CINCINNATUS

In 463 B.C.E., a devastating plague weakened Rome and the Volsci and Aequi took advantage to do some plundering. Rome won the deciding battle so the crisis was overcome. In 459, the Aequi attacked Tusculum, an ally of Rome. Rome sent an army to lift the siege. It sent another Read more…

A CENTURION’S POEM

            A centurion was an officer in the Roman army.  They were the equivalent of a modern sergeant. They were easily identified on the battlefield because of their side-to-side crests on their helmets. You got the job after being promoted from the ranks due to coolness in combat and leadership Read more…

CORIOLANUS

By this time in Roman history, the citizens were divided between the upper-class patricians and the common people called plebeians. Although called a republic, the government was closer to an aristocracy as the patricians, despite being around 10% of the citizens, held most of the power. In 493 BCE, the Read more…

CANUTE COMMANDS THE WAVES

                One of the most famous anecdotes from Medieval England is the story of Canute and the waves.  Canute was a Viking who came to England in 1013 with his father Sweyn Forkbeard, the King of Denmark.  Sweyn became King of England, but died one year later.  In 1016, Canute Read more…

THE BATTLE ON THE ICE

                Crusaders were not limited to the Crusades.  And the Knights Templar and Knights Hospitaller weren’t the only militaristic orders in the Christian church.  In the 13th Century, the Teutonic Knights were warriors for Christ in Eastern Europe.  Not that they were particularly religious.  They participated in wars along the Read more…