17:07 I've heard varying opinions on the pilum. Some say they were meant to bend on impact, however, I've also heard that it is a common misconception.
I've heard that too. Most of the "experts" say it's a myth. But then I wonder about the stories I've heard about one of the iron nails (or rivets) in the head of the shaft being replaced with a wooden peg so the pilum would break or bend. So, I'm confused.
The secret to Roman dominance, and later their failures is mainly attributed to three factors. First, training, the legions were not comprised of conscripts, but professional soldiers who were well trained, and disciplined. Their punishments were beyond imagination for us today. The term decimation comes from the decimation punishment which was the execution of ever tenth soldier hence deci-mation. Secondly their equipment, it was perfectly suited to the tactics they used, thirdly would be their small unit formations. The way the legions were organized meant that they were easier to command, and could form different formations easier, and quicker, than a larger traditional army of the era. When you take those three factors into account, you have an extreme departure from the norm of the time. Other empires might have been able to field a larger army, but it wasn't as well trained, or organized which means not nearly as effective. Couple that with the mostly solid leadership they primarily had and it was deadly effective. Barbarians aren't going to send out a call for levies and be able to stop a legion. The formation tactics they employed were also cutting edge for the time. In later years, the organization broke down, the cohesion, the standardized equipment, and the over reliance on auxiliary troops means training declined as well. They tried to rely on the tactics that had served them so well, but were not becoming outdated. History has taught that a military that fights to win the last war loses the next one, it was true of Rome, of France (multiple times), and quite a few other empires.
Simply not true that Germania limited their military abilities, the area wasn’t considered worth the expense and trouble there weren’t enough benefits for permanent conquests, even though Probus marched to the Elbe and considered annexing and reducing it to a Provence before his assassination.
The guy who got executed for forgetting his sword was told by his commander to go get it and put it on. The soldier went to his tent and came back totally naked except for his sword on his hip, trying to be funny. That’s why he was executed. Apparently his commander didn’t see the humor.
I have a Roman Centurions uniform and went trick or treating with my 2 year old grandson . It was great ! One person called me a gladiator ! I had to explain I spent 10 years ( Army ) in Centurion school and am not a slave . My Son's named Julius Caesar and my grandson Roman . I spent two years in Germany with an ADA Battery near Trier Germany and it was great . In 1984 , Trier was 2000 years old and they had the Legio XX march at the Port De Negro gates , I have a post card from it ! Make Rome Great Again ! I also have a recording production company , " 10th Legion Productions " . Research Giaus Crastinus , Primus Pilus of the 10th . I wrote a song " Primus Pilus " about him ! " Victus Romanus " !
There are several glaring inaccuracies in this documentary. The main one being that Rome was in no way the first standing or professional army. Additionally, prior to the Roman Army nations were not throwing their armies against each other in random, disorganized melees. Other armies like the Greeks, Macedonians and Persians were using formations and tactics long before Rome was even a thought. They speak about Decimation like it was a fairly common practice. Which it never was. It was an extreme punishment rarely used as killing 1/10 out a cohort was a massive waste of men. Each professional soldier is a massive investment in both time to train and money to kit out and feed. And now you would have to replace all of them. No commander is going to want to do that very often if ever. The reason decimation was effective as a punishment is because of its rarity .
Signing on for 25 year's in the Roman Army tells me that there wasn't much dieing in the ranks. How did the Army calculate the likelyhood of dying within this 25 years.🤔
Reville: Yell at legionaries Dawn: Yell at legionaries Mid-morning: Yell at legionaries Noon: Yell at legionaries Afternoon: Yell at legionaries Evening: Yell at legionaries Dinnertime: Yell at legionaries Nighttime: Yell at legionaries Sleeptime: Yell at legionaries in dream After retirement: Yell at kids and neighours (but not the wife)
@@jameswells554 Well I am Singaporean and we have universal male conscription for 2 years at 18. So like every military there's obviously the shouting and such, but it has been toned down a ton from my father's generation. Back in his day the sergeants did all the sadistic stuff like hitting and kicking recruits, making them leopard crawl on the brick parade square in the blazing hot tropical noon sun, change parades etc, but now they've been outlawed. I also heard positive encouragement is now encouraged (lol) in basic training, though that was after my time. Also because I finished my 2 years and now only go back for reservist like for two weeks every year, the higher-ups don't shout at us any more and have to cajole us sometimes since we're reservists and don't give a F. Anyway the NCOs and officers are our fellow conscripts so everyone just tries do things chill and safely.
