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Forgotten Wars - The Roman Invasion of Arabia (26 BC) DOCUMENTARY 

Invicta
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We explore Forgotten Wars - The Roman Invasion of Arabia. Get your SPECIAL OFFER for MagellanTV here: try.magellantv.com/invicta. It's an exclusive offer for our viewers! Start your free trial today. MagellanTV is a new kind of streaming service run by filmmakers with 3,000+ documentaries! Check out our personal recommendation and MagellanTV’s exclusive playlists: www.magellantv.com/explore/hi....
In this history documentary we explore one of the lesser known chapters of Roman history during the reign of Emperor Augustus. The event in question was the forgotten war of the Roman invasion of Arabia. This was brought about after Augustus had consolidated his rule and was looking for new ways to win gold and glory for the people. The campaigns into Germania had become tiresome slogs with little material benefit. As such he turned to the newly minted province of Egypt and its lucrative eastern trade routes. Emperor Augustus ordered the prefect, Aelius Gallus to venture forth into the lands of ancient Arabia. The documentary follows the Roman Army as it prepares for the military campaign and eventually invades.
Stay tuned for more episodes on Rome's Forgotten Wars like our previous episode on the Great Illyrian Revolt. What other unknown wars should we cover next?
Bibliography and Suggested Reading:
"The Geography of Strabo - Book XVI, Chapter 4" by Strabo
"Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam" by Robert G. Hoyland
Credits:
Research - Chris Das Neves
Writing - Chris Das Neves
Narration - Invicta
Artwork - Gabriel Cassata
Editing - Invicta
#Rome
#Military
#History

Опубликовано:

 

3 май 2021

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Комментарии : 2,6 тыс.   
@InvictaHistory
@InvictaHistory 3 года назад
What other forgotten wars do you think we should cover?
@Bitch00Please
@Bitch00Please 3 года назад
WW2
@naj1450
@naj1450 3 года назад
ghazis
@naj1450
@naj1450 3 года назад
ww1
@crusader7659
@crusader7659 3 года назад
I think the Diadochi Wars are generally forgotten, especially relative to how important they were in shaping the world following Alexander’s death
@sudetenrider-pili6637
@sudetenrider-pili6637 3 года назад
Expeditions to find the source of river Nile would be super cool. Oh master Invicta
@notablegoat
@notablegoat 3 года назад
If the guide really did wear the invaders down by directing them on poor routes, then he single-handedly beat an invading army. That's clever as hell
@Asgard2208
@Asgard2208 3 года назад
Well, until he lost his head, obviously. That's always a bummer.
@deeipomar2366
@deeipomar2366 3 года назад
@@Asgard2208 Sacrificing one single life to repel an entire army is the most profitable sacrifice ever!! If the story is true then by all means this man is a legendary hero who used his brain as his only weapon to trick a Roman army!!
@Asgard2208
@Asgard2208 3 года назад
@@deeipomar2366 Umm, it was a joke.... Lighten up.
@nicholaspanos1559
@nicholaspanos1559 3 года назад
@@Asgard2208 Lighten up? The guy's ecstatic
@BanditoBurrito
@BanditoBurrito 3 года назад
He... didn’t beat them though?
@Nawyria
@Nawyria 3 года назад
So Gallus decided to take a sea route when an easy land route was available to friendly Leucerome - and then decided to march his army through Arabia Deserta rather than land in Arabia Felix and start from there? Surely this guy's strategic genius is unparalleled.
@Supadubya
@Supadubya 3 года назад
Yup. He clearly did it backwards. Should have marched by land to Leucorome (ideally, taking the city and setting it up as a staging ground) and then slowly gathered a large fleet there (buying up local merchant vessels to act as transport and logistics ships, mainly) to sail straight to Arabia Felix...
@Killerbee_McTitties
@Killerbee_McTitties 3 года назад
Hindsight is 2020. The land was unknown to romans and landing in a port as an invading army with resistance isn't easy either, granted they would have even found a port before their entire fleet wrecked in the unknown waters. They didn't have the maps we're looking at today. Plus dealing with all the logistical issues at the start while having augustus breath down his neck, Gallus was propably just glad he found a guy who supposedly knew the region somewhat and just went with it.
@MegaBlueShit
@MegaBlueShit 3 года назад
@@Killerbee_McTitties The entire idea of a campaign there with such little preparation was ridiculous. It would have required years of building up bases along the western coast of the red sea, and extensive scouting operations for them to have a chance. Their fleet barely even set out of port, and they already had to deal with scurvy. Their logistics were a mess. And marching through an unmapped desert with the help of a local guide? A really ingenious idea.
@Killerbee_McTitties
@Killerbee_McTitties 3 года назад
@@MegaBlueShit you make do with what you have. the romans were neither explorers nor seafarers, they were conquerors and they approached this like a campaign. they had never seen such a desert before and weren't expecting what they found, arabia is vastly different from gaul, spain or syria after all. you're looking at this 2000 years later with a wealth of knowledge availbable to you at the push of a button unparalelled in history. get off your high horse.
@MegaBlueShit
@MegaBlueShit 3 года назад
@@Killerbee_McTitties More like Augustus was utterly clueless when it came to warfare, never cared about it and had a foolish idea. Something he had a lot of in his younger years. The guy leading this campaign was thus put in an impossible position and was forced to act with haste. Normally, gathering more information about the area one intends to invade would be the obvious thing to do for anyone semi-competent.
@caesarshotdogchampion8738
@caesarshotdogchampion8738 3 года назад
Forgotten Videos: Your Part 3 to Julius Caesar lives
@LuanMower55
@LuanMower55 3 года назад
Yeeeeeeesss
@isaiahmacias5276
@isaiahmacias5276 3 года назад
Yes I miss it
@InvictaHistory
@InvictaHistory 3 года назад
I've got our Roman researcher helping chip away at that
@caesarshotdogchampion8738
@caesarshotdogchampion8738 3 года назад
@@InvictaHistory Minerva blesses you
@randomlyentertaining8287
@randomlyentertaining8287 3 года назад
@@InvictaHistory What about "that" series? You know...Evolution of the Roman Legion. 5 years and counting for a part 2, longer than the wait for the entire Siege of Jerusalem series from start to the final super video of all four parts.
