🚩 Help support my channel by installing Raid for Free ✅ IOS/ANDROID/PC: clcr.me/Nov_HistoryMarche and get a special starter pack 💥 Available only for the next 30 days 🚩 Forum Gallorum is Part 1 of the series about the Rise of Caesar Augustus, the first Roman Emperor. This is a collaboration with my friend Hoc Est Bellum. I'm very happy that we're working together on a new series! Hope you enjoy this one. 🚩 Rise of Augustus Playlist: th-cam.com/play/PLWwyDn76LiH3r-Q173dLxL_4yaSHZjsyL.html
Very nice channel. I cannot disregard your advice because your every suggestion is stunning. Not only the suggestions but also videos are extremely worthy for Praise. I think you are underrated but don't unpleased with this you must gain your deserveble subscriber. But brother I am waiting for promised video on skanderbeg when it will come?
Yall got the best history channel man. I cant get enough of this stuff. Ancient Rome is my favorite time period but this channels opened me up to all kinds of new time periods. If i become a millionaire im just gonna constantly throw money at this channel.
The fact they were so experienced they not only spotted Antony's ambush but just outright told the 5 legions of recruits to stay out of the battle so they didn't get in the way is the most badass thing I've ever heard.
They should have put a few grizzled experienced but handicapped officers in charge (unable to directly fight, but very useful), and had them get the raw recruits to digging ditches and stakes around the camp, and take 10% of them as water bearers, telling them to "fill in if you see a casualty and want to be a real warrior". Most of them would have born water, given it out, then jumped in, and then I'd have the next 200 or so go forward and so forth. a steady dribble of raw recruits, surrounded by vets and mimicking them and desperate to show their bravery would have added quite a force factor.
@@mutteringmale both sides were too proud to hide behind ditches and stakes. They weren't fighting to survive, or to win or lose. The outcome was already known to the veterans of both sides before they engaged. All that was left was to win and lose with honor. The raw recruits would have stained the honor of the side who knew this wasn't a battle they were gonna win.
@@reheyesd8666 At Pharsalos Caesar was outnumbered two to one by Pompey's well-trained but less experienced infantry. In cavalry it was more like ten to one. But a line of reserve infantry hidden behind Caesar's thin cavalry screen on his right flank managed to turn back the main Pompeian assault by cavalry and light troops by using their pila (javelins) as spears instead of missiles. The latter routed from the field as this reserve force briefly pursued, then turned on Pompey's left flank. Meanwhile Caesar's front-line infantry had already engaged their Pompeian counterparts, who were deployed in deep formations that enhanced stability but afforded less flexibility. At this point Caesar committed his last reserve forces to the battle, soon prompting the entire enemy force to rout away. Thousands were killed, even more captured, although Pompey and most of his subordinates escaped. Caesar claimed his own losses amounted to less than 250 killed, although like Napoleon he probably understated these. [Source: Adrian Goldsworthy's Caesar: The Life of a Colossus]
Wars are usually fought by the young and inexperienced, but this was different. It must have been a thing to see Veterans of this magnitude, masters of the art of War, solemnly walking to the task at hand, except this time the enemy was his own brother.
In a case like this you have to have a hidden force factor that you can insert at a critical time; archers, a wing of light cavalry, a hidden century in the woods. Wave a giant red flag at the right time, and wham! No more M.Anthony, who I would immediately behead.
Οh just noticed the upload! I sincerely wish that Forum Gallorum's art style will resonate with Mago's audience. Thank you very very much for the shout-out my friend, I honestly appreciate it!
I like this period of Roman history. It is a pivotal period for the Romans. This period determined the fate of the entire Roman history. Thank you for this great video. I hope the part 16 of Hannibal series will be released.
You know, I’ve watched just about every single Roman documentary there is, and your voice and narrative style is like no other. You make me feel so immersed in the video, almost like I’m personally there in these time periods. You have a superb talent for telling stories, and this is my favorite channel BY FAR. I’ve watched all of your videos, some 3-4 times, and they never get old!! Thank you so much for these insights into our ancient ancestors!! ❤
I always thought that story about the poisonous mushrooms to be much hokey baloney. He lived a long time in a time of very limited medical care. I ascribe that to his being careful of what he ate and not be a glutton. Something to be said for the "Miditeranean (sp?) diet". :)
wow caesar just had such great vision, he knew who to choose as his successor and really believed in him, and it turned out so so well as Octavian became one of the best administrators ever
I think a good deal of luck was involved in that choice, the future Augustus was 19 when the events of this video take place and Caesar had spent most of the 5 previous years before his death fighting a civil war and most of the previous decade conquering Gaul, Octavius only came to his attention in 51 B.C when he delivered the eulogy of his grandmother, Caesar's sister, at her funeral. But Caesar had other grandnephews like Pedius and Pinarius and even Marcus Antonius himself was a relative of his so whatever he saw in the young Octavius must had been pretty impressive even though they probably did not have enough time to get to know themselves too much.
