
modern-day city, see Rome. For other uses, see Ancient Rome (disambiguation).
Ancient Rome
Roma
753 BC–476 AD
Senātus Populusque Rōmānus
Territories of the Roman civilization:
Roman Republic
Roman Empire
Western Roman Empire
Eastern Roman Empire
Capital Rome
Languages Latin
Government Kingdom (753 BC-509 BC)
Republic (509 BC- 27 BC)
Empire (27 BC-476 AD)
Historical era Ancient History
- Founding of Rome 753 BC
- Overthrow of Tarquin the Proud 509 BC
- Octavian proclaimed Augustus 27 BC
- Fall of Rome 476 AD
Ancient Rome
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This article is part of a series on the
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Ancient Rome
Periods
Roman Kingdom
753–509 BC
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509–27 BC
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27 BC – AD 476
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Constitution of the Kingdom
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Constitution of the Empire
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History of the Roman Constitution
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v t e
Ancient
Rome was an Italic civilization that began on the Italian Peninsula as
early as the 8th century BC. Located along the Mediterranean Sea and
centered on the city of Rome, it expanded to become one of the largest
empires in the ancient world[1] with an estimated 50 to 90 million
inhabitants (roughly 20% of the world's population[2][3][4]) and
covering 6.5 million square kilometers (2.5 million sq mi) during its
height between the first and second centuries AD.[5][6][7]
In its
approximately 12 centuries of existence, Roman civilization shifted
from a monarchy to a classical republic and then to an increasingly
autocratic empire. Through conquest and assimilation, it came to
dominate Southern and Western Europe, Asia Minor, North Africa, and
parts of Northern and Eastern Europe. Rome was preponderant throughout
the Mediterranean region and was one of the most powerful entities of
the ancient world. It is often grouped into classical antiquity together
with ancient Greece, and their similar cultures and societies are known
as the Greco-Roman world.
Ancient Roman society has contributed
to modern government, law, politics, engineering, art, literature,
architecture, technology, warfare, religion, language and society. A
civilization highly developed for its time, Rome professionalized and
expanded its military and created a system of government called res
publica, the inspiration for modern republics[8][9][10] such as the
United States and France. It achieved impressive technological and
architectural feats, such as the construction of an extensive system of
aqueducts and roads, as well as large monuments, palaces, and public
facilities.
By the end of the Republic, Rome had conquered the
lands around the Mediterranean and beyond: its domain extended from the
Atlantic to Arabia and from the mouth of the Rhine to North Africa. The
Roman Empire emerged under the leadership of Augustus Caesar. 721 years
of Roman-Persian Wars started in 92 BC with their first war against
Parthia. It would become the longest conflict in human history, and have
major lasting effects and consequences for both empires. Under Trajan,
the Empire reached its territorial peak. Republican mores and traditions
started to decline during the imperial period, with civil wars becoming
a common ritual for a new emperor's rise.[11][12][13] States, such as
Palmyra, temporarily divided the Empire in a 3rd-century crisis. Soldier
emperors reunified it, by dividing the empire between Western and
Eastern halves.
Plagued by internal instability and attacked by
various migrating peoples, the western part of the empire broke up into
independent kingdoms in the 5th century. This splintering is a landmark
historians use to divide the ancient period of universal history from
the pre-mediaeval "Dark Ages" of Europe.
Contents
1 Founding myth
2 Kingdom
3 Republic
3.1 Punic Wars
4 Late Republic
4.1 Marius and Sulla
4.2 Caesar and the First Triumvirate
4.3 Octavian and the Second Triumvirate
5 Empire - the Principate
5.1 Julio-Claudian dynasty
5.1.1 Augustus
5.1.2 From Tiberius to Nero
5.2 Flavian dynasty
5.2.1 Vespasian
5.2.2 Titus and Domitian
5.3 Nerva–Antonine dynasty
5.3.1 Trajan
5.3.2 From Hadrian to Commodus
5.4 Severan dynasty
5.4.1 Septimius Severus
5.4.2 From Caracalla to Alexander Severus
5.5 Crisis of the Third Century
6 Empire - the Dominate
6.1 Diocletian
6.2 Constantine and Christianity
7 Fall of the Western Roman Empire
8 Historiography
8.1 In Roman times
8.2 In modern times
9 Society
9.1 Class structure
9.2 Family
9.3 Education
9.4 Government
9.5 Law
9.6 Economy
9.7 Military
10 Culture
10.1 Language
10.2 Religion
10.3 Art, music and literature
10.4 Scholarly studies
10.5 Cuisine
10.6 Games and recreation
11 Technology
12 Legacy
13 See also
14 Notes
15 References
16 Further reading
17 External links
Founding myth
Main article: Founding of Rome
According to legend, Rome was founded in 753 BC by Romulus and Remus, who were raised by a she-wolf.
According
to the founding myth of Rome, the city was founded on 21 April 753 BC
by twin brothers Romulus and Remus, who descended from the Trojan prince
Aeneas[14] and who were grandsons of the Latin King, Numitor of Alba
Longa. King Numitor was deposed from his throne by his brother, Amulius,
while Numitor's daughter, Rhea Silvia, gave birth to the twins.[15][16]
Because Rhea Silvia was raped and impregnated by Mars, the Roman god of
war, the twins were considered half-divine.
The new king feared
Romulus and Remus would take back the throne, so he ordered them to be
drowned.[16] A she-wolf (or a shepherd's wife in some accounts) saved
and raised them, and when they were old enough, they returned the throne
of Alba Longa to Numitor.[17][18]
The twins then founded their
own city, but Romulus killed Remus in a quarrel over the location of the
Roman Kingdom, though some sources state the quarrel was about who was
going to rule or give his name to the city.[19] Romulus became the
source of the city's name.[20] In order to attract people to the city,
Rome became a sanctuary for the indigent, exiled, and unwanted. This
caused a problem for Rome, which had a large workforce but was bereft of
women. Romulus traveled to the neighboring towns and tribes and
attempted to secure marriage rights, but as Rome was so full of
undesirables they all refused. Legend says that the Latins invited the
Sabines to a festival and stole their unmarried maidens, leading to the
integration of the Latins and the Sabines.[21]
Another legend,
recorded by Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus, says that Prince
Aeneas led a group of Trojans on a sea voyage to found a new Troy,
since the original was destroyed in the outcome of the Trojan War. After
a long time in rough seas, they landed at the banks of the Tiber River.
Not long after they landed, the men wanted to take to the sea again,
but the women who were traveling with them did not want to leave. One
woman, named Roma, suggested that the women burn the ships out at sea to
prevent them from leaving. At first, the men were angry with Roma, but
they soon realized that they were in the ideal place to settle. They
named the settlement after the woman who torched their ships.[22]
The
Roman poet Virgil recounted this legend in his classical epic poem the
Aeneid. In the Aeneid, the Trojan prince Aeneas is destined by the gods
in his enterprise of founding a new Troy. In the epic, the women also
refused to go back to the sea, but they were not left on the Tiber.
After reaching Italy, Aeneas, who wanted to marry Lavinia, was forced to
wage war with her former suitor, Turnus. According to the poem, the
Alban kings were descended from Aeneas, and thus Romulus, the founder of
Rome, was his descendant.
Kingdom
Main article: Roman Kingdom
The
city of Rome grew from settlements around a ford on the river Tiber, a
crossroads of traffic and trade.[23] According to archaeological
evidence, the village of Rome was probably founded some time in the 8th
century BC, though it may go back as far as the 10th century BC, by
members of the Latin tribe of Italy, on the top of the Palatine
Hill.[24][25]
The Etruscans, who had previously settled to the
north in Etruria, seem to have established political control in the
region by the late 7th century BC, forming the aristocratic and
monarchical elite. The Etruscans apparently lost power in the area by
the late 6th century BC, and at this point, the original Latin and
Sabine tribes reinvented their government by creating a republic, with
much greater restraints on the ability of rulers to exercise power.[26]
Roman
tradition and archaeological evidence point to a complex within the
Forum Romanum as the seat of power for the king and the beginnings of
the religious center there as well. Numa Pompilius was the second king
of Rome, succeeding Romulus. He began Rome's building projects with his
royal palace the Regia and the complex of the Vestal virgins.
Republic
Main article: Roman Republic
This bust from the Capitoline Museums is traditionally identified as a portrait of Lucius Junius Brutus.
