A masterfully condensed epic that distills a millennium of complex history into a seamless and visually arresting narrative. It achieves a rare balance between broad accessibility and historical gravity, making the Roman legacy feel both immediate and profound.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
The ENTIRE History of ROMEAdded:
Before the Roman Empire, there was the Roman Republic. And before that was the Roman Kingdom. And all of this actually didn't start in Rome. It started in Albalonga, an ancient city about 25 km away from nowadays Rome. There in the year 771 before Christ, the king of Albalonga, Numur, is chilling on his balcony enjoying his Latin Empire when his younger brother Amulius suddenly pushes him into early retirement. At the same time, Amulius's followers also kill all of Numur's suitable children to make sure he becomes the new rightful ruler.
Only Sylvia, Numur's soul daughter, survives the balcony party. And to make sure she doesn't produce any new heirs, she gets assigned a fate worse than death. She was forced to become a vast virgin, a priestess forbidden from having children. Well, that solves that, Amelius thought to himself. But then a miracle happened. Somehow Sylvia gets pregnant even though she was supposed to be a virgin. Now don't get your hopes up since it wasn't Jesus Christ just yet, folks. But it was Rome's original founders, Romelus and Remis. After a presumably very chaotic childbirth and a very awkward welcome baby gathering, it was time for the next family drama. How did you get pregnant while being a virgin? I was literally raped by the god of war, Mars.
The god of war, Mars. Yes, that is the worst excuse I've ever heard. It's not an excuse. It's literally the myth.
What? But whether Amas believed it or not, he now had a much bigger and cuter problem. With the newborn twin boys around, his claim for the throne started to become wobbly as there was a legitimate heir. Now, better call Saul.
>> Hi, I'm Saul Goodman. Did you know that you have rights?
>> Constitution says you do.
>> And now the part I think everyone knows.
Eventually, the basket of the two babies crashes into the riverbank and the twins roll into the cold, wet sand that is rough and gets everywhere. Well, this is it, said Romelus Remis in a very manly and sexy voice. Yes, brother. It was an honor sharing the same womb with you.
And just when they think they are about to die, a female wolf jumps from the bushes and sucks the >> Okay, this is straight up becoming a Bible story now. Virgins giving birth, kings ordering to kill babies, and the wolf feeding two twins. What's next? The Tower of Babylon? Well, chronically speaking, yes, but I get the hint. This all is a myth. It might or might not have happened. But it is crucial to the birth of Rome, which we are about to talk about actually. So, why don't you shut your mouth, sit down, and enjoy the free entertainment.
Who are you even? Get out of here.
Anyway, uh after being raised by the wolf for an unknown time, the boys grow older and stronger. Like absurdly strong. Living on proteinrich wolf milk apparently turns you into ancient Jojo characters. So one day while they're out flexing in the woods and doing whatever feral demigod teenagers do, a shepherd finds them, adopts the twins, and teaches them presumably how to speak since they were literal furries till then. and the twins grow up into two tall muscular troublemakers. One day, Romelus and Remis get into a fight with some thugs who work for guess who? King Amulus. And during the brawl, the twins learn the truth. They are not random forest boys. They are the lost princess of Albalonga. The rightful heirs that Amulius tried to river delete. So naturally, the boys decide to go on a bizarre adventure. They march straight back to Albalonga. gather the locals, shout something dramatic like, "Please become a member of the YouTube channel historically." And together with the people of the city, they overthrow Uncle Amelius and reinstate their grandpa Numeer, who apparently survived the fall. Grandpa gets reinstated as a king and everyone's cheering, celebrating, throwing flowers, etc. Everyone except Romelus and Remis because they started to like this whole army thing. So, they decided to build a city together a couple kilometers over. Eventually, they find a great spot near the Tyber River.
Beautiful scenery, seven hills, perfect vantage points, a village of a blacksmith. All was going well. But then, because this is Roman legend, disaster strikes. They can't agree where to put the city. We should put the city on Palatine Hill. No, Evine Hill. No, my location is better. No, mine's better.
No, no, no. No, no, no. And suddenly the founding of the Roman Empire became a sibling argument that could have been solved with like, I don't know, a coin.
