{"id":10377,"date":"2023-12-06T05:55:18","date_gmt":"2023-12-06T04:55:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/?p=10377"},"modified":"2023-12-06T05:55:18","modified_gmt":"2023-12-06T04:55:18","slug":"who-were-the-barbarians-during-the-time-of-ancient-rome","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/who-were-the-barbarians-during-the-time-of-ancient-rome\/","title":{"rendered":"Who Were The Barbarians During The Time Of Ancient Rome"},"content":{"rendered":"
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At the height of the Ancient Roman Empire, the idea of the ‘barbarian’ was used to describe a group of non-Romans or those who posed a military threat to the Roman state. The term ‘barbarian’ (which derives from the Greek word for stammering or for uttering unintelligible sounds) served both to reinforce the politics of conquest and to defend Roman notions of civilization. It has been long believed that Rome saw the external world as being divided into two spheres – the civilised and the barbarian – the latter being more of a political construction than an ethnographic fact.<\/p>\n

The typical ‘barbarian’ of Roman discourse was an enemy of Rome living beyond the boundaries of the Empire, typically viewed as less civilised, disorganised and violent. In the Roman imagination a ‘barbarian’ population was usually seen as a unified entity, regardless of whether they were Celts, Iberians, Thracians or even Germanic tribes. Despite this oversimplification by the Romans and their tendency to stereotype ‘barbarians’, however, the whole range of groups mentioned within this term actually constituted a much more diverse set of peoples with a variety of cultural beliefs, narratives and customs of their own.<\/p>\n

During the time of Ancient Rome, the barbarians primarily posed a military threat to the Roman state by way of raiding and pillaging. For example, the Germanic tribes continually raided the Roman Empire from the north, while the Celts from the east often allied with Rome, particularly during the Punic Wars. These groups also posed a theological challenge to the Roman state: for example, the ongoing conflict between Christianity and Judaism was exacerbated by their practice of their respective faiths.<\/p>\n

The Romans attempted to contain the ‘barbarian’ threat by constructing Hadrian’s Wall in Britain and providing military support to Gaul to prevent a Germanic crossing of the Rhine. Roman forces also fought against the ‘barbarian’ tribes in a series of conflicts, such as the Marcomannic Wars and the Gothic Wars, which saw the Empire losing land and resources each time. Despite this, the Roman Empire eventually succeeded in defending its borders against the ‘barbarians’ and solidifying its status as a major world power.<\/p>\n