Heroin addiction actually destroyed my life. I started doing drugs since my teenage, spent my whole life fighting heroin addiction. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Much respect to mother nature the great magic shrooms.
Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in New Zealand. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.
Ive done shrooms last month in my house. It taught me how severely traumatized I was from alcohol. I healed from many mental traumas from my past and was able to forgive, let go. Shrooms to me is a remedy not a vice. I even felt more refreshed the morning after. So no hangovers. No depression mood for days. No anxiety.I now have a more calm mind
I would like to know from those who have solved PTSD and anxiety, if they have solved it definitively and how to understand what quantity of psilocybin to take and when, for how long. And can you really heal without having an addiction? Thanks to everyone for helping me understand, I want to understand if it's something that can help me solve the problem (I have c-ptsd)
Whoever asked about hobbies -- THANK YOU. This is the exact kind of thing I wonder about, as well as anything that can give us insight to the internal state, thoughts, and feelings of every day people in other times and places.
soldiers ALWAYS everywhere loved to gamble. Upper class loved to read. If you coun the desire for accumalting material goods as a hobby, or owning exotic animals, than plenty upper class folks qualify as hobbyists.
I just want to note that the mentioned medical uses of opium by the Romans sound perfectly reasonable. Opioids are still used as pain relief for a number of skin diseases and the cough suppressing qualities of opioids are well known .
Yes. It's a an extremely useful substance. If taken responsibly and with proper respect for its potency, its value is enormous. And for modern addicts it would be great if pure natural opium were available instead of morphine or heroine, or synthetics such as fentanyl.
@@olavl8827morphine is what’s in natural opium at least the red eastern Indian opium poppy but yes it’s very safe if uses reasonably it only has a 30% oral bioavailability you would have to eat a lot of it to hurt you that’s the benefit of heroin it has 90% bioavailability it’s all useful and safe if used correctly but nobody knows how to use them correctly because of our childish social stance on it and the problems with its use comes from the social stigma around it’s use
On the topic of the first question, I'd add Quintus Sertorius to the list of famous turncoat Romans. After being on the losing side of a civil war at the turn of the 1st century BC, he ended up leading the natives of Hispania in a very successful resistance against Senatorial armies for many years.
I don't think Sertorius counts. He wasn't waging war against Rome, but against Sulla and his allies and successors. His goal doesn't seem to have been to have Spain secede from Roman rule, but to overthrow the Sullans.
@@kawadashogo8258 True. But if a Roman fighting the official legitimate Roman state with a foreign power doesn't count as a turncoat, I'm not sure I know what turncoat means.
In 1st question you should've mention Roman defectors during Mithritadic wars. It were they who did teach Pontus' troops Roman tactics and introduced to them equipment similiar to Roman in later stages of this conflict
The people who taught Pontus Roman fighting tactics were quite likely defectors from Rome's auxiliaries or perhaps disenchanted centurions. They could also have been captives forced to divulge tactics, as well. It's an interesting question and one I hope Dr. Ryan answers.
A question for your next episode - Those "pursuits" of Tiberius you mentioned on Capri (little minnows!), what is the consensus amongst historians today as to whether or not that was merely slander, or if there was any truth to those rumors? My understanding is that our sources were later authors like Suetonius, who tended to slander Tiberius in the decades and centuries after his death. Thanks!
Given the sensitive subject matter covered in your question, I highly doubt Dr. Ryan is going to tackle that in a video. It would get messy, complex, and potentially bridge into the questions surrounding slander and/or child sex abuse. Those don't seem to be his forte and for good reason. It would be interesting to have your question answered, though.
Heavily regulated. Soils were a key reason for war, and its acquisition and distribution was governed by military laws and custom. Anyone caught keeping something for themselves would face serious punishment. In the crowded environment of an army, good luck finding the privacy to keep things hidden from your centurion, let alone your tent mates.
The incentive was probably to TURN IN the spoils, that way each warrior who found something valuable knew they had a guaranteed reward in store for them . Thus, eliminating the desire for personal glory among the barracks.
Murder or theft were treated as aspects of indiscipline. Serious Indiscipline was punished by flogging and then death on a frame of wood. They would be tied up in a central part of the camp with their flogged back exposed to view, and forbidden water. All of the under-officers of anyone who committed murder or theft would also be punished, usually with a fine because their men were not disciplined. When your immediate officer was fined, he was CERTAIN to say "You rats, you knew what he was planning . . . it was your duty as squad-mates of that thief, to have stopped him . . . by Jupiter I am going to make you see the error of your ways".
Interesting Q&A. _"Hobbies"._ I believe it was you who in one of your numismatic videos mentioned a large ancient Roman coin collection, so the owner must have collected coins as a hobby.
Did the classical period have any famous clothing designers that we know of? Today there are designer brands, but did high ranking Romans or Greeks favor a particular designer for their opulence?