But no, this is ancient Italy. So instead, they go, "Let's just ask the gods." They hold a contest. Whoever sees more birds wins divine approval because why not? Remis goes, "I saw six birds."
Ralis then responded, "Cool. I saw 12.
You cheated. The gods love me more, bro.
They literally don't.
Romelus decides to just start building a tiny wall. If his brother won't help him, he will just make this city himself. And Remis, being a certified older brother, Menace, decides to clown on him. Remis hops over the wall like it's nothing and goes, "Oh no, look, I'm in your super secure city, brother. What will you do? Arrest me?
Your city sucks?
What? You going to fountain empire on my corpse?" He did. And this is the start of Rome. Historically extra long facts part 16. So Romelus is now king, right?
But Rome at this point is basically a homeless camp. To attract people, Romelus calls it an asylum city and not the medical kind. the everyone who's on the run from something come on end kind which means suddenly Rome fills up with runaway slaves deputers exiles guys who stole goats guys who are goats criminals and a couple lost tourists Romelus looks at his crowd and goes perfect as city but there is a problem a huge problem because Rome has food hills walls chaotic men one king but exactly zero women to have children with this is an issue. Oh, you think? Shut up. So, Rome hosts a big festival and invites their neighbors, the Sabines, and tell them, "Come celebrate. Bring the whole family.
There will be snacks." Let's be honest, no one can ignore such a great housewarming party. So, the Sabines show up and everyone's vibing. But then, midparty, Romelus gives the signal and the Romans just kidnap all the Sabine women. Rome literally solved its gender imbalance with an 8th century BC Tinder kidnapping event. Papa Mars would be proud. The next morning, the Sabine men wake up with a hangover and are furious.
They attack Rome obviously and we get the first official Roman war just oh 3 years after the birth of the place.
Bravo. The Sabine women walk out between the armies and yell, "Stop. We don't want our new husbands killing our old families. Stop being stupid. Merge the kingdoms and continue your lives." and they do. Just like that, the Sabines and Romans became one people, which must have been awkward at the dinner table.
From here, Rome cycles through six more kings. We still have over a thousand years of Roman history to cover, so I'll just speedrun us through this timer, please. The first king is Romelus. He creates the Senate, did all the crazy stuff we just went over, then disappears one day in a storm. Romans say he ascended to heaven, though he probably just tripped and died. Romelus was followed by the second king, a Sabine king who creates the Roman religion, builds temples, actually does not fight anyone for a while and dies peacefully.
The third king was basically the opposite of his predecessor and decided religion is cringe and fighting is so much cooler. So he attacks and destroys Albalonga followed by absorbing their population. He dies because he angered a god supposedly. So the fourth king, a half-sabine, half Roman person, takes power, brings back religion, yet expands Rome forcefully. He also starts paving the way for his followers by building prisons, sports, and bridges. The next king kept the spirit going and constructed the massive sewer system we still applaud Rome for to this day and becomes insanely powerful. So he gets assassinated by his political opponents.
And so did his successor, who was abusing his power left and right. Though he did build a wall, but it didn't stop the Mexicans. Finally, the seventh king, who was so incredibly sinister and cruel that he was expelled from the city by the people of Rome. And just to prevent any more idiotic kings from taking over, the Roman people turned the place from a kingdom to a republic. And with that, we enter the era of the Roman Republic.
Yes, still not empire, which in theory means no more kings ever. We are done.
We have learned our lesson. So instead of one king, they elect two consils who have the power of a king but definitely aren't kings. They rule at the same time and can veto each other to quote unquote keep each other in balance. They also switch out each year. I'm sure that will go well. Let's see how well Oh my god, it's all burning down. Ever wondered how Rome became so militaristic? It wasn't just because their first king's daddy was the god of war. It's actually because of what's happening right here in front of us. Rome wasn't the only city that like to plunder and kill because the French in the ancient Gaul region wanted to do it before them. And the Romans lost to them. And not just a bit. The Gouls enter Rome, loot it, burn most of it, sit around like it's a camping trip, and leave only after the Romans paid him a ransom in gold. This event might as well be Rome's original story of their villain arc. Never again can we be this humiliated said the Romes to each other. So they turn ultra ultra militaristic. Anything that isn't nailed to the ground is about to get conquered.