I hate this sensation of anxiety for the next episodes... I "hate" you for this!! That's why i will push the like buttom 1000 times. Please, release soon the next episodes to crush my anxiety, so anyone dies.
Leading to longest time of peace in the Roman empire, which also means the richest. America needs to understand that you can fight little wars, like Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan for training, profit and to keep your military sharp, but you have to WIN them, not consistently lose every war, to be a great, rich and powerful nation.
i thought it was HANNIBAL for a moment. it still good to know about the other Caesar that people forget about, Octavian. Please don't forget Hannibal 🙂
This Caesar ws much greater than Julius, who made a stupid fatal mistake in the forum, and all you need at that level is to make one mistake, and that's all you get....most of the time.
OMG I love HistoryMarche! Best channel ever! Every time you have a new video, my kids and I gather round to watch it with popcorn. We look forward to your video releases. :)
This keeps happening! I just started another Rome II campaign with Octavius and here comes HistoryMarche…I managed to deal with Lepidus first, but now I have to restart in order to complete my campaign as accurately as it was remembered in history.
You've got a fantastic voice for this kind of work. I'm enjoying videos for periods in which I have little interest (not including this!) because of your narration. Thanks!
I delayed watching it because I half ass read the title thing oh another Caesar video but then I saw the augustus and never clicked so fast so shocked there Are no. Video of the greatest emperors campaign
That the senate would illegally give the son of Caesar an army, rather than take him on themselves, feels so telling about how ill prepared they were for a post-Caesar world. It's also funny because Marcus Antonius was exactly the kind of person that the senate had turned their noses up at for centuries. An incredibly talented commander and leader of soldiers who in any other century would never have been able to have the career that he had. Can't wait to see the next part.
IMO Mark Anthony was brave, cunning, and capable commander, but not really at the level of Caesar, Sulla, or Scipio Africanus, nor the latter great Roman leaders/generals like Agrippa, Trajan, or Aurelian.
Never send a general to do a statesman's job (Mark Antony) Never send a statesman to do a general's job (Curio) Find you a man who can do both (Octavius)
He was not much of a general, but he had a friend who was amongst the best, and extremely loyal. And Octavianus was smart enough to let him do his job.
That's a considerable stretch. Antony certainly had an uncouth reputation among subsequent Augustan historians (who, at any rate, all took Octavian's side - as they were expected to) but there's nothing to suggest Antony lacked competence in statecraft. He received appointment to positions of statecraft by Caesar himself, so that can clearly be taken as Caesar's personal endorsement of Antony's capacity for statecraft. Also, as others said, Octavian did little generalship himself, and left this to Agrippa. Moreover, Octavian would never have been in the position to dominate Rome after Actium if not for the results of the prior Battle of Philippi, which was Antony's victory. So Octavian built off of Antony's achievements.
Octavian wasn't a good general. But he had the legendary Agrippa at his side. Augustus was a genius as an administrator. Agrippa was August's closest and most loyal friend until his death...and he was an exceptionally talented general and very intelligent. Octavian didn't have a stomach for anything military related. He'd usually "become sick" or had a reason to leave whenever military leadership was required, and then Agrippa would handle things. Later, Agrippa just handled everything military related by default. And of course, Agrippa was also Octavian's most trusted advisor. Accepting the will of Caesar was optional and came with making lots of dangerous enemies. The idea of marching to Rome to accept the will came from Agrippa. And much of everything else Octavian did was influenced by the trusted advice of Agrippa.
Thanks for this, best time period. Thank God Octavian and Anthony came together or those senators that killed Caeser may be the ones remembered by Caeser. Caeser would be an after thought.
Yah, yah....it also helps that some of the world's best marble, Carrera, is close by, in copious quantity, and with slave and prisoner labor pennies on the dollar, voila! A city of marble. If Augustus had started in Maine under the same conditions, Boston would be a city of granite.
