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Author Topic: Question for the Library Twins
Shik
Starship database: completed; History of Starfleet: done; website: probably never
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...or anyone else who feels like it.

Obviously, the Roman Empire was dealt a massive blow after the death of Marcus Aurelius in AD 180. The 12-year reign of Commodus & the 5? 6? emperors in the year following his death wasn't exactly a "happy time." Would you peg this as the beginnign of the end of the Empire? What other events might y'all point to? And yeah, Christianity's rise counts.

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"Deviance is not tailored suits or computer geeks/Pierced tongues or sex freaks/love for hire under dirty sheets/I have lived and breathed you...." --Vanessa Daou, "Deviate"


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Nim
The Aardvark asked for a dagger
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That's funny, I was just discussing the celtics and gaulles this evening, about how they developed after the time of Asterix, how most of them abandoned their religion. Played a big part in that whole thing too.

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And by the way, I faked all the orgasms.

Leslie Nielsen, in "Room With A View With A Staircase In A Pond"


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Vacuum robot lady from Spaceballs
astronauts gotta get paid
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I've always felt that Diocletian and Constantine I were the forebearers of collapse, with their handling of the Roman Military. The split of the Army into Frontier Guards and Mobile Units caused the skill and training of the soldiers to break down, as many were peasants and farmers and the like. Plus, the acceptance of barbarian soldiers was not a plus.

This, in combination with the now powerful unified barbarian tribes like the Goths and Franks, not to mention the Huns, was the beginnings of a less than all-powerful Empire. Adrianople opened the floodgates allowing the other Goths and such to enter.

The Military was, I believe, the key component to the downfall. Religion & Crazy Emperors surely contributed, but those alone the Empire probably could've withstood.

I think.

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"...you know, Omega, there's a phrase you might want to look up. It goes something like "paranoid arrogant fuckwit who has more chance of ejaculating to the moon than he has of ever convincing a girl that he's a viable prospect for marriage." -PsyLiam, September 16, 2000 10:23 PM.


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Saltah'na
Chinese Canadian, or 75% Commie Bastard.
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Hmph.....

And I thought you were talking about Gladiator......

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Jay the Obscure
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Certainly not that there has been anything written on this.

To me Diocletian represents the last great Roman Emperor. Diocletian recognized that the empire was too large and complex to be ruled by only a single emperor and instituted the Tetrarchy, or Rule by Four. At the time of his abdication in 305 AD, he had basicly split the Empire when he selected Maximinus as Caesar in the east and Severus as Caesar in the west. A clear signal that Rome, while still mighty was in decline.

While Constantine represents the transformation to the Byzantine with his legalization and support of Christianity and his foundation of a new capital at Byzantium.

Either way, they represent the last impossible hopes of holding an already crumbling Empire together...the last gasps of the Augustinian Principate.

In a very real way, the death of Augustus signaled the beginning of the end of the Empire. Seriously. None of the other people who followed in the shadow of his purple robe had the skills or the ability to make the office what he intended it to be.

quote:
Furthermore, none of his cardinal powers were conferred for life but, rather, for fixed periods of five or (later) ten years. That these powers were never rescinded when they came up for renewal is entirely beside the point: there was the illusion of choice. That is what mattered. The vocabulary Augustus chose to express his power, too, was a model of tact: "leading citizen" (princeps) not dictator, "authoritative influence" (auctoritas) not "command" (imperium). Throw into the equation his modest lifestyle, affable approachability, routine consultation of the senate, and genuinely impressive work ethic, and we have in Augustus one of the greatest and most skillfully manipulative politicians of any nation in any age.

Augustus (31 B.C. - 14 A.D.)

Titles like chief priest (pontifex maximus) and "Father of his Country" (pater patriae) were voted by the Senate...even though under the guise of real power.

And yet, all too soon after Augustus, what became a game of tact and influence bacame one of naked ambition, assassinations, and raw military power. Certainly not in keeping with the traditions of the Republic that Augustus had wanted.

He alone of the Emperors preserved the illusion that the Republic might still return. A very important tradition to a people who thrived on tradition. It might be argued that the further that Rome moved away from the ideals of the Republic the closer it came to it's eventual downfall.

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[This message has been edited by Jay (edited October 01, 2000).]


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Nim
The Aardvark asked for a dagger
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Now you got me interested. So when was the empire at it's peak?

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The Talented Mr. Gurgeh
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Around the time of Hannibal and the battle of Carthage I suppose, although I freely admit that my knowledge of Ancient History is crap.

