Ten Minute History - The Fall of Rome (Short Documentary)

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
395 and the roman empire has been split in two this was done by emperor theodosius the first known also as theodosius the great because he defeated the goths and made the official religion of the empire christianity he did this in a very clever way by banning all of the others the empire's two halves were to be inherited by theodosius sons arcadius received the eastern half centered at constantinople and anorius received the west centered at medeolanum in case you're wondering rome was seen as the spiritual capital of the entire empire and it's important to note that the empire wasn't officially divided those who controlled the two halves saw themselves as joint rulers of a single empire but realistically they were run as separate entities at this point as a whole the empire had a population of about 40 million people and was fairly urbanized rome was the largest city and had a population between 350 000 and half a million but the east as a whole was much more urbanized the major urban centers there included the likes of constantinople antioch alexandria and corinth feeding the masses of roman constantinople required what was called the grain doll this was where wheat was imported from the fertile regions of north africa and egypt to the cities at great cost to the imperial treasury this was part of the bread and circus's mantra whereby feeding and entertaining people meant that they would shut up and not riot the entertainment was mostly paid for by the wealthy but after 404 this entertainment would no longer include gladiatorial combat this was because the monk telemachus tried to stop a fight between gladiators and was promptly murdered anorius moved by this banned gladiatorial combat because it was unchristian and apparently not okay to watch people maim each other for our entertainment so another major expense to the treasury was of course the army which numbered between 400 and 500 000 men this was extremely expensive and required an extensive tax system and bureaucracy to make sure the army was paid on time since if the army wasn't paid on time they tended to revolt both halves of the empire suffered with many problems corruption rebellion financial crises and perhaps most notably barbarian invasions side note the term barbarian will be used to describe non-latin or greek-speaking peoples who originated from outside of the empire there were loads of barbarian groups that the romans had to deal with but the main ones were the celts the franks the vandals the ostrogoths the visigoths and later on the huns the eastern empire was wealthier than the west but had to share a border with the extremely potent sassanian empire meaning that it can never bring its full force to bear unless they face a deadlier invasion nominally the western empire was run by an aurius but the real power lay in a man called flavius stiliko who was born to a vandal father and a roman mother i.e he was a barbarian or at least was seen to be by his peers this was not a rare occurrence since there were many groups of barbarians that had been allowed to settle within the empire and the condition that they fight for it the romans rarely held up their end of the bargain though and this led to many barbarian groups revolting the most notable example of this occurred in 378 when the agreement between fritigen and his goths and the roman emperor valens wasn't honored fritigen revolted and defeated the romans at the battle of adrian oppel in which valens was killed surely after this though the romans would learn to uphold their bargains but fun fact no so a visigoth called alaric had been rampaging across the balkans and in order to get him to stop he was given an imperial title and allowed to settle in a lyrica here he wanted to be closer to rome rome wanted him to not be closer to romans so he decided to compromise in 401 when he raised an army and marched on rome he was stopped and defeated by stillico but this invasion did lead to an aureus moving the capital of the western empire from mediolanum to ravenna which was more secure in 406 another invasion this time led by a gulf called radagases entered italy he was also defeated by stiliko but in order to do so he had to withdraw troops from the northern border which in hindsight not a great idea because immediately after this in came the vandals who flooded into ghoul fortunately for stillico things would quiet down after this by which i mean they would get considerably worse in 407 a general in britain declared himself to be the rightful emperor as constantine iii in invaded ghoul stiliko was being blamed for all of the previous few years failings and him being half vandalman that many questioned where his loyalties lie as such he was accused of being a traitor executed and soon afterwards the romans slaughtered any of his allies and whatever vandals they could get their hands on with stylico now a bit on the dead side things started to get a bit better for the western empire that was a lie i'm sorry alaric made his way back into italy again and was free to do whatever he wanted honoris was getting a bit worried by this point and so recognized constantine as his co-ruler to help the situation it didn't in 410 after his third siege of the city alaric took rome and promptly sacked it he was a christian and so he spared most of the churches but the city was damaged quite severely the main damage was to roman prestige however since rome had remained safe for 800 years rome was no longer invincible and by extension neither was her empire in either the east or the west after the sack alaric went south where he promptly died removing at least one major threat from the romans it was in this same year that the people of britannia had complained of their lack of protection from celtic raids to anorees he promptly told them to deal with it as such britannia's place in the empire simply fell away and it would never again be under roman rule in 411 after failing to secure ghoul or defeat the barbarians constantine decided this emperor business wasn't for him and he abdicated soon after which he died of being murdered so the west was starting to fall apart at this point but how was the east doing fine really there was no immediate prospect of war with the persians and the wealthiest regions of the empire were far away from danger in the south 4away did see the death of arcadius and the succession of his son theodosius ii though back in the west the roman army spent the next decade mopping up the remaining