@rustamsahabuddin5727
@rustamsahabuddin5727 3 года назад
The world: ahh this land is just filled with sand and this sticky black, useless liquid 2000 years later The world: mine! Mine! Mine! Mine!
@freed.man.1
@freed.man.1 3 года назад
Careful, if you have too much oil the us might invade...
@rustamsahabuddin5727
@rustamsahabuddin5727 3 года назад
@@freed.man.1 I fear putting extra in my pasta due to the us believe me 😁
@yonathanrakau1783
@yonathanrakau1783 3 года назад
They didnt even know that place had oil centuries ago
@cv4809
@cv4809 3 года назад
@@yonathanrakau1783 you don't say
@ofallmyintention9496
@ofallmyintention9496 3 года назад
@@freed.man.1 Oh, come on. America never does anything immoral ;) shhhh
@Dantick09
@Dantick09 3 года назад
That Nabataean guide deserved a medal. He single-handedly slowed the romans to1/3 speed, cripled them and killed the auxiliaries lol
@vladescu3g
@vladescu3g 3 года назад
sounds more like a scapegoat for an incompetend governor
@anon2427
@anon2427 3 года назад
They should’ve sewed him in a bag with a monkey, dog, snake, and chicken and thrown him into the sea!
@recentrogue
@recentrogue 3 года назад
They probably quartered him after cutting out his tongue. Not being brutal just truthful. After they probably decimated his home village as well as done the same to his family.
@hebl47
@hebl47 3 года назад
@@recentrogue What if his family had less than 10 members? Would they kill part of a person in decimation?
@recentrogue
@recentrogue 3 года назад
@@hebl47 your attempt at criticizing my words and grammar on a youtube comment has as much validity as a blind person judging a wet tshirt contest.
@mnoor-dj6lp
@mnoor-dj6lp 2 года назад
The desert protected the land of the Arabs, just like snow protected the Russians from the invaders
@Abdulmalik12341
@Abdulmalik12341 2 года назад
Or just like how the snow protected the Finnish from Soviet invasion
@ranro7371
@ranro7371 2 года назад
Arab sources say that the Roman campaign led by Aelius Gallus to Arabia in 26 BC was disastrous, as most of the soldiers of the campaign (11,500 men including 500 jews ) perished by drowing, severe heat, diseases and malnutrition, and also thanks to the intelligence of Saleh (Syllaeus in Roman), an Arab minister sent by the Nabataean king Obodas III, who served as a guide to The Roman army ..Saleh misguided the Romans & was able to exhaust them by taking long and difficult roads, and the campaign took 180 days to reach Yemen which supposed to take 60 days The Romans reached yemen very exhausted and was unable to fight & capture ma'reb the capitale city which forced them to retreat after a fierce resisting from the local population
@amas1002
@amas1002 2 года назад
By the way I’m Arabic and that video is totally wrong by 70% there are wars happened and plans that never mentioned and how the romans got defeated by the Arabs, They didn’t like to say we got defeated so they made that story but the real story was very different to that, As an Arabian I would like to clarify this.
@jon9247
@jon9247 2 года назад
@@ranro7371 i would not take arab sources as authentic 😅
@user-xr2jt7ss4o
@user-xr2jt7ss4o 2 года назад
Snow didn't protect Russia It was invaded by : 1. Vikings ( 9th century) 2. mongols ( 1241) 3. Polish ( 1618) 4. Swedes (1708) 5. Ottoman tatars ( 1571, 1593) 6. France (1812) 7. Germany( 1915, 1941)
@user-xr2jt7ss4o
@user-xr2jt7ss4o 3 года назад
600 years later... Arabia: hello Roman empire do you remember me?
@tarci2994
@tarci2994 3 года назад
Arabia:Remember how you tried to take advantage of my disunity well I am gonna do that now. Roman empire: ...
@Ahmed-Bin-Koshari
@Ahmed-Bin-Koshari 3 года назад
Hahahah Arab sack of Rome This day is mine Tomorrow is yours
@gerardjagroo
@gerardjagroo 3 года назад
That wasn't the Romans the Arabs fought but the Greeks, nice try on self aggrandizement though.
@Ahmed-Bin-Koshari
@Ahmed-Bin-Koshari 3 года назад
@@gerardjagroo Greece Rome are same people I don’t care what you say
@abo3zzzam
@abo3zzzam 3 года назад
@@gerardjagroo you all are Frinja and Khwaja to the Arabs.
@blockmasterscott
@blockmasterscott 3 года назад
This campaign is hard to find information about. I’m impressed.
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
It is not hard.There are only few sources for it.
@comradekenobi6908
@comradekenobi6908 3 года назад
@@paprskomet that's why it's hard
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
@@comradekenobi6908 Why is that hard if you can easily find those same informations they used in this video?
@comradekenobi6908
@comradekenobi6908 3 года назад
@@paprskomet because most (most people, not the more passionate ones) people don't really know how to get good sources To access those they have to do a lengthy research scouring the web or going to historical archives Both of the things above I don't have faith in most people have the time for, either aren't familiar with scouring archives it or just plain lazy But more passionate ones will enthusiastically do both things above, and most historical channels are the more passionate people
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
@@comradekenobi6908 You are correct Master Kenobi.But they could simply follow names of authors mentioned in this video.These days most ancient works exist in several english translations for free and online so they dont even need to buy some book.
@amanghin
@amanghin 3 года назад
Another useful reminder of how terrain, climate and logistics have won/lost just as many wars as blade and gunpowder. A very well made video!
@molybdaen11
@molybdaen11 3 года назад
The land itself can be more deathly then any enemy army. Many generals forgot this over the centuries.