Nothing against the guy with the thick accent, but a narrator for a video for American viewers he is not. It was very distracting. What were you thinking???
The Gaul commander had fought with the Roman Legions . The Roman Legions like to day trained on team work. Some of the best example are the Korean lower rank officers. They were better trained than the ones I had in Vietnam. The Vietnamese Army was the worst for the most part you bought your rank.
I traded for an old SKS with mounted scope (made-in-china) gun? Wink wink, it's acually not bad now after going through it, cleaning & adjusting, then adding the shoulder strap & pig-sticker on the end. I respect your involvement and praise the effort served for our country Sir
Varus was a lawyer - not a military commander. He was petty and cruel. The legions were sworn to follow him. This was the principle cause of Teutonburg massacre.
The secret to Roman military success is engineering. The Romans showed up in mass, built forts and garrisons that were well protected and maintained. It was next to impossible to dislodge them. It was this engineering that won wars. Never forget when Cesar came to the Rhine he built a bridge across it (300 yards over 30 foot deep cold moving water) crossed it, chased the local armies for few weeks then turned and crossed the river and tore the bridge down. All to let them know he could do was he wished.
What did I just watch? The video doesn't show Julius (or Iulius) very much. Yet, he is supposed to be the viewer's POV character. The only action he does in the entire documentary is RUNNING AWAY?! Also, the narrative clumsily jumps around: the story starts at the time of Augustus, but after that the story veers wildly back and forth from showing the pre-Marian legions before 100 BC (look at the armor) to the sack of Rome in the 5th century AD?!
Otto von Bismarck did not like war but recognized you had to get into one if you want to prevent worse conflict in the future. And if you think he had a hand in WW1 think again it was the French who resented losing for 40 years that started the Triple Entente, basically a plot against Germany.
Some scholars of North-European origin (and most layman alike) tend to greatly overestimate the Teutoburg forest disaster and its impact. Ancestral trauma of being inferior to the might and sophistication of Rome, I guess.
I'm wondering how "real" the weapons and armor are in this documentary. Are the extras wearing real chainmail, scale armor, and banded armor? It LOOKS real, certainly. More so than other docuentaries and tv shows, where they'd have "knitted mail" for example, or outright printed patterns or molded foam. The helmets look like they're metal instead of foam or plastic. Interesting attention to detail! Perhaps the "costume designer" should be commended in this case.
Not always a lot of good Roman commanders would not throw in the new recruits are auxiliary troops they wanted to train them because they were knew they were loyal .
If they were on Hadrian's Wall it would be tough cold, wet, and freezing and they had to keep the Picts (in today's Scotland) from jumping over the Wall to attack Britain's (today's English) after the Romans left in the early 5th century the Picts attacked all the way down to the south coast of today's England, that's why the Britain's asked the Anglo Saxons to come and help them.
If you go back far enough we all came out of Africa. Romans recruited soldiers from all over their empire. From Egypt , Syria and Iraq to northern France and England. 😮
History is way more clear with a Hellenic classical education, and someone who speaks like a native Greek and not as an outsider/foreigner who learned Greek. Dionysius Pyrrhus requests the exclusive use of Hellene in his Cheiragogy: "Never desire to call yourselves Romans, but Hellenes, for the Romans from ancient Rome enslaved and destroyed Hellas." And George Gemistus Plethon pointed out to Constantine Palaeologus that the people he leads are "Hellenes, as their race and language and education testifies". Ducas Vatatzes, wrote in a letter to Pope Gregory IX about the wisdom that "rains upon the Hellenic nation". He maintained that the transfer of the imperial authority from Rome to Constantinople was national and not geographic, and therefore did not belong to the Latins occupying Constantinople: Constantine's heritage was passed on to the Hellenes, so he argued, and they alone were its inheritors and successors. His son, Theodore II Lascaris, was eager to project the name of the Greeks with true nationalistic zeal. He made it a point that "the Hellenic race looms over all other languages" and that "every kind of philosophy and form of knowledge is a discovery of Hellenes […]. What do you, O Rome, have to display?" The ancient Greeks used the name "Italia" In addition to the "Greek Italy" and it was Ulfilas, a Greek Who Created the Early German Alphabet. The Greeks created it, the Germans copy it, and the English exploit it. 😅 No other small country can compare with Greece in terms of impact on human benefit. In the beginning... God created the Earth, and in the light blue waters, put a small ship to travel forever, in order not only to give birth but also to transfer great ideas all over the world ... He called that ship...HELLAS! 🐬🐬🐬🐬 The only good is knowledge, and the only evil is ignorance. Herodotus. 🐟🐟🐟🐟
Centurions weren't just black. They were predominantly latin (roman), may there have been black roman soldiers? Yes,definitely in the latter years of the roman empire there were black ones. In fact, the roman solider Morris I believe was his name, it could be argued he was the first knight..so to speak. The code of chivalry. To say ,"they were only black is not true".