According
to tradition and later writers such as Livy, the Roman Republic was
established around 509 BC,[27] when the last of the seven kings of Rome,
Tarquin the Proud, was deposed by Lucius Junius Brutus and a system
based on annually elected magistrates and various representative
assemblies was established.[28] A constitution set a series of checks
and balances, and a separation of powers. The most important magistrates
were the two consuls, who together exercised executive authority as
imperium, or military command.[29] The consuls had to work with the
senate, which was initially an advisory council of the ranking nobility,
or patricians, but grew in size and power.[30]
Other
magistracies in the Republic include tribunes, quaestors, aediles,
praetors and censors.[31] The magistracies were originally restricted to
patricians, but were later opened to common people, or plebeians.[32]
Republican voting assemblies included the comitia centuriata (centuriate
assembly), which voted on matters of war and peace and elected men to
the most important offices, and the comitia tributa (tribal assembly),
which elected less important offices.[33]
Italy in 400 BC.
In
the 4th century BC Rome had come under attack by the Gauls, now
extending their power in the Italian peninsula beyond the Po Valley and
through Etruria. On 16 July 390 BC, a Gallic army under the leadership
of a tribal chieftain named Brennus, met the Romans on the banks of the
small Allia River just ten miles north of Rome. Brennus defeated the
Romans, and the Gauls marched directly to Rome. Most Romans had fled the
city, but some barricaded themselves upon the Capitoline Hill for a
last stand. The Gauls looted and burned the city, then laid siege to the
Capitoline Hill. The siege lasted seven months, the Gauls then agreed
to give the Romans peace in exchange for 1,000 pounds (450 kg) of
gold.[34] (According to later legend, the Roman supervising the weighing
noticed that the Gauls were using false scales. The Romans then took up
arms and defeated the Gauls; their victorious general Camillus remarked
"With iron, not with gold, Rome buys her freedom.")[35]
The
Romans gradually subdued the other peoples on the Italian peninsula,
including the Etruscans.[36] The last threat to Roman hegemony in Italy
came when Tarentum, a major Greek colony, enlisted the aid of Pyrrhus of
Epirus in 281 BC, but this effort failed as well.[37][38] The Romans
secured their conquests by founding Roman colonies in strategic areas,
thereby establishing stable control over the region of Italy.[39]
Punic Wars
Main article: Punic Wars
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In the
3rd century BC Rome had to face a new and formidable opponent: Carthage.
Carthage was a rich, flourishing Phoenician city-state that intended to
dominate the Mediterranean area. The two cities were allies in the
times of Pyrrhus, who was a menace to both, but with Rome's hegemony in
mainland Italy and the Carthaginian thalassocracy, these cities became
the two major powers in the Western Mediterranean – a signal of the
imminent war.
The First Punic War began in 264 BC, when the city
of Messana asked for Carthage's help in dealing with Hiero II of
Syracuse. After the Carthaginian intercession, Messana asked Rome to
expel the Carthaginians. Rome entered this war because Syracuse and
Messana were too close to the newly conquered Greek cities of Southern
Italy and Carthage was now able to make an offensive through Roman
territory; along with this, Rome could extend its domain over
Sicily.[40]
Although the Romans had experience in land battles,
to defeat this new enemy, naval battles were necessary. Carthage was a
maritime power, and the Roman lack of ships and naval experience would
make the path to the victory a long and difficult one for the Roman
Republic. Despite this, after more than 20 years of war, Rome defeated
Carthage and a peace treaty was signed. Among the reasons for the Second
Punic War[41] was the subsequent war reparations Carthage acquiesced to
at the end of the First Punic War.[42]
The Second Punic War is
famous for its brilliant generals: on the Punic side Hannibal and
Hasdrubal; on the Roman, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, Quintus Fabius
Maximus and Publius Cornelius Scipio. Rome fought this war
simultaneously with the First Macedonian War.
The outbreak of the
war was the audacious invasion of Italy led by Hannibal, son of
Hamilcar Barca, the Carthaginian general who was in charge of Sicily in
the First Punic War. Hannibal rapidly marched through Hispania and the
Alps, causing panic among Rome's Italian allies. The best way found to
defeat Hannibal's purpose of causing the Italians to abandon Rome was to
delay the Carthaginians with a guerilla war of attrition, a strategy
propounded by Quintus Fabius Maximus, who would be nicknamed Cunctator
("delayer" in Latin), and whose strategy would be forever after known as
Fabian. Due to this, Hannibal's goal was unachieved: he couldn't bring
Italian cities to revolt against Rome and replenish his diminishing
army, and he thus lacked the machines and manpower to besiege Rome.
