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Roman Auxiliaries - The Unsung Heroes of Rome 

Historia Militum
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This video covers the lesser known branch of the Roman Imperial Army; the Auxilia, which is composed of soldiers from all corners of the Roman Empire, and outside it! This video will hopefully serve as a deep introduction to the Auxiliaries for both history buffs and those who have never heard of them before, for they are the Forgotten Heroes of Rome!
Primary sources:
-Tac. Agr. 35 -Tab. Vindol. II. 156 romaninscriptionsofbritain.or... -Tab. Vindol. II. 180 romaninscriptionsofbritain.or... -Tab. Vindol. II. 181 romaninscriptionsofbritain.or... -Tab. Vindol. I. 344 romaninscriptionsofbritain.or... -Tab. Vindol. I. 628 romaninscriptionsofbritain.or... -P. Dura. 82. findit.library.yale.edu/bookr... -P. Dura. 100. papyri.info/ddbdp/rom.mil.rec... -P. Dura. 101. papyri.info/ddbdp/rom.mil.rec... -Marcus Aurelius Lucilius: CIL 02-14, 4147 eda-bea.es/pub/record_card_2.p... -Secundus: Ephemeris Napocensis, EphNapoc-2020-296 db.edcs.eu/epigr/bilder.php?s...
Secondary sources:
-Bowman, A. K. Life and Letters on the Roman Frontier: Vindolanda and Its People. London: British Museum Publications, 1994. -Busquets Artigas, S. Los Externa auxilia en el siglo final de la República romana (133-27 a.C.). Barcelona: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 2014. -D. J, Breeze. (1969). The immunes and principles of the Roman army. Doctoral thesis, Durham University. etheses.dur.ac.uk/10478/ -Gilliam, R. O; Fink, R. O. & Welles, C. B. Excavations at Dura-Europos. Final Report V, I. The parchments and papyri. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959. -Gilliam, J. F. Dura Rosters and the Constitutio Antoniniana, in Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Bd. 14, H. 1 (Jan., 1965), 74-92. -Ruiz de Arbulo, J. “La dedicatoria a Mars Campester del centurión T. Aurelius Decimus y el campus de la guarnición imperial de Tarraco en el siglo II d.C. Algunas reflexiones sobre la topografía militar de la capital provincial”, in CuPAUAM 37-38, 2011-12, 553-569. -Spaul, J. E. H. Ala2 The Auxiliary Cavalry Units of the Pre-Diocletianic Imperial Roman Army. Nectoreca Press: Andover, 1994. -Spaul, J. E. H. Cohors2 The Evidence for and a Short History of the Auxiliary Infantry Units of the Imperial Roman Army. Bristish Archaeological Reports International Series 841, 2000. -Speidel, M. Roman Army Pay Scales, in The Journal of Roman Studies 82, 87-106. -Speidel, M. P. Riding for Caesar: The Roman Emperors Horse Guard. Harvard University Press, 1997. -Tentea, O. “Cohors I Ituraeorum Sagittariorum Equitata Milliaria”, in ORBIS ANTIQVVS: Studia in honorem Ioannis Pisonis, Cluj-Napoca: National History Museum of Transylvania, 2004, 804-814.

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19 дек 2022

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Комментарии : 246   
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
Click here tiege.com/filaximhistoria to get 30% off your first Tiege Hanley box plus a FREE gift! Let me know what gift you chose in the comments below!
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
@Thomas McCarthy that’s definitely a possibility!
@neutralfellow9736
@neutralfellow9736 Год назад
They also often weren't trained in the Roman style but were allowed to fight as they saw fit, especially during the age of the Republic, we can read this in the account of Caesars invasion of Spain, where he fights Pompeys army, and among them, Iberians, equipped as Roman legionaries, but fighting as heavy skirmishers, in their native style and tactics, causing some headache for Caesars officers.
@RexGalilae
@RexGalilae Год назад
I'm pretty sure the Iberians Caesar faced were still legionaries. They had adopted the Iberian style of warfare having been accustomed to it there
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
@@RexGalilae - No, because to be a legionaire you had to be a Roman citizen (strict requirement) and provinciales were not Roman citizens with very rare exceptions but what we'd call colonial subjects. While auxiliares and others would be later granted citizenship (after due service), especially common in the period of the civil wars, this situation would continue in general terms all the way to Caracalla's Edict. Only then the provinciales became citizens and could thus properly rise in the ranks of the Roman Army... and soon we see a lot of them becoming emperors even, because that's what happens when you live in a military dictatorship and most soldiers and commanders are colonial subjects.