I noticed all the weapons are designed to be used by right handed people what happened to the left-handed soldier? And how did the left-handed soldier fit in when it came to formations?
Very good, thank you for this, well done it be. But, however, can we please keep it at "B.C.", "A.D." and NOT change it into anything else.. Try not to "change" history shall we...
Oops. They would train the auxiliaries I'm trying to say train them to fight in the right sequence and order of the Roman tactics where they learn discipline and how to fight together that was their biggest success on the battlefield fighting together as a unit.
I agree, but the long-term consequences were huge. By accepting the loss and not persevering about subduing the Germans, basically conceding that they were unconquerable, they left a mortal enemy proud and intact ....and Rome fell to the descendants of Arminius' Germans 400+ years later. It did not fall to Carthage or Persia.
@johndenugent4185 i mean 400 years later it was depolutated and ravaged by plague so kind of unavoidable. Those germans didnt do shit to the east and were moatly fleeing their own conquest by the huns.
Several inaccuracies. One for all, it was far, very far from the greatest, or even one of the greatest romans defeats through history... Battle of lake Trasimene, Caudine Forks, Cannea, Carrhae, Arausio. Tragedy for the Romans, but surely the outcome was in Rome not that dramatic, since it was, to exaggerate a bit, a mere "border" skirmish. However those other battles threatened the Rome´s very existence.
Why does this Roman soldier of Germanic origin look southern Italian? Especially back two thousand years ago, many Germans were blond. Tacitus said they seemed to be of a pure race (which is not true now):
Why do Italians speak with an A at the end of the final word of their sentences when they speak English? Soldiers-a Roman-a Punishment-a Germans-a I'm of Italian descent and have no idea why they talk like that when they speak English... (Honest question I would really like to know)
@@digge2210 thanks for replying I was genuinely curious :) I speak English as a second language and I live in a very cosmopolitan area but the only ones that do this (to my knowledge and experience) are Italians and Japanese and I never knew why…
@@pavelivanov2999 Japanese put the letter O when it ends with a consonant (McDonald-o for instance) but Italians put the letter A in the end of every sentence which is very odd to me hence the question :)
The language does not like consonant clusters and, for euphony, wants to separate them by a vowel, even adding one. German and Russian are the opposite -- many consonant clusters.
Great show. You keep history alive. Bravo
Where is that centurion which live you said you were showing?
A "classic example was decimation" it was anything but classic... it was super exceptional... for super obvious reasons!!!
There was this YT channel Invicta presenting what it takes for a legion on the move...very impressive and worth watching.
I love Invicta... truly passionate historian.
Well.. it was interesting.. and I did see a few centurions walk by... the title is not really saying what this is about..
The battle of teutoburg forest happened in 9AD not 15CE.. another inaccurate documentary.
Besides that I actually like the documentary
17:07
I've heard varying opinions on the pilum. Some say they were meant to bend on impact, however, I've also heard that it is a common misconception.
I would guess that whether it bent or didn't bend, a shield with a heavy pilum stuck in it would not be useful.
I've heard that too. Most of the "experts" say it's a myth. But then I wonder about the stories I've heard about one of the iron nails (or rivets) in the head of the shaft being replaced with a wooden peg so the pilum would break or bend. So, I'm confused.
@13:59 he throw pilum like a grandma
🤣
The picture is incorrect. Roman Centurions were black. BBC and Netflix told me.