It's definitely an one of a kind period in history. These veterans could have marched all the way to India. Instead they faced each other in a methodical duel to the death.
It amazes me to the point of incomprehensive thought, of how battles were fought in these times. To be able to smell the bad breath or know the color of your enemies eyes (and there would've been many) if you were lucky enough to survive! You would've had to be a lunatic after being a veteran of one battle let alone many!🤪
0:40 did you just call the period following Caesar's assassination a "yeasty mixture" because if you did that's the equivalent of sneaking up behind somebody and whispering the word "moist" in their ear
I wonder if donating a large sum of money to the public was Caesar's way of ensuring a smooth transition of power for Octavian since as heir he would have to carry out his will and in turn make the people love him as a result. Maybe thats why Octavian did so in the end
Just love your videos sir .... but if you are talking of history ... I think India was one of the major powers historically ....would love to see some videos about large scale Indian conflicts too if possible
🚩 Help support my channel by installing Raid for Free ✅ IOS/ANDROID/PC: clcr.me/Nov_HistoryMarche and get a special starter pack 💥 Available only for the next 30 days
🚩 Forum Gallorum is Part 1 of the series about the Rise of Caesar Augustus, the first Roman Emperor. This is a collaboration with my friend Hoc Est Bellum. I'm very happy that we're working together on a new series! Hope you enjoy this one.
🚩 Rise of Augustus Playlist: th-cam.com/play/PLWwyDn76LiH3r-Q173dLxL_4yaSHZjsyL.html
Very nice channel. I cannot disregard your advice because your every suggestion is stunning. Not only the suggestions but also videos are extremely worthy for Praise. I think you are underrated but don't unpleased with this you must gain your deserveble subscriber. But brother I am waiting for promised video on skanderbeg when it will come?
Great video. PLEASE set up a channel on Od - y - See, I've had a gut full of YT censorship.
dont spam me with links to your videos
Yall got the best history channel man. I cant get enough of this stuff. Ancient Rome is my favorite time period but this channels opened me up to all kinds of new time periods. If i become a millionaire im just gonna constantly throw money at this channel.
The fact they were so experienced they not only spotted Antony's ambush but just outright told the 5 legions of recruits to stay out of the battle so they didn't get in the way is the most badass thing I've ever heard.
They should have put a few grizzled experienced but handicapped officers in charge (unable to directly fight, but very useful), and had them get the raw recruits to digging ditches and stakes around the camp, and take 10% of them as water bearers, telling them to "fill in if you see a casualty and want to be a real warrior". Most of them would have born water, given it out, then jumped in, and then I'd have the next 200 or so go forward and so forth. a steady dribble of raw recruits, surrounded by vets and mimicking them and desperate to show their bravery would have added quite a force factor.
@@mutteringmale both sides were too proud to hide behind ditches and stakes.
They weren't fighting to survive, or to win or lose. The outcome was already known to the veterans of both sides before they engaged.
All that was left was to win and lose with honor.
The raw recruits would have stained the honor of the side who knew this wasn't a battle they were gonna win.
Indeed, it's the stuff of movies that we've never seen in any flick about the time. This would be an outstanding battle to cover.
When the episode says “part 1” you already know the series is about to be a thriller 🔥💯
Christ is there anything Mark Anthony DIDN'T fuckup?
Better story than most tv shows
@@jonbaxter2254 Couldn’t have said it better
It's even more of a thriller when i clap yo cheeks !
I can't wait until the next episode and I haven't watched it yet
Two veteran legions with identical equipment, training and tactics. Must've just been a straight up slugging match until one side became exhausted.
This is where veterans became key. They had just enough of an edge to win a battle.
@@reheyesd8666 At Pharsalos Caesar was outnumbered two to one by Pompey's well-trained but less experienced infantry. In cavalry it was more like ten to one. But a line of reserve infantry hidden behind Caesar's thin cavalry screen on his right flank managed to turn back the main Pompeian assault by cavalry and light troops by using their pila (javelins) as spears instead of missiles. The latter routed from the field as this reserve force briefly pursued, then turned on Pompey's left flank. Meanwhile Caesar's front-line infantry had already engaged their Pompeian counterparts, who were deployed in deep formations that enhanced stability but afforded less flexibility. At this point Caesar committed his last reserve forces to the battle, soon prompting the entire enemy force to rout away. Thousands were killed, even more captured, although Pompey and most of his subordinates escaped. Caesar claimed his own losses amounted to less than 250 killed, although like Napoleon he probably understated these. [Source: Adrian Goldsworthy's Caesar: The Life of a Colossus]
Wars are usually fought by the young and inexperienced, but this was different. It must have been a thing to see Veterans of this magnitude, masters of the art of War, solemnly walking to the task at hand, except this time the enemy was his own brother.