@RexGalilae
@RexGalilae Год назад
@@LuisAldamiz You look like you have a chip on your shoulder for no reason lol but to answer your point, entire legions were trained in the legionary style from the non citizen pools of the empire. Think of Pompey and Caesar's Hispanic and Gallic Legions and Brutus's Macedonian Legions. The whole appeal of becoming a legionary was citizenship. Auxiliae were recruited from outside the empire's core territories (Germanic Cavalry, Batavian Infantry) or were specialist troops not trained like legionaries (Numidians, Rhodians). The difference was administrative and tactical rather than a matter of citizenship like shown in the video.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
@@RexGalilae - A chip on my shoulder? That's a very weird thing to say to anyone. I have no idea what you mean by that. I guess that a major appeal of becoming auxiliary (not legionaire) was indeed acquiring the citizenship, along with the pay, probably still good for colonial (provincial) standards even if much smaller than that of Roman soldiers. As the video illustrates most auxiliaries were recruited from within the Roman borders. Some times those borders extended into Batavia or even much of Germania, as happened when Arminius served in the Illyrian wars. While there were citizen auxiliaries, as shown in the video, most were so because the cohort had been given such prize because of bravery in battle or other reasons at the discretion of the legate. In order to become a legionaire you had to be Roman citizen to begin with and most were Italians, provincials were not Roman citizens in most cases. I understand that you can be ignorant about that but it's a reality: don't argue, research.
@gorlab9549
@gorlab9549 Год назад
@@RexGalilae You got butthurt that you got shit on by history.
@alfredosenalle9284
@alfredosenalle9284 Год назад
In Spain and Latin America when a person is in an emergency or in distress they scream , "Auxilio" , the equivalent of "Help" in English. The word "Auxilio" comes from these Roman times and the Auxiliary Roman units.
@robertnegron9706
@robertnegron9706 11 месяцев назад
Wow didht know. In New York auxiliary police force support the main police department
@danieleriksson5587
@danieleriksson5587 Год назад
I think this was excellent. And great information many people quite don’t understand how much of the fighting Auxilia troops really did.
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
You are right about that. Thanks for the kind words!
@laisphinto6372
@laisphinto6372 Год назад
that aspect would explain some mindboggling battle reports from africa where appearantly europeans mowed so many tribesmen with no losses. i would give it to them maybe the first few Times but after that its very fishy especially when they didnt had that many white people in africa in the first place and a bunch of african empires were sole firearm military
@chemicalman53
@chemicalman53 Год назад
One reason for their popularity was that the Gauls (3:19) had were writings such as *Commentarii de Bello Gallico*. Hearing Caesar himself praise their ability to war did much to improve their reputation and thus desire to employ them!
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
Also Romans were bad at cavalry and Celts were good at it.
@OptimusMaximusNero
@OptimusMaximusNero Год назад
"Our blood may not be Roman... BUT IT FLOWS WITH THE SAME PRIDE AND HONOR AS THE EMPEROR'S HIMSELF! *Motto of the auxiliaries*
@HAYAOLEONE
@HAYAOLEONE Год назад
OMG they internalized the values of their oppressors!!
@edhipolito6694
@edhipolito6694 Год назад
@HAYAOLEONE bro stfu I can tell you never served in any armed forces
@HAYAOLEONE
@HAYAOLEONE Год назад
@@edhipolito6694 😂
@lichcoin6144
@lichcoin6144 Год назад
@@HAYAOLEONE So it seems. I guess that's what happens when the civilization that conquers you is efficient enough to still be mostly considered an overall improvement over what they had before by the standards of their own society due to the improvements they brought with them. Most curious.
@cristhianramirez6939
@cristhianramirez6939 Год назад
@@HAYAOLEONE Rome offered better oportunities than their native states, the same as an aboriginal in the US army today
@napoleonibonaparte7198
@napoleonibonaparte7198 Год назад
Great to see that these auxiliaries are just as complex as modern units and Roman legions.
@r0ky_M
@r0ky_M Год назад
Keep in mind the Praefectus and Tribunes of the auxilia in the imperial period were still largely from the Equestrian and senatorial class of Roman society respectively.
@cyka7705
@cyka7705 Год назад
8:23 Empire loves their damn lists
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
What's an empire without bureaucracy? A mere barbaric horde, overextended quite possibly.
@cleon24769
@cleon24769 3 месяца назад
"It has been an honor, Jarl Ulfric."
