However, the movement in Baghdad has not stopped. In 283 AD, the Baghdad uprising broke out again in the Seine and Royal Gaul, and soon the whole Gaul was caught in an uprising storm. This struggle is still centered on Lagerton Gaul, attacking the city and plundering the land, killing the rich and helping the poor, burning the manor and dividing the wealth. They elected two leaders, Elian and armand, as emperors and minted their own coins, which posed a serious threat to the rule of Rome. In 286, the Roman emperor Diocletian sent Maxim, the ruler of * * * *, to Gaul to suppress it. Maxim was defeated by Patagonia several times, and the soldiers got cold feet. Later, Maxim punished the retreating soldiers eleven times. Gradually, under the attack of the superior forces of the Romans, the rebels retreated to a castle at the intersection of the Marne River and the Seine River. Under the long siege of the Roman army, the castle fell and many pagoda soldiers died heroically. Since then, the Baghdad Department has continued its activities.
In 408 AD, the pagoda movement resumed, and Roman commander Sarah led a Roman army back to Italy from Gaul. Passing through the Alps, the Patagonians attacked the unsuspecting Romans. All Roman weapons fell into the hands of the rebels. Since then, the rebels' weapons and equipment have been greatly improved and their combat effectiveness has been greatly enhanced. In 435 AD, Barthol, the leader of Barthol, led the rebels to launch a larger attack on the Romans and established political power in many parts of Gaul. Under the influence of the Batagoda Uprising, huge uprisings also broke out in Spain, North Africa, Thrace and the Dodds River basin under the rule of the Roman Empire. In 449 AD, the Roman army defeated the rebels again. The rest of the rebels were forced to move to Spain to continue their struggle.
The Batagoda Uprising dealt a heavy blow to the ruling order of the Roman Empire, restored the life of a free rural commune, and was larger in scale and broader in mass base than the Spartacus Uprising in 1 century BC, which accelerated the demise of the Roman Empire.