StepSideways77
StepSideways77 t1_j09oz78 wrote
Reply to comment by ReallyRiles55 in How did new emerging religions succeed despite established pre-existing religions during ancient and/or pre-historic times? by matthewlee0165
Tithes / Taxes and protection rackets... yeah, yer right. I didn't think of that. Don't forget the looting and plunder that came with subduing pagans. It you convert them. you get to take their lands.... in reality that's what happened.
StepSideways77 t1_izax23n wrote
Reply to comment by ReallyRiles55 in How did new emerging religions succeed despite established pre-existing religions during ancient and/or pre-historic times? by matthewlee0165
So true. A lot of how we look at pre Christian "pagans" comes from the romantics of the 1800-ish era. For pagan leaders Christianity's best selling point was its hierarchical structure. By adopting Christianity you also brought its leadership structure into your society. Pope/king, Cardinal/Baron, priests/sheriffs. It showed how to divide up a country, who shows fealty to who. Volodymyr I of Kyiv openly stated this was one of the main reasons he chose Christianity... he liked the way the church was run. He mapped it's structure onto civil society.
StepSideways77 t1_iv25l2l wrote
Reply to comment by War_Hymn in How did slavery work in imperial China? by War_Hymn
It was an interesting question. Rarely bought up. Romans, everybody in the area back then, enslaved entire cities, I've not heard this of the Chinese. It likely happened. My Chinese history is sketchy.
StepSideways77 t1_iuxx62k wrote
Reply to How did slavery work in imperial China? by War_Hymn
The Chinese were not saints. They enslaved when they wanted the labor, just like the rest of the planet.
StepSideways77 t1_it36yvb wrote
Reply to Was there mass migration of Roman citizens from Western Empire to Eastern Empire during degredation and after fall of Western part of empire. by [deleted]
When the east fell to the Turks in 1454 AD intellectuals/books flooded Europe and is a factor in the renaissance of the 15th century.
StepSideways77 t1_isv654p wrote
Reply to How common was a having a horse? by UM_Chapter_Champ
Mongol warriors in the 12th century were said to have ten horses each when they invaded Europe, grass fed. Europeans fed their horses grain. London in 1900 was said to have 600.000 roaming it's streets on any day. Sorry, can't recall date, but would guess pre 2000 BC, Pharos legs bones, when examined, were curved from riding donkeys... 500 years later horse driven chariots are all over the place. The horses usefulness greatly increased when use of a harness that did not constrict their windpipe was invented.
StepSideways77 t1_j0zzgva wrote
Reply to comment by ReallyRiles55 in How did new emerging religions succeed despite established pre-existing religions during ancient and/or pre-historic times? by matthewlee0165
Tithe's for the church, taxes for the state... That "Render onto Caesar..." line must have stuck out to the early royal adopters. The big guy, JC, tells all to pay taxes, mentions giving god his cut as well. A suspect line, possibly inserted... very convenient for secular rulers, and the church.