To: BloodScarletMinnesota
Thanks for the kind remarks! Augustus’ disbanding of half of the regular army, and adding the equal number (28) of auxiliary legions allowed the Romans to use foreign military specialties in exactly the places they’d do the most good. It also helped to move the armed men of a subject people to an area where they were regarded as the enemy (like the Sarmatian cavalry, which was moved to Britain).
6 posted on
06/14/2016 1:18:24 AM PDT by
SunkenCiv
(I'll tell you what's wrong with society -- no one drinks from the skulls of their enemies anymore.)
To: SunkenCiv
But the Scottish tribes fought back hard for more than 20 years, and in A.D. 158, the Romans gave up their plans to conquer the north and pulled their legions back to Hadrian's Wall.
"Scotland is rather like Afghanistan in many respects," Reid said. "The terrain is pretty inhospitable, certainly the farther north you go, and the isolation and long supply lines would make it difficult for servicing an army that far north." Aye. The ancestors were an angry group.
16 posted on
06/14/2016 3:53:06 AM PDT by
Tainan
(Cogito, ergo conservatus sum -- "The Taliban is inside the building")
To: SunkenCiv
Thanks for the kind remarks! Augustus disbanding of half of the regular army, and adding the equal number (28) of auxiliary legions allowed the Romans to use foreign military specialties in exactly the places theyd do the most good. It also helped to move the armed men of a subject people to an area where they were regarded as the enemy (like the Sarmatian cavalry, which was moved to Britain).You're more than welcome, you're a great teacher, even if you don't hold those credentials.
The bog butter thread was great, just fascinating stuff.
Thank you.
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