And oh god were they good at it. They started with their Latin neighbors, then some hill tribes, then Greek colonies, then more tribes, then even more tribes.
Basically, if you live near early Rome, you were about to receive a very polite invitation to join the Republic or be flattened by it. But the real challenge comes from across the water in the south. Cartage. They have a massive navy, way too much money, a beautiful city, and elephants. You know, the kind of neighbor Rome absolutely can't tolerate. So, the two republics start fighting in what historians very casually call the Punic Wars, which is basically a trilogy movie about chaos.
In the first movie, Rome goes, "You know what? We want that island." Cartage responds by saying that you don't even have a navy to stop us. And Rome responds by building a navy by stealing the design of the Carthaginian ships and win anyway. 10 for Rome. Then the second war starts and this is the big one.
Hannibal appears. This man shows up with 50,000 troops, 37 elephants, and the determination of many years of deeprooted racism. He gathers in Spain, marches his army over the Alps, which is insane even today, and absolutely wrecks Rome for years. Rome eventually wins because they are Rome. But yeah, Hannibal made them sweat. That's too old for Rome. Then the third war is basically Rome saying Carthage still exists and that bothers us. So they delete the whole city from the timeline.
Boom, gone. Survivals of the fittest or whatever. And just for good measure so they won't fight again, they enslave the whole city. And so with their only real rival out of the way, Rome gets addicted to expansion like the British got to opium. They conquer Spain, North Africa, Greece, Turkey, and of course the Gaul region. Instead of going to therapy about what happened to them before Rome literally conquered 10% of humanity, enslaved another 2% and destroyed entire civilizations just to make sure they were strong enough to have revenge against the Gouls for what they did 330 years before. And the man who gets to deal the final blow to these Frenchies is Julius Cesar. Cesar is basically the final boss of the Roman Republic. He marches into Gaul with a relatively small army and proceeds to absolutely dismantle the place. And by dismantle, I mean defeat tribe after tribe, conquer all of France, dip into Belgium, flirt with Germany, and then casually invade Britain just to see what they taste like. He comes back to Rome so powerful that the Senate becomes afraid of him.
So they order him to come to Rome alone and to leave his army behind. He naturally refuses and starts marching to the capital anyway. The Senate panics and flee as Caesar enters the city with little to no resistance. But that doesn't mean Rome was his just yet. He still had to defeat the disputed leader and his allies before he can legally become, I don't know, the first dictator Rome has seen in 500 years.
He fights all across the continent.
Boinks Cleopatra on the way because why not? And after 4 years finally gains control of the republic. Half the Senate likes him. The other half wants to kill him by stabbing him 23 times. But is that hate justified? Well, kind of, but also absolutely not. Caesar wasn't a straightup evil guy most people portray him as today. He was actually doing a lot of stuff that regular Romans loved.
He fixed the chaotic calendar. So months actually made sense, and it's why we now have 365 days. July is literally named after him. So you're welcome. He lowered taxes, canceled depths, expanded citizenship, rebuilt half the city, gave lands to veterans of war, regulated grain supply so poor people didn't starve, and tried to keep the army under control so rogue generals wouldn't create another civil war. But, and this is the butt, the Senate couldn't ignore.
Caesar was also absorbing every political office he possibly could.
Dictator, yep, console, sure. Pontifacts Maximus, aka the head priest, why not?
Basically, the man was collecting powers like they were Pokémon cards. And the Senate, who spent 500 years being paranoid about kings, looked at this and went, "Oh god, he's becoming a king."
So, they decide to save the Republic by doing the most republic destroying thing possible. They murder him in the middle of a Senate meeting. And this might have been the dumbest thing they could have possibly done because tiny problem, everyone liked Caesar except the senators. The liberators walk out of the Senate like, "We did it, guys. We saved the republic." While the Roman people are more like, "You killed the guy who lowered our taxes and gave us free grain. Let's just hope this somehow doesn't escalate. Look how they massacred my boy. This is Mark Anthony.
