Comment on It was a lot easier to get a job back in the day

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PugJesus@piefed.social ⁨1⁩ ⁨week⁩ ago

Largely accurate, just a couple of nitpicks!

  1. The change to state-issued equipment is suggested to have occurred as early as the Second Punic War, with velites, hastati, principes, and triarii being sorted by experience rather than wealth, as in Ye Olde Days.

  2. The change to volunteer, professional legions occurred about ~100 years before Augustus. Gaius Marius is often credited with the change, but it’s generally accepted nowadays that the change happened organically throughout the whole 2nd century BCE, and Marius probably only formalized it, if he was involved at all in changing formal regulations. Augustus just standardized the term length (previously, terms of 5-10 years were common; Augustus set it to ~20 years, adjusting it upwards a few times) and instituted the retirement bonus.

  3. The equipment was issued by the state, but centralized state manufacturing would not occur until the Late Empire (and would prove to be disastrous). The equipment was bought from private contractors (and retiring soldiers who didn’t want to keep their gear, which was most of them). Some specialized pieces would have been created by the specialist blacksmiths (who traveled with the legion and fought in combat as well) in each legion, but much of it was externally acquired. There’s a whole array of fascinating tidbits we’ve gleaned about the arms trade and military-market integration in recent decades of research on the Roman Empire!

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