@KatonRyu
@KatonRyu Год назад
I love these kinds of videos, not just for their historical information but also because it'll be good for my slightly OCD tendency to want to compose armies as standardized as possible in games like Rome 2 for 'realism'. Knowing the real auxiliary cohorts weren't exactly standardized either makes things much easier.
@Dayvit78
@Dayvit78 Год назад
One thing you need to realize is that armies were composed with respect to what was available and the threats they faced. If you are in a different situation, you don't have to make your armies the same as Rome did. You're creating alternate history.
@aldenbahtijari6565
@aldenbahtijari6565 Год назад
You forget to mention Illyrians, who give maybe the best Emperors, generals and soldiers in Roman history. Also, Dalmatian cavalry soldiers was one of the best.
@nagayafamm1006
@nagayafamm1006 Год назад
You are the best channel at giving out information about the Roman Empire and its legions
@manuelagustin7719
@manuelagustin7719 8 месяцев назад
one of the best if not the best narrator in you tube...correct intonation, pausing & delivery...even better than most newscasters nowadays...
@sukumarmishra5186
@sukumarmishra5186 Год назад
I enjoyed learning the forgotten heroes of Rome, Auxiliaries - it is such a wonderful lively presentation.
@froggystyle642
@froggystyle642 Год назад
Really well done dude. Especially liked the bit about the name of the Cohort. I'm not the brightest so wouldn't have figured that out without you spelling it out for me lol. Keep it up, great seeing your channel grow- thoroughly deserved!
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
If you enjoyed this video, consider subscribing, as we have many more to come! I would like to thank you all for your support and wish you a happy upcoming new year! :)
@ajithsidhu7183
@ajithsidhu7183 Год назад
Please do more on maceneries in depth
@ajithsidhu7183
@ajithsidhu7183 Год назад
Why were the syrains good in the archers
@ajithsidhu7183
@ajithsidhu7183 Год назад
Please do plymarans
@JackyHeijmans
@JackyHeijmans Год назад
Happy new year to all of you too! Thank you for making such interesting videos! Much love! 💖
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
Thank you. Best wishes for the new year as well.
@flyboymike111357
@flyboymike111357 Год назад
I tried to share this video on Reddit and it got down voted within 2 minutes. I don't understand why people hate the idea that Samurai, Knights, and Legionaires didn't do most of the fighting, and didn't use their swords as primary weapons. Honestly it's cool to learn the real and nuanced history of wardare.
@brad5426
@brad5426 Год назад
That's Redditors for you. Second to worst, first being Twitter users.
@r0ky_M
@r0ky_M Год назад
What was the legionaires primary weapon in elongated face to face battle if not the gladius?
@flyboymike111357
@flyboymike111357 Год назад
@@r0ky_M The Scutum of course. But you're kind of asking a trick question, because like a samurai or a yeoman, Legionaires spent most of a battle using ranged weapons. The only difference, is the bow was less common for them. Usually slings, were the main weapon.
@r0ky_M
@r0ky_M Год назад
@@flyboymike111357 Primary personal offensive weapons include the likes of; gladius, pugio, pilum and plumbata...the scutum/shield is not considered a primary weapon..it's ranks more as a protective measure like helmet and body armour.
@flyboymike111357
@flyboymike111357 Год назад
@@r0ky_M You use a shield as a weapon, especially in the fighting style of the period. That's why a lot of types of soldier were named after their shield. Shields aren't armor. They're weapons.
@CptZhu
@CptZhu Год назад
What I would do to see a movie "Life of a Roman auxiliary" and following their battles, story and social interactions... instead we get black mermaid movies
@modulusorbis5323
@modulusorbis5323 Год назад
lol
@matthiasthulman4058
@matthiasthulman4058 Год назад
Seriously though. We could have a movie about a Syrian horseman fighting for Rome in the heart of Germania, and all of it actually happened. But no, black mermaids it is...
@bovinejangles
@bovinejangles Год назад
'We' get black mermaid movies? I've not watched it or even seen the trailer 🤷‍♂️
@Dan-radda
@Dan-radda Год назад
Haven't had the chance to leave a comment for a hot minute . You really are doing great , dont stop the hard work . I've been playing ALOT of rome 2 with a buddy who i bought it for . i've been teaching him about Rome while he plays as Macedon . I was just telling about the Auxilia last game . I'll have to throw some into the next legion i raise for my invasion of Sicily.