Cesar's bestie, who is apparently really upset that his friend is dead. But don't let it fool you. In reality, he really just enjoys power and is about to usurp that power all to himself. Not on my watch, says Octavius, the adopted 18-year-old grandne nephew of Caesar.
Octavius might look like an adorable baby boy, but in reality, he is a cunning war criminal. Mark Anthony, Octavius, and some random other guy that doesn't matter become the new United leaders of Rome. But in reality, it's more like Mark, Anthony, and Octavius trying to become the sole leader. Luck has it for Octavius that Mark is a massive s. And he too, just like Cesar, gets seduced by Cleopatra. So Mark leaves for Egypt, showers her in gifts, and Octavius sees this as the perfect opportunity to depose of his rival.
Look, he's only spending his time in Egypt with his egirl. And guess what? He is definitely planning to move the capital from Rome to Alexandria. We should depose of him. It was a blatant lie, but the Romans believed it. They attack Egypt, defeat the Egyptians, and the love couple takes the Eway out to avoid being humiliated in Rome. That leaves Octavius as the sole ruler. He blatantly steals the plot of the good Star Wars movies because he declares himself first citizen or imperator and usurps all the power to himself. finally by the Senate or whatever is left of it after a campaign of revenge and bloodshed for what a few of them did to Caesar. He is named Augustus which means all kinds of fancy things. And since this day in the year 27 before Christ, yes, all of this happened before the man himself even spawned in, the Roman Empire is officially born. Or wait, I mean empire is officially born.
Man, I'm getting hungry. We're at the halfway point now, so best to take a short break. Do you want pizza? No. Like literally, I have $500 worth of Dominous pizza codes to give away thanks to the sponsor of this video, freecash.com.
Freecash is a free platform where you can earn real money by playing mobile games, answering surveys, and completing simple offers. You just pick an offer. I usually choose games because you're literally getting paid to play. You download it, play for a bit, and as soon as you hit the goals, the money shows up right here. If you sign up using my link or QR code, you will get a $10 bonus when you start your first offer. The more offers you complete, the more rewards you unlock. So, it usually stacks over time. And just like you can complete tasks for cash, here's a task for you to be eligible to win free pizza. Freecash.com is giving away 10 time $50 worth of Domino's pizza. And all you got to do to be eligible to win is sign up using the link below. And that's it. It is only for US-based viewers, though. And additionally, you have 30 days from when this video goes live to enter the giveaway. And 10 days after the deadline, I will announce the hungry winners with a community post.
So, make sure to press the bell button as well. Thanks again to freecash.com for feeding the needy and sponsoring this video. All roads lead to Rome, which is actually true, unless you live in any of these continents. But why do they lead to Rome? Well, that is because Rome in its empire phase started to learn how to stabilize instead of endlessly expanding like, for example, the Mongols used to do. That is also why their empire fell apart so quickly while Rome managed to survive way longer.
Anyway, eyes on me, please. As we continue our story, as we enter Rome's golden age, Rome has become very quickly a fully centralized empire. And Augustus, the first emperor, is the reason it doesn't immediately collapse again. The key thing to understand about Augustus is that he is not trying to be impressive. He is trying to be permanent. And because of that, he might be the single greatest emperor to ever exist. He knows exactly why the republic failed. It wasn't because Rome lacked laws or values or tradition. It failed because the army stopped belonging to the state and started belonging to individual men. Every civil war from Marius to Solah to Cesar followed the same pattern. Soldiers fought for generals, not for Rome. So Augustus fixes that first. He turns the Roman army into a professional standing force.
No more temporary allegiance raised for single wars. Soldiers now enlist for roughly 20 years. They receive regular pay from the state, standardized equipment, and a guaranteed retirement package. Land grants come from the government, not from a general promising rewards if his rebellion succeeds. This one change alone removes the main fuel for a civil war. Augustus also limits how much military power any single governor can control. Provinces with large armies are separated from provinces with large wealth. No one gets both. Generals are rotated, commands are time limited, and loyalty flows upwards, not sideways. Rome now maintains around 25 to 30 legions, roughly 150,000 professional Roman soldiers, backed by at least as many auxiliary troops permanently stationed across the empire.