Still,
Hannibal's invasion lasted over 16 years, ravaging Italy. Finally, when
the Romans perceived that Hannibal's supplies were running out, they
sent Scipio, who had defeated Hannibal's brother Hasdrubal, to invade
the unprotected Carthaginian hinterland and force Hannibal to return to
defend Carthage itself. The result was the ending of the Second Punic
War by the famously decisive Battle of Zama in October 202 BC, which
gave to Scipio his agnomen Africanus. At great cost, Rome had made
significant gains: the conquest of Hispania by Scipio, and of Syracuse,
the last Greek realm in Sicily, by Marcellus.
More than a half
century after these events, Carthage was humiliated and Rome was no more
concerned about the African menace. The Republic's focus now was only
to the Hellenistic kingdoms of Greece and revolts in Hispania. However,
Carthage, after having paid the war indemnity, felt that its commitments
and submission to Rome had ceased, a vision not shared by the Roman
Senate. In 151 BC Numidia invaded Carthage, and after asking for Roman
help, ambassadors were sent to Carthage, among them was Marcus Porcius
Cato, who after seeing that Carthage could make a comeback and regain
its importance, ended all his speeches, no matter what the subject was,
by saying: "Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam" ("Furthermore, I
think that Carthage must be destroyed").
As Carthage fought with
Numidia without Roman consent, Rome declared war against Carthage in 149
BC. Carthage resisted well at the first strike, with the participation
of all the inhabitants of the city. However, Carthage could not
withstand the attack of Scipio Aemilianus, who entirely destroyed the
city and its walls, enslaved and sold all the citizens and gained
control of that region, which became the province of Africa. Thus ended
the Punic War period.
All these wars resulted in Rome's first
overseas conquests, of Sicily, Hispania and Africa and the rise of Rome
as a significant imperial power.[43][44]
Late Republic
Main article: Roman Republic
After
defeating the Macedonian and Seleucid Empires in the 2nd century BC,
the Romans became the dominant people of the Mediterranean Sea.[45][46]
The conquest of the Hellenistic kingdoms provoked a fusion between Roman
and Greek cultures and the Roman elite, once rural, became a luxurious
and cosmopolitan one. By this time Rome was a consolidated empire – in
the military view – and had no major enemies.
Gaius Marius, a Roman general and politician who dramatically reformed the Roman military
Foreign
dominance led to internal strife. Senators became rich at the
provinces' expense, but soldiers, who were mostly small-scale farmers,
were away from home longer and could not maintain their land, and the
increased reliance on foreign slaves and the growth of latifundia
reduced the availability of paid work.[47][48]
Income from war
booty, mercantilism in the new provinces, and tax farming created new
economic opportunities for the wealthy, forming a new class of
merchants, the equestrians.[49] The lex Claudia forbade members of the
Senate from engaging in commerce, so while the equestrians could
theoretically join the Senate, they were severely restricted in
political power.[23][50] The Senate squabbled perpetually, repeatedly
blocking important land reforms and refusing to give the equestrian
class a larger say in the government.
Violent gangs of the urban
unemployed, controlled by rival Senators, intimidated the electorate
through violence. The situation came to a head in the late 2nd century
BC under the Gracchi brothers, a pair of tribunes who attempted to pass
land reform legislation that would redistribute the major patrician
landholdings among the plebeians. Both brothers were killed and the
Senate passed reforms reversing the Gracchi brother's actions.[51] This
led to the growing divide of the plebeian groups (populares) and
equestrian classes (optimates).
Marius and Sulla
Gaius Marius,
a novus homo, started his political career with the help of the
powerful Metelli and soon become a leader of the Republic, holding the
first of his seven consulships (an unprecedented number) in 107 BC by
arguing that his former patron Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus was
not able to defeat and capture the Numidian king Jugurtha. Marius then
started his military reform: in his recruitment to fight Jugurtha, he
levied very poor men (an innovation), and many landless men entered the
army – this was the seed of securing loyalty of the army to the General
in command.
At this time, Marius began his quarrel with Lucius
Cornelius Sulla: Marius, who wanted to capture Jugurtha, asked Bocchus,
son-in-law of Jugurtha, to hand him over to the Romans. As Marius
failed, Sulla – a legate of Marius at that time – went himself to
Bocchus in a dangerous enterprise and convinced Bocchus to hand Jugurtha
over to him. This was very provocative to Marius, since many of his
enemies were encouraging Sulla to oppose Marius. Despite this, Marius
was elected for five consecutive consulships from 104 to 100 BC, because
Rome needed a military leader to defeat the Cimbri and the Teutones,
who were threatening Rome.
Lucius Cornelius Sulla
After
Marius's retirement, Rome had a brief peace, in which the Italian socii
("allies" in Latin) requested Roman citizenship and voting rights. The
reformist Marcus Livius Drusus supported their legal process, but he was
assassinated and the socii revolted against the Romans in the Social
War. At one point both consuls were killed; Marius was appointed to
command the army together with Lucius Julius Caesar and Sulla.[52]
By
the ending of the Social War, Marius and Sulla were the premier
military men in Rome and their partisans were in conflict, both sides
jostling for power. In 88 BC, Sulla was elected for his first consulship
and his first assignment was to defeat Mithridates of Pontus, whose
intentions were to conquer the Eastern part of the Roman territories.
However, Marius's partisans managed his installation to the military
command, defying Sulla and the Senate, and this caused Sulla's wrath. To
consolidate his own power, Sulla conducted a surprising and illegal
action: he marched to Rome with his legions, killing all those who
showed support to Marius's cause and impaling their heads in the Roman
Forum. In the following year, 87 BC, Marius, who had fled at Sulla's
march, came back to Rome while Sulla was campaigning in Greece. He
seized power along with the consul Lucius Cornelius Cinna and killed the
other consul, Gnaeus Octavius, achieving to his seventh consulship. In
an attempt to raise Sulla's anger, Marius and Cinna revenged their
partisans conducting a massacre.[52][53]
Marius died in 86 BC,
due to his age and poor health, just a few months after seizing power.
Cinna exercised absolute power until his death in 84 BC. Sulla after
returning from his Eastern campaigns, had a free path to reestablish his
own power. In 83 BC he made his second march in Rome and started a more
sanguinary time of terror: thousands of nobles, knights and senators
were executed. Sulla also held two dictatorships and one more
consulship, which established the crisis and decline of Roman
Republic.[52]
Caesar and the First Triumvirate
Bust of Caesar from the Naples National Archaeological Museum.
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improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced
material may be challenged and removed. (September 2014)
In the
mid-1st century BC, Roman politics were restless. Political divisions in
Rome became identified with two groupings, populares (who hoped for the
support of the people) and optimates (the "best", who wanted to
maintain exclusive aristocratic control). Sulla overthrew all populist
leaders and his constitutional reforms removed powers (such as those of
the tribune of the plebs) that had supported populist approaches.
Meanwhile, social and economic stresses continued to build; Rome had
become a metropolis with a super-rich aristocracy, debt-ridden
aspirants, and a large proletariat often of impoverished farmers. The
latter groups supported the Catilinarian conspiracy – a resounding
failure, since the consul Marcus Tullius Cicero quickly arrested and
executed the main leaders of the conspiracy.
Onto this turbulent
scene emerged Gaius Julius Caesar, from an aristocratic family of
limited wealth. His aunt Julia was Marius' wife,[54] and Caesar
identified with the populares. To achieve power, Caesar reconciled the
two most powerful men in Rome: Marcus Licinius Crassus, who had financed
much of his earlier career, and Crassus' rival, Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus
(anglicized as Pompey), to whom he married his daughter. He formed them
into a new informal alliance including himself, the First Triumvirate
("three men"). This satisfied the interests of all three: Crassus, the
richest man in Rome, became richer and ultimately achieved high military
command; Pompey exerted more influence in the Senate; and Caesar
obtained the consulship and military command in Gaul.[55] So long as
they agreed, the three were in effect the rulers of Rome.
In 54
BC, Caesar's daughter, Pompey's wife, died in childbirth, unraveling one
link in the alliance. In 53 BC, Crassus invaded Parthia and was killed
in the Battle of Carrhae. The Triumvirate disintegrated at Crassus'
death. Crassus had acted as mediator between Caesar and Pompey, and,
without him, the two generals manoeuvred against each other for power.
Caesar conquered Gaul, obtaining immense wealth, respect in Rome and the
loyalty of battle-hardened legions. He also became a clear menace to
Pompey and was loathed by many optimates. Confident that Caesar could be
stopped by legal means, Pompey's party tried to strip Caesar of his
legions, a prelude to Caesar's trial, impoverishment, and exile.
To
avoid this fate, Caesar crossed the Rubicon River and invaded Rome in
49 BC. Pompey and his party fled from Italy, pursued by Caesar. The
Battle of Pharsalus was a brilliant victory for Caesar and in this and
other campaigns he destroyed all of the optimates' leaders: Metellus
Scipio, Cato the Younger, and Pompey's son, Gnaeus Pompeius. Pompey was
murdered in Egypt in 48 BC. Caesar was now pre-eminent over Rome,
attracting the bitter enmity of many aristocrats. He was granted many
offices and honours. In just five years, he held four consulships, two
ordinary dictatorships, and two special dictatorships: one for ten years
and another for perpetuity. He was murdered in 44 BC, in the Ides of
March by the Liberatores.[56]
Octavian and the Second Triumvirate
The Battle of Actium, by Laureys a Castro, painted 1672, National Maritime Museum, London
Caesar's
assassination caused political and social turmoil in Rome; without the
dictator's leadership, the city was ruled by his friend and colleague,
Mark Antony. Soon afterward, Octavius, whom Caesar adopted through his
will, arrived in Rome. Octavian (historians regard Octavius as Octavian
due to the Roman naming conventions) tried to align himself with the
Caesarian faction. In 43 BC, along with Antony and Marcus Aemilius
Lepidus, Caesar's best friend,[57] he legally established the Second
Triumvirate. This alliance would last for five years. Upon its
formation, 130–300 senators were executed, and their property was
confiscated, due to their supposed support for the Liberatores.[58]
In
42 BC, the Senate deified Caesar as Divus Iulius; Octavian thus became
Divi filius,[59] the son of the deified. In the same year, Octavian and
Antony defeated both Caesar's assassins and the leaders of the
Liberatores, Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, in the
Battle of Philippi.
The Second Triumvirate was marked by the
proscriptions of many senators and equites: after a revolt led by
Antony's brother Lucius Antonius, more than 300 senators and equites
involved were executed on the anniversary of the Ides of March, although
Lucius was spared.[60] The Triumvirate proscribed several important
men, including Cicero, whom Antony hated;[61] Quintus Tullius Cicero,
the younger brother of the orator; and Lucius Julius Caesar, cousin and
friend of the acclaimed general, for his support of Cicero. However,
Lucius was pardoned, perhaps because his sister Julia had intervened for
him.[62]
The Triumvirate divided the Empire among the triumvirs:
Lepidus was left in charge of Africa, Antony, the eastern provinces,
and Octavian remained in Italia and controlled Hispania and Gaul.
The
Second Triumvirate expired in 38 BC but was renewed for five more
years. However, the relationship between Octavian and Antony had
deteriorated, and Lepidus was forced to retire in 36 BC after betraying
Octavian in Sicily. By the end of the Triumvirate, Antony was living in
Egypt, an independent and rich kingdom ruled by Antony's lover,
Cleopatra VII. Antony's affair with Cleopatra was seen as an act of
treason, since she was queen of another country. Additionally, Antony
adopted lifestyle considered too extravagant and Hellenistic for a Roman
statesman.[63]
Following Antony's Donations of Alexandria, which
gave to Cleopatra the title of "Queen of Kings", and to Antony's and
Cleopatra's children the regal titles to the newly conquered Eastern
territories, the war between Octavian and Antony broke out. Octavian
annihilated Egyptian forces in the Battle of Actium in 31 BC. Antony and
Cleopatra committed suicide. Now Egypt was conquered by the Roman
Empire, and for the Romans, a new era had begun.
Empire - the Principate
Main article: Roman Empire
In
27 BC, Octavian was the sole Roman leader. His leadership brought the
zenith of the Roman civilization that lasted for two centuries. In that
year, he took the name Augustus. That event is usually taken by
historians as the beginning of Roman Empire – although Rome was an
"imperial" state since 146 BC, when Carthage was razed by Scipio
Aemilianus and Greece was conquered by Lucius Mummius. Officially, the
government was republican, but Augustus assumed absolute powers.[64][65]
Julio-Claudian dynasty
The
Julio-Claudian dynasty was established by Augustus. The emperors of
this dynasty were: Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero. The
dynasty is so-called due to the gens Julia, family of Augustus, and the
gens Claudia, family of Tiberius. The Julio-Claudians started the
destruction of republican values, but on the other hand, they boosted
Rome's status as the central power in the world.[66]
While
Caligula and Nero are usually remembered as dysfunctional emperors in
popular culture, Augustus and Claudius are remembered as emperors who
were successful in politics and the military. This dynasty instituted
imperial tradition in Rome[67] and frustrated any attempt to reestablish
Republic.[68]
Augustus
Augustus gathered almost all the
republican powers under his official title, princeps: he had powers of
consul, princeps senatus, aedile, censor and tribune – including
tribunician sacrosanctity.[69] This was the base of an emperor's power.