@mohammadnasser6715
@mohammadnasser6715 2 года назад
@@molybdaen11 It's also hard to beat Arabians in their land
@mr.mazingerz4659
@mr.mazingerz4659 2 года назад
In the north, the desert is part of the An-Nufud desert, which also branches off to the eastern side of the Nejd. Also, there is the Al-Dahna Desert, which contains some quicksand and is very dangerous for those who are ignorant of its features. Each desert has a distinctive vegetation cover and flora (wild plants), and the Empty Quarter is found in The southern and southeastern part, and there are some Bedouins who live there to this day, and the difficulty of living there lies in the fact that the distinctive features change. The sand dunes change almost every month, but the winds and the area have very clean air, throwing three air currents. This wind makes a distinctive and terrifying sound for those who The area is not well known, as the wind and sand make this sound, and there are some oases as well. Also, some herds of the Arabian Oryx live. They are not completely empty as some think. There are mountains in the western part and plateaus in the middle, the plains in the east , There is a distinct geographical diversity in the Arabian Peninsula.
@user-qpp
@user-qpp Год назад
A good explanation, as if you are one of the people of this desert 👍🏻
@hishamalaker491
@hishamalaker491 5 дней назад
Damn them dessert bedouin m'fers be living life to the harcore, respect.
@kianbehmanesh7775
@kianbehmanesh7775 3 года назад
One correction: the empty quarter is not the area encompassed by all of “Arabia deserta,” but the name Arabs give to the south-eastern portion of that desert (West of Oman) for its lack of oases. The rest of Arabia deserta is traversable and has multiple settlements.
@ahmd5
@ahmd5 3 года назад
Actually the Arabs never called it the empty quarter. It was called Al Ramlah الرملة، or Ramlat Jibreen رملة جبرين or Alahkaf الأحقاف
@nashmi-8609
@nashmi-8609 3 года назад
Actually these area is the land of ishmaelites and there they raised and lived its called Najd and Hejaz
@ranro7371
@ranro7371 2 года назад
Arab sources say that the Roman campaign led by Aelius Gallus to Arabia in 26 BC was disastrous, as most of the soldiers of the campaign (11,500 men including 500 jews ) perished by drowing, severe heat, diseases and malnutrition, and also thanks to the intelligence of Saleh (Syllaeus in Roman), an Arab minister sent by the Nabataean king Obodas III, who served as a guide to The Roman army ..Saleh misguided the Romans & was able to exhaust them by taking long and difficult roads, and the campaign took 180 days to reach Yemen which supposed to take 60 days The Romans reached yemen very exhausted and was unable to fight & capture ma'reb the capitale city which forced them to retreat after a fierce resisting from the local population
@jaif7327
@jaif7327 2 года назад
@@nashmi-8609 that’s the other side the tribal arabs didn’t live in the empty quarter no one did that’s why Oman never experienced a land invasion for nearly all of history except the wahabbi raids
@nashmi-8609
@nashmi-8609 Год назад
@jin gu Real arabs are known whom they are. And arabized people are known. You know very well that Ishmaelites exsist and they spread around middle east and north africa?
@lastblueride5
@lastblueride5 3 года назад
Who would win? A big ass army of 10,000 romans or 1 tour guide boi
@omegasupreme7353
@omegasupreme7353 2 года назад
My money goes for that tour guide booooi
@chocolate6315
@chocolate6315 2 года назад
@@omegasupreme7353 😂😂
@iQLQ
@iQLQ 2 года назад
@@omegasupreme7353 😂🙂
@matovicmmilan
@matovicmmilan 2 года назад
I begin to question whether he had ever properly graduated the tourism management or ended up falsifying his diploma instead?
@iaskelad
@iaskelad 2 года назад
😭😭🔥
@RexGalilae
@RexGalilae 3 года назад
3:09 The "Empty Quarter", iirc, was used to refer to the area to the north of the Hadramawt region (at the junction of modern Saudi, Yemeni and Omani borders) because not a single drop of water nor a single tribe settled in the region. I don't think the label applied to the rest of Arabia Edit: The region is called Rub Al Khali in Arabic
@dankwarmouse6248
@dankwarmouse6248 3 года назад
Yeah, it has also apparently grown over recent millenia so it was likely even smaller than it was when the invasion occurred. (Not an expert by any stretch.)
@dankwarmouse6248
@dankwarmouse6248 3 года назад
@Albert Fels Yep! Called Rub' Al Khali in Arabic.
@enrico7474
@enrico7474 3 года назад
Hadramaut was in southern yemen the empty quarter is more north of hadramaut
@RexGalilae
@RexGalilae 3 года назад
@@enrico7474 Correct, it was called Rub Al Khali, as pointed out by another commenter
@noblemann4898
@noblemann4898 3 года назад
@@RexGalilae you should look at the greenery of the Yemeni city called ib. You would never have believed that it was in Arabia
@Legiondude
@Legiondude 3 года назад
Guess it's time for Alternate History Hub to entertain what the world would be like if Rome held the peninsula
@anon2427
@anon2427 3 года назад
They did set up a colony in Arabia Felix
@napolien1310
@napolien1310 3 года назад
It is impossible
@TheSuperhoden
@TheSuperhoden 3 года назад
@@napolien1310 its not. Other nations did set up autonomous colonies far away. Greeks and phoenicians
@napolien1310
@napolien1310 3 года назад
@@TheSuperhoden it is impossible to control the whole peninsula by a foreign power. The greeks and the phoenicians colonised parts and built city states and these states governed themselves and weren't under a single rule and small compared to the Arabian peninsula, foreign powers can held some parts like the south region of Yemen because of the sea routes and the prosperity of the lands, or like the Persian hold some parts of the eastern coast, or the Ottomans holding the western coast but not the whole peninsula as it is useless and impossible.
@ammarhaziq919
@ammarhaziq919 3 года назад
It will be hard for mediterranean power like romans or macedon to assert power at arabia, only ottomans the mediterranean power that rule over arabia, especially on western coast of arabia peninsula like Jordan, Hejaz and Yemen, but ottomans had religious reasons for that, two holy cities of Mecca and Medina located there, and ottomans claim on the caliphate title make it a lot easier to rule there.
@noblemann4898
@noblemann4898 3 года назад
The older I get, the more I'm astonished at the monuments of Egypt and Rome
@whatkenyan7684
@whatkenyan7684 3 года назад
I think this video should be titled "HOW ONE MAN DEFENDED THE OF ARIBIA AGAINST ROME". That guide must have died of laughter and then they beheaded him to keep face.