bands of barbarians as well as any remaining rebels or usurpers much of this was done by allowing the barbarians some semblance of independence such as when the visigoths were granted territory here in 418. by 423 the crisis had subsided and so an aurier celebrated by dying and after some arguing he was succeeded by valentinian iii theodosius's nephew 4 22 he'd seen the outbreak of war between the eastern empire and the sasanians but they agreed to peace after only a year with all this in mind it's important to remember that the vast majority of romans thought the empire was fine rome had suffered many civil wars in the past and had also survived the 3rd century crisis so there was little reason to think that this time would be any different in the east this certainly seemed to be the case since it saw the beginnings of an economic boom which would last until the 6th century the issues of the barbarians within the western empire were growing worse though with many groups notably the visigoths and the vandals demanding more territory valentinian iii was essentially a puppet to a general named flavius atheists who failed to deal with the barbarians in any meaningful way in fact he had to turn to a new group of barbarians to help suppress rome's enemies the huns led by a certain attila the huns were a nomadic group of people who had been pushing west for several decades at this point forcing other barbarians to also head west into the roman empire 80 has made regular use of hunnic mercenaries to help fight other barbarian groups which even when it was successful was only so for a short time roman success was short-lived since it was never long until barbarian groups would rise up again in revolt and start taking territory by the late 430s the romans had settled large groups of barbarians in ghoul and hispania who were also essentially independent reducing the western empire's effective territory to this of course the major change occurred when the vandals led by king gen zurich settled in north africa in the early 430s and in 439 conquered the city of carthage this was a major blow to the western empire since the vandals now controlled the grain supply to rome and thus could cut it off whenever it suited them furthermore the loss of all of this territory meant that rome could no longer raise as much taxes it had done previously and so it couldn't pay its troops soon after the fall of carthage jt has raised a large force to retake the city from the vandals but this wasn't to be since the eastern empire was then invaded by a massive force of huns so these troops had to be recalled in case you're wondering both the east and west had attempted to help each other several times before this such as when the east sent troops to carthage but generally speaking self-interest won out over fraternity so the hanukkah threat had picked up massively during the 40s as attila had united the huns and subjugated people like the ostrogoths attila's empire looked like this and in the early 450s he launched a large-scale invasion of the western empire this culminated in the 451 battle of the catalonian fields which saw atheists command an army mostly made up of barbarians against the huns a colossal amount of people died and by 453 the hunted withdrawn from the western empire and it was in this same year that attila died his empire subsequently fell into civil war and disintegrated fairly quickly 454 saw the assassination of atheists by valentinian who the next year was himself assassinated in the wake of valentinian's death the west fell into chaos which saw more territory lost and roamed sacked again in 455 this time by gen zurich by 457 the emperor was a man called mayuri and who actively sought to reconquer the lost territories within the west he had some success with this and recaptured all of this territory with the help of his magister militant rissima rissima would have miurian assassinated and would then rule the western empire as stiliko had through a series of imperial puppets until his death in 472 there were some more weak emperors in the west until a man called orestes took control of it and named his son emperor as romulus augustus although he's better known as augustulus which means little augustus both of these were soon chased off in 476 by a man called odawasa who forced romulus to abdicate leaving the imperial throne vacant in the west this is with the exception of the former emperor julius nepot who claimed it but had no authority this is by many historians considered to be the final end of the western roman empire in the void it left were many new kingdoms including the vandals the visigoths the franks are now in italy the kingdom of odawasa which pledged its allegiance to the eastern emperor zeno zeno would of course have other plans and task the ostrogothic king theodoric to retake italy as the eastern empire's representative which he would do by 493 so the roman empire in the west was now gone rome lay in ruins and the city wouldn't really recover until the 19th century whilst rome had fallen the roman empire had not and in the east it stood as strong as ever what remained was a highly urbanized empire which would dominate the eastern mediterranean and would continue to do so for another two centuries with hindsight it's easy to look at what happened in the west and assume that it was inevitable rome had survived many great problems before but this time it was many weaknesses combined which led to its ultimate collapse in the west whilst the roman empire had disappeared from western europe her legacy would endure and would be something and monarchies alike would aspire to be over the next millennia or too i hope you enjoyed this episode and thank you for watching and a special thanks to james bisonette for sponsoring the channel if you'd like to know more about the fall of rome there are some book recommendations in the description below
Info
Channel: History Matters
Views: 1,642,531
Rating: 4.9192486 out of 5
Keywords: Ten, Minute, History, 10, animated, documentary, short, education, educational, Rome, Western, Roman, Empire, Emperor, Eastern, Byzantine, Byzantium, Constantinople, Barbarian, Invasion, decline, fall, Vandals, Visigoths, Huns, hunnic, Attila, Aetius, Honorius, Arcadius, Theodosius, Adrianople, Stilicho, last, Battle, Britannia, Collapse, Odoacer, Genseric, 410, 455, 476, Romulus, Augustus, Augustulus, Zeno, Carthage, Celts, Ostrogoths
Id: EIkeRBP5nDg
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 9min 59sec (599 seconds)
Published: Sun Sep 09 2018
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.