The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show

Jeremy Ryan Slate

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show is a bi-weekly investigation into how power really works—across history, empires, and the modern world. Each episode draws on two core lenses: Hidden forces behind history—royal murders, lost colonies, financial systems, modern elites, NGOs, propaganda, and the quiet mechanisms that shape events long before they reach the headlines. And the Roman pattern—the idea that today’s crises aren’t new. Currency collapse, political division, border chaos, military overreach—Rome faced them all first. The Roman Empire spent centuries making every mistake a civilization can make, and left behind a playbook we’re following again, page by page. Through expert conversations with historians, researchers, and serious thinkers—and deep dives into primary sources, documents, and records—this show connects ancient history to modern power with evidence, not opinion. You’ll learn to: • Recognize collapse signals before they’re obvious • Understand modern crises through ancient parallels • See how empires actually rise, decay, and fall • Spot the patterns shaping what comes next From medieval conspiracies to modern cover-ups, from Augustus to Constantine, from ancient Rome to today’s global order—this is history as investigation. No spin. No narratives. Just receipts. New episodes twice a week.

  1. Rome Didn’t Fall — It Split Into Three Empires

    3D AGO

    Rome Didn’t Fall — It Split Into Three Empires

    Most people imagine the Roman Empire collapsing in a single moment. Barbarians at the gates. Cities burning. The empire ending overnight. But that’s not what actually happened. In the year 260 AD, Rome didn’t fall. It split. After the capture of Emperor Valerian by the Persian king Shapur I, the Roman world fractured into three rival states. In the west, the general Postumus created the Gallic Empire, ruling Gaul, Britain, and Spain with stronger borders and better money than Rome itself. In the east, the wealthy trading city of Palmyra rose under Odaenathus and later Queen Zenobia, controlling the empire’s richest trade routes and eventually seizing Egypt. What remained in the center was a weakened Roman state struggling with civil war, currency collapse, and a rapidly shrinking tax base. For nearly fifteen years, the Roman Empire existed as three separate empires. This is the Roman Pattern. When a central state can no longer provide security, stable money, and legitimate authority, the edges stop listening. They build their own systems. In this episode we explore: • The capture of Emperor Valerian   • The creation of the Gallic Empire   • The rise of Zenobia and Palmyra   • Rome’s catastrophic currency debasement   • How Aurelian violently reunited the empire   • Why the Rome that survived was never the same   History doesn’t repeat. But it rhymes. Subscribe for more episodes exploring the hidden forces behind Rome’s rise and fall.

    14 min
4.9
out of 5
307 Ratings

About

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show is a bi-weekly investigation into how power really works—across history, empires, and the modern world. Each episode draws on two core lenses: Hidden forces behind history—royal murders, lost colonies, financial systems, modern elites, NGOs, propaganda, and the quiet mechanisms that shape events long before they reach the headlines. And the Roman pattern—the idea that today’s crises aren’t new. Currency collapse, political division, border chaos, military overreach—Rome faced them all first. The Roman Empire spent centuries making every mistake a civilization can make, and left behind a playbook we’re following again, page by page. Through expert conversations with historians, researchers, and serious thinkers—and deep dives into primary sources, documents, and records—this show connects ancient history to modern power with evidence, not opinion. You’ll learn to: • Recognize collapse signals before they’re obvious • Understand modern crises through ancient parallels • See how empires actually rise, decay, and fall • Spot the patterns shaping what comes next From medieval conspiracies to modern cover-ups, from Augustus to Constantine, from ancient Rome to today’s global order—this is history as investigation. No spin. No narratives. Just receipts. New episodes twice a week.

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