How did Rome conquer Classical Greece? | DOCUMENTARY  @HoH
How did Rome conquer Classical Greece? | DOCUMENTARY  @HoH
House of History | How did Rome conquer Classical Greece? | DOCUMENTARY @HoH | Uploaded July 2021 | Updated October 2024, 17 hours ago.
One of the things I never wrapped my head around was how the Roman Republic managed to conquer the mighty city-states and kingdoms of Classical Greece... All the more reason to create a video about it.

Consider supporting HoH:
►Patreon: patreon.com/HouseofHistory
►Become a channel member:
youtube.com/channel/UCjvbQ_ZRQ0EH6qVYQ9ApXCw/join
►Leave a tip: paypal.me/HouseofHistory

►Webshop: houseofhistory.co/shop
Use code "HISTORYBONUS5" for a 5% subscriber discount!

Check out House of History: the Podcast
►iTunes: podcasts.apple.com/podcast/house-of-history-the-podcast/id1549558236
►Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/71f9cyleacVjQiSCEP2VGh?si=tGsietBeSD2q589fKDWsdg

Socials:
►Check out my blog: houseofhistory.co
►My Twitter: twitter.com/Oscar_HoH

My videos tend to get arbitrarily demonetized. That is why I decided to open up a Patreon where people can support the channel. If you decide to pledge as little as 1$/month you will gain access to a monthly series exclusive to my Patrons!

Chapters:
0:00 Introduction
0:51 Classical Greece (359-201 BC)
4:22 First Macedon War (214-205 BC)
7:26 Second Macedon War (201-196 BC)
12:21 Third Macedon War (171-168 BC)
15:23 Breaking the Final Resistance (168-146 BC)

Watch my documentary series:

►History of Prussia playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLazn7eofVtjJjSlui3iOOz0P3KI7-v3o5

►End of Empire - Downfall of the Qing Dynasty playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLazn7eofVtjLnVJY6NyQX8JlVApf40DLs

►World War 2 playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLazn7eofVtjLYTXde713nRftdAPj7YW_a

►Hitler's Spies playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLazn7eofVtjJGQ4c1q7mQhTh5vM54_17o

The content of this video covers events, people or concepts via a lecture-style presentation that is educational and historical in nature. Every video is original content by House of History. The events relating to conflict in this video are portrayed in their historical context without either value judgment or an ideological message attached to it. There is no intent to shock, upset or disgust. The goal of my channel is to make interesting lecture-style videos, no more, no less.

Thank you for taking the time to check out House of History, I hope you will find the films informative, interesting and enjoyable!

Already during the 5th and 4th century BC the Greek city-states managed to attain great political power around the Meditteranean. There were a plethora of reasons for this, among them the relative overpopulation of the city-states and a large number of this population participating in warfare.

To the north of the influential city-states of Athens, Sparta and Thebes, lay the tiny Kingdom of Macedonia. In 359 BC, its new king, Philips II, began his two-decade-long reign, during which he managed to gain considerable control over mainland Greece. In 338 BC, at the Battle of Chaeronea, Philips beat an alliance of Greek city-states and gained hegemony over Southern Greece, except Sparta. Philips established the League of Corinth under the pretext of unifying a Greek power block against the eastern Achaemenid Empire. He passed away two years later, upon which his twenty-year-old son Alexander became Macedon's king.

Alexander managed to suppress several uprisings by tribes in the Balkan. City-state Thebes, attempting to exploit the presumably indecisive new ruler, was besieged, defeated and razed to the ground. When Spartan King Agis III took up arms against Macedon a few years later, he too was beaten by Macedon general Antipater, killed, and Sparta was forced to join the League.

Alexander's Macedonian army, augmented with thousands of soldiers from his Greek allies, not to mention the mercenaries, became infamous for the size and distance of its military campaigns. The size and scope of these campaigns were unprecedented, and young Alexander remained undefeated in battle. Nowadays, the name Alexander is still associated with the legendary commander.

When Alexander passed away in 323 BC, his empire tore into separate parts, governed by rulers all engulfed in their own wars. As for Greece, for decades, the city-states faced Macedonian satraps and kings fighting each other, and by the end of the century, the formal cooperation of the Corinthian bond was abolished. A period of chaos and anarchy followed.

If you have any feedback, questions or criticism feel free to leave a comment. Your opinion truly aids me in improving the content of the channel! If you have a question, feel free to leave a comment and I will either write a reply, answer your question in a Q&A video, or make an entire video about it!

Sources:

Written by House of History

Music: purple-planet.com

Machinima by: youtube.com/channel/UCORdkjFuOR8_gnUyjqpjNSg

Photos, paintings and imagery: Public Domain, Wikicommons

#HouseofHistory #History
How did Rome conquer Classical Greece? | DOCUMENTARYStenka Razins Great 1670 Cossack Revolt against the Russian EmpireThe Battle of Flodden, 1513: The Largest Battle Between Scotland and EnglandThe Battle of Chaeronea, 86 BC ⚔️ | First Mithridatic WarThe Forgotten (and Flawed) British Invasion of Iceland - Operation Fork (May, 1940)A Serial Killer during World War II and the Battle of Brisbane: Americans in Australia (WW2)Romes Disaster: The Battle of Carrhae, 53 BC ⚔ Roman-Parthian WarsThe Battle of Soor, 1745 ⚔️ | Frederick the Greats Second Silesian War (1744-1745)Nazi Germanys Accidental Early Start of World War 2 - The Jablunkov incidentColonel Bloods 1671 Theft of Englands Crown JewelsThe Battle of Varna, 1444: Europes Final Anti-Ottoman CrusadeFrederick the Greats Battle of Mollwitz, 1741 ⚔️ | First Silesian War

How did Rome conquer Classical Greece? | DOCUMENTARY @HoH

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER