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re: Non athletic points to ponder thread

Posted on 5/3/19 at 9:57 pm to
Posted by Athanatos
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2010
8143 posts
Posted on 5/3/19 at 9:57 pm to
Not a "point to ponder," I suppose, but just an interesting article I was reading today.

quote:

The end of this lucky climate regime did not immediately, or in any simple deterministic sense, spell the doom of Rome. Rather, a less favorable climate undermined its power just when the empire was imperilled by more dangerous enemies—Germans, Persians—from without. Climate instability peaked in the sixth century, during the reign of Justinian. Work by dendro-chronologists and ice-core experts points to an enormous spasm of volcanic activity in the 530s and 540s CE, unlike anything else in the past few thousand years. This violent sequence of eruptions triggered what is now called the ‘Late Antique Little Ice Age,’ when much colder temperatures endured for at least 150 years. This phase of climate deterioration had decisive effects in Rome’s unravelling. It was also intimately linked to a catastrophe of even greater moment: the outbreak of the first pandemic of bubonic plague.


LINK /
Posted by Cheese Grits
Wherever I lay my hat is my home
Member since Apr 2012
55225 posts
Posted on 5/5/19 at 4:39 pm to
Weather really does affect stuff but a bigger part of Rome was internal decline. Seems most cultures are brought down by internal power struggles based on the self over the population as a whole. You have the guy who builds the empire by trade or conquest but eventually the decline comes when the folks at the top have the wrong folks whispering in their ear at court.

Last emperor of China never left the Forbidden City and listened to advisors wanting personal gain. When the country fell he had no clue about the rest of the empire as he had never seen it or the average citizen ever.
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