READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
WILHELM IHNE’S HISTORY OF ROMESECOND BOOK.THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE REPUBLIC.CHAPTER
I.
THE
FIRST YEARS OF THE REPUBLIC.
Roman tradition is, as we have seen,
wholly untrustworthy as to the cause and course of the revolution which brought
about the overthrow of the kingly power, and laid the foundation of the
republic. Whatever may have been the nature of these struggles, it cannot be
supposed that the republic appeared at once in its perfect form, and that in
the very first year the regular consular power was introduced with all its
attributes and functions in relation to the senate and citizens. Traces of a
less quick and smooth transition have been preserved, especially in the
traditions connected with the name of the great legislator P. Valerius Poplicola, from which it appears not unlikely
that, after the abolition of the royal dignity, a period of dictatorial
government followed, which ended with the dictatorship of Valerius.
At
all events the republic seems to have been first regularly established by the
Valerian laws, of which, unfortunately, we can discover little more than half
obliterated traces in the oldest traditions of the Romans.
According
to the story, P. Valerius was chosen as consul after
the banishment of Tarquinius Collatinus, and remained
alone in office after the death of his colleague, Brutus, without assembling
the people for the election of a second consul. This proceeding excited a
suspicion in the minds of the people, that he intended to take sole possession
of the state, and to re-establish royal power. But these fears proved groundless. Valerius remained in office with the sole design of
introducing a number of laws intended to establish the republic on a legal
foundation, without the danger of any interference on the part of a colleague.
The
first of these Valerian laws threatened with the curse of the gods any one who, without the consent of the people, should dare
to assume the highest magistracy. By this law the sovereignty of the
people was not only recognised, but an effectual
barrier was presented to any attempt to keep an office beyond the period
legally fixed for its duration. As the public law did not allow the people to
compel a magistrate to resign, and as, therefore, a magistrate once elected could
only return into private life by an act of voluntary abdication, it would have
depended apparently on his own free will whether his power should last during
his lifetime or not, unless by this law the magistrate who, after the legal
time, refused to resign an office was marked as a traitor to the state. Against
such a one resistance by force was legally sanctioned, and from this time
forward, therefore, the regular annual change of republican magistrates was
secured, and the restoration of the royal power in Rome was made impossible,
unless a usurper was prepared to use force and violence to upset the very basis
of the established order. Such an act of violence, however, was not to be
expected in Rome, where the magistrates had the command of no military force
except the armed citizens, and where each member of the aristocracy was a
zealous guardian of republican equality.
The
second law of Valerius was of equal importance for
the good order of the republic. It prescribed that in criminal trials, where the
life of a citizen was at stake, the sentence of the consul should be subject to
an appeal to the general assembly of the people. This Valerian law of appeal
was the Roman Habeas Corpus Act. It formed the keystone of the structure of the
republic. It provided a barrier against every illegal stretch of authority on
the part of the magistrates, and against every act Of military tyranny during
their legal term of office. With such a guarantee against abuse of judicial
authority, the Romans could afford to entrust to their magistrates an extensive
jurisdiction, without being obliged, like the Athenians, to have recourse to
popular assemblies as ordinary courts of law.
As
an outward sign of the limitation of the official power, and as an acknowledgment
of the sovereignty of the people, Valerius caused the
fasces of the lictors to be lowered before the people. From this time the
consuls never displayed the dreaded axes within the town. But in the field,
where the consular authority was preserved without limitation, the axes
continued to be in the fasces of the lictors, as a symbol of the military power
of the consuls.
The
Romans found a further protection against the abuse of consular authority in
the division of the office between two colleagues of equal rank. In this way
not only was the re-establishment of the monarchy rendered difficult, but too
harsh and severe an exercise of the power which was left to the consuls was
also prevented, as in the intercession of one of the two consuls against the
decisions of the other there was a certain guarantee against precipitation and
injustice. According to the principles of public law in Rome, the intercession
of a magistrate had the effect of stopping the execution of any order or
sentence pronounced by an official of equal rank. There can be no doubt that
the possibility of limiting the power of the consuls by the consuls themselves
was the principal if not the only reason for the division of the chief
magistracy of the state, which was in many respects so prejudicial.
Although
the Roman consulship was divided between the two colleagues, and was limited in
its duration to one year, yet it conferred very considerable power, and by the
insignia of the office, as well as its substantial rights, resembled the
abolished royalty. The royal functions which remained to the consuls were those
which related to the internal administration, the jurisdiction, and the command
of the army. The priestly functions alone were separated and were conferred on
an officer called the king of sacrifices (rex sacrificulus,
or rex sacrorum), who was appointed for life.
The reason for this arrangement may be found in a feeling of conscientiousness
and religious formalism; the gods were not to be deprived of services or
sacrifices which the state owed them through a ‘king.’ Although the shadow of
the regal dignity was thus preserved, care was taken to make the office
powerless. The king of sacrifices was excluded from all political functions; he
was declared incompetent to fill any other office in the state; and it was not
he, but the chief pontiff, who was placed at the head of all religious
concerns.
But
by the nomination of the sacrificial king, and by the transfer of the whole
religious authority to the pontiff, the consulship was by no means entirely secularised, nor brought into any sort of opposition to the
priesthood, or exposed to the possibility of a conflict with it. In so far as
religion had an influence on political life, it was wholly and entirely at the
service of the magistrates. A religious interest apart from the interest of the
state was never thought of; a dispute between spiritual and secular authorities
was not possible. Religion was expected to preserve and to benefit the people
and the state; its servants were only the mediators of whom the state made use
to secure the goodwill and protection of the gods. The augurs certainly
conducted the auspices, and interpreted the divine will, but only at the
command of the magistrates; and the answer from heaven was not addressed to
them, but, through them, to the political representatives of the Roman people.
When the consul wished to offer up a solemn prayer, the pontiff repeated for
him the prescribed form, and instructed him in the manner of performing the religious
ceremony. He was the living book in which the science of heavenly things was
written down, but only the officers of the state were permitted to open and to
read it.
By
this arrangement the consulship had suffered no loss of power through the
separation of the religious functions from the secular magistracy. Religion, as
an instrument for political purposes in the hands of the magistrates, had
become rather more effective now that the fulcrum of the lever lay further off
in the priesthood. The ruling party could, by the mouth of the priests,
sanctify or condemn, without scruple, what, from a political point of view,
they sanctioned or rejected; and the Roman parties never hesitated to make use
of this means to increase their real power.
As
judges the consuls occupied altogether the place of the kings. They decided the
legal disputes of the citizens either personally or by deputy. Their criminal
jurisdiction was probably limited to the most important cases, as the paternal
authority (patria potestas), which extended over clients as well as all
members of the family, was in full force.
In
the warlike state of the Romans the military character of the consuls was no
doubt most prominent and most important. When the consul led the army into the
field, he possessed the unlimited military power of the kings (the imperium).
He was entrusted with the direction of the war, the distribution of the booty,
and the first disposal of the conquered land. Here he had an opportunity of
gaining the respect of his fellow-citizens, renowned for his family, an
influential position in the state, and material profit. The oldest designation
for the consuls,—therefore, was derived from their military quality, for they
were called praetors, that is, commanders.
It
was, however, precisely in war that the division of power among two colleagues
must often have proved prejudicial. The want of unity in the command of the
army was the frequent cause of great dangers and reverses. Had it not been for
the military instinct, which every Roman possessed, and the wonderful
discipline and drill of the legions, it would have been impossible for Rome to
endure for any length of time the division of the supreme command. But there
came troubles in which, in spite of the military qualities of the people, the organisation broke down, and the necessity of unity in the
direction of affairs was felt to be indispensable.
The
dictatorship served this purpose. By decree the consuls could be charged with
naming a dictator for six months, and in this officer the full power of the
king was revived for a limited period. The dictatorship was a formal
suspension of the constitution of the republic. All magistrates remained in
office, and continued to discharge their regular duties, but they were all
placed under the absolute command of the dictator. The guarantees of republican
freedom (such as the right of appeal to the people) were in abeyance during the
continuation of the dictator’s power. Military was substituted for common law,
and Rome, during the time of the dictatorship, was in a state of siege.
Armed
with such authority, which placed the resources of the whole state at their
disposal, the dictators often succeeded in saving the commonwealth from great
dangers. In the good old time of the republic, the dictatorship was never
abused for the gratification of personal ambition. The attempt was never made
to turn the temporary possession of regal authority into a permanent
restoration of monarchy. On the contrary the dictators felt it to be their
pride to solve as quickly as possible the problem for the solution of which
they had been appointed, and then, even before the end of the legal period, to
return into private life.
That
the dictatorship had an essentially military character is proved especially by
the circumstance that the dictator had to nominate as second in command a
master of the horse (magister equitum), who by
his very name is characterised as an officer of the
army. It was indeed natural that the government should also make use of the
power of the dictator for the settling of internal disputes. In fact a dictator
was often appointed to be the leader of the patrician party against the
plebeians. But the origin of the dictatorship is certainly not to be found in
the disputes between the two classes. It is possible that it formed the
transition from the monarchy to the consular constitution, as hinted above; but
it is impossible now to arrive at any certainty on this very difficult
question.
As
first administrative officers, the consuls had the presidency in the senate, a
political body which in ancient Rome corresponded in many respects to what is
now called the ministry, and which, besides being a supreme council of state,
had the control of the whole administration. The consuls were charged with the
selection of new senators, with calling the senate together, presiding over its
deliberations, conducting the debate, and carrying out the resolutions. The
senate had no independent legislative, still less any independent executive,
power; it was in fact only an administrative council. The consul, therefore,
would naturally be influenced in his actions by the authority of the senate,
but he was not bound to carry out any of its resolutions to which he was
opposed. The law did not compel him in his public actions to obtain the consent
of the senate; in fact he was not the servant, but rather the master of the
senate. He called the senators together to receive their advice, not their
commands. Yet, owing to the annual change of consuls and the great influence
which the senate, as a permanent body, exercised on the election of consuls,
the practical result was that, in all essential and important questions, the
senate decided the policy which the consuls had no alternative but to adopt.
The senate was the head of the body politic, the consuls were the hands. The
sum total of political wisdom and experience was treasured up in the senate; as
the senate was, so were Roman politics internal and external. No growth or
development could take place unless the germ had been previously matured in the
bosom of the senate.
With
regard to the consuls, therefore, the power of the senate was not so much a
legal and formal superiority as a de facto irresistible influence. With
regard to the general assembly of the people it was otherwise. The senate had
not only the duty of previously discussing and preparing all measures about
which the assembly had to decide, but it possessed also the constitutional
right of confirming the resolutions of the people. The previous deliberations
in the senate were the most natural functions of a select assembly of
experienced men. Regular discussion and debate were not possible in the large
unwieldy assemblies of the people. They could only decide with yes or no on a
question laid before them. But in the senate different views could be
maintained by different speakers. There were here, as in all free public assemblies,
opposing parties, and representatives of the various interests which divided
the people. There was a rule that after a resolution had been arrived at by the
senate (a senatus-consultum) one of the magistrates
should lay it before the people. If the people approved, it came back for
confirmation to the senate, and in this manner obtained the force of law. The
act of conferring this ratification by the patrum auctoritas was no superfluous formality. It is
true the preliminary deliberation in the senate was the common rule, and when
the senate had once decided to bring a resolution before the people for acceptance,
it was almost certain that their consent and approbation would follow; but it
was not impossible that, owing to unlooked-for events, or party manoeuvres, the senate, after repeated deliberations, might
arrive at a different vote, just as in the English parliament the first and
second readings of a bill do not always insure its passing on the third. But
the right of the senate to give or withhold its consent to a resolution of the
people was of especial importance, because the magistrates could not be
prevented from bringing a question before the people even without submitting it
previously to the senate. The withholding of the patrum auctoritas, therefore, was one of the means which
the patricians made use of to control the decisions of the comitia. It was
first legally abolished by the Publilian law, 339 b.c., with regard to acts of legislation, and by the Majnian law with reference to the election of magistrates.
In consequence of these two laws the patrum auctoritas became a mere formality, because the
senate was now compelled to confirm the eventual decision of the people before
the votes were actually taken.
One branch of the public service, which in modern
times occupies a prominent part and regulates all political action, was of
subordinate importance in old republican Rome. This was the management of the
finances. In a state in which no public officer received any salary, where the
military service was a personal duty exacted from the citizens, there was no
necessity for an elaborate system of finance, and even taxes properly so-called
could not be wanted before the introduction of regular pay to the soldiers, i.e. before the year 406 b.c. There were, therefore, no officers especially entrusted with the management of
the finances. The senate administered the property of the state. Booty gained
in war, fines imposed by law, and any other money that flowed into the treasury
of the state, passed through the hands of the consuls. Annually elected
officers, the quaestors of the treasury, were not appointed before the year 449 b.c. for the management of the public finances.
As
to the composition of the senate, it is certain that senators. election of senators was entrusted to the
consuls. After the violence of the revolution which had driven into exile a
great number of the adherents of the dethroned monarch, the senate was
naturally very much reduced in numbers, and it became necessary to fill up the
numerous vacancies by an extraordinary measure. This measure, which by some
historians is ascribed to Brutus, by others to Valerius Poplicola, is supposed to have brought a number of plebeians into the senate,
who after the current view of the old historians were at once raised to the
rank of patricians, but who, according to the opinion of modern critics,
remained plebeian, and thus formed a plebeian section in the patrician, senate.
The official title of the senators, by which they were addressed as ‘Patres Conscripti,’ was by the
popular archaeologists derived from this new element in the senate, the surname
‘Conscripti ’ being supposed to apply originally only
to the newly received plebeian members.
If
there existed authentic historical evidence of the period which immediately
followed the beginning of the, republic, we should be compelled simply to
accept the account of the reception of plebeians into the senate, although it
sounds very improbable. But all the reputed evidence consists in attempts of
later Roman antiquarians to account for the title ‘Patres Conscripti’. These have no value in themselves, and
as they do not agree with the gradual development of the plebeian rights, there
is no choice left us but to reject them.
The
legal position of the plebeians in the beginning of the republic was such that
we cannot conceive their admission to the council of patricians to have been
possible. The senate was the representative of the patrician interest during
all the disputes of the two classes of citizens. Nowhere can there be
discovered a trace of a plebeian party in the senate. A whole century elapses
after the beginning of the republic before we find a single plebeian in the
senate; and even long after the admission of plebeians to the highest offices
of the state, the patrician element in the senate was by far the strongest.
Moreover, the elevation of plebeians to the rank of patricians for the purpose
of strengthening the senate is highly improbable. It is irreconcilable with the
great contrast which evidently separated the two classes at the beginning of
the republic—a contrast which amounted to a legal barrier between them, and
prevented the possibility of individuals from one class joining the other, but which, after such a precedent as the alleged reception of many plebeians
into the body of the patricians and into the senate, could not have been maintained
any longer.
We
have, therefore, no alternative left but to hold that, in the beginning of the
republic, the senate was purely patrician, and remained for a long time the
real representative of the patrician interest. As such it appears throughout
in the narratives of the annalists, and it is
therefore easily explained that the same political terms are applied to the
senate which designate the patrician order as such, particularly the
expressions Patres and Patricians. Afterwards, when,
by the admission of plebeians to the highest offices of state, they were
admitted by degrees into the senate, and when, by the equality of rights of the
two orders, the old aristocracy of the patricians was merged in the new ‘nobility,’
the senate was always the representative of these nobles, and the old views and
names were on the whole preserved by the historians of the time.
Simultaneously
with the Valerian laws, which established the republic, the Comitia centuriata, which Servius Tullius is said to have devised
with a view of abolishing the kingly power, came into practical use. The
highest political functions in the state, the decisions of the sovereign people,
were now formally transferred to this assembly, which, as we have surmised
above, owed its origin to military necessities at a time when the old organisation of the army, based on the curiae, no longer
sufficed. It seems to have gradually grown out of the original assembly of the
thirty curiae. As a natural consequence of this innovation, the comitia of curiae
were now more and more confined to mere formalities, just as the royal dignity
was not altogether abolished, but was allowed to survive in the office of
sacrificial king, though reduced to an empty shadow of its original power. The
comitia of the centuries had, therefore, from the very beginning of the
republic, the same functions which had formerly belonged to the comitia of
curiae. In them was vested the right of legislation, the election of the chief
magistrates, the decision of questions of peace and war, and, lastly, they
formed the highest court of judicature, which had to pass sentence, in the last
instance, in all cases affecting the life of a citizen. In the comitia of
centuries, therefore, reposed the sovereignty of the people. They were the
source of power, because they appointed the magistrates, and indirectly,
through the magistrates, the senators. The laws were the expression of the will
of the people as declared in the centuries. The consuls and the senate had only
certain limited rights and duties conferred on them in the administration and
legislation, but the people was supreme and sovereign; it was limited and
controlled by no legal power beside itself that might claim superiority or even
equality to it. The de facto influence of the aristocracy, exercised by the
magistrates and the senate, had no independent legal foundation, but was always
dependent on the will of the people.
The
comitia of centuries embraced the whole of the people, not a part only, like
the comitia of curiae, in which the plebeian clients were only passive members,
without the right of voting. Every Roman citizen was now competent to vote,
according to the measure of his census. But this apparent political equality
was far from filling up the gulf between the two classes of citizens. If the
patricians and plebeians in the assembly of centuries had really been
amalgamated into one people, and if at the same time the plebeians had been
admitted to the senate and to the magistracy, the development of the
constitution would have taken quite a different direction from what it really
did. There would then have been no necessity for the plebeians to straggle for
a separate, clearly defined, legal position in the state. The constant disputes
for equality between the two classes would have been avoided, and the republic
would have possessed from the beginning the strength which was displayed after
the passing of the Licinian laws.
The
facts were altogether different. The revolution which overthrew the monarchy
led to the exclusive power of the patricians. The plebs was separated from the
privileged class, and debarred from the advantages, rights, and honours which the patricians enjoyed. No bridge led across
this gap. No service rendered to the state, no amount of wealth, opened to a
plebeian the prospect of rising from the crowd and taking a part in the
government. Marriages between patricians and plebeians were unlawful, as were
those between freemen and slaves. The plebeian was excluded from the senate,
and from all civil and religious offices of state, from the auspices, and even
from the knowledge of the laws. He shared only the public burdens, especially
those of the military service, which were becoming more and more oppressive
from day to day.
Thus
it is not surprising that, although the plebeians had their lawful share in the
comitia of centuries, yet it was a very insignificant part they played.
Limited, probably to the four lowest classes, they could make no successful
opposition to the well-organised dominion of the
patricians. The consular elections during the first period of the republic
clearly show that the patricians were all-powerful in the comitia of
centuries. Thus the plebeians were urged by necessity to organise themselves as a separate political body, that they might as a whole oppose the
excessive power of the patricians. It is, therefore, not to be supposed that
the right of appeal from the sentence of the consuls, which the Valerian law
had established as a guarantee against the arbitrary exercise of authority,
extended to the plebeians. It was this denial of justice which forced the
plebeian class to create for themselves in the Tribunes of the People legal
protectors of their own. The tribune, by his intercession against the sentence
of the patrician magistrates, made up to his fellowplebeians for the want of the right of appeal to the popular assembly, a right which,
even if it had been possessed by the plebeians, would have been to them of
little practical value, as long as they had so little influence in the
comitia.
CHAPTER
II
THE
TRIBUNES OF THE PEOPLE.
The abolition of the monarchy had raised
the patricians to power. In possession of the republican offices, political and
religious, exclusively represented in the senate, preponderating and dominant
in the assembly of centuries, influential by their large landed possessions and
by the numbers of their clients, they were absolute lords and masters of the
commonwealth, in which the plebeians had scarcely a share or a legal standing.
If such a state of things had continued, the Roman state must have been reduced
to a powerless oligarchy, which, in a short time, the enmity of hostile neighbours would have overthrown.
From
such a danger Rome was saved by the spirited opposition which the plebs as a
class brought to bear against the tyranny of the patricians. Immediately after
the overthrow of the monarchy, the struggles began between the patricians and
the plebeians, which, if we compare them with the vehement party warfare and
the excessive fluctuations in most of the Greek states, were carried on with a
certain calmness, deliberation, and steadiness, corresponding to the firm,
persevering, sober, practical character of the Romans.
The
Roman historians, who, deceived by the state of things in their own days,
looked upon the patricians of the old time as a nobility by no means numerous,
represent the insurrection against Tarquinius and the establishment of the
republic as a victory of popular freedom, that is to say, plebeian freedom over
tyranny. The people revelled, it was said, in the
enjoyment of the newly acquired blessings, and by the amicable dealings of the
patricians, who, from political reasons, made some valuable concessions, the
plebeians, together with the patricians, became the irreconcilable enemies of
the expelled tyrant, and with united efforts opposed all attempts of the
Tarquins to regain their power. But the narrative goes on to tell that they
had hardly escaped all danger from the banished king and his adherents when the
patricians showed themselves in their true light, as unfeeling, hardhearted
oppressors of the people. The plebeians suffered great distress and boundless
misery. Through continual wars, which laid waste their fields and reduced their
farms to ashes, they were deprived of their regular means of maintenance; they
were impoverished by the severe war taxes, and plunged into debt. Their
creditors were the patricians, who, with reckless severity, administered the
harsh law, drove then- debtors from their homes, loaded them with chains, kept
them languishing in prison, and even tore their backs with ignominious stripes.
At last despair drove the poor wretches to resistance. They refused the
military service. While the Volscians were attacking Rome, and the senate was
in vain devising means of defence, those plebeians
who were imprisoned for debt escaped from the prisons and rejoiced in the
trouble of their oppressors. Then the consul Servilius,
who was friendly to the people, promised them temporary release from their
debts, and protection against the harshness of their creditors, on condition
that they should allow themselves to be enrolled in the legions. His proposal
was accepted. The Volscians were driven back. The Sabines and Auruncans also, who made use of the same opportunity to
attack Rome, were conquered in a short campaign. After a threefold victory the
army returned to Rome. But forthwith the distress began anew. Again the
plebeians filled the loathsome debtors’ prisons, and were subjected to all sorts
of outrage and indignity by the heartless patricians. New wars threatened. The
plebeians refused to serve. It was only through the nomination of M. Valerius as dictator that the senate could levy new troops. Valerius succeeded, by the promise of protection from
their creditors, in inducing the plebeians to enlist. Ten legions marched under
the dictator and two consuls against the Volscians, Aequians, and Sabines.
Again a threefold victory was won, but, instead of the armies being disbanded,
they were kept under military command and military law, lest the men should
insist on the fulfilment of the promises of the dictator and on an abolition of
debts. Then at length the patience of the plebeians was exhausted. One of the
armies declined to obey, marched in military order to the right bank of the
river Anio, in the immediate neighbourhood of Borne, encamped there, and threatened to secede from Borne altogether. The
danger was very great that the Roman state would fall to pieces and become a
prey to its ever-jealous and ever-watchful neighbours.
The senate now resolved to yield. It entered into negotiations with the
insurgents. It convinced them of the necessity of a reconciliation, and agreed
to the condition which they proposed. This was, that plebeian magistrates,
called Tribunes of the Plebs, should be chosen, empowered to protect the
plebeians from the unfair treatment of the patrician magistrates, and invested
with personal inviolability under the sanction of religion.
The
foregoing narrative, which is abridged from ten long chapters of Livy, and from
sixty-eight much longer chapters of Dionysius betrays at first sight the
boundless caprice and the unskilfulness of the annalists. Apart from the surprising detail in the
descriptions, and from the elaborate speeches, in which Dionysius endeavours to show his rhetorical talent, the repetitions
and exaggerations—the two most pardonable faults of the Roman annalists—are quite
palpable. The occurrences of the first and of the second year of the plebeian insurrection are plainly the
same. Each time a threefold war is ended by three victories with an army of
Roman debtors. Ten legions are levied—an army, such as Rome, up to the time of
the Punic wars, could hardly collect. It would be tedious and unprofitable to
point out in detail all the absurdities which excite our indignation, when we
are obliged to read the tedious and vapid speeches of Dionysius. We should be
satisfied if, among irrelevant particulars drawn from the imagination, we could
find a few credible hints in explanation of the facts, and an answer to the
questions, which have reference to the political and social character of the
movement. But the historians give us no consistent, intelligible, or probable
report, either as to the time of the revolution, or the place where peace was
concluded, or the number of tribunes elected, or the manner of electing them.
In
the first place the date of the outbreak of the plebeian revolt is made to
coincide with the death of Tarquinius, not on the ground of anything like a
trustworthy tradition, the but because it seemed plausible to suppose that,
during the life-time of the expelled tyrant, the patricians would avoid
everything that could create discontent among the plebeians and make them
regret the monarchy. It was therefore assumed that, as soon as Tarquin died,
the systematic oppression began which drove the plebeians to resistance and
mutiny. It is hardly necessary to remark that this calculation is very flimsy;
that too little time is given for the sudden cruelty of the patricians to
produce an effect, and that, after all, even the date of the death of Tarquin
is quite uncertain. On the whole, the chronology of this period is in a state
of confusion from which no ingenuity is likely ever to rescue it.
The
locality where the insurgent plebs assembled, and where peace was concluded
with the patricians, is perhaps a matter of indifference in the history of the
secession. But it awakens an uncomfortable feeling, when we find that, while
the received traditions mention the so-called Sacred Hill beyond the river Anio as the place in question, the Aventine is also named, and indeed both hills at once. These variations show a want of certainty
in the tradition, which is the more striking as the Sacred Hill is said to have
derived its name from the solemn treaty of peace which was concluded there, and
as it must have been connected with this peace in the minds of the people.
The
statements of the number of tribunes chosen in the beginning vary between two
and five, and it is not possible to decide which is the most authentic. The
internal probability is in favour of two plebeian
tribunes, because they were in some manner opposed to the two patrician
consuls; but a few years later the board of the tribunes consisted of five
members, and we cannot learn how the number was raised from two to five.
