Oh, definitely not. Romans had been getting beaten in their wars since before Hannibal. Their system was one of long-term resiliance. It was never that the legionaires were invincible. It was that if you killed a Roman army, you found two more coming after you next--on road systems they built while advancing towards you, if necessary, and defended by fortifications they erected steadily upon the march. The legacy of the Roman success was in their resiliancy and incredible engineering.Crown wrote:Could you argue that Hannible was the first to show that the Roman's were 'beatable'? (Yes I know that Cathrage ultimately lost, but that was due to a poor strategy, for the most part Hannible ate up the legions on the field)
Or are we talking about when the Empire proper was finally destroyed?
The real demonstration of the superiourity of the legionary system of arming wasn't until after the Second Punic War--when the Romans defeated the Macedonians at the Battle of Pydna. However, I'd say that the tactical flexibility of the Roman system was an outgrowth of Hellenistic combat. Observe that when the Hellenic system of warfare first developed there was lots of infighting between small groups, and they used rigid formations charging straight at each other to do it.
Then the Macedonians came along with the sarissa integrated with shieldmen and heavy cavalry and with light troops and they swept the field in combined arms formations and used mechanical engineers to take cities, etc, and then Alexander went on to conquer the whole of the known world, basically. Okay, that was great:
Except it wasn't. In the sense, that is, that Alexander's Empire fragmented immediately, and it was quickly demonstrated that the Macedonian system was not very efficient for fighting other armies of the same time. So Pikes got longer and more cumbersome, and cavalry and light troops were relegated to a sideshow, whilst artillery became tactical and the elephant more popular to break up the phalanx. Stalemates and horrendous casualties ensued and we were back to lots of warring states slaughtering each other enmasse.
The Romans reintroduced combined arms and tactical flexibility, and just like the Macedonians they unified essentially the whole of the known world. The difference was that their engineering and organizational practices allowed them to keep it unified.