential for anyone who watches this series and wants to learn more. It ends at the perfect time for this series to pick up.

  • @terawatt1
    @terawatt1 Год назад +575

    What makes Historia Civilis the best history youtuber imho is that he has the mix of displaing cold hard historic events with just the right tint of humour to it (e.g. the sound effects on Agrippa) just right - while those only putting out data are often dry to watch, others went too far into the comedy where they sometimes misrepresent historic events just to make a joke work
    This channel is #1 without question

    • @joehill4094
      @joehill4094 Год назад +5

      Agrippa just had access to rome shell

    • @kilianxxxx8543
      @kilianxxxx8543 Год назад +1

      And to mentally fly, As the video shows us 😂

    • @Slender_Man_186
      @Slender_Man_186 Год назад +26

      Also, the squares.

    • @SlappyThomas
      @SlappyThomas Год назад +8

      @@Slender_Man_186 all hail the green square

    • @MercenaryX10A
      @MercenaryX10A Год назад +5

      As someone has already said, this is the best because of the squares.

  • @Ashasverus
    @Ashasverus Год назад +706

    "Perhaps the whole damn thing was a near death experience."
    The thought of Octavian getting his ass kicked up and down a mountainside really has brightened my day.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb Год назад +50

      Yeah right. I can't stand Octavian. His uncle was much cooler.

    • @BlackMasterRoshi
      @BlackMasterRoshi Год назад +77

      @@jmiquelmb yeah but you can't have Agrippa without Octavian so it's worth it

    • @necfreon6259
      @necfreon6259 Год назад +15

      @BlackMasterRoshi still I’m wondering when we get some of the good shit from Octavian mostly up till this point Octavian either gets wrecked and aggripa carries the game or Octavian is lucky for no particular reason the boat war and Antony’s last will burglary being among the lucky ones I mean seriously if Antony’s will said anything other then him having Egyptian heirs Octavian whould have been fucked

    • @kingofcards9516
      @kingofcards9516 Год назад +15

      Why all the Octavian hate?

    • @acey457
      @acey457 Год назад +35

      @@kingofcards9516 he did some nasty shit

  • @kamalindsey
    @kamalindsey Год назад +783

    People might not know that you can go and visit Octavian's Mausoleum now. It has been in renovation for 14 years, and the Mausoleum of Augustus has been closed since *the 1970s!* However it is now finally reopened to the public, in 2021. Because its been closed so long and a lack of advertisement, it is not that known to tourists in Italy, yet it contains some of the titans of Rome. It is the final resting place of the first Roman Emperor among others like his younger sister Octavia Minor, Emperor Caligula, Tiberius, and Claudius
    EDIT (From Wiki): The traditional story is that in 410, during the sack of Rome by Alaric, the pillaging Visigoths rifled the vaults, stole the urns and scattered the ashes, without damaging the structure of the building. Platner and Ashby, however, posited that "The story of its plundering by Alaric in 410 has no historical foundation, and we know nothing of its destruction".

    • @kamalindsey
      @kamalindsey Год назад +8

      @Maddie Dang.

    • @caesar4159
      @caesar4159 Год назад +8

      @Maddie im real sorry to be the one telling you this but their ashes were scattered and desecrated by the goths of alaric

    • @kamalindsey
      @kamalindsey Год назад +4

      @@caesar4159 Source?

    • @casualyoutubeviewer9198
      @casualyoutubeviewer9198 Год назад +2

      @@kamalindsey Literally would take you a minute to google this. Their tombs or ashes is not in the mausoleum - however a «tombstome» of what some assume to be of a Julio-Claudian Agrippina does exist.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Год назад +8

      What is this? A habeas corpus case?
      No matter what's inside, it's still a cool old historical place.
      And the reason it is still high among tourist attractions is its meaning to the Roman people (and senate of course).

  • @vaylonkenadell
    @vaylonkenadell Год назад +237

    The story of Agrippa cleaning up the city of Rome really speaks to me as someone who is concerned with public works and civic improvement. People tend to forget that the role of government should be to handle these basic, day-to-day, boring functions.

  • @darthplayer5333
    @darthplayer5333 Год назад +124

    -This is Agrippa!
    *Happy spinning space engine noise
    -And he means bussines
    *Proceds to singlehand carry little Octavian and make his enemies disappear

  • @The_Malcontented
    @The_Malcontented 10 месяцев назад +19

    I LOVE how the fact that Agrippa's thinking and strategies were centuries ahead of his time is represented with the sound effect accompanying him moving around

  • @shangrilainxanadu
    @shangrilainxanadu Год назад +311

    It's pretty heartwarming considering Roman history both before and after that Agrippa and Octavian never forgot how much they owed each other. A brilliant politician combined with a brilliant general made the Empire work. Afterwards, even if both existed at the same time, they always betrayed or sabotaged each other, and the Empire depended on unicorns who could be both in one man.

