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  • Hi there, my name’s John Green, this is crash course: world history, and today were

  • going to talk about the fall of Rome.

  • Mr. Green, Mr. Green, Mr. Green! Who’s that pretty lady?

  • That lady, me-from-the-past, is Emperor Justinian. Well get to him in a minute.

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  • How and when Rome fell remains the subject of considerable historical debate

  • but today I’m going to argue that the Rome didn’t really fully fall until the middle

  • of the 15th century.

  • But first, let me introduce you to The Traditional View:

  • Barbarians at the Gates. My, don’t you look traditional?

  • If you want to be really technical about it, the city of Rome was

  • conquered by bar bar bar barbarians in 476 CE.

  • There was a last Roman Emperor Romulus Augustus, who ruled the empire for less than a year

  • before being deposed and sent into exile by Odoacer,

  • who was some kind of barbarian- we don’t know for sure.

  • Ostrogoth, Hun, Visigoth, Vandals; they all looked the same to the Romans.

  • Rome had been sacked by barbarians before, most notably by Alaric the Visigoth in 410-

  • Is it Uh-lar-ick or Uh-lair-ick? The dictionary says Uh-lair-ick but

  • The Vampire Diaries say Uh-lar-ick so I’m going to go with Uh-lar-ick.

  • But anyway, after 476, there was never again a “Romanemperor in Rome.

  • Then there’s the hipper anti-imperialistic argument

  • that’s nice, but if you really want to go full hipster

  • you should probably deny that youre being hipst

  • right, exactlywhich goes like this:

  • Rome was doomed to fall as soon as it spread outside of Italy

  • because the further the territory is from the capital,

  • the harder it is to govern.

  • Thus imperialism itself sowed the seeds of destruction in Rome.

  • This was the argument put forth by the Roman historian Tacitus,

  • although he put it in the mouth of a British chieftain.

  • That sounded dirty, but it’s not, it’s all about context here on Crash Course:

  • "To robbery, slaughter, plunder, they give the lying name of empire; they make a desert

  • and call it peace.”

  • There are two ways to overcome this governance problem:

  • First, you rule with the proverbial topaz fist

  • that’s not the proverb? Really, Stan? It’s an iron fist? But topaz is much harder

  • than iron. Don’t these people know their Mohs scale

  • of mineral hardness?..

  • Regardless, the Romans couldn’t do this because their

  • whole identity was wrapped up in an idea of justice that precluded indiscriminate violence.

  • The other strategy is to try to incorporate conquered people into the empire more fully:

  • In Rome’s case, to make them Romans.

  • This worked really well in the early days of the Republic

  • and even at the beginning of the Empire. But it eventually led to

  • Barbarians inside the Gates.

  • The decline of the legions started long before Rome started getting sacked.

  • It really began with the extremely bad decision to incorporate Germanic warriors into the

  • Roman Army.

  • Rome had a long history of absorbing people from the empire’s fringes into the polity

  • first by making them allies and then eventually by granting them full citizenship

  • rights.

  • But usually theseforeigncitizens had developed ties to Rome itself;

  • they learned Latin, they bought into the whole idea of the aristocratic republic.

  • But by the 3rd and 4th centuries CE, though, the empire had been forced to

  • allow the kind of riffraff into their army who didn’t really care about the idea of

  • Rome itself. They were only loyal to their commanders.

  • And as you no doubt remember from the historical examples of

  • Caesar, Pompey, Marius, contemporary Afghanistanthis is not a recipe for domestic bliss.

  • So here is Rome, stuck with a bunch of expensive and bloody

  • wars against Germanic peoples who were really good at fighting

  • and then they had a great idea: Why not fight with these guys?

  • So they essentially hired them and soon the Roman Legions were teeming with

  • these mercenaries who were loyal mostly to gold,

  • secondarily to their commanders, and not at all to Rome

  • which is a place that very few of them ever even saw.

  • I mean, why would they give a crap about the health and well-being of the empire?

  • Am I allowed to say crap, Stan? Nice.

  • This was of course a recipe for civil war, and that’s exactly what happened with general

  • after general after general declaring himself Emperor of Rome.

  • So there was very little stability in the West.

  • For instance, between 235 and 284 CE, 41 different people were either emperor or claimed to be

  • emperor.

  • And after the year 200, many of the generals who were powerful enough

  • to proclaim themselves emperors weren’t even Roman.

  • In fact, a lot of them didn’t speak much Latin.

  • Oddly enough, one of the best symbols of the new face of the Roman Empire was sartorial.

