Comment on Daily reminder that the good old days of the Empire weren't THAT good...
PugJesus@piefed.social 2 days agoDon’t forget they wiped out the cultural heritage of the Gauls and Brits.
These the same Gauls whose culture and language remained vibrant and present in archeological finds until the arrival of the migrating Germanic tribes?
The same Brits whose culture, likewise, survives until the Anglo-Saxon migrations pushed them into enclaves in Wales and Cornwall?
Wiped out most of the Gauls outright, really. Estimates of Caesar’s conquest was 1 in 4 Gauls dead, 1 in 3 enslaved.
No, accepting Caesar’s numbers ("Caesar considered that a million Gauls had been killed, and a million enslaved.") with modern estimates of the Gallic population (~6 million) results in 1/3 dead or enslaved. The issue is that mixing-and-matching numbers like that is highly questionable, even if you want to take Caesar’s conveniently round estimate as literal and accurate.
Grail@multiverse.soulism.net 2 days ago
ngl, guy who brags about killing a million people and enslaving another million sounds like a piece of shit. Even if he’s lying, he still wanted to be seen as a genocidal oppressor of holocaustic scale. Any society which would approve of such supposed actions is evil.
I stand with the barbarians.
PugJesus@piefed.social 2 days ago
If saying “I won over a large number of enemies” is all that it takes to count as a piece of shit, I have really bad news about the Gauls for You.
That’s not even close to the message, especially considering the rest of the Commentarii.
… how do You think Gallic societies reacted to their leaders murdering and enslaving others?
Of course. What’s a little human sacrifice and executing the slowest member of each tribe for ‘disloyalty’ between friends?
MalikMuaddibSoong@startrek.website 1 day ago
Is this stupidity-slow or velocity-slow? Whatever it is, does this act have a name or term?
PugJesus@piefed.social 1 day ago
Velocity-slow. The stragglers from each tribe called to war were tortured or executed. I don’t think there’s a specific term for it, though I vaguely remember a few similar events in history.