😂😂🤘
Marxists have taken over
Rent free in your head
and Santa @@Mordor_Sauron
😂😂 no shit 😂😂
The secret to Roman dominance, and later their failures is mainly attributed to three factors. First, training, the legions were not comprised of conscripts, but professional soldiers who were well trained, and disciplined. Their punishments were beyond imagination for us today. The term decimation comes from the decimation punishment which was the execution of ever tenth soldier hence deci-mation. Secondly their equipment, it was perfectly suited to the tactics they used, thirdly would be their small unit formations. The way the legions were organized meant that they were easier to command, and could form different formations easier, and quicker, than a larger traditional army of the era. When you take those three factors into account, you have an extreme departure from the norm of the time. Other empires might have been able to field a larger army, but it wasn't as well trained, or organized which means not nearly as effective. Couple that with the mostly solid leadership they primarily had and it was deadly effective. Barbarians aren't going to send out a call for levies and be able to stop a legion. The formation tactics they employed were also cutting edge for the time. In later years, the organization broke down, the cohesion, the standardized equipment, and the over reliance on auxiliary troops means training declined as well. They tried to rely on the tactics that had served them so well, but were not becoming outdated. History has taught that a military that fights to win the last war loses the next one, it was true of Rome, of France (multiple times), and quite a few other empires.
What ever happened to good ol AD & BC…….. history lost right there
It wasn't introduced until 525 CE by Christians. Wasn't used at the time of this history nor is the whole world Christian.
Simply not true that Germania limited their military abilities, the area wasn’t considered worth the expense and trouble there weren’t enough benefits for permanent conquests, even though Probus marched to the Elbe and considered annexing and reducing it to a Provence before his assassination.
Finally a representation of Romans (my ancestors) that is historicaly accurate! 😊 bravo
My ancestor too. 😊
@@josephmarzulloarp den shroffel abbä den plott? 🎉
Age of Empires II style music/sound effects, and I love it! 🏹 ⚔ 🛡 🗡 🏰
Ur in the crew.
Being left handed would make being a legionary tough for me.
The guy who got executed for forgetting his sword was told by his commander to go get it and put it on. The soldier went to his tent and came back totally naked except for his sword on his hip, trying to be funny. That’s why he was executed. Apparently his commander didn’t see the humor.
cool documentary
I have a Roman Centurions uniform and went trick or treating with my 2 year old grandson . It was great ! One person called me a gladiator ! I had to explain I spent 10 years ( Army ) in Centurion school and am not a slave . My Son's named Julius Caesar and my grandson Roman . I spent two years in Germany with an ADA Battery near Trier Germany and it was great . In 1984 , Trier was 2000 years old and they had the Legio XX march at the Port De Negro gates , I have a post card from it ! Make Rome Great Again ! I also have a recording production company , " 10th Legion Productions " . Research Giaus Crastinus , Primus Pilus of the 10th . I wrote a song " Primus Pilus " about him ! " Victus Romanus " !
Victus Romanus!
Weird...I was thinking about ancient Rome today for some reason 😮
Caligula would have blushed
There are several glaring inaccuracies in this documentary. The main one being that Rome was in no way the first standing or professional army.
Additionally, prior to the Roman Army nations were not throwing their armies against each other in random, disorganized melees. Other armies like the Greeks, Macedonians and Persians were using formations and tactics long before Rome was even a thought.
They speak about Decimation like it was a fairly common practice. Which it never was. It was an extreme punishment rarely used as killing 1/10 out a cohort was a massive waste of men. Each professional soldier is a massive investment in both time to train and money to kit out and feed. And now you would have to replace all of them. No commander is going to want to do that very often if ever. The reason decimation was effective as a punishment is because of its rarity .
Signing on for 25 year's in the Roman Army tells me that there wasn't much dieing in the ranks. How did the Army calculate the likelyhood of dying within this 25 years.🤔
Augustus: “Varus, give back the legions!”
Correction. "Varrus give back my legion". Did you ever see BBC I Claudius
thank you
14:00 what was that throw lmao.
Reville: Yell at legionaries
Dawn: Yell at legionaries
Mid-morning: Yell at legionaries
Noon: Yell at legionaries
Afternoon: Yell at legionaries
Evening: Yell at legionaries
Dinnertime: Yell at legionaries
Nighttime: Yell at legionaries
Sleeptime: Yell at legionaries in dream
After retirement: Yell at kids and neighours (but not the wife)
Substitute Soldiers for Legionaries and you described my career as an NCO. 😂
@@jameswells554 It's universal.