  • Instead of the traditional tunic and toga of the glory days of the Senate,

  • most of the new general-emperors adopted that most practical and most barbaric of garments:

  • pants.

  • Oh, which reminds me, it’s time for the Open Letter.

  • An Open Letter to Pants:

  • Dear Pants,

  • Although you eventually became a symbol of patriarchal oppression,

  • in your early days you were worn by both men and women.

  • And in the days of the Roman Republic, they hated you.

  • They thought you barbarous. They thought that people wearing you was

  • the definition of people lacking civilization.

  • They ventured north and the wind blew up through their togas

  • and lo and behold, they adopted pants.

  • And there’s a history lesson in that, pants, which is that when people have to choose between

  • civilization and warm genitals, they choose warm genitals.

  • Best Wishes, John Green

  • And now a note from our sponsor: Today’s episode of crash course is brought

  • o you by the all-new Oldsmobile Byzantium,

  • mixing power and luxury in a way- Really? Oldsmobile isn’t a company anymore?

  • And Byzantium is a place? Are you sure?

  • So remember when I said the Roman Empire survived til the 15th century?

  • Well that was the Eastern Roman Empire, commonly known as the Byzantine Empire

  • (although not by the people who lived in it who identified themselves as Romans).

  • So while the Western empire descended into chaos,

  • the eastern half of the Empire had its capital in Byzantium,

  • a city on the Bosporus Strait that Constantine would later rename Constantinople,

  • thereby paving the way for They Might Be Giants only mainstream hit.

  • Constantine had lots of reasons to move his capitol east.

  • For one thing he was born in modern-day Croatia, also he probably spoke better Greek than Latin,

  • and plus the eastern provinces were a lot richer than the Western provinces and

  • from a looting perspective, you just want to be closer to where the good

  • warring is.

  • The enemies in the East, like the Persian Parthians and the Persian Sassanians,

  • were real empires, not just bands of warriors.

  • And no matter who you were in world history, if you wanted to make a name for yourself

  • in terms of war, you really needed to be up against the Persians.

  • EVEN IF you werewait for it

  • the Mongols.

  • Not this time, friends.

  • As the political center of the Roman Empire shifted east,

  • Constantine also tried to re-orient his new religion, Christianity, toward the east,

  • holding the first Church council in Nicaea in 325.

  • The idea was to get all Christians to believe the same thing-

  • that worked- but it did mark the beginning of the emperor

  • having greater control over the Church.

  • That trend would of course later lead to tensions between the church centered at Constantinople

  • and the one centered in Rome. But, more on that in a bit.

  • To give you a sense of how dramatic this shift was,

  • by the 4th century CE, Constantinople’s population had soared

  • while Rome’s had gone from 500,000 to 80,000.

  • And although the Byzantines spoke Greek not Latin, they considered themselves Romans

  • and if they did then we probably should too. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.

  • There was a lot of continuity between the old, Western Roman Empire,

  • and the new, Eastern one. Politically, each was ruled by a single

  • (sometimes there were two, and once there were fourbut let’s forget about them

  • for now) who wielded absolute military power.

  • War was pretty much constant as the Byzantines fought the Persian Sassanian Empire

  • and then various Islamic empires.

  • Trade and valuable agricultural land that yielded high taxes meant that the Byzantine

  • Empire was like the Western Roman Empire, exceptionally rich,

  • and it was slightly more compact as a territory than its predecessor and much more urban,

  • containing as it did all of those once independent Greek city states,

  • which made it easier to administer.

  • Also like their Western counterparts, the Byzantines enjoyed spectacle and sport.

  • Chariot races in Constantinople were huge, with thousands turning out at the Hippodrome

  • to cheer on their favorites.

  • Big bets were placed and there was a huge rivalry not just about sports

  • but also about political affiliations between the two main teams,

  • the Blues and the Greens- Thanks for putting us on the Greens, Thought

  • Bubble. That rivalry was so heated that riots often

  • broke out between them. In one such riot, an estimated 30,000 people

  • were killed.

  • Thanks Thought Bubble. But perhaps the most consistently Roman aspect

  • of Byzantine society was that they followed Roman law.

  • The Romans always prided themselves on being ruled by laws,

  • not by men, and even though that’s not actually the

  • case after the second century BCE, there’s no question that the Eastern Roman

  • Empire’s codification of Roman laws was one of it’s greatest achievements.

  • And much of the credit for that goes to the most famous Byzantine Emperor,

  • at least after Constantine, Justinian.

  • I like your brooch, sir.

  • In 533 Justinian published the Digest, an 800,000-word condensation of 1,528 Latin law

  • books.

