Disunity between whom, precisely?
Slaves and non-slaves, Romans and non-Romans (Egyptians, Jews, etc) predominantly.
Posted 11 July 2010 - 03:54 PM
Disunity between whom, precisely?
Posted 11 July 2010 - 04:50 PM
Slaves rarely succeeded in doing much against Rome. With the big exceptions of slave rebellions of Sicily and Spartacus.Slaves and non-slaves, Romans and non-Romans (Egyptians, Jews, etc) predominantly.
Posted 11 July 2010 - 08:02 PM
Edited by moobie, 11 July 2010 - 08:25 PM.
Posted 12 July 2010 - 01:39 AM
Which again is odd, as Rome apparently had a massive GDP and the strongest army in the world, but got destroyed by the remnants of a weakened enemy chased across the world by the Han Dynasty.
Posted 14 July 2010 - 07:19 AM
However upon further inspection...
Posted 14 July 2010 - 10:55 AM
This strategical problem China never faced, since it bordered directly on the steppe with no intermediate belt of sedentary, relatively thickly populated areas. Thus, the nomad conquerors, once they settled amidst the Chinese peasant population as ruling elite, had won the war but lost the peace in the same instance since the adoption of a sedentary life-style automatically meant their adoption of Chinese customs which were, for the lack of other high cultures in the Far East, the only model they could look on.
In Europe, by contrast, the Germanic and Slav people, both long themselves following a sedentary life-style, were much less obliged to follow the customs of the more advanced conquered territories and possessed more cultural pride to hold fast on their national traditions. This relative cultural and political resilience meant that the path of Europe changed permanently from empire to patchwork, and ultimately frustated all attempts at empire-building of which they there was no lack in European history.
Posted 14 July 2010 - 11:13 AM
I may have a misunderstanding with the concept that says that technology must outpace population growth to be of any benefit because it doesn't seem to fit for the past ages. I can see how it works for present day because when you have something like a very crowded city and total water supply becomes an absolute shortage in the end water just gets pumped wastefully for city life and therefore prices for goods as simple as food will increase. The concept fits here because technology would have to discover a way to produce more water than can possibly be produced naturally. But people in the past that were forced to work on beneficial projects such as canals and diverting rivers to irrigate crop fields as in ancient China must have took plenty of slave or conscripted labor and in the end the benefit was being able to produce more food output. But a technology such as building canals and diverting rivers took massive amounts of human labor and it wasn't as though an exponentially growing Chinese population couldn't have just implemented more of the same human effort involved in traditional construction of their large scale projects. So unless readily available water was scarce and had to be pumped from location to location using high powered pumps I have a hard time accepting that technological limitations was a factor prohibiting ancient populations' prosperity and growth.
Edited by Borjigin Ayurbarwada, 14 July 2010 - 11:28 AM.
Posted 14 July 2010 - 03:30 PM
3. While slavery was less frequent in Han China, coercive labour which had a very similar function was all the more. Ancient Chinese tradition has it that 7 out 10 workers died during the construction of the first Great Wall, and children from the age of 11 or 12 were pressed into construction work. Is (Chinese) coercive labour morally less repulsive than (Roman) slavery because it happens to be spelled differently?
Posted 14 July 2010 - 06:36 PM
Problem is your further analysis, rather a poupourri of largely unrelated topics, is very much open to debate.
1. Height and health historically do not correlated nearly as closely with an 'advanced civilizational state' as you suggest. In fact, population pressure on ressources meant that people in relatively densely populated empires like Rome or China were on average less tall than those who lived more scattered at their periphery on a mix of cultivation and animal husbandry. Thus, average height of Europeans actually rose in the early Middle Ages after the demographic decline when more land was available to less people.
2. Equating slavery with economic stagnation is simplistic and does not reflect actual history, since this premise cannot explain why the Greco-Roman world, and particularly its labour-saving technology (watermills, waterlifting devices, cranes etc.), expanded most at the same time slavery reached its peak (100 BC-100 AD).
3. While slavery was less frequent in Han China, coercive labour which had a very similar function was all the more. Ancient Chinese tradition has it that 7 out 10 workers died during the construction of the first Great Wall, and children from the age of 11 or 12 were pressed into construction work. Is (Chinese) coercive labour morally less repulsive than (Roman) slavery because it happens to be spelled differently?
4. As already been said, the billiard theory applies to the fall of Western Rome: both Huns (453 AD) and Avars (626 AD) were beaten decisively within 75 years upon their arrival at the Roman and Eastern Roman frontier respectively. It was not so much their military power which brought the collapse of the Roman defenses, but the bow wave of the much more numerous Germanic and Slav people which they pushed along.
Posted 14 July 2010 - 10:40 PM
While slavery was less frequent in Han China, coercive labour which had a very similar function was all the more. Ancient Chinese tradition has it that 7 out 10 workers died during the construction of the first Great Wall, and children from the age of 11 or 12 were pressed into construction work. Is (Chinese) coercive labour morally less repulsive than (Roman) slavery because it happens to be spelled differently?
Posted 15 July 2010 - 05:10 AM
Lastly, these state employees were only temporary and makes up a very small amount of the total population count...
Posted 15 July 2010 - 05:28 AM
I wouldn't call them comfortably "state employees"; they didn't wear a cravat when being pressed into construction work at the Great Wall, and workers who arrived too late at construction site were executed en masse. The Qin dynasty was finally toppled by mutineering workers send to work there, so the burden on the Chinese population must have been immense, immense enough to risk your life in your rebellion against the authorities.
Posted 15 July 2010 - 05:30 AM
I wouldn't call them comfortably "state employees"; they didn't wear a cravat when being pressed into construction work at the Great Wall, and workers who arrived too late at construction site were executed en masse. The Qin dynasty was finally toppled by mutineering workers send to work there, so the burden on the Chinese population must have been immense, immense enough to risk your life in your rebellion against the authorities.
Posted 15 July 2010 - 06:02 AM
When the builders of Great Wall mutinied, few took up arms to suppress them, except for the existing Qin soldiers. As far as the commoners back at home were concerned, the danger of Xiongnu was not so immediate and overthrowing the Qin would release them from the threat of being sent to Great Wall or executed.
Rome had a large number of slaves. But huge numbers of free citizens felt that they were benefiting from slavery in some way - continuing existence of slavery did not threaten free citizens of Italy with enslavement, but successful slave rebellion threatened their own life, freedom and property. This is why the free citizens enlisted with Crassus to suppress Spartacus rather than join the slaves in overthrowing the senatorial oligarchy.
Posted 18 July 2010 - 04:29 PM
There are multiple explanations given for the collapse of the Qin, and the traditional explanation was one painted by Confucian historians of later times who were hostile to the first dynsty, which isn't necessarily a reflection of what was actually going on during the time. One needs to remember that Cheng Sheng and Wu Guang did not rebel because they were abused physically as slave labors, but because they broke the law. The Qin empire did not have the time to consolidate the various nations within it, therefore, a rebellion naturally appealed to the people of the states vanquished by the Qin. This is further buttressed by the fact that the native people of Qin, were governed under these same laws for over a century and had no problem with it. Harsh as the written code was at the time, the matter was a legal and national issue and not one of abusive labor.
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