@@silverchairsg kinda sad, actually. Think there'd be an easier way to things by now.
@@jameswells554 Well I am Singaporean and we have universal male conscription for 2 years at 18. So like every military there's obviously the shouting and such, but it has been toned down a ton from my father's generation. Back in his day the sergeants did all the sadistic stuff like hitting and kicking recruits, making them leopard crawl on the brick parade square in the blazing hot tropical noon sun, change parades etc, but now they've been outlawed. I also heard positive encouragement is now encouraged (lol) in basic training, though that was after my time.
Also because I finished my 2 years and now only go back for reservist like for two weeks every year, the higher-ups don't shout at us any more and have to cajole us sometimes since we're reservists and don't give a F. Anyway the NCOs and officers are our fellow conscripts so everyone just tries do things chill and safely.
Nothing against the guy with the thick accent, but a narrator for a video for American viewers he is not. It was very distracting. What were you thinking???
The Gaul commander had fought with the Roman Legions . The Roman Legions like to day trained on team work. Some of the best example are the Korean lower rank officers. They were better trained than the ones I had in Vietnam. The Vietnamese Army was the worst for the most part you bought your rank.
I traded for an old SKS with mounted scope (made-in-china) gun? Wink wink, it's acually not bad now after going through it, cleaning & adjusting, then adding the shoulder strap & pig-sticker on the end. I respect your involvement and praise the effort served for our country Sir
Varus was a lawyer - not a military commander. He was petty and cruel. The legions were sworn to follow him. This was the principle cause of Teutonburg massacre.
The secret to Roman military success is engineering. The Romans showed up in mass, built forts and garrisons that were well protected and maintained. It was next to impossible to dislodge them. It was this engineering that won wars. Never forget when Cesar came to the Rhine he built a bridge across it (300 yards over 30 foot deep cold moving water) crossed it, chased the local armies for few weeks then turned and crossed the river and tore the bridge down. All to let them know he could do was he wished.
What did I just watch? The video doesn't show Julius (or Iulius) very much. Yet, he is supposed to be the viewer's POV character. The only action he does in the entire documentary is RUNNING AWAY?!
Also, the narrative clumsily jumps around: the story starts at the time of Augustus, but after that the story veers wildly back and forth from showing the pre-Marian legions before 100 BC (look at the armor) to the sack of Rome in the 5th century AD?!
Outfitting the Roman army alone never ceases to amaze me.
Roman never fell they became the church ⛪️
Ah! Chromed stirrups! lol 7:37
The soldiers took oaths, but I don't recall the documentary mentioning generals having to take oaths. If anyone knows more?
I dont know if they were the first but the Spartans had a standing army way before Rome!
Otto von Bismarck did not like war but recognized you had to get into one if you want to prevent worse conflict in the future. And if you think he had a hand in WW1 think again it was the French who resented losing for 40 years that started the Triple Entente, basically a plot against Germany.
"What Was Normal Life Like For A ?" I guess we'll never know...
Hahaha 48 minutes later, still waiting to find out
Roman Centurions were from the Congo, my grandmother told me so.
🤪
Haha.
Maybe a few
The soldiers would have been much fitter looking than the stand-ins pictured!
Some scholars of North-European origin (and most layman alike) tend to greatly overestimate the Teutoburg forest disaster and its impact. Ancestral trauma of being inferior to the might and sophistication of Rome, I guess.
Roman Republic treated citizen soldiers much better.
What do you mean by that? Not really sure that is true.
Panonia is not in the Balkans 🙄 From how good this documentary looks you would think you’d get your facts right.
No it is not it is in slovenia
the guy with the good hair kinda reminds me of Seth Rogan…I’m gonna refer to him as Dr. Seth from now on whenever he shows up
Think a soldier won’t lie? Ask him how much his pack weighs and how far he marched that day. 😂
46:56 "Belarius". Who is that? Does he mean Belisarius?
Not BCE, it's BC end of story!
The same sort of people felt all offended and banned prayer in schools.
@@johndenugent4185unless you're muslim. Then you get a prayer room and a pass out of class.
wtf. This video didn’t talk almost ALL about Centurions. It was about the life of Auxiliaries. Good video, but shit TITLE. 😑
What happend to the centurion story ????
