SLD
Contributor
Kind of like the United States? i.e. a federal system with local elections for candidates to represent them in the capital. Governors are elected by local people, and there are local legislatures for local problems. A professional army with allegiance to a Constitution instead of a man?
I wonder if Caesar could have instituted such a system. Even if he had appointed himself king or dictator for life. Maybe not with a King.
It seems to me that the fall of the Roman empire can be traced to him and the troubles surrounding his rule and downfall. The precedence was set. Take power by force. Kill the leader and establish yourself in power. The two hundred years following Augustus's reign were relatively peaceful, but they were punctuated by sharp rebellions over the succession of emperors - except for a period of the five good emperors who managed to see that power was passed peacefully. But that system was inevitably flawed as for the first four emperors fortunately did not have sons to take over. The fifth did (or at least plausibly did as Commodus may have been illegitimate). The result was Commodus who was a disaster and initiated the series of rebellions and counter rebellions that sucked the life out of the empire.
Had they a different system, could they have controlled all the indigenous populations? or would there be too many centrifugal movements tearing it apart and making the whole of it ungovernable? Palestine clearly wanted independence; but would they have been content with local self government under a federal system? They seem to be the worst of the bunch. The Greeks, Gauls, Spanish and the Africans seemed to have accepted Roman rule in ways that Palestine would not.
Food for thought.
SLD
I wonder if Caesar could have instituted such a system. Even if he had appointed himself king or dictator for life. Maybe not with a King.
It seems to me that the fall of the Roman empire can be traced to him and the troubles surrounding his rule and downfall. The precedence was set. Take power by force. Kill the leader and establish yourself in power. The two hundred years following Augustus's reign were relatively peaceful, but they were punctuated by sharp rebellions over the succession of emperors - except for a period of the five good emperors who managed to see that power was passed peacefully. But that system was inevitably flawed as for the first four emperors fortunately did not have sons to take over. The fifth did (or at least plausibly did as Commodus may have been illegitimate). The result was Commodus who was a disaster and initiated the series of rebellions and counter rebellions that sucked the life out of the empire.
Had they a different system, could they have controlled all the indigenous populations? or would there be too many centrifugal movements tearing it apart and making the whole of it ungovernable? Palestine clearly wanted independence; but would they have been content with local self government under a federal system? They seem to be the worst of the bunch. The Greeks, Gauls, Spanish and the Africans seemed to have accepted Roman rule in ways that Palestine would not.
Food for thought.
SLD