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CHAPTER XV
ROME AND HER NEIGHBOURS IN THE FIFTH CENTURY BC
I.
ROME, LATIUM AND THE HERNICI AT THE BEGINNING OF THE
FIFTH CENTURY
THE opening decades of the fifth century were a period
of outstanding importance in Italian history. If republican Rome had been
strong enough to retain unimpaired the authority in Latium which had been
wielded by the latest kings, the process whereby Italian unity was finally
achieved might have been set in motion two hundred years before it
actually began. In Italian affairs the first and gravest issue presented
after the monarchy collapsed was this—Should the fifth century see an extension
of Roman influence towards Campania and the south? Or should Rome’s
political horizon still be fixed along the boundaries of Latium? The
question was simple and the answer plain. So far from building still
further on the foundations laid during the regal age, Rome was to feel the
foundations themselves give way. Instead of winning new conquests outside
the Latin region, she was first to lose ground in Latium itself; and the
history of her external affairs for a century and a quarter before the
coming of the Gauls is a tale of very varied fortune, in which the final
gain is small. First, for more than half a century Rome is on
the defensive, holding her own indeed, though nothing more.
And secondly, after a breathing space of twenty years, comes a
brief period of Roman success. Enemies who had lately been
an aggressive danger were brought definitely under control:
Veii itself was captured: and on two fronts the way lay open for a
new advance. Then came the Gauls, and the fulfilment of
Rome’s promise was again postponed. The achievement of the
fifth century was not indeed thrown away, but though its
potential value remained, its immediate result was to leave Rome,
when gains and losses had been cancelled out, very much where she
had stood when the century began.
The troubles of Rome were due in part to the advance
of peoples who had hitherto lain outside her ken, but in the first place to
a movement in Latium against Roman supremacy. Out of the confusion in
which Tarquinius Superbus disappears nothing
emerges save the fact that Rome was compelled to meet serious
onslaughts from more enemies than one. The evidence does not admit of
a detailed narrative, and the suggestion that Porsenna was so
far successful as to dismantle the walls of Rome is scarcely more
a hypothesis designed to explain the ease with which the city
was captured by the Gauls a century or so later. Nothing more can be
said than that the young Republic defeated all attempts at a monarchical
restoration and faced the future under the leadership of an oligarchy
whose outlook was definitely Latin. But from the monarchy the government
of republican Rome seems to have inherited at least enough of patriotic
ambition to cling with such tenacity as it could command to that
hegemony in Latium which the kings had at length secured. If the
first treaty between Rome and Carthage is rightly dated by
Polybius1, it implies a very natural attempt by the Republic to claim
the reversion of that predominant position among the Latin cities which
Rome had shown most clearly during the career of the second Tarquin. The
combination, however, of Etruscan efforts to retain a foothold on the
Latin bank and of Latin movements against a Rome which was weakened by
other commitments soon destroyed the prospect of an easy succession to the
legacy of the sixth century.
The first incident after the expulsion of the kings
which can be accepted as historical is the struggle between Rome and
the Latin cities, which culminated at the battle of Lake Regillus
and was ended by the treaty associated with the name of Spurius
Cassius Vecellinus. In the period of the
Etruscan retreat to the Tiber certain Latin cities seem to have formed
combinations whose object was to secure Latium for the Latins. One such
union is perhaps recorded by the inscription quoted in a fragment of Cato’s Origines: lucum Dianium in nemore Aricino Egerius Laeuius Tusculanus dedicauit dictator Latinus. hi populi communiter: Tusculanus, Aricinus, Lanuuinus, Laurens, Coranus, Tiburtis, Pometinus, Ardeatis Rutulus. In
this document the small number of the members, which suggests that it cannot be
earlier than a time when the larger states of Latium had absorbed many of
their more insignificant neighbours, combines with the presence of Pometia and the absence of Signia and Norba to indicate a date at the end of the
sixth century. Moreover, the omission of Rome from so influential
a league may be evidence that the humbling of Rome—an achievement perhaps
made possible by the expulsion of the kings—was at least one of the
purposes for which the league was formed. But though this organization may
well belong to the period of Rome’s weakness during the infancy of the
Republic, it would be rash to see in it the federation with which the foedus Cassianum was concluded. The league which finally compelled Rome to
exchange her hegemony for the position of an equal undoubtedly had
its headquarters ad caput (aquae) Ferentinae.
Since it must have been under Latin, and not under Roman, control, the
long-accepted theory which identified it with a spring near Marino cannot
be received; but the search for a more plausible site has reached no
definite result. On the whole, in spite of doubts recently expressed,
probability favours a location somewhere in the direction of Aricia,
though the aqua Ferentina cannot reasonably be sought
in the nemus Aricinum itself. If Livy indicates a point near the track along which the Via Appia
was built, his evidence tends against any attempt to find the
caput aquae on the north side of the Lago di Nemi, where the
sanctuary of Diana lay. Thus if the aqua Ferentina and the nemus Aricinum cannot be associated, though both may have been within the territory of Aricia,
it is unsafe to identify the league once commanded by Laevius Egerius with the great Latin League of the
fifth century.
Though most of the cities mentioned in the inscription
at Aricia undoubtedly belonged to the federation which met in the lucus Ferentinae,
it cannot be proved that the union whose members are known from the Arician text was the league which concluded the foedus Cassianum and not rather a group of powerful states, formed when the weakening of
Etruria seemed to invite a Latin revanche and afterwards developed into a
larger organization whose headquarters were no longer in the precinct of Diana
but at a spring probably not far away. Of the cities named in the
dedication, Lavinium, Ardea, Lanuvium, Aricia
with Cora and Pometia behind, and finally Tusculum
lay in a continuous line round the frontiers of Roman territory from a
point near Ostia as far as Gabii. But there the ring was broken, and of
the leading powers in the league Tibur alone remained. From the other
members Tibur was cut off. Between Tusculum and the ager Tiburtinus Labici, Pedum and, above all, Praeneste seem to have stood
aloof; nor were Nomentum and Crustumerium enrolled to fill the gap between the western boundaries of Tibur and the
river. The evidence for later developments whereby the league was
enlarged is too scanty to justify speculation about details. The list of
thirty cities, given by Dionysius as those which belonged to a league directed against Rome, is shown
to be a late invention by its alphabetical order, by its inclusion of Laurentum as well as Lavinium, and by other
indications; but it is clear that all the really formidable opponents of
Roman supremacy in Latium are to be found in the list of peoples whose
names have been preserved by Cato. They formed the nucleus of the Latin
alliance which Rome was called upon to face in the early years of the
fifth century.
The traditional account of the struggle between Rome
and the Latin states united to throw off her hegemony is heavily
loaded with matter which has no right to be regarded as historical.
In the whole narrative only two features need be seriously considered—the
battle of Lake Regillus and the foedus Cassianum. Of the battle it is possible to say
little more than that it was fought, that on the Latin side a leading part
was played by Tusculum, and that the issue was something less than a
complete victory for Rome. Neither of the dates offered by antiquity—499
and 496—can be accepted with any confidence, because one of these
two years, in which the consulship was held by the heroes of
the battle—T. Aebutius (499) and A. Postumius Albus (496)—was an obvious choice for later
annalists whose passion for precision outran the information at their
command. Again, the purely Greek origin of the tale which told how the
Dioscuri intervened cannot be refuted, nor can the interest of
third-century Rome in Regillus be proved, by the reverse type adopted for
Roman denarii when the issue of these coins began in 268 BC. In
this context the two horsemen are certainly meant to represent
the Penates Populi Romani, and they are without any kind of reference to
fifth-century history. But though much of the later Roman account must be
rejected as worthless accretion, accretions demand a solid foundation: the
tradition of the battle itself would be inexplicable unless some kind of
battle had taken place, and without a war between Rome and the Latins the foedus Cassianum would
scarcely be intelligible. If this treaty can be accepted with the
confidence which the evidence seems to justify, it implies a battle in
circumstances which tradition ascribes to the battle of Lake Regillus.
Treaty and battle hang together, and both may be received. But though a
battle was fought, little more about it can be said. The prominence of
Tusculum in the dedication of the nemus Aricinum lends a certain plausibility to the tale
that in the campaign of Regillus Tusculum was prominent. The lake
itself is probably to be identified with the Pantano Secco near
Tusculum itself, but of the Tusculan general—Octavius (or Octavus) Mamilius—it would be rash to say whether he is historical
or not. To this nothing further can be added except that the terms of
the foedus Cassianum contain a strong suggestion that shortly before the conclusion of that
agreement Rome had fought a battle against the Latins with a result rather
less glorious than the victory of which the Dioscuri were alleged to have
brought the news to Rome.
