this post was submitted on 27 Feb 2025
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Bruh, Britannia hadn't had a major native uprising in over 300 years at the time Roman Britain was abandoned.
"Britannia" as in "The Roman province of Britannia", guy.
...
Fucking what.
Before and after the Jewish-Roman Wars in which religious fanatics attempted to murder everyone who wasn't their coreligionist or was their coreligionist but in the wrong way, yes. During them, not so much.
See, now this is a potentially legitimate point. I would counter, though, that most major cross-border incursions into Germania by Rome after the campaigns of Augustus were provoked by attacks and raids on Roman land and allies - Germania remained unconquered for the same reason that it was not really all that great as a target for loot and plunder - it was dirt poor. Rome's primary reason for expeditions against the Germanic tribes was defense of the borders - the Germans were neither prestigious nor prosperous targets.
Now, Persia? Persia was a perpetual dream of Roman conquest, and they were probably quite glad to hear half of their enemy's empire had collapsed.
Yes. Unironically.
No, but was life as a slave of a British chieftain or a Spanish warlord great? It seems an odd question to level considering the ubiquity of slavery in the ancient world.
No, man, this is pop history shit viewing the Roman Empire through an extremely modern lens of imperialism and exploitation.
This is like saying there was hunger in the medieval period, but there's also hunger in developed countries today. It entirely misses the fucking point.
Huh. I wonder why Romans were such great record keepers and were so keen on writing about 'how great it was' (since you think it's self-praising pamphleteers that we get our view of the Empire from) while everyone else utterly failed to do so. I guess it was coincidence.
The idea of the Empire's foundations being built on a cycle of conquest, exploitation, and enslavement is insane. That's plunder economy shit that hasn't been taken seriously in nearly a hundred years.