Ancient Rome’s Provinces: The History of the Foreign Lands Ruled by the Roman Empire in Antiquity
Charles River Editors
It can be argued that Roman culture was, indeed, Graeco-Roman rather than Roman. It was the Greek language that served as the lingua franca in the Eastern Empire and much of the west including Italy. Many Greek intellectuals, including Galen, were based in Rome and the Roman aristocracy more and more came to embrace Greek literature and philosophy. Homer’s epics inspired Virgil’s Aeneid and Seneca wrote in Greek. Earlier, Scipio Africanus (236 – 183 B.C.), the epitome of the Roman martial hero, studied Greek philosophy and regarded Greek culture as the benchmark against which all others had to be judged. The Roman poet and philosopher Horace studied in Athens during the Principate and, in common with many of his class, saw that city as the intellectual centre of the world.
In the minds of most people today, Gaul equates to modern France. However, the vast geographical area that Caesar named Gaul, in fact, was made up of a number of very distinct regions and covered, in addition to modern-day France, Belgium, Luxembourg, parts of the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland and Northern Italy. The Romans called the northern area of the Italian peninsula, which is now part of modern Italy, Cisalpine Gaul, or Gaul on this side of the Alps. Early Romans did not even consider this region as part of Italy and repeated incursions southwards, and the sacking of Rome itself in 390 B.C., resulted in Rome taking full control of the area in 221 B.C. and thoroughly Romanizing it to the extent that even the Celtic language totally disappeared and was replaced by Latin. The region was initially a province but by the beginning of the 1st century B.C., it had become fully integrated into the Roman heartland and became an administrative region of Italy rather than a province.
Duration - 11h 27m.
Author - Charles River Editors.
Narrator - Michelle Humphries.
Published Date - Monday, 09 January 2023.
Copyright - © 2023 Charles River Editors ©.
Location:
United States
Description:
It can be argued that Roman culture was, indeed, Graeco-Roman rather than Roman. It was the Greek language that served as the lingua franca in the Eastern Empire and much of the west including Italy. Many Greek intellectuals, including Galen, were based in Rome and the Roman aristocracy more and more came to embrace Greek literature and philosophy. Homer’s epics inspired Virgil’s Aeneid and Seneca wrote in Greek. Earlier, Scipio Africanus (236 – 183 B.C.), the epitome of the Roman martial hero, studied Greek philosophy and regarded Greek culture as the benchmark against which all others had to be judged. The Roman poet and philosopher Horace studied in Athens during the Principate and, in common with many of his class, saw that city as the intellectual centre of the world. In the minds of most people today, Gaul equates to modern France. However, the vast geographical area that Caesar named Gaul, in fact, was made up of a number of very distinct regions and covered, in addition to modern-day France, Belgium, Luxembourg, parts of the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland and Northern Italy. The Romans called the northern area of the Italian peninsula, which is now part of modern Italy, Cisalpine Gaul, or Gaul on this side of the Alps. Early Romans did not even consider this region as part of Italy and repeated incursions southwards, and the sacking of Rome itself in 390 B.C., resulted in Rome taking full control of the area in 221 B.C. and thoroughly Romanizing it to the extent that even the Celtic language totally disappeared and was replaced by Latin. The region was initially a province but by the beginning of the 1st century B.C., it had become fully integrated into the Roman heartland and became an administrative region of Italy rather than a province. Duration - 11h 27m. Author - Charles River Editors. Narrator - Michelle Humphries. Published Date - Monday, 09 January 2023. Copyright - © 2023 Charles River Editors ©.
Language:
English
Opening Credits
Duration:00:00:13
Introduction
Duration:00:23:41
The romans and gauls
Duration:00:19:06
The decline of ancient greece
Duration:00:22:47
Hispania and the carthaginians
Duration:01:07:36
The province of africa
Duration:00:25:53
The roman consolidation of gaul
Duration:00:21:09
The hellenization of rome
Duration:00:34:12
Judea and herod
Duration:00:44:07
Caesar's invasions of britannia
Duration:00:21:26
The gallic wars
Duration:00:55:36
The collapse of the egyptian empire
Duration:00:37:52
Incorporating egypt as a roman province
Duration:01:04:07
The final subjugation of britannica
Duration:00:53:40
Londinium
Duration:00:29:03
The jewish wars
Duration:00:55:15
The romanization of gaul
Duration:01:01:52
The romanization of hispania
Duration:00:18:01
African influences
Duration:00:32:05
Ending Credits
Duration:00:00:13