    • @thehegemon1024
      @thehegemon1024 Год назад +20

      Not always, there was Diocletian and Maximian at the end of the Crisis of the 3rd Century. However, it's incredibly rare.

    • @Xalerdane
      @Xalerdane Год назад +22

      (cough)Justinian and Belisarius(cough)

    • @TimDutch
      @TimDutch Год назад +2

      @@Xalerdane As you know: Justianian blinded Belisarius

    • @lordadamantium1210
      @lordadamantium1210 Год назад +11

      @@TimDutch I looked it up and that's considered wrong be most historians. I believe it was just a rumor spread to make Justinian look bad.

    • @TimDutch
      @TimDutch Год назад

      @@lordadamantium1210 oh really. In the History Marche documentary it was presented as a fact if i recall correctly.

  • @spencerthomas4087
    @spencerthomas4087 Год назад +299

    Curious if Caesar (who was always happy to defer a battle until he had an advantage) knew that the Illyricum campaign was intractable and it was a matter of career expedience that he kept pushing it off.

    • @Jake007123
      @Jake007123 Год назад +57

      Maybe he foresaw that it would take too long and had others more pressing matters at hand. When I saw the description of numerous mountains on Illyricum, I was expecting the campaign to be even longer than 3 years... But then Agrippa.

    • @JB-xl2jc
      @JB-xl2jc Год назад +70

      I wouldn't be surprised. A huge trend in the Roman Republic time-frame was generals doing everything they could to avoid embarrassments, to the point that several threats to Rome (the most famous that immediately comes to mind is Spartacus) ended up getting way more traction than was necessary. Think about it, if you win against Spartacus, well, you beat some random slaves. No loot, no glory. If you LOSE, you lost to a slave rabble, and your career is done for. So why would any general accept it?
      Illyricum isn't so far off from that. If you pacify it and set things up to run smoothly, no one cares. It was already owned on paper so there's not much glory, it's more like housekeeping. If you LOSE, you're the one who will be blamed for letting it go to hell.
      So it does make perfect sense to avoid problem areas where "the juice is not worth the squeeze" and take your resources to seek glory elsewhere. After all, a career in Roman politics or military leadership (the two of which were so entertwined they might as well have been one) was heavily based on how much glory you could achieve and how much loot you could give your men.

    • @user-vz1zc3fn7o
      @user-vz1zc3fn7o Год назад +26

      @@JB-xl2jc Interesting that this is essentially the argument for destroying Roman republican politics and transforming it into a monarchy in the nutshell. A monarch (Or someone with a similar position to that of a monarch, like Octavian in the video) might be able to tackle long-term issues like this without thinking about their immediate career.

    • @JB-xl2jc
      @JB-xl2jc Год назад +25

      @@user-vz1zc3fn7o Indeed, it was a common argument even at the time! When I was younger I found it fascinating that some of the propaganda at the time basically said things like "If X wins, you won't have to worry about the burden of politics any more, they'll decide everything for you"! I found it so weird that that was BRAGGING or seen as a positive. Turns out the cultural zeitgeist was to be utterly fed up with politicking, civil wars, etc- to the point that someone "strong" coming along and taking it out of your hands was seen by many as a POSITIVE! Really interesting

    • @unionsquaregrassman
      @unionsquaregrassman Год назад +1

      Smart comment.

  • @bordenfleetwood5773
    @bordenfleetwood5773 Год назад +93

    I would honestly love to see a deep dive into the life and career of Marcus Agrippa. He seems... Interesting.

  • @redacted3557
    @redacted3557 Год назад +210

    Is there a reason why Agrippa is always shown "flying" into the scene whenever he's mentioned? Is that a metaphor for him saving Octavian all the time?

    • @rat_thrower5604
      @rat_thrower5604 Год назад +2

      he's superman

    • @TimeChanger103
      @TimeChanger103 Год назад +127

      I believe it’s supposed to show as him a future time traveler to the past, referencing The Jetsons

    • @mafiousbj
      @mafiousbj Год назад +138

      Probably to mean he was "ahead of his time" or a man of the future with his forwars thinking. And he indeed uses Jetsons sound effects!

    • @ISenjaya71
      @ISenjaya71 Год назад +37

      What if he's a literal time traveler, almost every single thing he did resembles what a modern historian would do to fix the Roman Empire

    • @kimjongoink6863
      @kimjongoink6863 Год назад +18

      @@ISenjaya71if that was the case i’d hope he’d just save some time and silence cato during caesar and pompey’s feud, would’ve stopped caesar from becoming a tyrant in the first place lol

  • @gabrielgonzalezc1037
    @gabrielgonzalezc1037 Год назад +1223

    HE’S NOT DEAD!!!!!