The
question which presents the greatest difficulty is that of the mode of election
of the first tribunes. To this question even the ancients could give no satisfactory
answer. In the absence of any real evidence and authentic tradition, we are
thrown back upon conjecture, and every form of election has been proposed in
succession. The question, it is true, relates only to the short period from 498
to 472, and it is, on the whole, of but small importance; but there seems to be
no reason why we should not endeavour to answer it.
For our own part we have a decided conviction that the plebeians alone in their
purely plebeian assemblies—the comitia tributa—could
elect their legal chiefs and protectors.
The
distress of the plebeian debtors is almost universally given as the occasion of
the insurrection. This distress is painted in the most glaring colours. One would think the plebs had been only a mass of
insolvent debtors, and that they had reached the last stage of economical
decay. We may ask, how could such distress arise so suddenly? If wars
undermined the prosperity of the peasants, how could the patricians escape the
consequences? Where could they get the money for the loans? Rome was not a
commercial town, and in the earlier ages of the republic there was no
artificial measure of value, excepting the heavy copper money, so that
extensive money loans cannot be thought of. Nor can the debts of the plebeians
be attributed, as has often been attempted, to the pressure of taxation. For,
in the first place, as already remarked, money taxes were at that time either
unknown, or very trifling, and, in the second place, it can hardly be imagined
that the burden of taxation, if it existed, rested, as has been supposed,
entirely on the shoulders of the poor. This would have been in direct
opposition to the principle of the constitution of centuries, according to
which the heaviest burdens of war had to be supported by the wealthier classes.
Supposing,
however, that the great mass of the plebeians at that time were hopelessly
languishing under the oppression of theirs debts, and had in consequence lost
their property, and practically their freedom, is it probable that the Roman
legions were formed of such men, who had still on their backs and hands traces
of the stripes and chains of slavery? And, if even this were granted, can we
imagine the Roman senate insane enough to propose casting again into debtors’
prisons these men, who had carried arms against the enemies of their country
and had conquered in the field? The evident contradictions are multiplied at
every step, as we proceed in examining the traditional story. But if we were to
try to get nearer the truth by moderating the exaggerations, we should still go
astray. For not only is it the excess of the misery of the plebeians which
challenges our doubt, but we must question whether it was distress for debt at
all that caused the insurrection. This doubt is justified, first, by the
circumstance that, at the reconciliation of the two hostile parties, there is
nothing said of removing the causes which are supposed to have produced the
distress; and, secondly, by the fact, that nevertheless, from this time forward
up to the burning of Rome by the Gauls, nothing is said of any indebtedness of
the plebeians. The severe laws of debt we find unmodified in the Twelve Tables.
It is therefore not likely, nor is it recorded, that the plebeians, at the time
of their secession, urged the abolition of these laws, and we cannot understand
that insolvency was the cause of the insurrection.
The
true cause of the secession can therefore only be looked for in the political
condition of the plebs, as above described, and not to any extent in the
wretchedness of their economical position. Whatever that may have been, the
plebeians were de facto not protected by the law. They were subject to the
patrician magistrates, and without the benefit of the right of appeal? Those
of them who were clients had a claim on the good-will and protection of their
patrician patrons, but this claim was of no avail if a client wanted redress
against his patron himself. It was evident that the plebeians stood in need of
official patrons, who should, by virtue of their office, guard their rights,
and interfere in their favour whenever they had to
complain of injustice.
As
to the character of the office of tribune of the people, which arose out of the
secession, we are on the whole well informed. The tribunes of the people were
so essentially different from all the other magistrates, that, strictly
speaking, they could hardly be called magistrates at all. They were originally
nothing but the official counsel of the plebs—but counsel who possessed a veto
on the execution of any command or any sentence of the patrician authorities.
The
tribune of the people had no military force at his disposal with which to inforce his veto. He had nothing to do with the
army or war, and was entirely a civil officer. Only his official servants, who
were armed neither with the ‘fasces’ nor with the axes of the consular lictors,
obeyed his commands. There is no more striking proof of the high respect for
law, which was inherent in the Roman people, than that it was possible for such
a magistracy to exercise functions specially directed against the governing
class and their interests, without encountering, more frequently than the
tribunes did, the force and violent resistance of their political opponents.
To
strengthen an official authority which was so much wanting in physical
strength, the Romans availed themselves of the terrors of religion, which was
always appealed to when the limits of secular authority were reached. The
tribunes were accordingly placed under the special protection of the Deity.
They were declared to be consecrated and inviolable (sacrosancti),
and whoever attacked them, or hindered them in the exercise of their functions,
fell a victim to the avenging Deity, and might be killed by anyone without fear
of punishment. Such an arrangement, which aims at making a breach of the peace
lawful, which places the observance of political order under the guarantee of
open violence, is, in spite of all religious forms and sanctions applied to it,
an open wound which never heals, and is harmless only so long as the body on
the whole remains healthy and strong, but which, in case of sickness, is easily
inflamed and endangers the whole community.
The
tribuneship, by being placed from the very beginning above all laws by reason
of the extraordinary religious protection which it enjoyed, served as a
powerful engine for the progressive development of the constitution. The reign
of freedom must always be preceded by the removal of restrictions,
disabilities, privileges, monopolies, and all sorts of bad laws by which the
legislators of a rude age have endeavoured to repress
the natural instinct of men for freedom and equality, in behalf of a ruling
class, under the pretext of maintaining order, religion, and prosperity. The
tribunes of the people had a most arduous task assigned to them. They had to
remove the legal inequalities among the two classes of citizens, caused by the
gulf which separated the conquerors from the conquered. They succeeded in
accomplishing this object after ages of political contests, for which a
parallel is to be found only in the development of the English constitution.
But, when their work was done, they did not retire. The tribuneship,
established for the protection of the helpless plebeians, was not abolished, as
it ought to have been, when the plebeians had risen to perfect equality with
the patricians. It continued to exist, completely changed in its nature, though
but little in its external form, and contributed materially to undermine the
republic and re-establish a monarchy.
In
the first years of the existence of their office the tribunes naturally kept
within modest limits. All the stories of tribunician accusations and
condemnations in the period immediately following the secession, related by
Livy and Dionysius, are inventions of a much later period, and represent the
tribunes as invested with powers which, in those early days, they did not possess.
But,
in the legal protection of the plebs, which the tribunes maintained by the
right of intercession against all the official acts of the magistrates, the
germ of their future power lay concealed. It was evident that, if they could
protect a single plebeian from the consequences of a general order, their
interference in reality nullified that general order. Their mode of proceeding,
therefore, soon changed from affording protection in single instances to
interposing a veto on political acts of the magistrates and of the senate. In
their hands grew up a power of stopping every public functionary in the
discharge of his duty, and in fact of making all government impossible—a power
which, like that of refusing the supplies to a ministry, should operate only as
a threat, and not really be put into practice. Nor did the tribunes exercise it
without moderation, and thus the establishment of this magistracy contributed
materially to advance the development of the constitution.
CHAPTER
III.
THE
LEAGUE OF THE ROMANS, THE LATINS, AND THE HERNICANS.
If it is difficult to gain clear views
as to the condition of Rome in the regal period, these difficulties, and the obscurity
arising out of them, increase as soon as we turn our eyes away from Rome to the neighbouring country, endeavour to examine the internal condition of Latium as well as its relations to Rome.
Soon
after the foundation of Rome, the legendary city the Latin of Alba Longa, the
old capital of the Latin league, was destroyed. From that time it lay in ruins,
out of which, to the present day, it has never risen. As the common sanctuary
of the Latins, there remained standing the temple of the Latin Jupiter, on the
summit of the Alban hill, visible from every part of the plain. There was celebrated
at this spot an annual festival of all the assembled Latins, which preserved
the memory of their original union, and of their descent from one common stock.
There were also other religious centres in Latium,
which perhaps point to still older leagues; for instance, the sanctuary of the Lares and Penates at Lavinium.
From the beginning of the Roman republic the sacred grove at Aricia appears to
have been the meeting-place of the Latin peoples. Authentic accounts
as to the details of this league are wanting. The most probable conjecture is,
that for a time dictators were at the head as commanders of the league, and
that they afterwards gave place to two annually-elected prators.
Still it was in the nature of this, as of every international league, that the
individual members enjoyed more or less independent action in proportion to
their size and strength, and that the security and power of the league were
weakened in consequence.
It
was precisely during the time which followed the expulsion of the kings from
Rome that this weakness became highly dangerous. According to all appearances, several
nations of central Italy at that period left their seats among the mountains,
and moved southward and towards the coast. The memory of these migrations has
been preserved in the legend of the ‘sacred spring’. In hard times, under the
pressure of war, failure of the crops, and sickness, the inhabitants of the
mountains, we are told, used to vow that they would dedicate to the
gods all that was born in the ensuing spring. For the fulfilment of this vow
the firstlings of cattle were offered; but the children, after a number of
years, when they were grown up, were sent out of the country to find a new home
for themselves. By such emigrations central and southern Italy was almost all
conquered by the Sabine nations. The Aequians advanced towards the east of
Latium, the Volscians towards the south. These two nations were, from this time
forward up to the Gallic invasion, the constant enemies of the Latins and of
the Romans.
It
was therefore very natural that the latter nations should form for their mutual
protection an offensive and defensive league. Such a league the legend refers
even to the time of Servius Tullius. But now, for the first time, we meet with
traditions respecting it which deserve credit. It is said that in
the year of the secession a league was concluded between the Romans and Latins
which the Consul Sp. Cassius negotiated for Rome. It stipulated that there
should be everlasting peace between Rome and Latium, and that the two nations
should assist one another in defensive wars. There can be no doubt that this
league really existed, though we know nothing with certainty of the details of
the treaty than what has just been mentioned. It
was the first great political act of the Roman senate, which always conducted
its foreign policy with wisdom and firmness. By this league a bulwark was
erected between Rome and the Sabellian nations, which, it is true, was repeatedly
broken through in the course of the everlasting wars, and could only be
repaired with difficulty by the combined powers of the allied nations, but
which generally kept the ravages of war from the immediate vicinity of Rome,
and finally rendered it possible for the Romans to change their position of
allies to that of masters over the exhausted and divided Latins. This result
was brought about by the great losses sustained in the wars by the Latin towns.
When the alliance was formed, the league of the Latin towns was unbroken, and
they were able to treat with Rome on an equal footing. But the losses in the
course of the war were only on the side of the Latina. The Latin towns
conquered by the Volscians and Aequians were lost to the Latin league; on the
other hand, all territories reconquered by the united efforts of the Romans
and their Latin allies, were not simply restored to the latter, but in part
claimed as the share of Rome. Thus the Latin league led the way to that
dominion of Rome over Latium which existed for a long time de facto before the
great Latin war (338 b.c.) caused it to be formally
acknowledged.
The
league between Rome and Latium was soon joined by the kindred race of the Hernicans.
The territory of this people lay further in the eastern mountains in the valley
of the Trerus, and was threatened on one side by the Aequians,
and on the other by the Volscians. The league with them is said to have been
concluded on the same terms as with Latium. Dionysius relates that the conclusion
of the league was preceded by a war and a victory over the Hernicans. This is
not at all likely to have been the real course of events. If the Hernicans had
been conquered, they would not have been allowed to join the Roman alliance on
an equal footing as an independent nation. But it was a usual practice with the
Roman annalists (a practice with which we shall become sufficiently acquainted
as we proceed) to suppose that it was beneath the dignity of Borne to conclude
a treaty of peace and amity except after a preceding victory. As regards the Hernicans,
the story goes on to relate that two thirds of their territory were taken from
them. This statement is a palpable perversion or misunderstanding
of a stipulation of the treaty between the Romans, Latins, and Hernicans, by
which each of the three nations was to receive one third of the booty made in
war, and therefore also of the conquered land.
The
league of the three peoples existed as long as any serious danger threatened on
the side of the Volscians and Aequians. When this danger disappeared, and Rome
had grown strong, it was transformed into the acknowledged dominion of Rome.
CHAPTER
IV.
THE WARS WITH THE VOLSCIANS.
The foreign history of Rome in the first
century of the republic is one unbroken series of wars with the neighbouring peoples on the north, east, and south of
Latium. The descriptions of these wars which we read in Livy and
Dionysius bear the stamp of unscrupulous fiction to such an extent that a
critical examination of them would be hardly profitable. They are fall of
reports of the most heroic victories, of evident and palpable repetitions and
inventions, of mendacious boasting, and of attempts to conceal the reverses
which Rome and her allies had to suffer. If we may trust the stories of the annalists, as far as they describe the general features of
these wars, we come to the conclusion, that, for the most part, they consisted
of a succession of plundering excursions, in laying waste the open country, and
in similar enterprises, which the unpaid citizen soldiers could accomplish at
that time in the course of a few weeks of summer.
But
the effect of such annual warfare, even on a small scale, must have been very
harassing and ruinous. It is evident, even from the fragmentary and partial
reports of the Roman annalists, that the Aequians,
and still more the Volscians, gradually gained ground and conquered several of
the towns of the Roman allies; that the war on several occasions visited the
immediate neighbourhood of Rome; and that, finally,
after the complete dissolution of the Latin league, a great portion of Latium
was reconquered by, and thus became dependent on, Rome.
The
memory of these wars was preserved among the Roman people by several legends,
which the annalists endeavoured to transform into
history, and to bring into harmony with their narratives. The most celebrated
are those of Coriolanus and Cincinnatus. They show clearly what degree of
belief the Roman history of this time deserves, and for this reason we select
them for a more detailed examination.
The
legend of Coriolanus runs as follows:—In the year after the secession of the
plebs (492B.C.) there was a famine
in Rome; for, during the civil contention, the plebeians had not cultivated
their own lands, and they had laid waste the fields of their adversaries. There
was therefore great distress among the poor plebeians, and they would have
fallen victims to hunger if the consuls had not bought corn in Etruria at the
cost of the state, and distributed it to the starving people. But even this was
not sufficient, and the people suffered great want, till corn arrived from
Sicily, which Dionysius, the Lord of Syracuse, sent as a present to the Romans.
There
was at that time in Rome a brave patrician, whose name was Caius Marcius. He
had conquered the town of Corioli in the preceding
year, when the Romans were carrying on war with the Volscians, and for this
reason his fellow-soldiers had given him the surname Coriolanus. This man set
himself stoutly against the plebeians, for he hated them because they had won
the tribuneship from the senate. He, therefore, now advised that the corn
should not be divided, unless the plebeians would surrender their newly
acquired right and abolish the office of the tribunes.
When
the plebeians heard this, they were enraged against him, and wanted to kill
him. But the tribunes protected
him from the fury of the crowd, and accused him before the assembly of the
people of having broken the peace which had been sworn between the classes, and
of having violated the sacred laws. But Coriolanus mocked the people and the
tribunes, and showed haughty defiance and presumptuous pride. Therefore, as he
did not appear before the people assembled to try his case, he was condemned,
and left Rome as an exile, swearing that he would be revenged on his enemies.
As
the Volscians were then living in peace and in friendship with Rome,
Coriolanus went to Antium, and lived there as the
guest of Attius Tullius, the most respected and the most influential man among
the Volscians. And the two men consulted together how they might excite the
Volscians to make war on the Romans. At this time the great games were
celebrated in Rome, in honour of Jupiter; and a great
number of Volscians came to Rome to see the games. Then Attius Tullius went
secretly to the consuls, and advised them to take care that his countrymen did
not break the peace during the festivities. When the consuls heard this, they
sent heralds through the town, and caused it to be proclaimed that all
Volscians should leave the town before night. Astonished at this unexpected
order, and exasperated at the outrage to their nation, the Volscians proceeded
in a body to return home by the Latin road. This road led past the spring of Ferentina, where at one time the Latins used to hold their
councils. Here Attius was waiting for his countrymen, and excited them against
Rome, saying that they had been shut out unjustly from sharing in the sacred
festivities, as if they had been guilty of sacrilege, or were not worthy to be
treated as allies and friends by the Roman people. Thus the war with Rome was
decided on, and as commanders the Volscians chose Attius Tullius and C. Marcius
Coriolanus. These set out with a large army, and conquered in one campaign Circeii, Satricum, Longula, Polusca, Corioli, Lavinium (the holy city
of the Penates), Corbio, Vitellia, Trebium, Lavici, and Pedum. No Roman army offered any resistance in the field.
Thus
the Volscians at last advanced to Rome, and encamping near the Fossa Cluilia, five miles from the town, they laid waste the
lands of the plebeians round about. Then the Romans were seized with despair,
and scarcely retaining courage to defend the walls of the town, did not dare to
advance against the Volscians, or fight them in the field. They looked for
deliverance only from the mercy and generosity of their conquerors, and sent
the principal senators as ambassadors to Coriolanus, to sue for peace. Sut
Coriolanus answered that, unless the Romans should restore to the Volscians all
the conquered towns, peace could not be thought of. When the same ambassadors
came a second time, to ask for more favourable conditions, Coriolanus would not even see them. Thereupon the chief priests
appeared in their festive robes and with the sacred signs of their office, and
tried to calm the anger of Coriolanus. But they strove in vain. At last the
noblest Roman matrons came to Veturia, the mother of
Coriolanus, and to Volumnia his wife, and persuaded
them to accompany them into the enemy’s camp, and with their prayers and tears
to save the town, which the men could not protect with their arms.
Now
when the procession of Roman matrons approached the Volscian camp, and
Coriolanus recognised his mother, his wife, and his
little children, his heart softened, and he heard the entreaties of the
matrons, fell on the neck of his mother and of his beloved wife, and granted
their request. He immediately led the army of the Volscians away from Rome, and
gave back all the conquered towns. But he never returned to Rome, because he
had been banished by the people, and he closed his life in exile among the
Volscians.
Critical
Examination of the Story of Coriolanus.
If
we examine the particulars of the foregoing narrative, we find that no single
feature of it can be considered historical, and that it consists altogether of
baseless of a later period, which betray a great want of skill in the invention
of a probable narrative, and even ignorance of the institutions and manners of
the Roman people. The conquest of Corioli is
evidently invented only to account for the name Coriolanus. In the first place
it does not fit into the historical account of the Volscian war; and, in the
second place, we know that surnames taken from conquered towns or countries
came into use at a much later period among the Romans. For the whole of the
alleged history of the campaign in which Corioli is
reported to have been conquered, the annalists, as
Livy himself admits, had no positive testimony. They found only the name of one
consul of 493 B.C., viz. that of Sp. Cassius, in the treaty which at that time
was concluded with Latium. They inferred from this that the other consul must
probably have been absent in some war. They therefore made him carry on the war
with the Volscians, and effect the conquest of Corioli.
On such flimsy and baseless combinations the history of the wars of that time
is made to rest.
The
alleged famine of the year 492 is accounted for in the story by the neglect of
agriculture on the part of the plebs, during the secession of the preceding
year. But, according to Livy’s report, the secession lasted only a few days.
There can, therefore, be no truth in the presumed cause of the famine. The
story of the buying-up of the corn for the relief of the starving people is
taken almost word for word from the stories relating to the years 433 and 411 b.c. And so
thoughtless and ignorant were the Roman annalists,
that they mentioned as the benefactor of the distressed Romans the tyrant
Dionysius of Syracuse. This chronological error was discovered by the learned archaeologist
Dionysius, who was too well acquainted with the history of his disreputable
namesake of Syracuse, to suppose that he could have sent corn to Rome about
half a century before he was born. He therefore substitutes Gelo as the Greek tyrant who is said to have sent the corn. It is evident that the
removal of a gross blunder does not amount to positive evidence, and the
learning and ingenuity of Dionysius are therefore thrown away.
It
has already been observed that the accusation and sentence of Coriolanus by the
plebs, almost immediately after the first election of tribunes, was impossible.
The tribunes had for a long time no other function than that of protecting
their fellow-plebeians from the unjust treatment of the patrician consuls. The
plebeians, who for a long time remained in a dependent and oppressed condition,
had as yet no chance of exercising a power which would have placed at their
mercy every patrician hostile to them.
The
Volscians appear in the annalistic account to have been at war with Rome in the
year 493 b.c., and to have lost the town of Corioli. At the time of the banishment of Coriolanus,
however, in the following year, they live in profound peace with Rome, and
appear in great numbers at the Roman games. The contradiction implied in this
Dionysius attempted to remove by inventing a temporary truce between the two
nations. The improbabilities of the story are most palpable in the
narrative of the campaign of the Volscians against Rome under the command of
Coriolanus. According to Livy, the Volscians conquered, in the course of one
summer, twelve—and according to Dionysius, fourteen— Latin towns, overran
the whole of Latium, and penetrated into the immediate neighbourhood of Rome. When we consider what a small measure of success usually followed a
campaign; how difficult, even in the time of their undisputed supremacy, the
Romans found it to reduce a single town, it may well be looked upon as a
miracle that the Volscians took seven towns, as Dionysius says, in thirty days.
And not less wonderful than the rapidity of the Volscian success, is the
complete inactivity of the Romans, and of their allies, the Latins, who were at
other times not accustomed to look on calmly when enemies invaded their
country. Attempts have been made to account for this inactivity by the civil
disputes of the Romans, as if these disputes during the many years of their
continuance had ever hindered the Romans from offering resistance to the
enemies of their country. But what is still more wonderful than the rapid conquest
of so many Latin towns by the Volscians, is the ready restoration of them to
the Latins. After the departure of Coriolanus the possessions of the Volscians
and of the Latins are precisely the same as before; all the conquests of
Coriolanus have melted away like snow, and nothing is left for us in
explanation of this extraordinary event but to believe, with the author of the
legend, that Coriolanus, at the request of his mother, retired from Rome, and
restored all his conquests.
As
a punishment for this treachery, which the Volscians, as it appears, were
obliged to submit to, they were reported to have cruelly murdered Coriolanus at
the end of the campaign. Yet another, and probably older, form of the legend
says nothing of this revenge, but allows him to attain a great age among the
Volscians, and to lament his banishment from his fatherland. The simple-minded
old annalist saw nothing unnatural in the fact that a Roman exile should
restore to the Romans towns conquered by the military strength of the
Volscians.
The
germ from which the whole legend sprang is the story of the filial love of
Coriolanus, and of the great authority exercised in olden times by Roman
matrons over their sons and husbands. Now it is not beyond the range of
possibility that, at one time or other, a Roman party leader, expelled in one
of the numerous civil broils, may have joined the national enemies, and may
have been induced by the tears of his mother and wife to desist from
hostilities against his native city; but the story of Coriolanus, as given by
Livy and Dionysius, relates things utterly impossible in Rome. The Roman senate
could at no time have dreamed of sending an embassy of priests to ask for peace
from a public enemy; still less can we reconcile a deputation of matrons with
what we know of Roman manners and law, granting even that such a deputation
was self-appointed, and not formally commissioned by the senate to act for the
Roman people. Such misconceptions of the old institutions of Rome could
originate only in later times, when people had vague and erroneous conceptions
of the laws and manners of a bygone age, and when fanciful Greeks had begun to
adorn the old annals of Rome with moral tales of their own invention.
If,
then, there is nothing historical in the legend of Coriolanus, it can, of
course, throw no light on the particulars of the wars with the Volscians. That
these wars, in the first half century of the republic, turned out more and more unfavourable for Rome and the Latins, is quite
evident from a careful examination of the accounts handed down to us, in spite
of all the mendacious reports of victories. The light of truth begins to dawn
even through the thick mists of fiction. At the time when the oldest family
chronicles were composed, it was not yet forgotten that the Volscians had often
defeated the Romans, had conquered many Latin towns, and threatened even Rome
itself. These events took place during, and no doubt in consequence of, the
internal disputes in Rome which preceded the decemvirate. The success of the
enemy, however, was in the legendary accounts, by national pride, attributed to
Coriolanus, a native Roman; and thus, perhaps, it happened that all the
Volscian conquests were condensed into the history of one campaign.
Antium,
a town on the sea coast, was one of the chief strongholds of Volscian power;
another was Ecetra, on the mountain range which rises
in the east of Latium. These two towns were the chief centres of the Volscians, and the headquarters from which they directed their attacks
against the Latin league and against Rome. But after the decemvirate the
strength of the Volscians decreases. We see them gradually losing the conquered
towns one after the other. Rome became so secure from molestation on the part
of the Volscians that she had leisure to attack Veii with all her strength.
When Veii was subdued and the Romans had gained their first great accession of
power in the fertile districts of southern Etruria, the Volscians had ceased to
be dangerous to them.
The
increasing weakness of the Volscians is perhaps due, at least in part, to the
attacks of the Samnites, to which they were now exposed on the east and
south-east of their territory. The Samnites were then spreading their conquests
over Campania; they appeared soon after in the history of Rome as the enemies
of the Sidicines. It is most probable that they
became very unpleasant neighbours to the inhabitants
of the fertile districts in the lower part of the valley of the Liris, and that even before 354 b.c., when they concluded a formal alliance with Rome, they
directed their attacks against the Volscians, and thus rendered a material
service to Rome. This is what we may conjecture; but the scanty annals of that
unhistorical period do not allow us to speak with certainty on this subject.
CHAPTER
V.
THE
WARS WITH THE AEQUIANS.
Contemporary with the wars of the
Volscians are those of the Aequians in the first century of the republic. These
mountaineers, closely allied to the Sabines, attacked the eastern frontier of
Latium, but they seem to have been more intent on plunder than on permanent
conquests and colonisation, like the Volscians. There
were no towns of importance in the land of the JEquians.
