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Life & Wisdom Quote by Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus

"Few men are born brave. Many become so through training and force of discipline"

About this Quote

Bravery, Vegetius implies, is less a gift than a manufactured product - and that’s the kind of claim you make when your world depends on turning anxious civilians into reliable soldiers. Writing in the late Roman Empire, Vegetius wasn’t composing motivational aphorisms; he was diagnosing institutional decay. His treatise is a reformer’s document, aimed at leaders who had let standards slip and were now paying for it in battlefield losses and brittle morale.

The line is designed to dethrone the comforting myth of the “naturally brave” warrior. “Few men” flatters no one, but it also relieves the rank-and-file of shame: fear is normal. The real target is command. If courage is trainable, then cowardice is, at least partly, a managerial failure. Vegetius smuggles accountability into what looks like moral psychology.

“Training and force of discipline” is the hard edge of the sentence. He’s not selling self-actualization; he’s selling habit, repetition, drill, and the social machinery that makes hesitation expensive. Discipline here is both internal (conditioning the body to obey under stress) and external (a system of rewards, punishments, and cohesion). The subtext is almost modern: in a crisis, people don’t rise to ideals; they default to rehearsed behavior.

It also functions as a political argument for professionalization. If bravery can be built, then the state can justify stricter regimens, longer preparation, and tighter control - all in the name of stability. Vegetius makes courage sound democratic, but he anchors it in hierarchy: bravery isn’t born in the blood; it’s forged by institutions.

Quote Details

TopicSelf-Discipline
Source
Verified source: Epitoma rei militaris (De re militari) (Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus, 390)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Paucos uiros fortes natura procreat, bona institutione plures reddit industria. (Book III, Chapter 26 (Regulae bellorum generales / “General Maxims”)). This is the original Latin line from Vegetius’ De re militari / Epitoma rei militaris, traditionally cited as 3.26 among the ‘General Maxims’ in Book III. Common English renderings include: “Few men are born brave; many become so through care and force of discipline.” Note: the widely circulated English wording “through training and force of discipline” is a paraphrase/variant of published translations, not the Latin verbatim.
Other candidates (1)
Military Quotations (Ray Hamilton, 2012) compilation95.0%
... PUBLIUS FLAVIUS VEGETIUS RENATUS ( VEGETIUS ) ( FOURTH CENTURY AD , ROMAN WRITER ) Few men are born brave ; many ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Renatus, Publius Flavius Vegetius. (2026, February 8). Few men are born brave. Many become so through training and force of discipline. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/few-men-are-born-brave-many-become-so-through-159514/

Chicago Style
Renatus, Publius Flavius Vegetius. "Few men are born brave. Many become so through training and force of discipline." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/few-men-are-born-brave-many-become-so-through-159514/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Few men are born brave. Many become so through training and force of discipline." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/few-men-are-born-brave-many-become-so-through-159514/. Accessed 9 Feb. 2026.

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Few Men Are Born Brave: Vegetius on Courage and Discipline
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About the Author

Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus

Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus is a Writer from Rome.

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