This is expensive, but it gives Rome something it never really had before, a standby response unit. On top of that, Augustus changes Roman war strategy.
Instead of endless expansion, Rome now focuses on securing the borders. Spain is fully pacified after decades of resistance. The Alps are conquered to eliminate raiding routes into Italy. In the Balkans, rebellions are crushed and the Denube becomes a hardened frontier.
In the east, Augustus avoids full-scale war with Partia. He uses diplomacy and pressure to recover Roman standards lost in earlier defeats. He presents this as victory to the public even though no major war was fought. It shows how the emperor really tries to keep the empire alive, but that doesn't mean the wars stop. Along the rine and the noob, Roman legions are constantly active. Forts are built every few kilometers. Roads connect them so troops can move quickly.
These regions were anything but peaceful, and because of that, it actually had soldiers living there permanently. In 9 AD, three Roman legions march into Germania under the general Varys. They are ambushed by Germanic forces led by Armenius, a former Roman ally trained in Roman warfare. The legions are wiped out almost completely in the Toyberg forest.
Mind you, that is 20,000 professional soldiers dead just like that. How could a general fumble so badly? Well, let's take a look at the traitor, Armenius.
Armenius knows Rome better than most Romans do. He grew up around them, served in their army, earned their trust, and learned exactly how legions move, fight, and think. He knows their discipline. He knows their confidence.
And most importantly, he knows their biggest weakness. Romans assume everyone wants to become Roman. But back home, where Armenius is from, Germania, Roman rule doesn't feel like order. It feels more like suffocation. Roman courts replace local customs. Roman law overrides tribal authority. Taxes are imposed. Obedience is expected. What Rome calls civilization, Armenia sees as the slow eraser of everything his people are. To him, Germania isn't being conquered by the sword anymore. It's being absorbed quietly, permanently. And Armenius understands that once Rome finishes that process, resistance will be impossible. So he decides this is the moment. He doesn't rebel openly. That would fail immediately. Instead, he stays loyal on the surface. To Varys, Armanius is the perfect Roman ally.
Calm, cooperative, warning him about small uprisings that supposedly need to be dealt with. He convinces Varys that Germania is already under control, that this whole operation is just going to be a routine cleanup. Varys believes him.
The legions move as if they are on administrative duty, not a military campaign. They march stretched out, hauling wagons, supplies, and even civilians through terrain they don't understand. Forests close in, roads disappear. Rain turns the paths into mud. This is no place for Roman formations. And Armenius knows it. Then the attacks begin. Not a battle, a slaughter. Germanic fighters strike from the forest, disappear when the Romans try to respond, and then strike again harder. Because the legions are strung out for kilometers in narrow terrain.
Units can't form up, and orders don't travel. Roman discipline still exists, but there is nothing to apply it to.
Rome is used to fighting on open ground.
One army facing another, not conga lining through the dense forest while being dismantled piece by piece. Varys hears reports of attacks, but doesn't react decisively. He hesitate, assuming it's just minor banditry causing delays.
He keeps pushing forward, believing the situation can still be managed, but it can't. Over several days, the army collapses. Units are isolated. Officers are killed. By the time Varys realizes this isn't unrest, but a full betrayal, there is no army left to save. More than 20,000 career soldiers are dead because of his blindness. Varys takes his own life rather than return to Rome as the men who lost three legions without ever fighting a proper battle. The Germanic tribes, Rome's barbarians, slip out of Roman control, thanks almost entirely to Armenius. The legions number 17, 18, and 19 are never used again. Forever locked away with Rome's unresolved traumas.
More importantly, because of this, Roman policy changes permanently. Augustus abandons the idea of conquering Germania. The Rine becomes the frontier.