@youamazing41
@youamazing41 11 дней назад
*ARABIA
@KGBzelov
@KGBzelov 3 года назад
Hey can you do the forgotten campaign of Rome final conquest of northern spain? My family is from the city of Leon which use to be Roman army camp during the time of Augustus. Would love to know about this forgotten war so closely tied to my heritage!
@nayas1885
@nayas1885 3 года назад
This is a great idea
@user-ou5dw7lf9s
@user-ou5dw7lf9s 3 года назад
türkiyeden ispanya selamlar
@thefisherking78
@thefisherking78 3 года назад
@@user-ou5dw7lf9s wat
@EduNauram
@EduNauram 3 года назад
gran idea bro
@sudetenrider-pili6637
@sudetenrider-pili6637 3 года назад
Not many people know that north part of peninsula was pacified up until Augustus. Good topic
@kingspore5000
@kingspore5000 3 года назад
Next video: Roman conquest of Nabatea during Trajan!
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
That was pretty borring action that actually went without any significant fighting(none is even reported).Romans simply sized control of that territory by marching their army there(and there already were Roman garrisons on that territory as Nabateans were already vassals of Rome a long time before).If there was any ressistance at all it was apparently not seen worthy to even being mentioned.
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
@SystemRelevant All personally free inhabitants of the Empire became citizens at early 3rd century which would certainly included also Arabs but only minority of them since most continued to live outside of Roman Empire.Some Arabs could recieved roman citizenship even much sooner but as individual cases or at best small communities.
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
@SystemRelevant Christianity did not formed in province of Arabia(that is Arabia Petraea) nor was Arabia Petraea ever among the most important provincies.
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
Philip the Arab was the only Roman Emperor born in province of Arabia Petraea and he was most likely not really 1st Christian Emperor.Claim that he was is only a later christian legend known from less reliable sources and possibly based on his relative tolerance of Christianity which some christians interpreted as he was one of them secretly.Some members of Severan dynasty had partially arabic descent from Julia Domna and Julia Soaemias.Arabia was of course not without any strategic importance against Persia but even in this field there were more important provincies.
@paprskomet
@paprskomet 3 года назад
@SystemRelevant No historical revisionism is included in my words only scholarly consensus.It is in fact you who attempts for history revisionism clearly motivated by your nationalism.No realiable sources exist on legend of Philip as first Christian Emperor and it does not matter how often later Christian tradition repeated that story.Even for christians themselves 1st Christian emperor is and was considered Constantine the Great so do not hide behind "all christian sourses" as it is not truth that "all" christian sources says so.Do not use word "all" as some magical word or irresistible argument if it is not even truth.Roman curency was in fact coined in several centres across the Empire and existed in two branches as smaller local mints and imperial central mints.Mint of Damascus was just one out of many.Arabia Petraea was also never a food basket of the Empire-such titles were and still are applied mainly for Egypt,rest of north Africa and Sicily.
@ahmadnaser8192
@ahmadnaser8192 11 дней назад
I'm from Arabia Petraea, and have a fascination with Roman history. So, thank you for enlightening me about a campaign that went through the soil I grew up on!
@hawaaEve-bf8pp
@hawaaEve-bf8pp 8 часов назад
مبهور بماذا بالضبط؟....لولى أن الله أكرم العرب بالإسلام لكان بني الأصفر أبادوا العرب كما فعلوا مع سكان أمريكا الأصليين...الفديوا يتحدث عن حملة الإحتلال الرومانيه الفاشلة لجنوب شبه الجزيرة العربية، وكيف أن رجل عربي واحد إستطاع خداعهم وتضليلهم وأنقذ شبه الجزيرة العربية من شرهم.
@timmcclymont3527
@timmcclymont3527 3 года назад
Gold. Pure gold. This is the content I've been missing from this channel
@nahruz.w3044
@nahruz.w3044 3 года назад
History always made me feel calm and happy
@MichaelWite19
@MichaelWite19 3 года назад
Wow! The Roman Empire is so interesting to learn about! Thx!
@MichaelWite19
@MichaelWite19 2 года назад
@Scott Johnson yea it is so cool I think
@MichaelWite19
@MichaelWite19 2 года назад
@Scott Johnson yea, this is why I love learning about history
@nyahjzt-7430
@nyahjzt-7430 2 года назад
yeah, I love history :D
@sizzla123
@sizzla123 3 года назад
EXCELLENT “If you would know who controls you see who you may not criticise.” ― Tacitus
@tomchch
@tomchch 3 года назад
puppies
@abdelnasserwardani3346
@abdelnasserwardani3346 3 года назад
Cancer sick children
@sizzla123
@sizzla123 3 года назад
@@tomchch kittens
@user-jv3mm6vt6e
@user-jv3mm6vt6e 3 года назад
Rape victims The left
@MegaRedsword1
@MegaRedsword1 2 года назад
@@tomchch you cant criticize puppies and kittens?
@kirschakos
@kirschakos 3 года назад
Loving the videos about these less known parts of history :) Keep them coming!! :D
@Brandazzo22
@Brandazzo22 3 года назад
Great video! I didn't know about this war. I definitely hope you continue to do more forgotten wars stuff!
@amritzansara
@amritzansara 3 года назад
Video number 7 until subtitles are added. Your videos are amazing, though it helps to have subtitles for these videos especially since RU-vid removed the Community Captions feature. People who are deaf or hearing-impaired may struggle to hear (in general) and RU-vid's automated captions just does not do. I could even make subtitles during my free time for these videos if you'd like - just please find a way to implement these and make your already wonderful videos better.
@kanyekubrick5391
@kanyekubrick5391 3 года назад
@invicta here’s your guy
@avocadokirby1517
@avocadokirby1517 3 года назад
I agree as I have a deaf ear
@dankwarmouse6248
@dankwarmouse6248 3 года назад
Blame RU-vid. With their recent update to censor swearwords in the autogenerated subtitles they clearly don't give a shit about the hearing impaired. That's a change that literally ONLY hurts the hard of hearing.