Fashion, yes. Portraits of women can be dated to the decade by their hair styles. Clothing designers, I doubt. My gut feeling is that the designer was also the tailor/seamstress, so would only make a very limited number of garments. So few that a rich household might hire them (or, more likely, buy them as a slave) full time to produce things just for them. This, clearly, would prevent anything like the modern concept of a clothing brand to appear.
During the second Punic War, there were laws on opulence and clothes were restricted by law. You could of course make your own. But when the war was won, women demanded that the laws were repealed and bought clothes again. So there were clearly designer clothes to buy. Cato the Elder, a curmudgeon, grumbled about it. Livy quotes him on this.
@@Joanna-il2ur Clothes? I thought it was jewellery? Anyway, opulent clothes don't have to mean designer bought from a shop. Could just mean you have a slave make it at home from fancy imported silk.
Addiction requires a supply chain which can ensure widely available access to addictive goods. For example: sugar and opium are totally natural, addictive substances. However they really became problematic when humans began extracting, purifying, and commercializing them.
I recognize that thumbnail from an alleyway in San Francisco. Took me a minute but I found it in an old file from 2012. It seemed out of place but still caught my eye.
What a curious mind this scholar has, and hiw symphatetic approach to history he unfolds. It would be fine that he devoted a video to speak of his conception of the historical reality.
If opium was widely available I doubt very seriously that addiction didn't become a problem, as it has been in every other society where it is used. I'd guess that it just somehow never made it into the histories. Great Q, and A!
people back then were very closely united and respected nature. I doubt opium was a big problem because opium is a problem of the mind, a unfilled desire, anguish caused by the distance from desir, like wanting a meaningful relationship with a good woman, which is almost unheard of today…so the minds separation from heart and nature truncates spirituality and leaves men empty
Have you considered that addiction does not necessarily have to = problem? If a wealthy shop owner wanted to take opium every night and it was easily and cheaply available, there really is no problem, even though the shop owner would certainly be addicted in the sense that he would suffer if he were forced to stop. But he would have no reason or desire to stop, not in the absence of drug laws, would he? Just a thought.
It did make it into the histories only the spice route taught in our junior high history class was not actually cumin and coriander.. Look at the money it generates in it's current contraband state and imagine how much it must have made prior to the laws/restrictions set in the early 1900s. Sex, drugs and rock n roll... Heaven.
In ancient times they only ate the opium which makes it less addictive as less can be consumed. There are however references from ancient doctors who point out "weakening" from daily use. The real problem with opium started when the technology for smoking it was discovered, and later when morphine was isolated from opium and could be used intravenously. Smoking and shooting allowed for more quantity to be consumed, making it more and more addictive.
Our understanding of drug use wasn’t as childish as it is today and why would addiction be a problem if you could treat your withdraw with a flower that grows everywhere
Question: What was considered Roman and what Latin in the Roman Empire and how did it gradually shift to the Byzantine Greeks calling themselves and their language Roman?
Markus Aurelius, was dependent on it, Gallen his physician who even today is world renowned for his medical contributions to medicine and his extensive medical writings we have been lucky to not lost to history, described that he used it for aiding sleep, but also that if he did not have or use the medicine, he would not be able to talk to his fellow soldiers, and was unwell, they surly must of concluded that people who would use it for a period of time and then when they did not, that they could not function, and surly observed that they required it, although they may not have been able to label it as an addiction, dependence would have shown in their behaviours. Especially a physician who advised and treated people with it. Once you look you see drugs everywhere in the ancient world!
When was the latest recognizably classical-looking building (columns, marble,etc.) build in the West and in the East? I’m sorry if it’s a stupid question, but I’m just curious about how the classical Roman style evolved into early Byzantine/medieval architecture. Love your content!
If detailed maps were not available, how was the extent of the empire demonstrated for military or administrative purposes (especially to newly appointed governors etc.). I assume PG refers to parental guidance: "Now son, these are the accepted prerogatives of power".
It was important since at least the time of the Phoenicians until post-Roman Britain (I recently watched a docu on alleged Tintagel = Camelot and they emphasized the tin trade and the post-Roman unusual Mediterraneanness of the site, born of trade). In older times (Bronze Age) the core of the tin mining was almost certainly further south, NW Iberia, instead, and it was for sure the main source of such strategical mineral for the Mediterranean region, via the Nuraghic Sardinians (Sherden) in part but also the Mycenaean Greeks, who clearly had influence in SE Iberia (El Argar B) in those days.
The first example you’ve given of a defector reminds me of what happens with Frank Pentagelli in the Godfather. (SPOILER ALERT) All it took to stop him from taking down Michael Corleone like the FBI had been hoping was for Michael to bring Pentagelli’s brother over from Sicily to simply show his face. Frank INSTANTLY turned against the FBI and said all the incriminating evidence he had said was a lie he came up with under duress. He just had to be reminded of his family. This is a fictional story, but it makes me wonder if your first example was the inspiration for that scene turning out the way it did.