  • And to go along with this he published the Institutes,

  • which was like a curriculum for the Roman law schools that existed all through the Empire.

  • Justinian, incidentally, was by far the most awesome of the Byzantine emperors.

  • He was like the David Tennant of doctors.

  • He was born a peasant somewhere in the Balkans and than rose to became emperor in 527.

  • He ruled for almost 30 years and in addition to codifying Roman law,

  • he did a lot to restore the former glory of the Roman Empire.

  • He took Carthage back, he even took Rome back from the Goths,

  • although not for long.

  • And he’s responsible for the building of one of the great churches in all of time

  • which is now a mosquethe Hagia Sophia or Church of Saint Wisdom.

  • So after one of those sporting riots destroyed the previous church,

  • he built this, which with its soaring domes became a symbol

  • for the wealth and opulence of his empire.

  • The Romans were remarkable builders and engineers and the Hagia Sophia is no exception:

  • a dome its equal wouldn’t be build for another 500 years.

  • But you would never mistake it for a Roman temple;

  • It doesn’t have the austerity or the emphasis on engineering that you see, for instance,

  • the Coliseum.

  • And this building in many ways functions a symbol for the ways the

  • Eastern Roman Empire was both Roman and not.

  • But maybe the most interesting thing Justinian ever did was

  • be married to his controversial Theater Person of a wife,

  • Theodora. Hey Danica, can we get Theodora up here?

  • Wow that is perfect. It’s funny how married couples always look

  • like each other.

  • Theodora began her career as an actress, dancer, and possible prostitute before become Empress.

  • And she may have saved her husband’s rule by convincing him not to flee the city during

  • riots between the Blues and Greens.

  • She also mentored a eunuch who went on to become a hugely important general-

  • Mentoring a eunuch sounds like a euphemism, but it’s not.

  • And she fought to expand the rights of women in divorce and property ownership,

  • and even had a law passed taking the bold stance

  • that adulterous women should not be executed.

  • So, in short, the Byzantines continued the Roman legacy

  • of empire and war and law for almost 1000 years after Romulus Augustus

  • was driven out of Rome.

  • The Byzantines may not have spoken Latin, and few of their emperors came from Rome,

  • but in most important ways they were Romans. Except one REALLY IMPORTANT way.

  • The Byzantines followed a different form of Christianity,

  • the branch we now call Eastern or sometimes Greek Orthodox.

  • How there came to be a split between the Catholic and Orthodox traditions is complicated

  • you might even say Byzantine.

  • What matters for us are the differences between the churches,

  • the main doctrinal one being about the dating of Easter,

  • and the main political one being about who rules whom.

  • Did I get my whom right there, Stan? YES!

  • In the West there was a Pope and in the East there was a Patriarch.

  • The Pope is the head of the Roman Catholic Church.

  • He sort of serves as god’s regent on earth and he doesn’t answer to any secular ruler.

  • And ever since the fall of Rome, there has been a lot of tension in Western

  • Europe between Popes and kings over who should have the real power.

  • But in the Orthodox church they didn’t have that problem

  • because the Patriarch was always appointed by the Emperor.

  • So it was pretty clear who had control over the church,

  • so much that they even have a word for it- caesaropapism: Caesar over Pope.

  • But the fact that in Rome there was no emperor after 476 meant there was no one to challenge

  • the Pope, which would profoundly shape European history

  • over the next, like, 1200 years.

  • So I would argue that in some important ways, the Roman Empire survived for a thousand years

  • after it left Rome, but in some ways it still survives today.

  • It survives in our imagination when we think of this as east

  • and this as west;

  • It survives in football rivalries that have their roots in religious conflicts;

  • and it survives in the Justinian law code which continues to be

  • the basis for much of civil law in Europe.

  • Next week well talk about the emergence of Islam over here...

  • How’d I do, Stan? Well, you can’t winem all.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller,

  • our script supervisor is Danica Johnson. The show is written by my high school history

  • teacher Raoul Meyer and myself and our graphics team is Thought Bubble.

  • Last week’s Phrase of the Week wasAristotelian logic”.

  • You can guess this week’s Phrase of the Week or suggest new ones in Comments,

  • where you can also ask questions that our team of historians will endeavor to answer.

  • Thanks for watching, and as we say in my hometown, Don’t forget to be awesome.

Hi there, my name’s John Green, this is crash course: world history, and today were

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ローマ帝国の崩壊...15世紀クラッシュコース世界史#12 (Fall of The Roman Empire...in the 15th Century: Crash Course World History #12)

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    Chi-feng Liu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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