@audiosurfarchive
@audiosurfarchive 3 года назад
THANKS RU-vid ONLY MADE EVERYTHING WORSE
@audiosurfarchive
@audiosurfarchive 3 года назад
@@dankwarmouse6248 _"b-b-but it'll make creators ""engage"" more with their audience by having to tediously import, align and calibrate captioning themselves! It'll be a win-win, right..? Surely it wont just marginalize those that dont wanna let us use their video viewing data for text-to-speech analysis?"_
@merkytippery
@merkytippery 3 года назад
Man I've been waiting for this one, thanks Invicta!
@brycevo
@brycevo 3 года назад
This is truly interesting to learn, a roman war that was forgotten by most
@suckadoesstuff7095
@suckadoesstuff7095 3 года назад
A "forgotten" war or really wars I'd enjoy to see would be the Selucid wars I never hear those mentioned hardly ever and if so it's always in foot notes
@TheSuperhoden
@TheSuperhoden 3 года назад
RU-vid search "kings and generals" they did an animated series about it l
@uniuni8855
@uniuni8855 3 года назад
Even less early Pheonician wars and colonies
@Kyriosin
@Kyriosin Год назад
They were fighting the Jews
@kevinhull7925
@kevinhull7925 Год назад
@@Kyriosin Wasn’t that around the time of the Maccabees?
@droopmasterflex2822
@droopmasterflex2822 3 года назад
My father always said you learn something new every day with Invicta it's true. Thank you for your time for researching this information and sharing it with us. We are grateful for your painstaking work and research into finding lost history all of us here thank you for your videos.
@denizmetint.462
@denizmetint.462 3 года назад
My Dad (1961- ongoing) always listened to Invicta's videos on his way home from school. Good thing he had NordVPN. Back then you had little to no ads on RU-vid.
@CesarMartinez-oc4xm
@CesarMartinez-oc4xm 2 года назад
I just couldn't imagine Roman legions marching through the desert sands in full armour. Its crazy. Even without facing enemy forces, the heat and exhaustion alone could defeat their army.
@williamrobert9898
@williamrobert9898 2 года назад
and that is what happened
@aalaaelsaobb3717
@aalaaelsaobb3717 Год назад
So how did the Roman legions conquer North Africa, including Egypt
@aalaaelsaobb3717
@aalaaelsaobb3717 Год назад
By the way, this campaign was against the Sabaean Kingdom in Yemen, and not all of Arabia, as the narrator tried to show
@williamrobert9898
@williamrobert9898 Год назад
@@aalaaelsaobb3717 they conquered the empires that were already there on the fertile shores tf??? Arabia was mostly arabian tribes and the small kingdoms there were also established on the fertile shores, the Islamic Caliphate as far as I know were the only Empire to conquer the whole Arabian Peninsula
@WilliamShares
@WilliamShares 6 месяцев назад
Because that parts about the guide, the miscalculation of the Military campaign are just sensationalized for a soft landing for the Great Roman empire, in reality Yemen has and always was a difficult task for any invader, even if the teleport and fall out the sky🤣😭
@camille-jeanhelou4444
@camille-jeanhelou4444 2 года назад
Great video. More obscure historical events please
@kathrynradonich3982
@kathrynradonich3982 3 года назад
Always love a new video from you. Love learning new thjngs
@BOSIE321
@BOSIE321 3 года назад
I always wonder how far Alexander would have gone in Arabia if he'd lived longer; it was his next destination.
@RexGalilae
@RexGalilae 3 года назад
The Arab indifference to the rumored invasion gives us a hint of how it might've panned out. I doubt Alexander would venture too deep not only due to geographic and logistical reasons but because Arabia held no significant strategic value at the time (except Aden)
@XxLIVRAxX
@XxLIVRAxX 3 года назад
@@RexGalilae Agree, other the coastal regions, important to the maritime trade routes with India, most of the region was of little interest. The bulk of alexandrian troops would have probably been persians.
@anthonyoer4778
@anthonyoer4778 3 года назад
The horn of Africa has always been a trading hub since Ancient Egypt referenced Punt...
@torinjones3221
@torinjones3221 3 года назад
He didn't want to go south he wanted to go west to the 'Pillars of Hercules' aka Gibraltar and Mount Hacho.
@michaelhowell2326
@michaelhowell2326 3 года назад
All the way. That's why he was killed. Had he built his Empire, the whole world would speak Greek/Macedonian.
@lucasvanderhoeven3760
@lucasvanderhoeven3760 3 года назад
Amazing idea for future videos!
@HellenicWolf
@HellenicWolf 3 года назад
Great video thanks. I didn't know these things. Great work!
@GaaraNous
@GaaraNous 3 года назад
“Obodas” is the name “Ubayd” or “Ubaidah” in Arabic, while “Aretas” is “Harith” or “Harithah” Its mentioned in the text there was a village or settlement call “Egra” which situated near the Nabataean kingdom ruled by Obodas. I think this is possibly the same settlement called “Mada'in Salih” which was also called by another name: “Al-Hijr” (or spelled “Hegra” by the Roman and the Byzantine). All of these maybe the one identified with the name “Thamud” by the Quran as all of them also have a rockcarved architecture as mentioned in the Quran. Also there is a discussion in the text on another tribe or group of Arabian people called “Erembian” (Erembi) or “Arambian”. These people are later called “Troglodyte” meaning “cave dweller”. Furthermore, while the author mentioned that the word resembles other possibly related name such as “Arabian” or “Aramaean” and was being confused between these, I personally suspect that the name “Erembian” may come from the word “Haram” meaning “sanctuary”. If so then I think these Arabian people mentioned are the ancient Meccan people whose city have one of the most important “Haram” before the advent of Islam.
