What Happened to the Ancient Romans? (2024)

No one quite knows exactly what happened to the Ancient Romans… but that doesn't mean there aren't plenty of theories out there.The following four theories about how you might find out if you are related to the ancient Romans.

Theory One: Family Trees

By the end of the Empire, "Roman" meant every free born citizen, no just emperors and their offspring, and even though the empire ended, many people didn't leave the area. Many may simply have switched their allegiances to the big German with the sharp sword who now lived a lot nearer to them than the distant emperors. Although in most of Europe our little down-trodden Roman seems to have won in the end, neither France (Gaul), Spain (Hispania), nor Italy which between them make up a significant percentage of the Western Empire, speak a Germanic languages based on that of the specific barbarians who took over after Imperial Authority ended, but a more or less direct descendant of Latin. As for any ethnic Romans today, it's difficult to say. Even Italy has been repeatedly invaded since then with numerous races to throw their little bits in to the mixing pot, let alone the rest of the bits of the West.

Are you related to European royalty? Ancestry is difficult to trace for anybody past the 9th century CE: certainly with non-royal families, the records just aren't there to provide a link to imperial Rome. Royal families were interested in establishing their genealogies. Those records may exist for European royals through the Byzantine emperors: there's a suggestion that the Russian czars were related to the 11th century Palaiologos Greek Byzantine rulers, but that's not assured. There were a number of palace coups in Byzantium's long history, but upstarts tend to marry daughters of earlier ruling families or their close relatives in attempts to legitimize their thrones, so you might be able to trace the British royal's Byzantine ancestors to some members of Constantine the Great's court. Bear in mind that such genealogies were established specifically to "prove" royals deserved to be ruling.

Theory Two: Genetics

All studies of lineage today are based on genetic "similarities." Generally, the The cleanest gene pool today is in Iceland—almost undiluted since the 10th century. But, to find any reliable connection to the ancients would only put you in a pool that demonstrates X% of traits with Y% of the pool you were comparing. For example:

You could go to Macedonia and gather genetic samples from everyone whose at least had family there for, say, three generations. In that pool you will find some similarities which, because they are the most common, are therefore the oldest traits in the pool. You can get some traits, perhaps only 1% or less which you might then say were traits of the Ancient Macedonians. It you have this trait, you are reliably descended from ancient Macedonians.

To establish a linkage to a specific ancient character is impossible. We don't have their gene data to start with.

Theory Three: What is a "Roman"

Don't forget, an objective analysis would indicate that most ancient Greeks and Romans themselves were ethnically varied and subject to migrations as much as later people. While it is would be nice if modern Greeks, say, could just simply identify themselves as descendants of the people that produced the Age of Pericles, etc. Suffice it to say, however, that, after several hundred years of Turkish domination, not to mention numerous incursions by Slavic peoples and other invaders, the modern Greek gene pool is probably as diverse as that of the British (for example), though there are no doubt still traces of "ancient" Greek ancestry in the population. For a modern Greek to proclaim that his ancestors built the Parthenon is rather like a modern Englishman claiming that his ancestors built Stonehenge or Maiden Castle. Yes, he may well be partly descended from someone who was around at the time, but the great majority of his ancestors from that era were probably living in a different part of Europe (or Asia) altogether.Italy likewise has undergone numerous invasions, both temporary and permanent, since the heyday of the Roman Republic. Even if you disregard the peaceful influx of diverse people from all over the empire, and class every citizen who lived in Rome in, say, 300 A.D. as a "Roman", the 5th and 6th centuries saw a series of invasions by Germanic peoples (most notably the Lombards) that introduced a large, permanent, German component into the population of Italy, especially in the northern part. Later invasions of the southern regions by Saracens, Normans, etc. also added to the gene pool. There are undoubtedly many Italians alive today who are directly descended from people who lived in Italy during the Roman era, but most (if not all) of them will have at least some admixture from other European peoples too.

KL47

Theory Four

The ethnogenesis of Italian population is rather complicated. I think one can count 4 main Indoeuropean invasions and settlements of Italy. In prehistoric times Italy was inhabited by a (or probably more) non-Indoeuropean population. The first Indoeuropean invasion of Italy dates back to about 2000 B.C. and amongst these Indoeuropean peoples there were the ancestors of the Romans. A second wave dates back to about 1100 B.C. These first two Indoeuropean settlements in Italy happened in prehistoric times. The third wave (the first historically recorded) was that of the Celtic invaders (about 450 B.C.), who settled in the northern part of Italy ('Gallia Cisalpina'). The fourth wave was that of the Germanic tribes who invaded and settled mainly in northern and part of southern Italy after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. To VI century A.D. date back also the settlement of Slavic tribes in north-eastern Italy.These were the main Indoeuropean invasions and settlements of Italy from continental Europe. Besides these, there were also, from the Mediterranean Sea, the Greek settlements in southern Italy (Magna Grecia) and Phoenician colonies in Sicily and Sardinia. Finally we have not to forget the mysterious Etruscan people in central Italy. These are only the main peoples who contributed to determine ethnogenetically modern Italy. Note that even during the Roman Empire the 'true' Romans (that is, the descendants of the first Latin settlers of the zone around Rome) were only a small part of the Italic population. The unity of Italy during the Roman Empire was mainly political, economical and linguistic -- not racial.