Rome stops pushing outward and commits fully to defense. This decision defines the empire's borders for centuries. It was time for solidifying ground and making sure no silly little man would start a world religion. Spoilers. When Augustus dies in 14 AD, he leaves behind something unprecedented. A Roman state that is stable, defensible, and no longer tearing itself apart. His actions single-handedly were the foundation of the Golden Age. Now, before we continue with emperors and wars, it's worth stopping for a moment and looking at what living in the peak of Rome's golden era was really like. For the average Roman citizen living inside the empire, especially in Italy or a major province, life is structured in a way that is rare for the ancient world. Cities have paved roads, stone buildings, aqueducts, public baths, markets, courts, and written laws. Grain distributions keep large populations fed. Trade moves freely across thousands of kilometers.
Most people are not wealthy. Many live modestly, and slavery is widespread and brutal. But there is stability. If you are inside the empire, you live within a system that absorbs shocks. Famine, crime, and violence exist, but there is an administration to respond to them.
Now, compare all of that to the average person outside of the empire, often labeled a barbarian by Roman writers.
Most of these societies are rural and decentralized. Political authority depends on the person. There are no standing armies, no long-distance infrastructure networks, no permanent bureaucracies. Life is harder but more flexible. Taxes are lower but protection is limited. When something goes terribly wrong, there are no larger systems to intervene. This contrast matters because for centuries, Rome doesn't just defeat and fight these peoples. It also attracts them. Roman service offers pay.
Roman cities offer security. Roman citizenship offers legal rights. Many people outside of the empire don't want to destroy Rome. They want access to what it provides. And that will matter later. For now, it's time for the next emperor to take power. Spin the wheel of misfortune.
Wait, good. Oh, this thing is definitely rigged. Meet the adopted son of Augustus, Emperor Tiberius. He's a capable guy, an experienced guy, but most interestingly, an extremely introverted guy who is deeply suspicious of literally everyone and hates being in public. From the day he took the role as emperor, which he essentially got forced into by Augustus, he didn't do anything too radical. He simply kept himself secluded to the point he abandoned living in Rome and moves to the island of Capri where he reigned the empire from there. That was a little bit of a mistake since there was no one in Rome anymore to enforce orders directly.
Though it did come in handy for the Ptorian guards who were originally created by Augustus as an elite protective unit. These soldiers are heavily armed, permanently stationed in Rome and loyal not to the state, but to the emperor personally. Problem is, with Emperor Tiberius living on an island, the Ptorian guard commander becomes one of the most powerful men in the city. He controls access to the emperor, filters information, and increasingly influences decisions. Behind the curtains of Rome, power is no longer flowing through institutions, and the Senate is always seen as a joke. The never-ending corruption has begun. Meanwhile, in the far province of Udea, a local religious figure named Jesus of Nazareth is arrested by local authorities and handed over to the Roman administration. He's executed for causing unrest and refusing to acknowledge Roman authority in the way expected of him. The execution is routine and crucifixion is standard Roman punishment. As far as the empire is concerned, this all is a minor provincial matter, barely even worth recording. And Rome moves on. When Emperor Tiberius eventually dies in 37 AD, the balance of power inside Rome was already distorted. The Ptorian guard actively starts playing a key role in ensuring the next emperor supports their wishes and desires. They choose Caligula, a great grandson of Emperor Augustus. At first, he does what they expect him to do. But a long story short, because I don't want to cover all what 90 emperors Rome had in full detail, Emperor Caligula gets a bit too cocky. So the Ptorian guards simply kill the emperor and on the spot immediately select a replacement themselves. They find Caligula's uncle Claudius and declare him the new emperor. Needless to say, Rome has now crossed yet another line. The emperor is no longer chosen by tradition, legitimacy, or public consensus. He is chosen by the soldiers standing closest to him. Emperor Claudius turns out to be more competent than expected since he expands the empire, strengthens administration, and keeps the system functioning. But the precedent remains. Everyone now understands that the Pritorian Guard is not just a protective force. It's the ruling force. After Claudius, power passes to Augustus' great great grandson, Nero. Nero is obsessed with personal image and is careless about his power. He's basically the complete opposite of the legendary first emperor.