Bad title. WTF?
EXACTLY! 😂
Pre Empire was very different for the average Roman soldier.
Sure, pre reforms like Marius. As a result we have a much different army Years later
in the map the time is correctly namend as "BC".
War was definitely considered, more of just a way of life in pre-industrial times.
Got to hand it to them the Germans they have been a worthy battle and fighting opponent since the beginning
Yes, and they learned many things from the Romans in subsequent centuries of trade and contact.
I'm wondering how "real" the weapons and armor are in this documentary. Are the extras wearing real chainmail, scale armor, and banded armor? It LOOKS real, certainly. More so than other docuentaries and tv shows, where they'd have "knitted mail" for example, or outright printed patterns or molded foam. The helmets look like they're metal instead of foam or plastic. Interesting attention to detail! Perhaps the "costume designer" should be commended in this case.
Most documentaries of that era use extras who are interested in it and take their own gear to the shot.
31:37 Is that type of sophisticated recruitment letter real?
All these centurions are strong independent women...
13:40 I think I see why the empire might have fallen
Not always a lot of good Roman commanders would not throw in the new recruits are auxiliary troops they wanted to train them because they were knew they were loyal .
We need a modern revival.
Great video!
How do you pronounce the greatest ROMAN generals name again?....or...at least the 2nd greatest.
If they were on Hadrian's Wall it would be tough cold, wet, and freezing and they had to keep the Picts (in today's Scotland) from jumping over the Wall to attack Britain's (today's English) after the Romans left in the early 5th century the Picts attacked all the way down to the south coast of today's England, that's why the Britain's asked the Anglo Saxons to come and help them.
Its was much warmer there in those days - grapes were grown along Hadrians wall.
I feel like the title did not match
Annoying as hell that you use CE instead of AD.
Yes, well, the producer may be anti-Christian. John 8:44
If you go back far enough we all came out of Africa.
Romans recruited soldiers from all over their empire. From Egypt , Syria and Iraq to northern France and England. 😮
Ignorance appears to be contagious
I saw what a Roman looked like... the b picture on Roman meal bread 2
Mussolini kinda tried to do it on beer and cheese didn't he? Sorry bud... 😂
If anyone's very much into Roman warfare I strongly recommend Schwerpunkt's videos series
History is way more clear with a Hellenic classical education, and someone who speaks like a native Greek and not as an outsider/foreigner who learned Greek. Dionysius Pyrrhus requests the exclusive use of Hellene in his Cheiragogy: "Never desire to call yourselves Romans, but Hellenes, for the Romans from ancient Rome enslaved and destroyed Hellas." And George Gemistus Plethon pointed out to Constantine Palaeologus that the people he leads are "Hellenes, as their race and language and education testifies". Ducas Vatatzes, wrote in a letter to Pope Gregory IX about the wisdom that "rains upon the Hellenic nation". He maintained that the transfer of the imperial authority from Rome to Constantinople was national and not geographic, and therefore did not belong to the Latins occupying Constantinople: Constantine's heritage was passed on to the Hellenes, so he argued, and they alone were its inheritors and successors. His son, Theodore II Lascaris, was eager to project the name of the Greeks with true nationalistic zeal. He made it a point that "the Hellenic race looms over all other languages" and that "every kind of philosophy and form of knowledge is a discovery of Hellenes […]. What do you, O Rome, have to display?"
The ancient Greeks used the name "Italia" In addition to the "Greek Italy" and it was Ulfilas, a Greek Who Created the Early German Alphabet. The Greeks created it, the Germans copy it, and the English exploit it. 😅
No other small country can compare with Greece in terms of impact on human benefit.
In the beginning... God created the Earth, and in the light blue waters, put a small ship to travel forever, in order not only to give birth but also to transfer great ideas all over the world ...
He called that ship...HELLAS! 🐬🐬🐬🐬
The only good is knowledge, and the only evil is ignorance. Herodotus.
🐟🐟🐟🐟
the legions in this documentry is a mix ture diferent eras!!!!????
Centurions weren't just black. They were predominantly latin (roman), may there have been black roman soldiers? Yes,definitely in the latter years of the roman empire there were black ones. In fact, the roman solider Morris I believe was his name, it could be argued he was the first knight..so to speak. The code of chivalry. To say ,"they were only black is not true".