The first person, as far as I know, who spoke of all modern Italians as direct descendants of the ancient Romans was the famous Italian poet Petrarca at the end of the Middle Ages.
DINOIT

Theory Five

There were two ways of making newly conquered land Roman: the first strategy was killing all inhabitants and replacing them by Romans. The Romans murdered the Kelts of Gallia Cisalpina and replaced them by Romans. The second strategy was making the inhabitants 'feel' Roman, by bringing them Roman technology/culture. This was used when larger lands were conquered (they couldn't just kill all inhabitants of Gallia, around 4-5 million, and replace them by Romans). The Romans didn't like the Kelts and Iberians (who lived in Spain) -- they were nothing more than barbarians -- and I think that contact between Romans and Kelts wasn't appreciated by other Romans. Greeks were more civilized than the western inhabitants of Europe, so contact between them and Romans would be more likely tolerated. What is certain is that when the Germans invaded Gaul they didn't find Gauls, Romans, etc. They found Gallo-Romans, who were related to many kinds of people. The Germans then intermingled with Gallo-Romans. Are there still Romans left? What are real Romans? The Romans were the descendants of intermingling between Indo-Europeans and other people. They themselves were a melting pot. Real Romans have simply never existed! (At least that's what I think.THEMANIAC77

What Happened to the Ancient Romans? (2024)

FAQs

What happened to the ancient Romans? ›

In AD 286 the Roman Empire was split into eastern and western empires, each ruled by its own emperor. The western empire suffered several Gothic invasions and, in AD 455, was sacked by Vandals. Rome continued to decline after that until AD 476 when the western Roman Empire came to an end.

What happened to ancient Rome after it fell? ›

After the fall of Rome, the political structure and culture changed greatly in Europe. The many different barbarian tribes established their own kingdoms throughout Europe. These groups tended to live in small communities that were independent from each other.

How was Roman history lost? ›

The West was severely shaken in 410, when the city of Rome was sacked by the Visigoths, a wandering nation of Germanic peoples from the northeast. The fall of Rome was completed in 476, when the German chieftain Odoacer deposed the last Roman emperor of the West, Romulus Augustulus.

What happened to the people the Romans conquered? ›

The Romans did not try to turn everyone they conquered into a Roman. For the most part, cities and regions that came under Roman control were allowed to maintain their existing cultural and political institutions.

Why did the ancient Romans fall? ›

Increasing pressure from invading barbarians outside Roman culture also contributed greatly to the collapse. Climatic changes and both endemic and epidemic disease drove many of these immediate factors.

When did ancient Rome fall? ›

What was Rome like before it fell? ›

Before the Fall of the Roman Republic, Income Inequality and Xenophobia Threatened Its Foundations. Long before Julius Caesar declared himself dictator for life in 44 B.C., essentially spelling the beginning of the end to the Roman Republic, trouble was brewing in the halls of power.

Who replaced the Roman Empire? ›

But in the late 5th century, the empire collapsed. The Roman Empire fell into factions and was replaced by the Byzantine Empire which lasted from 476 CE - 1453 CE.

Did parts of Rome survive after the fall? ›

Only the Western Empire fell. The Eastern Empire existed just as ever - and the Eastern Empire based on Constantinople was the true Roman Empire. The Western Empire based on Ravenna was nothing but a rump state.

What actually destroyed the Roman Empire? ›

1. Invasions by Barbarian tribes. The most straightforward theory for Western Rome's collapse pins the fall on a string of military losses sustained against outside forces. Rome had tangled with Germanic tribes for centuries, but by the 300s “barbarian” groups like the Goths had encroached beyond the Empire's borders.

Did the Romans change the Bible? ›

James Morcan It is historically proven many or all of the books in the Bible were edited (revised, rewritten, added to and subtracted from) at later dates. For example, the extensive Council of Nicea biblical edits in the 4th Century AD conducted by the Romans under Emperor Constantine.

What was the Romans biggest loss? ›

Rome suffered many defeats: In terms of losses,the worst was probably the one Hannibal inflicted on it at Cannae (216 BCE)-estimated Roman losses 50,000 dead. But,in terms of historical significance,the worst was the one at Adrianople (378 CE).

Are Italians descendants of Romans? ›

At same times if you mean that we are only the “descendants of the Latins” (the Italic tribes that founded Rome) the answer is still no but if you mean that we are the descendants of the Italics populations that lived in Italy with Latins and were genetically related to them yes, practically we are still the same of ...

What race were Romans? ›

As in neighbouring city-states, the early Romans were composed mainly of Latin-speaking Italic people, known as the Latins. The Latins were a people with a marked Mediterranean character, related to other neighbouring Italic peoples such as the Falisci.

Who are the descendants of the Romans today? ›

What is the current location of the descendants of the Romans?
  • Italy: Italy is often considered the modern-day home of the descendants of the ancient Romans. ...
  • Romania: Many historians believe that the modern Romanians are the last remaining descendants of the Romans in the Balkan Peninsula and Eastern Europe.
4 days ago

Who are the descendants of Romans today? ›

More precisely, modern Italians are essentially the descendants of ancient Italians. Since ancient Italians were synonym of Romans from the 1st century BC to 212AD, modern Italians are somehow the descendants of the Romans.

Where did Romans go when they died? ›

There were no fixed or enforced beliefs about life after death in ancient Rome. The general consensus was that the deceased lived on in the Underworld. Influences and adaptations from Greek culture can be found throughout Roman poetry, such as The Aeneid by Virgil.

Are modern Italians descendants of Romans? ›

So, do modern Italians come from the Romans? Well, yes, of course: but the Romans were a genetically mixed bunch and so were medieval Italians, who are closer ancestors to us than them. That's why we can say we are, today, as genetically varied and beautiful as varied and beautiful is the land we come from!

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