In a case like this you have to have a hidden force factor that you can insert at a critical time; archers, a wing of light cavalry,
a hidden century in the woods. Wave a giant red flag at the right time, and wham! No more M.Anthony, who I would immediately behead.
Super excited for this series! What an incredible period of history. Will we also see Mutina, Philippi and Actium?
Yes sir.
@@HistoryMarche best news of the day 😊
@@HistoryMarche Great!👍😊
*SPOILER ALERT*
Οh just noticed the upload!
I sincerely wish that Forum Gallorum's art style will resonate with Mago's audience.
Thank you very very much for the shout-out my friend, I honestly appreciate it!
It's all you my friend. All you!
I like this period of Roman history.
It is a pivotal period for the Romans. This period determined the fate of the entire Roman history. Thank you for this great video. I hope the part 16 of Hannibal series will be released.
Hannibal 16 in 3-4 days
It's the sequel to Caesar, not as good but still enjoyable
@@HistoryMarche Oh my stars, yes :)
Hannibal wasn’t black
@@HistoryMarche *gulp*
No one does battles better than history march, the level of detail and tension is just unmatched
You know, I’ve watched just about every single Roman documentary there is, and your voice and narrative style is like no other. You make me feel so immersed in the video, almost like I’m personally there in these time periods. You have a superb talent for telling stories, and this is my favorite channel BY FAR. I’ve watched all of your videos, some 3-4 times, and they never get old!! Thank you so much for these insights into our ancient ancestors!! ❤
I will cry at the last part if Augustus´ quote : "Have I played the part well? Please applaud as I exit." will be mentioned.
I always thought that story about the poisonous mushrooms to be much hokey baloney. He lived a long time in a time of very limited medical care. I ascribe that to his being careful of what he ate and not be a glutton. Something to be said for the "Miditeranean (sp?) diet". :)
wow caesar just had such great vision, he knew who to choose as his successor and really believed in him, and it turned out so so well as Octavian became one of the best administrators ever
I think a good deal of luck was involved in that choice, the future Augustus was 19 when the events of this video take place and Caesar had spent most of the 5 previous years before his death fighting a civil war and most of the previous decade conquering Gaul, Octavius only came to his attention in 51 B.C when he delivered the eulogy of his grandmother, Caesar's sister, at her funeral. But Caesar had other grandnephews like Pedius and Pinarius and even Marcus Antonius himself was a relative of his so whatever he saw in the young Octavius must had been pretty impressive even though they probably did not have enough time to get to know themselves too much.
@@g.sergiusfidenas6650 plus he chose him over Anthony. Wonder how it turns out if Anthony got his name and money.
Antony line later got to be emperor.
Finally some quality Octavian content! Can't wait for the series!
I hate this sensation of anxiety for the next episodes...
I "hate" you for this!!
That's why i will push the like buttom 1000 times.
Please, release soon the next episodes to crush my anxiety, so anyone dies.
Cream of Rome's legionnaires killing each other
I'm eager to see the next video! Perfectly done!
That is why roman never expanded to parthians
You left us on a cliff hanger. What a beginning to the great wars of Augustus and Mark Antony
Glad to see u working together again! an amazing work as always
Thanks!
Thank you so much for the support!
Yes. I am very intrigued about Octavian's rise. This series is gonna be awesome!!!
Leading to longest time of peace in the Roman empire, which also means the richest. America needs to understand that you can fight little wars, like Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan for training, profit and to keep your military sharp, but you have to WIN them, not consistently lose every war, to be a great, rich and powerful nation.
Hoc Est Bellum deserves way more subs!! The content is top notch! Thanks for the collaboration guys, I always appreciate your work
Fantastic video!! I can’t express how much I love to see when you guys upload a new video! Great job.
Thanks so much!
i thought it was HANNIBAL for a moment. it still good to know about the other Caesar that people forget about, Octavian. Please don't forget Hannibal 🙂
Hannibal 16 coming in 3-4 days
This Caesar ws much greater than Julius, who made a stupid fatal mistake in the forum, and all you need at that level is to make one mistake, and that's all you get....most of the time.