@user-cd4bx6uq1y
@user-cd4bx6uq1y Год назад
This is what we always wanted the films to be like
@coolbricks63
@coolbricks63 Год назад
Good to see the Auxillary forces getting the praise they deserve, they often did the dirty, praise-less fighting. Or filled gaps in the army such as cavalry.
@eardwulf785
@eardwulf785 Год назад
RU-vid recommendations only deliver both interesting and well made content infrequently and it's only once in a blue moon that a real belter like this channel shows up. All things Roman is right up my street, I'm over the moon (a blue one) 🙂👍
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
Thank you and welcome aboard! Glad you found the channel.
@felipedantasdearaujo
@felipedantasdearaujo Год назад
So, our fellow veteran Secundus, a Briton, served in a cohort composed mainly by Nervians (~Belgium) and Pacensians (~Portugal), and was married to a Greek woman. "Roma caput mundi", indeed!
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
And it is recorded in 1.900 years old tablet. You can say he found love far away from home 😂
@jamie_d0g978
@jamie_d0g978 10 месяцев назад
Wait, Pacensians are Spanish or Portuguese? Paz Augusta is Badajoz
@ayoitsyayo
@ayoitsyayo 22 дня назад
Love how inclusive the Roman’s were, as long as you were working for Rome it didn’t matter where you were from or what you looked like
@chippyonline001
@chippyonline001 Год назад
It'd be nice to have another video focusing on auxiliaries, maybe distinguished soldiers such as those mentioned here but with a little more depth to their stories. Thank you for this! Interesting vids as always. Ave Roma.
@RGP43_
@RGP43_ Год назад
wonderful video
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
Many thanks!
@gilwhitley6810
@gilwhitley6810 7 месяцев назад
Wow, this was extremely well-done, thank you!
@LEFT4GABEN
@LEFT4GABEN Год назад
Excellent and enlightening video, keep it up!
@CptZhu
@CptZhu Год назад
I have always wondered this! So many auxiliaries died for the glory of rome and arent mentioned enough.
@ralambosontiavina7372
@ralambosontiavina7372 7 месяцев назад
Excellent work man !
@ShishouDzukiZaManako
@ShishouDzukiZaManako Год назад
the noncitizen meatshield Windu: you may die for Rome; but i do not grant you the title of citizen
@bigboy379
@bigboy379 Год назад
Great job man!
@twitchsopamanxx
@twitchsopamanxx Год назад
Forgotten? Wasnt at least half the army by the time of the late roman empire composed by auxiliaries? Regardless, fantasic video as usual Mr Filaxim. Nothing better to drive an hour or two than a good roman history video.
@luciusdomitiusaurelianus5334
During the Republican Era, then most of them became Roman
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
Thanks for the kind comment, glad you enjoyed! I chose the word "forgotten" in the sense that they are underappreciated as of today. Hopefully this video does something to tip that balance!
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
Yes but they are forgotten in the sources often and the author forgot to even mention them altogether in his/her previous video on the structure of the Roman legions. Some of us protested this oversight and now he/she corrected the oversight with a very good video on the matter.
@mrmoder1006
@mrmoder1006 Год назад
What an interesting history of our world!
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
Very nice video, thank you. Very informative in spite of the many unavoidable lacuna.
@optio256
@optio256 Год назад
Fantastic video!
@parrythetrojan
@parrythetrojan Год назад
Great content, subscribed!
@oliver5403
@oliver5403 Год назад
Awesome video as usual!
@robbabcock_
@robbabcock_ Год назад
Terrific Video! ⚔
@TP-ym1xe
@TP-ym1xe Год назад
I love your new video! Lots of unique facts for the enthusiastic layman. By the way, what video game engine or mod did you use for your cool Auxillia depictions?
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
We are very glad you enjoyed! For the depictions, we used the mod Divide et imperative in the game Total War Rome 2.
@ibrahimibrahmovic7391
@ibrahimibrahmovic7391 Год назад
Roman History is just amazing ty for your work. Whats the Name of the Song in the backround?
@A.G.798
@A.G.798 4 месяца назад
Very Nice ❤ Thank you for this Video from Germany!
@odo9954
@odo9954 Год назад
Very interesting! Keep it up
@huantruonginh2946
@huantruonginh2946 Год назад
Great video. I am curious about how different were the role and equipment of the Auxiliary during the 3rd century crisis as compared to the early Principate period. Could you point me to any source? Thanks!