The evidence for the foedus Cassianum is as good as evidence for the early
fifth century in Italy can be. Livy makes casual reference to the
preservation of its text inscribed on a bronze stele, and Cicero
adds that within his own memory this document had stood before the Rostra,
where it was an object of common knowledge. Its removal was
probably made necessary by Sulla’s changes at the western end of
the Forum. Dionysius gives the terms. Between Rome and the Latins
there was to be perpetual peace. Neither side was to invite attacks on the
other by third parties, or to give unmolested passage through its territory to
enemies of the other. If one side were attacked, the other was to give the
defence every assistance in its power; and each contracting party was to
take half the booty won in such wars as were conducted by both parties
together. Suits arising out of private contracts were to be tried within
ten days at the place where the contract at issue had been made. And,
finally, no alteration in the terms of the treaty was to be admitted
without the unanimous agreement of the Latins and of Rome. There is no
need to argue at length that the account given by Dionysius is a mere
summary and not a complete translation of the treaty; but definite proof
of his omissions is perhaps to be found in a passage from a ‘foedus Latinum’ preserved by
Festus—though it is rash, as is often done, to assume that the instrument
from which this quotation comes is the foedus Cassianum—and in a remark of the grammarian Cincius for which Festus again is responsible. From Cincius’ somewhat unconvincing description of the way
in which a ‘praetor’ was chosen at Rome in those years when it
was Rome’s business to supply a commander for the combined forces of
herself and the Latins, it is possible to argue that the treaty contained
some arrangement which secured annual alternation between Rome and the
League in the provision of a generalissimo when such an officer was
needed. But though the account of Dionysius is not complete, there cannot
be any serious doubt that it is no mere invention but a substantially
accurate summary of the text which had still been standing in the Forum
three-quarters of a century before he wrote. For its accuracy there
is strong evidence in its failure to support the annalists’ repeated suggestion
that during the fifth century Rome was, not the mere equal ally, but the
leader of the Latin League. If his report may be accepted, Dionysius adds
another fact. His version, and particularly what it has to say about the
distribution of booty ‘from wars fought in common’ makes it clear that the
agreement was no mere domestic arrangement made inside the Latin League to curb
the excessive pretensions of Rome, but a treaty between two powers whose
independence of one another proves that Rome was wholly outside the
League1.
The date of the treaty has provoked discussions which
for the most part add nothing to our knowledge of Roman history.
It appears from the passage of Livy that on the stele in the
Forum the name of a certain Spurius Cassius was mentioned as that of
a consul at the time when the agreement was concluded; and, according to
the Fasti, Sp. Cassius Vecellinus was consul three
times—502, 493 and 486 BC. To the second of these years the treaty is
assigned by tradition. Modern speculations which seek to set tradition
aside vary over roughly a century in their choice of an alternative date.
The limits may be put at 380 and 280 BC. At the start, all theories
advocating a time later than 338 may be dismissed, because from that year
onwards no Latin league was in existence with which such a treaty could be
made. There remain suggestions to the effect that the renewal in
358 by Rome and the Latins of the ‘foedus vetustum, quod multis intermiserant annis,’ which is recorded by Livy, was really the renewal of a treaty
made, not at the beginning of the fifth century, but earlier in the
fourth. If it is true to say that during the closing years of the monarchy
Rome exercised an extensive authority in Latium, the foedus Cassianum, which leaves the Latin cities
masters of their own fates, must belong to a period in which Rome’s
fortunes had sustained a reverse. In spite of the successes which she had
lately won against the Volsci, the Aequi and, above all, against southern
Etruria, the great Gallic invasion might possibly account for the weakness
of Rome at the time of the negotiations with Latium. But when the Gauls
arrived, Roman prospects were bright; and the Gallic menace was a somewhat transitory
cloud. Though such a date is not wholly inconceivable, the years following
the departure of the Gauls are not the most plausible period for a display
of Roman humility. But the most powerful argument against such a reconstruction
is the absence of any cogent reason for departing from tradition. Unless
the account of early Latium accepted here is wholly wrong, there did exist
a Latin league in the fifth century with which Rome might make a treaty,
Again, if the view taken above of Roman activities under the later kings
is right, early in the fifth century Rome unquestionably did suffer a
set-back of the kind which the traditions of Regillus and the foedus Cassianum combine to suggest. The fact that the Cassii of later centuries are
plebeians is, in the opinion of the present writer, no argument against
the appearance of a Cassius in the Fasti about 500 BC. And finally, though
chronological precision is not to be supposed, scepticism cannot be
allowed its claim that the Fasti preserve no serious record of the men who
governed Rome in the time of Cleisthenes and Themistocles.
The course of events after the expulsion of the kings
thus seems to be that for a moment, marked by the first treaty with
Carthage, Rome tried to maintain the position she had enjoyed in the time of
Tarquinius Superbus, but that before long the Latin
cities began to combine in an attempt to free themselves from
external control, whether Roman or Etruscan. Between Rome and
the Latin League there followed a war wherein the pretensions of
Rome were so far reduced that she agreed to live outside the
Latin federation and to refrain from attempts at political control.
Such were the circumstances of the foedus Cassianum. At that point, however, matters
could not rest. Rome and the Latins alike were confronted with dangers
which gave each party need of the other’s help. Across the Tiber the
Etruscans were still an active menace, and behind the Alban hills Aequi
and Volsci were advancing.
The strongholds of the Volsci in the Monti Lepini were divided from the Aequian country by the valley
of the Trerus, and in this valley lived a people
of uncertain ethnical connections—the Hernici. Their
territory was small, but such few cities as they could claim had formed
themselves into a league of which the most considerable member was Anagnia. With this league Rome had perhaps come into
contact before the end of the sixth century, but it was at some time soon
after the conclusion of the foedus Cassianum that Rome and the Latins took the Hernici into partnership to form a triple alliance. Of
the circumstances in which Rome gained this new support the accounts of
Dionysius and Livy are suspect. Though in detail they diverge, in
general they agree that the Hernican alliance
was secured by Sp. Cassius in his third consulship (486 BC) and that it
was the outcome of fighting between the Hernici and Rome.
Livy alone is responsible for the suggestion that part
of the Hernican territory was earmarked for division
by the abortive lex agraria which Cassius is alleged to have proposed. In
all this it is difficult to take seriously anything more than the
implication that the treaty with the Hernici was
made soon after the foedus Cassianum. Since the terms between Rome and the Hernici were supposed to be identical with those on
which Rome and the Latins had agreed2, it was natural to make Sp. Cassius
the negotiator of the second treaty as well as of the first. Though this
may have been the case, it is too obvious an inference, which some
annalist may have drawn, to be accepted with even the slightest
confidence. And again, though their position between Aequi and
Volsci— both of whom at this time were aggressive—may have made the Hernici anxious for the help of Rome, the suggestion that
they purchased her alliance by a surrender of territory is even
more difficult to believe. With Etruria still pressing her from the north
and with the Volscian danger imminent in the south, Rome was in no
position to drive hard bargains with possible supporters, least of all
when their support could serve so useful a purpose as that which the Hernici might achieve. To secure a wedge of friendly
country in the valley of the Trerus and so to impede
a junction of Volscian and Aequian forces was too valuable a gain for
Rome to run any risk of its sacrifice. And, finally, the
supposed annexation of Hernican territory is
made still less convincing by the way in which it is connected with the
doubtful tale of the rogatio Cassia
agraria.
On the whole it is unsafe to say more than that at
some time soon after the treaty between Rome and the Latins was
concluded, the two parties made a similar agreement with the league of
the Trerus valley. Thus the Roman Campagna was
at peace with itself, and in its Hernican allies
it had an invaluable buffer between two of its most dangerous enemies—the
Volsci and the Aequi. Though dangers from north and south at times grew
so great as to call for the united efforts of the three allies on a
single front, geography made it the primary business of the Latins
and the Hernici to deal with the Aequian and
Volscian threat, while Rome’s affair was with Etruria. Such was the
condition in which Latium faced its invaders during the fifth century.
II.
THE SABINES AT ROME
In the early years of the Republic, from the fall of
the monarchy to the middle of the fifth century, there appear scattered and
disconnected allusions to trouble between Rome and the Sabines. These
Sabines were a northern outlier of the great Oscan-speaking people and they
formed a link, running east of Latium, which joined the main Oscan region
to the Umbrian country in the north. Though there is a narrow strip beyond
the Anio which has some claim to be regarded as Latin from the first, the
Tiber from Orta to Antemnae, and the Anio thence
to its upper waters, may roughly be said to mark the extreme limits of
Sabine occupation. It was with the south-western borders of this area that
the Romans found themselves in contact.
The Sabines were a unit only in an ethnic sense.