Magnificent work as always! I cant live without this channel i swear.
OMG I love HistoryMarche! Best channel ever! Every time you have a new video, my kids and I gather round to watch it with popcorn. We look forward to your video releases. :)
Super excited!!
ceasers civil war vs pompey is one of the coolest videos of all time..
Splendid as always. I am so pumped for this series! My favourite period of history covered by the best there is on TH-cam!
This is just what I needed to help digest the heavy meal from yesterday 😁👍
From yesterday? Holy hell that'll be some "digestion". It'll be a bloodbath in the toilet far greater than at Forum Gallorum :)
@@HistoryMarche 😂
Awesome ! A new series !
This keeps happening! I just started another Rome II campaign with Octavius and here comes HistoryMarche…I managed to deal with Lepidus first, but now I have to restart in order to complete my campaign as accurately as it was remembered in history.
Makes me sad this channel is not more popular.
I would like to give thanks to History Marche and Hoc Est Bellum. Happy holidays!
Happy holidays!
Fabulous work with this Roman Era period
This young man has the ambition that was brighter then the sun.
brighter
@@nabeelahmed6317 thanks
I reckon this Octavian guy will go far!
Yeah, the kid's got potential
My most favorite history chanel by far
man this guys voice is just wonderful
Oh baby looks like Christmas came early with this and upcoming parts
Narrator's voice is epic
Excellent as always!
I love this video, and i love Octavius.💖
I can't wait for the rest, like the battles of Philippi and Actium. Very epic.⚔️
SO excited for this one! But please finish the one on Hannibal! Love the channel!
Hannibal 16 coming in 3-4 days
@@HistoryMarche lovely! keep them coming!
@@HistoryMarche any new Hannibal after 17?
Omg! Thank you for a masterpiece
Happy Late-Thanksgiving, History Marche
In most of these battles, I know the outcome... but am always on the edge of my seat, cheering for the underdog!
oh my godd. i love your content. thanks a lot historymarche. your video makes my day!
Ty! Nice video.
Love this. Great idea for a series
Every time I watch these series, it makes me go back and play RTW. I've been playing that game for over 20 years 😅
You're a gift to humankind, HistoryMarche.
Caesar would have cried if he saw his veteran legions fight each other, confused on who to trust as Caesar's successor.
i was in work when this video came up and i don't have time for it
but I'm pretty sure its perfect just like always 💟
You've got a fantastic voice for this kind of work. I'm enjoying videos for periods in which I have little interest (not including this!) because of your narration. Thanks!
I'm loving this HM + HeB alliance
That was awesome can't wait for part 2
I am hyped for this series!
Is this the part where Roman Republic transitioned to become an Empire? Nice video as always.
Yes, that's the period.
@@HistoryMarche I am waiting for the entire series with great anticipation.
Great work Sir thank you
Best narrator in all battle documentaries on youtube
Your voice is So serious it sounds like a head of mafia is talking cool😂
Can't wait for the next part
Fantastic video, as always!⚔️🏹
fantastic video, can't wait for part 2, awesome narrator.
I delayed watching it because I half ass read the title thing oh another Caesar video but then I saw the augustus and never clicked so fast so shocked there
Are no. Video of the greatest emperors campaign
A great Antony Vs Octavian . What a close battle. Antony’s shouldn’t have risked his best legions !
These are great!
You know you are in trouble when the bushes start speaking Latin lol
Wasnt this Battle's aftermath shown in HBO's Rome? When Pullo was searching for Vorenus? Damn what a great video HistoryMarche
welp my bad...i think its the battle coming after this one
GREAT 😍😍
We are waiting for battle of Uhud 😊
Most likely in December or early January. My main researcher on Uhud is busy with his own projects.
@@HistoryMarche Thank you so much 😭😭
I enjoy your work and learn alot from it.
Thanks for working so hard for all of us.
God bless
I really love ur video i play total war soo its very helpful
That the senate would illegally give the son of Caesar an army, rather than take him on themselves, feels so telling about how ill prepared they were for a post-Caesar world. It's also funny because Marcus Antonius was exactly the kind of person that the senate had turned their noses up at for centuries. An incredibly talented commander and leader of soldiers who in any other century would never have been able to have the career that he had.
Can't wait to see the next part.
