I mean, you’re right about the rich getting richer being a problem (and the citizen/land problem, though only relevant in the Late Republic, not the Empire), but wars were a net drain on the Empire’s finances. A few men got very wealthy from them, but they were largely unessential to the Empire’s economy and tax base.
A lot of the problem was not only a declining tax base from increasing mismanagement and unchecked barbarian incursions in the 3rd century AD, but skyrocketing costs from the Emperor’s court, which slowly discarded the previous power-sharing arrangements with locals and Senatorial elites in exchange for a more monarchial system in which the Emperor controlled access to all the levers of power, funding unspeakable luxuries for the ‘majesty’ of the office, and a massive army of incredibly corrupt bureaucrats with very little actual power, who nonetheless made themselves indispensable by eliminating all alternative forms of running the Empire.
I’m just an amateur armchair historian that likes to read books. I love reading and learning about Roman history and I thoroughly enjoy being able to talk to others more knowledgeable than me about these things.
The ‘Absolutely Barbaric’ guy is historically accurate though.
I’m just an amateur armchair historian that likes to read books. I love reading and learning about Roman history and I thoroughly enjoy being able to talk to others more knowledgeable than me about these things.
I always love seeing your comments!
The ‘Absolutely Barbaric’ guy is historically accurate though.
I mean, you’re right about the rich getting richer being a problem (and the citizen/land problem, though only relevant in the Late Republic, not the Empire), but wars were a net drain on the Empire’s finances. A few men got very wealthy from them, but they were largely unessential to the Empire’s economy and tax base.
A lot of the problem was not only a declining tax base from increasing mismanagement and unchecked barbarian incursions in the 3rd century AD, but skyrocketing costs from the Emperor’s court, which slowly discarded the previous power-sharing arrangements with locals and Senatorial elites in exchange for a more monarchial system in which the Emperor controlled access to all the levers of power, funding unspeakable luxuries for the ‘majesty’ of the office, and a massive army of incredibly corrupt bureaucrats with very little actual power, who nonetheless made themselves indispensable by eliminating all alternative forms of running the Empire.
I’m just an amateur armchair historian that likes to read books. I love reading and learning about Roman history and I thoroughly enjoy being able to talk to others more knowledgeable than me about these things.
The ‘Absolutely Barbaric’ guy is historically accurate though.
I always love seeing your comments!
Oh, definitely!