Julius Cesar being Pontifex Maximus enabled him to override the effective suspension of the senate by opponents who could just claim they had witnessed a bad omen. The Pontifex function was so key that no emperor could do without it.
The post was for life, so Augustus had to wait until the exiled former triumvir Lepidus died before he could add it to his portfolio. It remained an imperial perquisite until one of the Christian emperors was persuaded to let the Bishop of Rome have it. Consequently it's the oldest priesthood held by the Pope. The PM was only the fifth highest priest until the other pagan priesthoods were swept away.
Ancient Egyptians were known to utilize dried crocodile dung for the purpose of temporarily damming up the cervix and preventing pregnancy. Though I'm not sure if the practice was still commonplace or even around by the time Rome annexed Egypt. Would be interesting to know!
They commonly used poisonous herbs such as queen annes lace, henbane or rue to terminate early pregnancies. These herbs are actually effective at inducing misscariages, but the use of such herbs can be fatal due to blood loss. They also used curretage methods to perform abortions. I imagine the consequences of that would be similar, and there would be a great risk of infection. They also used pessaries to prevent conception. These could be anything from stones to the hulls of fruits. I doubt that these were effective at all.
Thoroughly enjoyed as always 🙂 Perhaps for next time - assuming the lives of most gladiators were brutal and short, who were the Mick Jagger and Bruce Springsteen of the Colosseum?
3:51 Guess now I'll have to spend the next 5 hours researching Tiberius to dig up whatever you're referring to. Why won't you just tell us the naughty things he liked, we can take it
Tiberius went to live in the beautiful island of Capri, were even today you can visit the remains of his palace, google villa jovis to see it. He ruled the empire from there for years. When the emperor summoned someone, sometime it was to reward him, but if the emperor was displeased he had a habit of having the culprit thrown down from Capri majestic high cliffs into the sea below, a certain death sentence. Allegedly enemies of the emperor, slaves that displeased him and even ex lover were killed this way, but it’s not sure if these stories are real or exaggerated by roman historians that hated him.
@4:31 a point of order most rabbi's in the 17th century in germany at least my area of expertise, and probably other places, tended to have other "middle class" jobs, like doctor lawyer scribe etc. in addition to their duties as rabbi.
No. They stayed exactly where they were. There was no fall in the sense I think you mean. After 395 the emperor was mainly a figurehead, with officials such as Stilicho, Constantius and Aetius, actually running things, often with the title Patrician. The final emperor was a child, Romulus, who did nothing and his father Olympius was Patrician. In 476, the Roman general Odovacarius overthrew Olympius and made himself Patrician. He retired the little boy Romulus, who lived another sixty years in comfort on his landed estates. The idea was for Odovacarius to become emperor. His uncle by marriage, Basiliscus, was emperor in the east, but by the time the ship from Ravenna reached Constantinople Basiliscus had himself been overthrown by Zeno, who Basiliscus had overthrown. Zeno told Odovacarius that his emperor was Julius Nepos, who’d been ousted in 474. Odovacarius instead killed Julius in 480. In response the new eastern emperor, Zeno having died, sent Theodoric, one of his top generals, to kill Odovacarius, which he did. Theodoric was an Ostrogoth, and ruled Italy from Ravenna as king and patriarch until the 530s. The senate continued, and last met in 611. The mayor of Rome, the urban prefect, was still going for many centuries and of course the bishop of Rome, the Pope, is still around. Consuls continued to be nominated until 541 in both east and west, but were then abolished to save money. The east Roman generals Narses and Belisarius suppressed the Ostrogoths in the 540s and Italy, North Africa and part of Spain had Roman rule restored. However parts of Italy were brought under Lombard rule in 567. The rest of Italy including Rome, Ravenna, Bologna and in the south Naples and the foot remained Roman until after 1000. So, there was no real fall of Rome as such. The famous book Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire ends in the year 1453.
Were all the Greek colonies absorbed into the Roman Empire? If not, what happened those few still independent? I am thinking primarily of the Black Sea colonies.
i had heard that body control was valued in roman society and that also they thought it more proper to drink wine diluted with water. i am wondering if social pressure not to be seen (even by oneself who presumably had the same values as the rest of society) as over indulging to the point of loss of body control might have been a strong force to keep opium usage moderate? when i saw the title i thought "well, maybe it was very rare so most people might not have any access to it" but you mentioned it was available in various forms to people. or maybe it's like how cocaine products were fine to buy at the drug store but society didn't collapse because of it...(unless there's a conspiracy to keep it secret from us.. 🙂)
An important thing to remember is they didn't have drinkable water, so all the wine etc was hydration , hence why it was diluted or in medieval times porter. The point wasn't high alcohol content like today.