Though they seem to have thought that the district round Reate had been the peculiar home of the stock from which they sprang, the
communities of which this people was composed were politically disunited. In
the progress towards political federation they lagged far behind neighbours
like the Hernici and the Latins, and consequently the
danger which they threatened to the Latin plain was slight. When the pressure
of population along the central Apennine, which in the end brought the
Aequi to the frontiers of Latium, thrust onwards the Sabine communities in
its way, the Sabines came in groups so small that Rome found it easy to
repel such as were not allowed to settle in Roman territory. It would be
unprofitable to examine in detail the whole of such scanty records as are
preserved of Sabine movements in the sixty years which follow the
establishment of the Republic at Rome; but in the history which begins in
505 BC and ends with the defeat of the Sabines in 449 after their victory
of the previous year there are two episodes which repay consideration. The
first is the arrival of Attius Clausus in Rome.
In 505, according to the reckoning of Livy, when Rome and the Sabines were
in conflict, a section of the Sabine people which preferred peace to war
migrated into Roman territory under the leadership of this chief.
Attius Clausus, henceforward known as Appius
Claudius, was admitted to the patriciate and soon became a leader in the
state, and his whole following were granted Roman citizenship and settled
on lands beyond the Anio. Such was the advent of the Claudian gens.
The second is the affair of Appius Herdonius, placed
by Livy in 460. With a suddenness and lack of preliminaries which recall
the mysterious recovery of Sardes by the Persians in 498, Appius Herdonius, with a Sabine army of 2500 men, was found
one night in possession of the Capitolium at Rome. In the circumstances
which follow, so large a part is played by conflicts between tribunes and
Senate, which are woven into the narrative of the agrarian agitation, that
the tale is more relevant to the constitutional and economic development
than to the history of Rome’s relations with her neighbours. At last,
however, the Capitoline was stormed, Herdonius was killed, and those of his followers who survived were put to death in
ways appropriate to their varying conditions.
These incidents, trivial in themselves, deserve notice
for the part they play in a theory which has won wide acceptance,
but which, nevertheless, is almost certainly to be rejected. It is
the view of Pais that the expulsion of the Etruscans from Latium was
the work, not of the Latins themselves, but of Sabine invaders, that Rome was
conquered by the Sabines in the first half of the fifth century, and that
of this conquest, which was not completed at a single stroke, we have such
records as Roman tradition was prepared to admit in stories like those of
Attius Clausus and Appius Herdonius.
The end of this Sabine incoming is said to be marked by the Roman victory
of 449, after which nothing more is heard of Sabines until the Samnite
wars.
Such speculations call for the utmost caution: written
history, language and archaeology alike provide grounds for scepticism. It
would be unwise to deny the possibility that the Roman version of a
foreign conquest of the city was garbled in the interests of patriotic pride;
and, if they were unsupported by independent facts, the accounts given by
Livy and his kind might justly be treated with suspicion. For what they
are worth, however, their tale is clear. In the population of Rome there was
a strong element described as Sabine, to which some of the greatest gentes like the Claudii and Valerii belonged, but the
presence of this element was the result of gradual infiltration spread
over several centuries and not of any sudden irruption which
would justify the use of phrases like a Sabine conquest of Rome. Already in
the time of Romulus Titus Tatius is made a Sabine, and later the same is
said, with much plausibility, of Numa; but neither in the regal period nor
in any later age is there the slightest sign that a Sabine army fought its
way to Rome and gained permanent control of the city. Were there any
reason to believe in a catastrophic coming of the Sabines at all, it would be
easy, as De Sanctis has observed, to show that it should not be placed in
the years to which it is assigned by Pais. In the first half of the
fifth century the silence of tradition about any such event is
confirmed by the evidence of the Fasti, which show no sudden break in
the control exercised by the great patrician houses such as would
have been the inevitable consequence of foreign conquest. But if
this consideration is enough to cast doubts on the reality of
Sabine immigration on a large scale in the only period in which it
has been claimed to find evidence for Sabine domination at
Rome, other facts suggest that at no time was Rome a Sabine
city. Linguistic indications are as clearly opposed to the
suggestion that Rome was suddenly occupied by a large and
permanent Sabine population as they are to the theory of extensive
Etruscan settlement. Among the Italic dialects the speech of .the
Sabine population before it fell under the influence of Rome is
definitely remote from Latin and Faliscan and connected most closely
with the Oscan side of the Osco-Umbrian group. Traces
of Sabine influence in the speech of Rome, if
they were present, would be easy to detect; but, except in a few personal names
like that of Numa Pompilius, there are very few that, in the opinion of
the present writer, can be regarded as certain. The conclusion to be
drawn about the Sabine element in Rome is plain: whatever its total
numbers may have been, it was not enough to submerge the Latin-speaking
people. Whether the immigrants were few all told, or whether a gradual
immigration finally reached large dimensions, the Sabines came to Rome in
a way which allowed them to be absorbed by the existing inhabitants of the
site so completely that their language was obliterated.
The view that the Sabines penetrated Rome by slow
degrees and over a long period of time finds its final confirmation in
the evidence of material remains. The Sabine country falls within
the region where in the early iron age the regular method of
disposing of the dead still was inhumation; and when the plain of
Latium became fit for human habitation it was from the Sabine
country and neighbouring parts of the same cultural area that an
inhuming people made its way to the homes of the Latins and the Faliscans. This people, it is true, found itself
forestalled on the site of Rome by the cremators from the north, but
traces of its presence can be recognized in the cemetery of the Forum by
the end of the ninth century at latest; and from that time onwards the
strength of the inhuming settlement continued to increase until it came
to dominate the outer hills. The numbers and importance of
this people must not be ignored. The mass of primitive
inhumations opened at various spots from the Quirinal to the Esquiline suggests
an occupation that was dense, and the fact that this colony provided Rome
with one of the most famous figures in the regal canon is indication
enough of its importance. There are even signs preserved of the
independent lives led at one stage by the communities of this region. The
existence of a college of Salii Collini side by
side with those of the Palatine and perhaps still more the references to a
Capitolium Vetus on the Quirinal may be accepted as memorials of an age when
the Sabine immigrants still retained a separate organization of their own.
But in spite of the claim to superior antiquity implied by calling the
Sabine Capitolium the Capitolium Vetus, when the time came for one
or other of the two elements in the population of Rome to assert itself
over the whole, it was the cremators of the Palatine and their Latin
language which prevailed. Though in some matters the Sabines may have affected
the Palatine people, though they certainly clung long to their burial rite and
may even have communicated it for a time to some members of the other ethnic
stratum, it is to the Palatine that we must look for the more powerful
element in the days when the Roman stock was being formed. The influence
of the cremators may be explained in part by their earlier presence on the
site, but the explanation demands the further assumption that tradition is
right in holding that the Sabine immigration was spread over three
centuries at least and that at no time were its numbers more than the
original settlers could absorb. Of a sudden invasion there is no valid
evidence, and the incidents recorded between 505 and 449 BC are only
the closing phase of an infiltration of inhumers from the eastern highlands which had begun even before the regal period
itself.
III.
THE VOLSCIAN ADVANCE
In the struggle between Rome and Veii the prize of
victory was the control of the lower Tiber; but the invasions from
the south, which occupied the Latin stage during the first half of
the fifth century, were movements of population from the surrounding mountains
set in motion by the pressure of economic conditions rather than political
attacks on Rome or any other power. Besides the line of the Tiber itself
where Rome faced southern Etruria, three distinct zones on the northern
and eastern borders of the Campagna became theatres of war before Latium
at length won freedom from external interference. Between Tiber and Anio
the Sabines advanced; the main thrust of the Aequi was delivered from
a base between the Anio and the Praeneste gap; and the passage between the
Alban hills and the sea was the natural route of Volscian invasions.
In the sixth century the Volsci descended from the
slopes of the Apennine somewhere west of the Fucine Lake towards the coastal plain between Latium and Campania, and already in
the times of the Tarquins tradition brings them into conflict with Rome
over the possession of Suessa Pometia. If Livy is wrong in his assertion that they
were ejected from this place by Tarquinius Superbus,
the appearance of the populus Pometinus in the
dedication of Nemi must be explained by a denial that Pometia had fallen into Volscian hands before the end of the monarchy.
That the first contact between the Volsci and Rome has been
antedated by tradition is possible, since the most intelligible
opportunity for a Volscian advance to the sea is provided by the general
collapse of Etruscan authority south of the Tiber, in which the overthrow of
the Roman kingship is a part. But the anticipation is small. At latest it
was only a few years after 500 BC that the invaders appeared in the
district to the south-east of the Alban hills, and it was at this time
that they either founded or occupied the city which retained its Volscian
character as long as any: this was Velitrae. But Velitrae and Pometia were
on the frontiers of the Volscian region, where resistance from the Latins
was inevitable, and it is to be supposed that farther south, where
Volscian control of Antium and (probably) Anxur on the coast and further inland of the
mysterious Ecetra was alleged, the invaders had
already won a foothold before they attempted an extension to the
north. When the time came for the northward advance to be begun,
the newcomers seem to have encountered opposition strong enough to
deny them any permanent foothold in the Roman Campagna.
