Roman Army ppt
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The Roman Army
Be All You Can Be…
THE ROMAN ARMY
By the end of the civil wars the Roman
Army had changed dramatically
Service by all Roman citizens was
not practical.
Long term garrison troops
New terms of service were laid down
by Augustus and his military aide,
Marcus Agrippa
Army consisted of professional,
long-term soldiers who were paid
relatively good salaries
had to be Roman citizens
(later non-citizens were
allowed to enlist).
receive citizenship after 20
years of service
Given choice of 12,000
sesterces cash bonus or
its equivalent in land at
retirement
MILITARY STRENGTH
Augustus established 28 legions
About 6000 men each
Trajan increased number to 30
legions and Septimius Severus
increased it again to 33 legions
Most stationed along frontiers of the
empire
2/3s in the western provinces and
the rest scattered in the east and
North Africa
Rome also had several fleets
Two stationed along Italian coast,
squadrons stations off coasts of
Egypt and Syria, and one each on
Danube River, Rhine River, Black
Sea and the English Channel
LOYALTY
Army loyal to emperor in normal times
But no emperor ever took this
loyalty for granted
He kept control by making sure that:
All generals and many lesser
officers appointed by and
responsible to the emperor
Commanders continually shifted
from place to place
Governors were prohibited from
raising their own armies and
discouraged from contacting
each other
Not allowed to pay troops
or reward bonuses
SPIRITUAL CONNECTION
All soldiers were spiritually bound to
the emperor
Swore oath of allegiance when
they enlisted in which they
vowed:
“to perform with enthusiasm
whatever the emperor
commands, never to desert, and
not to shrink from death on
behalf of the Roman state”
Also observed numerous
religious holidays in which the
current emperors and selected
past emperors were honored
Not easy to incite soldiers to rebel
Average rank-and-file soldier was
fairly trustworthy (during first
200 years of empire)
CONDITIONS
Conditions of service were pretty
tolerable
Soldiers were paid fairly well
Dangers they faced were not
particularly great
Commanders were
expected to win through
caution rather than by
boldness
There were occasional
disasters
Such as total destruction
of 3 legions commanded
by General Varus by
Germans during reign of
Augustus
But this was rare
ACTIVITIES
Most soldiers spent their long
service in peacetime activities
Going on marches and
training exercises
Building and maintaining
roads, forts, walls, and
bridges
Acting as police force in
territories where they were
stationed
This job could get
burdensome
POLICE PROBLEMS
Bandits and brigands were a problem
As were pirates on the
Mediterranean Sea and major
rivers
Runaway slaves were another big
problem
Special brigades created just to
catch them
Rebellions also sometimes occurred
Usually broke out within first 20
years after a new territory had
been conquered
Most rebellious people in the
empire were the Jews
Masada Revolt (66-75 CE)
Even worse revolt (133-135
CE)
THE PRICE OF REBELLION
Open challenge to imperial
system was simply not
allowed
If troops were called in to
quell a revolt or riot, they
could leave a town or city
in a shambles
Destroyed Cremona,
Lyon, and Byzantium
after soldiers put
down minor revolts
THE FRONTIER
Emperors generally content to keep what they held
Preferred diplomacy to war and usually garrisoned troops on established
frontiers rather than engage in more conquests
They intelligently realized the technological, logistic, financial, and military
limits of Roman power and that it was wise to stay within them
Some exceptions
Claudius’ conquest of Britain and Trajan’s conquest of Dacia
But they basically still realized that to conquer more territory would have been
a losing population in terms of money and manpower