Como um exército romano se alimentava? | Logística romana

📖 If you want to go beyond what videos can show: I've created a PDF guide with thirteen of the greatest medieval battles explained in depth — strategies, weapons, commanders, and complete historical context, based on verifiable sources. 👉https://canalguerrasmedievais.lovable... ⚠️ Historical and educational content | Based on primary sources and academic research This video is based on Roman primary sources and modern academic historiography. Caesar describes logistical operations in detail in De Bello Gallico, including the Alesia crisis — used as a primary source. The Vindolanda tablets document a varied diet including beer, garum, meat, cheese, and olive oil, analyzed by Alan Bowman. The estimate of daily grain ration is presented as an academic range — ancient sources do not provide a single definitive number. The annona militaris as a system of in-kind taxation is documented by Egyptian military papyri analyzed by Roger Bagnall. The horrea with raised floors for conservation are confirmed by archaeology and analyzed by Geoffrey Rickman. Trajan's Column as a representation of campaign logistics is analyzed by Lepper and Frere. The distinction between formal requisition and extortion in the annona is presented as tenuous in practice, with reference to abuses documented in the sources. All content is for educational purposes only. 📚 Main Sources: Caesar. De Bello Gallico. Primary source | Bowman, Alan. Life and Letters on the Roman Frontier. British Museum Press, 1994 | Roth, Jonathan. The Logistics of the Roman Army at War. Columbia University Press, 1999 | Rickman, Geoffrey. Roman Granaries and Store Buildings. Cambridge, 1971 | Dalby, Andrew. Food in the Ancient World. Routledge, 2003