According to the traditional account, Velitrae was besieged and recovered, and the Latin front
against the Volscians was strengthened by the foundation of colonies at Signia and Norba. The dates
and details with which the narratives of these events are provided can
make no claims to accuracy, but the incidents themselves are plausible to
the extent that they mark a successful Latin stand against Volscian
advance at a time when such success is implied by less disputable
evidence. It is not to be doubted that by the end of the sixth century the
Volsci had reached the coastal plain; and, in bringing them soon
afterwards as near the Latin strongholds as Velitrae,
tradition is to some extent confirmed by archaeology. But west of Velitrae they leave no trace, and the stoppage of
their expansion at a point reached soon after 500 BC is assumed by
everything recorded of their attacks on Latium during the rest of the
fifth century.
Of these attacks the first is the most famous, but it
is like the rest in being recorded, so far as the Campagna is concerned,
not as an enduring conquest of new territory so much as a sudden raid
on the rich lands towards the Tiber. The story of Coriolanus is one whose
outstanding merits do not include any notable contribution to our knowledge of
the Volscian wars. That the figure of Coriolanus contains a kernel of fact
is certain, nor is an episode so curious as the invasion of Latium which
he directs likely to be pure invention. Again, of the elements which
constitute the legend in its latest form some at least are additions
belonging so obviously to other times that they may be discarded without
damaging the reputation of the residue. The hero’s refusal to allow the plebs a distribution of corn presented to the state, unless they agreed to the
surrender of their tribunes, is more like fiction of the second century than
history of the fifth; and the dedication of a temple to Fortuna Muliebris on the spot where Coriolanus was at
length persuaded by his mother to spare his native town is an
aetiological figment which needs no comment.
But even when such features have been discarded what
remains is difficult to understand. Questions about the name of
Coriolanus cannot be answered. Whether he is merely the man or founder
of Corioli or the conqueror of that place is an
open issue; but, whatever view is taken of the probabilities, the value of his
career as evidence for the course of Roman relations with the Volsci
is unaffected. If Coriolanus be Roman or if, in spite of his connection
with the Marcian gens, he be Volscian in origin, the main task of
criticism is still to decide whether the campaigns with which he is
connected are wholly mythical or not. In this case, unfortunately,
decision is made more difficult than usual by the peculiarity which
Niebuhr rightly stressed. Like Horatius Codes, Coriolanus hangs in air.
His name does not appear in the Fasti— a fact of which elaborate
explanations were evolved; he belongs to a gens otherwise
unrepresented among the officers of the early republican period; and the personnel of his story, at least until quite late times, is as much out of touch
with the framework of fifth-century history as Coriolanus himself.
Whatever the reasons for which the annalists chose 491 and the following
years, they were not good: indeed it is a familiar criticism that few
years could be less suitable for a Volscian thrust to the gates of Rome
than one immediately after Rome and Latium had composed their differences
and agreed to present united opposition to attack. Thus arguments from
probability, which would have been available if dates were even
approximately fixed, in this case are impossible; and nothing but the
outline of the tale remains. At worst it tells nothing, and at best little
more than that at some point in the first half of the fifth century the
Volscians for a moment penetrated clean across the Campagna to Rome.
Those who believe that legend, however much
elaborated, rests on some foundation of fact may perhaps accept the raid on
Rome on such evidence as this. But an episode so devoid of
permanent results is of the smallest importance: it is another and less
famous feature of the story which calls for more regard. The list, given
by Dionysius and Livy of towns which the Volscians are said to have
acquired under the guidance of their king Attius Tullius and of Coriolanus
is in parts open to grave suspicion: some of the alleged conquests are in
regions which the Volsci held from the time of their earliest descent to the
littoral plain, and others are in places where no permanent Volscian occupation
can be admitted. But one group of names, among which Labici and Pedum are the most familiar, is marked out from
the rest by the way in which it bears on later history. The
implication of those conquests, if they are true, must be that the
Volscians pushed northwards from Velitrae close
along the eastern frontier of Tusculum towards the Aequian country. The
significance of such a movement is clear: its effect would be to cut off
the Hernici from Latium and to open
communications between the Volsci and the active mountain tribes whose
front against Latium stretched from the Trerus to the Anio. Though there is no need to insist on any part Coriolanus may
have played in this advance, the advance itself may be believed, because
in the narratives of wars towards the middle of the fifth
century—narratives which are certainly sounder than those of fifty years
before—-joint action by Aequi and Volsci is regularly assumed. But in this
later phase it is the Aequi who take the lead, and with the tale of
Coriolanus— a tale whose information about the fifth century is negligible
in comparison with the light it throws on the character of the
Roman people—the independent operations of the Volsci may be left.
IV.
THE WARS WITH THE AEQUI
The mountain homes from which the Aequi advanced on
Latium seem to have lain north-west of the Fucine Lake on the country between Carsioli and the
Avens. Their southward movement first calls for notice when it has brought them
to the line of the Anio, and their progress becomes a serious danger
to Latium when they cross the river on a wide front from Tibur to the
source. On the right flank the Latins held their own, and, though it was
perhaps the scene of fighting, the ager Tiburtinus did
not pass under any enduring occupation by the enemy. With the left flank
it was the business of the Hernici to deal; but
about the fortunes of war in this direction, where Rome was
only distantly concerned, our information is too slight to justify
any confident assertion. It was in the centre that the Aequi
won their chief success, and with the centre Roman tradition for
the most part is concerned. From the middle Anio they pushed in
a south-westerly direction round the borders of Tiburtine territory until
they reached the Algidus gap and appeared in Latium
at Tusculum. The implications of this progress are clear. There is no
need to suggest that it involved a passage through the ager Tiburtinus, and still less to base on this unstable
ground speculations about the possibility of Tibur having been in origin an
Aequian foundation. With Praeneste, however, the case is different. Praeneste,
unlike Tibur, is absent from the inscription of Nemi, and it is hard to
see how the Aequi reached their position above Tusculum without
encroaching on the Praenestine country. Under
these circumstances, though confidence is impossible, it is at least not
unlikely that the decline of Praeneste from the position she had held in
the seventh century is to be explained by her passing into Aequian hands
after the Etruscans had withdrawn. And what may be true of Praeneste is no
less possible of Pedum and Labici,
where the Aequi perhaps found themselves in contact with their Volscian
friends.
In the detailed story of the Aequian attack the
evidence of Dionysius and Livy, which for the Volscian wars stands
virtually alone, receives support from the more credible testimony
of Diodorus. According to Diodorus (xi, 40, 5) the Romans attacked the
Aequian or phil-Aequian occupants of Tusculum as early as 484 and ejected
them from the city. From that time onwards for thirty years the Aequi seem
to have hovered round the Algidus and won
possession, more or less secure, of the places east of Frascati. The
frontier struggles, in which the Latins generally contrived, with the help
of Rome, to prevent the Aequian and Volscian invaders from debouching on
the Campagna, are without interest or importance until, in a year
identified by tradition with 462 BC, a hostile thrust, more violent than
usual, produced a crisis which culminated in the first of the two
dictatorships ascribed to L. Quinctius Cincinnatus.
In spite of its many improbabilities, the brief career
of Cincinnatus contains more of value for fifth-century history than all the
detailed stories told of Coriolanus. It must be admitted that knowledge of
dictatorships at so early a stage as this may rest wholly on unofficial
records, if on documentary evidence at all, and it is not in favour of
such claims to the consulship of 460 BC as Cincinnatus can advance that in the
Fasti Capitolini he appears only as consul suffectus.
But Cincinnatus differs from Coriolanus in two important respects. He
belongs to a gens which played a leading part in Rome for a hundred years
after the middle of the fifth century, and the minor figures of his story
are wholly apposite to the period in which they are set. In the legend,
of Coriolanus the Volscian war is the only important element
which can be accepted as sound; but in the case of Cincinnatus the
figure of the hero himself is at least plausible, as well as the business
with which he is concerned. As always, much of the detail must be rejected. The
voluntary exile of his son Kaeso and the
forfeiture of the vadimonium, together with the conflicts between
Cincinnatus himself and the tribunate and his opposition to the rogatio Terentilia for the appointment of a commission to define the consular imperium,
belong to that least credible department of tradition which is concerned
with the origin of public institutions. Nor again need much notice be
taken either of the picturesque details of the dictator’s appointment or
of the extraordinary methods of war whereby he succeeds in rescuing the
consul’s army on the Algidus and definitely
defeating the Aequian blockaders. But in spite of this, and in spite of
confusions between Cincinnatus and other Quinctii of the fifth century, the figure of the dictator is at bottom historical;
and the campaign he conducts in the eastern hills, however much the Roman
version may indulge in its habitual exaggeration of the part played by
Rome and neglect the Latin share, may be accepted as characteristic of the
warfare which went on before the issue between the Aequi and the
peoples of the plain was finally decided.
The decision came, according to the Roman vulgate,
with the dictatorship of A. Postumius Tubertus in 431 BC. The similarity between the
achievements of Tubertus and those of
Cincinnatus is marked, and there was an obvious tendency at Rome to
connect their respective careers and to confuse the details. At the
outset Tubertus is made father-in-law of
Cincinnatus’ son, and it is the younger Cincinnatus who names Tubertus dictator. Moreover there was a danger of the
circumstances on the Algidus, with which Tubertus was called upon to deal, being assimilated to
those that confronted Cincinnatus. Livy records a version, which he
rejects, according to which the reason for the dictator’s appointment was
a consular defeat—a defeat which looks strangely like an attempted
duplication of the reverse from whose results L. Minucius had been rescued
by Cincinnatus. And again the tactics used on the two occasions have much
in common. But in spite of these grounds for suspicion and in spite of
other features —one of which, the dictator’s sentence of his son to death
for a military crime, Livy himself1 prefers not to believe in the
prevailing conflict of opinion—the story is historically valuable. Though Tubertus is otherwise known only as magister equitum to Aemilius Mamercus Mamercinus in 434, he bears a name which is not, like that of Marcius Coriolanus,
unique in the fifth century. His name, however, and his personal relations
do not call for so much notice as the final relief of Aequian pressure on
the Algidus, There is no room for doubt about the
decisive victory of the Latin defence at this time. It has rightly been
observed that the traditional accounts of the campaign gain authority from the
record, remarkable in such a context as this, of the day—16, 17 or 18 June—on
which the final battle was fought. The rarity of such precision outside
the Fasti triumphales shows that details like
this were not regular subjects of invention at Rome, and the appearance of
so exact a date in the narrative here is not easy to explain unless the
date be true. But the most cogent fact in favour of the tale is that a
victory such as it relates is manifestly implied by the easy Roman
penetration of country which the Aequi had lately held when the
well-authenticated Roman offensive is opened soon after 420. For that
reason alone it might be agreed that the battle of the Algidus,
said to have been fought in 431, is tradition’s version of an historical
victory which, after a struggle for sixty years or more, finally destroyed
the menace of an Aequian advance and freed Latium for good from the danger
of occupation by this people and its Volscian allies.
The connection between Aequi and Volsci has been
doubted, and it is not wholly impossible that the part which the
Volsci are made to play in operations round the Algidus is due to mere confusion. It seems more probable, however, that the
connection should be accepted. The story of the Volscian progress to
the north, in the region between Tusculum and Praeneste, bears
no clear signs of invention; and, if it is sound, Aequi and
Volsci must have been in the closest contact. Moreover, the battle of
the Algidus seems to have a marked effect on
Volscian fortunes. In the late forties of the fifth century Volscian
activity round Ardea is freely recorded: the plausible tradition of a
treaty made with Ardea in 444—a treaty which had apparently been accessible to
Licinius Macer—if not the somewhat dubious colonization of the place in
442, suggests serious concern in this quarter, for which the Volsci were
almost certainly responsible. But after this the coastal thrust is heard
of no more, and the Volscian front in its narrow sense remains quiescent
until the Romans pass to the attack. For this cessation of Volscian
pressure after 440 b.c. a reason is available in
the battle of the Algidus, if that was
a conflict between Rome and, not the Aequi alone, but a Volsco-Aequian alliance. In these circumstances it would
perhaps be rash to dismiss off-hand the frequent records of Volscian
presence near Tusculum, and the rarer hints of Aequian contingents farther
south.
V.
THE ROMAN DEFENCE OF THE TIBER
When Etruscan influence in Latium was destroyed, a
revival of the ancient dispute about the bridge-heads was inevitable.
On the left bank Veii still tried, not without success, to maintain
a hold on Fidenae; and on the other side Rome had to fight for its
rights to Janiculum and its surroundings. The old contentions for the septem pagi and the
salt-pans, whose origin was so early as to gain them a place in the
legends of Romulus himself, began afresh after the Tarquins were expelled.
Whatever he may represent, Porsenna already seems to have challenged Rome’s
claims on the ripa Veientana,
as has been said: but for tradition at least the mists in which Porsenna
is enwrapped lift within twenty-five years, and in the middle eighties of
the fifth century there begins a period of feverish activity on which the
information of the authorities is explicit. Until its closing chapters,
the value of the story is so slight that it calls for no detailed notice.
After a few years of border raiding the Romans were defeated, but in
the following campaign (480 BC) the position was recovered by
the notable victory of M. Fabius and Cn. Manlius. Next year, however, the Veientanes won their way to the Janiculum, and in
this crisis the Fabii came forward to save the
state. They fortified a camp on the Cremera—a
stream which flowed down from Veii and joined the Tiber opposite
Fidenae—and there in 477, under circumstances of which the most widely
variant versions are preserved, they were virtually annihilated by the Veientanes. Thereupon Rome was actually besieged: but at
this point the Etruscan fortune failed, and in the three more years for
which the war went on Roman success was so consistent that in 474 a peace
of forty years was made.
However doubtful the details of this history may be,
its strategic implications, though they are not stressed or even understood by.
tradition, deserve ready acceptance. In her disputes with Rome for control
of the lower Tiber and in particular for access to the left bank at
Fidenae, Veii was at a disadvantage. Whereas Rome, at least after the foedus Cassianum,
could have had Latium behind her if there was any question of an Etruscan
revanche, Veii was isolated from the centre of Etruscan power. Her position in
the outlying region south of the Monti Cimini made her interests a matter
of indifference to the greater cities of Etruria, and left her supported
by nothing more than the feeble and intermittent sympathy of Caere. In
these circumstances, if Veii was not to antagonize the Latin league, Veientane operations on the left bank of the Tiber
were impossible except in the friendly territory of Fidenae; and
consequently the fighting is either confined to a narrow region round the
lowest course of the Anio or else is wholly conducted on the Etruscan
side. In the campaigns themselves the stakes at issue—the bridge-heads—are
clearly indicated. After the Veientane dash to
Janiculum in 479, the Fabii retort with their
block-house on the Cremera—the site of which,
somewhere in a direct line between Veii and Fidenae, makes plain
its object to deny the Veientanes access to
their outpost in Latium.
So far the general scheme of the war is probable
enough; but most of the details must be rejected. In the earlier phases
movements are on too small a scale for it to be likely that their
memory survived from so early a time, and the siege of Rome after
the Fabian disaster is suspect for its resemblance to the siege
by Porsenna. On the other hand the victory of Fabius and Manlius may
well be authentic, and it is impossible seriously to doubt the presence of
historical matter in the episode of the Cremera. Because
it is not appreciated by tradition, the strategic value of a Roman
garrison in this region—a value obvious when the relations between Veii and
Fidenae are known—adds probability to the tale. Though in ancient times it
was generally overlooked, the plot of the story is more pointed than
anything that ordinary invention can boast. And this consideration in its
favour is reinforced by a second—that mere fabrication does not
normally employ its ingenuity on the excogitation of unfounded
disasters. For this reason the affair of the Fabii has a far greater claim to respect than the victory of 480.
Over the details of the defeat it is useless to
linger. The recorded accounts show variations, abnormally pronounced, both in
the number and circumstances of the victims and on the nature of the Veientane stratagem which compassed their
destruction. The latter may be ignored, and on the question of numbers
no help can be got from the absurd suggestion that every male member
of the Fabian gens perished with one exception. In addition to the three
hundred odd Fabii who fell, some of the versions
include a body of clients, though on a scale so enormous as to make the
result less credible than ever. In a case where no kind of certainty can
be expected, the view preserved by Diodorus is as attractive as any.
According to this account, Rome and Veii met in the battle on the Cremera, and the Romans sustained a defeat with heavy
losses among which three hundred of the casualties were Fabii.
If the three hundred Fabii be understood to mean Fabii and their clients, the numbers become
possible: and if the campaign is interpreted as one between Veii and
the whole Roman state, the difficulty of explaining how
Roman interests came to be committed to the care of the Fabii alone—a difficulty which all attempts have
failed to surmount—does not arise. If, however, the fight was an incident
of ordinary war, it follows that, for a single gens afterwards to have
been able to annex the whole glory and responsibility, the battle—and
indeed the whole campaign in which it occurred—was of too slight
an importance to impress itself permanently on the public
traditions. If such a theory makes in the right direction, the history
behind the Fabian tale is a defeat inflicted on Rome, with notable
losses to the Fabii and their followers, in the
course of otherwise undistinguished operations designed to cut the
communications between Veii and her crossing of the Tiber. For the rest
nothing calls for notice until an honourable peace is made in 474 BC.