@gianlucacardillo6541
@gianlucacardillo6541 10 месяцев назад
so cool seeing the translation
@overdriveoutershaxson1837
@overdriveoutershaxson1837 Год назад
Auxiliaries waiting for Roman citizenship be like:
@HistoricalWeapons
@HistoricalWeapons Год назад
I wouldn’t say they are forgotten though. In video games they bring good unit diversity for gameplay and are hence not forgotten
@davidhughes8357
@davidhughes8357 Год назад
At the battle of Mons Graupius in the north of England in AD 83 auxiliary units decided the battle without the legions even being engaged.
@DontThinkso-kb9tc
@DontThinkso-kb9tc Месяц назад
Very smooth pitch
@Ogrem
@Ogrem Год назад
Good stuff!
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@MBP1918
@MBP1918 Год назад
Very good video
@tristinkirby
@tristinkirby Год назад
Definitely not a topic that's spoken about enough
@FelixstoweFoamForge
@FelixstoweFoamForge Год назад
Lovely video mate, but I don't want any skin-care products! 😁 Actually, on a more serious note, the pure snobbery of the Romans and the way they treated their Auxilia in the early Empire, goes a long way to explain Civilis Batavian revolt. "You can do boring frontier duty, you can fight and die for us, but we won't pay you what you're worth, and we'll always be better then you. Oh, and we'll take all the credit".
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
That's more of a trope and a myth. It is true that there was always a bit of prejudice and snobbery, but keep in mind that many of the Imperial Era historians were not military men per se or had very little knowledge like Tacitus. So, always take such statements with a pile of salt. Because they might be reflecting senatorial prejudice (they did act the same way with pure roman citizens of lower status) than an on the ground military point of view. So it's more of a grey zone. Also, service in the Auxilia was a quick way for non citizen noble to make a career in the Imperial Administration. The commander at Vindolanda, Cerialis, was a second generation batavian citizen noble and he had a pure roman blood wife. It seems his background didn't hamper him in the slightest
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
@@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Weren't all patricians/senatores expected to have some sort of military career? I believe so.
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
@@LuisAldamiz In republican times yes, but by the time of the Empire Senators had a more limited participation in military affairs. They still commanded the armies, governed the provinces with legions in them and 1/6 of legionary tribunes were senators. But the actual commanding of auxiliaries, military tribunes etc. was dominated by the equestrian class and the urban aristocracies of the provinces. They were the ones that filled the lower echelons of the imperial apparatus
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
@@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez - Fair enough, I guess. I was of course thinking in republican times, which is most of the history of Rome (unless you consider the Dominate/Byzantium as "Rome", I guess).
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
@@LuisAldamiz One example illustrates the fact perfectly. Cicero rose to fame in the courts of Rome not in the battlefield. He did command a small army in Cilicia but he basically delegated everything to his entourage and served a minimum time as a tribune begrudginly. Even when he was offered a province to govern he drag his feet because he didn't want to go. His best friend Atticus, a fellow senator basically dedicated his life to the study of greek and never engaged in high politics. This does tell us about a growing diversification in the ranks of the senate, with some members moving away from the old military tradition and instead rising to fame thanks to oratory, administrative skills or judicial knowledge
@CptZhu
@CptZhu Год назад
Imagine a syrian archer travelling to Rome, spain and britain and seeing the world, did this happen???
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
It did happen indeed, in our Harzhorn video we covered a man from Osrhoene (Northwestern Iraq/Syria) named Barsemis who took part on a battle deep in Germania
@seanbissett-powell5916
@seanbissett-powell5916 Год назад
It was deliberate policy, at least after the Batavian revolt. Auxiliaries didn't serve in the provinces where they were raised, to reduce the chance of them joining any rebellion. But there were patterns; more than half of the auxiliary units raised in Britannia were stationed in Dacia and Pannonia, while significant numbers of Balkan (and specifically Pannonian/Sarmatian) auxiliaries were sent to Britannia.
@stevesmith5439
@stevesmith5439 7 месяцев назад
Thanks
@konradzatonow5078
@konradzatonow5078 8 месяцев назад
cool video
@bryanb2886
@bryanb2886 Год назад
I am once again anticipating the arrival of Rome total war the board game at my house.
@legioxequestris811
@legioxequestris811 Год назад
Dude can you make hapy saturnalia short to send to everyone for Christmas
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
Great idea! Will do ;)
@legioxequestris811
@legioxequestris811 Год назад
@@HistoriaMilitum thank you
@jmaniere
@jmaniere 7 месяцев назад
Epitaph of Marcus Aurelius Lucilius .. (a uk site ) To Marcus Aurelius Lucilius, son of Lucius, of the Papiria Tribe, of Poetovio, from the singulares of the emperor, centurion of Legion I Adiutrix, Legion II Traiana, Legion VIII Augusta, Legion XIII Gemina, Legion VII Claudia, Legion VII Gemina, 3rd spearman at the front (III hasta prior), 60 years old, 40 years of military service. Ulpia Iuventina, his wife and heir, had this made for the most pious and kindest husband.