He caused rebellions, a financial collapse, and half of Rome burned down during his reign. The Senate and the army lose confidence in him, and those who actually matter if they support you or not, the Ptorian guard ended up also giving up their support, which basically means your time is up. Nero flees Rome, and as it's clear he's going to get arrested and executed, he takes his own life. And with Nero's passing in the year 68, we not only end the Julius Caesar dynasty reign, but also end in the very chaotic year of 69. Very nice.
Also known as the year of the four emperors. Four men claim and sit on the throne in a single year. Not because they are great leaders, but because different armies across the empire back different candidates. One emperor gets murdered, another one gets overthrown, another rules for a few months. Civil war breaks out across the entire empire.
Legions that were supposed to defend borders are now actively marching on each other. Eventually, one man wins, Vaspacian. Not because he is charismatic, not because he is loved, but because he has the strongest army.
He restores order mostly by force and hence the empire to his sons afterwards.
So, yay, Rome survives. But now everyone yet again knows the truth about emperor legitimacy. Because if you control the army, you control Rome, no matter how bad of a leader you are. Naturally, for the next century, emperors rise and drop dead like flies every other week. It is extremely chaotic and not that interesting because it just comes down to this emperor bad. He gets killed.
This emperor a bit better, but the Ptorian guard don't like him, so he is also killed, etc., etc., et etc. So just to summarize the next century here are a couple highlights. In the year 117 under Emperor Treyan the Roman Empire reaches its historical peak with the capture of what is nowadays Romania, Jordan and Armania. In 193 AD, the Ptorian guards who are yes still in power even 200 years later literally sell the title of emperor to the highest bidder. Emperor Giulianis ended up reigning for just 66 days until he got executed in the palace by another general aka the next emperor.
And in the beginning of the 3rd century, Christianity started to spread like crazy. And that was annoying for the Roman elite. Christians refused to worship Roman gods and instead worshiped well the Christian God. But that wasn't the only crisis they faced. The whole 3rd century was hell for the Roman Empire. Emperors went from switching monthly to weekly and most died violently. The empire nearly fractures into separate states. Germanic invasions hit the west while Persian armies press from the east. Meanwhile, massive plagues teared through cities and hyperinflation destroys the economy.
Sounds like 2020 all over again. I can't make it clear enough. It was a chaotic mess. And eventually, one emperor accepts the obvious. The empire is just too big, too unstable, too complex to be ruled the old way. So he makes a radical change. He chops the empire into pieces.
He creates the tetrarchy, the rule of four, two senior emperors, two juniors.
And on top of that, emperors now live in border cities to be close to the action.
And Rome literally gets abandoned just like that. It's still there, but the power of the empire is now at the front among four of them. After that genius emperor retires to grow cabbages. Yes, he really did. The rule of four turns into a battle royale. Who would have guessed? The winner is Constantine. He somehow reunites the empire, but he doesn't move back into the old Roman office. He's seen the future, and the future was in the east. In 330 AD, he built Constantinople. It's built on a massive choke point between Europe and Asia. It's richer than Rome, easier to defend, and crucially, it's built as a Christian city. No more old school pagan garbage. Christianity is now the legalized new cool thing. Though the empire is whole, in reality, the split into East and West had already settled in. All the rich and intellectual people follow the emperor to the Greekeaking world. While in Rome, the Latin speaking folks were left behind as a ghost province. And I know this is a bit of a hot take, but at this point, the Byzantine Empire is real. Some people like to call it the Western Roman Empire and the Eastern Empire, but that's lame.
They don't even speak Latin like the Westerners or live anywhere close to Rome. You know, the Roman Empire. The Eastern Roman part of the empire at this point in history evolved in the Byzantine Empire. And that is a hill I'm willing to die on. You can sue me in the comment section. Anyway, if you don't think that is when the Byzantine Empire started, this moment might have because the split between east and west became finalized when an emperor who died in 395 AD split this empire between his two sons. Classic mistake and both administrations immediately ceased working together. Rome is officially no longer Rome. By the early fifth century, the non-Byzantine, aka Western Roman Empire, is laughably weak and often ruled by foreign kings. It was time to put it out of its misery. It was time for the final blow. And uh yeah, if you're watching this video with your political uncle who has no filter, you might want to click off now because he is most likely going to quote what happens now each Thanksgiving dinner till there is no tomorrow. You ready?