With peace comes the question of chronology. No
argument for the view that knowledge of this treaty was derived from
contemporary documents can be based on the mention of its duration: the
forty years recorded may be merely the result of a calculation of the
interval between the date to which the disaster of the Cremera was assigned and the year in which hostilities between Rome and Veii broke
out again. Nor again can any weight be attached to the placing of the
Fabian catastrophe in 477. To the question whether the early fifth century
was a period of warfare between Rome and Veii the Etruscan activities
after the Roman monarchy fell and certain elements in the tradition of the
war itself are enough to justify an answer in the affirmative. If, when
the war itself is accepted, it be asked again whether the
traditional dates are open to serious criticism, the reply must be that in
themselves they are plausible and no better can be found. During
the middle of the fifth century Roman operations towards the east imply
a freedom from embarrassment in the west. The Etruscan attack on the Tiber
line must be put either before or after the worst period of Volscian and
Aequian pressure, and between these alternatives the choice is easy. Five
years after, even if not before, the battle of the Algidus was fought, there has begun an authentic history of developments along the
river which is almost continuous until Veii falls to Rome. Here there is
no room for the Fabii and their contemporaries;
and the earlier date remains, commended not only by the absence of an
alternative but by the support of tradition and by its proximity to the years
of Etruscan activity in which Porsenna is the central figure.
The political relations of Fidenae during the first
sixty years of the fifth century are a matter of some importance, about
which the evidence is bad. Possibly, as Dionysius asserts, the city
was captured by Rome soon after 500 BC, but the garrison which T. Larcius is said to have left in possession plays no
part in later events and cannot be accepted as permanent. Nevertheless,
the implication of this account—that Fidenae was under Roman control until
its affairs are heard of again about the time of the battle of the Algidus—is right to the extent that in the treaty
assigned to 474 Rome must have insisted that Fidenae should cease to act
as a Veientane outpost in Latium; and it may be
assumed that throughout the years of peace Fidenate policy was sufficiently free of Etruscan control to give Rome no
cause for a renewal of hostilities.
Fidenae is not heard of again until 438. In that year,
according to tradition, the city revolted under Veientane promptings and a war began which was ended by a peace concluded in 435.
In 426 Fidenae rebelled again, but in the following year a
decisive Roman victory imposed another treaty which remained unbroken for
twenty years, until the final war with Veii broke out. The operations of
437—435 show suspicious parallels with those of 426—425. In both the
dictatorship is held by Aemilius Mamercus and in both the most prominent
actor on the Roman side is A. Cornelius Cossus. In the former Cossus is
made, as military tribune, to win spolia opima after killing Tolumnius, lars of Veii, with his own hand; and in the
latter he is magister equitum to Mamercus in the
year of Fidenae’s fall. In details at least, if
not in essence, the earlier war is a retrojection of the later.
The claims of the second war to be regarded as the
original from which incidents were transferred to the first are
adequately vindicated by the one certainly contemporary record which
bears on the course of these campaigns. According to Livy tradition had
been unanimous in believing that the spolia opima had been won by
Cossus as military tribune, until, during his restoration of the temple of
Juppiter Feretrius, the Emperor Augustus
discovered the linen cuirass stripped from the body of Tolumnius,
on which it was recorded that at the time of this exploit Cossus had been
consul. The courtly forbearance of Livy to verify the imperial
announcement with his own eyes is to be ; but though the word of Augustus
is without confirmation, and though the office held by Cossus had an
intimate bearing on an issue raised when M. Crassus, governor of Macedonia,
killed the Bastarnian Deldo,
it cannot be thought probable that Augustus either forged the inscription on
the cuirass, or misreported its effect in order to justify his refusal of
Crassus’ claim to have won spolia opima on the ground that he did
not hold the auspices at the time. It is unnecessary to do more
than mention the theory that Augustus misread a contraction of
the name ‘Cossus’ as consul. This document may be accepted as
conclusive evidence that at the time of his encounter with Tolumnius Cossus
was consul, and his consulship falls in 428. Thus a date is fixed for the
most famous episode in the struggle with Fidenae: an alternative
suggestion of 426, when Cossus was tribunus militum consulari potestate, fails because the assumption that
a holder of this office could be described as ‘ consul ’ is
inconsistent with what is by far the most credible explanation of the
consular tribunate. War, then, had been declared by 428; but since Diodorus
records a tale that a battle perhaps to be identified with that in which
Cossus won his spolia opima was indecisive, there is no reason to
carry the peace back three years from the traditional 425. It seems rather
that in chronology, as well as in other details, the operations assigned
to the years 438—435 are an anticipation of events which should properly
be put precisely ten years later. If this is so, the whole tale of
the first war collapses.
If the war is not a mere invention, nothing is known
of its course. There is a certain plausibility in the view that the
affair of 428—425 was duplicated a decade earlier merely on
account of the names borne both by one of the consuls of 437—L.
Sergius Fidenas—and by the dictator whose
command is placed in 435— Q. Servilius Priscus Structus Fidenas. But, though it is possible that the cognomen is not triumphal, its almost simultaneous appearance in two distinct
gentes—both of which were represented in high office at the time and both
of which continued to use the name—is best explained, not by their civil
connection with Fidenae, but by the participation of the consul and
dictator in some earlier and less memorable operations against the city.
To this, one other piece of evidence should be added. It is said
that, when Fidenae made common cause with Veii in 438, a
Roman embassy was sent to protest and that at the instigation of Tolumnius its four members were murdered. The victims
of this outrage were commemorated by statues which, though perhaps
removed for a time by Sulla, were apparently still to be seen on the
Rostra in the first century A.D.; and from these statues our knowledge of
their names is undoubtedly derived. This much about these monuments has
withstood all the attacks of criticism; but any value they might have as
support for the earlier war depends wholly on the presence of some
chronological hint in the inscriptions on the base, and the insertion of such
information is neither proved nor even probable.
Thus the history of the last effort made by Veii to
recover her hold on the Latin bank is confined, so far as we can say, to
the years immediately following 42 8. The war alleged to have
broken out ten years before rests on the evidence of a tradition which
is manifestly contaminated with retrojections, supported, if at
all, only by the cognomen acquired by families of the Sergian and Servilian gentes.
The second war is undoubtedly historical. Its beginning must be put
earlier than the traditional date, because it was in 428 that spolia
opima were won by Cossus; but no objection need be taken to that date
regularly accepted for its end. Precise accuracy cannot, indeed, be
claimed for 425; but this point is certainly near enough to the year when
Fidenae finally passed under Roman control for it to be true to say that
the long defence of Latium against its various enemies was finally
brought to a successful issue when the last quarter of the fifth
century began. On the eastern front the enemy’s back had been broken on
the Algidus in 431, and to the west the same thing
happened in 425. The thirty years which followed saw the opening of
the Roman offensive.
VI.
THE EASTERN OFFENSIVE
The advance of Rome into Aequian and Volscian regions
is recorded less fully than the offensive on the western front. Unlike the
great campaigns which ended with the fall of Veii, the operations round
the Alban hills seem to have been designed to win ground rather by
persistent nibbling than by any single and decisive victory. This
difference in strategy was probably dictated by the different political
conditions among the enemy. In southern Etruria authority seems to have been
concentrated in the hands of Veii, whereas in the mountains to the east
the hostile tribes, at least after the battle of the Algidus,
were probably broken up into sections which presented no united
opposition. Thus the story of successes between the Tiber and Circeii is an uncoordinated list of scattered
acquisitions from which little, if anything, can be divined about the scheme of
operations. The general truth of tradition, however, is not in doubt: the
incidents which compose the tale are individually too insignificant to
have been invented, and their broad implication—that by the time of the
Gallic attack Rome had thrust back the Aequi and Volsci until she was
in direct contact with Praeneste—is essential to the understanding of
fourth-century history.
Against the Aequi activity may have begun already by
423, when C. Sempronius Atratinus was consul, if Verrugo is to be placed in the Aequian rather than the
Volscian sector; but it was five years later that Rome won her first
valuable acquisition by the conquest of Labici.
To this station, important because it could control the Algidus gap, a Roman garrison was sent. ^415
the neighbouring city of Bola was taken, and probably about the same
time Carventum was occupied, though our only
information about its fate is Livy’s mention that it was seized
by the Aequi in 410 and subsequently changed hands more than once.