    • @DaDitka
      @DaDitka Год назад +35

      He's getting better!

    • @nostro1940
      @nostro1940 Год назад +95

      HE WAS A CONSUL OF ROME!

    • @iLikePineTrees
      @iLikePineTrees Год назад +20

      First time?

    • @michaelbeach7988
      @michaelbeach7988 Год назад +11

      Bro I think he’s in school rn, he doesn’t have the time to put out weekly or even monthly videos

    • @wewladstbh
      @wewladstbh Год назад +16

      you dudes need to read his website lol, he has trackers for the progress he's making on each video

  • @ahernj
    @ahernj Год назад +463

    Just finished rewatching the Rome playlist yesterday, this couldn't be more perfectly timed!

    • @MintyLime703
      @MintyLime703 Год назад +7

      I was going to in preparation since I had a feeling it'd be soon, now I wish I did

    • @Finkaisar
      @Finkaisar Год назад +1

      Same, what a coincidence for him to upload now

    • @MrCosinuus
      @MrCosinuus Год назад +5

      too bad: I had to wait for a year

    • @fiendishghoul1649
      @fiendishghoul1649 Год назад +2

      Did tribune aquila give you permission though?

    • @stebbenwolfe
      @stebbenwolfe Год назад

      Yes but now you’ll just be hungry for more like the rest of us. Waiting. Starving on crumbs like some Roman citizens circa 32BCE.

  • @Splicer87
    @Splicer87 Год назад +73

    Agrippa is such a chad of his time. Not afraid to get stuff done. I’m super glad you talked about his work here.

  • @dmann4903
    @dmann4903 Год назад +100

    Great video as always! It makes you wonder, what would have happened to Octavian had he not had Agrippa around to continuously win wars for him, organize for him, and literally clean up the city for him. Octavian really inherited his great uncles luck to have a friend like that!

    • @JB-xl2jc
      @JB-xl2jc Год назад +14

      Fully agreed. There's something to be said about being able to inspire loyalty in skilled councilors, but he was very fortunate indeed!

    • @madhurawat155
      @madhurawat155 Год назад +8

      The more I learn about him, the more I feel bad for him. Agrippa doesn't get the recognition *to the extent* he deserved, Octavian exists because of him and Caesar.

    • @trustytrest
      @trustytrest Год назад +2

      He was the brains and strength behind Octavian's naïve ambitions. It says something to his prowess that he was able to get Octavian so far.

    • @madhurawat155
      @madhurawat155 Год назад +10

      @@trustytrest Octavian was not exactly naive though. He had ruthlessly assassinated many political rivals, including Cicero(whom he publicly used to call as father). And look at how successfully he managed to sideline Lepidus, the ablest deputy of Caesar (after Labienus' betrayal that is). The only one who was naive was Agrippa. He was the brain behind the military victories but lacked both the ambition and political savvy necessary to capitalise on it.

    • @madhurawat155
      @madhurawat155 Год назад +13

      While my original statement about Aggripa stays the same, I would like to add on that the reason why we even know about Aggripa to this extent is because not only Octavian recognised his talent, but also rewarded him and gave him the recognition to the extent he reasonably could without potentially risking his own career. If he was on Anthony's side, then he would've been nothing more than just another one of his many subordinates and advisors.

  • @freespiritedd
    @freespiritedd Год назад +743

    Agrippa is the real hero in my opinion, and Octavian was indeed very lucky to had him. He was extremely loyal, very intelligent and diligent. He did all the work, and saved his ass all the time. Without Agrippa, Octavian is nothing.

    • @KKKKKKK777js
      @KKKKKKK777js Год назад +216

      They needed each other. Octavian provided the legions for Agripas campaings, the money for Agripas building projects and also the political backing for Agripas political carrer. You could also argue that Agripa, not being from a prominent family, was lucky to attach himself to the most powerfull patron in roman history.
      Realy it was mutualy bennificial and both men held up their part of the bargain. Agripa was loyal and supremely competent and Octavian (especialy as Augustus) rewarded and promoted his main man.

    • @juliusrobertjuico6322
      @juliusrobertjuico6322 Год назад +157

      @@KKKKKKK777js Agrippa was also a pleabian while Octavian was basically groomed to be Roman royalty. Octavian recognized how important Agrippa was and elevated his status from a lowborn to one of the most powerful men in Rome. And Agrippa never forgot that.
      Without Octavian, Agrippa might've been a footnote in history. It really was a mutual benefit for each other.

    • @aleksandertanchev8148
      @aleksandertanchev8148 Год назад +55

      And also Octavian been able to acknowledge his own shortcomings as a military leader and been able to delegate to his betters in the field.