The blow that ended the Roman Empire once and for all was uncontrolled immigration.
>> Introducing the last villains for today, the Hunts. They exploded out of the Ureian step in the late 4th century and they were so dangerous that they single-handedly caused mass migrations towards Europe. When the hunts smash into the Goffs north of the Danube, the Goffs very intellectually decide to not stand still and die. So they run. And where do they run? Across the Roman border. Tens of thousands of Goffs show up at the Denoo asking for asylum. Rome lets them in. On paper, this is manageable, but in reality, corrupt Roman officials starve and exploit them so badly that the Goffs revolt. As a direct result, two years later, a Roman army is destroyed and the emperor is killed on the battlefield by the hands of them. That moment is important because after the events of Adrianople, everyone learns something Rome never wanted to teach. If you bring a whole nation into your borders and you can't control them, you are not integrating them. You're just importing your future civil war. So, the Western Roman Empire starts doing what it will keep doing until it dies. Making deals with armed groups it can't defeat. Here's some land. Please just stop burning us. It calms them for a bit, but greed can never be satisfied. And no, it doesn't stop with the Goffs. Once the border breaks psychologically, the chain reaction begins. More groups move. Some are fleeing the hunts. Some are just following opportunity. The vendals go on a rampage across the West and eventually take North Africa, which is catastrophic because North Africa is where the West gets grain and money. Lose Africa, lose taxes. Lose taxes, lose soldiers. Lose soldiers. Yeah, good luck. In 410, the Visigoss return from last video and sack Rome. Not because Rome is militarily important, but because it's really funny. Then once the hunts are defeated, Rome the city gets sacked again in 455 because why not? And by 476 when the last Roman emperor, Romelus Agustalus, who has literally the most ironic name for this moment since he is both named Romelus, the name of the founder of Rome, and Agugustalus, named after the first emperor. Anyway, yeah, he basically got politely asked by his Germanic commander to stop being emperor, and then the Roman Empire is dead. Yeah, sorry guys. There's no epic final battle or anything, just emperor fatigue. Now, to be realistic about the Eastern and Western Roman divide, the term Byzantine is made up by modern historians. So, if you asked everyone back then if the Roman Empire is really dead, they would probably say, "No, dumbass. It's right there." But this video is long enough already, and my pizza is getting cold. If you really want to know what happened to them, the Eastern Roman Byzantines survived for a whopping thousand additional years and fought like crazy to survive. They slowly lost more and more territory to Persians, Arabs, crusaders, and finally to the fearsome Ottomans till only the city of Constantinople remained. In 1453, the city falls gets turned from Christian to Muslim and with it the last state that still calls itself Roman fell. Yes, I just skipped a thousand years of interesting things, but I will make a Byzantine Empire video one day to explain it all in more detail. So, subscribe, become a member, and don't forget that if you want pizza and make money by doing simple tasks to check out the link in the description. I really hope you enjoyed the long video, and we will see you in the next one. Bye-bye.
Related Videos
They Said Flight Was Impossible—Then Two Bicycle Mechanics Changed Everything#wrightbrothers
umars997
526 views•2026-05-30
#SeamansAct1915 #MaritimeHistory #LifeAtSea #BoatShitCrazyX #SaferWorkEnvironment
BoatShitCrazyX
859 views•2026-06-01
Black Women Were Banned From White Suffrage Groups
Peoplediduknow
782 views•2026-05-31
A Volcano Created Frankenstein — And Killed Summer for a Year
TheDarkSideOfSmth
389 views•2026-05-29
Born into slavery in Beaufort
RoadsanRoots
613 views•2026-05-31
50.32 Judah And Israel Split / Jeroboam's False Religion - 2 Chronicles ch. 10-11
smyrnachristianchurchkokomo
107 views•2026-05-29
Iran's Secret Society Wrote the Constitution — Then Got Hanged for It
TheShadowLecture
502 views•2026-05-29
How the Qing Dynasty's Imperial Harem System Actually Worked
HiddenTime360
580 views•2026-05-28