3:25 no one cares about mastodon bones. These were “Human” bones. There are so many accounts is giants we should not be so quick to dismiss it. And not just taller than average, but two to three times larger. There have been swords found that were well beyond the size that an average size man could ever handle. As well as other artifacts that would give credence to the writings about giants.
Addiction mainly stems from social stigma and isolation (see the Rat Park experiments for evidence). If there was no social stigma against consuming opium poppies, then Roman people would be unlikely to go through the stages that a modern day addict does, where they are hiding their use and being ashamed, which leads to self soothing through hgeavier use. I blame the victorian British, personally. IIRc thre was no concept of opium addiction in Chinese culture until they were under the heel of the British empire and there were thousands of socially powerful, dainty British gentlemen turning their noses up at opium users in a way they never would to their more familiar drunkards.
That's not exactly true. China has had horrible opium addicts for ever and a day. They got the opium from the middle east at least 10000 years ago. There were definitely addicts. Kinda in the same sense of where smoke there will be fire. The British made it worse because they were already prejudiced against Asians so they demonized them/the addicts to the point where they withdraw from society and go headlong into the dragon so to speak. Things haven't changed. People always try to escape what they cannot with things like drugs....I definitely have first hand experience in that field at least...
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It's hard to see how Germanicus, if that's whom you meant, "turned on Rome." He may have received Putin-like treatment from his subordinate Piso, who suffered the same from Tiberius.
@@faithlesshound5621 There was a hope that Ovid might be returned to public favour. He dedicated his last known work to Germanicus. When the prince was murdered by Piso that hope must have died. I don’t think Ovid was actually in exile in Scythia, but he was certainly out of social favour.
Christian priest is a oxymoron. As priests are catholic wich is catholicism. Calling catholics Christians is like calling scientologists, mormans, jehova witnesses Christians.
Heroin addiction actually destroyed my life. I started doing drugs since my teenage, spent my whole life fighting heroin addiction. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Much respect to mother nature the great magic shrooms.
Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in New Zealand. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.
Ive done shrooms last month in my house. It taught me how severely traumatized I was from alcohol. I healed from many mental traumas from my past and was able to forgive, let go. Shrooms to me is a remedy not a vice. I even felt more refreshed the
morning after. So no hangovers. No
depression mood for days. No anxiety.I now
have a more calm mind
I would like to know from those who have solved PTSD and anxiety, if they have solved it definitively and how to understand what quantity of psilocybin to take and when, for how long. And can you really heal without having an addiction?
Thanks to everyone for helping me understand, I want to understand if it's
something that can help me solve the problem (I have c-ptsd)
Does he make delivery across the country? Am here in Poland 🇵🇱
When I lost my veins I no longer enjoyed it. God I do miss it. 😢 but yea. 8 years clean but I lost my wife my
House my cars my job.
Whoever asked about hobbies -- THANK YOU. This is the exact kind of thing I wonder about, as well as anything that can give us insight to the internal state, thoughts, and feelings of every day people in other times and places.
soldiers ALWAYS everywhere loved to gamble. Upper class loved to read. If you coun the desire for accumalting material goods as a hobby, or owning exotic animals, than plenty upper class folks qualify as hobbyists.
you're welcome
I just want to note that the mentioned medical uses of opium by the Romans sound perfectly reasonable. Opioids are still used as pain relief for a number of skin diseases and the cough suppressing qualities of opioids are well known .
Yes. It's a an extremely useful substance. If taken responsibly and with proper respect for its potency, its value is enormous. And for modern addicts it would be great if pure natural opium were available instead of morphine or heroine, or synthetics such as fentanyl.
Natural opium contains morphine, codeine and a number of others. It's not like unprocessed poppy pods are healthier for you.@@olavl8827
@@olavl8827morphine is what’s in natural opium at least the red eastern Indian opium poppy but yes it’s very safe if uses reasonably it only has a 30% oral bioavailability you would have to eat a lot of it to hurt you that’s the benefit of heroin it has 90% bioavailability it’s all useful and safe if used correctly but nobody knows how to use them correctly because of our childish social stance on it and the problems with its use comes from the social stigma around it’s use
@@olavl8827black tar heroin 100% organic
Opioids are used in modern times for pain management!? Wow! thanks for letting everyone know! 🤪
On the topic of the first question, I'd add Quintus Sertorius to the list of famous turncoat Romans. After being on the losing side of a civil war at the turn of the 1st century BC, he ended up leading the natives of Hispania in a very successful resistance against Senatorial armies for many years.
We’ll look how he ended up!
I don't think Sertorius counts. He wasn't waging war against Rome, but against Sulla and his allies and successors. His goal doesn't seem to have been to have Spain secede from Roman rule, but to overthrow the Sullans.
@@kawadashogo8258 True. But if a Roman fighting the official legitimate Roman state with a foreign power doesn't count as a turncoat, I'm not sure I know what turncoat means.
