41-God’s Consul
The History of the Christian Church
sanctorum.us
4.6 • 790 Ratings
🗓️ 1 June 2014
⏱️ 26 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the History of the Christian Church, Season 1 with Lance Rolston. |
| 0:14.0 | This week's episode of Communio Synchorum is titled God's Consul. |
| 0:20.0 | One of the Roman Emperor Diocletian's most |
| 0:22.4 | important contributions to the Empire was to divide the top-tier leadership up so that it could |
| 0:27.1 | rule more efficiently. The Empire had simply grown too large to be governed by a single |
| 0:32.1 | emperor, and so he selected Aco-Augustus and divided the regions of oversight between western and eastern realms. |
| 0:39.3 | Since the issue of succession had been a cause of unrest for previous generations, |
| 0:44.1 | Diocletian also provided for that by assigning junior Caesars for both himself and his co-agustus. |
| 0:49.9 | When they stepped down, there would be someone waiting in the wings, predesignated to take control. |
| 0:56.0 | The idea was then that when their successors stepped into the role of being co-Augusti, |
| 1:01.0 | they'd appoint new junior Caesars to follow after them. |
| 1:04.7 | It was a solid plan and worked well while Diocletian was the senior Augustus. |
| 1:09.4 | When he retired to raise prize-winning cabbages, the other rulers |
| 1:13.0 | decided, well, they liked power and didn't want to relinquish it. Over the years that followed, |
| 1:19.3 | rule of the empire alternated between a single emperor and Diocletian's idea of shared rule. The general |
| 1:25.6 | trend was for shared rule with the senior Augustus making his capital |
| 1:29.1 | in the east at Constantinople. This left the weaker and subordinate ruler in the West with increasingly |
| 1:35.6 | less power at the same time that Germanic tribes pressed in from the north. What eventually spelled |
| 1:41.6 | doom for the Western Empire was that Rome had forged treaties with some of those Germanic tribes, turning them into mercenaries who were armed and trained in the Roman style of war. |
| 1:52.5 | When Rome stopped paying them to fight for Rome against their Germanic brothers in the Goss, well, it was inevitable that they would join them to fight against the rich pickings |
| 2:02.2 | of the decaying empire who could no longer field armies against them. We've seen previously, |
| 2:08.2 | as the barbarians pressed into the Western Empire from the North and East, civil authorities |
... |
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