@akbeh
@akbeh 2 года назад
Relatively to the roman itinerary, they could have passed by Medina and Mecca by the Kaaba
@user-fw5kb9qb1k
@user-fw5kb9qb1k 2 года назад
The Arab tribes were scattered before Islam, but when the Prophet Muhammad came, he united these tribes, and they were fighting and fierce tribes. After Islam, these tribes headed towards the Romans, the Persians, and North Africa and were able to reach India until they ruled nearly half of the land for several centuries. These are the Arab tribes
@seaman5705
@seaman5705 Год назад
@@akbeh Mecca did not exist by that time . Even in the time of Mahomed , there was no Mecca . Mecca was first mentioned unambigously in 741 AD . Before that, was just a fabrication of those who " invented " Islam, Quran and Muslim God as a copy of Jew/Christian God . The fabrication meant that all that "religion" was put together later , when Mecca was a fact , and had not much to do with the stories invented about Mahomed . But the Arabs where good at copying the Christian story which relies on same kind of un-prooven facts . However Medina did exist and was ruled quite a time by the Jews , hence the inspiration for the new religion called Islam .
@akbeh
@akbeh Год назад
@@seaman5705 u saying crap. Mecca always existed and was even first house built for the humanity. Today, I don't give anymore importance to dumb comments like yours.
@joahua122
@joahua122 Год назад
@@seaman5705 okay sorin whatever leave the arabs alone
@mariuss1590
@mariuss1590 3 года назад
A series about the Diadochi Wars would be great, since no one really talks about them
@bloodlessbeast2661
@bloodlessbeast2661 3 года назад
Check the kings and generals podcast on Spotify!
@SaracenCount
@SaracenCount 3 года назад
Check Kings and Generals channel on RU-vid, they covered all the Diadochi Wars in great fashion 👍🏼.
@SuperXLiike
@SuperXLiike 3 года назад
i can also recommend the hellenistic age podcast. the wars are coveres in great detail..might be worth a shot if you are interested
@DB-km2in
@DB-km2in 3 года назад
King and Generals has it covered them all to great detail. Check it out😃
@scipio0793
@scipio0793 3 года назад
Invicta would outshine Kings and generals... i dont know what it is but i cant listen to that guys voice for long... it becomes stale and boring and he often talks to fast.
@MrDalisclock
@MrDalisclock 3 года назад
Had literally never heard of this until now. Appreciate the video
@zainmudassir2964
@zainmudassir2964 3 года назад
I had forgotten about It! Thanks Invicta!
@ktheterkuceder6825
@ktheterkuceder6825 3 года назад
The roman nubian war is also forgotten.
@legendarian4690
@legendarian4690 3 года назад
Not for long, my next video is about it. Hope it comes out well.
@ahmadmuhammad6200
@ahmadmuhammad6200 2 года назад
My ancestors defeated their ass ... Can't mess with the bow people of the Nile.
@user-hs6sf6ef2g
@user-hs6sf6ef2g 2 года назад
@@ahmadmuhammad6200 ⲁⲙⲃⲉ︦ⲥⲁ ⲉⲣ ⲥⲁⲓⲣⲣⲉ̅ ?
@hassanabdikarimmohamed2505
@hassanabdikarimmohamed2505 2 года назад
That was a sick war, the kingdom of kush and their female Candace warrior king defeated the romans, wiped out their armies, then lost a few battles and made a geopolitical peace which made both of them be close commercial allies, these same cushite kingdoms later on also defeated the mighty Islamic arab abbasid armies that conquered Egypt Libya Morocco Tunisia Algeria Spain, Portugal, Syria Jerusalem Palestine etc, the nubian cushite kingdoms like meroe alodia nobatia makuria defeated the arabs and signed the longest peace treaty in documented human history, called as the Baqt, which lasted for 700 years
@hassanabdikarimmohamed2505
@hassanabdikarimmohamed2505 2 года назад
@@ahmadmuhammad6200 the correct term is land of the (qaanso iyo leeb sumaysan) bow and sharp long arrows dipped in Waabayn (Ouibain chemical poison) poison
@4izm0v
@4izm0v 3 года назад
I am actually grateful to the guide
@mikeruxpin2829
@mikeruxpin2829 3 года назад
Love videos on lesser know Roman wars/events. Thank you
@Anaris10
@Anaris10 3 года назад
Informative and well done!.
@KTChamberlain
@KTChamberlain 3 года назад
I'd like to see you cover Sulla's Civil Wars.
@dreckken
@dreckken 12 дней назад
If I had a time machine I wouldn't go back to 26 BC...No, I would go back to the time when RU-vid videos didn't have adds except for on the side of the screen.
@MindForge446
@MindForge446 3 года назад
This is a really interesting topic thank you for sharing it!
@MindForge446
@MindForge446 3 года назад
Thank you I will look out for it
@insanerhapsody7170
@insanerhapsody7170 3 года назад
I needed my dose of invicta!
@drraoulmclaughlin7423
@drraoulmclaughlin7423 3 года назад
Brilliant! Great to see this fascinating subject explained and visualised! I wonder what a Roman conquered Arabia would have meant for the imperial economy and later Roman wars against Parthia.
@404y
@404y 2 года назад
The Arabs are smart. The Romans came to the Arabian Peninsula, then fought them and defeated them
@aalaaelsaobb3717
@aalaaelsaobb3717 Год назад
This campaign was against the Sabaean Kingdom, not all of the Arabian Peninsula, But the narrator speaks bullshit
@mahadlodhi
@mahadlodhi 3 года назад
Loved it, i wonder how an ordinary roman would have reacted when he first saw petra and hegra
@dda40x1
@dda40x1 3 года назад
Thank you, this was great.
@AlkalineAjay
@AlkalineAjay 3 года назад
Legendary video!!!!
@ahmedoval3140
@ahmedoval3140 2 года назад
The history of the Middle Arabia was mentioned alot in the Arabic literature
@bu3adel944
@bu3adel944 3 года назад
3:07 Arabia deserta is not the empty quarter.. The empty quarter is the borders of KSA, UAE, Oman, Yemen.. Also middle and east of arabia is semi fertile due to abundance of water wells with agricultural communities
@nashmi-8609
@nashmi-8609 3 года назад
Most arab tribes lived in Arabia deserta actually He was not accurate at all
@mahdimehdi445
@mahdimehdi445 3 года назад
@@nashmi-8609 yeah ,because yemenis weren't tribal
@DragonwolfoftheSands
@DragonwolfoftheSands 3 года назад
@@nashmi-8609 because he's using entirely Roman sources and didn't offer any context or critique or them Imagine taking an account seriously that says that 100,000 warriors were defeated with 2 losses
@pierrefranckx6363
@pierrefranckx6363 3 года назад
@@DragonwolfoftheSands That said, I'm sincerely interested in non-Romans sources about this. Can you provide them to me? Thanks in advance.