In 1st question you should've mention Roman defectors during Mithritadic wars. It were they who did teach Pontus' troops Roman tactics and introduced to them equipment similiar to Roman in later stages of this conflict
The people who taught Pontus Roman fighting tactics were quite likely defectors from Rome's auxiliaries or perhaps disenchanted centurions. They could also have been captives forced to divulge tactics, as well. It's an interesting question and one I hope Dr. Ryan answers.
A question for your next episode - Those "pursuits" of Tiberius you mentioned on Capri (little minnows!), what is the consensus amongst historians today as to whether or not that was merely slander, or if there was any truth to those rumors? My understanding is that our sources were later authors like Suetonius, who tended to slander Tiberius in the decades and centuries after his death. Thanks!
Given the sensitive subject matter covered in your question, I highly doubt Dr. Ryan is going to tackle that in a video. It would get messy, complex, and potentially bridge into the questions surrounding slander and/or child sex abuse. Those don't seem to be his forte and for good reason. It would be interesting to have your question answered, though.
Have never watched a Told In Stone video which wasn’t highly erudite and very entertaining.
Love your work & many thanks !
Commenting for the gods of the algorithm! Love your work and your voice is very soothing
I only managed to saw your answer to my question today!! Thank you so much for answering and all your great work!!
I've always wondered how spoils were shared among soldiers. How did they stop them from killing each other if someone found something really valuable?
Heavily regulated. Soils were a key reason for war, and its acquisition and distribution was governed by military laws and custom. Anyone caught keeping something for themselves would face serious punishment. In the crowded environment of an army, good luck finding the privacy to keep things hidden from your centurion, let alone your tent mates.
The incentive was probably to TURN IN the spoils, that way each warrior who found something valuable knew they had a guaranteed reward in store for them . Thus, eliminating the desire for personal glory among the barracks.
Probably the punishments executed at the time was not worth the risks 😂😂
Murder or theft were treated as aspects of indiscipline. Serious Indiscipline was punished by flogging and then death on a frame of wood. They would be tied up in a central part of the camp with their flogged back exposed to view, and forbidden water.
All of the under-officers of anyone who committed murder or theft would also be punished, usually with a fine because their men were not disciplined. When your immediate officer was fined, he was CERTAIN to say "You rats, you knew what he was planning . . . it was your duty as squad-mates of that thief, to have stopped him . . . by Jupiter I am going to make you see the error of your ways".
Interesting Q&A. _"Hobbies"._ I believe it was you who in one of your numismatic videos mentioned a large ancient Roman coin collection, so the owner must have collected coins as a hobby.
Did the classical period have any famous clothing designers that we know of? Today there are designer brands, but did high ranking Romans or Greeks favor a particular designer for their opulence?
Good question. Were there anything like fashion trends in Rome? It seems that Roman costumes didn't change for centuries.
Part of this was addressed in a previous video talking about jewelry and tattoos
Fashion, yes. Portraits of women can be dated to the decade by their hair styles. Clothing designers, I doubt. My gut feeling is that the designer was also the tailor/seamstress, so would only make a very limited number of garments. So few that a rich household might hire them (or, more likely, buy them as a slave) full time to produce things just for them. This, clearly, would prevent anything like the modern concept of a clothing brand to appear.
During the second Punic War, there were laws on opulence and clothes were restricted by law. You could of course make your own. But when the war was won, women demanded that the laws were repealed and bought clothes again. So there were clearly designer clothes to buy. Cato the Elder, a curmudgeon, grumbled about it. Livy quotes him on this.
@@Joanna-il2ur Clothes? I thought it was jewellery? Anyway, opulent clothes don't have to mean designer bought from a shop. Could just mean you have a slave make it at home from fancy imported silk.
Thank you sir , very educational
Dude great topic I must say. Bravo. Such a great topic about the opium which applies to today nearly over 2000 years from the ancient Romans.
I visited Istanbul 2 months ago and loved the museum very much. I was a bit dissapointed the mosaics museum is closed due to restoration.
“Nothing is new under the sun”
Great Q&A! Is it true that the Roman Legions, when on campaign were issued measured amounts of opium for emergency medical use?
Very intresting
Just doing my part by leaving a comment
The mention of paintings made me wonder, have (m)any of those survived? Who would be famous painters from the era?
I have a question too. How accurate is John Maddox Roberts portrayal of Roman life and customs in his SPQR series?
Addiction requires a supply chain which can ensure widely available access to addictive goods. For example: sugar and opium are totally natural, addictive substances. However they really became problematic when humans began extracting, purifying, and commercializing them.
Much Love from the Philippines.❤
I recognize that thumbnail from an alleyway in San Francisco. Took me a minute but I found it in an old file from 2012. It seemed out of place but still caught my eye.
