Yet note that you are talking about 500 years.So it is this weird in between time in Europe — schopenhauer1
This is one of the most startling statistics in history ever, the population of the city of Rome:The city of Rome went from a population of 800,000 in the beginning of the period to a population of 30,000 by the end of the period. — Gus Lamarch
As a whole, the period of late antiquity was accompanied by an overall population decline in almost all Europe, and a reversion to more of a subsistence economy. Long-distance markets disappeared, and there was a reversion to a greater degree of local production and consumption, rather than webs of commerce and specialized production. What was once a "globalized" world, became a isolated fragmented continent - people living in Italy didn't have any notion or information of how was life in Egypt from the 6th to the 9th century, contrary to the roman period, where distant information was easily accessed -. These long distances knowledge only became the norm again after the 10th century onwards. — Gus Lamarch
Well, debasing money is likely more of a desperate response to a problem that you cannot solve otherwise. It's a good point, but I don't think it's the most important reason as it is more of a response. I think Nero had a ruinous debacle with inflation and even more opposed him when he made his own version of a death tax: meaning that Nero's henchmen would go around killing rich people and then collect the tax. (No wonder one of the biggest armies was formed against Nero, but once the emperor died this army broke up.)We should consider too, the theories of both Michael Rostovtzeff and Ludwig von Mises about the economic collapse of the Roman Empire: — Gus Lamarch
This is one of the most startling statistics in history ever: the population of the city of Rome: — ssu
I think the problem was that for rapid economic growth Rome needed to conquer new territories, plunder them and when Rome could not expand anymore, when it had no loot to bring back to Rome and new slaves to us, the whole huge standing army needed to defend the borders became a huge burden. Soldiers manning a wall in the middle of nowhere are an expense. — ssu
I do value those "old-school" views. — ssu
Perhaps the problems of the Roman Empire can be thought with alternative history: What would have it taken for the Roman Empire to survive, perhaps until this day?
Could we have avoided the De-globalization of the Middle Ages, but just continued from Antiquity to Renaissance? The love affair Renaissance had with Antiquity seems that this could have happened. Could entrepreneurialism have been restored, perhaps creating proto-capitalism? Or for the Roman Empire to survive, would it had needed a technological edge with the Romans replacing their ballistas with culverins and cannons? The East Romans had their nafta throwers that were potent against ships, so they did innovate a bit. Would the Romans have needed some innovation in ship building and then go on to conquer the World ruling the waves of not just the Mediterranean? At least they would have the drive and the correct attitude to do that, when thinking about the martial culture of Rome. — ssu
From 2020 to 1520 is five hundred years also, and during that time there's been a lot of transformation too. The fact is, we can notice the transformation that has taken in our lifetime, in 50 years and perhaps understand that 100 years, and we typically can have some artifacts or old books that are a hundred years old. But once you are talking about 400-500 years, it is no wonder how distant the times are. There is a huge time gap between Charlemagne and Augustus and the height of the Roman empire. — ssu
True, though I thin the "Dark Ages" in Europe had a slower progression of change than say the 500 years after the Renaissance. — schopenhauer1
So it is this weird in between time in Europe, between the Roman fall and the rise of feudalism, roughly about 400 CE- 900 CE, whereby the (often) migrating Germanic tribes transformed more-or-less into non-tribal, yet feudal entities. There are things to unpack here:
1.) The Germanic tribes prior to the post-Roman times, were largely pastoral. Cattle and livestock defined their economic lifestyle more than planting and farming.
2.) Post-Roman Empire the feudal system relied on farming to increase production for feudal lord in a more-or-less self-sufficient manner. This may have been an import from the manorial system in southern Europe (read Roman Empire's influence) whereby there was a Roman elite and his landholdings. However, due to the economic collapse, which you rightly point to, this manorial system went from commercial agriculture (to be sold in wide networks of trade), to local use (very short-distances, local, and often self-contained). Thus the slave systems of old gave way to peasants and surfs. However, these peasants and surfs must have slowly themselves turned away from their ancestral pastoral lifestyle as land was closed in by armies and such. Actually, I don't know the details of this transformation of Germanic pastoral to farming feudal, so that would be interesting to explore. — schopenhauer1
So it is this weird in between time in Europe, between the Roman fall and the rise of feudalism, roughly about 400 CE- 900 CE, whereby the (often) migrating Germanic tribes transformed more-or-less into non-tribal, yet feudal entities. There are things to unpack here:
1.) The Germanic tribes prior to the post-Roman times, were largely pastoral. Cattle and livestock defined their economic lifestyle more than planting and farming.