@DragonwolfoftheSands
@DragonwolfoftheSands 3 года назад
@@pierrefranckx6363 I don't know of any, I'm talking about source critique. There are famous examples from Bronze Age Mesopotamia where Assyrian (as an example) Kings claim to completely destroy a people group in their writing only for their successors to claim the destruction of the same groups. If the Romans claim they did something unlikely you take it at face value and look for other evidence, if they claim to do something impossible you should question the validity of the source.
@freddysandoval9701
@freddysandoval9701 2 года назад
Awesome! The first time I know about the Roman campaign in Arabia.
@rrocketman
@rrocketman 3 года назад
Another great production
@DeclanMBrennan
@DeclanMBrennan 3 года назад
Fascinating. Invading Arabia by land seems to be as much fun as invading Russia except with the snow replaced by sand. Perhaps its two great generals were July and August. Now I know where the word "dessert" came from.
@edwinnick2217
@edwinnick2217 Год назад
Few years letter.. Roman empire: who's that man..? Khalid bin walid army: its khalid the sword of allah
@trollege9618
@trollege9618 Год назад
Centuries
@calvins4940
@calvins4940 3 года назад
"Bone-headed" move. Love it.
@davimattos7081
@davimattos7081 3 года назад
Fascinating!
@masstv9052
@masstv9052 3 года назад
They did have an outpost on an island in the southern red sea during the middle of the 2nd century. It was well below Egypt's territory. A Stone plaque written in latin that dedicated a monument to the emperor by a legion known to be sent to Egypt around that time was found by a tourist a couple decades ago. The monument was gone but the stone plaque remained. It was Rome's furthest known outpost. controlling the trade &, taxing of ships going to and from Arabia & India.
@gothic3theageofwar565
@gothic3theageofwar565 3 года назад
This would make for an epic movie
@lunarmodule6419
@lunarmodule6419 3 года назад
Interesting. Thank you.
3 года назад
Another very interesting Video
@mihaiionita5648
@mihaiionita5648 3 года назад
The death of Emperor Julian the Apostate, the last Pagan, would be a fascinating subject for a new Forgotten Wars video. Either way, any subject chosen will surely be great.
@defyboom1153
@defyboom1153 2 года назад
I always imagine how military conquests and it’s logistics will be during those times
@TheDejakal
@TheDejakal 3 года назад
Wow! I learned something new!
@verce7362
@verce7362 3 года назад
Nice vid man!
@JazKaz
@JazKaz 3 года назад
The last time I was this early Julius was on his way to the Theatre of Pompey on March 15th, 44 BC.
@denizmetint.462
@denizmetint.462 3 года назад
"Caesar, don't go to the Theatre of Pompey on March 15th!" "Qvid?"
@alejandrosakai1744
@alejandrosakai1744 Год назад
Every forgotten military campaign made by Rome is interesting because it showcases unknown cultures that existed in Antiquity!
@PoochieCollins
@PoochieCollins 10 месяцев назад
@@2celii he's talking about more particular cultures of the time, not language aspects that survived through a number of generations long after early antiquity.
@airanator1212
@airanator1212 9 месяцев назад
@@2celii I’m sorry if you feel like people are being offensive here but I think you’re misinterpreting what they’re saying. Yes, due to regions of the planet orally passing information through generations of descendants has caused a lot of that information about long lost cultures to disappear, this is by nature why it would be titled “unknown”. And yes, I also agree that much of the western world today has been adopted from early middle eastern philosophy and science/mathematics and that’s an amazing thing. Something I feel people don’t talk about often enough, if at all. However, to say western cultures today are unoriginal and have mostly appropriated their identity from middle eastern culture is quite an offensive thing to say on your part. I’d kindly suggest you look up some information on the ancient history of Europe and Scandinavia to find it just as rich as that in the Middle East.
@elderlight
@elderlight Год назад
Loved the video 🤩
@veganwolf3268
@veganwolf3268 3 года назад
There's one forgotten war that is truly fascinating! Now if I can only remember what it was.
@KomradeCPU
@KomradeCPU 2 года назад
Rome was like: "Poor conditioned roads.... my only weakness *dead*"
@rollz4010
@rollz4010 3 года назад
Thx for the video,i've never heard about this
@sethdominickortiz
@sethdominickortiz 3 года назад
Thanks always, when I get the means I’ll support your channel better
@1pierosangiorgio
@1pierosangiorgio 3 года назад
What is odd in this campaign is, unlike what Cesar did in Gaul, the (seemingly) lack of exploration expeditions and diplomatic emissaries before the main force to gather intelligence, explore alliances, secure supplies and suitable anchorings/harbours, etc.
@jaskrip
@jaskrip 8 месяцев назад
Well when Caesar tried to invade Britain, he didn't have much information on it and mainly did it for glory, as it was completely unheard of for a Roman to even land on that island. He had to retreat and managed to avoid complete disaster, by luck according to his own admission iirc. Once they had a better idea of what they faced, Claudius invaded the Island and took Britain with the help of skilled generals such as Agricola.
@Pompomatic
@Pompomatic 3 года назад
Romans in Northwestern Africa would be interesting! I've never heard anything about their involvement in today's Morocco.
@bard001
@bard001 3 года назад
saint marcellus of tangier
@Pompomatic
@Pompomatic 3 года назад
@@bard001 Thank you, I'll have to check that out!
@mg4861
@mg4861 3 года назад
Never seen "Patton"?
@khalednajada2514
@khalednajada2514 3 года назад
The vandals
@moncef9778
@moncef9778 3 года назад
Im from morocco we are happy with islam in North Africa
@intemir
@intemir 2 года назад
Really cool
@mikooou
@mikooou 3 года назад
I love your channel!!!!
@kingmaverick3140
@kingmaverick3140 3 года назад
That Nabatean guide beaten the entire Roman army single handed !
@casparvoncampenhausen5249
@casparvoncampenhausen5249 3 года назад
Soooooooooooo when's part two of " Evolution of the Roman army coming out"? I love that series!