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When I said I'd like to smash every tooth
In your head"
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Shik
Starship database: completed; History of Starfleet: done; website: probably never
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Carthage was the time of the Republic. The peak would be the rule of the 5 "Good Emperors," probably--Hadrian, Trajan, Nerva, Antoninus Pius, & Marcus Aurelius.

I ask this because I'm looking at writing an alternate history of the world...where Rome survives, thrives, & rules all. I'm also looking at writing stories based in the Renegade Legion timeline. That was a fun little RPG set in 6830...basically, "Rome in space."

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"Deviance is not tailored suits or computer geeks/Pierced tongues or sex freaks/love for hire under dirty sheets/I have lived and breathed you...." --Vanessa Daou, "Deviate"


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Nim
The Aardvark asked for a dagger
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Well good luck, man!
That has got to be one of the best "what if"'s I've heard of! Tell me, do the romans keep supressing Christianity and promoting Jupiter&Co?

And thanks for the info guys, I'll use it as best I can.
About Hannibal, when I first saw the promos for "Silence Of The Lambs II" I thought it was a "Gladiator"-movie but with Hannibal. Would've been cool...

Was it Sun Tsu or Confucius that said "Imperialism is the last stage of capitalism"? I've always linked that to the romans and Palpatine's Empire.

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And don't forget, I faked all the orgasms.

[This message has been edited by Nimrod (edited October 01, 2000).]


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Vacuum robot lady from Spaceballs
astronauts gotta get paid
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Speaking of Alternate histories, could someone point me towards some well written & thought out ones? I've only read "Fourth Reich" by William Caberthall, and it was shit.

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"...you know, Omega, there's a phrase you might want to look up. It goes something like "paranoid arrogant fuckwit who has more chance of ejaculating to the moon than he has of ever convincing a girl that he's a viable prospect for marriage." -PsyLiam, September 16, 2000 10:23 PM.


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TSN
I'm... from Earth.
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I thought the movie Fatherland was pretty good, but I've only seen it once, so that's just a first-impression sort of thing...

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-Boris Skrbic, 27-Sep-2000


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USS Vanguard
i hate clowns
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If you want some cool alternate history, check out the book "What If", its a collection of essays by historians on "what if" situations in military history from Battle of Long Island to Gettysburg to D-Day to Alexander the great. pretty cool stuff.

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Malnurtured Snay
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Harry Turtledove has written some good alternate history ... he's got a great sage (currently underworks) about how the world would have been different if the Union hadn't won the American civil war

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Nim
The Aardvark asked for a dagger
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"Guns of the south", was it?

I read the first book of the WWII-thing with alien interference, "World War: In The Balance" I think. Pretty good, maybe I'll continue.
Loved the detailed info about the German/Russian/Alien Tank-battles.

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Don't forget, I faked all the orgasms.


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SCSImperium
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To me, the writing was on the wall once the Republic fell. Caesar and Octavian might have been great rulers, as well as most of the first line of Julian Emperors and some notable others beyond that, but things could not hold together for any long duration after that. Slow demise began the day the Pax Romana began. Pretty much like Jay said.

I share the sentiments Cicero, among other men and great orators at the end of the Republic. A despot, no matter how great or tactful, is still inferior to a republic. Furthermore, with every Caesar comes a Caligula.

It took until who, Mr. Jefferson, for someone to realize this again?

{Salutes his former state flag, which proudly bears "Sic Sempter Tyrannus"}

quote:
romans keep supressing Christianity and promoting Jupiter&Co?

{Cough, cough!} That's a bunch of hooey propaganda. The Romans alowed free practice of Religion, as long as one pleged allegaince to the Emperor. Any other stories you heard were myth (the infamous Nero fables) or exagerated (many Biblical stories).

Heck, the Romans were about to industrialize when at their peak. Most people don't know they had a crude steam engine device, used as a toy, though.

In other words, it took till the 19th century for civilization to get back to where Rome once was; fully.

Lastly, Magnus, I lvoe the quote. Where did that happen? I haven't been able to get around the boards as much lately.

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-Small Computer Systems Interface "Scuzzy" Emperor

Operator of the Goulag Hotel, maintainer of the workhouses.

Operator of Cargill Conglomerate Publications, http://www.cargillconglomerate.com

"Woman is deprived of rights from lack of education, and the lack of education results from the absence of rights. We must not forget that the subjection of women is so complete, and dates from such distant ages, that we are often unwilling to recognize the gulf that separates them from us."

Tolstoy, on a more objective note.

[This message has been edited by SCSImperium (edited October 01, 2000).]


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