Augustus also styled himself as Imperator Gaius Julius Caesar divi
filius, "Commander Gaius Julius Caesar, son of the deified one". With
this title he not only boasted his familial link to deified Julius
Caesar, but the use of Imperator signified a permanent link to the Roman
tradition of victory.
He also diminished the Senatorial class
influence in politics by boosting the equestrian class. The senators
lost their right to rule certain provinces, like Egypt; since the
governor of that province was directly nominated by the emperor. The
creation of the Praetorian Guard and his reforms in military, setting
the number of legions in 28, ensured his total control over the
army.[70]
Statue of Augustus, the first Roman emperor.
Compared
with Second Triumvirate's epoch, Augustus' reign as princeps was very
peaceful. This peace and richness (that was granted by the agrarian
province of Egypt)[71] led people and nobles of Rome to support Augustus
and increased his strength in political affairs.[72]
In military
activity, Augustus was absent at battles. His generals were responsible
for the field command; gaining much respect from the populace and the
legions, such as Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, Nero Claudius Drusus and
Germanicus. Augustus intended to extend the Roman Empire to the whole
known world, and in his reign, Rome had conquered Cantabria Aquitania,
Raetia, Dalmatia, Illyricum and Pannonia.[73]
Under Augustus's
reign, Roman literature grew steadily in the Golden Age of Latin
Literature. Poets like Virgil, Horace, Ovid and Rufus developed a rich
literature, and were close friends of Augustus. Along with Maecenas, he
stimulated patriotic poems, as Virgil's epic Aeneid and also
historiographical works, like those of Livy. The works of this literary
age lasted through Roman times, and are classics.
Augustus also
continued the shifts on the calendar promoted by Caesar, and the month
of August is named after him.[74] Augustus brought a peaceful and
thriving era to Rome, that is known as Pax Augusta or Pax Romana.
Augustus died in 14 AD, but the empire's glory continued after his era.
From Tiberius to Nero
Extent
of the Roman Empire under Augustus. The yellow legend represents the
extent of the Republic in 31 BC, the shades of green represent gradually
conquered territories under the reign of Augustus, and pink areas on
the map represent client states; however, areas under Roman control
shown here were subject to change even during Augustus' reign,
especially in Germania.
The Julio-Claudians continued to rule
Rome after Augustus' death and they remained in power until the death of
Nero in 68 AD.[75] Augustus' favorites for succeeding him were already
dead in his senescence: his nephew Marcellus died in 23 BC, his friend
and military commander Agrippa in 12 BC and his grandson Gaius Caesar in
4 AD. Influenced by his wife, Livia Drusilla, Augustus appointed
Tiberius, her son from another marriage, as his heir.[76]
The
Senate agreed with the succession, and granted to Tiberius the same
titles and honors once granted to Augustus: the title of princeps and
Pater patriae, and the Civic Crown. However, Tiberius was not an
enthusiast of political affairs: after agreement with the Senate, he
retired to Capri in 26 AD,[77] and left control of the city of Rome in
the hands of the praetorian prefect Sejanus (until 31 AD) and Macro
(from 31 to 37 AD). Tiberius was regarded as an evil and melancholic
man, who may have ordered the murder of his relatives, the popular
general Germanicus in 19 AD,[78] and his own son Drusus Julius Caesar in
23 AD.[78]
Tiberius died (or was killed)[78] in 37 AD. The male
line of the Julio-Claudians was limited to Tiberius' nephew Claudius,
his grandson Tiberius Gemellus and his grand-nephew Caligula. As
Gemellus was still a child, Caligula was chosen to rule the Empire.