@drmunawar5435
@drmunawar5435 Год назад
Very Good Info Shared.. Same happened with Alexander the Great when he returned from Sindh, India.. Was forced to take inland route to reach Babylon.. Lost almost all his Army to Heat, disease and Poor Guides.. This stresses the need for prior understanding of local topography and people.. As the British used in their campaigns in Sudan, South Africa and Frontier provinces of India..
@ragael1024
@ragael1024 3 года назад
Exquisite video
@theortheo2401
@theortheo2401 3 года назад
Next forgotten war : Invicta's subs still fighting madness after 5 years waiting for the next video of Evolution of the Roman Legion.
@michimatsch5862
@michimatsch5862 3 года назад
I had just surpressed tge memory man.
@Ramtin-Blue_rose
@Ramtin-Blue_rose 3 года назад
Hi there Invicta are you into Roman economic structure or the mechanics they were based on ,for example why some regions/provinces had surplus value ,filling the imperial coffers, and why some of them were bringing deficit, why emperors didnt redistribute administrations budget according to province economic value ,or why didnt try invest in poor provinces infustructure to fix this problem, overall I think the Economic aspect of Rome is an interesting topic ,and uncontroversial it wasn't Capitalist or communist or even a feudal one.
@stuartbarnhill2795
@stuartbarnhill2795 2 года назад
Enjoyed 👍
@allonzehe9135
@allonzehe9135 3 года назад
Love the Forgotten Wars series.
@callusklaus2413
@callusklaus2413 3 года назад
What a difference it would have made should Arabia Felix been incorporated, despite it being something of a quiet backwater at the time. Incredible, thanks for posting
@yassertabikh5362
@yassertabikh5362 3 года назад
It wasn't a backwater, its name was Felix Arabia literally means Flourishing Arabia. A lot of ancient civiliazations made it their home. It has a moderat climate with lots of water and sea acess and trade routes to india.
@butterskywalker8785
@butterskywalker8785 3 года назад
@@yassertabikh5362 it's mostly a backwater desert,there are only a few good spots which aren't worth the logistical problems
@alessandrodelogu7931
@alessandrodelogu7931 3 года назад
Arabia Felix was a rich land due to trade, but it's unlikely that the Romans could keep it for long due to its distance. They abandoned Mesopotamia, that was much nearer, so how could they hold Arabia?
@Syllaeus
@Syllaeus 3 года назад
@@butterskywalker8785 What’s fascinating is how most of the Roman elite viewed brittania, Gaul, and Germania as backwaters. While Arabia provided the Roman an alternative route to Asia, Germania and its tribes would only bring the Roman world into a long prosperous dark age.
@Syllaeus
@Syllaeus 3 года назад
Germania, Gaul, and brittania were the true backwaters of that time. Arabia was an alternative route to Asian trade, something that Germania didn’t have. In fact the only reason Rome would enter Germania was to push back against the Germanic tribes who somehow kept encroaching into their Roman provinces.
@andrewdock7288
@andrewdock7288 3 года назад
Fascinating to hear of the forgotten wars in Britain after the Romans left in 410 AD as many soldiers stayed behind and fought as Sub - Romans against the Saxons for another 150 years.
@wewenang5167
@wewenang5167 2 года назад
its not really forgotten thou..you can literally read in in history books
@tf2664
@tf2664 3 года назад
Nice video
@soyuz281
@soyuz281 11 дней назад
The tour-guide is like the taxi driver who takes his novice passenger thru a long path to destination.
@younissaif4156
@younissaif4156 3 года назад
I always thought that us Yemenis were one of the few people to know of this expedition
@udad7625
@udad7625 3 года назад
It was not important. They only sieged Marib for a while then went back.
@Nabium
@Nabium 2 года назад
I mean the guide was really a hero, if he saved his own kind from invasion of Rome by tricking the Romans.
@keithklassen5320
@keithklassen5320 2 года назад
He mostly saved Gallus from taking responsibility for his failures.
@wewenang5167
@wewenang5167 2 года назад
The Arab name for the guide is Saleh, he WAS a hero in Arabic literature and still remembered by many Arabs poets and historian in Yemen till today.
@Nabium
@Nabium 2 года назад
@@wewenang5167 That's cool!
@ruslantokhchukov4925
@ruslantokhchukov4925 3 года назад
Fascinating! I did not know the Romans reached this far!
@miguelconti2304
@miguelconti2304 3 года назад
Fantastic
@Somewhat-Evil
@Somewhat-Evil 3 года назад
"So your saying a barbarian fooled a Roman Governor and thwarted a Roman conquest. Interesting...I'm sure sure nothing like THAT could never happen again!" 😏 -Arminius Commander of German Auxiliaries, 5 years before the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.
@ViktoriousDead
@ViktoriousDead 3 года назад
That battle is the most tired reference ever. Germanicus came back and destroyed the Germans after that
@NormanTheDormantDoormat
@NormanTheDormantDoormat 3 года назад
@@ViktoriousDead lol, "destroyed" ... almost funny Tiberius himself spoke of heavy and terrible losses. Most of what the romans claimed as victories were none of any importance. They did not gain any land, did not destroy the rogue tribes, did not reclaim all 3 legions eagles until later, did not prevent Arminius from still leading the coalitions army, had high losses ...
@alvaro701
@alvaro701 3 года назад
@@ViktoriousDead Yes, however Arminius is the only guy that could say that he made Augustus, the strongest person in the known world, became literally crazy for a while. The people around Augustus even though that he was going to die because his dementia.
@demonmenace4657
@demonmenace4657 2 года назад
@@ViktoriousDead Germanicus only defeated Arminius at Idivasto in 16 A.D. not conquered whole of Germania, He had to go back to Italy
@Palestine4Ever169
@Palestine4Ever169 2 года назад
What do you mean by (barbarian) ???
@AlkalineAjay
@AlkalineAjay 3 года назад
Please cover Trajans expedition to ctesphon
@charlesdaniels4216
@charlesdaniels4216 Год назад
Amazing
@barkingpawz
@barkingpawz Год назад
Great story
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