Next year Verrugo was captured, and in spite of
some vicissitudes it remained generally in Roman hands until its
revolt in 394; and to this period also the occupation of Vitellia by
a Roman colony may possibly be assigned. By these small gains the Aequi
were thrust off the outskirts of the plain; and though the struggle still
went on with varied fortunes, in 393 the invaders lost their hold on
Tiburtine territory when they were ejected from Aeful-um
(or -ae). Rome could now boast that from Tibur to the Alban hills
Latium was protected by a belt of country in the uplands beyond the
frontier whence the Aequi had finally been expelled.
The lands on the coast where the Volsci had settled
were richer than the heights on which the Aequi appeared, and the
efforts needed for their recovery were on a larger scale. The first
recorded move was made from the Hernican region
to the north, when the Volsci were turned out of Ferentinum in 431. Unless the fall of Verrugo should
properly be mentioned here, the next attack was delivered from the Latin
side along the coast. Anxur fell in 406 and was
definitely in Latin hands by 400. Velitrae received a
Roman garrison in 404; and by 393, when a colony was sent to Circeii, the people of Latium had won back
almost everything in the coastal region that had been lost since the time of
the second Tarquin. The fall of Antium is not
recorded, though it is implied by the conquests on either side; and Satricum too, though we do not know when it was first
recovered, was under Roman control when it rebelled in 393. Thus in a
century or rather more Latium had retrieved the disasters which the
Etruscan withdrawal had involved, and the Latin power, back once
more in Tarracina (Anxur),
was again almost within sight of the Liris and Campania.
VII.
THE CONQUEST OF SOUTHERN ETRURIA
The last phase in the external history of
fifth-century Rome is the offensive movement on the Etruscan front which ended
with the fall of Veii. On the opposite side of the Campagna Rome
and the Latins had already made progress enough into Aequian
and Volscian country to be secure against the danger of serious invasion
from the south-east. Along the Tiber valley the capture of Fidenae—and of Crustumerium, if tradition is wrong in saying that Crustumerium was finally taken in the earliest days of
the Republic—had deprived the Etruscans of their last hold on
the left bank and had given the peoples of Latium the best of all
bases for operations against the headquarters of the enemy—the city
of Veii. And Rome herself, with a confidence intelligible after
her success in the troubles of the recent past, seems to have been in
a mood to make the most of her advantages. The advance against Aequi and
Volsci may be regarded as no more than retaliation against unprovoked
attacks. The move against Veii, on the other hand, was different. Veii,
indeed, could not complain of unjustified aggression if war were carried
into her own territory; but, for Rome, the campaign against Veii meant the
opening of a new epoch in her history. When Rome crossed the Tiber and claimed
something more than a bridge-head on the further bank, she abandoned her
natural boundary to the north-west and entered a region whose limits in
the end were found to lie far beyond the Monti Cimini which lay on the
immediate sky-line.
The chronology of the Veientane war is a matter of some obscurity and small importance. On one point Diodorus
and Livy, the two primary authorities, are agreed—that M. Furius
Camillus was nominated dictator in 396 and brought the war to an
end by capturing Veii in the same year. In spite of the elaborations
to which the career of Camillus has been submitted, the date of
his most memorable achievement may be accepted as approximately right.
That Camillus was in command when Veii fell is a fact too well attested for
doubt. As Beloch has observed1, it is unlikely that he became dictator before
403, when he held the office of tribunus militum consulari potestate for the first time; and it is certain
that the Roman victory over Veii had been achieved before the Gallic
incursion, which cannot be put later than 384, if it was not so early as
390. Thus the capture of Veii is appropriately placed between 403 and 386; and
if Rome’s treaty with the Faliscans—a treaty
certainly made after the Veientane war— is
rightly assigned to the second consular tribunate of Camillus in 394, the
lower limit for the fall of Veii may be fixed, as Beloch fixes it, in the
latter year. Thus the familiar date for the conclusion of the war may be
believed, with the admission of a possible error amounting at most to a
year or two in one direction or the other. The duration of the war is less
clear. According to Diodorus hostilities and the siege began together in
406; according to Livy negotiations opened in 407, when the peace of
twenty years between Rome and Veii had either expired or at least was
running out, but the siege itself was not begun till 406. Yet though these
accounts are not hard to reconcile and though they are consistent with the
versions of the preceding history to which they are attached, there
remains a suspicion that the ten years duration of the first great
siege in Roman history is derived from the accepted story of the
first and most famous siege in the recorded history of Greece. The case
against tradition is not strong enough to compel its rejection: but the
possibility cannot be ignored that the chronology for the outbreak of war
was reached by placing a ten years siege before the date accepted for the
fall of Veii.
The details of Livy’s story are in large part an
unprofitable study. Some of the less important features have clearly
been produced by duplication; and others, though their origin
is obscure, for other reasons are difficult to believe. Minor episodes in
the operations may be ignored; but in the narrative of Livy certain major
points demand attention. The brief account of Diodorus mentions only two
incidents besides the opening and the close of the campaign. One is a
successful sortie by the besieged in 402, which in Livy appears twice—in this
year and in the year before: the other is the introduction of military pay
at the beginning of the war. To this Livy adds another
military reform—the first inclusion in the forces of Rome of equites mounted
at their own expense. The value to be assigned to the suggestions of
developments in the Roman army system during the Veientane war is discussed elsewhere in connection with the history of Roman
institutions. Here it is enough to say that the introduction of pay and the
first appearance of equites equo privato do not stand or fall together. An increase of
the mounted troops is a change of small significance. The
provision of pay, on the other hand, is a departure of the deepest
meaning. It is the first step of many taken by Rome towards turning
an army characteristic of a typical city-state into the army of
an imperial people. A citizen-militia, whose members might reasonably be
expected to serve for nothing, was enough to carry on the brief border
warfare in which city-states were wont to settle their accounts: but the
purposes of an empire called for longer and more continuous service than
this. Longer service could only be had if the troops were paid; and there
is much plausibility in the view of tradition that it was the protracted
siege of Veii which first forced Rome to provide her soldiers with more
regular and immediate recompense than a share of the booty when
victory had been won.
Another feature of the story deserves notice for its
reference to the only monument of the Roman triumph which survived, at
least in part, to later times. Livy relates that in 398 the waters of the
Alban Lake suddenly rose high above their normal level, and that Rome sent
a mission to Delphi to ask the meaning of this manifestation. When the
envoys returned they brought an oracle which confirmed the utterance made
already in their absence by a Veientane seer—that Veii would not fall to Rome until Rome had built an outlet for
the Lake. The emissarium was
thereupon constructed, and when it was complete the forces of
Camillus made their way into the citadel of Veii by a gallery bored
underground. At the outset of the campaign of 396 Camillus had vowed a
tithe of the booty to Delphi, and after the war was over the tithe was
sent in the shape of a gold krater, which was first captured by the
pirates of the Lipari Islands but finally reached Delphi, where it stood
in the Treasury of the Massiliotes. The bowl itself was rifled by
Onomarchus in the middle of the fourth century during the Sacred War, but
the base remained; and since its original purpose was known, it may be
assumed to have borne an inscription recording the origin and occasion of the
offering which had disappeared. The tale of this dedication is found
in several derivative authorities, but their testimony does nothing to
confirm the account of Livy. Confirmation is, however, forthcoming from
Diodorus; and since it seems that the base long survived, it can scarcely be
doubted that Delphi could boast a memorial of the Veientane war.
For the circumstances which Livy narrates, no credence
need be claimed. It is scarcely probable that a connection, even of
time, existed between the capture of Veii and the emissarium of the Alban Lake. The physical features of the site make it
improbable that a cuniculus played any part in the taking of the
city, and it is certain that no trace of such a gallery has so far been
found. Moreover, this method of entering a town through a mine
is three times recorded of earlier Roman operations against Fidenae. Again,
the oracle may be no more than a later invention designed to explain the
offering of the krater; and similarly the story that the matrons of
Rome were rewarded for their public spirit in surrendering their gold
ornaments to provide metal for the dedication by the grant of permission to use
carriages in Rome is probably an artificial explanation of the way in
which the women had come to enjoy a right denied to men. Such elaborations
are not surprising in a piece of history whose embellishment was not complete
till the Augustan age. Livy himself seems to have been responsible for a
final addition—the great speech in which Camillus, after the departure of
the Gauls, is made to utter the sentiments which Livy shared with Vergil
and Horace on a living issue in the early principate of Augustus. In word
Camillus is resisting a proposal to transfer the Roman people and the
Roman gods to the site of Veii; in fact his argument is directed
against a plan—which public opinion had attributed to Julius and
which Augustus was suspected of having inherited from him—to move at
least the administrative centre of the Roman Empire to some city in the
eastern Mediterranean.
