The dual triumphs of the Greeks at Himera in Sicily and Salamis in Greece in 480 BC checked Carthage & Persia. The rest of the century saw the Greeks of Syracuse breaking Etruscan sea power while the Etruscans lost land in tandem to their neighbors.
There was recently an ancient DNA paper which tested the remains of soldiers slain at the Battle of Himera:
Epirus & Sparta both intervened on behalf of Greeks of S Italy in 340s & 330s BC against their Samnite, Sabellian, & Messapian enemies. Tarentum’s Greeks, worried by Epirote successes, assassinated the Epirote ruler in 332 BC. With Greek unity in Italy broken, Rome’s power grew.
Pyrrhus, like Alexander the Molossian before him, found it difficult to unite Greeks of Italy behind him. His direct administration of land was unpopular, but perhaps national feeling played a role? Romans advanced where Italics lived, Greeks did not.
Sicels were possibly Italic speakers who overran the Mycenaean Greeks of Sicily during the Bronze Age Collapse, while Sicanians (who have been DNA tested) were at least Indo-European influenced and possibly from Iberia (though maybe speaking a non-IE language).
Mommsen, writing 1854-1856, anticipated DNA findings showing that Carthaginians had little-to-no Phoenician ancestry. “The Carthaginians were changed from Tyrians to Libyans”. He describes change in Carthage’s national spirit 500-450 BC from passive trade to aggressive expansion.
Greeks of Macedon, Syracuse, and S Italy supported Carthage in Second Punic War, but were incompetent fighters. Carthage & its Numidian & Celtic allies did most of the effective fighting against Rome.
Population of Italy was higher in 253 BC than 153 BC. Mommsen believes the combination of Hannibal’s devastating invasion 218-204, expansion of slavery, conversion of farmland to pasture or vineyards, & land speculation drove the population decline.
Cretan & Cilician corsairs raided Greek islands and coastal Syria for slaves, exporting them to Roman Republic in 2nd century BC. Sicily had the most developed plantations at the time, and saw years long revolts. Mommsen chalks the slavery system up to Carthaginian influence.
Breakdown of populist-democrat coalition in 100 BC led to senate, aristocrats, & democrat-freed prisoners fighting & crushing populist streetfighters. Mommsen earlier mentioned populists mobs included many Anatolians & non-Roman Italics, latter of whom were on path to equality.
Associations around democrat politician Drusus rose in rebellion in 91 BC, demanding citizenship. Aristocrats held with Rome, middle class with rebels. Rebels wanted to build new state, Italica, on Roman model, but with citizenship for all members of participating communities.
Interesting last two lines - larger states imagined even by revolutionaries were to be alliances of city-states led by a head city-state, with individuals seen as part of a specific community rather than a broader nation.
Sulla made all loyal members of Italian communities Roman citizens. The convoluted alliance & colony system that had evolved over centuries was replaced by a new system of municipalities modeled off of Rome, but with institutions subject to Roman supremacy.
Decrease in Italian population from Social & Mithridatic Wars was made up for by immigration of Greek-speakers from Asia. Mommsen saw 133-78 BC as decadent due to promiscuity, rising marriage age, high housing prices, love of pets, indulgence in entertainment, & foodies.
(He mentions on a previous page how the Romans destroyed Greek industry around Corinth, so not a comparable situation to what we are in. Using slaves rather than waterwheels perhaps doomed Rome to miss an industrial revolution)
Mommsen takes the view that Caesar was bad, but inevitable as the unrepresentative Senate and slavery had rotted the late Republic.
Caesar’s finance policy. The Romans passed sumptuary laws for moral & economic reasons several times, as did a number of states throughout history. Today, I think only Tajiks and Uzbeks have such laws, though specifically aimed at families overspending on weddings.
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Greenland was not colonized by the Amerindians or their predecessors. It was only discovered in the mid-to-late 3rd millennium BC nemets.substack.com/p/greenland
The Belkachi people migrated across the Bering Strait in the early 3rd millennium BC. They expanded across Alaska and the American Arctic. Their descendants reached Greenland towards the end of the millennium, forming the Independence I and Saqqaq cultures.
The climate shift which led to the Bronze Age Collapse in Eurasia also afflicted the Arctic, reducing the Saqqaq to a refuge in southwestern Greenland by beginning of the first millennium BC. They were overrun by their Dorset relatives from continent in mid-1st millennium BC.
Nicole Parker from FBI's Miami office chalks many of the bureau's problems to its post-9/11 shift under Mueller away from crime fighting & towards intelligence collection. New class of program managers (TDYs) in DC gained power gained authority over regional office bosses (SACs)
the kinds of women who joined the FBI in 2010, immediately before enactment of Obama's 2011-2 DEI policies: Coast Guardette, two financiers, Air Force lawyer, accountant, hotel directoress, two engineers. Two were single mothers.
Authoress claims a minority of FBI agents do most work, a phenomenon reinforced by lack of performance pay. 60 statistics were kept for agents, & their nature drove agents to focus on simple crimes & those which afflicted celebrities. Complex financial cases were neglected.
apparently it was more dangerous to be a polemicist in 1870s Kansas than in the South
persecution of innocent poasters by hack judges & sinister feds is sadly an old American tradition
a hundred years before the founding of the Cannonball Run, Americans had the New Orleans to Saint Louis steamboat race. The race took a similar amount of time.
Thread with excerpts from "The Other Quiet Revolution: National Identities in English Canada, 1945-71" by Jose Igartua
Author argues national identity among English-speaking Canadians died entirely in mid-20th century, and was replaced by a broader civic identity. Nonetheless there is still an English-Canadian nation that can be seen sociologically through shared culture.
90% of Canadians read at least one newspaper in 1969, compared to only 68% watching television news. Spread of opinion polling ended up restricting range of public discussion.
Thread with excerpts from "Lies of the Tutsi in Eastern Congo/Zaire. A Case Study: South Kivu (Pre-Colonial to 2018)" by John Kapapi
At the time of the 1884 Berlin Conference, what is now the eastern Congo was ruled by eight kingdoms. Rwanda had yet to be united. Per the author, Rwandan (Tutsi & Hutu) migration west of Lake Kivu was minimal at the time.
Belgians created two chiefdoms in North Kivu. One was given to Tutsi from Hunde in 1922, & other was bought from the Hunde in 1939. Conflict with Hunde led to Tutsi preferring to flee to South Kivu during the dynastic struggles following overthrow of King Rwabugiri in 1895.