It’s BC not BCE..so dumb cus the pc version still marks before and after Jesus ..just stop and get help
I love Rome lol
I noticed all the weapons are designed to be used by right handed people what happened to the left-handed soldier? And how did the left-handed soldier fit in when it came to formations?
They were given a left handed sword
Very good, thank you for this, well done it be.
But, however, can we please keep it at "B.C.", "A.D." and NOT change it into anything else..
Try not to "change" history shall we...
For the senate and the people of Rome.
Bismarck did not incite the Prussian wars. Also that term is not established. Get your facts right.
If you start mentioning all the errors it will take a whole day.
5 minutes for the introduction and i turned off
So what about the Centurions ?
13:59 One of these recruits, is not like the others, one of these recruits, doesn't belong...
Oops. They would train the auxiliaries I'm trying to say train them to fight in the right sequence and order of the Roman tactics where they learn discipline and how to fight together that was their biggest success on the battlefield fighting together as a unit.
This world is crazy apparently Netflix thinks Roman’s are black and Egyptians are white. I can’t wait until Angelina Jolie plays Harriet Tubman
Change the title from Centurion to Legionare.
What were the Prussian wars of Independence? Not to be nit picky but that's error.
It's not lost forever. We can still LARP it.
How does the one scholar say teutoburg was probably worst defeat of Roman's? Cannae was much worse and Carrhae was close in casualties as well.
I agree, but the long-term consequences were huge. By accepting the loss and not persevering about subduing the Germans, basically conceding that they were unconquerable, they left a mortal enemy proud and intact ....and Rome fell to the descendants of Arminius' Germans 400+ years later. It did not fall to Carthage or Persia.
@johndenugent4185 i mean 400 years later it was depolutated and ravaged by plague so kind of unavoidable. Those germans didnt do shit to the east and were moatly fleeing their own conquest by the huns.
Lol it’s not like that bruh I own a challenger mate
11:30 Why the hell will allow the roman military someone to leave with their full gear?
wasnt there like 15,000 men in a legion?.....
What?
No transecual Centurions?
No DEI in Roman times?
Hey roman what was life like for you normal??? I mean we don't have to fear barbarians anymore.
Ugh! I hate when people say chainmail! Its just mail lol.
I dont know how this Erik Walters got his PhD.?
A lot of BS.
Overall not a very good video.
Several inaccuracies. One for all, it was far, very far from the greatest, or even one of the greatest romans defeats through history... Battle of lake Trasimene, Caudine Forks, Cannea, Carrhae, Arausio. Tragedy for the Romans, but surely the outcome was in Rome not that dramatic, since it was, to exaggerate a bit, a mere "border" skirmish. However those other battles threatened the Rome´s very existence.
Well I'm pretty sure life was short for the centurion. It must have sucked but it was still better than being a peasant. 😊
You have to survive first to get Centurion.
Why does this Roman soldier of Germanic origin look southern Italian? Especially back two thousand years ago, many Germans were blond. Tacitus said they seemed to be of a pure race (which is not true now):
The term Common Era makes me instantly stop watching any documentary...
There are people in Hollywood who hate Jesus and in fact got him crucified.
Why?
Yeah, why?
I’d love to be able to travel back in time and start building nations and taking over lands. I often think about how I would do it lol
Why do Italians speak with an A at the end of the final word of their sentences when they speak English?
Soldiers-a
Roman-a
Punishment-a
Germans-a
I'm of Italian descent and have no idea why they talk like that when they speak English...
(Honest question I would really like to know)
Because english isnt our mother language and we have to translate in our mind
That -a is your "and-eeeh"
@@digge2210 thanks for replying I was genuinely curious :)
I speak English as a second language and I live in a very cosmopolitan area but the only ones that do this (to my knowledge and experience) are Italians and Japanese and I never knew why…
DO you mean Italians speaking English-a :D
It is really strange, i agree.
@@pavelivanov2999 Japanese put the letter O when it ends with a consonant (McDonald-o for instance) but Italians put the letter A in the end of every sentence which is very odd to me hence the question :)
The language does not like consonant clusters and, for euphony, wants to separate them by a vowel, even adding one. German and Russian are the opposite -- many consonant clusters.
Totally misleading name!!