Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

How did the Emperor Trajan change the Roman Empire

8 bytes added, 01:32, 22 June 2018
no edit summary
====Reign of Trajan====
[[File: Trajan Four.jpg|200px|thumb|left| Petra the capital of the Nabatean Kingdom, today]]In 98 AD Trajan became Emperor after the death of Nerva. Trajan proved to be an energetic ruler and immediately reduced the influence of the Praetorian Guard.<ref> Mommsen, Theodor A History of Rome Under the Emperors (London: Routledge, 1999), p 113</ref>. He secured support by offering donations to the legions and the population of Rome and reduced taxes. Trajan was very much a builder and he helped to finance many public buildings and ordered the building of many aqueducts and prohibited wasteful expenditure on festivals. He also initiated a series of social welfare reforms. Trajan also overhauled the administration of the Empire and ended abuses by Senators. His domestic policy achievements are impressive, but his main focus was on military glory. He abandoned the policy of Augustus, of not seeking to expand the Empire.<ref>Suetonius, Life of Augustus, xxv</ref>. Only Britain had been added to the Empire since the death of the first Emperor. Trajan was determined to expand Rome’s borders and for the first time in a century he pursued an active policy of conquest.  In modern Romania, a powerful confederation of Thracian tribes, the Dacians had proven a formidable foe and had defeated Roman governors in the past. Trajan after careful preparations invaded Dacia and in 101-102 reduced the Dacian kingdom to the status of a vassal. However, in 105 the Dacians revolted and Trajan invaded the area and in a series of bloody campaigns ended the revolt with the capture of the capital Sarmizegethusa (106 AD). Dacian resistance was ended with the suicide of their king and chief priest, Decalbus. Trajan organised the kingdom into a Roman Province and he encouraged settlers from all over the Empire to settle in the new territory.<ref> Schmitz, Michael The Dacian Threat, 101–106 AD. Armidale, Australia: Caeros Pty, 2005), p 134</ref>. Trajan was a restless figure and he seems to have sought to emulate the achievements of Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar.<ref> Csassius Dio, Roman History, book 68, xi</ref>.  He recruited a large army for the invasion of Parthia, the Romans greatest enemy. First, he annexed the Nabatean Kingdom with its famous capital of Petra to secure his flank. The Parthian campaign began in 105/106 AD and it took place at a time when that Empire had been weakened by a series of civil wars. Despite this the Parthians defended their territories fiercely. They even placed a puppet on the throne of Armenia in 110 AD.<ref>Bennet, p 101</ref>. Trajan launched a ferocious counter-attack and recaptured Armenia and later conquered Northern Mesopotamia (modern North Iraq) and organized it into a province. He built a road to link the province to the rest of the Empire and this allowed his legions to strike deep into the heart of the Parthian Empire. In 115 he marched his army down the Tigris River and he swiftly captured the Parthian summer capital of Ctesiphon and advanced down the Tigris to the Persian Gulf.<ref>Cassius Dio, 68, 17</ref>.  He annexed the entire area of modern Iraq and incorporated it into the Empire. An anecdote is told that when Trajan saw the Persian Gulf he wept because he was too old to conquer the rest of the known world. In 116, while in Antioch, the Emperor nearly died in an earthquake and a series of revolts broke out across the Roman territories in the east.<ref>Cassius Dio, 10, 19</ref>. A serious Jewish revolt broke out in several areas of the eastern Mediterranean. Trajan was ill and old and decided to journey back to Rome, but he died in 116 AD, in Asia Minor. The Emperor had no children and adopted Hadrian an experienced soldier and governor. After Trajan’s death Hadrian became ruler of the Roman World. [[File: Trajan Four.jpg|200px|thumb|left| Petra the capital of the Nabatean Kingdom, today]]
====Dacia====
The conquest of Dacia, which was a powerful military force in the Balkans and a real rival of Rome in the Balkans was a significant achievement. The Dacians had been a problem for the Romans since the time of Julius Caesar. However, no Roman Emperor had been effectively able to contain them. The conquest of Trajan from a military point of view was remarkable as the kingdom consisted of fortified settlements in a mountainous region<ref>Cassius Dio, 10, 23</ref>. It has often been argued that Domitian helped to weaken the Dacians before the conquest in 106 AD. The addition of the old Dacian kingdom to the Empire initially strengthened Rome. The gold mines of the area boosted the economy as did the new lands that were acquired. The annexation of the kingdom strengthened the Danube frontier and secured the Balkans for decades. However, many argue that the conquest of Dacia was ultimately a drain on the Empire. Moreover, over time as the Roman legions weakened it proved difficult to defend. In the crisis of the 3rd century, the province was abandoned to the Goths and other tribes<ref>Bennet, p 189</ref>. However, the territory had remained part of the Empire for 150 years and at least in the first century of Roman rule it brought the empire new revenues and was a bulwark against barbarian incursions.

Navigation menu