They lived more after the true manner of the Sabines, in open villages; and from
their mountain fastnesses they made their periodical inroads into the neighbouring Latin territory. The wars of the Romans with
such border plunderers, even if they were faithfully described, would be of
very little historical interest. But the confused, exaggerated, and worthless
statements of the Roman annals, with their endless repetitions and tedious
monotony, have the effect of destroying even the scanty interest which they
might possess if they were truthful pictures of the manners of the time. After
examining them carefully, the critic turns from them with something of disgust
and with sore disappointment for having lost so much time in seeking to
discover a grain of wheat in a bushel of chaff. It will suffice to select one
example as an illustration. We take the famous story of Cincinnatus, one of the
most famous and most popular Roman heroes of the olden time, the true type of
primeval virtue, abstinence, and patriotism. This story is admirably calculated
to characterise the general quality of what is
supposed to be the history of those wars.
Peace
was concluded with the JSquians in the year 459 b.c., and the Romans expected no
hostilities on that side. But soon after, the faithless Aerquians suddenly invaded the country of Tusculum, and their commander Gracchus Cloelius
pitched his camp on the hill Algidus, the eastern
spur of the Alban range, from whence he laid waste the land of the Roman
allies. Here Quintus Fabius appeared before him at the head of an embassy, and
demanded satisfaction and compensation. But Cloelius laughed at the ambassadors,
and, mocking them, said, they should lay their complaints before an oak-tree,
against which his tent was pitched. Then the Romans took the oak and all the
gods to witness that the Aequians had broken the peace, and had begun an
unrighteous war. Without delay the consul Minucius led an army against the Aequians. But the chances of war were not in his favour. He was defeated and blockaded in his camp. At this
news terror prevailed in Rome, as if the enemy were at the very gates; for Nautius, the second consul, was far away with his army,
fighting with the Sabines, the allies of the Aequians.
Then
there was nothing to be done but to name a dictator, and only one man seemed
to be fit to fill the post. That was Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus, a noble patrician, who had filled with distinction all the posts
of honour in the republic. He was then living quietly
at home, and, like noble Romans of the good old time, cultivated his small
estate with his own hands. Now, when the messengers of the senate came to
Cincinnatus, to bring him the news that he was nominated as dictator, they
found him ploughing his field, and he had taken off his garments, for the heat
was very great. Therefore he first asked his wife to bring him his toga, that
he might receive the ambassadors of the senate in a becoming manner. And when
he had heard their errand, he went with them into the town, accepted the
dictatorship, and chose for the master of the horse Lucius Tarquitius,
a noble but poor patrician. And he ordered that all the courts of justice
should be closed, and all common business suspended, bill the danger was
averted from the country. Thereupon he summoned all men who could bear arms to
meet in the evening on the Field of Mars, every man bringing twelve stakes for
the ramparts and provisions for five days, and before the sun went down the
army had started off and reached Mount Algidus at
midnight.
Now
when the dictator saw that they were drawing near to the enemy, he bade the men
halt and throw their baggage in a heap, and he quietly surrounded the camp of
the Aequians, and gave orders to make a ditch round the enemy and drive in the
stakes. Then the Romans raised a loud cry, so that the Aequians were overcome
by terror and despair; but the legions of the consul Minucius recognised the war-cry of their countrymen, seized
their arms, and sallied forth against the Aequians, who, being thus attacked
from both sides, and seeing there was no escape, surrendered themselves and
prayed for mercy. Cincinnatus granted them their lives, and dismissed them,
making them pass naked under the yoke; but Gracchus Cloelius and the other
commanders he kept as prisoners of war, and he divided the spoil among his
victorious soldiers. In this manner Cincinnatus rescued the blockaded army and
returned in triumph to Borne; and when he had delivered his country from its
enemies, he laid down his office, on the sixteenth day, and returned to his
fields, crowned with glory and honoured by the
people, but poor, and contented in his poverty, as he had been before that
time.
Critical
examination of the Story of Cincinnatus.
That
this story belongs less to the region of history than to that of fancy is
evident from the physical impossibilities it contains. The distance between
Borne and the hill Algidus is more than twenty miles.
This distance the Boman army under Cincinnatus is
said to have accomplished between nightfall and midnight, though the soldiers
were burthened with three or four times the usual number of stakes for
intrenchments. Then, after such a march, the men were set to work to
make a circumvallation round the whole Aequian army, which itself inclosed the army of Minucius,
and must, therefore, have occupied a considerable extent of ground. The work of
circumvallation was accomplished in the same night, uninterrupted by the Aequians,
though the Romans at the very commencement had raised a shout to announce their
arrival to the blockaded army of Minucius. With these
details the story is, of course, mere nonsense. But if, following the example
of Dionysius we strip off from the popular legend all that is fanciful,
exaggerated, or impossible, and place the heroic deed of Cincinnatus on such a
footing that it assumes an air of probability, we shall gain nothing, because
by such a rationalising process we shall not be able
to convert a legend into genuine history.
We
arrive at the same conclusion by observing the fact that the story of
Cincinnatus, in its general and characteristic features, is related no less
than five times.
The
wars of the Aequians, like those of the Volscians, lasted during the first
century of the republic. Sometimes, among the periodical enemies of Rome and
Latium, the name of the Sabines occurs—a name by which, in all probability, no
other people than the Aequians are to be understood, just as the Volscians are
sometimes called Auruncans. We have already noticed
it as probable that in some of the family chronicles the name Sabine was employed, instead of the distinctive names of the particular
branches of the Sabine stock, and that in this way the Latin war of the year
503 b.c. is also called a Sabine war. Thus the Sabines were now and then introduced into
the Aequian wars; and we have no means of knowing where the seats of these
Sabines were and what their relation was to the Aequians.
This
is particularly evident in the story of the seizure of the Capitol (460 b.c.) by the Sabine Appius Herdonius. It is related that Roman exiles and slaves,
under the command of Appius Herdonius, surprised and
took the Capitol by night; but to which party the exiles belonged is not
explained. It is very unlikely that the enemies who seized the Capitol were Roman
exiles at all. For, however hot the quarrel between the classes may have been,
it is certain that it did not lead to the banishment of great numbers? The
mentioning of the slaves is still more mysterious. Revolts of slaves, at a time
when there are comparatively but few, are highly improbable. On the other hand,
sudden invasions and the taking of strongholds seem not to have been very
unusual in the wars of those times. In the year 477 b.c., the Janiculus was taken
possession of by the Veientes; in the year 459 b.c., the Aequians stormed the fort of
Tusculum; and soon after, Corbio was taken by them in
the night. Probably it was these Aequians who by a sudden attack
took the Roman Capitol, for this occurrence happened just in the midst of the quian wAear. But as P. Valerius, the son of Publicola,
was then consul, and was killed at the retaking of the Capitol, the domestic
annalist of the Valerians named a Sabine instead of an Aequian, as the enemy
who had taken the Capitol. To the Romans, moreover, it appeared less
humiliating to think that the Capitol had been taken by Roman exiles, or even
by Roman slaves, than that it should have fallen into the hands of the enemies
of their country.
From
the time of the decemvirs downwards, the attacks of the Aequians, like those of
the Volscians, decrease in vigour. Rome, after having
been on the defensive so long, now takes the offensive, and by degrees gains an
undoubted superiority.
CHAPTER
VI.
THE
WARS WITH VEII
While the wars with the Aequians and
Volscians were almost annually repeated in the first century of the republic,
and filled the annals with monotonous and tedious state narratives, the
Etruscans, the northern neighbours of Rome, seem to
have lived in peace, and not to have thought of making conquests in Latium. The
once powerful nation of the Etruscans was in its decline. Expelled in the north
from the valley of the Po by the Gauls, from Campania in the south by the Sabellians, from Latium by Rome and the allied Latins,
weakened in the interior by dissensions and divisions, injured in their
maritime trade by the rivalry of the Greeks, the Etruscans were no longer in a
position to be dangerous to their southern neighbours.
The confederation intended to bind together the different Etruscan communities
could no more stand the test of dangerous times than similar confederations
have done in ancient and modern times. The towns lying to the north took little
interest in the fate of those lying to the south; they had always enough to do
to ward off the Gauls, who were becoming more and more troublesome. We
therefore find Rome from time to time involved in wars with Veil alone, and in
wars, too, which on the part of the Veientes were
merely defensive.
In one of these wars (483-474 b.C.) the Roman house of the Fabii plays so prominent a part as to justify the conclusion that the story originated in the family chronicles house, of this great race, the name of which had not appeared in the Fasti before this time, but which was destined to leave a lasting impression on the annals of the republic. The particulars of the wars with the Veientes are related in the same manner as the other contemporary wars, and are not a whit more trustworthy. They furnished materials for popular legends, of which the most celebrated was the story of the destruction of the Fabii at the river Cremera. The
war with the Veientes, says the legend, was more
harassing for Rome than dangerous. The Veientes confined
themselves to keeping Rome in a continual state of alarm by constant invasions,
driving away the flocks, destroying the crops, and cutting down the fruit
trees. In order to protect the community from such annoyances, the noble house
of the Fabii offered to undertake the war themselves.
The consul Kaeso Fabius placed himself at the head of
his kindred; with 306 men of patrician rank he left the town, followed by the
blessings and good wishes of the admiring people. He erected a fortified camp
in the territory of the Veientes not far from the
chief town of Veii on the river Cremera. From this
spot the Fabii made the territory of the Veientes insecure, and at the same time kept the enemy from
attacking Rome. But the Veientes enticed them out of
their fortress into an ambush, and attacked them from all sides with overwhelming
force. Not one of the valiant band escaped. The whole race would have become
extinct, if it had not been that one boy had been left behind in Rome, who
preserved the name and the race of the Fabii. The
memory of the unhappy day on the Cremera was never
effaced from the minds of the people. It was remembered that the brave band, on
their march out of Rome, passed through the right opening of the Porta Carmentalis, and from that time . this passage acquired the
name of ‘the unlucky way’, and was avoided by all with religious awe.
In
consequence of the massacre of the Fabii, the fortune
of war turned for a time to the side of the Etruscans. They defeated the consul Menenius, and occupied the Janiculus,
from whence they spread alarm and terror in Rome itself. The Romans succeeded
at length, after a severe struggle, in driving them away again from the stronghold
of the Janiculus, and, after some time, concluded a
truce of forty years with Veii, during which time each people kept within the
bounds of its own dominion.
The
stories of the wars with the Veientes have no greater
claim to authenticity than traditions of other wars of that period. Here also
we can discover in the accounts two sources of error rather than of historical
truth, which combine to make up the commonly received story. We can trace on
the one hand the popular legend, and on the other the invention of the annalists. The destruction of the 306 Fabii is wholly and entirely legendary. Legends take but little count of
probabilities; they delight in what is most striking, wonderful, and
improbable. We have already observed this in the legends of Coriolanus and
Cincinnatus. It is no less clear in that which relates to the Fabii. The Fabian house is said to have consisted of 306
men capable of bearing arms, and one boy under the military age. This alone is
so unnatural that it tends to condemn the whole story. These Fabii were, in the oldest form of the legend, all
patricians. This is plainly an exaggeration, for such a number of men capable
of bearing arms in one single house is impossible, especially among the
Fabians, who up to this time could only produce as consuls the three brothers Kaeso, Quintus, and Marcus. We gain nothing by supposing
that among the 306 Fabii the clients of the Fabian
house were also reckoned. The story must be taken or rejected as it is. Nor is
the statement of Dionysius more than a guess, that the Fabii with the clients numbered 4,000 men, i.e. they formed a legion. Another writer, who may have thought that a legion at that time consisted of 5,000 men,
gives that as the number of those who , marched out of Rome, and were killed at
the Cremera.
Independently
of the difficulties presented by the reported numbers and the particular
circumstances, the whole proceeding, as it is related, is irreconcilable with
the Roman public law, or at least custom. The expedition of the Fabii is an expedition of volunteers, and at their head is
the consul for the year. Such a thing was impossible. The consul could only
take the field after a formal decree of the senate and the people. The military organisation of the Romans was incompatible with
private undertakings of the kind ascribed to the Fabii. It is a sign of a declining state when a war is
carried on by officers who have no special commission from their government.
For
this reason we cannot venture on any conjectures as to the real intentions of
the Fabii; whether, as Niebuhr says, they wished to
found a sort of private settlement of their own, or whether they wished only to
establish a permanent military post, as was customary among the Greeks. The
story offers no materials which would enable us to judge of the possible facts
which may have given rise to it.
The
wars with the Veientes cease from the year 474 b.c. till the war which, in 431 b.c., ended with the destruction of Veii.
CHAPTER
VII.
THE
AGRARIAN LAW OF SPURIUS CASSIUS.
The soil of a country is not the produce
of human labour. Individual citizens cannot therefore
naturally lay any claim to lawful property in land as to anything produced by
their own hands. The state, as the representative of the rights and interests
of society, decides how the land is to be divided among the members of the
community, and the rules laid down by the state to regulate this matter are of
the first and highest importance in determining the civil condition of the
country and the prosperity of the people. Where the land is considered the
property of the sovereign, the consequence for the people is abject poverty and
slavery. If only one class among the people is privileged to have property in
land, a most exclusive oligarchy is formed. Where the land is held in small
portions by a great number, and nobody is legally or practically excluded from
acquiring land, there the elements of democracy are provided.
According
to the strict right of conquest in antiquity, the defeated lost, not only their
independence, but, if the conquerors thought proper, their personal freedom,
their movable and landed property, and even life itself. In practice a
modification of this right took place in the interest of the conquerors
themselves. Extreme severity was applied only in extreme cases; for instance,
as a punishment for treason. The conquered had generally not only life and
freedom left them, but also the means of livelihood, i.e. some portion of their
land. The conquerors did not take the whole, but either one-third, or a half,
or two-thirds, according to circumstances. Such we must imagine to have been
the proceeding at the foundation of the Roman state. One portion of the
original inhabitants which the Sabine conquerors found there probably remained in possession of their hereditary farms, subject to no
restrictions and services save those which the state required of all its
members, such as serving in the field and contributing the war taxes. These
people formed the nucleus of the plebs—the freemen who were members of the
Roman state without actually having any political rights. The land which the
victors took from the vanquished being partly arable, but to a far greater
extent pasture land, was either cultivated by the conquerors with their own
hands, or given for cultivation to the former possessors on condition that
they should pay part of the produce as rent. In this way arose the clientela, the social, political, and economical
dependence in which a great part of the plebs stood with regard to the
patricians, and which could remain in its original vitality only so long as the
clients depended for their subsistence on land held not as freehold, but by an
imperfect title, and subject to the seignorial rights of their patrons. The
extent of the plebeian farms in the oldest times is stated to have been two jugera. This statement may the more readily be accepted as
derived from authentic tradition, since the same amount of land was repeatedly
given in historical times to the settlers in new colonies. So scant a measure
of arable land would scarcely have sufficed for the support of a family,
without a share in the common pasture. It may therefore be taken for granted
that the plebeians had the right to use the common pasture on paying a tax to
the state.
As
long as the people of Rome depended less on agriculture than on the breeding
of cattle, these regulations were natural and satisfactory. But with the
advance of civilisation, agriculture was developed
more and more, and as population increased, the grazing lands belonging to the
government were inclosed by degrees. The plebeians
now found themselves exposed to a double hardship. In the first place, the
pasture lands being brought into cultivation, the extent of land available for
grazing became smaller, and, in the second place, the patricians claimed the
exclusive right of inclosing and occupying (occupatio)
public land (ager publicus). This claim
might be allowed, and, to a certain degree, be well founded, as long as the
patricians alone formed the people (the populus)
and bore the burdens of the state. But when the plebeians were gradually made
to take their share in the military service, and when the Servian constitution
substituted for the old patrician populus a
new people, consisting of plebeians and patricians alike, the time for making a
distinction between patricians and plebeians in the use of the public land had
passed. Its occupation ought to have been granted to the plebeians as a right,
or it should have been divided fairly among all the citizens, and the
pernicious custom of occupation should have been abolished.
This
system of occupation or squatting, in which every one may take possession of
the land which he chooses, appears possible only where there is uncultivated
land in abundance, and where the state offers undisturbed possession to the
cultivator as a premium upon cultivation. Where, however, the reserved land is
limited in quantity, and where the population has urgent need of it for purposes
of agriculture—in other words, where land has a high value—disputes cannot
possibly be avoided among those who wish to take possession, without the
enactment of very precise rules and regulations, directing the process under
which occupation is to take place. What these rules and regulations were in
Rome we have no means of judging, as they are never even hinted at by the
historians. We only know that the law sanctioned the occupation of waste and uninclosed land, and that it protected the bona fide occupier in his possession, without, however, acknowledging his possession as
property. The state remained the owner of the public land, even after it was
occupied by individual citizens. It had the right to impose an annual tax, as
an acknowledgment of its paramount right of ownership, and it could at any time
re-enter into possession and compel the occupiers to restore the land, without
even a claim to compensation.
The
right of occupation was claimed, as we have seen, by the patricians for
themselves. The plebeians, however, did not allow this claim, and always called
this proceeding of the patricians a crying injustice. Out of these conflicting
interests arose the quarrels about the agrarian laws, which extend through the
whole republican period, and mark a very sore spot in the social system of the
Romans.
Already
in the history of the regal period we hear much of allotments of land to the
citizens. None of these accounts, however, have any weight. The first
apparently credible mention of an agrarian law belongs to the third consulship
of Sp. Cassius, 486 b.c. Although this law must have been of the greatest importance, although it was
the cause of the death of Cassius, and, year after year, gave rise to the
agrarian agitations of the tribunes, we know really nothing of its contents,
and must be satisfied with conjecture. Sp. Cassius, in proposing it, was in opposition
to the ruling party in the senate, as, after the expiration of his year of
office, he was called to account, and fell a victim to the vengeance of his
fellow-patricians, who made his fate a warning example for all members of the
aristocracy that should feel inclined to place the wellbeing of the state
higher than the advantage of the ruling class. It seems probable, therefore,
that Cassius brought his agrarian law before the people without the consent of
the senate, which he was legally justified in doing. But though the law was
sanctioned by the comitia without the concurrence of the. senate, it could not
be carried into effect without the. approval of the
senate, the patrum auctoritas. If Cassius attempted to do this,
or if, in calling the people together and laying his bill before them for
acceptation, he was opposed by his colleague, and, regardless of this veto,
persisted in his course, he was guilty of an infringement of the law which may
have been the plea for his condemnation.
How
confused, wild, and thoughtless are the stories of the Roman annalists which
refer to this period is plainly seen from the accounts which Livy and Dionysius
give of the measure of Spurius Cassius.
According
to Livy, Cassius conquered the Hernicans, and concluded a treaty with them, by
which they gave up two-thirds of their land. This land Cassius proposed to
divide between the Latins and the Roman plebs. The plebeians would have had no
objections to urge, if it had been proposed that they alone should have the
conquered land, but they could not make up their minds to share it with the
Latins, and therefore they condemned Cassius to death; although, apart from the
intended boon of the agrarian law, he had thought to win their favour by proposing that the money which they had paid for
the corn sent from Sicily in the year of the famine should be restored to them.
The whole of this story is mere moonshine. The war with the Hernicans was
invented to account for the well-known treaty with them, as we have already
seen, and the alleged proposal to divide the money paid for the Sicilian com
among the plebs is as unauthentic as the whole story of the famine of the year
493 B.C., as the conquests of Coriolanus, and as the gift of the Sicilian
tyrant. Perhaps Niebuhr is right in his ingenious conjecture that this feature
of the story was borrowed from a similar proposal of C. Gracchus in 122 B.C., and was therefore of very recent
date.
Still
wilder than the account of Livy is that of Dionysius. According to him, Sp.
Cassius proposed to give away two-thirds of the Roman public land to the Latins
and Hernicans, and to divide the remainder among the Roman plebs. This
astounding misrepresentation is, like the report of Livy, an inference from the
same treaty of Rome with the Latins and Hernicans. And in the story of
Dionysius also we can trace, as in that of Livy, a reminiscence of the civil
disturbances of the second century B.C. Dionysius says that Cassius, in order to carry his law, invited the Latins and
Hernicans to an assembly of the Roman people, and that, by an edict of the
consul Virginius, they were prevented from taking part in the Roman comitia.
This feature of the story is plainly borrowed from the year 123 b.c., not less than 363 years later, when
C. Gracchus invited the Latins and the Italian allies to come to Rome to vote,
and when the Consul Fannius ordered them to leave the
town. Such are the reports of one of the most important measures, which gave
the first impulse to an agitation calculated to shake the republic to its very
foundations. We know with certainty nothing more than the fact that an agrarian
law was proposed by Sp. Cassius and frustrated by the patricians; and we can
only suppose that that far-seeing statesman proposed what subsequently the
plebs perseveringly struggled for, viz., a limitation of the exclusive right of
the patricians to occupy the public land, and the admission of all citizens to
a share in what was thus rescued from the grasping monopoly of the privileged
class.
As
to the end of Cassius, our authorities are partly contradictory, partly so
vague that we are obliged to give up altogether the attempt to understand it,
or to rest content with conjecture. It is universally reported that
Sp. Cassius, after the expiration of his third consulship, was accused by the
quaestors L. Valerius and K. Fabius of trying to
obtain absolute power, but we are left quite in the dark as to the comitia that
tried him. It is not likely that he was condemned in an assembly where, as in
the comitia of centuries, the plebeians were numerous ; for, in spite of all
that Livy has to say about the discontent of the plebeians on account of the
liberality of Cassius to the allies, he acknowledges that they suffered a
defeat in his condemnation. It is, therefore, most likely that Cassius was
accused before the patrician curiae, and judicially murdered by the exasperated
party of the nobility, under the always ready and easily proved accusation of
an attempt to obtain absolute power.
There
was, however, another, and a totally different, account about the end of Sp.
Cassius, namely, that he was sentenced and put to death by his own father. It
is difficult to say what we are to think of this story; we see, however, in it
a new and striking example that the sources of our information are still far
from being clear, consistent, and trustworthy.
CHAPTER
VIII
THE
DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION BEFORE THE DECEMVIRATE.
The establishment of the tribuneship of
the people had apparently introduced no new principle into the constitution of
the republic. The authority of the patrician consuls, of the patrician senate,
of the assembly of centuries, in which the patricians were paramount, remained
what it had been before. The plebeian magistracy of the tribunes of the people
was intended only to inforce the carrying out the law
which granted lawful protection to the plebeians. It was, therefore, not
hostile to the spirit of the old constitution, but rather in conformity with
it.
Yet,
in spite of this apparent preservation of the old institutions of the state,
the beginning was made of a great revolution. The plebeians had already become
so important a body that the apparently small privilege which secured to them
nothing more than the right of protection became a weapon in their hands, by
which they could gradually obtain full and equal rights with the old citizens.
In the first place, the election of plebeian magistrates by the plebs was
formally acknowledged and recognised by the
patrician consuls and senate. This implied the recognition by the state of the
plebs as a distinct and legally constituted body, as one of the constituent
parts of the Roman people. The plebeian tribes, no doubt, had been
self-governing bodies from the very beginning; and had managed their own
affairs in their plebeian assemblies, without interference on the part of the
patricians ; but of their proceedings hitherto the consuls and the senate had
taken no notice. Their resolutions had had no more weight or legal effect on
the officers of the state than the resolutions carried by an association or
society not recognised by law or not invested with
political functions. The chief officers whom the plebeians had hitherto chosen
for themselves were not invested with any authority to cooperate with or to
control the patrician magistrates; they were, in the eyes of the latter,
nothing more than private individuals. This was altered now. Since the representatives
of the plebs were, by a solemn covenant with the patricians, endowed with
specified rights and functions, which could not be ignored by the patrician magistrates,
and since their persons had received a special dignity and inviolability, the
elections of the plebeian officers were binding on the whole state, and the
plebeian comitia as such took a part in the political transactions in which the
sovereignty of the Roman people was expressed. The immediate consequence of the
tribuneship of the people was the organisation of the
assembly of tribes, the comitia tributa,
whereby they lost their former character as factional or party meetings, and
were raised to the dignity and functions of assemblies of the Roman people.
In
what way this constitution of the comitia of tribes was effected cannot be
shown with certainty. Even the mode of election adopted for the first tribunes
during the secession, and for their successors until 471 B.C., is by no means ascertained beyond doubt.
Livy, who often carefully avoids or skilfully conceals difficulties, does not say by which assembly the first and the
succeeding tribunes were elected, and in his account of the year 471 b.c. he
mentions for the first time that, in consequence of the Publilian law, the
tribunes were from this time forward elected in the comitia of tribes.
Dionysius, who endeavours to compensate for the
deficiency of his sources by his rich imagination, states that the first
tribunes were elected in the comitia of curies; and Cicero, who is not always a
trustworthy witness on Roman antiquities, agrees with him in this statement.
Modern
historians have ventured to question this account, especially on the ground
that the patrician comitia of curies would hardly have been suitable to choose
the representatives of the plebeians, whose special duty it was to act as a
check on the unfairness of the patrician magistrates. In truth, this view can
be held by those only who accept the theory of the ancient writers, that the
comitia of curies in the regal period were of a democratic nature, and
included the plebeians. Yet, even this theory does not remove all doubts. Above
all things, we may naturally ask how it happened that this assembly of the
curies, which, since the establishment of the republic, was superseded in all
legislative and elective functions by the assembly of centuries, was revived
for the purpose of serving for a newly established office like that of the
tribunes.
After
duly weighing all the arguments that can be brought forward in favour of the different modes of electing the first
tribunes, we come to the conclusion that the plebeians, who before this period
had no other assemblies than those of their tribes for the election of their
own plebeian officers, made use of the same comitia tributa for electing the tribunes, who were in all probability their old officers
invested with new rights, and now for the first time formally recognised by the patricians, as representatives and
patrons of the plebs. The assemblies of the local tribes thus attained an
importance which they had never had before, and it was most natural that the
patricians, who, according to their places of residence, were, like the
plebeians, included in the local tribes, laid claim to have a share in the
choice of the tribunes.