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Год назад +18

      No, Octavian was good as well. Don't raise a human by lowering another one

    • @aleksandertanchev8148
      @aleksandertanchev8148 Год назад +17

      I am not saying he was bad, but he wasn't as good as his peers and his uncle. He was always on the back foot of most of his military campaigns, and was saved multiple times Antonius at philippi for example... Or Agripa in iliricum.
      Again I am not dissing him I am a big fan boy of his, and one of the reasons I respect him so much is him realising Agripa was better than him in those matters and not only using him but giving him his dues for it.

  • @tituslabienus6482
    @tituslabienus6482 Год назад +155

    5 monts felt like a decade.. so glad to see your squares back fighting dir Rome!

    • @Vielenberg
      @Vielenberg Год назад +14

      It was over 1,5 years since last Roman video...

    • @tituslabienus6482
      @tituslabienus6482 Год назад +4

      @@Vielenberg True! Had enough time to watch all videos again and again 🤣

  • @roqeyt3566
    @roqeyt3566 Год назад +225

    Historia civilis is like that one fun uncle that only comes by every half a year, but has the most impact on you as you grow up
    I'm happy that a new video dropped, but I'm sad that it'll unlikely that we'll see another in 2022

    • @matthewstuckenbruck5834
      @matthewstuckenbruck5834 Год назад +16

      Not entirely sure on that. According to his website, his next video is already 60% written.

    • @anisyyxux
      @anisyyxux Год назад +2

      Aged like milk, but in a good way

    • @Pizza_Is_Cool
      @Pizza_Is_Cool Год назад +6

      @@anisyyxux That's called "cheese"

    • @LuizAlexPhoenix
      @LuizAlexPhoenix Год назад +1

      ​@@Pizza_Is_Coolthere is also yogurt but that takes special bacteria I guess.

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl 6 месяцев назад

      @@LuizAlexPhoenix So does cheese. If you just use milk and rennet and acids you end up with cottage cheese. But if you want cheddar or something like that you need particular bacterial cultures.

  • @samwisegamgee8318
    @samwisegamgee8318 Год назад +50

    I have a theory that Agrippa was a time traveler. He always seems to make the “strategy game” moves that are totally ahead of their time. Fighting multi pronged logistically focused wars, building massive sewer and water sanitation systems that was the least sexy thing to be doing during the lead up to the next civil war, and all around making these game breaking military achievements like he’s a total war campaign pro. I think he is a time traveling romeaboo that learned Latin

  • @tenthweb
    @tenthweb Год назад +420

    I got a covid diagnosis a few hours ago and am stuck in my room for a week. This video from my favourite creator is pure manna from heaven. I'll be watching it more than once.

    • @DerVarg
      @DerVarg Год назад +26

      Are there people, who watch HC videos only once??
      Sickos..
      Edit: Get well soon m8!

    • @hasansalihaktas
      @hasansalihaktas Год назад +9

      Get well soon man

    • @skinnyb717
      @skinnyb717 Год назад +2

      Me 2

    • @Great_Olaf5
      @Great_Olaf5 Год назад +2

      Get well soon.

    • @Haytem.
      @Haytem. Год назад +2

      Get well soon...

  • @YossarianVanDriver
    @YossarianVanDriver Год назад +94

    To be fair, this Agrippa-style combined operation mindset isn't exclusively modern; it's the kind of thing you see in Byzantine-era military operations (so way...waaaay later in Roman history, haha). It does still make him unusual for his environment, as in that later era it's a mindset they've been forced to adopt due to limited resources and stronger opponents, whereas the "classical" Romans tended to enjoy advantages in renewable manpower and could afford to be simpler (if that's the right word).

    • @j1nz007
      @j1nz007 Год назад

      Tactics like modern day russia

    • @zealousdoggo
      @zealousdoggo Год назад +2

      @@j1nz007 it's slightly different from a combined arms assault seen in modern day battles as those usually have mechanized and air elements operating in tandom with ground troops but the fundamental idea of individual small gains making up a larger campaign is still the same. Russia is also demonstrating such an offensive poorly

    • @chriskramer2340
      @chriskramer2340 Год назад +3

      I think it would be great to have a video on all things Agrippa actually accomplished, organized and build. he is really something else!

    • @madhurawat155
      @madhurawat155 Год назад +1

      The Persians tried to do the same (sort of) in the Greco Persian war, where the land based army advanced all the way from modern day Istanbul to Greece, while the fleet tried to occupy the Aegean islands. While the war itself might've been a failure in the long term, it does show that military minds weren't always that simple.

  • @omnomnomnomm
    @omnomnomnomm Год назад +18

    i don't know how to put it, but to me, Historia Civilis is the Agrippa of history content creator. He is the best out there.
    been watching since i was a young boy, now a grown man, i remember watching Historia Civilis during lunch breaks back then, and during work hours now. This channel will always have a special place in my heart, and i will remember it till the day i die (i know the last sentence might seem cringe, but i'm just saying what's on my mind)

  • @davidramos4707
    @davidramos4707 Год назад +32

    Could you do a series on historical figures? Maybe Vergil, Phideas, Euclid, or someone most people have forgotten about.