IMO Mark Anthony was brave, cunning, and capable commander, but not really at the level of Caesar, Sulla, or Scipio Africanus, nor the latter great Roman leaders/generals like Agrippa, Trajan, or Aurelian.
I enjoyed every second of it
Tnx
i miss total war arena, this channel could have been a perfect sponsor ad for that game
Love this part of Roman history. Thanks for the video.
Glad you enjoyed it
Never send a general to do a statesman's job (Mark Antony)
Never send a statesman to do a general's job (Curio)
Find you a man who can do both (Octavius)
He was not much of a general, but he had a friend who was amongst the best, and extremely loyal. And Octavianus was smart enough to let him do his job.
Octavius wasn't a good general and definitely not a good man.
Agrippa was Octavian's general/admiral and did a lot of the heavy lifting
That's a considerable stretch. Antony certainly had an uncouth reputation among subsequent Augustan historians (who, at any rate, all took Octavian's side - as they were expected to) but there's nothing to suggest Antony lacked competence in statecraft. He received appointment to positions of statecraft by Caesar himself, so that can clearly be taken as Caesar's personal endorsement of Antony's capacity for statecraft.
Also, as others said, Octavian did little generalship himself, and left this to Agrippa. Moreover, Octavian would never have been in the position to dominate Rome after Actium if not for the results of the prior Battle of Philippi, which was Antony's victory. So Octavian built off of Antony's achievements.
Octavian wasn't a good general. But he had the legendary Agrippa at his side.
Augustus was a genius as an administrator.
Agrippa was August's closest and most loyal friend until his death...and he was an exceptionally talented general and very intelligent.
Octavian didn't have a stomach for anything military related. He'd usually "become sick" or had a reason to leave whenever military leadership was required, and then Agrippa would handle things.
Later, Agrippa just handled everything military related by default.
And of course, Agrippa was also Octavian's most trusted advisor. Accepting the will of Caesar was optional and came with making lots of dangerous enemies. The idea of marching to Rome to accept the will came from Agrippa. And much of everything else Octavian did was influenced by the trusted advice of Agrippa.
ALL HAILL!!!!
Its incredible that Rome didn't fall into a Warring States period. I think Caesar and Augustus narrowly avoided this fate for the protoempire.
Your voice is Amazing.❤️👍Keep it up.
Great!
Well done!
Thanks for this, best time period. Thank God Octavian and Anthony came together or those senators that killed Caeser may be the ones remembered by Caeser. Caeser would be an after thought.
عاش متابعك من ال🇮🇶🇮🇶🌹
Wow
Can't wait for part 2
You know what good on you for doing not Julius for once on TH-cam
This is gonna be epic!!
Can't wait to see my man Agrippa.
"I found Rome a city of bricks and left it a city of marble"
Your a firefly out of a supernova!
Yah, yah....it also helps that some of the world's best marble, Carrera, is close by, in copious quantity, and with slave and prisoner labor pennies on the dollar, voila! A city of marble. If Augustus had started in Maine under the same conditions, Boston would be a city of granite.
By Jupiter, I'm already subscribed!
Dropped everything!! Can already tell this series is going to be great!!
It's definitely an one of a kind period in history. These veterans could have marched all the way to India. Instead they faced each other in a methodical duel to the death.
It amazes me to the point of incomprehensive thought, of how battles were fought in these times. To be able to smell the bad breath or know the color of your enemies eyes (and there would've been many) if you were lucky enough to survive! You would've had to be a lunatic after being a veteran of one battle let alone many!🤪
0:40 did you just call the period following Caesar's assassination a "yeasty mixture" because if you did that's the equivalent of sneaking up behind somebody and whispering the word "moist" in their ear
More roman History. This is great news
I wonder if donating a large sum of money to the public was Caesar's way of ensuring a smooth transition of power for Octavian since as heir he would have to carry out his will and in turn make the people love him as a result. Maybe thats why Octavian did so in the end
Was just reading about this brutal battle a few days ago and wondering why it hasn’t really been covered on TH-cam
We'll surely meet in the next one. Part II. 👍👍
Great new series! when will appear the next episode?
Can you do something about the battle of skanderberg and league of lezhe ?
Just love your videos sir .... but if you are talking of history ... I think India was one of the major powers historically ....would love to see some videos about large scale Indian conflicts too if possible
Cicero: Octavian is the lesser evil.
Tony Stark : NOT A GREAT PLAN !