If
the plebeians had agreed to this, the tribuneship of the people would have changed
its character altogether. Under the influence of the patricians it would not
have remained the weapon of offence and defence of
the plebeians. It would have become a common magistracy of all citizens of
Rome, and would not have been a wedge driven in between the two principal
elements of the Roman people, destined to keep them distinct and at enmity one
with another. The patricians often made the attempt to amalgamate
these two elements. Whether they themselves frustrated their own object by
having the interest of their class more at heart than the common weal, we do
not know. But this is possible, and even probable, and they were therefore most
to blame for the continuance of a schism which their cruelty and oppression had
called forth. The circumstances which, in 471 B.C., led to the passing of the
Publilian law, seem to indicate that even at that time the attempt was made by
the patricians to change the original character of the tribuneship of the
people, and to open it to the patrician class. The patricians intruded
themselves in the assembly of the plebeians,’ surely not for the purpose of
making a disturbance, as it is represented, but to enforce a contested right,
by which they claimed to take part in the comitia of tribes. Their claim affected
the organisation of the comitia materially, and it
was of the greatest importance to decide, once for all, how these should be
constituted, and what privileges they should have. This question was decided by
the Publilian law, which excluded the patricians from the comitia tributa, and specified the privileges of these comitia, now admitted to be purely
plebeian. To these privileges belonged the right of discussing all questions
affecting not only the plebeian order but the community at large, and the right
of electing the plebeian magistrates, including, of course, the tribunes of the
people.
The
Publilian law was, therefore, not so much a further acquisition of the
plebeians, as a legal interpretation of the rights which belonged to them in
consequence of the sacred laws. These were the right of meeting together
unmolested in separate purely plebeian comitia, the right of freely and
independently electing their representatives, the right of discussing and
settling their own affairs, and in certain matters of passing resolutions which
affected the whole community. These resolutions were of course not binding on
the state, they had more the character of petitions than enactments, but still
they were the formal expression of the will of a great majority of the Roman
people, and as such they could not easily be set aside or ignored by the
patrician government. It was natural that in a short time a custom should
spring up regulating the manner in which such resolutions were to be laid
before the senate. Once introduced into the senate, the resolutions of the
tribes were launched on the road which all the laws of the state had to pass,
and so it was possible that, without any further legal privileges, the tribunes
of the people participated in the sovereign right of legislation through the
assembly of tribes.
The
first use of this right was made by the plebs, under the direction of their
tribunes, for the purpose of passing the Terentilian rogations.
CHAPTER
IX.
THE
DECEMVIRS AND THE LAWS OF THE TWELVE TABLES.
451
B.C.
By the treaty of peace concluded by the
two orders of citizens on the Sacred Hill, the demand of the plebeians not to
be subject to the caprice of the patrician government, but to the existing laws,
was granted. As a guarantee of this legal position they received the
consecrated magistracy of the tribunes. But when the tribunes were called upon
to put their veto upon any unfair or illegal decision of the patrician
magistrates, they found themselves insufficiently acquainted with the law, and
it was no doubt easy for the patricians, by appealing to a law known and
accessible only to themselves, to frustrate the intercession of the plebeian
tribunes.
The
knowledge of law was guarded as a sacred mystery from the profane eye of the
plebeians. It was cultivated in the patrician families as a kind of secret
science, and, like the precepts of a priesthood jealous and ambitious of power,
it was strictly preserved from being written down and published. This
exclusive possession of the principles and formulae of law was one of the
greatest supports of patrician authority, and kept the ignorant masses in a
state of dependence from which even the protection of the tribunes was not
able to deliver them.
It
could not, therefore, be long after the establishment of the tribuneship before
the plebeians felt the necessity of putting an end to the exclusive possession
of the laws which the patricians enjoyed, and to make them the common property
of the whole nation. This could only be done by writing them down and making
them public. A proposal was accordingly made in the assembly of the tribes by
the tribune C. Terentilius Arsa (462 b.c.) to appoint a commission for the
purpose of committing to writing the whole of the laws. The proposal was by no
means revolutionary; it was, on the contrary, conservative. A reform of the
state, like that which Solon was commissioned to effect in Athens,
was not contemplated by the movers of the law. The proposal did not at first
affect the constitution at all, but only the civil law. Nor was it intended
that this should be remodelled after new principles.
Nothing was proposed but a codification and publication of the law which was
then in force. Such a work is, indeed, not easy, even under the most favourable circumstances, and it is a convincing proof of
the spirit and strength of will of the Roman plebs that they so early insisted
on carrying a measure not less difficult than salutary.
It
is not wonderful that the patricians opposed with all their strength a measure
which would wrest a most powerful weapon out of their hands. As yet the plebs
had no share in the regular course of legislation. Their representatives, the
tribunes, had neither the right to summon the senate, nor to lay before it
proposals respecting new laws. In all probability they were not even entitled
to enter the hall of the senate, and had to be satisfied with the modest
privilege of listening outside to the proceedings. They could indeed speak to
their fellowplebeians in public meetings of the
necessity of the proposed reform, and so they could exercise a pressure on the
senate and the patricians, but the decisions in the assembly of tribes were not
binding and might be ignored by the senate. Only, as they expressed the opinion
of the great majority of the Roman people, which, if entirely disregarded,
might possibly lead to a violent revolution, they exercised on the better and more
intelligent part of the nobility an influence that, under continued agitation,
promised success. For this reason the contest for the passing of the bill of Terentilius lasted, according to tradition, not less than
ten years, and all means of open and secret opposition and of partial
concession were made use of to elude the claims of the popular party. The
attacks of foreign enemies, of the Volscians and Aequians, which just at this
time were most alarming, often supplied the patricians with a plea for letting
internal dissensions rest for a while. This was the period when the Volscians
penetrated into the heart of Latium, and broke up the Latin league. Even Rome,
no longer protected and shielded by Latium, was exposed to the attacks of the
enemy. The Aequians succeeded one night in gaining possession of the Capitol by
a bold assault, while the patricians and plebeians were in the
midst of their civil dissensions. Such events were eminently calculated to
convince even the staunchest patricians that it was high time to conciliate the
warlike plebeians, and to put an end to the internal dissensions of the
republic. They contributed, no doubt, to give the necessary weight to the
popular demands, and to smooth down difficulties which might be involved in any
irregularity or informality in the mode of proposing the law.
We
hear, therefore, of various concessions made by the patricians before they
accepted the principle of the new law. Among these must be reckoned the
increase of the tribunes from five to ten (457 BC..), by which a greater number of plebeians came within
reach of the protection of the tribunes; moreover, the giving up of the
Aventine hill to the sole use of the plebeians, a measure by which the
patrician possessions on that hill were resumed by the state, and portioned out
to plebeians. Shortly after this (454 b.c.) a law was proposed by the consuls themselves, i.e. the
patrician party, which, quite in the spirit of the Terentilian proposals, regulated the amount of fines which the consuls should have a right
to inflict, and thus limited, in one direction at least, the consular
authority. The maximum was fixed at two sheep and thirty bullocks, a measure
which casts a light on the domestic condition of Rome at this period, and shows
that we must picture Rome to ourselves as engaged in agriculture, and far removed
from an imposing town life. It was not till twenty-four years later that these
fines were fixed in money.
But
all these concessions failed to satisfy the plebs. Although Terentilius,
the original proposer of the motion, is never named again after the first year,
and may therefore be supposed to have died, his proposal was taken up by the
succeeding tribunes year after year. It is possible that, during the course of
these years, some modifications were made in the original motion. Still we may
presume that, essentially, it remained the same, as eventually, after a ten
years’ struggle, it was passed into law. It proposed that a commission of ten
men, being partly patricians and partly plebeians, should be appointed, for
the purpose of arranging the existing law into a code. At the same time the
consular constitution was to be suspended, and the ten men to be intrusted with the government and administration of the
commonwealth during the time that they acted as legislators. By the same law
the plebeian magistracy of the tribunes of the people ceased likewise, and the
ten men became a body of magistrates intrusted with
unlimited authority. The Romans thought that the difficult task of compiling a
code could not be accomplished unless those who were intrusted with it were unfettered. More especially the tribunes of the people, whose
particular function and duly it was to act as a check on the magistrates, might
have frustrated the whole scheme of legislation, if it had not been agreed to
suspend the office of tribunes for a time.
But
the patricians did not act entirely in good faith. Confident of their influence
in the assembly of centuries, they consented that men of both orders should be
eligible for the office of decemvirs, but, this done, they carried the election
of ten patricians. The plebeians, therefore, were without their tribunes, and
found themselves and their interests at the mercy of ten patrician magistrates.
Having, however, obtained this advantage over the credulity of their
opponents, the patricians made no attempt to use it insolently as a party
victory. The decemvirs proceeded with wisdom and moderation. Their administration,
as well as their legislation, met with universal approval. They published on
ten tables the greater part of the Roman law, and after these laws had met with
the approbation of the people, they were declared by a decision of the people
to be binding.
Thus
the first year of the decemvirate passed, and so far the traditional story is
simple and intelligible. But what now follows is so confused and unnatural that
we must suspect it to have been largely corrupted by idle tales and partial
misrepresentations. It runs as follows:—The decemvirs had not quite finished
their task. It was therefore agreed to choose decemvirs for the following year
also, that the statutes might be completed. The patricians made the greatest
efforts to elect the most eminent men of their order into this commission, and
these candidates availed themselves of the usual means for obtaining the votes
of the people. But a formidable rival came in their way, no other than Appius
Claudius himself, who was regarded as the principal support of the patricians.
This man had been a member of the first decemvirate, and had decidedly taken
the lead in it. He now conducted himself as a sincere friend of the people, and
contrived to obtain adherents among the leaders of the plebeians, the Icilii and Duilii, the former
tribunes. To prevent his re-election, his patrician colleagues conferred on him
the office of presiding at the comitia, hoping that he would observe the usual
custom, and, as presiding magistrate, would not accept votes for himself. But
this ruse did not succeed. Appius Claudius not only allowed himself to be
elected, but also frustrated the election of the principal patrician candidates.
Thus the result of the election was that, besides Appius Claudius, only men of
inferior weight among the patricians obtained seats in the commission, and that
half of the members were plebeians. The new decemvirs had, however, scarcely
entered office when they began a perfect reign of terror. They appeared on the
Forum with a band of a hundred and twenty lictors, and these carried axes among
their rods as a sign of unlimited power over life and death. Nor was it only
for show, or to inspire terror, that Appius and his fellow-decemvirs assumed
this emblem of regal authority. Neither their lives nor the property of the
citizens, especially the plebeians, were safe from their tyranny and greed. The
senate was hardly summoned at all. They ruled like ten kings, and their caprice
was their only law. They gave so little thought to the completion of their
task, that only towards the end of the year did they draw up two more tables of
laws, to be submitted to the assembly of the people.
When
their time of office expired, Appius and his colleagues declined to abdicate.
Their rule was now an undisguised tyranny. No one, however, dared to oppose
them, until by two acts of infamy they excited the people to take up arms
against them. A war had broken out with the Sabines and with the Aequians.
While Appius, with one of his colleagues, carried on his rule of terror in the
town, the remaining decemvirs led the army into the field. Here they caused a
brave soldier, named Siccius, formerly a tribune of
the plebs, who by his repeated complaints against the tyrants had roused the
discontent of the people, to be murdered. Meanwhile, in Rome, Appius Claudius
broke his oath and the law by pronouncing a wilfully false sentence from the seat of judgment. He declared a freeborn Roman virgin,
the daughter of Virginius, to be a slave and the property of one of his clients,
whom he had suborned to claim the girl, in order that he might get her into his
own power. Virginius, seeing no way of shielding his daughter from disgrace and dishonour, killed her before the judgment-seat of the
tyrant and before the eyes of the people. A storm now broke out against the decemvirs,
which they were net able to withstand. The senate took courage and compelled
them to resign. The people left Rome in a body, went a second time to the
Sacred Hill, and did not return till the old constitution and the sacred laws
had been re-established and the tribuneship of the people restored. The
decemvirs suffered for their crimes. Appius Claudius and Spurius Oppius, the most guilty of his accomplices, were
accused of having broken the laws, and died in prison by their own hands. The
rest were punished with banishment and forfeiture of their property.
This
is, in a few words, the story which Livy and Dionysius have ornamented with a
great mass of rhetorical detail. Unfortunately we have no full report of the
events independent of these two narratives, and we are obliged to use the few
faint hints given us to shape the crude mass of confused and conflicting
statements into something which can be accepted as at least a possible history
of the time.
We
start from the peculiar part which Appius Claudius played during the
decemvirate. Though he is painted in the glaring colours which mark all the Claudii of the older annals as
enemies of the plebeians, yet he appears nevertheless in Livy’s account to be
decidedly opposed to the ultra-patrician party. He even enjoys the favour of the plebs, and thereby exercises the chief
influence among the decemvirs of the first year. He has become entirely a fidend of the people; he agitates against the nobles, and
for the candidates of lower station and less influence; he associates with the
leaders of the plebs, the former tribunes. Thus he not only brings about his
own re-election, but frustrates the nomination of the most zealous and
influential patricians. Finally he succeeds so far that three plebeians are
chosen among the second decemvirs. These features of the story, in
which Appius bears a character differing so widely from that usually ascribed
to the Claudii, deserve the more credence as it would
have been easy to describe Appius Claudius in the whole story as a consistent
enemy of the plebs. It appears, therefore, that in the traditions respecting
the decemvirate, the democratic principles of Appius Claudius were too
distinctly and too strongly expressed to allow the annalists to exhibit him in this respect with the traditionary characteristics of his
family. If, therefore, we may believe any one single feature of the story, it
is this prominent importance of Appius Claudius in a policy carried out in
opposition to the wishes of the narrow-minded and short-sighted nobility.
What
then, we may ask, was the intention of Appius Claudius? It is clear that he
could not have been, as he is represented, at one and the same time, an enemy
of the leaders of the nobility and a tyrannical oppressor of the common people.
The two characters cannot be united in one person. From whom could Appius and
his adherents have expected support, if they had estranged both nobles and
people? Here is evidently a perversion of the truth, and we must decide whether
we wish to accept the account of his enmity or of his friendship for the
people. If it be admitted that, through the influence of Appius Claudius, three
plebeians were elected among the second decemvirs, and the leaders of the
extreme patrician party excluded, his intention must have been, in the spirit
of the Terentilian law, to establish harmony between
the two orders. At the election of the first decemvirs, the patricians had succeeded
in excluding the plebeians, thereby violating the agreement which had ended the
long disputes about the Terentilian rogations. By the
mixed composition of the second decemvirate, the long-wished-for equality of
rights between the two orders might be obtained. This was probably the object
of Appius Claudius. We venture to think that by such an equality of rights, he
hoped to fill up the gap between the two orders of citizens, so that the
tribuneship, being henceforth superfluous, need not be re-established.
But
in this attempt Claudius had to encounter the whole influence of the party of
the uncompromising patricians. He did not succeed in winning their approval for
his scheme of regulating on an equable footing the respective rights of the
plebeians and patricians. The two last tables which were yet wanted to complete
the whole decemviral legislation could not be passed by Appius and his colleagues,
no doubt because his draft contained regulations unpalatable to the old
aristocracy. When they were finally passed, after the downfall of the
decemvirs, under the consulship of Valerius and
Horatius, they certainly contained such unpopular laws as the one which forbad
marriages between patricians and plebeians. But it appears that Claudius, with
characteristic firmness, persevered in his purpose, and when the year of office
of the decemvirs had expired, he declined to retire with his colleagues before
his laws were accepted and published. He thereby placed himself in a false
position, and no longer had the formal law on his side. It was now easy for the
patricians to overthrow the bold innovator and his colleagues, as well as to
frustrate his plans. But only a compulsory resignation, and not by any means a
revolt of the people, put an end to the decemvirate. The secession which took
place at this time was surely not directed against the man who, like Sp.
Cassius and other Roman patricians, had the magnanimity and the political
wisdom to oppose the presumed advantages of the privileged party. If we are not
mistaken, the rising and the secession of the plebs did not take place before
the abolition of the decemvirate. Then the two last tables, containing the
unpopular laws, were drawn up by the consuls Valerius and Horatius, and while the old consular government was restored, the attempt
was made to prevent a restoration of the tribuneship. Taking this view of the
events we must of course reject the story of the accusation of Appius and his
colleagues by the tribunes of the people, and of his suicide in prison. We
shall have the less scruple in doing this, as the impeachment and suicide of
Appius are related by the annalists for the year 470 BC. also. If Appius died a violent death, it was not the
plebeians who drove him to it, but men of his own order, who persecuted in him
the traitor and apostate. The annals of the aristocratic families have
concealed this fact, as they have also concealed facts regarding the punishment
of other friends of the people?
This
is our view of the history of the second decemvirate. It is a view which makes
that history appear to some extent possible and intelligible. Of course it
follows that Appius cannot have been accused by the popular party of the crimes
said to have been committed against Siccius and
Virginia. Such charges may well have been fabricated against him by the
patricians, who wished to make his name infamous. The whole history of the
decemvirate is in a state of hopeless confusion, and our conjectures cannot be
adduced as proved facts. But, however this may be, the story of Livy and
Dionysius is so absurd that we must sacrifice it for any hypothesis which does
not require us to accept palpable contradictions as facts, and the imaginations
of a feverish dream as history.
CHAPTER
X.
RESTORATION
OF THE CONSTITUTION AFTER THE DECEMVIRATE.
It
is almost surprising that we have such scanty information regarding the events
which preceded and followed the decemvirate. The movement stirred the Roman
people even to the very heart. For the first time the idea was discussed that
patricians and plebeians were members of one and the same political body, and
entitled to the same rights. The claim that both ought to share in the
government of the state was made and allowed. The plebeian decemvirs were the
first chief magistrates of the republic, who belonged to the inferior, and
hitherto subject, class of the population. For the first time plebeians sat on
the curule chairs by the side of their patrician colleagues, conducted the
deliberations of the senate, and led the legions of the republic in the field.
The change was rapid and too great to last. When we bear in mind how, some time later, after the establishment of the military
tribunes, the patrician blood boiled up at the idea of seeing the descendants
of their former clients by the side of the scions of the old nobility, wearing
the insignia of the highest office; and how, in the face of the law, they
persevered during half a century in excluding the plebeians from this dignity;
how half a century later they could hardly endure plebeian consuls, and
repeatedly succeeded, in spite of the Licinian law,
in getting two patricians elected—if we bear this in mind, a strong reaction on
the part of the narrow-minded nobility against the spirit of the decemviral
legislation, and especially against plebeians having any share in the chief
magistracy of the republic, becomes most natural. The patricians insisted on
the retirement of the decemvirs, and on the restoration of the old
constitution. Perhaps they pleaded that the tribunes were now no longer needed,
since the legal protection which they were appointed to give was guaranteed by
the laws of the twelve tables, which restrained the patrician magistrates from
any further caprice and injustice. It was, as we have seen, only against such
pretensions as these that the rising and the secession of the plebs were
directed, not against the decemvirs, who themselves were at enmity with the
senate. The consequence of the secession was the re-establishment of the
plebeian liberties, that is, of the tribunes, and of personal protection
against the caprice of the patricians.
But
with this the plebeians were no longer satisfied. They had learned their
strength. In spite of their violent opposition, the patricians had found
themselves compelled to consent to the compiling of the code of laws. Still
more: they had been obliged to consent to the election of plebeians to the
decemvirate, which was, for the time being, the highest political office. The
plebeians had no intention of returning simply to the same position which they
had obtained for themselves by the first secession. They had grown stronger.
The patricians had lost in numbers and moral influence. The plebeians now laid
claim not merely to toleration and protection against tyranny: they insisted on
having a share in the government of the state, of which they were the chief
support, and which they could deprive of all vital power by the simple means of
a secession. The time had now come when a real union of the two classes, and a division
of power, might have spared the state a long period of internal discontent; and
this was, as we can plainly see, the object which some of the wisest men in
Rome had in view. But the parties were not sufficiently reconciled to one
another for such a union, and it appears that on the one side patrician
selfishness and pride, on the other, plebeian distrust, were the great
obstacles. There was therefore no choice left hut to go on with that dualistic
development of the constitution, which had been begun at the first secession of
the plebs, to strengthen and complete the organisation of the latter as a separate power in the state, and, by opposing it to the old
patrician body, to establish a balance between conflicting forces and
interests. The creation of the tribuneship of the people was now followed up
by a second measure of equal importance. The plebeian assembly of tribes had
hitherto been recognised only as an assembly of the
plebeians. Their resolutions could bind only plebeians. Only in so far as the
tribunes elected by them were invested with authority to control even patrician
magistrates, were the votes of the plebeian assembly of tribes recognised as law by the whole of the community. Their
resolutions on other matters had no weight but that of petitions, and might be
rejected as impertinent interferences in state affairs. The comitia of tribes
were now raised above this doubtful and unsatisfactory position. It was a great
step in the development of plebeian freedom when, in consequence of the second
secession, the consuls Valerius and Horatius caused a
law to be passed in the comitia of centuries, that the resolutions of the plebs
in their tribes should be binding on the whole people.
By
this law the tribuneship was not simply renewed, but weapons were put into the
hands of the tribunes with which they could successfully attack, and by degrees
could conquer, the stronghold of patrician privileges. For the first time the
tribunes had now a firm legal ground under their feet for this purpose. Mere defence and protection were no longer their exclusive
business. Their whole position in the state was altered. The body of plebeians as
such was now called upon to co-operate in legislation. It is true, its powers
were still limited. The election of consuls, the declaration of war, the
jurisdiction over life and death were, and remained in, the hands of the
centuries under the presidency of the consuls; the resolutions of the tribes,
confined as they were to internal and civil questions, were moreover subject to
the approval of the senate (patrum auctoritas), just like the resolutions of the centuries;
but this very co-operation between the senate and the assembly of tribes made
it necessary that the tribunes should from this time forward stand in a legal
and regular relation to the senate. It was necessary for them to have the
opportunity of bringing the resolutions of the tribes in proper form before the
senate for confirmation ; and accordingly it became the ordinary practice that
the propositions of the tribunes should be first submitted to the senate for
discussion, and then to the decision of the people. Henceforth
therefore we find the tribunes taking part in the deliberations of the senate, at first only as tolerated listeners, sitting before the door of the
senate hall, but very soon after admitted to the interior and obtaining a full
share of influence.
The
original function of the tribunes, which consisted in rendering legal
assistance to plebeians in individual cases of hardship or oppression, was also
changed by degrees. They began to interpose their veto on resolutions of the
senate and administrative measures of the consuls.If the opposition of the tribunes was apprehended—for instance, against the
levying of soldiers—it must have been preferable for the magistrates to meet
this opposition at the very outset—that is, in the senate—where it might possibly
be overcome either by argument or by direct personal influence, than to see
themselves checked in the carrying out of the resolution. But if the opposition
of the tribunes could not be overcome, it was expedient to desist from such
measures altogether.
The
right of legislation was inseparable in antiquity from that of jurisdiction. It
was therefore natural that the comitia of tribes, as soon as they had power to
legislate for the people, acquired also the right of a popular court of
justice. Now, therefore, begin the tribunician impeachments of patricians
before the comitia of tribes. The jurisdiction in capital cases, it
is true, was reserved for the comitia of centuries by a law of the twelve
tables, and the tribes could inflict only fines; but, even with this
restriction, the plebeian court of justice proved, in the hands of the
tribunes, who naturally acted as prosecutors, a terrible weapon not only of defence but also of attack. Through the right of
impeachment, which was practically the right of punishing their antagonists,
the tribunes gradually lost their original character, and, from public
protectors, came to be more and more public prosecutors. Nor did they confine
themselves to prosecutions which had for their object the punishment of attacks
on plebeian rights, but they soon arrogated to themselves the right of bringing
before their forum faults and offences of the magistrates which in no way
concerned the plebs as a class. Thus it was, without doubt, a palpable
straining of the law if they brought an impeachment against a consul for bad
management in war; for, however the interests of the state as a whole might be
affected by such an offence, it could hardly be maintained that any plebeian
individually, or the plebs as a body, had been especially wronged.
With
the recognition of the plebeian comitia of tribes as a popular court of justice
was connected a further important extension of plebeian liberties. By it a
court was formed, to which the plebeians could appeal from the decisions of
patrician judges. Accordingly a law of appeal is reported to have been given by Valerius and Horatius. The object of this law could
not have been to confirm the right of appeal, which the patricians already
possessed by virtue of one of the Valerian laws. For the restoration of the consulship
after the decemvirate would have been no bona-fide restoration if it had
not included that clause of the Valerian laws which limited the authority of
the consuls, by giving to the patricians the right of appeal from their
decisions to the people, i.e. the centuries. The new law of Valerius and Horatius, which is apparently identical with the old Valerian law of
appeal, can therefore apply only to the plebeians. These were now allowed to
share a right which the patricians had enjoyed from the beginning of the
republic as members of the sovereign people. Nor was this new right anything
but the application of the principle of constitutional law, which gave to the
plebeians in the assembly of their tribes a share in the sovereignty of the Roman
people. As this assembly was henceforth called upon to discharge some of the
duties of legislation and the election of magistrates, it was likewise made to
participate in the jurisdiction exercised by the Roman people. The comitia tributa constituted henceforth a tribunal qualified to
guarantee the plebeian rights. No obstacles were therefore left which, before
the decemvirate, had prevented the extension of the right of appeal to the
plebs, and the difference between plebeians and patricians which made them
unequal in point of legal security ceased to exist.
This
improvement in the legal position of the plebs might have been a motive for
abolishing the tribuneship. For, as we have seen, the principal function of the
tribunes was to provide that legal protection which for the plebeians was to
take the place of the right of appeal. The tribuneship nevertheless remained,
and the tribunes directed less attention to the protection of the civil rights
of the plebeians than to the obtaining political equality between them and the
patricians. When, after the lapse of about 100 years, this object was attained,
the tribuneship was transformed into an organ of the government, by which the
new nobility controlled the servants of the state, until at a still later
period the greatly increased power of the tribunes provided the demagogues with
the means of overthrowing the republican constitution.
