4.7 • 3.5K Ratings
🗓️ 13 August 2020
⏱️ 60 minutes
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In 281/280 BC, the Hellenistic King Pyrrhus ventured to southern Italy to aid the Italiote-Greek city of Tarentum against a rising power based in central Italy. This enemy was the Romans. Over the next 150 years this civilisation would rise to become the Mediterranean superpower, winning wars against the Carthaginians, the Antigonids, Seleucids, Ptolemies and various other enemies. But why were the Roman soldiers so effective? I was delighted to be joined by Dr Steele Brand who brilliantly answered this question. Steele explained how the Roman Republican military was far from invincible. Indeed what is so striking from this period is how many devastating defeats the Romans suffered in the process - from Heraclea to Cannae. What made the Romans so extraordinary, however, was their mindset: the Roman civic ethos that was ingrained in its citizens from childhood. Steele explained how the household farm served as an ‘incubator’ for habituating citizens to Roman virtue, which in turn ensured that citizens remained willing to serve even in the wake of catastrophic military defeats. In short, it was these part-time ‘soldier farmers’ that became the nucleus of antiquity’s most famous empire.
Steele is the author of 'Killing for the Republic: The Roman Way of War'.
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0:00.0 | How did a bunch of soldier farmers from Central Italy become the nucleus of the most powerful |
0:08.2 | military force in the Mediterranean? |
0:11.6 | Why were the Roman soldiers so effective? |
0:15.0 | It's a great question, and to answer it I'm talking with Professor Steele Brandt from |
0:20.3 | the Kings College in New York City who has written a book all about the Roman way of war |
0:26.8 | using their citizen soldiers during the Republican period. |
0:31.0 | Enjoy. |
0:35.8 | Steele, it's fantastic to have you on the show. |
0:38.2 | Thanks for having me, I appreciate being on. |
0:40.2 | Not at all, not at all. |
0:42.3 | And now this is an amazing story, which really I guess dives into the extraordinary |
0:48.0 | mentality of the Roman Republican soldier. |
0:51.5 | Yes, it's the story of a people who very, very slowly managed to conquer the world using |
0:59.4 | farmers to fight as part-time soldiers. |
1:03.1 | What really struck me first of all with your book, and we're actually chatting about this |
1:06.6 | just now, was the fact that I've never really encountered an ancient civilization that |
1:11.9 | seems to suffer so many catastrophic military defeats in its career. |
1:16.6 | But it still comes off on top as the supreme military power in the Mediterranean. |
1:21.6 | Yeah, I mean, this is the secret to Rome's success. |
1:25.5 | It's not merely about military power. |
1:29.4 | It's not about military proficiency. |
1:31.2 | In fact, the number one surprising fact when I first approached Rome was how many times |
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