Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History
We've explored military defeats and climate shocks, but what about the quiet killer of empires — their own tax systems? In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into the late Roman Empire's fiscal implosion, from Diocletian's price controls to the crushing tax burden that turned farmers into fugitives. They examine how the Roman tax system, designed to fund an ever-growing army and bureaucracy, became so extractive that it hollowed out the very economy it depended on. Key figures include Emperor Diocletian, who attempted to freeze prices and occupations, and Emperor Constantine, who introduced the gold-based solidus. The conversation covers the curiales (the municipal aristocrats trapped in tax collection), the capitatio-iugatio system of land and poll taxes, the coloni (tenant farmers bound to the land), and the fateful decision to pay barbarian foederati with land instead of cash — a policy that sowed the seeds of the empire's administrative collapse. Specific documents like the Edict on Maximum Prices and the anonymous treatise de Rebus Bellicis are discussed. This episode reveals how an empire's fiscal architecture can become its own slow poison — a story with eerie echoes in modern debates about state capacity and taxation. #RomanEmpire #FiscalCollapse #Diocletian #EdictOnMaximumPrices #TaxHistory #Solidus #Curiales #CapitatioIugatio #Constantine #Foederati #DeclineAndFall #LateAntiquity #EconomicHistory #RomanTaxation #Collonus #DeRebusBellicis #EmpireFall #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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