  • @elmunus1
    @elmunus1 Год назад +215

    Bro, these are the best historical videos on youtube. They're so engaging, putting you in the shoes of the people of that day. Explaining all of their Dilema's and their reasoning. Something about Historia Civilis just makes history as real as today.

    • @willdunn8846
      @willdunn8846 Год назад +14

      Plus the tunes always get my toes a wiggling.

    • @madamedurand4830
      @madamedurand4830 Год назад +1

      Extremely true

    • @-VOR
      @-VOR Год назад +1

      Meh. Kings and generals channel and some others are slightly better I think. But this dude is top5 definitely

    • @elmunus1
      @elmunus1 Год назад

      @@-VOR No one pay attention to Vor. He is one of the Kings and Generals bots.

  • @PsyK0man
    @PsyK0man Год назад +167

    Nobody does it like you!! the true historian master. You are the best, the details, the context, you really make the characters alive, and you really make us feel how they think and behave. Better than a movie, a squares and rectangles movie! The only problem is that you make us wait to loooooong!!!! don't stop!!!!

    • @booradley6832
      @booradley6832 Год назад +10

      Dont get it backwards. He's an entertainer, not at all doing the job of the historian. If you go back through his stuff you find many thing presented out of order or timelines fudged to help the presentation of the story.

    • @skyhappy
      @skyhappy Год назад

      @@booradley6832 like what

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Год назад +4

      @@booradley6832
      Edutainment is what I’d call it-educating people in history in an accessible, entertaining manner?
      I’m ok with fudging some details since it’ll get people invested in doing their own reading and research

  • @hitrapperandartistdababy
    @hitrapperandartistdababy Год назад +19

    This series has been going on for 6 years now, what a journey❤

  • @brendondellinger355
    @brendondellinger355 Год назад +14

    7:00 Every now and again I fantasize what this channel would be like with super fancy graphics and CGI recreations of events. Then I'm reminded by moments like these that we have already achieved perfection.
    Btw History Civilis just wanna say I genuinely love this channel and the work you do. Literally didn't know an ounce of Roman History until coming across this channel and its made working at Amazon bearable. Ty m8!

  • @MrStrigori
    @MrStrigori Год назад +59

    gotta appreciate what an amazing general and strategist agrippa really was. what a guy

  • @DerpyMackerel
    @DerpyMackerel Год назад +13

    Agrippa 💨 💨 💨 is definitely my favourite square now 😂

  • @matteomerlini604
    @matteomerlini604 Год назад +37

    This is one of the very few youtube history channels that put out quality content.
    Good job!

    • @madhurawat155
      @madhurawat155 Год назад +2

      He takes quality over quantity to another level. See you in a few months while we wait for his new video.

  • @WildWombats
    @WildWombats Год назад +18

    It's a shame these videos are so rare! It's always worth the wait though. I always love his form of storytelling. This channel is definitely some of the most inspiring for history story-telling to me. It's actually the sole reason that got me pushed into reading about Rome as a whole. I just happened to come across one of his Julius Caesar videos and it was just told in the most interesting way and I think told the tale of Caesar as well. It may very well have been the first genuine time I heard the full tale told in such depth, beyond what was common knowledge which was that Caesar had been assassinated by multiple people including a man he thought he could trust with his life, Brutus. That was probably the extent of my knowledge before watching Historia Civilis' Caesar videos, give or take. But by sheer chance I happened to stumble on one of those videos, and watched it all the way through, and before I knew it, I was binging everything. I watched even the Rome show by HBO which was fantastic, highly rec as well. Read Caesar's book, too, bought many others both Rome and Greek. So yeah, definitely opened a whole door for me (that would've taken a lot longer for me to get to because I'm a procrastinator but still a history lover)
    TLDR; Historia Civilis is awesome. Got me into Rome's history quicker than I would've naturally (as a history lover in general). Also was very clear to understand what went on, it all felt very connected and streamlined the way it was told.

  • @cryptocunt5402
    @cryptocunt5402 Год назад +98

    I just wanted to say thank you HC I went to univesity to study Ancient History because of the interest and passion sparked by your videos. Igraduated this year with the highest possible grade so again from the bottom of my heart thank you!

  • @eris9062
    @eris9062 Год назад +46

    I love this channel so much, I love the subtle implication Aggripa is either a timetraveller or an alien, I love the fact they don't take themselves too seriously, the humour is wonderful and its just overall an incredibly enjoyable experience, especially the prude dialogue.

  • @Navak_
    @Navak_ Год назад +9

    I knew Agrippa was a big deal just from how reverentially he was treated in I, Claudius. Glad to be getting the play by play Historia Civilis scoop on him.

