
History Unplugged Podcast Why Did Rome Fall? Wrong Question. How Did it Last 2,000 Years Despite Changing its Religion, Language, and Government?
Nov 18, 2025
Edward J. Watts, a historian and author of "The Romans: A 2000-Year History," delves into Rome's remarkable 2,000-year continuity despite monumental changes. He discusses the unique Roman identity that united diverse peoples and the importance of citizenship and inclusion as strengths. Watts highlights how the empire adapted through military innovations, embraced Christianity without collapse, and effectively balanced tradition with innovation. He argues that enduring institutions, rather than individuals, were key to Rome’s resilience through the ages.
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Identity Over Culture
- Roman identity persisted for roughly 2,000 years despite huge changes in language, religion, and institutions.
- Edward Watts argues the through line is shared civic identity and institutional continuity rather than cultural sameness.
Roman-ness As Civic Belonging
- Being Roman meant belonging to a civic community with obligations and shared institutions across eras.
- Watts treats self-identification as historically meaningful and central to the long Roman through line.
Citizenship As Inclusion
- Rome succeeded by making citizenship a stake in a political corporation that rewarded talent and incorporation.
- This open-but-representative model let Rome absorb elites and skills from conquered peoples for centuries.