2.) Post-Roman Empire the feudal system relied on farming to increase production for feudal lord in a more-or-less self-sufficient manner. This may have been an import from the manorial system in southern Europe (read Roman Empire's influence) whereby there was a Roman elite and his landholdings. However, due to the economic collapse, which you rightly point to, this manorial system went from commercial agriculture (to be sold in wide networks of trade), to local use (very short-distances, local, and often self-contained). Thus the slave systems of old gave way to peasants and surfs. However, these peasants and surfs must have slowly themselves turned away from their ancestral pastoral lifestyle as land was closed in by armies and such. Actually, I don't know the details of this transformation of Germanic pastoral to farming feudal, so that would be interesting to explore. — schopenhauer1
So it is this weird in between time in Europe, between the Roman fall and the rise of feudalism, roughly about 400 CE- 900 CE, whereby the (often) migrating Germanic tribes transformed more-or-less into non-tribal, yet feudal entities. There are things to unpack here:
1.) The Germanic tribes prior to the post-Roman times, were largely pastoral. Cattle and livestock defined their economic lifestyle more than planting and farming.
2.) Post-Roman Empire the feudal system relied on farming to increase production for feudal lord in a more-or-less self-sufficient manner. This may have been an import from the manorial system in southern Europe (read Roman Empire's influence) whereby there was a Roman elite and his landholdings. However, due to the economic collapse, which you rightly point to, this manorial system went from commercial agriculture (to be sold in wide networks of trade), to local use (very short-distances, local, and often self-contained). Thus the slave systems of old gave way to peasants and surfs. However, these peasants and surfs must have slowly themselves turned away from their ancestral pastoral lifestyle as land was closed in by armies and such. Actually, I don't know the details of this transformation of Germanic pastoral to farming feudal, so that would be interesting to explore. — schopenhauer1
Yet, feudalism was dominated by crops, farming, planting, etc. How and when did this take place in the years between lets say 500 and 900 CE? — schopenhauer1
Yeah, I don't really have any qualm calling it a "Dark Age", one of many in human history. Dark Ages tend to be ages that occur after flourishings. They are sort of desolutions of empires, ideas, commerce, and technology. Many societies have had them for environmental, cultural, and economic reasons. Label it whatever you want, but Dark Ages fits fine with me. I also think the years you use are well enough. I've seen everything from 800s-1000s, so anywhere in there probably works, depending on how you demarcate the age. — schopenhauer1
But I guess my question is, how is it between that time, that the Germanic peoples went from tribal to feudal? Specifically in my last post, it seems that Germanic tribes were more pastoral than they were farmers. Yet, feudalism was dominated by crops, farming, planting, etc. How and when did this take place in the years between lets say 500 and 900 CE? — schopenhauer1
And so forth, — Gus Lamarch
But nobody did even try this as they understood what a useless bickering match would it all have ended up with countries demanding their famous persons to be put in euros. And this shows how these historical people are linked to a national heritage. Even if Charlemagne was the "father of Europe", he surely was a French king, especially for the French. — ssu
Yet that's the whole question: would it really completely change the story? The superficial story of events happening and how exactly people reacted to them would change, but would the narrative in the Longue durée, about which the French Annales school were so enthusiastic about, really change into something totally different that we couldn't relate to?I - find it inappropriate to talk about "alternative scenarios" because any change made to the scenario that has become history - fact - would completely change the whole story in the long run. — Gus Lamarch
Any person? I think a lot of very intelligent people do believe in the uniqueness of our time and truly think we are really different and our society is totally different from earlier times.In my view, the study of Roman civilization, is to compare with ours and to repair errors so that they do not repeat themselves, and victories, so that they are redone. But anyone who's a person with an intellect slightly above average will see that the same mistakes are being made, the same decadence, the same nihilism, the same thinking. — Gus Lamarch