  • @brianaguila6925
    @brianaguila6925 Год назад +21

    It puzzles me how capable Marcus Agrippa's subodinates since he can't be the only one doing these fights against Sextus,Cassius and Brutus along with his naval battle against Antony?

    • @madhurawat155
      @madhurawat155 Год назад +24

      Indeed no one cares about the subordinates. The only reason we even know about Aggripa to this extent is because not only Octavian recognised his talent, but also had fairly rewarded him and given him the recognition he deserved, not something that some Octavian haters would understand here though.

  • @josephhalford917
    @josephhalford917 Год назад +48

    When we only get a couple every few months you know they’re gonna be bangers

  • @SomeoneYouDontKnowOfficial
    @SomeoneYouDontKnowOfficial Год назад +159

    I found you recently and have been watching the Chronological playlist and just watched "Antony's Invasion of Parthia" for the first time 2 hours ago, couldn't have had better timing! Love your videos! And your commitment to make them after all these years is incredible!

    • @joelfisk
      @joelfisk Год назад +9

      Lucky! I've been falling asleep to these videos for years now. The combination of his music and voice help me fall asleep so easily. Glad to see you've found the best history channel on youtube!

    • @josemanuelvarelapuig5064
      @josemanuelvarelapuig5064 Год назад +3

      @@joelfisk someone like me

  • @nickdarr7328
    @nickdarr7328 Год назад +5

    At 12:30, missing footage. That's beautiful. 15 years ago I was watching a revolutionary war documentary. It showed some sepia colored film of George Washington preparing to cross the deleware to attack the Hessians. My roommate really really believed it was actually footage of the real George Washington. Even after arguing he still thought, since it looked old, it was real. I mean photography has been around awhile. And films or at least essentially flip books like hundreds of pictures of a horse set together frame by frame to see if all 4 hooves of a horse leave the ground at the same time when running. That was probably 1890s. Not 1780s

  • @chrisbullock3504
    @chrisbullock3504 Год назад +21

    This is just such a good series. I really dont think there is a man who can make history as gripping as you do. This is my favorite series on the internet its just such a simple and presentable style, yet is so jam packed with knowledge, you can watch it 3 times and still be enthralled.

    • @atlasfrog5730
      @atlasfrog5730 Год назад

      "You can watch it 3 times and still be enthralled" Just after this video came out, I binged all of the previous videos in the series for around the fifth time I think now, so I can confirm, I am still enthralled

  • @monkeymoo87
    @monkeymoo87 Год назад +95

    Historia Civilis, Dovahatty, and K&G are RUclips history legends

  • @HugeZorse
    @HugeZorse Год назад +76

    I could not love a human baby as much as I love this channel.

    • @joelfisk
      @joelfisk Год назад +8

      I'm naming my firstborn son Julian, thanks in large part to HC's work and his assistance in helping me fall in love with ancient Rome.

    • @Nisfornarwhal1990
      @Nisfornarwhal1990 Год назад +1

      I am inclined to agree

    • @mjs752002
      @mjs752002 Год назад +1

      How does one swaddle a youtube channel?

  • @baalplays7855
    @baalplays7855 Год назад +16

    The combination of vivid detail and engaging storytelling is what makes your channel stand out on a platform full of bores and amateurs. You're my favourite history channel on the whole site... I hope you keep putting out videos for a long time, and I'm so glad your channel has gotten the popularity it deserves.

  • @jeremiahbaxter6887
    @jeremiahbaxter6887 Год назад +1

    This channel is so comforting to watch. When I saw that a new video dropped I was so stoked. You never disappoint!

  • @ivanklimov7078
    @ivanklimov7078 Год назад +69

    out of the several hundreds of yt channels i'm subbed to, this one is at least top 5. never knew shit about roman history and never really wanted to study it until i stumbled upon HC, where every new upload is cause for celebration. keep it up man, you're doing great, hope you rightfully become the most popular history channel on yt

    • @irmsurr56
      @irmsurr56 Год назад

      Which other channels would you rate as top 5? I'm always looking for more history on YT:)

    • @ivanklimov7078
      @ivanklimov7078 Год назад +2

      @@irmsurr56 i don't watch that much history on yt, but some of the channels i really enjoy are The Histocrat, History Scope, Kraut and Three Arrows. also Knowing Better, while not strictly a history channel, does a lot of great work demystifying american history

    • @irmsurr56
      @irmsurr56 Год назад

      @@ivanklimov7078 Thank you my friend

  • @mitchycool92
    @mitchycool92 Год назад +32

    Simply heaven when Historia Civilis, Epic History TV & Internet Historian all come out with a video in the same week!

  • @markignatiev7194
    @markignatiev7194 Год назад +8

    Great episode! Agrippa sounds very competent, hope to hear more about him in the next one.

