
Slaves Opened the Gates of Rome (Not Barbarians)
Jun 8, 2026 - 63:57
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On August 22, 408 AD, the Western Roman Emperor Honorius signed an execution order. The man being executed was Flavius Stilicho — half Vandal, half Roman, the general who had defeated Alaric three times, held the Rhine f...
Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It is an episode from Create Your Own Life with Jeremy Ryan Slate | Breaking the Chains of Ordinary by Jeremy Ryan Slate. On August 22, 408 AD, the Western Roman Emperor Honorius signed an execution order....
This episode belongs to Create Your Own Life with Jeremy Ryan Slate | Breaking the Chains of Ordinary.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jun 1, 2026, 22:19 long, audio available.
On August 22, 408 AD, the Western Roman Emperor Honorius signed an execution order. The man being executed was Flavius Stilicho — half Vandal, half Roman, the general who had defeated Alaric three times, held the Rhine frontier together for 13 years, and kept a collapsing political structure functioning through sheer competence. For more than a decade he had been the only thing standing between the Western Empire and total disintegration. The Senate hated him. The court whispered against him. They said he was conspiring with the Goths. They said he wanted to put his son on the throne. They said his barbarian blood made him untrustworthy. None of it was true. But systems like this eventually stop needing truth. They just need targets. Stilicho walked out of a church in Ravenna and accepted his fate. He could have resisted — 10,000 federate troops were personally loyal to him, and he could have seized power and likely won. He chose not to. He still believed in something larger than himself. The system that executed him no longer did. Within months, 10,000 federate soldiers marched directly to Alaric's camp. The Rhine frontier collapsed. The borders dissolved. The army Stilicho had built to defend Italy became the army that destroyed it. Two years later, on August 24, 410 AD, Alaric walked into Rome — undefended, unresisted — and sacked it for three days. The man most capable of preventing it had already been killed by his own government. This is the autopsy of how empires actually die. Not from the outside in. They destroy their own immune system first and call it patriotism. 00:00 — Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It 02:24 — Welcome to The Roman Pattern 02:45 — What Rome Had Become by 395 AD 03:06 — Who Was Flavius Stilicho? 04:05 — The Three Fault Lines: Money, Borders, Power 06:23 — Stilicho's Rise Through Competence 07:38 — Theodosius Dies, Stilicho Inherits an Empire 08:03 — Alaric and the Eastern Court's Sabotage 09:43 — The Battle of Pollentia (402 AD) 10:55 — The Deal That Sealed His Fate 11:43 — The Rhine Freezes (December 406) 12:31 — Honorius the Chicken Farmer 13:21 — Olympius and the Whispered Accusations 14:07 — August 22, 408 AD: The Execution 15:07 — The Federate Defection and the Sack of Rome 18:13 — When Systems Can't Tell Threat from Solution 21:06 — The Last Roman
You can listen to Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It is an episode from Create Your Own Life with Jeremy Ryan Slate | Breaking the Chains of Ordinary by Jeremy Ryan Slate.
This episode is 22:19 long.
This episode was published on Jun 1, 2026.
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Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It is from Create Your Own Life with Jeremy Ryan Slate | Breaking the Chains of Ordinary by Jeremy Ryan Slate.
Published Jun 1, 2026 and 22:19 long