The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage

We model the Western Roman Empire from 500 BCE to 500 CE, aiming to understand the interdependent dynamics of army size, conquered territory and the production and debasement of coins within the empire. The relationships are represented through feedback relationships and modelled mathematically via...

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Main Authors: Sabin Roman, Erika Palmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2019-12-01
Series:Cliodynamics
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2cz4q2jq
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spelling doaj-82ef5e05f81d4b07ad757c5a26c18bc82020-11-25T00:45:23ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaCliodynamics2373-75302373-75302019-12-0110212310.21237/C7clio10243683The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and CoinageSabin Roman0Erika Palmer1Centre for the Study of Existential Risk; Romanian Institute of Science and TechnologyRuralis—Institute for Rural and Regional ResearchWe model the Western Roman Empire from 500 BCE to 500 CE, aiming to understand the interdependent dynamics of army size, conquered territory and the production and debasement of coins within the empire. The relationships are represented through feedback relationships and modelled mathematically via a dynamical system, specified as a set of ordinary differential equations. We analyze the stability of a subsystem and determine that it is neutrally stable. Based on this, we find that to prevent decline, the optimal policy was to stop debasement and reduce the army size and territory during the rule of Marcus Aurelius. Given the nature of the stability of the system and the kind of policies necessary to prevent decline, we argue that a high degree of centralized control was necessary, in line with basic tenets of structural-demographic theory.https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2cz4q2jq
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sabin Roman
Erika Palmer
spellingShingle Sabin Roman
Erika Palmer
The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage
Cliodynamics
author_facet Sabin Roman
Erika Palmer
author_sort Sabin Roman
title The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage
title_short The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage
title_full The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage
title_fullStr The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage
title_full_unstemmed The Growth and Decline of the Western Roman Empire: Quantifying the Dynamics of Army Size, Territory, and Coinage
title_sort growth and decline of the western roman empire: quantifying the dynamics of army size, territory, and coinage
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series Cliodynamics
issn 2373-7530
2373-7530
publishDate 2019-12-01
description We model the Western Roman Empire from 500 BCE to 500 CE, aiming to understand the interdependent dynamics of army size, conquered territory and the production and debasement of coins within the empire. The relationships are represented through feedback relationships and modelled mathematically via a dynamical system, specified as a set of ordinary differential equations. We analyze the stability of a subsystem and determine that it is neutrally stable. Based on this, we find that to prevent decline, the optimal policy was to stop debasement and reduce the army size and territory during the rule of Marcus Aurelius. Given the nature of the stability of the system and the kind of policies necessary to prevent decline, we argue that a high degree of centralized control was necessary, in line with basic tenets of structural-demographic theory.
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2cz4q2jq
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