@saber2802
@saber2802 8 месяцев назад
Does anyone know what mod they use for these?
@DataBeingCollected
@DataBeingCollected 3 месяца назад
What are your thoughts on the edict of Caracalla and its impact on the institution of the Auxilia? For example, a Gaulic Peregrinus joins his local Auxilia Ala a month before the edict. He would be just shy of 23 years of service as a Roman citizen in an Auxilia when the Crisis of the 3rd century kicks off. I imagine the disappearance of the Peregrini class had a big impact on recruitment demographics at the expense of the Legions. My reasoning is, if citizens could receive the same pay and benefits serving closer to home in a regional Auxilia cohort, there is less incentive to go travel to join the Italic Legions. This is especially so once the Crisis is in full swing.
@bruh-bn3ni
@bruh-bn3ni Год назад
makes me wonder how many awesome heroes we will never know about or forget. will the heroes in ww2 like desmond doss be forgotten?
@HomeService-ur6sr
@HomeService-ur6sr Год назад
2:55 in the subtitles >< LOL!!!
@therealpianofairy
@therealpianofairy Год назад
The editor wasn't wrong LOL
@HistoriaMilitum
@HistoriaMilitum Год назад
That was a bit of behind the scenes for you, haha. Thanks for pointing it out!
@jrnsengustavsson7910
@jrnsengustavsson7910 Год назад
The best archers were from Syria,the best cav from Gallia and Germania.
@brunolima7402
@brunolima7402 Год назад
History says the best cav was from Numidia.
@swissmilitischristilxxii3691
Best equites were batavians and nervians. Augustus and Nero had germanic bodyguards, don't remember the name.
@meth2733
@meth2733 Год назад
well aurelian mostly relied on dalmatian and north african cav to win his battles so theres that i guess
@jamie_d0g978
@jamie_d0g978 10 месяцев назад
Best skirmishers and saboteurs were Spanish. Good infantry too, specially the Cantabros, Navarros and Vascos.
@antoniotorcoli702
@antoniotorcoli702 Год назад
Congratulations, excellent work. A small correction concerning the theoretical auxiliary units strength. Most of the scholars agree on the following numbers: Ala milliaria: 768 equites,distributed in 24 turmae of 32 cavalrymen Ala : 512 equites and 16 turmae Cohors milliaria equitata: 800 infantrymen and 256 cavalrymen distributed in 10 centuries of 80 men each and 8 turmae. Cohors milliaria: 800 infantrymen and 10 centuries of 80 men each. Cohors quingenaria equitata: 480 infantrymen and 128 equites distributed in 5 centuries and 5 turmae. Probably one centuria was double strength. But it is possible that the additional 80 men were evenly distributed among the 5 centuries. Cohors quingenaria: 480 infantrymen and 5 centuriae even in this case the additional 80 men were possibly concentrated in one double strength century or equally distributed among the 5 centuries. These of course are theoretical figures,since frequently the units were under strength. Occasionally, according to some original documents, the number of soldiers could even exceed the theoretical strength.
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
Thanks for your comment and your appreciations. We assumed that many of our viewers do have a previous knowledge about the auxiliaries. Also, our aim was not to do another video on the auxilia explaining the usual points (sizes, strengths, composition in theoretical numbers). After all, is hard to cover everything in a 10-15 minute video. Instead we tried to focus on how complex these units were. Nobody talks about the alphabetazitation and how they learnt latin, how tribal or local ties still existed in the units, they worshipping their own gods, that sometimes citizens were also recruited etc... It is a brief "deep" intro into the complexity of the auxiliaries so people might feel the urge to seek out more than the usual information. Sorry if it sounds a bit harsh, I don't intend to lecture or discredit you, just trying to give you the idea and the thought process involved behind the scenes 😅😊 so you can see that if things were left out is not because of lack of knowledge or incompetence 😅
@antoniotorcoli702
@antoniotorcoli702 Год назад
@@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez agreed!
@dermagnus8482
@dermagnus8482 2 месяца назад
When you need such troops in large numbers your empire is already done.