It
has been supposed by modern historians that, after the decemvirate, the
patricians voted with the plebeians in the assembly of tribes. But for this
supposition no argument can be brought forward that will bear examination. For
although the patricians were included in the tribes for administrative
purposes—as, for example, in assessments for the public taxes—and although,
therefore, every patrician was a member of a particular tribe, it is not a
necessary consequence that they were allowed to vote in the assembly of tribes
with the plebeians. The English peers are also members of certain parishes, which
form part of the parliamentary divisions of counties; but they have no vote in
parliamentary elections. On the other hand, the wording of the laws themselves
serves as a proof that the patricians were excluded from the assembly of
tribes. The law of Valerius and Horatius of 449 b.c. declares that the resolutions of the
tribes should be binding on the whole state, i.e. patricians as well as
plebeians. This declaration would have been superfluous, if the patricians as
well as the plebeians had been included in the assembly of tribes. Nor do we
find a single instance of a patrician voting in the assembly of tribes; but it
often happened that they tried to influence their friends and adherents who had
votes.
The
assemblies of the tribes therefore, although always purely plebeian, assumed
more and more the character of general assemblies of the people. This is the
more easily explained, as the votes in the bribes were taken by heads, and the
patricians, who were continually becoming fewer, could have no direct influence
on the result of the voting. They found it more convenient to rely on that
indirect influence which cannot be taken away from the rich and powerful by
any electoral law. By this means the comitia of tribes became, in time, like the
tribunes of the people, an instrument of government in the hands of the
nobility, in the same manner as the English House of Commons has generally
served the interests of the aristocracy of England.
The
assemblies of tribes were now no longer convened exclusively by plebeian
magistrates—the tribunes and their assistants, the aediles—but also by the
higher curule magistrates, who were originally purely patrician. In such cases
they had a resemblance to the old assemblies of Roman citizens, especially on account
of the religious ceremonies with which they were opened by the patrician
magistrates. Plebiscites, however—i.e. plebeian resolutions properly so
called—were only those which the plebs made under the presidency of plebeian
magistrates.
Simultaneously
with the new order of things brought about by the second secession of the plebs
(449 BC.) an innovation took
place, which was the first step in the direction taken by the subsequent
constitutional reforms. It appears that till now the consuls had had the free
disposal of booty made in war, and of the war treasury, if such a thing then
existed. In the wars of that time, in which rapine and plunder played a great
part, the booty was of the highest importance for the unpaid soldiers. We may
believe Livy, that party interest often determined the mode in which the
consuls acted with regard to the division of the spoils. In order to take away
from the consuls this arbitrary power, and to give to the people a more direct
influence in this matter, the new office of quaestors was now established, and
the nomination for this office was intrusted to the
comitia of tribes, with this restriction, however, that they should only elect
patricians.
CHAPTER
XI.
DEVELOPMENT
OF THE RIGHTS OF THE PLEBEIANS.
The laws of the Twelve Tables form the
first unmistakable landmark on the confines of legend and history. The alleged
documents of the earlier period are all either falsely interpreted or downright
forgeries. Even the oldest annalists possessed no real documentary evidence
from the time preceding the decemvirate. But the twelve tables were for a long
time well preserved and universally known. At the same time we are approaching
a period which made so deep an impression on the imagination of contemporaries
that the memory of it was not obliterated when the first attempts were made at
historical writing.
Though
the details of events cannot yet be sharply and distinctly recognised,
the relations of the contending parties are now represented, on the whole, with
increasing accuracy. There was still no reconciliation or union between
patricians and plebeians. The patricians had still exclusive possession of the
senate and of the high offices of state and of religion. The plebeians, as a
compensation for this exclusion from the government, had obtained a complete
internal organisation of their own body. They had a
share in the sovereignty of the Roman people, and they had their own
assemblies, their tribunes and aediles, to a certain extent counterbalancing
the patrician consuls and quaestors. The tribunes had gained admission to the
senate, and no public question could be discussed or settled without their
concurrence. Through their right of intercession they had obtained an influence
which bears some resemblance to the power exercised by representative chambers
in the present day. They were backed by the plebeian comitia of tribes, and
their principal weapon was the jurisdiction of the same comitia through which
they could strike terror into their opponents.
If
the decemvirs intended by their legislation to establish equal rights for the
two classes and to blend them into one, they entirely failed in their object.
But the plebeians now began in earnest, and with success, to attack and abolish
the exclusive privileges of the patricians. Nothing shows with greater distinctness
the opposition which originally existed between the patricians and the
plebeians than the inadmissibility of a legal Roman marriage (connubium)
between members of the two classes. It was not the twelve tables which, as the
Roman historians erroneously relate, first prohibited such marriages. The prohibition existed from the commencement of the Roman state as a natural
consequence of the difference of rights between the people or
patricians, the original founders the Roman state, and the subject plebeians.
As the patricians had their own religious worship to which the plebeians were
not admitted, and as they considered that they alone were in possession of the auspicia, by means of which the divine protection was
secured to the Roman state, they had, as a kind of privileged caste, kept themselves
pure from any mixture of plebeian blood.
On
this purity of noble descent, and the religious sanctity supposed to be
inherent in it, was based in great measure the preponderance which the
patricians knew how to make use of in their dealings with the plebeians. If
this ideal advantage were taken from them—if, from privileged beings of a high
and favoured race, they were to become common men—if
plebeians were admitted into the consecrated circle—the old superstitions, from
which the patricians derived so many advantages, must give way and disappear.
It
seems to have been principally from such considerations, of a purely political
character, that, soon after the restoration of the consular constitution (445 b.C.), the tribune Canuleius proposed a law to legalise marriages between the two classes,
so that the father should retain the full paternal authority over the children,
and that, therefore, the children of a patrician father and a plebeian mother
should belong to the father’s class; whereas, in the case of such mixed
manages, all the children formerly took the lower station, that is, they became
plebeians, it being all the same whether the father or mother was plebeian.
It
is clear, and this fact could not escape the plebeians, that the plebeian class
as such would not gain strength, if in this manner the patricians grew in
numbers and were invigorated by new blood. But the weakening or destroying of
the patrician class was not the object of the plebeians. They wished only to
do away with the distinct position and privileges of the patricians; they
wanted to obtain for themselves admission to all their honours and rights, and for this reason they considered it necessary first of all to
break through the barrier which hemmed in the privileged class and separated it
from the rest of the people. This motive is evident from another demand of the
plebeians put forward at the same time, a demand which pointed to the final aim
they had in view, but which it took two more generations and the hottest
contests to realise—the demand of a share in the
highest office of the state, the consulate.
These
two motions, brought forward so soon after the decemvirate, show how strong and
enduring in its effects the movement had been which had led to the decemviral
legislation. The plebeians had (though only for a time) raised themselves to an
equality with the privileged class. The tide of the reaction could not sweep them
down permanently into the old state of subordination. Only four years later
the plebeians were bold and confident enough once more to strive for the
highest of all prizes. The course of events now showed how much the plebs had
gained in strength by the recent reform, on the one hand by the growing power
of the assembly of tribes, on the other by the increasing authority of the
tribunes, and their influence in the senate. After a violent but short
opposition, the patricians were obliged to yield on both these points. The
demand of the right of intermarriage was granted (445 b.c.) without reserve; and with this concession all claims
resting on the exclusiveness of the patrician class and the purity of patrician
blood were altogether overthrown. From this time forward the richest and most
prominent families of the plebs contracted alliances with those of the old
nobility; and there can be no doubt that the latter by this union, against
which they had so obstinately struggled, gained a great accession of strength,
which was of material service to them in subsequent civil disputes.
The
second demand of the plebeians, which was directed to a share in the
consulship, the patricians met neither by straightforward concession nor by
direct refusal. They hoped to save for themselves the reality of political
power by allowing to the plebeians the formal right of sharing it. They
accordingly modified the proposition of the tribunes to this effect, that in
future the people should be free to elect either consuls—that is, patricians
according to the old law—or in their place other officers, under the title of military tribunes with consular power consisting of patricians and plebeians.
In this form the law was passed. It is not reported in what respect
the official competency of the consular tribunes was to differ from that of
the consuls. Still so much is plain, that the difference consisted not alone
in name. The number of the consular tribunes was in the beginning
fixed at three, and it seems that one of these three offices—that for the administration
of justice (the future praetorship)—was intended to be reserved for the
patricians; at any rate one place at least always remained patrician.
A
further limitation of the concession made to the plebeians consisted in the
establishment of a new patrician office, the censorship, whose official duties
had hitherto belonged to the consulship, but were not transferred to the
military tribunes.
The
right thus attained by the plebeians of electing consular tribunes of their own
order proved—as no doubt the patricians had expected from the beginning—a dead
letter for a long time. So great was the influence of the old nobility in the
elections that, for the space of forty-four years, down to 400 BC not a single plebeian was elected to
the office. Only in the very first year (444 BC.) it appears that, in the flush
of recent victory, and in the excitement produced by the passing of the law,
the plebeians succeeded in raising one of their order to the new office. But
even this first success they were not allowed to enjoy long. For, two months
after the election, the patricians came forward and declared that the election
was vitiated by some formal irregularity, and they compelled the consular
tribunes to lay down their office, whereupon the senate contrived that in their
place consuls, i.e. exclusively patrician magistrates, should be elected. The
gain, therefore, which the plebeians derived from the reform was, in reality,
of very little practical importance. They had indeed, under bold leaders, favoured perhaps by particular circumstances, under the
impression which the decemviral legislation and the secession had made,
obtained a constitutional right; but the excitement of the contest, it appears,
was succeeded by a time of exhaustion, and the patricians remained practically
in possession of the power which they had legally resigned.
The
gains In order to explain this remarkable phenomenon we ought to be intimately
acquainted with the influence which the patricians still possessed through
their wealth, their political organisation, their
experience and capacity, and their firmly rooted power. We can only form conjectures
on these points; but this can be plainly seen, that, by the forms of the
constitution, especially by the extensive discretionary powers of the
presiding magistrates, the patricians had the means of exercising a decided
influence on the issue of the election.
The
presiding magistrate had the right to refuse votes which fell on a candidate he
disapproved of. He could even decline formally to declare the result of an
election, and thus was able to treat it as null and void. If such a course was
unadvisable, it was open to the senate to refuse its sanction (patrum auctoritas)
and the body of patricians could decline to confer the imperium by the lex curiata. Where none of these means seemed likely
to produce the desired result, there was another pretext in the religious
formalities, by which an election could at any time be declared vitiated. If
the nobility unscrupulously applied all these legal checks in addition to their
own private influence, and at the same time dextrously made use of the foreign relations of the republic to carry out their party
politics—if they understood how to frighten or to humour the plebeians by the prospect of wars, conquests, alliances, or colonies—we can
well understand how the plebeians, with mournful resignation, might yield to
what was inevitable, and rather renounce the carrying out of a hard-won law,
than endanger the internal peace and perhaps the safety of the state by
stubborn opposition. As a last resource the tribunes of the people might have
used their right of intercession, by which they could stop the elections; but,
in such a case, if the patricians would not yield, an interregnum or
dictatorship became inevitable; and thus the patricians finally succeeded in
exhausting the patience of the plebeians, and in compelling them to give up
the contest.
Six
years after the establishment of the consular tribunes (439 b.c.), an event took place which throws much light on the
character of the civil struggles then raging in Rome. It is the melancholy end
of the popular leader, Spurius Maelius.
We will endeavqur to clear it of the
misrepresentations by which the partial historians, writing in the interest of
the aristocracy, have made it almost unintelligible.
CHAPTER XII.SPURIUS MAELIUS.
In the tenth year after the decemvirate,
Livy relates, there was a famine in Rome. Everything was tried to check the misery
of the people, and the necessary measures this purpose were intrusted to L. Minucius, an officer especially appointed as
master of markets (praefectus annonae), who took a
great deal of trouble to get the price of com reduced. He bought large supplies
in foreign lands, ordered that every citizen should sell whatever com he might
have in excess of one month’s consumption, limited the rations of slaves, and
acted with severity towards the usurers. But all these means were of little use.
The misery of the poor increased, and many threw themselves into the Tiber, to
escape by a quick death from the tortures of hunger.
Then
a man from among the people took compassion on his suffering countrymen. Spurius Maelius, a rich plebeian
from the class of knights, bought com in Etruria through his friends and
clients, and distributed it gratis, or at very low prices, to the starving
plebs. In this way he won their unbounded gratitude and attachment, and it
appeared that the people would withhold nothing from his ambition, and that he
had at least a prospect of being made consul as a reward for his generosity.
But Maelius aimed higher. He thought that, in order
to attain to this dignity, he must encounter the opposition of the patricians,
and it did not seem to him a much more difficult task to make himself the absolute
master of the state. Such plans and intentions could not long remain secret,
and were made known especially to Minucius, whose
exertions on the part of the government to ameliorate the misery of the people
were quite thrown into the shade by the splendid generosity of Mselius. Forthwith Minucius reported to the senate that in the house of Maelius arms had been collected, and that secret meetings of conspirators were taking
place. The tribunes were already bribed, he said, to betray the liberty of the
republic. The projects for restoring the royal power were notorious; only the
conspirators had not yet agreed as to the time of action. There was danger in
delay, and he had waited too long already in making his report. In this state
of affairs the senate determined to adopt the last measures for the defence of the republic. The aged Cincinnatus was
immediately appointed dictator, and he chose C. Servilius for his master of the horse. Surprise and consternation seized all the people
when, on the following morning, the dictator mounted his tribunal in the Forum.
With anxious curiosity the people crowded together, and among them also Sp. Maelius. Nobody knew against what internal danger or
against what enemy the extraordinary dictatorial power was directed. Then Servilius forced his way into the crowd, with a number of
patrician youths, and challenged Maelius to appear
before the tribunal of the dictator. Mselius saw the
danger which threatened him, and implored the protection of the people. But Servilius drew a dagger from under his armpit, and stabbed Maelius before the eyes of the people, who were paralysed with fright. Sprinkled with the blood of the
murdered man, he appeared before the tribunal of the dictator, and announced
the death of the traitor. The people now became uproarious, and thronged around
the seat of the dictator, threatening vengeance. But Cincinnatus, undaunted and
defiant, justified the deed of Servilius; ‘for’ said
he, ‘even if Maelius was innocent of the crime of
treason, of which he was, on good information, accused, he still deserved
death, because he disobeyed the commands of the dictator, and feared the
judgment of the people.’ He then commanded that the house of Maelius should be pulled down and levelled with the ground’;
and the corn which Maelius had accumulated, Minucius, the master of the markets, distributed among the
people at a low price, thus relieving the distress, and making himself so
popular that a bull with golden horns was dedicated to him as a sign of the
gratitude of the people. Yet the people felt that Maelius had been put to death unjustly, without a trial, and that no proof of his guilt
could be produced, and their anger turned against Servilius.
He was compelled to go away from Home, and after some years, a tribune, named
Sp. Maelius, a relation of the murdered man, proposed
a law to confiscate the property of Servilius, and to
inflict the same punishment on Minucius, as a fake
accuser.
Thus
runs the story of Sp. Maelius, as told by Livy, our
chief authority. The tradition, however, is not quite the same with different
writers. The report of Dionysius exhibits some important deviations. He knows
nothing of the dictatorship of Cincinnatus, but relates that the young Servilius, commissioned by the senate, got rid of Maelius by cowardly assassination, approaching him under pretence of conversing with him, and piercing him with a dagger.
In spite of this variation, which cannot be wondered at, considering the nature
of the authorities at that period, the event comes out with tolerable
clearness. It had, in a variety of forms, been deeply imprinted in the memory
of the Roman people, and the broad facts were undoubted that, soon after the
establishment of the consular tribunes, Sp. Maelius,
a rich and respected plebeian, was murdered in a party conflict by the
patrician, C. Servilius Ahala.
How
the Romans of later times looked upon this act appears plainly from the remarks
of Cicero, Livy, Valerius Maximus, and other writers.
The Roman historians are almost without exception partisans of the aristocracy;
the tribunes are generally represented as turbulent, and often as venal
demagogues; the people appear selfish and base; the senate, on the contrary,
and the true leaders of the nobility are lauded as high-minded,
self-sacrificing, and patriotic. The deed of Servilius Ahala is, therefore, celebrated as an act of heroism;
and Maelius is universally described as an enemy of
freedom, who wished to bribe the Romans by the paltry present of a few pounds
of bread to submit to the yoke of a tyrant.
In
spite of the few criteria by which we can judge of the motives of Sp. Maelius, we must not hesitate one moment to cast aside this
verdict, and to look upon the murdered plebeian as the victim of a party which,
with a haughty contempt of justice, made use of any weapon, however dishonourable, in a base endeavour to evade or violate the law—a party which was not ashamed to extol bloody
crimes, committed in its interest, as patriotic exploits, and to stigmatise its murdered enemies in their graves as traitors
or common criminals.
It
is clear, at the very outset, that the accusation of having aimed at royal
power when the republic was firmly established hardly deserves our notice. It
is not even likely that such a charge was ever seriously brought against Sp. Maelius; it must have had its origin in the distorted
narrative of the annalists. How could a citizen, who,
like Sp. Maelius, had never had the direction of the
government, who had never been even tribune, who with the exception of his
wealth possessed no means of influence, who appears not to have had numerous
adherents, and to have led no party,—how could such a man be suspected of
aiming at the overthrow of the republic, and at the restoration of the regal
power in his own person? And if it be granted that he did this, if it be
granted that he had collected partisans, arms, and mercenaries, would he in
that case have exposed himself unarmed to the dagger of a fanatical enemy?
Would he have gone to the Forum without a retinue of trusty followers, and
without concerting plans for resistance or attack? If proofs could have been
produced of a treasonable conspiracy, it would have been easy to bring the
simple plebeian to justice, and the people would not have spared an enemy of
their freedom. But the people were convinced of his innocence. Intimidated at
the moment by the display of dictatorial authority, they soon recovered spirit
and courage to force the perpetrator of the bloody deed into exile; and the
patricians were compelled to sacrifice to the popular vengeance the man who had
acted as their champion, and whom they continued to praise as the deliverer of
his country.
It
is true, Sp. Maelius was not altogether innocent in
the eye of the patricians; no doubt he had committed a crime which, by their
code, was punishable with death. What this crime was we can guess with
tolerable accuracy. Just then was the time when, after severe struggles, the
plebeians had been declared eligible for the office of consular tribunes. In
spite of this concession, the patricians strained every nerve to reduce this
right to nothing in practice, and, as we have seen, they succeeded so far that,
during forty-four years, none but patricians were raised to this office. What
means they used to attain this end, we have already hinted. Now, however, in
their proceedings against Sp. Maelius, we discover,
if we are not mistaken, a new method of controlling the elections, and a very
effective one for keeping off plebeian candidates. The crime of Sp. Maelius was, we may be sure, no other than this, that by
his wealth and generosity he had acquired great popularity among the people,
and that at an election of military tribunes he was in a fair way of gaining
for himself the votes of the centuries. This fully explains why he was so
obnoxious , to the enemies of popular rights, and why he shared the fate and
the opprobrium of Sp. Cassius and M. Manlius, the forerunners, like himself, of
the Gracchi.
CHAPTER XIII.THE CENSORSHIP, 445 B.C.
The reform of the year 445 b.c. was
followed, as appears most probable, by the establishment of the censorship as a
separate office. For, the plebeians being admitted to the office of consular
tribunes, it was in the interest of the patricians to weaken this office by separating
from it a certain class of functions, and constituting for them a new purely
patrician office.
Till
now the consuls had. from time to time held the census, by which they not only
regulated the military services of every citizen, but also revised
periodically the general assembly of centuries. The nomination of new senators
had also till now been one of the functions of the consuls. On them depended,
therefore, the rank and consideration of every single citizen in the state.
These important privileges the patricians had no .intention of relinquishing
when they were compelled to admit the right of the plebeians to the office of
consular tribunes. That part of the former consular power, therefore, which
referred to the nomination of senators and to the holding of the census was not
transferred* to the consular tribunes; but a new patrician office, the
censorship, was established for its exercise. The censors were to be two in
number, and the term of their office was to range over five years. It is not
easy to decide with accuracy what were the official duties of the censors in
the first period of their existence. No doubt many duties were in course of
time added which were foreign to the first censors, especially when, with the
increase of wealth, the finances of the state became more complicated and more
important, and when Rome became not only more powerful, but richer and more
luxurious. From this time the administration of the state domains, the farming
out of the indirect taxes, and the management of public works constituted alone
an office of the greatest importance. A special branch of the duties of the
censors was that of watching over the preservation of public morals, or rather
of the customs and habits of the good old time, a duty which they vainly endeavoured to discharge by all sorts of restrictions on expenditure
and luxurious living. These censorial functions, which are generally much
overvalued in their practical effect and usefulness, were probably due to the
gradual development and increasing dignity of the office, and not contemplated
at the time of its establishment. Yet the censorship ranked, even from the
beginning, in dignity and importance, next to the consulship; and in those
years when military tribunes, and not consuls, were chosen, the censorship
ranked first. Nor can it be supposed that an office especially
instituted to protect the most important privileges of the patricians could be
thought lightly of.
After
the establishment of the offices of military tribunes and censors, a long pause
took place in the further development of the constitution. The plebeians
having succeeded in doubling the number of the quaestors from two to four in
the year 421 b.c., and in securing their own eligibility
for this office, directed their attention, not so much to obtain new privileges
by new laws, as to try the working of their legally acquired privileges, and to
make the constitution a reality.
Year
after year the question had now to be discussed and settled, whether for the
ensuing period of office consuls or military tribunes should be elected. The
first object of the senate always was to try to obtain the election of consuls,
and it succeeded in this twenty times during thirty-five years, from 444 B.C.
till 409 B.C. When the
aristocracy felt compelled to yield to the pressure of the tribunes, and to
give their consent to the election of consular tribunes, no stone was left
unturned to have only patricians elected to the office. With what obstinacy and
with what success they persisted in this perfidious and illegal practice may be
seen from the fact already referred to that, till the year .400, i.e. in four
and forty years, during which period consular tribunes were elected
twenty-three times, no plebeian ever filled that office.
The
patrician policy during the whole of this period bears an undignified
character. It is the policy of shrewdness and of meanness; still more, it is a
continued and systematic violation of the law, a sham constitutionalism, such
as we see so frequently in the present day. Not only the positive law, but also
the honour, the well-being, and even the safety of
the state, were sacrificed to the interests of a party whose day was past,
whose strength was undermined, and the continuance of whose privileges had
become unendurable and injurious to the state.
In
spite of the apparent exhaustion of the plebs, it is clear that they only
needed time to recover themselves before again trying their strength. The
stifled fire flickered up again afresh from time to time. The plebeians submitted
to their fate with indignation and impatience, and the nobility, although
all-powerful for the moment, received now and then a warning which made them
tremble for the future. After the second censorship, in the year 434 b.c., the quinquennial term of this
patrician office was cut short, and on the proposition of the patrician consul
Mamercus Aemilius, it was determined that every fifth
year new censors should be chosen, but should remain in office only eighteen
months. A further concession was made to the plebs in the year 421 b.c., by which the number of the quaestors
was increased from two to four, and the plebeians were declared eligible for
this post. It is true this concession was made by the patricians with the
secret expectation that, in spite of the legal admission of plebeians to this
office, they would be able, as in the case of the consular tribunes, to carry
the election of patricians. They were, however, mistaken in this calculation.
The plebeian comitia of tribes, which had to elect the quaestors, could not be
managed so easily as those of the centuries, and eleven years afterwards, in
the year 410 b.c., three plebeians were elected among
the four qusestors. This was a just retribution for
the cunning of the patricians, who would not consent to the plebeians having a
certain fixed number among the quaestors, in the hope of being able to fill up
all the places with patricians.
But
at the election of the consular tribunes also an unexpected result took place.
In the years 400 and 399 b.c., and again in the year 396 b.c., a majority of plebeians was elected.
We cannot ascertain the causes and the details of these changes, as we are too
scantily informed of the events of this period. We see plainly, however, that
the plebeians were not hopelessly torpid, but understood how to make good use
of a favourable opportunity, when offered, for the
assertion of their rights. This perseverance could not fail sooner or later to
be crowned with success. In the plebs was the germ of growth. The patrician
class could neither be renovated nor extended. One generation later, in the
year 866 b.c., the Licinian laws secured to the plebeians a share in the consulate, and the patricians lost
their old preponderance in the state for ever.
CHAPTER
XIV.
ROMAN
INTERVENTION IN ARDEA, 446 B.C.
We cannot suppose that the foreign
policy of the Roman senate was carried on with a greater respect for justice
than was exhibited in the dealings of the patricians with the popular party. As
far as foreign nations were concerned, the ancients considered everything
right which promised to bring advantage, even more unscrupulously than we do at
the present day. The considerations of equity and self-restraint which it was
necessary to observe to a certain extent with regard to fellow-citizens, were
disregarded in the case of foreigners. Towards them cunning and deceit, cruelty
and ferocity, became virtues, and passed for wisdom and courage. Antiquity can
show but few instances of magnanimity in the intercourse of nations, and the
Romans especially were strangers to it. They are therefore entitled least of
all to moralise on the faithlessness and perfidy of
other nations; for, with regard to foreigners, who for them were originally
synonymous with enemies, they never considered themselves bound by any
obligation or restrained by any principles of right, except in so far as their
own advantage seemed to demand it. We have occasion to notice this practice at
the first contact of Rome with a neighbouring state,
which is described in our authorities with so much detail and apparent fidelity
that we can judge with tolerable certainty of the motives and the object of the
Romans. It is the disgraceful spoliation of the allied town of Ardea, which
Livy himself, who so gladly praises or excuses anything Roman, felt to be an
infamous act.