  • @lambrosk3790
    @lambrosk3790 Год назад

    Just want to say I first saw your videos a few years back and I constantly watch them before bed. The narration, music and visuals are so cool, informative and, at times, comical I’m addicted to watching. Thank you 🙏

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Год назад +28

    edit: also *DIES DELTA*
    Up till this time that I watched the bit as *AGRIPPA AEDILIS* (Friday 2 OCT, 21: 44 Amsterdam Time, 2022 A.D.)
    I never knew this man was not just a Great General.
    He also waged a succesful War of Sanitation (multiple exlamation marks).
    Please make a video about Agrippa sometime in the foreseeable future.

  • @DC-hy2rg
    @DC-hy2rg Год назад +21

    Agrippa's time as Aedile was something I had no idea of.
    Always a treat to get a new HC upload!

  • @mungobestmage
    @mungobestmage Год назад +3

    This is honestly my favorite content being produced on RUclips. Well worth the wait every time!

  • @Kraghinkoff
    @Kraghinkoff Год назад +3

    I absolutely love your videos. I was waiting eagerly for this saga to continue and when i saw the notification i was thrilled. Hope we won't wait this long again but whatever it takes to put together content like this. Take care, man.

  • @denpadolt9242
    @denpadolt9242 Год назад +105

    Octavian: Refuses to take part in any battles, raises ludicrously high taxes, aggravates a famine, breaks the Roman Senate's last ounce of fair representation, builds a bunch of cool monuments, becomes one of the most influential men in Rome's entire existence
    Agrippa: Amazing general, defeats Boat King, goes into a more in-depth perspective of the mechanisms of warfare than would be popularly held for over a thousand years, builds functioning sewers and supplies all of Rome with clean drinking water, lasting legacy remains specific to the city of Rome

    • @infidelheretic923
      @infidelheretic923 Год назад +14

      Octavian was wise to employ Agrippa.
      He was like Caesar’s Labinus.

    • @coot33
      @coot33 Год назад +23

      This a tainted perspectives. Only a few historian have the Octavian hate boner. This minority view is the one presented here.

    • @andrewbreadholm5715
      @andrewbreadholm5715 Год назад +13

      Oh im sure the most succesful roman leader/emperor and greatest politician in probably history was just a chump... Historia civilis hate boner is really skewing peoples perspective

    • @RickJaeger
      @RickJaeger Год назад

      You guys have a love boner for the term "hate boner."

    • @superguy911
      @superguy911 Год назад +7

      ​@@andrewbreadholm5715 octavian hasn't done much yet besides cause widespread death for personal gain so far, if he died in this video or the next he'd be completely forgotten.

  • @filipbujaroski9221
    @filipbujaroski9221 Год назад +45

    Let’s goooooo. It’s always a great day when there’s a new Historia Civilis video

  • @roscoehowes4454
    @roscoehowes4454 Год назад

    Literally the best history channel on RUclips! Always look forward to videos by you and at the end of each I always feel very informed. The history of Rome through your lens really is eye opening! Keep it up

  • @lukasa6374
    @lukasa6374 Год назад +5

    This content you publish on roman history and beyond, is likely the content i enjoy the most on all of RUclips. Thank you for all your hard work!!

  • @legoazurp
    @legoazurp Год назад +7

    You say that Octavian wanted to reach the Danube, but only managed to reach the Sava. The river you highlight is the Drava, the Sava is to the south of it.

  • @ottoginafiel5468
    @ottoginafiel5468 Год назад +27

    I occasionally rewatch Historia Civillis because it relaxes me, and a few hours ago I started having pain from a kidney stone (I hope) and he puts out a new episode to sooth me

    • @rakkasaniron1696
      @rakkasaniron1696 Год назад +3

      I rewatch every video through anytime a new one comes out.

    • @uwu_smeg
      @uwu_smeg Год назад

      now you just need to put out the kidney stone
      sorry

    • @jonbaxter2254
      @jonbaxter2254 Год назад +2

      Caesars little adventures are genuinley thrilling, and they're just little coloured squares!

  • @zephyr32
    @zephyr32 Год назад +8

    These are some of the best videos on RUclips, thank you so much for your hard work and effort

  • @georgelazenby7167
    @georgelazenby7167 Год назад +1

    I remember watching this guy as a kid! Haven’t seen anything in years, and now here you are!!! Literally made my day❤

  • @adrianaslund8605
    @adrianaslund8605 Год назад +40

    Another good one! As expected. Historia Civilis videos are so minimalistic in presentation but so maximalist in detail.

    • @SolracCAP
      @SolracCAP Год назад +1

      That's a great to put it! Also he infuses so much personality in these square representations of real people!

  • @taowroland8697
    @taowroland8697 Год назад +11

    A blessing from the Lord!

