Thank you so much for this. This is just beautiful. Justinian was a HERO and under his legendary administration and great leadership emerged Belisarius, perhaps the GREATEST Roman general. He was a dreamer AND an achiever.
Honestly The Greatest Greek Empre after Macedonia When Rome was deafeted The Greeks carried The Torch and Rebirthed Rome 🇬🇷☦️👑 Eastern Rome 🇬🇷👑 Western Rome🇮🇹👑
they both were truly blessed to live in the same period. Belisarius was lucky to serve under Justinian because only such a benevolent Emperor as him would had been constantly forgiving general's numerous failures. and Justinian was lucky to command Belisarius, because he was loyal beyond question and talanted enough on a battlefield to react hastly and cease opportunity when it was shown.
I'm sorry but historically this is bullshit. Justinian's reconquest was HUGELY expensive and in the end it achieved NOTHING other than holding the Italian peninsula for a short time. In long term, it crippled the Eastern Rome financially. His military campaign chased the Ostrogoths out of Italy. Ostrogoths was a group of people lived with Romans side by side for so long, they became Romans at that point. Or at least the next best thing. They kept the Roman traditions and the language alive. After they were out of Italy and Eastern Rome pulled back, Lombards, then Franks swooped in and changed the peninsula forever. Justinian wasn't a visionary, he was a dreamer. There is a difference.
Shut it you DOLT. Justinian THE GREAT was the Eastern Roman Empire at its APEX. It's not HIS fault that some of those after him could not fill his shoes. Under his unprecedented leadership emerged the GREATEST Roman general Belisarius who avenged and completed the conquests of other Roman greats such as Stilicho and Aetius and Majorian and WIPED OUT the vandal kingdom that sacked and ultimately destroyed Rome in the 5th century. And THEN he destroyed the Gothic kingdom and thanks to him and Belisarius Rome is still preserved today. Justinian's leadership and codex of law still influence the world today. You're a FOOL. His reconquests AND REBUILDING of Constantinople after the deadly riots kept the Empire alive and the city afloat for a further Millennium, DESPITE one of the deadliest plagues ever and one of the worst years in HISTORY. You're right, you ARE sorry.
It just hit me how similar this duo is to Augustus and Agripa in terms of the politician and the strategist.
Wow that’s so true!
if Justinian had trusted Belisarius the way Augustus trusted Agrippa, they might have finished the job
A dream that never die
Thank you so much for this. This is just beautiful. Justinian was a HERO and under his legendary administration and great leadership emerged Belisarius, perhaps the GREATEST Roman general. He was a dreamer AND an achiever.
Honestly The Greatest Greek Empre after Macedonia When Rome was deafeted The Greeks carried The Torch and Rebirthed Rome 🇬🇷☦️👑
Eastern Rome 🇬🇷👑
Western Rome🇮🇹👑
Justinian and Belisarius were romans, not greeks lol
@@Taskmastergoated belisarius was closest to being greek He was a Tracian which was part of the Macedonian Empires successor states 🇬🇷
*Thracio-Roman
The Thracians at the time were culturally and linguistically roman
Not to mention thracians aren't even greeks lol
they both were truly blessed to live in the same period.
Belisarius was lucky to serve under Justinian because only such a benevolent Emperor as him would had been constantly forgiving general's numerous failures.
and Justinian was lucky to command Belisarius, because he was loyal beyond question and talanted enough on a battlefield to react hastly and cease opportunity when it was shown.
Ne plora, mater Roma, denuo florebis, Civis Romanus sum, Sed sine imperio sum,
Sanguine barbarorum, Renata erit Roma!
☦️💪🏼
Nice video man! AVE
Great video, would have picked different music but what the hell do I know…also why isn’t the Justinian reconquest a movie yet
Thanks as an editor finding music for edits is definitely the hardest part
@@scipiodare oh I can only imagine, I found one bit of music for my openings in my videos and I have not changed it lol
Cool
Then the bros were divided because of a woman. (Theodora, emperor Justinian's wife)
How did they divide?
@@DraganNisevic-hg3hgJustinian thought belursius would betray him as he was very popular, although belursius never showed signs of betrayal
@@heisenberg7415 Ah i taught they used a sword to divide themselfs
Based
Don't you even dare to make edit with Saint Justinian!
I'm sorry but historically this is bullshit. Justinian's reconquest was HUGELY expensive and in the end it achieved NOTHING other than holding the Italian peninsula for a short time. In long term, it crippled the Eastern Rome financially.
His military campaign chased the Ostrogoths out of Italy. Ostrogoths was a group of people lived with Romans side by side for so long, they became Romans at that point. Or at least the next best thing. They kept the Roman traditions and the language alive. After they were out of Italy and Eastern Rome pulled back, Lombards, then Franks swooped in and changed the peninsula forever.
Justinian wasn't a visionary, he was a dreamer. There is a difference.
Shut it you DOLT. Justinian THE GREAT was the Eastern Roman Empire at its APEX. It's not HIS fault that some of those after him could not fill his shoes. Under his unprecedented leadership emerged the GREATEST Roman general Belisarius who avenged and completed the conquests of other Roman greats such as Stilicho and Aetius and Majorian and WIPED OUT the vandal kingdom that sacked and ultimately destroyed Rome in the 5th century. And THEN he destroyed the Gothic kingdom and thanks to him and Belisarius Rome is still preserved today.
Justinian's leadership and codex of law still influence the world today. You're a FOOL. His reconquests AND REBUILDING of Constantinople after the deadly riots kept the Empire alive and the city afloat for a further Millennium, DESPITE one of the deadliest plagues ever and one of the worst years in HISTORY. You're right, you ARE sorry.
anglo moment
True but still the Roman traditions they got were few they were posers
@@avruvimtu2204 you can say the same thing for Eastern Roman Empire too
Yeah justinian did handle that situation pretty poorly