The
town of Corioli had been destroyed in the course of
the Volscian wars; and its territory, which was lying waste, was the subject of
a long dispute and frequent wars between two adjacent Latin towns, Ardea and
Aricia. At length (446 b.c.), after both towns had suffered
severely from the protracted contest, they decided to choose Rome as their
umpire. The Roman senate laid the matter before an assembly of the people, and
the people decided that the disputed land belonged by right neither to Ardea
nor to Aricia, but to Borne; for as Borne had conquered Corioli forty-seven years before, it had become the property of the Roman state (ager publicus). In vain, it is said, did the consuls and the
senate endeavour to prevent this selfish and dishonourable decision of the people. The magnanimity and
sense of right in the nobility found no response in the great mass, which was
only moved by greediness and selfishness. The consuls therefore had no choice
but to announce, very much against their will, to the allies of Borne the
sentence of the Roman people, which, though not in reality altogether unjust,
still was contrary to the feeling of equity of the senate. A formal treaty
with Ardea ratified the decision of the Roman people in the year 444 B.C.
Shortly after this (443 b.c.) a bloody civil war broke out in the
town of Ardea. In Ardea also there were patricians and plebeians, and the same
disputes and struggles took place there as in Borne. The plebs seceded and
united themselves with a Volscian army to besiege the town. The patricians
turned to Borne for assistance, and the Boman consul
marched to the relief of Ardea. The Volscians were defeated, the town
delivered, the rebellious plebeians punished, and the supremacy of the
patricians re-established. But, as the town had been very much depopulated in
the civil war, it was decided to send Roman colonists to Ardea, and to give
them grants of land on the territory which Rome, as umpire, had awarded to
itself. In order, however, that the disgrace of the iniquitous sentence might
be obliterated, no land was assigned to the Roman colonists until all the
people of Ardea had received allotments. Thus the assistance rendered, and the
way in which the land was divided, not only reconciled Ardea with Borne, but
laid it under especial obligations. The Roman plebeians, who had confidently
expected that they would have a share in the division of the land, and who now
found themselves excluded, to the advantage of the people of Ardea, were so
exasperated that the patrician triumvirs, who had been sent as com missioners
to settle the colonists at Ardea, did not venture to return to Borne, but
preferred to remain in Ardea.
Thus
runs this edifying narrative. We cannot fail to see that there is something
true in it. It is certainly not a pure invention. The stain on the honour of Rome caused by its decision between Ardea and
Aricia was of too deep a dye to be washed out. The Roman annalists have taken much trouble to garble the report and to justify or to excuse the
conduct of the Romans. They have not, however, altogether succeeded, and we can
separate with tolerable accuracy the true from the false.
It
is, in the first place, no doubt untrue that the decision of the Romans was given by the assembly of the
people, that is, by the plebs. All questions of foreign policy came before the
senate, and when by its decision no burden was imposed upon the people—for
example, if no war was necessary—there was no need of consulting the people.
The Roman patricians could indeed alone be interested in this matter and expect
advantage from it. For as the disputed lands became the public land (ager
publicum) of Rome, it is clear that the plebs gained nothing. The public lands
still belonged exclusively to the privileged class. Only patricians could take
possession of them. The principal complaint of the plebeians in relation to the
agrarian laws was just this, that they were excluded from the enjoyment of the
state lands. It is therefore quite absurd to attribute the ignominious decision
to the mean selfishness of the plebeians, as our historians do, and to
represent the patricians as opposed to it. It appears plainly in the course of
the story that the Roman patricians were allied with the patricians of Ardea,
and the district of Corioli was only the price which
the aristocracy of Ardea paid to the Romans for their assistance against their
own rebellious plebs. Finally, the conduct of the commissioners for the
settlement of the colony of Ardea is significant. They dreaded the resentment
of the plebs, and did not venture to return to Rome. Surely this proves that
the Roman plebeians had not profited by the iniquitous acquisition, and that
the patricians, who had the advantage of the transaction, were also the sole
authors of it.
CHAPTER
XV.
THE
WARS DOWN TO THE LAST WAR WITH VEII, 449-405 B.C.
During the internal struggles which led to
the decemvitate and the consular tribuneship, the
wars with the neighbouring nations, especially the Aequians
and the Volscians, had not ceased. Year after year these enemies repeated their
incursions for rapine and murder; and not only the allies of the Romans, the Hernicans
and the Latins, but even the Roman dominions themselves, were visited by the
dreadful scourge of these everlasting petty wars. Three times, as mentioned
above, in the years 465, 463, 446 b.c., the enemy penetrated into the immediate vicinity of Rome, and in the year 460 b.c., in the midst of the disputes about
the Terentilian law, the Roman Capitol had
temporarily fallen into their hands. The second and third book of Livy, and the
corresponding books of Dionysius, convey to the careless reader a very
erroneous impression. They make it appear that Rome, in spite of occasional
reverses, was on the whole successful, and pursued an almost uninterrupted
course of victories and conquests. This, as we have seen, is a great misrepresentation,
caused by the national vanity of the historians. In truth Rome could hardly
stand her ground, while her allies, the Latins and Hernicans, lost a considerable
portion of their territory, and suffered more directly than even Rome, as lying
nearer to the common enemies of the league.
Such
continual calamities, we may suppose, were aggravated by internal dissensions.
We are told of Roman soldiers, who, out of hatred to the patrician consuls,
allowed themselves to be beaten by the enemy, or at least would not conquer, in
order that the commander might lose his triumph; we read frequently of the
factious opposition of the tribunes, who prevented, by their intercession, the
levying of troops. There may be a great deal of exaggeration in these
accounts, but they are not altogether fictitious, for it is evident that the
wars were very disastrous. And, in truth, no growth of national power was possible
for Rome so long as the plebeians, who supplied the main strength of the
armies, were in bitter enmity against the ruling class.
A
connected history of the wars of the Volscians and the Aequians during this
time is out of the question. The character of our sources is essentially the
same as in the preceding period, though such wild fictions as the stories of
Cincinnatus and Coriolanus are not repeated. Here and there we are even
agreeably surprised by narratives which have so much the air of genuine history
about them that the dark clouds appear to break and to show distinct lines and
points, which enable us to form an opinion of the probable outlines even of
those parts which are still hidden. In the half century after the foundation of
the republic, as we have seen, the war was decidedly unfavourable to the Romans and their allies. The Aequians, issuing forth from their old
strongholds in the mountains on the Anio, had taken
possession of the plain which, between those mountains and the isolated group
of the Mons Albanus, formed the only easy
communication between Rome and the Trerus valley, or
the land of the Hernicans. They had taken several places, such as Labici and Boise, and retained possession of them. More
than that, they had even penetrated to the Alban mountains, and had established
themselves on the eastern spur, known as Mount Algidus.
From this hill, as from a citadel, they could make their devastating incursions
into all parts of Latium. The neighbouring town of
Tusculum they kept in a continual state of siege, and made inroads at pleasure
between Tusculum and the Anio into the Roman
districts as far as the Tiber. In the south of Latium the Volscians had at the
same time made extensive and lasting conquests. The most important of these was
the fortified maritime town of Antium. The new
Volscian inhabitants of this town separated themselves politically from their
countrymen, and formed an independent community; they renounced all ideas of
further conquests, and for a long while took no part in the war against Rome,
in order apparently to devote themselves more exclusively to piracy, which promised
not less profit than the predatory wars on land.
Next
to Antium, Ecetra,
originally a Latin town, had become a principal stronghold of the Volscians in
Latium. The situation of this town is not known; it lay, perhaps, in the
mountain range which forms the eastern boundary of Latium, and divides it from
the country of the Hernicans in the valley of the Trerus. Other towns, among them, perhaps, Satricum and Velitra, had fallen
into the power of the Volscians. Such a Volscian conquest may be presumed in
the case of those towns which, at a later period, when the fortunes of war had
turned, are reported to have been taken by the Romans. Besides the
towns of Latium already named which fell into the possession of the enemy, we
must also mention those which were destroyed and never built again. One of
these was Corioli, the territory of which was the
matter of dispute between Ardea and Aricia. Many other places may have had a
similar fate. Who can say how many flourishing villages, strong castles, and
walled towns shared a similar fate in those devastating wars? The Roman
antiquarians have preserved long lists of townships in Latium, the names of
which touch our ears like the faint sounds of a distant echo; in the plains of
the depopulated Campagna are seen at present, in many places, heaps of weatherworn
stones, and unmistakable sites of towns on the level summits of steep rocks, to
which no name and no memories cling. At the time of the Volscian wars, the
desolation began which changed that once fruitful and populous land into the
malaria-stricken wilderness of the present day.
By
the successful invasions of the Aequians and the Volscians, the league between
the Romans, Latins, and Hernicans was practically dissolved. The towns of Latium
which had escaped destruction or conquest were so much reduced that they could
no longer claim to be allies, entitled to treat with Rome as equals. They were
compelled to look to Rome for their safety, and so they were no longer allied
but protected states, and the superiority of Rome became more and more
acknowledged as a de facto dominion.
Two
causes seem to have contributed to turn the tide of the Aequian and Volscian
wars in favour of Rome after the period of the
decemvirs. In the first place, the civil troubles which preceded that period
were followed by comparative repose. The laws of the Twelve Tables seem not to
have been without a beneficial effect in quieting the internal disorders. The Canuleian law on the right of intermarriage and the
admission of the plebeians, at least in law and theory, to the highest office
of the state, seem to have softened the virulence of the civil contest. Rome
was therefore able to meet her enemies on more advantageous ground. In the
second place, the Aequians and Volscians displayed much less vigour and energy during this period. This was owing,
probably, as we have already said, to the growth of the Samnites, who were at
that time extending their dominion in the rear of these two nations, and thus
involuntarily relieving Rome. The Romans thus felt strong enough to assume the
offensive, and to regain the ground they had lost.
They
turned their attention first to their nearest enemies, the Aequians, who were
decidedly the most troublesome, and had in the year 446 B.C. laid waste the Roman territory, even to the gates of the city. The wars appear
often to have been interrupted by long periods of armistice, and the enemies
of Borne were now reduced to the defensive. The first statement from which we
can venture to form an opinion as to the
course of the wars, refers to the conquest of the small town of Bolae (414 B.C.), which, like Labici,
lay on the line of communication between Rome and the country of the Hernicans,
where, at a later period, the important ‘Latin road’ (via Latina) was
constructed. 414 b.c. The Romans had now established an easy
communication with their allies in the valley of the Trerus,
and it is said that they made the first use of this for the purpose of restoring
to the Hernicans their principal town, Ferentinum,
which had fallen into the hands of the Aequians.
In
the popular tradition, the memory of these wars was principally connected with
the name of the dictator, A. Postumius Tubertus, who stands out in horrible grandeur as one of the
superhuman and inhuman heroes of the olden time. It is related of him that he
condemned his son to death, because he had engaged in battle with an enemy
against the express command of his father. The admiration for such virtues was,
even in a Roman, mixed with horror and detestation. Another member of the Postumian house, the consular tribune M. Postumius Regillensis, was
equally distinguished for his stern and unyielding temper and his cruel abuse
of power. In consequence he had inspired his soldiers with no love or devotion,
but only with fear; and when, after the conquest of Boise, he kept back the
booty, and was making preparations to punish the mutinous disposition of the
soldiers with inhuman severity, they were goaded to the terrible deed of
stoning to death the commander to whom they were bound by the sacred military
oath, the sacramentum, to yield implicit obedience? Such events were
deeply impressed on the memory of the people. There is no reason for believing
them to be without foundation, though there is some vagueness and uncertainty
as to the precise, time and place to which they belong; and though they do not
always seem to tally exactly with the great political events, we can still
discover in them a substantial element of historical truth. By such gradual
transitions we pass insensibly from the deceptive region of fable to the firm
ground of history.
After
the decemvirate, the Volscians, like the Aequians, appear to have lost
strength. The war with them turns on the conquest of a few fortified places,
like Verrugo and Artena, of
which we know nothing but the names. Perhaps it was at this time that the
Volscians lost some of their most important conquests in Latium, such as Velitrae and Satricum, as we find
these soon after in the possession of the Romans. At all events, the fortune of
war was on the side of the latter, who undertook what was for this period a
very bold expedition through the midst of the land of the Volscians, past Antium, even to Anxur, afterwards
called Terracina. The taking of this town also is reported more than once, as
is usual in the case of such creditable exploits—viz., for the years 406 and
400 b.c.
While
the attacks of the Volscians and Aequians not only grew less frequent, but the
nations themselves lost ground in Latium and were reduced to such a state of
weakness as to appear no longer formidable, the Romans acquired sufficient
self-reliance, leisure, and strength to undertake a war with their nearest
northern neighbours, the Etruscans. This war, which
soon proved to be one for aggression and conquest, strained the whole strength
of the republic, but eventually ended in the first important extension of the Roman
territory.
In
the immediate neighbourhood of Rome, only five Roman
miles distant, on the left or Latin bank of the Tiber, lay the town of Fidenae.
It had been undoubtedly Latin in the beginning, but at the time when the
Etruscans reigned over Latium, it had received an Etruscan colony; and having
thus a mixed population, it was isolated and separated from the neighbouring peoples, and occupied an independent position
between Latium and Etruria. But an independent city just outside the gates of
Rome could not avoid frequent collisions with such a powerful and aggressive neighbour. The feuds between the two towns must have been
numerous enough. But what we read of these feuds in the stories of the regal
time and of the earlier republic bears the manifest stamp of invention. Fidenae
was always drawn upon to supply materials for filling the empty annals with
warlike exploits, and such was the poverty of fancy of the Roman annalists that they nearly always relate the same uniform
and interminably tedious stories, without ever rising to bold and original
fiction. From the year 498 B.C., when Fidenae, after having revolted five
times, was conquered and colonised for the sixth
time, no further mention is made of the town till the year 438 B.C., and this silence is a good sign
of the gradually increasing credibility of the Roman annals.
In
the year 438 BC. Fidenae made an
alliance with Veii, which was at that time governed by a king called Lars Tolumnius. The Romans sent four ambassadors to Fidenae to
demand satisfaction. The people of Fidenae followed up their desertion with the
murder of the ambassadors—a crime which cut off all chance of reconciliation.
War was now unavoidable, and seemed the more threatening as the Veientes, under their king, Lars Tolumnius,
and even the Faliscans, the people of the small town
of Falerii in Etruria, were ready to assist Fidenae. The Romans therefore did
as they were wont to do in hazardous times—they appointed a dictator.
The
man selected was Mamercus Aemilius, who seems to have
been a man of energy and ability, and is frequently mentioned about this time
with reference to the civil history of Rome. A great battle was fought, which
was decided in favour of the Romans chiefly in
consequence of the courage of the horsemen, and in which the king of Veii fell
by the hand of the valiant commander of the Roman horse, A. Cornelius Cossus.
Yet
it was not until the following year, after another victory, that Fidenae fell
into the hands of the Romans. It was again made a colony in 428 B.C. Nothing is
said of the town being punished. The war with Veii was concluded by an
armistice after the fall of Fidenae. The same events were repeated almost
without any material variation, according to the Roman annals, in the year 426
B.C., some ten years later. Again Fidenae broke the peace, and marked its
savage hostility and resolution this time by murdering the Roman colonists who
had been sent to Fidenae two years before. Veii is again in league with Fidenae,
and, what is of the greatest significance, Mamercus Aemilius is again nominated to be dictator. This time the valiant leader of the horse of
487 b.c., A. Cornelius Cossus, is master of the
horse under the dictator, and again he decides the battle. This time also Fidenae
is conquered, but it no longer appears to have strength to renew the war almost
immediately. It is razed to the ground, and never appears again in history; it
was from that time so utterly desolate that its name was used to designate a
depopulated and deserted place.
From
a comparison of the stories of the two wars with Fidenae it is perfectly clear
that one is only a variation of the other. If it is asked which of the two wars
has the greatest claim to be considered historical, we must, with Niebuhr,
decide in favour of the second. It is quite inconceivable
that Fidenae, after the first conquest, should not have been severely punished
for the murder of the Roman ambassadors. Moreover, Diodorus knows only of the
second war, and places in it the story of the murder of the ambassadors. This
war has obtained a great celebrity, and is, for this reason, of considerable
importance for the critical examination of the sources of the Roman
historians, because two monuments, still extant in later times, bore witness to
it. These were the statues of the murdered ambassadors on the Roman Forum, and
the armour of which the commander of the Roman horse,
A. Cornelius Cossus, stripped the body of Tolumnius,
the king of Veii, and which he dedicated in the temple of Jupiter Feretrius on the Capitol as spolia opima, i.e. spoils taken
by a Roman commander from a commander of the enemies. That four statues of
murdered ambassadors really stood at a later period on the Forum cannot be
doubted, for Cicero mentions them as existing not long before his time. But
whether they were set up immediately after the event which they were intended
to commemorate, or at a later period, after the burning of Rome by the Gauls,
must remain uncertain. At any rate they dated from a time when the memory of
the murder was still fresh, and they may pass as historical evidence, although
of course they can only bear witness to the general fact, and leave us in the
dark with regard to detail, and especially the date of the event.
The armour of King Lars Tolumnius has given rise to an interesting critical enquiry. Livy, who, on the whole, did
not care much for the examination of historical monuments, felt himself
compelled here, probably out of polite attention to the Emperor Augustus, to
tack on to his story a remark in which he represents Augustus as stating that
during the restoration of the temple of Jupiter Feretrius he himself examined the armour of Cossus, and found
that in the inscription he was called consul. From this fact Augustus came to
the conclusion that Cossus could not have taken the spoils in the year 437 BC., because he then filled no public
office, and because such spoils could only be dedicated by a man who, whilst
commanding an army under his own auspices, had slain a hostile general in
battle. Livy does not venture to decide whether, in consequence of this
discovery, the dedication of the spoils ought to be placed in the year 428 BC., in which indeed Cossus was consul,
but, according to the annals, waged no war, or in the year 426 b.C. when he
was consular tribune, and, as commander of the horse of the dictator Mamercus Aemilius, again fought victoriously against the Fidenates and Veientes. For us,
who regard the stories of the two wars as versions of the same story, no
controversy can arise about the time of taking the spoils or the dedication of
them. We reject the story of the year 437 B.C. as quite untenable on the ground
given above; we hold that Cossus, as consular tribune, dedicated the spoils,
and that either he himself or one of his descendants put the inscription on the armour, adding to his other titles that of consul,
which he enjoyed two years later. Thus the accidental notice of an authentic
monument does not lead to a negative result upsetting the whole of the popular
tradition and the annalistic account, but it supplies a criterion which we can
make use of to separate what is erroneous from the
common narrative, and to arrive at a degree of certainty which, considering the
still prevailing obscurity in the history of Borne at the time in question,
cannot be too highly prized.
A
consequence of the conquest and destruction of Fidenae was the confiscation of
its territory as public land (ager publicus) of the Roman
people. This, after the acquisition of the land in dispute between Ardea and
Aricia (442 B.C.), is the first extension of the territory in the immediate neighbourhood of the town. We shall see hereafter how this
acquisition led to the renewal of the agitations for agrarian laws which now
began to be for the first time of a serious and reformatory character, and
increased in intensity after the extension of the Roman possessions by the fall
of Veii, so that at last (366 B.C.) they led to the Licinian laws, by which the possessions of the patricians in the state lands were
limited.
CHAPTER
XVI.
THE
CONQUEST OF VEII, 396 B.C.
The war with Fidenae was the prelude to
a more serious contest, for which Rome now prepared herself, and which may be characterised as the first war of conquest which the
republic undertook. The flourishing and populous Etruscan town of Veii, which
lay in the most southern portion of Etruria proper, if we can trust the annals,
had been already frequently at war with Rome and the fall of the heroic Fabii on the river Cremera, and
the taking of the Janiculus by the Veientes, had been preserved in the memory of the people,
as the most striking and important events in those wars.
Nevertheless
it appears that, on the whole, a peaceful intercourse prevailed between the
Etruscans and the Romans. The former do not appear to have aimed at extending
their power southward, after having lost the possession of Campania and Latium,
and when the strength of the nation was evidently decreasing. While Rome and
Latium barely maintained the contest with the Aequians and the Volscians, the Veientes remained quiet; and after the fall of Fidenae they
felt even less inclined than before to break the peace, as the invasion of
Northern Italy by the Gauls at this time exposed the Etruscans to a new and
unexpected danger, and no doubt deprived the southern towns of Etruria of the
assistance of their countrymen and allies in the north. Yet Veii, although
confined to her own resources, had no great reason to dread a war with Rome.
According
to the reports of ancient writers, confirmed by modern topographical
researches, the extent of Veii was about equal to that of Rome. It stood on a
rocky eminence bounded on three sides by precipitous ravines, and it contained
a large population. The public and private buildings were of a solidity and
grandeur unknown in Rome at that time. The industry and the peaceful arts of
the Veientes had enriched and beautified the town. Being the mistress of several smaller towns, and of a large territory, and
moreover allied with the neighbouring cities of Capena, Falerii, Tarquinii, and Caere,
Veii was at the head of all Southern Etruria, and seemed able to preserve her
independence without foreign help.
We
know next to nothing of the political and social institutions of Veii.
According to the Roman annalists, the monarchical
constitution continued in Veii, while in the other Etruscan towns it had given
way to that of an aristocratic republic. Whether this continuance of the
monarchy was injurious to the prosperity of Veii must be left undecided. Nor do
we know what was the relation of the ruling class to the mass of the common
people, and whether the latter, as is generally supposed, were oppressed and
altogether deprived of political rights. If this was the case, it was certainly
an element of weakness. Much has beeen said about the
great influence of the priests over the Etruscan people, and of their almost
Oriental fanaticism. That this would have contributed to rouse and intensify
the energies of the nation in a war for political existence is proved by the vigour with which it inspired the Jews under the Maccabees,
and during the last siege of Jerusalem.
The
conquest and destruction of Veii, shortly before the invasion of the Gauls, is
an event as well attested as the fall of Carthage. But round this centre of historical truth a luxuriant crop of legends has
grown up, in which Greek fancy is unmistakable. The elements of legend and tradition
are so mingled, that the attempt to separate them is baffled to a very
considerable extent. We must therefore give up the hope of arriving at perfect
historical truth, and confine ourselves to conjectures on those points which
are enveloped in the legendary veil.
According
to the annalistic accounts, the war with Veii began as early as 406 b.c. We
cannot discover a sufficient cause of war; for the alleged participation of the Veientes in the revolt of Fidenae and in the murder
of the Roman ambassadors was succeeded by a reconciliation and by several years
of peace. The Romans, it seems, thought that the favourable moment had come for extending their territory towards the north, and they had
no difficulty in assigning a special grievance. They saw, however, that, for a
war with an enemy so formidable as Veii their old military organisation was not sufficient. It was only calculated for making short summer campaigns,
during a few months or weeks, against the Aequian and Volscian invaders. In
order to subdue a large fortified town like Veii, it was necessary to have an
army ready in the field all the year round. The old citizen-soldiers were fed
and armed at their own expense, and exchanged their agricultural labour only for a short time for military service. It was
necessary to replace them by a standing army of soldiers, who might remain in
the field summer and winter, and who would be relieved from all domestic cares.
For this purpose the introduction of military pay was necessary. This reform
was of the greatest importance, not only for the organisation of the army, and for the manner of carrying on war, but also for internal
political life. If, as we may suppose, the Romans conceived this idea sooner
than their neighbours (for they possessed a wonderful
instinct for improvement in military matters), the consequent superiority of
their army gave them a well-merited preponderance over troops that were now comparatively
undisciplined. Perhaps the Etruscans had already adopted the principle of
giving pay to their troops, for they were far in advance of the Romans in
wealth and refinement. But it is not likely that they had as much intuitive
wisdom as the Romans for hitting upon the best method of applying the
principle. For the Roman armies were not formed of mercenaries, such as were
very frequent in antiquity, but they consisted of citizens, to whom their pay
was only a lightening of their military service, not an inducement for devoting
themselves to a soldier’s life as to a profession.
With
the introduction of pay for the troops was connected another innovation in the
military organisation of Rome, the importance of
which appears to have been even greater in its bearing on internal political
reforms than on that of the army. The Roman cavalry, up to this time, was not
formed, like the infantry, on the principle of the census or property
qualification. The able- bodied young men, fit for cavalry service, were organised, without regard to the amount of their property,
in six patrician and twelve plebeian horse centuries, and received horses and
their keep from the state. Their arms were light, such as men of small means
could procure. They were therefore less fitted for close combat in battle than
for the purpose of quickly overrunning a hostile territory, for reconnoitring and for pursuing the enemy. The numerous
descriptions of battles won by the heroism of the horsemen are, like all the
pictures of the battles of those times, imaginary, and cannot be relied upon.
Now,
after the introduction of military pay, when the service of the infantry had
become less burdensome for the poorer class, the richer citizens were no longer
so much in request as heavy armed foot soldiers, and were, therefore, more
available for the cavalry. They accepted this change the more readily as the
pay of the cavalry was three times as much as that of the infantry. There were
a sufficient number who, we are told, offered themselves voluntarily, providing
their own horses, and the state thankfully accepted their offer. In this manner
the old Servian constitution was extended in the natural process of
development. From the first of the five Servian classes a new division had
branched off, consisting of the wealthiest citizens, who, without formally
constituting a separate class, and without changing the organisation of the eighteen centuries of knights, took service as a species of volunteers,
and laid the foundation for what became afterwards the order of the knights
(ordo equester). From this time forward the cavalry
service was considered a distinction, and attracted more and more the wealthier
class of citizens. These now stood forth in a marked manner from the mass of
citizens, and constituted a nursery for the senate, for posts of honour in the republic, and for the new nobility.