But there's no barbarian horde on the gates that could defeat our society. Even if the US and Russia would decide to have an all-out nuclear exchange and bomb also China on the way, because why not, the places left out from the carnage, South America, Africa, Oceania, still uphold all the knowledge of our society. Our society simply isn't as fragile as the globalized society in Antiquity, because then there were huge differences between the "high-cultures" and the so-called barbarians. Just think how much people were literate then and now.The right way of thinking for me its this:
Rome fell right? Yes
Why did it fall? - Insert causes here -
Our society could fall as Rome did? Yes
So let's study it to prevent our society's collapse. — Gus Lamarch
Oh yes, "never again" after WW2 was the true fighting call for the EEC/EU. And that's about it, apart from the vague idea of being the counter response to US supremacy and the obvious push from large corporations.Europe is trying to be more than a collection of rabidly aggressive self-centred microstates. European nationalism killed millions, least we forget. We are trying to become something different than a bunch of nationalist idiots. So of course we have an identity problem... — Olivier5
Yet the real issue is how to get the masses to love their new identity, not only the elite.That's the hard part as it doesn't happen with a decree or sharing your wealth and power with your cronies.Charlemagne was of course not French because this identity didn’t exist back then. He too had an identity problem: he was ruling romanized folks with the help of a Roman Church, but he was Frankish... so he worked on symbols, to help forge some synthesis here, like the EU bureaucrats do. And one such symbol he used was the emperor thing. — Olivier5
The Kalmar Union is interesting, thanks. (You might wish to check the history of the Delian league for another example).The story of the Kalmar Union and comparing it to the United Kingdom tells a lot. ...
And looking at the history of the British Isles, you can see just how much effort have to be made to create a common new identity and how really people take these things into heart. — ssu
The Americans get this feeling. — Olivier5
Isn't there a set of European values emerging as well — Olivier5
Umm, it isn't fake as identities aren't fake. Every identity is made up. If people have come up with ideas that unite them, don't think that it makes them fake. And belief of there existing nations is a far more older idea than the 19th Century, where nation-states, something bit different, came to be the new vogue.You could interpret Brexit as a failure of the Brits to reassess their nationalistic historiography, a failure to realise that their British identity was made up, created politically, and that it is to a degree based on fake nationalistic history and xenophobia. — Olivier5
Forced in a top down manner on the people, I mean, recent, not cast in stone. In fact the Scott's voted against Brexit and whether they will stay in the UK remains to be seen.people have come up with ideas that unite them, don't think that it makes them fake — ssu
I guess only France and the Benelux countries see themselves as being in the heart of Europe. — ssu
What wouldn't be forced in a top down manner? That's the way societies work.Forced in a top down manner on the people — Olivier5
Germans have a problematic stance towards their history and Italians do feel that Brussels and the EU is far away. The best example is Greece. People do understand the role that Greece has played as the birthplace for Western European culture, but we (in the West) then disregard it's Roman past as we call the East-Romans Byzantinians. They called themselves Romans, yet spoke Greek. Another divide comes with the Church.Germans and Italians too. — Olivier5
Who wants another European war? If the EU has any advantage, it's in offering a peaceful way to do some level of integration. It's the value proposition of the EU. And yes, the price to pay is slowness and hence patience. It's a long-term project.In my view the EU would have to understand it cannot be the US of Europe, it indeed is a confederacy of independent states, and it is wrong and actually harmful to try to reach something more.
It comes back to the fact that if you are willing really to unify Europe under one political rule, you have to use force, just like Napoleon, Charlemagne, and just like the Romans. And the military has to be dominant and always on the alert, otherwise it will break up. This is something that the EU is not willing to understand. — ssu
There simply wasn't any Garibaldi or Bismarck here that would have unified the territories through military force. The political will simply didn't exist and doesn't exist. — ssu
Start from the languages: they are different. Swedes and Norwegians can understand somewhat each other while (at least in my view) Danish is a lot more different.What's interesting is how the Viking kingdoms turned into various nation-states after conversion to Christianity. Can you elaborate on that process and how Norway, Denmark, and Sweden became distinct but without using post-facto realities? — schopenhauer1
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