Barbarization -
The term is also used in art and philosophy to describe the "unmaking" of rational forms.
: Critics at the time, like the historian Vegetius, argued this led to a decline in traditional Roman training and values , such as loyalty and strict drill. barbarization
: In early 20th-century art, movements like Expressionism were sometimes criticized as a "barbarization" of classical plastic forms —a rejection of Greek rationalism (squares, circles) in favor of raw emotion. The term is also used in art and
: It wasn't all negative; barbarian recruits brought technological and tactical innovations, including new armor designs and horse-archery techniques adopted from steppe cultures. 2. The Cultural Myth vs. Reality : It wasn't all negative; barbarian recruits brought
The most common focus is the "barbarization of the army." As the Roman Empire expanded and faced internal crises, it struggled to recruit enough Italian-born citizens.
A "solid" blog post on typically tackles the historical, military, and cultural shift seen in the late Roman Empire, where "barbarian" elements (primarily Germanic) became integrated into Roman institutions. Modern historical analysis often reframes this not as a simple "collapse into savagery," but as a complex process of cultural evolution and military necessity .
: The army moved from a civic body of citizen-soldiers to a professional force increasingly reliant on foreign volunteers and foederati (allies).