  • @mikehunter9780
    @mikehunter9780 Год назад

    Yessss! Came to the channel to rewatch the Caesar timeline but holy smokes there's a new video!
    Thank you for the dedication. These videos opened up a whole new era of history for me to enjoy. Just bought the Gaullic Wars by the man himself

  • @MIkeyTheKamakaziFan
    @MIkeyTheKamakaziFan Год назад +10

    I love this channel. The narration, the details, the GEOMETRY! I wish more history would be told like this.

  • @attigator
    @attigator Год назад +15

    My two favorite channels (Internet Historian and this channel) have now posted videos this week! This is Amazing!

  • @JawsOfHistory
    @JawsOfHistory Год назад +3

    I love the Agrippa sound so much.

  • @going_downtown
    @going_downtown Год назад

    your uploads are the most pleasant surprise in my sub box. i can’t get enough of the roman empire

  • @gyiouss
    @gyiouss Год назад +2

    Thank you so much for this channel! History and geography have always been my worst and least favorite subjects. Starting at the beginning of civilization with your playlist, I have somehow managed to retain a huge amount of detail that I never thought possible.
    I am very excited to see what happens next, because honestly I only have some vague notions of how things go until the 18th century.

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee2463 Год назад +24

    Ive said it before, but I'll say it again, I love these videos about this period in history. I only know what I know thanks to Robert Graves' novels 'I, Claudius' and 'Claudius the God'. Being novels, I always thought that much of the content was simply fictional drama, but these videos are revealing that, though that content might be fictional, it was no more dramatic than the reality... and some of it wasn't as fictional as I first believed!

  • @Inquisitor6321
    @Inquisitor6321 Год назад +7

    OMG! I see over 2000 viewers waiting to see this.
    When Historia Civilis posts a new video - a lot of us will drop everything to watch!

  • @Big-rumps
    @Big-rumps Год назад

    Perfect timing, just found this channel binged a bunch of episodes up to this point and the next one might be uploaded when I’m back from basic training!

  • @Kampfwageneer
    @Kampfwageneer 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’m getting sober and these videos are reanimating my love of history especially Roman. Thanks 🙏🏻

  • @procrastinator99
    @procrastinator99 Год назад +35

    This channel is SO great, thanks for all the hard work you do.

    • @MStonewallC
      @MStonewallC Год назад +1

      Seriously. This video had me hooked so well I couldn't believe 25 minutes had passed when it ended.
      I've also listened to his Trial of Charles I video like 10 times at this point

  • @norgporg8370
    @norgporg8370 Год назад +31

    Some say after Cesar and Pompey stopped powering aqueducts due to Antony’s blunders, Agrippa kept them powered by his sheer rotational velocity alone during his campaigns. Some say, in his grave, he is still at 600 rpm even to this day.

  • @beauselwood4534
    @beauselwood4534 Год назад

    Just wanna say love your videos, have watched every video on your channel, your telling of the whole Roman republic period so far is the best on RUclips, you go into like such interesting weird details that no one else touches on, love it, looking forward for the next one!

  • @GregoryShtevensh
    @GregoryShtevensh Год назад

    Just happened to look you back up to see.if anything new was posted... I wasn't disappointed! Awesome!!

  • @NomeDeArte
    @NomeDeArte Год назад +10

    So weird, I was thinking about your channel, I made a coffee and came to watch about Caeser and wondering when you'll upload a new video. Thank you SO much! Still waiting for that Machiavelli and Florence series though ; )
    Best wishes from Argentina!

    • @NomeDeArte
      @NomeDeArte Год назад +1

      Man, the video is a 10, as always, but the letter from Mark Anthony was just an 11, for that moments this is the BEST history channel, by far. THANK YOU

  • @Whoami691
    @Whoami691 Год назад +15

    Oh yes... finally. I saw this on patreon and couldnt wait to see it again here. Thank you HC!

  • @einarklint2509
    @einarklint2509 Год назад

    Another masterpiece of a video! I hope you know how much we appreciate your work, it truly is incredible!

  • @tyler3876
    @tyler3876 4 месяца назад +1

    Agrippa is literally the GOAT. He was modern in both military tactics and administrative tactics.

  • @iana1641
    @iana1641 Год назад +6

    I loved the last few videos on the Congress of Viene but hearing you talk about Rome just feels right. Thank you HC!

  • @Bawhoppen
    @Bawhoppen Год назад +10

    What a treat to see a new Historia Civilis video!

  • @spikeyholly3023
    @spikeyholly3023 Год назад +1

    Really respect Agrippa after watching this video. Had never heard of him before this, and now I really admire him. Thanks for sharing! Pls keep the videos coming. This is such an enjoyable series

  • @graveltheblock5578
    @graveltheblock5578 5 месяцев назад +3

    Agrippa is my favourite acoustic person