What a curious mind this scholar has, and hiw symphatetic approach to history he unfolds. It would be fine that he devoted a video to speak of his conception of the historical reality.
Question: What do we know about the management and administration of Hellenistic royal households and the lives of royal slaves and servants?
If opium was widely available I doubt very seriously that addiction didn't become a problem, as it has been in every other society where it is used. I'd guess that it just somehow never made it into the histories. Great Q, and A!
people back then were very closely united and respected nature. I doubt opium was a big problem because opium is a problem of the mind, a unfilled desire, anguish caused by the distance from desir, like wanting a meaningful relationship with a good woman, which is almost unheard of today…so the minds separation from heart and nature truncates spirituality and leaves men empty
Have you considered that addiction does not necessarily have to = problem? If a wealthy shop owner wanted to take opium every night and it was easily and cheaply available, there really is no problem, even though the shop owner would certainly be addicted in the sense that he would suffer if he were forced to stop. But he would have no reason or desire to stop, not in the absence of drug laws, would he? Just a thought.
It did make it into the histories only the spice route taught in our junior high history class was not actually cumin and coriander.. Look at the money it generates in it's current contraband state and imagine how much it must have made prior to the laws/restrictions set in the early 1900s. Sex, drugs and rock n roll... Heaven.
In ancient times they only ate the opium which makes it less addictive as less can be consumed. There are however references from ancient doctors who point out "weakening" from daily use.
The real problem with opium started when the technology for smoking it was discovered, and later when morphine was isolated from opium and could be used intravenously. Smoking and shooting allowed for more quantity to be consumed, making it more and more addictive.
Our understanding of drug use wasn’t as childish as it is today and why would addiction be a problem if you could treat your withdraw with a flower that grows everywhere
Doug DeMuro getting in touch with his Roman roots 💪🏽
Question: What was considered Roman and what Latin in the Roman Empire and how did it gradually shift to the Byzantine Greeks calling themselves and their language Roman?
Markus Aurelius, was dependent on it, Gallen his physician who even today is world renowned for his medical contributions to medicine and his extensive medical writings we have been lucky to not lost to history, described that he used it for aiding sleep, but also that if he did not have or use the medicine, he would not be able to talk to his fellow soldiers, and was unwell, they surly must of concluded that people who would use it for a period of time and then when they did not, that they could not function, and surly observed that they required it, although they may not have been able to label it as an addiction, dependence would have shown in their behaviours. Especially a physician who advised and treated people with it.
Once you look you see drugs everywhere in the ancient world!
When was the latest recognizably classical-looking building (columns, marble,etc.) build in the West and in the East? I’m sorry if it’s a stupid question, but I’m just curious about how the classical Roman style evolved into early Byzantine/medieval architecture. Love your content!
They're still being built?
It's a good question but it's more the Romans copying the Greeks, then on and on from there.
@@tomfitzsimmons6535the Greeks inherited from Persia, Persia inherited from Babylon. All was built by Babylon.
@@maggiemae7539 Greek architecture was inspired by Egyptians not Persians.
Whether or not someone is classified as a turncoat against Rome surely depends on whether or not they won. Eg: Caesar crossing the Rubicon etc
If detailed maps were not available, how was the extent of the empire demonstrated for military or administrative purposes (especially to newly appointed governors etc.). I assume PG refers to parental guidance: "Now son, these are the accepted prerogatives of power".
A question for a future episode: What were some of the contraptions used to entertain the crowd in the venatio/damnatio ad bestias animal spectacles?
This is right up my alley. I like ancient history, I like opium
I have a question: How important was the tin trade between the Romans and southwest Britian? Is there any way to quantify it? Thanks.
It was important since at least the time of the Phoenicians until post-Roman Britain (I recently watched a docu on alleged Tintagel = Camelot and they emphasized the tin trade and the post-Roman unusual Mediterraneanness of the site, born of trade).
In older times (Bronze Age) the core of the tin mining was almost certainly further south, NW Iberia, instead, and it was for sure the main source of such strategical mineral for the Mediterranean region, via the Nuraghic Sardinians (Sherden) in part but also the Mycenaean Greeks, who clearly had influence in SE Iberia (El Argar B) in those days.
Britain was part of the Roman Empire. Rome ruled the world.
The first example you’ve given of a defector reminds me of what happens with Frank Pentagelli in the Godfather. (SPOILER ALERT) All it took to stop him from taking down Michael Corleone like the FBI had been hoping was for Michael to bring Pentagelli’s brother over from Sicily to simply show his face. Frank INSTANTLY turned against the FBI and said all the incriminating evidence he had said was a lie he came up with under duress. He just had to be reminded of his family. This is a fictional story, but it makes me wonder if your first example was the inspiration for that scene turning out the way it did.
Julius Cesar being Pontifex Maximus enabled him to override the effective suspension of the senate by opponents who could just claim they had witnessed a bad omen. The Pontifex function was so key that no emperor could do without it.