@timothyortiz2222
@timothyortiz2222 25 дней назад
I'm enjoying Roman history a lot! It's a favorite. By now, if only, It would be a Roman world.
@stirpenova97
@stirpenova97 10 месяцев назад
Great video! But what about the Republic? Who were the Socii auxiliaries of the Republic? Can you please do a video about them? At the end of the day, they conquered half of the territories of the empire. Again, very well done
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez 9 месяцев назад
Thank you! 😊 Actually there are a handful of sources about them. Not a lot if you compare to the imperial auxiliaries but it's something. The most recent one is a PhD dissertation done by Salvador Busquets Artigas in spanish. It is extensively quoted in the field of republican history. About the Socii... they are the forgotten part of every republican army for no reason
@eyeswideshut1989
@eyeswideshut1989 7 месяцев назад
It is a good video but his-story stinks... Something is off
@aaron6178
@aaron6178 Год назад
Your example of Cohors I being unclear. Not sure that is the case. The Latin is pretty clear that it was a cohort of mounted archers.
@jeanphillipe9698
@jeanphillipe9698 Год назад
Great video, would anyone know the source for 6:45 where the narrator says that auxiliaries would wear their own cloaks, belts, facial hair, weapons and face paint?
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
Sure, the source comes from archaeological finds in auxiliary camps and artistical representations in roman sources. As an example, the first generation of batavian auxiliaries still retained their native belt designs, helmets and brooches in their clothing. Even well into the Empire and serving abroad they still retained some minor aspects of their own culture like a special design of pottery. Syrians for example kept their own clothing and helmets and that has been attested in stone monuments too. It was only progressively that they started adopting much of the roman ways but sometimes not everything
@CipiRipi-in7df
@CipiRipi-in7df 3 месяца назад
@@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez .. AFAIK, on Trajan's Column, "Roman" archers are depicted wearing pointy helmets an long over-knee tunics. Completely different from any type of soldier on the Column.
@adrianog4148
@adrianog4148 Год назад
Didnt mention a single time illyrians which played a huge role in late roman empire. The white hat 'PILEUS' which albanians wear until today became a symbol of late roman empire and was also stamped on roman coins.
@DimBeam1
@DimBeam1 10 месяцев назад
1:50 Start
@syedirfan6256
@syedirfan6256 Год назад
Lemme just say.... I love this narrator, idk just suits the story he's narrating.
@Roman_Kowalsky
@Roman_Kowalsky 11 месяцев назад
British empire utilize "auxiliary" too. Indians, Nepalese, African colonies, even Aussies and Canadians. French - arabs from colonies or coloured african from more exotic colonies ..
@CipiRipi-in7df
@CipiRipi-in7df 3 месяца назад
Roman auxilia could be considered the colonial troops of its days. :)
@hernanuliana9111
@hernanuliana9111 7 месяцев назад
There is a lot of misconception and myths around the auxilia. The allies of Rome enjoy the security and prosperity of the roman peace in home with high degrees of autonomy (in the time this system was in place, latter the situation will change) and half of the plunder in campaign. They fought in the flanks of the legionaires and they endure the same hardships. A system much more just that todays "allies" in proxy wars.
@jaquino451
@jaquino451 Год назад
In Rome total war 2 Auxalry have very little use except againstcav..
@jamie_d0g978
@jamie_d0g978 10 месяцев назад
Divide et Impera mod really give the auxilia some love. They have fantastic units and crazy variety
@iivin4233
@iivin4233 4 месяца назад
"commanded by Sextus... and Eugenia... his wife."
@N238E
@N238E 8 месяцев назад
Military reforms of Marius*
@Austin011
@Austin011 Год назад
What game is this
@ayuwoki453
@ayuwoki453 Год назад
8:22 "Empire loves their damn lists"
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
Wonder to what it is referring to... 😉
@johnq.3704
@johnq.3704 9 месяцев назад
It's the burden of the conquered to serve the conquerors. Vae victis.
@ingemar_von_zweigbergk
@ingemar_von_zweigbergk Год назад
historians need to learn to see
@mongoliandude
@mongoliandude Год назад
Nah, shout out to the Valites 🐺
@agar2134
@agar2134 Год назад
The commercial though 😅
@golgumbazguide...4113
@golgumbazguide...4113 10 месяцев назад
Explore Golgumbaz
@gaelperez4520
@gaelperez4520 Год назад
What game is that
@bottlerocket2528
@bottlerocket2528 9 дней назад
I think Total War Attila
@fonziebulldog5786
@fonziebulldog5786 Год назад
They served for 25 years !?. Couldnt have been much left to live for after that with a broken body.