Nevertheless,
even after this seasonable reform, which changed the character of the cavalry
from light to heavy armed horse, the chief strength of the Roman army continued
to be in their infantry. In the armies of the later republic, the allies
furnished a contingent of cavalry considerably stronger than the Roman. This
never could have happened if the Romans had felt themselves superior in this
branch of the service. It was their infantry that conquered the world. When,
however, they came in contact with such horsemen as the Gauls and Numidians of
Hannibal, the weakness of their own cavalry was bitterly felt, and contributed
not a little to the terrible defeats by which the republic was almost
overthrown.
How
the introduction of military pay influenced the tax on land we shall discuss in connexion with the agrarian laws.
In
the first nine years of the war with Veii, the fortune of war was, according to
the reports of the annalists, very fluctuating, and
victory was by no means always on the side of the Romans. We hear even that
they suffered serious losses and reverses. Veii was too large a town to be
surrounded on all sides by a continuous line of works. Several fortified camps
were therefore erected in the neighbourhood of the
town for the purpose of enabling the besiegers to intercept supplies and aid
from without. These fortified camps were stormed by the enemy in the third year
of the siege, and the Roman armies were beaten in the field by the Veientes and their allies. But the Romans made fresh
exertions, and when the plebeian consular tribunes Genucius and Titinius were beaten in the tenth year of the war
by the allies of the Veientes, the Faliscans and Capenatians, and in
consequence of this defeat a great panic arose in Borne, the senate resolved to
try the effect of a dictatorship—their sheet anchor in times of danger. M. Furius Camillus was the man into whose hand the Romans intrusted their fate. He justified the confidence of his
fellow-citizens, and within a short space of time brought the long and
dangerous war to a happy and glorious end. So far the story of the last war of
the Veientes is simple, dry, and ordinary. But now,
with the appearance of Camillus, another spirit is infused into the story. We leave
the domain of the natural and the possible, and enter the fabulous region of
the miraculous.
In
the eighth year of the war it is related there was oserved a remarkable natural phenomenon connected with the Lake of Alba. The waters of
the lake rose suddenly, without any assignable cause, to so great a height that
the banks were flooded, and the water at last found its way over the volcanic
ridge which enclosed the bed of the lake, and flowed down the hill into the
plain. When such wonderful events took place, the Romans were accustomed to
consult the Sibylline books or the Etruscan soothsayers, in order to avert any
threatened calamity by a solemn expiatory sacrifice. Now, as they were at war
with the Etruscans, they did not confide in their soothsayers, but sent an
embassy direct to Greece to seek advice at the shrine of the Delphian Apollo.
In the meantime the war with Veii continued uninterrupted, and the Romans, who were encamped before Veii, often entered into
conversation with the besieged. Then it happened that, during a dispute
between the Romans and the Veientes, an old man cried
out in a loud voice from the city wall, that Veii would not fall until the
waters of the Alban Lake were abated.A Roman soldier,
who thought he discovered something divine in this speech, persuaded the old
man to come down from the wall, and, under the pretence of having something to tell him, took him some little space aside, then seized
him suddenly round the body and carried him into the Roman camp. Sent from
thence to Rome, and questioned by the senate, the prophet, under compulsion,
revealed the divine will, as contained in the Etruscan books of fate. The Romans, therefore, immediately began making a canal through the mountain
side which bounded the lake, and thus conducted the water into the plain, and
when they had thus fulfilled the will of the gods, they doubted not that Veii
would now fall into their hands.
Meantime
Camillus kept the town blockaded with his army, which had been joined by Latin
and Hernican auxiliaries. But the strong walls could,
not be stormed Veii in the ordinary way. Therefore Camillus had a tunnel cut
from the Roman camp, under the wall, to the citadel of Veii. When this tunnel
was completed, Camillus knew that Veii was in his hands, and he sent to Rome to
ask the senate how he should divide the spoils. The Senate determined that the
whole people should have a share in the spoils of the enemy’s town, which was
reduced by the exertions of the whole people; and young and old, rich and poor,
proceeded from Rome into the camp before Veii, awaiting the moment when they
could break
At
last the day for storming the town arrived, and Camillus let the Roman army
advance to the walls, and pretend to attack them. But while the Veientes were engaged in defending the walls, a select body
of men advanced through the tunnel. At their head was Camillus himself, and
when he arrived at the place where the tunnel ended and where there was only a
thin wall to break through, inside the temple of Juno in the citadel of Veii,
he heard the high priest of the Veientes, who was performing
a sacrifice before the king, say that whoever presented this offering to the
tutelar goddess of Veii would be victorious in battle. At this moment the
Romans burst forth out of the ground, Camillus seized the victim, and offered
it on the altar of the goddess, and his troops dispersed themselves from the
citadel over the whole town, and opened the gates to their comrades.
Thus
Veii fell into the hands of the Romans. Camillus surveyed the extent of the
town from the citadel, and measured the greatness of the victory. Then he
veiled his head, and implored the gods that, if too great happiness and
success had attended him, they should impose upon him a moderate retribution.
And when he had thus prayed, and, according to the solemn custom, had turned
himself round, he tripped with his foot and fell down, for a good sign, as he
supposed; for he thought, by this slight misfortune, to turn away the jealousy
of the gods.
A
more splendid triumphal procession than that which Camillus celebrated on his
return from Veii had never been seen in Rome. In a chariot drawn by four white
horses, and wearing the insignia of the Capitoline Jupiter, Camillus rode
through the sacred street towards the Capitol; and his soldiers, flushed with
joy and triumphing over the spoils, followed him, singing songs of praise in honour of their victorious leader.
But
soon discontent and dissension arose. Camillus had made a vow to dedicate the
tenth part of the spoils to the Delphian Apollo, and demanded now from each
person the tenth part of all the booty he had taken. It was decided by the
pontifices that nobody could keep in his own possession what was dedicated to
the god, without incurring the divine vengeance. The tenth part of the
conquered land must also be consecrated to the god. It was estimated,
therefore, and copper was taken from the state treasury to buy gold for the
amount. But as there was not so much gold to be obtained, the matrons gave up
their ornaments, and as a requital of their good deed they were suffered to
ride in chariots inside the town at the feasts of the gods. A bowl was made out
of the gold thus obtained, and a ship was sent to Delphi to convey the offering
to Apollo. When the ship was come near to Sicily, it was attacked by pirates
and taken to the island of Lipara, where the pirates
lived. But when their captain, Timasitheos, saw that
the Romans had a sacrificial offering for the Delphian god on board, he let
them go unhurt in their ship, and in this way won for himself the friendship of
the Roman people, which was of great benefit to his descendants in the first
Punic war, when the Romans took the island of Lipara.
But the consecrated offering was placed in the temple of Delphi, and was among
its choicest treasures until the Phokian Onomarchos carried it off in the year 401 b.c., forty years later. Only the basis,
which was of brass, remained, and was to be seen even in Appian’s time. Thus
Apollo received the tenth part of the spoils of the town which, by his help,
had fallen into the hands of the Romans. But the people had ceased to love
Camillus, and, from the very height of his glory, he was brought down to great
misery. The tribunes accused him of having unjustly divided the spoils of Veii,
nay, of having embezzled a part of them. The people were also much exasperated,
because at his triumph he drove four white horses and bore with him things
which belonged to the gods alone. For this reason, when Camillus saw that the
sentence of the people would go against him, he left Borne, and retired to
Ardea.
Thus
runs the legend of the conquest of Veii. It looks like an attempt to introduce
the narrative of a war resembling that of Troy into the early history of Rome.
Hence the account of the ten years’ duration of the siege, and especially of
the wonderful manner of taking the town by a mine which opened in the midst of
the town, and from which issued armed foes, as from the Trojan horse. On the
other hand, we can discover the character of genuine Italian imagination in the
fable of the sudden appearance of the Romans in the sanctuary of Juno, of the declaration
of the Etruscan priest that the victory was destined to him who should perform
the present sacrifice, and of the readiness and cunning of Camillus, who
anticipates the king of Veii and obtains the victory for Borne by complying
with the decree of fate. We have met with a similar story before, relating
that a Sabine had a cow of wonderful size, which he was going to sacrifice in
the temple of Diana on the Aventine, in order to secure to his people the
supreme power, according to the advice of the soothsayers; but that a Roman
persuaded the Sabine first to perform his ablutions in the Tiber, and meanwhile
sacrificed the cow for the benefit of the Romans.
It
is evident that the story of the Etruscan soothsayer and that of the Delphian
oracle are of different origin, and were not originally part of the same
narrative. The one clearly excludes the other. One is of native Italian growth,
the other is Greek in its origin. There can be no doubt that it is also more
recent, for the worship of Apollo was, at the time in question, not yet
introduced in Rome. What is said of the pious pirate Timasitheos proves nothing. When Rome became powerful, many towns tried to discover some
old connexion, either of relationship or friendship,
and the Romans were not displeased to discover that their ancestors had enjoyed
familiar intercourse with the Greek nation. Hence the story of the Delphian
offering is probably nothing more than an idle tale, which the Delphians ms.de
up at the time when Rome became to the Greeks the object of fear or veneration.
The
outlet of the Alban Lake, of which the legend speaks, exists even at the
present day. But whether it was made at the time of the last war with Veii, and
how the legend arose, it is perhaps impossible to determine. We can hardly
suppose that Rome and Latium, just in the middle of a war which strained all
their powers, would undertake an important public work, the object of which
was, after all, only an agricultural improvement in the vicinity of the lake.
It is far more probable that the outlet belongs to that period when the
Etruscans had dominion in Latium, and when they constructed in Rome itself
similar important works for draining the lower parts of the city. In the
immediate neighbourhood of the Alban Lake was
Tusculum, which was once Etruscan, and it is most likely that the outlet was
made in the time before the expulsion of the Etruscans from this town, i.e. in
the time of the Roman kings. Possibly during the siege of Veii an obstruction
of the sewers made repairs or cleaning necessary, and thus the tradition may
have arisen which ascribes the construction of the outlet to the time of the
last Veientine war.
Some
of the stories of Camillus are evidently drawn from the imagination of a foreigner,
probably a Greek, who was imperfectly acquainted with Roman customs and
institutions, and therefore relates things and attributes motives which no
Roman would have hit upon. Thus we are told that Camillus gave offence because
on the occasion of his triumph he decorated himself with the insignia of
Jupiter, and drove to the Capitol in a chariot drawn by four white horses. But
we know that it was customary at Rome for the victorious general, on the day of
his triumph, to personate, as it were, the Capitoline Jupiter, as if to show
that Jupiter himself triumphed over the enemies of Rome.
Not
less open to objection is the story that, before the storming of Veii, the
whole population of Rome were invited to share in the sack of the town. Who
can think it compatible either with the strict Roman discipline, or with any
kind of military order, to invite indiscriminately the populace of a town into
the camp for the purpose of taking part in the plunder of a captured city?
Thus
we find that, while the conquest of Veii is an incontrovertible historical
fact, all the details connected with it in the annalistic reports are
untrustworthy; nor can we discover satisfactorily what consequences the Roman
conquest had on the neighbouring Etruscan towns. The annalists report wars with Capena and Falerii, even tell of military expeditions over the Ciminian mountains, the boundary of South Etruria, to Volsinii and Salpinum. How much of these accounts may be true
it is not possible to decide; it seems, however, natural that, after the fall
of Veii, the towns which had been subject to it, or closely allied with it,
must likewise have fallen into the power of the Romans. This must have been the
case with Capena, and also with Sutrium and Nepete, which from this time appear as subject to
Rome. Falerii, on the other hand, maintained her independence, and Rome appears
not to have shown herself at all hostile to Tarquinii and Caere,
perhaps because they had remained neutral in the last war with Veii, or had
even favoured Rome.
The
conquest of Veii was so important an extension of the extremely narrow old Roman
territory, that the former acquisitions of the territory of Corioli and Fidenae, as well as the colonisation of Labici, become comparatively insignificant. Shortly after,
in the year 387 b.c., four new tribes were added to the
twenty-one original Roman tribes, and these new tribes perhaps surpassed the
old ones in fertility as well as extent. The Roman state had now so decidedly
grown in power, that its relations to the allied towns in Latium were
essentially altered. If we are justified in supposing that Veii, before its
fall, was about equal to Rome, the power of the latter was nearly doubled, and
probably not one of the existing towns of Etruria was now a match for her. The
wide space enclosed by the wall of the city could now be filled by a denser
population, and the hills, which had thus far been largely used for
agricultural purposes, could grow into a town. The wealth acquired by the
capture of the works of art of the Etruscan town could not fail to give a
strong impulse to industry, enterprise, and commerce. For the first time Rome
obtained a great accession of slaves in the numerous captives, who formed a skilled
and industrious population; whilst the conquered country offered to the poor
plebeian peasant, as well as to the wealthy patrician, abundant land for
assignments and occupation. Borne, in her rapid development, was now in the
act of emerging from the position of a federal capital of the Latins to become
the mistress of a large country, when she was suddenly and unexpectedly
overtaken by a disaster which threatened not only her growth, but her life, and
which, like a hail-storm, swept away the first blossoms of the young republic.
Six years after the destruction of Veii, the Gauls rioted amidst the smoking
ruins of Rome.
CHAPTER
XVII.
THE
AGRARIAN MOVEMENTS TILL THE DESTRUCTION OF ROME BY THE GAULS.
The agrarian law of Sp. Cassius of the
year 486 b.c. was, as we have seen, never carried into effect, and probably was not passed
with due observance of all the constitutional forms. The thirty years from
that period to the time of the decemvirs were, according to the accounts of our
historians, filled with agrarian disputes, which were repeated almost every
year. The tribunes were always urging afresh the dividing of land among the
plebs, and the patricians always succeeded in frustrating these plans? But all
these agitations, which occupy so much room in the annals of the older time,
are incomprehensible to us, because we know no more than the annalists did
themselves what land it was proposed to divide. The narrators seem to have been
more or less of opinion that the dispute was about newly conquered land. But
the foreign history of that time, dark as it is, shows us that there was no
such land; that the Romans, and their allies, the Latins and the Hernicans,
could not always hold their own against the Volscians and the Aequians; and
that, instead of conquering, they often lost land. If, therefore, those stories
are really in any measure to be believed, and the tribunes urged the regulation
of landed tenures, their proposals must have had reference to the old territory
of the town. This is the more likely as the first agrarian law which was
carried in consequence of these disputes, and of which we have any certain
evidence, was confined to giving the plebeians a small portion of the town
district for their use. This was the law of the tribune Icilius,
adopted shortly before the decemvirate 456 b.c., which, on account of its importance, ranked as one of the
sworn fundamental laws (leges sacratae). We
can scarcely, however, suppose that the plebeians insisted on having the whole
of the Roman public lands, which till now were in the possession of the
patricians, divided among the people at large. Such a demand seems incompatible
with the legal status of the plebs. Moreover, if the plebeians aimed so high at
that early period, we can hardly understand why they should value so much the
moderate concession of the Icilian law, and why they
never afterwards made an attempt to disturb the old possessions of the
patricians.
It
is in the nature of the case that disputes about the division of land could
only arise when there were lands to be divided, i.e. after new acquisitions of
territory. The first acquisition of this kind was that of the Ardeatic district in the year 442 b.c. Ardea became a Latin
colony, either at this time or some time after. The
particular mode of appropriating the land for the exclusive benefit of the
Roman patricians must remain doubtful But so much is certain, that the
plebeians were excluded, for the three patrician commissioners sent out to
Ardea for the settlement of the colony did not venture to return to Rome for
fear of the plebs. We can well suppose that the signal would thus be given for
agrarian agitations.
The
next opportunity of improving the condition of the Roman plebs by grants of
land was offered by the conquest of Fidenae 426 b.c. This town was in the
immediate neighbourhood of Rome. Its land lay most
conveniently for the Roman peasantry, almost under the Roman walls. Fidenae was
destroyed and its territory united to that of Rome. Again in the years
immediately succeeding (424, 421, 420 b.c.) we hear of agrarian agitations. What the result was, we are
not told. But probably this time too the plebeians
failed to get what they wanted; the patricians insisted that the public land
(the ager publicus) belonged to them as the original populus, and they would admit only their clients as tenants
of the land which they had occupied on the ground of their exclusive right.
A
further conquest was that of Labici, 418 b.c., in the neighbourhood of Tusculum. This acquisition of land also was followed by agrarian disputes,
for in the succeeding years (416-414 b.c.) the tribunes made proposals of agrarian laws. This time the
plebeians carried their point. A colony was sent to Labici,
the first of the numerous Roman colonies which can be historically traced to
its very foundation, and which remained in the uninterrupted possession of
Rome. The colonists had two acres of land each assigned to them, to which was
of course added the right of pasture on the common land. Such a scanty
allowance seems to have satisfied the plebeians at that time. Yet the
patricians must have thought the measure of their generosity exhausted, for
soon after they resisted the proposal for the colonisation of Bolae. Party spirit ran so high that the consul Postumius, who acted as the champion of the patricians, was
murdered by his own troops. Whether this crime caused a reaction, or whether
other events favoured the policy of the patricians,
we know not. But Boise was not colonised, and the
Roman territory was for a time confined to the extent which it occupied at
that period, while soon afterwards (406 till 396 b.c.) the whole strength of the nation was in requisition for the
war with Veii.
The
agrarian disputes just referred to were not confined to the question among whom
the newly acquired lands should be divided. They extended to the question of
the burthens which the new occupants should bear. It seems that at this time
the principle was discussed, whether those who received from the state public
lands for occupation laid themselves under certain obligations to the state;
above all things, whether they should be obliged to pay a tax to the state.
Already in the year 424 b.c. we see this proposed by liberal candidates for the office of the consular
tribuneship, with this addition, that the income thus obtained should be
appropriated to paying the soldiers. Not long afterwards, it is related that
the patricians consented to the proposal of giving pay to the troops. To the
change in the military organisation in Rome, which
was thus effected, the Romans owed the great increase of power which is
perceptible from this time forward, and the first important result of which was
the conquest of Veii. It seems hardly doubtful that the money for paying the
troops was derived principally, if not exclusively, from the taxes which the
patrician possessors of the state lands had to pay; for only on this
supposition was this new measure of real benefit to the plebs, as it is always
represented to have been. It was therefore closely connected with
the question about the appropriation and use of the public lands, and may have
contributed not a little to support the claims of the patricians to their
exclusive use. It was no bad argument if the patricians could say that they
bore the cost of defending the state, and were therefore entitled to the
possession of the state lands.
All
previous conquests were insignificant in comparison with the great increase of
the Roman power after the fall of Veii, 396 b.c. By it the Roman territory
was all at once doubled, and the use to be made of the new districts became
inevitably a subject for discussion. The patricians undoubtedly put forward the
claim, which they had never relinquished, to the sole possession of the
conquered state lands, while the plebeians urged a division of land as private
property. The Roman writers have misrepresented these disputes in the interest
of the aristocratic party. According to their account, the plebeians intended
to divide the Roman state, leaving one-half of the citizens in Rome, and
sending the other half to colonize Veii. This pernicious scheme, which
threatened Rome with a fatal division, the patricians opposed with all their
might, and finally succeeded in frustrating. This account, which is in
substance repeated after the burning of Rome by the Gauls, is nothing but an
attempt to accuse the plebeians of folly and treason, and so to misrepresent
their demands as to insure their condemnation by very patriotic Roman. It is
not difficult to discover what the plebeians really wanted. They wished no
separation from Rome, nor did they propose a plan which would have substituted
for the overthrown Veientine state a more formidable
rival of Roman ascendancy. All that they insisted on was to acquire land for
themselves in the conquered territory. This demand was so just that it could
not be resisted in the end, and it was at last agreed that an allotment of
seven jugera a head should be made.
A
further misrepresentation of the facts is the story that Camillus dedicated to
the Delphian Apollo the tenth not only of the movable spoils but also of the
conquered land connected of Veii, and that the obligation of returning a tenth
of the tithing of spoils and raising, at the public cost, the value of a tenth of
the land, caused the serious contentions in Rome which ended in the exile of
Camillus. It has already been mentioned that the story of the Delphian oracle
and the dedication of the golden bowl is most likely a late invention. The
origin of the tale may easily be accounted for. It was nothing but the general
obligation imposed on the occupiers of the territory of Veii to pay a tenth of
the produce. Such a tax was not unreasonable, so far as it was imposed on the
occupiers of what was properly public land. It is therefore not likely that it
was objected to by the patricians, who were still the only occupiers of public
land. If the plebeians objected and raised an outcry against the tax, it can
only be explained by the supposition that they claimed to have land allotted to
them as freehold and not subject to annual payments.
They
received in fact allotments of seven jugera a head.
Such a large allowance, in such a fertile district and so near to Rome, would
no doubt have satisfied all their expectations, if it had not been burthened
with a tithe or rent charge. As discontent no doubt existed, according to all
accounts, on the part of the plebeians, and assumed the form of protests
against the payment of a tenth for the Veientine holdings—as, moreover, the story of the payment of this tenth to the shrine of
Apollo at Delphi is untrue—it seems natural to infer that the much-vexed
agrarian question lay at the bottom of these difficulties, and that the partial annalists, who wrote in the interest of the governing
class, misrepresented both the discontent of the plebs and the motives and
policy of the patricians.
It
is very uncertain in what manner the old inhabitants and cultivators of the Veientine country were treated. The tradition appears to
assume that they were incorporated as Roman citizens into the four tribes
newly formed from the conquered land. But such mild treatment of bitter enemies
would not have been in accordance with Roman customs, and it was not
practicable in this particular case, because the land of the conquered was to
be taken possession of by the Romans. Perhaps we are not far wrong if we
suppose that, with the conquest of Veii, the employment of slaves for domestic
service and for agriculture became more general. In the old time the number of
slaves in Rome was very small, as is natural in a state of society characterised by simplicity and poverty. The clientela of the subject population served to a
certain extent the purpose of slavery in later times. Slavery, like the milder
servitude of the clients, was the result of the subjection of enemies. The
difference was this, that if the conquered people were left in possession of
their hereditary lands, they became clients; if they were removed from their
lands, they fell into the condition of slaves. The foundation of the Roman
state was followed by the establishment of clientship; the extension of the Roman
dominion led to an increase of slavery. Before the taking of Veii, the Homans
had had but little opportunity of taking prisoners of war in large numbers, for
they had made no conquests by which the great bulk of the hostile population
fell into their power. But this was now the case with the numerous defenders
of the large and populous town of Veii, which no doubt consisted in great part of
country people from the surrounding districts. It is possible that some
townships of the country of Veii obtained milder conditions, as having
surrendered themselves to the Romans in the course of the war. If, in
consequence of this, a part of the conquered land was not forfeited, yet there
can be little doubt that the larger and more fertile part of the country was
divided among the Romans, and that these new owners were the citizens
authorized to vote in the newly established tribes.
With
the conquest of Veii, therefore, we see Borne entering on a period of power and
prosperity, which appeared to be a guarantee for a steadily continued
development. Rome began to grow wealthy. The possessions of the influential
families already covered hundreds of acres of land. Agriculture, it
is true, remained the foundation of the national wealth; trade and commerce
were only secondary sources of it. But in this direction also a beginning was
probably made, for by the conquest of Veii no doubt thousands of skilful artisans fell into Roman captivity. Even the
circumstance that Borne allured the rapacious hordes of the Gauls may be taken
as evidence that at that time it began to rank among the wealthy towns of Italy. Everything tends to show that, before
the invasion of the Gauls, Rome was on the point of taking a great start and
entering on a period of rapid development, when it was suddenly stopped, and
for a considerable time sank into a state of weakness which endangered its
position at the head of Latium.
CHAPTER
XVIII.
THE
INVASION OF THE GAULS, 390 B.C.
While in Italy the native Sabellian races,
as well as those of foreign origin, the Etruscans and the Greeks, had arrived
at various degrees of civilisation and national
prosperity, and were practising agriculture, trade,
commerce, and the arts, the north of Europe, separated from sunny Italy by the
great Alpine wall, was traversed by restless swarms of barbarians, who, with
unsteady aim, were drifted, like the clouds of dust in the desert, in different
directions, unwilling to settle down permanently and to live by the proceeds of
their labour. Coming from the east, the great nation
of the Celts or Gauls had taken possession of the western countries of Central
Europe even to the sea, and from this their chief seat, which after them was
called Gaul, Gallic hordes had crossed the Pyrenees and the Channel, to spread
themselves in Spain and Britain. They had also found their way across the Alps
at an early period. During a number of years swarms of them had penetrated to
the level lands of Northern Italy, and had either subjected or expelled the
former inhabitants of those parts. The Etruscan towns in the rich valley of
the Po fell one after another into the hands of the Gauls. Civilisation and art succumbed to barbarism. The most fruitful plain of Italy again became
almost a wilderness.
Northern
Italy, between the Alps and the Apennines, was justly called from this time
forward Cisalpine Gaul. In the extreme east only the Veneti preserved their
independence, and in the west, the Ligurians, between the Alps, the Apennines,
and the sea. The Umbrians, who lived between the Apennines and the Adriatic,
and of old possessed the plain northwards far towards the Po, were driven
southwards, and their collision with the Sabines caused the numerous migrations
which brought the Samnites and the cognate tribes into the coast districts and
to the south of the peninsula.
The
most advanced tribe of the Gauls were the Senones on the Adriatic Sea, to the
east of Central Etruria. While Borne reduced South Etruria to a state of
subjection, these Gauls crossed the Apennines, and appeared suddenly before the
gates of Clusium, the powerful Etruscan town from
which, according to the ancient legend, King Porsenna had marched to attack
Borne. When nations are migrating and seeking either booty or new settlements,
no special inducement or provocation is needed to call forth their hostility.