The post was for life, so Augustus had to wait until the exiled former triumvir Lepidus died before he could add it to his portfolio. It remained an imperial perquisite until one of the Christian emperors was persuaded to let the Bishop of Rome have it. Consequently it's the oldest priesthood held by the Pope. The PM was only the fifth highest priest until the other pagan priesthoods were swept away.
I have a question for YOU, sir: What do you think about Robert Graves and his curious perspectives on the ancient world?
His mother, wife and children came out, and plead with him: "Daddy chill!"
The comment section is going wild. Somebody call the IT guy.
Imagine being a vampire who actually witnessed Roman history and is watching this video. "That absolutely did happen. Coriolanus was a huge prick."
interesting! what about roman/greek use of ephedra (soma)?
How to turn a short into a ten minute history lesson on everything but the title subject.
Apparently you didn’t watch all the way….
Question: what was the contraception like in Roman times? How effective was it?
Ancient Egyptians were known to utilize dried crocodile dung for the purpose of temporarily damming up the cervix and preventing pregnancy. Though I'm not sure if the practice was still commonplace or even around by the time Rome annexed Egypt. Would be interesting to know!
They commonly used poisonous herbs such as queen annes lace, henbane or rue to terminate early pregnancies. These herbs are actually effective at inducing misscariages, but the use of such herbs can be fatal due to blood loss.
They also used curretage methods to perform abortions. I imagine the consequences of that would be similar, and there would be a great risk of infection.
They also used pessaries to prevent conception. These could be anything from stones to the hulls of fruits. I doubt that these were effective at all.
They used sheep intestines
Lack of hygiene… but that didn’t stop ‘em.
Imagine if ancient Rome had something like a crack epidemic. That would make for some interesting reading.
They did have a drug epidemic.
It’s all fun and games until Tiberius brings out the fishes
Thoroughly enjoyed as always 🙂
Perhaps for next time - assuming the lives of most gladiators were brutal and short, who were the Mick Jagger and Bruce Springsteen of the Colosseum?
3:51 Guess now I'll have to spend the next 5 hours researching Tiberius to dig up whatever you're referring to. Why won't you just tell us the naughty things he liked, we can take it
Tiberius went to live in the beautiful island of Capri, were even today you can visit the remains of his palace, google villa jovis to see it. He ruled the empire from there for years. When the emperor summoned someone, sometime it was to reward him, but if the emperor was displeased he had a habit of having the culprit thrown down from Capri majestic high cliffs into the sea below, a certain death sentence. Allegedly enemies of the emperor, slaves that displeased him and even ex lover were killed this way, but it’s not sure if these stories are real or exaggerated by roman historians that hated him.
@@dayros2023Caligula was way worse! He was mad!
i know you did a video on dentistry, what was other roman and greek hygiene like? bathing, soap, laundry, hair, etc.
@4:31 a point of order most rabbi's in the 17th century in germany at least my area of expertise, and probably other places, tended to have other "middle class" jobs, like doctor lawyer scribe etc. in addition to their duties as rabbi.
What happened to the population of Rome during and after the fall of the empire in the West? Did they all flee to the East?
No. They stayed exactly where they were. There was no fall in the sense I think you mean. After 395 the emperor was mainly a figurehead, with officials such as Stilicho, Constantius and Aetius, actually running things, often with the title Patrician. The final emperor was a child, Romulus, who did nothing and his father Olympius was Patrician. In 476, the Roman general Odovacarius overthrew Olympius and made himself Patrician. He retired the little boy Romulus, who lived another sixty years in comfort on his landed estates.
The idea was for Odovacarius to become emperor. His uncle by marriage, Basiliscus, was emperor in the east, but by the time the ship from Ravenna reached Constantinople Basiliscus had himself been overthrown by Zeno, who Basiliscus had overthrown.
Zeno told Odovacarius that his emperor was Julius Nepos, who’d been ousted in 474. Odovacarius instead killed Julius in 480. In response the new eastern emperor, Zeno having died, sent Theodoric, one of his top generals, to kill Odovacarius, which he did.
Theodoric was an Ostrogoth, and ruled Italy from Ravenna as king and patriarch until the 530s. The senate continued, and last met in 611. The mayor of Rome, the urban prefect, was still going for many centuries and of course the bishop of Rome, the Pope, is still around. Consuls continued to be nominated until 541 in both east and west, but were then abolished to save money.
The east Roman generals Narses and Belisarius suppressed the Ostrogoths in the 540s and Italy, North Africa and part of Spain had Roman rule restored. However parts of Italy were brought under Lombard rule in 567. The rest of Italy including Rome, Ravenna, Bologna and in the south Naples and the foot remained Roman until after 1000.
So, there was no real fall of Rome as such. The famous book Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire ends in the year 1453.