@CipiRipi-in7df
@CipiRipi-in7df 3 месяца назад
It depend wildly. Some lucky auxiliaries spent their entire 25 years career without firing a shot in anger. Their entire service was composed of training, patrolling, drudgery and chores. And physical activities, mostly in open air, made them only stronger.
@Imperium-YT
@Imperium-YT 11 месяцев назад
Great video as always but I think the Hispania Auxiliaries were more important and strong than what people regard them, the people from this land were always described as agile, skillful and enduring specially in guerilla warfare, it took the Romans more than 200 years to fully subdue the whole region comparing to Gaul which is about the same size took them basically little more than 10 years to fully subdue.
@janusgates2589
@janusgates2589 11 месяцев назад
Erin fucking Marino is in this video xD
@istvansipos9940
@istvansipos9940 Год назад
poor Secundus never had a chance to become number 1
@legioxequestris811
@legioxequestris811 Год назад
ROOOOOOOMMAA INVICTA
@josephvanwyk2088
@josephvanwyk2088 Год назад
I consider Assassins creed odyssey one of their best along with black flag and the Italian trio. If you are a gamer, play it.
@Pentagathusosaurus
@Pentagathusosaurus Год назад
IV the algorithm
@adrianog4148
@adrianog4148 2 месяца назад
wow..he didnt mention the illyrians one time..😂
@TelcontarTargaryen
@TelcontarTargaryen Год назад
Am I the only one who thinks that "Romans love their lists" is a pun on Skyrim's opening scene?
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
It is 😉 (I'm Filaxim's researcher and the guy who wrote the episode). Good catch!
@TelcontarTargaryen
@TelcontarTargaryen Год назад
Well, that is actually awesome.
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
@@TelcontarTargaryen It would have been a waste to let it pass. A good pun is sometimes better than three lines of explanation. Sadly putting a Ralof on the screen would have ruined the seriousness of the video 😅
@elshebactm6769
@elshebactm6769 Год назад
🤠👍🏿
@tofuchicken2
@tofuchicken2 Год назад
the more i learn about rome the more i understand that they were not very nice people.
@martinan22
@martinan22 Год назад
So. Why was the Imperial bodyguard Germanic?
@jrnsengustavsson7910
@jrnsengustavsson7910 Год назад
They were loyal.
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez
@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez Год назад
You mean the German Guard or the Equites Singulares that came afterwards?
@Gaius-Julius-Civilis
@Gaius-Julius-Civilis Год назад
When Caesar came to the Rhine around 55 bc, he had taken an elite german bodyguard because they where the strongest fighters. Bigger and more ferocious warriors then the Celts Augustus made them in to the pretorians guard when he became princeps. Most feared were the Batavians. The only German tribe under roman rule who did not pay taxes. They only had to provide soldiers. These men could cross rivers in full battle line and where the elite storm troopers of their time. The book Tacitus wrote about hs father-in-law Agricola tells in great details of their fighting skills if you are interested.
@martinan22
@martinan22 Год назад
@@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez I am Germanic so I just want to glorify Germanics. And attack anyone who tries to skirt around the truth. Which was that the Germanics were super cool. Rodriguez is Germanic name ultimately, btw. Visigoths ftw!
@jrnsengustavsson7910
@jrnsengustavsson7910 Год назад
@@JonEtxebeberriaRodriguez i think he means the Praetorian Guard.
@anameireles2118
@anameireles2118 2 месяца назад
Tout individu de peuple conqui😢s peuvent devenir des auxilia...pour ça devait se tondre la tête etre volontaire dans les legions auxilia...suivre le entraînement et discipline romaine, ils étaient moins payés que les réguliers...survivre a 25 ans de service...la l'empire avait besoin...ils étaient des unités de combat...pas de batisseurs ni ingénieurs...avaint ses propres ailes de cavalerie...au debut ils étaient cantones de la ils étaient originaires,mais du a las revoltes ...comme les bataves...ils seront envoyés la l'empire avait besoin de mater des revoltes...loin de chez eux...comme certaines cohertes des tungrii...en Britania,pendant les revoltes a l'époque de Claude...des britons en Dacia...des chevaliers sarmatae en Britania,etc...etc...
@enkeledgeri5731
@enkeledgeri5731 Год назад
ILLYRIANS the best. 25 Roman imperator it's ILLYRIANS origin.Constantine the great ,Justinian
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