Whoever is in their way, whomsoever they can subdue and despoil, he is their
enemy. They know no other policy and no other motives. It is therefore nothing
but a foolish tale which relates that an inhabitant of Clusium,
in order to avenge himself on a powerful enemy, the seducer of his wife,
prevailed on the Gauls to cross the Alps, by exhibiting before them specimens
of the finest fruits of the rich southern country, and inviting them to take
possession of districts which produced such delicacies, but were inhabited by
cowards.
When
the Clusians were threatened by the Gauls, so ran the
Roman account, they sent an embassy to Rome asking for assistance.
The senate despatched an embassy, consisting of three
of the noblest men in Borne, sons of M. Fabius Ambustus,
to warn the Gauls that they should desist from hostilities against the friends
and allies of the Roman people. The haughty barbarians received with scorn and
contempt a threat from a people whose very name was unknown to them. They
demanded from the Etruscans land, where they might dwell, and relied upon the
right of the stronger. A battle was fought between them and the Clusians; and the three Romans, eager to fight, and
unmindful of the sacred right of nations which protected them as ambassadors
against violence and also forbade their engaging in acts of hostility, took
part in the battle, and fought in the foremost ranks of the Clusians,
where one of them slew a Gallic chief and took his armour.
The whole rage of the northern enemy was thus diverted from Clusium against Rome. They demanded from the senate the delivery of the three
ambassadors; and when the Roman people rejected this demand, and even chose as
consular tribunes for the next year the same men who had broken the law of
nations, they marched with all their force down the valley of the Tiber towards
Rome. At the small river Allia, only eleven Roman
miles from the town, on the left bank of the Tiber, the two armies met, in the
middle of summer. The Romans were put to flight almost without offering any
resistance. A panic seized them at the sight of their gigantic enemies, who
rushed to the attack with a terrific war-cry and with irresistible impetuosity.
In one moment the legions were broken and scattered in headlong flight. The
Romans were slaughtered like sheep, and in their despair they plunged into the
waters of the Tiber; but even there many were reached by the darts of the
enemy, and many sank under the weight of their arms. Only a small part of the
fugitives reached the opposite bank, and rallied in the ruins of Veii. A few,
and among them the consular tribune Sulpicius, reached Borne by the direct
road. The Roman army was annihilated at one blow. Even the enemy were
astonished at their unexpected success. They dispersed themselves to despoil
the slain, and, according to their custom, they stuck the severed heads upon
spears, and erected a monument of victory on the battlefield.
The
defeat of the Allia was never forgotten by the Romans.
The 18th of July, the anniversary of the battle, was for all time looked upon
as an unlucky day. The panic, which alone had caused the misfortune, struck so
deep into their minds that, for centuries afterwards, the name and the sight of
Gauls inspired them with terror. The Romans never trembled before Italian
enemies. Even Hannibal and his Punic army they encountered with manly courage.
The greatest reverses, sustained in the wars with these enemies, produced but a
temporary, passing effect. But the Gauls and the Germans were terrible to them.
It was only with his iron discipline that Marius kept the legions together when
they had to encounter the northern barbarians. Even as revolted slaves they
inspired this terror, after they had worn Roman chains. Caesar had difficulty
in accustoming his soldiers to the sight of the daring warriors of Ariovistus,
and terror convulsed even imperial Borne when Varus, with his legions, met his
fate far away in the forests of Germany.
The
whole of the Roman people followed the example of the army. The machinery of
government was out of gear all at once. The magistrates had ceased to govern. Fear,
terror, and despair reigned throughout the town. Every one thought only of himself, of personal safety, of speedy flight. The army was
believed to be annihilated, and everything was given up for lost. No one
thought of defence. The walls were not manned; even
the gates were left open. In confused crowds the train of fugitives hurried
across the bridge over the Tiber towards the Janiculus.
What could not be carried away or was forgotten in the confusion of the hour,
was left behind to the mercy of the enemy. There was scarcely time to bury some
sacred things, and for the vestal virgins to carry away the sacred fire in
safety to the friendly town of Caere. The monuments
of antiquity, the bronze tables of the laws, the images of gods and heroes, the
old annals and whatever written documents were then in existence—all were
abandoned and doomed to perish in the impending destruction.
But
Rome was not destined to be quite overwhelmed by the barbarians. The Capitoline
hill, with the fortifications and the temple of Jupiter, was taken possession
of by armed men, and by the remnant of senators and magistrates. This isolated
rock rose above the widespreading flood and transmitted the continuity of the
Eternal City unbroken to the coming generations. From the centre Rome was destined soon to rise with renewed vigour,
and to see the sons of the haughty barbarians led captive before the triumphal
cars of her victorious sons.
Not
till the third day after the battle did the Gauls appear before the town. When
they found the walls unoccupied and the gates open, they feared an ambush, and
for a long time did not venture nearer. At last they satisfied themselves that
the place was undefended, and entering found the whole town forsaken and the
streets empty. Only here and there, in the halls of their houses, they saw venerable
old men, earnest, dignified, and motionless as statues, sitting on ivory
chairs. They were a number of the oldest senators—men who in previous years had
commanded the armies of the republic, and now, too proud for flight, preferred
to await death amid the ruins of their native town. Their wish was fulfilled.
They fell under the blows of the barbarians. When the enemy had sacked the
empty town, the work of destruction began. From the Capitoline rock the men of Rome
were doomed helplessly to look on and see their dwellings and the temples of
their gods consumed by the flames. The end of the Roman state seemed to have
come. The people were dispersed, the army annihilated, all order dissolved, the
town in ashes. Who could hope for a rise after such a fall. Could such a night
be ever succeeded by another day?
Yet
the remnant of the Roman nation never despaired of their fatherland. A
desperate assault of the Gauls against the Capitol was repulsed. For a regular
siege of a fortified place the disorderly hordes of Gauls were neither disposed
nor qualified. They confined themselves therefore to blockading the Romans, in
the hope of forcing them through hunger to surrender. One part of their troops
they sent into the neighbouring districts to collect
provisions; the rest encamped among the ruins of the town.
In
the meantime the fugitive Romans in Veii had recovered themselves from the
inexplicable terror which had seized them at the sight of the Gauls, and by
degrees they so far acquired courage that, under the guidance of a plebeian
captain, M. Caedicius, they drove back a party of
Etruscans, which had invaded the Roman territory on the right bank of the
Tiber. By degrees, as they gained confidence, they aspired to deliver Rome from
the barbarians. But it was felt that this undertaking could be ventured on
only under the guidance of Camillus, who was living still in banishment in
Ardea. In his new home Camillus had proved his Roman courage. At the head of
the men of Ardea, he had surprised a party of plundering Gauls and annihilated
them. But however much his heart might long to deliver his country, he could
undertake nothing as an exile and without official authority. Therefore a bold
youth, Pontius Cominius, undertook to go from Veii to
the senate on the Capitol to communicate the wish of the army. He swam down the
Tiber, climbed up the steep sides of the Capitoline rock, and after the senate
had decided on recalling Camillus and choosing him as dictator, he returned by
the same way. But this bold deed almost caused the destruction of all. The
Gauls discovered the foot-prints where Cominius had
climbed the rock, and, following this track, they tried to surprise the Capitol
in the following night. The Roman guards slept. The first foes had already
reached the height, when the garrison was aroused by the cackling of the geese
in the temple of Juno, and the ex-consul M. Manlius hurried to the threatened
place, and struck down the foremost of the Gauls, who in his fall dragged
others with him. Thus, by the wakefulness of the geese and the prompt courage
of Manlius, the Capitol was saved.
Nevertheless
the blockade continued without interruption. In vain the besieged looked
anxiously from the height of the Capitol into the distance. The expected help was
nowhere to be descried. The provisions were wasting away, and hunger began to
cripple the limbs and to warp the courage of the garrison. There was only one
chance of deliverance left. The Gauls did not seem averse to withdrawing, in
consideration of a ransom. Negotiations were opened, and it was agreed that
Borne should be redeemed by a ransom of a thousand pounds of gold. The
treasures of the temples and the gold of the trinkets which the noble ladies
willingly gave up, scarcely sufficed to raise such a large sum. The gold was
weighed on the Forum before the barbarians, and when the consular tribune
Sulpicius complained that the Gauls made use of unjust weights, Brennus, their
king, threw his sword into the scale and said, ‘Woe to the conquered!’ All of a
sudden, however, Camillus appeared on the Forum, at the head of a body of
troops, and stepping between the disputants, declared the contract which was
signed without his sanction to be null and void, and when the Gauls protested
he drove them by force out of the town. They drew up their forces at a short
distance from the gates. On the road to Gabii a
battle was fought. The Romans conquered and not a Gaul escaped. Brennus himself
fell into the hands of Camillus, and as he asked for mercy Camillus returned
his haughty words, ‘Woe to the conquered!’ and slew him. Thus was Rome
delivered from the Gauls, after they had remained in the town for seven months.
The disgrace of the Roman overthrow was blotted out; the insolent enemy was
punished, and by the heroism of one man the humiliating agreement was set aside
whereby the Romans, in their despair, had ransomed themselves from their
enemies with gold, unmindful that a Roman should purchase his freedom not with
gold but with steel.
The
foregoing story, which, on the whole, is abridged from the mastery narrative of
Livy, belongs to that class of narratives in which we can most easily detect
the additions, ornaments, and poetical inventions of a later time, partly
because they betray themselves by their fantastical features, partly because we
find in Diodorus and Polybius much more simple and authentic accounts of the
invasion of the Gauls, and with their assistance are enabled to recognise distinctly the event in its grand outlines. At
the outset the story of the embassy of the three Fabii to the Gauls before Clusium is very improbable. It is
not easy to understand why the people of Clusium should
send to Rome for assistance, still less how the Romans could at
that time employ a phrase which afterwards became popular among them, viz.,
that the Gauls should leave the friends and allies of the Roman people
unmolested. The vanity of the Fabian house and their family traditions are no
doubt the source of the story that the Gauls remarked the three Romans in the
Etruscan army, and, on account of the violation of the law of nations,
relinquished their attack on Etruria to advance straight upon Rome. From what
we know of the Gauls of this time, they marched through Italy for the purpose
of plundering, without scrupulously searching for just grounds to declare war
on this or that nation. Thus they attacked Clusium,
and for no other purpose they turned against Rome.
The
men who composed the eulogium of Camillus contributed most of the
embellishments and falsifications of the story. The fictions are so clumsy and
awkward that they betray themselves immediately. At the same time we discover
in them an author but little acquainted with Roman affairs and constitutional
practice. The object of the narrator was to represent Camillus as the true
deliverer of Rome. Hence the story of his recall from Ardea, and his nomination
as dictator. In this story the fact is overlooked that, according to the
previous account, Camillus was not sent into exile, but only condemned to pay a
fine; that he voluntarily left Rome, and therefore had not lost the Roman
citizenship, and that accordingly his recall required no vote of the people. The narrator, moreover, appears not to have known the forms observed on the
nomination of a dictator. He causes him to be elected by a vote of the people,
whereas the nomination ought to have been made by one of the consular tribunes.
It cannot be conceived why this rule should have been departed from, seeing
that, according to the received account, the consular tribune Q. Sulpicius
Longus was on the Capitol, and could, at the request of the senate, easily
nominate a dictator. The story therefore, creates a difficulty which, in
reality, did not exist. On the other hand, it conceals or ignores an obstacle
to the legal transfer of dictatorial power to Camillus. The law required that
the dictator, after being duly nominated by a consul or consular tribune,
should personally propose to the comitia curiata the law (the lex curiata de imperio)
which conferred on him the military command. Camillus could only do this if he
was himself on the Capitol, for the curies could not assemble outside Rome.
These are our reasons for doubting the dictatorship of Camillus. Moreover we
possess an account which is free from the silly theatrical scenes in which
Camillus suddenly appears, like a deus ex machina,
in the Forum, and defeats and slays the Gauls. According to Diodorus, Camillus
is not made dictator until the Gauls have evacuated Borne. We have therefore no
alternative but to prefer this simple narrative, and to reject every word which
connects Camillus with the deliverance of Borne from the Gauls.
In
like manner we must condemn the story which ascribes to Camillus the honour of having taken from the Gauls the spoils and the
ransom of a thousand pounds of gold. It is plain, from the report of Polybius,
that neither Camillus nor any one else was so
fortunate as to accomplish such a feat. Polybius reports that the Gauls retired
‘unmolested with their booty.’ He does not even mention the ransom
at all, so that perhaps even this story was invented for the same purpose of
glorifying Camillus. It is indeed neither impossible nor improbable that the
Gauls, after the destruction of the town, were induced to retire by a sum of money,
but at any rate the Romans never recovered any portion of such ransom or of
booty. According to the most popular story, adopted by Livy, the payment was
interrupted by Camillus on the Forum; the Gauls therefore never got the money
at all. According to another report, it was taken from the Gauls, by
Camillus, when they returned from an invasion of Apulia in the following year.
According to a third version, it was brought back to Rome out of the province
of Gaul by the propraetor M. Livius Drusus about a century later. The narrators thought it quite possible that a
heap of gold should remain untouched in the hands of barbarians for a whole
year or even for a century. To us such abstinence appears quite as marvellous as the suckling of Romulus and Remus by a
she-wolf, and we decline to accept it as an historical fact. In comparison
with it another version seems almost to deserve credit, though that also is
rather startling. It is stated that
the sum of two thousand pounds of gold, after having been recovered from the
Gauls, was deposited in the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol, and remained
there untouched for more than two centuries, until in 55 b.c., in the second consulship of Pompeius, it was taken away by
M. Crassus. If the Romans were able to lay aside such a handsome sum of money
at the period of the great national distress which followed the burning of the
city, and if they scrupled to touch it in the war with Hannibal, when they
borrowed and took whatever money they could lay their hands on, we must confess
that we have a very inadequate conception of the strength of their religious
faith and conscientiousness. But we may fairly have grave doubts as to the
accuracy of the statement. In the first place the sum paid as a ransom to the
Gauls is all but unanimously stated to have amounted only to one thousand
pounds of gold. If, therefore, it is true that, in 55 b.c., two thousand pounds were found, they must be otherwise
accounted for. In the second place all the statements which refer to
the raising, paying, and recovering the ransom are so contradictory and
unauthenticated that we cannot believe that any trustworthy information existed
on the subject.
The
story of the saving of the Capitol by M. Manlius and the cackling of thee geese is in itself not incredible, and it may
have been part of a very old tradition. It seems probable that while many of
the great outlines of the history have been effaced, some of the minute
details—such as the alarm given by the geese, the removal of the vestal virgins
in the waggon of Albinius,
and the sacrifice of Fabius—may have been faithfully preserved by tradition, or
by the pontifical scribes. At the same time even this part of the story is not
free from objections. In the first place the tradition was by no means uniform
that the Gauls had climbed up the rock, following the track of Cominius, for one version made them get into the Capitol by
a mine. In the second place, it is possible that the story of the geese was an aetiological legend, i.e., a legend invented to account for
the origin of a custom or religious ceremony. It is reported that, in memory of
the watchfulness of the geese and the negligence of the dogs, a procession
took place every year in Rome, in which a dog fastened to a cross, and a goose
decorated with gold and purple, were carried through the streets. Now it is hardly
probable that an event like that reported of the geese should have given rise
to such a religious ceremonial. Dogs were sacrificed on several occasions; the geese were sacred to Juno before the period in question, as the legend
itself presumes. It is therefore more probable that the legend arose out of the
religious custom, than the custom out of the alleged event.
Our
inquiry shows that the greatest part of the common story does not belong to
history but to fiction. On the other hand the narrative is defective. It does
not say, for instance, what part the Latins took in the war with the Gauls. A
very few faint traces indeed there are, which point to the fact that the Latins
were not idle spectators during the Gallic invasion of Latium. In fact, as they
were in the same danger as the Roman themselves, we cannot believe that they
would on this occasion maintain a cowardly and foolish neutrality. It was not
difficult for them, in their fortified towns, to defy the blind courage of the
Gauls, as the Romans did on the Capitol, and to harass small detachments and
troops of plunderers. Thus they may have played an important part in the
deliverance of Rome; but the Roman annalists, intent
only on their own glorification, have been ungenerously silent about the
deserts of their allies.
After
what has been said, it appears that the substance of historical facts to be
drawn from the long descriptions of the Gallic conquest is very meagre. There
is nothing certain but the general rough sketch of the picture. All the details
are doubtful or deceptive. There remains only the bare fact, that the Gauls
made an unexpected invasion, that the Roman army was overthrown, that the town
was sacked and burnt, the Capitol besieged in vain, and that after some time
the enemy retired with the spoils which had been taken.
That
this invasion of the Gauls was a great misfortune for Rome cannot be denied.
Yet it appears that the panic, which was the chief cause of the disaster, also
tended to increase the impression which it made on the public mind. The Gauls
were not in a position to make a permanent conquest. After they had retired,
the former state of things returned, as the old configuration of the soil
remains after an inundation. The body politic had been paralysed,
not killed ; the organism was not destroyed, its action only had been arrested
for a short time. Certainly it was necessary to rebuild the town, which had
been burnt to the ground; but the state recovered its former vigour without difficulty. It may even be that the invasion
of the Gauls was more destructive to neighbouring nations than to Rome itself, and that Rome indirectly gained more from it than
it lost. At any rate we find Rome, immediately after the retreat of the Gauls,
in such a commanding position with regard to the Latins, the Aequians, and the
Volscians, that its power seems in no way diminished.
CHAPTER
XIX.
SOURCES
OF EARLY ROMAN HISTORY.
The destruction of Rome by the Gauls is
so marked a point in the history of the Romans, that the plan of those writers
who (like Claudius Quadrigarius among the ancients)
begin their narrative at this point, has much in its favour.
The history of the regal period, and of the first 120 years of the republic, is
not derived from contemporary witnesses, but was composed after the Gallic conflagration.
Whatever historical monuments existed were almost entirely destroyed in the
burning of the town, and the distress of the time which immediately succeeded
left no leisure for restoring historical documents. We must not deceive
ourselves by thinking that the time before the Gallic invasion belongs,
strictly speaking, to the domain of history, inasmuch as history is intended to
exhibit successive events in their connexion of cause
and effect, and to trace a certain law of development, to make us understand
and appreciate the character of individuals and of political bodies. It seems,
therefore, advisable to pause here for a moment, and to review the sources of
information possessed by the oldest annalists. We are
the more called upon to do so as we require a justification for tarrying so
long in the labyrinth of legends and of traditions more perplexing than instructive.
Before
the second Punic war, the Romans possessed no connected general account of
their own history. An annalistic literature first grew up with the Greek work
of Fabius Pictor, and continued to be cultivated until the end of the republic.
It is from these annalists, whose works have all
perished, that our authorities, such as Livy and Dionysius, have derived their
information. But even Fabius Pictor and his imitators had predecessors, and it
is important for us to know these predecessors, and to judge of the materials
from which they gathered the knowledge of things which happened before their
time.
The
Roman nation was formed by the union of tribes and houses, which had been
originally almost or entirely independent, whose recollections extended much
further back than those of the united community, and whose peculiarities were
lost only by degrees in the general character of the Roman people. Every family
had its own domestic duties and religious rites, sanctuaries, and festivals,
the preservation of which was considered a most sacred duty. Each peculiar
custom gave rise to certain historical traditions, which were the common
property of all the members of the family, and were preserved the more
scrupulously as the happiness and prosperity of the family were supposed to depend
upon the due observance of their religious duties. Thus there were formed
distinct groups of families, closely connected together, and distinguished
from the rest of the community by the common name of the house (nomen gentile). No ancient people possessed such a strongly
developed and exclusive organisation of families and
houses as subdivisions of the community at large as the Eoman,
and nowhere was family pride carried to such an extent.
The
history of Rome grew up in a manner analogous to the Roman people. As families,
houses, and tribes were combined to make up the body of the citizens, so the
private traditions, chronicles, and monuments of the distinguished families of
the Roman nobility were the materials out of which Fabius Pictor and his
successors formed the history of the Roman commonwealth. Even though we had no
authentic evidence of the existence of such family chronicles, we still could
infer, from what we know of the patrician pride, that in every family
traditions of the noble deeds of their forefathers must have been most
carefully preserved. Even in the oldest period of the republic, and within the
body of the patricians, there was a select nobility, founded on the distinction
which certain ancestors had won in the service of the state. It was accordingly
of great importance to preserve the evidence of the exploits of the great men
belonging to each noble family, and to record the offices which they had
filled, in such a manner as would serve, before the whole nation,
as a public proof of nobility. Hence the care bestowed on the images of
ancestors, which were preserved in the hall of each house; and hence the solemn
pomp of the funerals, in which a noble Roman was accompanied to the grave not
only by his living friends and relatives, but by the whole series of his
ancestors, clothed in the robes of their offices. Hence, also, the solemn
funeral orations and laudations, which to a certain extent took the place of a
national epic poem or a popular history, and which preserved the memory of the
most important transactions. Out of these funeral orations and family
traditions arose the domestic chronicles, which, as we are told on good authority,
existed in Rome. A careful examination of the oldest history of the republic
shows that a considerable portion of it is taken from such traditions of the
Valerian, Fabian, Quinctian, Furian,
and other houses. At what time these traditions were written down in the form
of domestic chronicles cannot with certainty be determined. Perhaps the
beginning was made before the Gallic invasion; but such documents, if they
existed at that time, were mostly lost in the burning of the town, and could
not be restored afterwards without the chance of admitting a great amount of
error.
As
such domestic records dealt only with isolated portions of the events of the
past, many things were necessarily overlooked, whilst repetitions,
inaccuracies, and contradictions were numerous. It would have been impossible
for Fabius Pictor to compose, from these materials alone, a connected,
consecutive history. He must have had documents before him which served to
string together, in something like chronological order, the motley materials,
drawn from the traditions of the different families. These documents were
supplied by the official lists of magistrates. In a republic with annually
changing magistrates, it was absolutely necessary to have authentic records of
the names of these officers, especially as these names served, in the absence
of a recognised chronological era, to mark the
successive years. Such official lists of magistrates were kept in the temple of
Moneta, on the Capitol, and they are referred to as early as 444 b.c. Probably they extended as far
back as the beginning of the republic. But they perished, for the most part, in
the Gallic conflagration, and were restored imperfectly; nor even after this
period were they carefully kept, as otherwise the numerous discrepancies and
defects in them before and after this period would be unexplained.
The
two principal sources for the earliest connected annals of Borne were
accordingly the family traditions and the lists of the magistrates. All the
remaining writings and monuments which, in their origin, belong to the time
before the invasion of the Gauls, are of inferior importance.
The
so-called annals of the pontifices were confined to subjects of religious
interest, such as wonderful phenomena, the origin and meaning of religious
customs and festivals, the building and consecration of temples and altars,
epidemic diseases, public calamities, and so forth. The various ritualistic
books treated of forms of prayer and sacrifices, of the laws
concerning sacred things, of offices connected with public worship, of the
duties of priests and their assistants. The official formularies of the secular
magistrate contained in like manner only the necessary rules and instructions
for the conduct of the different offices.
But
little credit is to be attached to the alleged monuments of the oldest periods.
It is difficult to fix the age of such works, unless they bear inscriptions
with names or dates. A statue without a name inscribed on it is sure to pass
for different persons at different times, or even at the same time? The
monuments of the primeval period of Roman history are all more or less
suspicious, as comparatively late fabrications. At any rate no safe inference
can be drawn from them as to the reality of events, or even of persons, whose
memory they appear designed to preserve.
One
source yet remains for the knowledge of the old Roman history, a source out of
which the annalists have drawn some valuable facts.
This was supplied by the annals of the neighbouring towns, such as Ardea, Tibur, Tusculum, and Praeneste. As these towns never
suffered such utter destruction as Rome in the Gallic conflagration, they were
more likely to preserve old records and monuments.
It produces a very curious impression when Cicero tries to persuade himself that the history of Rome had, even in the regal period, a firm foundation, because at the time of Romulus Greece was already full of poets and musicians. Long before the building of Rome, Cicero remarks, Homer had flourished and Lycurgus had established the polity of Sparta. The age of Romulus was therefore, according to Cicero, a time when science was matured. The age of fables had passed away; it was already clear day. Granted that this was true of Greece, does it follow that in Italy the day of civilisation had begun to dawn? With the same reasoning a Russian patriot might claim for his country cultivation and advanced science in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, because in that age the classical studies were revived and the art of printing was discovered. Only a self-sufficient Roman like Cicero, who believed, or wished to make others believe, that his countrymen had in all things equalled or excelled the Greeks, could overlook the gigantic gulf which separated the Greek from the Italian world. The Greeks were several centuries ahead of the Romans. The whole of that glorious struggle from which Greece came forth victorious over Asiatic barbarism had been fought before Rome burst the narrow boundaries with which it was surrounded at the beginning of the republic. During the time of that brilliant age of the arts in Athens under Pericles and Phidias, Rome was a fortified village, with shingle-roofed houses, and without a single native artist of name. When Athens and Sparta were involved in that destructive war which blighted the blossoms of Greece, Rome was defending herself with difficulty against the Volscians and Aequians. While the family chroniclers of the Romans were relating the foolish tales about the destruction of Veii and the expulsion of the Gauls, and while the pontifical annals recorded, in the driest possible manner, nothing but miracles, pestilences, and famines, Thucydides raised the art of historic writing to the highest point which it reached in antiquity. In the year 404 B.C. Athens fell into the power of Lysander; in the same year the last war was commenced with Veii. When Rome was in the hands of the Gauls, 390 b.c., Greece was convulsed with that Corinthian war which directed the weapons of the Greeks away from the decaying Persian empire against their own hearts; and while in Rome the few miserable annals and historical monuments were consumed by the flames, there appeared in Greece the historical writings of Xenophon. It is necessary to keep in mind the contemporary events of Rome and Greece in order rightly to understand the political and intellectual influence exercised.
WILHELM IHNE’S HISTORY OF ROME
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