But though many details of the narrative must be
rejected as late, the Roman offering to Delphi stands on the solid
foundation of the base which seems long to have survived in the Treasury
of Massilia. If the offering may be accepted as historical, it
deserves notice for several reasons. Not only does it lend support to
other suggestions of friendship between Rome and the Massiliotes
at least as early as the end of the fifth century, but it confirms
in some degree the date for the introduction of the Apollo-cult
at Rome which Livy indicates when he says that the first temple of
which we hear was vowed in 433, and above all it throws a ray of welcome
light on the nature of the relations which existed already by the time of
the Gallic raid between Rome and the world of Hellas.
Of the remaining threads in the narrative only one
need be followed with any care. From the beginning of the story there are
scattered hints that the peril of Veii at length did something to break
down the indifference of her neighbours. Livy tells how in 405 the federal
council of the Etruscan cities considered the question of declaring a bellum
publicum gentis universae against Rome, without, however, coming to a decision. Two years
later, when the Veientanes appointed a king for
the more effective conduct of the war, the council seized upon this as an
excuse for officially proclaiming as its policy the attitude of
indolent inaction which in fact it had adopted from the first, and to
this policy the Etruscans adhered even when in 397, at the crisis of
the struggle, a special appeal on behalf of Veii was made by
the peoples of Capena and Falerii. Tarquinii alone among the
great cities of Etruria made some attempt to hamper the Roman operations
by a sudden raid on the territory of Rome in 397; but this, if it is
historical at all, was a brief and futile effort.
The explanation of the Etruscan failure to grapple
with a danger which threatened far more than the southern fringe
of Etruria is something still to seek. Livy may possibly be right in
hinting that the cities farther north were already fully occupied by the
advent of the Gauls; but, as has often been observed, the Gauls will not
account for the passivity of cities on the Tuscan coast, and it is these
which might naturally have led a movement for the relief of Veii. Tarquinii
may indeed have done a little; but Caere was Veii’s nearest neighbour, and
the attitude of Caere, if one may argue from Livy’s suggestion that Roman
forces enjoyed free passage across Caeretan country and from Caere’s behaviour at the time of the Gallic raid, was one
of actual hostility to the besieged. So far as our evidence indicates any
conclusion at all, the conclusion must be that the Etruscans left Veii to
its fate through that petty jealousy which seems always to have
been Etruria’s curse; and in the Veientane war
the land immediately at stake was an outlying district south of the Monti
Cimini geographically separated from the rest of Etruria by a division
so distinct that the risk of a Roman advance farther north may
well have seemed too remote to outweigh the temptations of
self interest. Livy’s story of the decisions taken at the fanum Voltumnae may not be strictly true: it is possible
that at this time the Etruscan synod was not concerned with political
affairs at all. But even if this be so, and if it be regarded as absurd to
hold that a religious meeting of representatives from the Etruscan cities might
make an appropriate opportunity for broaching a proposal for
common action in an affair of common interest, the account which
Livy gives of the spirit prevailing in Etruria is probably not far
from fair.
In another quarter Veii sought help with more success.
According to Livy, the cities of Capena and Falerii, of which the latter at
least was strong enough to be an ally of the greatest value, intervened in
402; and from that year onwards they maintained an almost uninterrupted
activity until, when Veii fell, they were still in arms and found
themselves obliged to settle a heavy account with Rome as best they might.
The Faliscans, with a foresight not vouchsafed
to the peoples of Etruria to the north, had recognized the Roman peril
even before Fidenae collapsed. To Fidenae their help had been unavailing,
but in 402 it was transferred to Veii. In that year, together with the Capenates, they were victorious in a raid of some
dimensions; and though their territory was ravaged by Rome in 401, they
were in the field again by 399. This time they were defeated; but even
when their appeal to the Etruscan council had failed in 397 they were
still able to strike another blow for Veii in the year in which it
fell. After the power of Veii had been broken, the resistance of
Capena and Falerii was overcome with ease: Capena made terms in
395 and Falerii in 394.
Rome was thus left with a broad tract of land at her
disposal on the right bank of the Tiber, and the way in which this
land was treated is a matter of some obscurity. The outstanding
feature of the settlement, which does not seem to have been made
until the Gallic incursion had been repelled, was the creation of
four new rustic tribes on the ager Veiens.
To the seventeen already in existence there were added the tribus Stellatina, Tromentina, Sabatina and Arnensis.
But, though this much is clear, the precise extent of the country thus
annexed by Rome is doubtful. If there were evidence enough to show that
Capena was included in the tribus Stellatina from its formation, as it certainly came
to be in later times, the territory of Capena as well as that of
Veii would have to be reckoned among the immediate acquisitions
of Rome. Festus, however, does not prove the point, and the suggestions
of his mutilated text are too vague to be set against the authority of
Livy. Since Falerii survived to fight two more wars with Rome, Livy’s
account cannot be questioned when he says that in 394 Rome made no more
than a treaty with the Faliscans: and if in this
instance Livy’s narrative is sound, it may well be right again when it records
a similar treaty between Rome and Capena in 395.
Nevertheless, whatever the view about Rome’s treatment
of Capena which Festus may at one time have preserved, it is not to be
denied that the story of Rome’s early dealings with the peoples of
southern Etruria is open to some suspicion of corrupt anticipations. Two
of the twelve Latin colonies which in 209 BC declared themselves unable to
continue the supply of men and money to Rome were Sutrium and Nepete. That Rome came into contact with
these cities soon after the end of the Veientane war is obvious; for their boundaries on the south-west must
have marched at least for some distance with those of Veii. There
is nothing improbable in the tale of Diodorus, unintelligible though it is
without emendation, that Sutrium somehow engaged
Roman attention in 394; but Diodorus is less convincing when he refers to it as
a colony in 390. Livy mentions the colonization of Nepete in 383, and this is placed by Velleius in 373 with Sutrium ten years earlier1. Before this, however—in 389 and 386—Livy calls
the people of both cities socii populi Romani. The plausible
arguments of Beloch2 do not prove his view that neither of these
places became a Latin colony before the fifties of the fourth
century; but they at least may serve as a reminder of reasons, among
which geographical considerations perhaps carry the greatest weight,
for doubting the version which holds that Sutrium and Nepete received their later status within a few
years of Veii’s fall. It may be admitted that with them, as with Falerii
and Capena, Rome made some kind of treaty forthwith; but in the
culminating episode of the period with which this chapter deals the actual
gain which accrued to the ager Romanus across the Tiber was
probably confined to the territory of Veii itself.
Thus in Etruria Rome stood facing Caere and Falerii;
and her next step northward only comes with the period after the
Gallic raid. At this point all that remains is to survey the results
achieved by Rome between the expulsion of the kings and the fall of
Veii. For more than half of the fifth century Rome had been on
the defensive, and for that reason her territorial gains had not
been commensurate with her efforts. Land had been annexed on the Algidus and in Etruria, but even so the ager Romanus had not increased to more than 650 square miles. Against this the cities
of the Latin League, which had profited greatly by the foundation of
colonies along the coast on land recovered when the Volscian thrust was
repelled, could set a thousand square miles or more. Yet, despite the
superiority of the acreage they could boast, the Latins were so far from
having strengthened their hands against Rome that the fifth century may
justly be said to have sealed the doom of the Latin League. Just as the
peoples of the Latin plain had owed much in the fight with the invaders of
the fifth century to the continuity of their territory and to its central
position, so in the domestic affairs of Latium it was to the great
advantage of Rome that the ager Romanus was an unbroken block of
country round whose fringes the members of the League lay
scattered. Notwithstanding its extent, after the advance made by Rome
into the Aequian country, the League was geographically so
badly placed that strong and united action seems to have become impossible.
On the north the towns round Tibur were cut off from the rest by the strip
of country about the Algidus which Rome had
annexed. Tusculum was wholly surrounded by Rome, except on the north where
her lands bordered for a few miles on those of Gabii. The great cities
between Aricia and the coast had no access of their own to their fellows
farther north; and places like Signia, Cora and Norba were mere outposts round the Monti Lepini—garrisons face to face with the Volscians and denied
their natural communications with the main body of the League by the
resolute refusal of Praeneste to become a member. The League thus lacked
cohesion, and the result appears already in the fifth century. The equal
alliance between Rome and the Latins collapsed: the arrangements for alternate
Roman and Latin command of the allied forces were disregarded: and in affairs
which affected the common interests of the region the initiative lay
with Rome. The time had not, indeed, arrived for the formal
extension of Rome’s authority over Latium as a whole; but when
Rome was called upon to face the coming of the Gauls she could
claim already to have gained effective hegemony of western Italy
from the frontiers of Caere and the Monti Cimini in the north to Cape
Circello and Tarracina in the south.
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