@@Joanna-il2ur There was massive population decline during the 5th and 6th centuries of Rome. The City of Rome essentially became a ghost town.
@@Joanna-il2urthat is not true. They moved it to to the west.
Were all the Greek colonies absorbed into the Roman Empire? If not, what happened those few still independent?
I am thinking primarily of the Black Sea colonies.
When Rome sacked the Greeks they ruled the world. Rome was an empire
RUclips suggested this to me after I watched a video on homeless drug addicts in San Francisco...
Did the Roman’s keep track of family origins? Specifically the plebs?
My 2 favorite things: opium & history!
same
I aspire to have the epitaph of "Less P.G. Pursuits." 😂😂🤣
i had heard that body control was valued in roman society and that also they thought it more proper to drink wine diluted with water. i am wondering if social pressure not to be seen (even by oneself who presumably had the same values as the rest of society) as over indulging to the point of loss of body control might have been a strong force to keep opium usage moderate? when i saw the title i thought "well, maybe it was very rare so most people might not have any access to it" but you mentioned it was available in various forms to people. or maybe it's like how cocaine products were fine to buy at the drug store but society didn't collapse because of it...(unless there's a conspiracy to keep it secret from us.. 🙂)
Absolutely wrong. The Romans were drug addled, sex rituals, orgies all the time. Brothels everywhere. They had No values!
An important thing to remember is they didn't have drinkable water, so all the wine etc was hydration , hence why it was diluted or in medieval times porter. The point wasn't high alcohol content like today.
Were there stereotypes that the Western and Eastern Romans held about each other? If so, what were they?
Damn Garrett, we gotta get u a new sock…things lookin a little shabby
Opium - Roman spice melange
They actually called it skooma back then.
Is the Obelisk Osiris male organ???
Yes
Is it true there were no rats in Ancient Rome
Best day of the week? Told in Stone Day! 👍🪨👍
💯👍👏
Yes just like in 1900. 1970 and today
Of course they did
I don't know how they built an empire and fought endless wars
I thought you would give us the story of Tarpeia..
3:25 no one cares about mastodon bones. These were “Human” bones. There are so many accounts is giants we should not be so quick to dismiss it. And not just taller than average, but two to three times larger. There have been swords found that were well beyond the size that an average size man could ever handle. As well as other artifacts that would give credence to the writings about giants.
Evidence for recreational use of opium is unclear. No wonder: opium (and derivatives) is utterly boring.
I can assure you there were opium addicts if there was opium. This isn't a theory but a certainty
They’re figs bro.
Figs and Wheat.
If Ancient Rome had Tesco and Marks and Spencer who would hold the greater market share?
Of course, drugs are old as humankind
Did they have Playboi Carti in Ancient Rome?
Addiction mainly stems from social stigma and isolation (see the Rat Park experiments for evidence). If there was no social stigma against consuming opium poppies, then Roman people would be unlikely to go through the stages that a modern day addict does, where they are hiding their use and being ashamed, which leads to self soothing through hgeavier use. I blame the victorian British, personally. IIRc thre was no concept of opium addiction in Chinese culture until they were under the heel of the British empire and there were thousands of socially powerful, dainty British gentlemen turning their noses up at opium users in a way they never would to their more familiar drunkards.
That's not exactly true. China has had horrible opium addicts for ever and a day. They got the opium from the middle east at least 10000 years ago. There were definitely addicts. Kinda in the same sense of where smoke there will be fire. The British made it worse because they were already prejudiced against Asians so they demonized them/the addicts to the point where they withdraw from society and go headlong into the dragon so to speak. Things haven't changed. People always try to escape what they cannot with things like drugs....I definitely have first hand experience in that field at least...
Rome had open drug fueled sex majik orgies
Of course you'd blame the British.
Blaming anyone else is throughly frowned upon these days lol.
Recreational opium …. Yummmy yummy 🤤 😊
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thanks for saying so
Bro is not opium 🧛♂️
Germanicas I dare say was raised Roman then turned on Rome.👍✌️
Eh? Who he?
It's hard to see how Germanicus, if that's whom you meant, "turned on Rome." He may have received Putin-like treatment from his subordinate Piso, who suffered the same from Tiberius.
@@faithlesshound5621 There was a hope that Ovid might be returned to public favour. He dedicated his last known work to Germanicus. When the prince was murdered by Piso that hope must have died. I don’t think Ovid was actually in exile in Scythia, but he was certainly out of social favour.
Used medicine
Did Rome invent Jesus?
I always chuckle when I hear your fake forced voice, trying to sound more academic, intellectual and smart.
Just use your everyday voice.
bro think he carti
"About which the less said, the better" Disgusting. Shameful thing to say
U look like u past life was roman bro
Christian priest is a oxymoron. As priests are catholic wich is catholicism. Calling catholics Christians is like calling scientologists, mormans, jehova witnesses Christians.