Being a popular leader in the first half of his reign, Caligula became a
crude and insane tyrant in his years controlling government.[79][80]
Suetonius states that he committed incest with his sisters, killed some
men just for amusement and nominated a horse for a consulship.[81]
The
Praetorian Guard murdered Caligula four years after the death of
Tiberius,[82] and, with belated support from the senators, proclaimed
his uncle Claudius as the new emperor.[83] Claudius was not as
authoritarian as Tiberius and Caligula. Claudius conquered Lycia and
Thrace; his most important deed was the beginning of the conquest of
Britain.[84]
Claudius was poisoned by his wife, Agrippina the
Younger in 54 AD.[85] His heir was Nero, son of Agrippina and her former
husband, since Claudius' son Britannicus had not reached manhood upon
his father's death. Nero is widely known as the first persecutor of
Christians and for the Great Fire of Rome, rumoured to have been started
by the emperor himself.[86][87] Nero faced many revolts during his
reign, like the Pisonian conspiracy and the First Jewish-Roman War.
Although Nero defeated these rebels, he could not overthrow the revolt
led by Servius Sulpicius Galba. The Senate soon declared Nero a public
enemy, and he committed suicide.[88]
Flavian dynasty
The
Flavians were the second dynasty to rule Rome.[89] In 68 AD, year of
Nero's death, there was no chance of return to the old and traditional
Roman Republic, thus a new emperor had to rise. After the turmoil in the
Year of the Four Emperors, Titus Flavius Vespasianus (anglicized as
Vespasian) took control of the Empire and established a new dynasty.
Under the Flavians, Rome continued its expansion, and the state remained
secure.[90][91]
Vespasian
Bust of Vespasian, founder of the Flavian dynasty
Vespasian
was a general under Claudius and Nero. He fought as a commander in the
First Jewish-Roman War along with his son Titus. Following the turmoil
of the Year of the Four Emperors, in 69 AD, four emperors were
enthroned: Galba, Otho, Vitellius, and, lastly, Vespasian, who crushed
Vitellius' forces and became emperor.[92]
He reconstructed many
buildings which were uncompleted, like a statue of Apollo and the temple
of Divus Claudius ("the deified Claudius"), both initiated by Nero.
Buildings once destroyed by the Great Fire of Rome were rebuilt, and he
revitalized the Capitol. Vespasian also started the construction of the
Flavian Amphitheater, more commonly known as the Colosseum.[93]
The
historians Josephus and Pliny the Elder wrote their works during
Vespasian's reign. Vespasian was Josephus' sponsor and Pliny dedicated
his Naturalis Historia to Titus, son of Vespasian.
Vespasian sent
legions to defend the eastern frontier in Cappadocia, extended the
occupation in Britain and renewed the tax system. He died in 79 AD.
Titus and Domitian
Titus
had a short-lived rule; he was emperor from 79–81 AD. He finished the
Flavian Amphitheater, which was constructed with war spoils from the
First Jewish-Roman War, and promoted games that lasted for a hundred
days. These games were for celebrating the victory over the Jews and
included gladiatorial combats, chariot races and a sensational mock
naval battle that flooded the grounds of the Colosseum.[94][95]
Titus
constructed a line of roads and fortifications on the borders of
modern-day Germany; and his general Gnaeus Julius Agricola conquered
much of Britain, leading the Roman world so far as Scotland. On the
other hand, his failed war against Dacia was a humiliating defeat.[96]
Titus
died of fever in 81 AD, being succeeded by his brother Domitian. As
emperor, Domitian assumed totalitarian characteristics[97] and thought
he could be a new Augustus, and tried to make a personal cult of
himself.
Domitian ruled for fifteen years, and his reign was
marked by his attempts to compare himself to the gods. He constructed at
least two temples in honour of Jupiter, the supreme deity in Roman
religion. He also liked to be called "Dominus et Deus" ("Master and
God").[98] The nobles disliked his rule, and he was murdered by a
conspiracy in 96 AD.
Nerva–Antonine dynasty
The Roman Empire at its greatest extent under Trajan in AD 117
During
the rule of the Nerva–Antonine, Rome reached its territorial and
economical apogee.[99] This time was a peaceful one for Rome: the
criteria for choosing an emperor were the qualities of the candidate and
no longer ties of kinship; additionally there were no civil wars or
military defeats in that time.
Following Domitian's murder, the
Senate rapidly appointed Nerva to hold imperial dignity – this was the
first time that senators chose the emperor since Octavian was honored
with the titles of princeps and Augustus. Nerva had a noble ancestry,
and he served as an advisor to Nero and the Flavians. His rule restored
many of the liberties once taken by Domitian[100] and started the last
golden era of Rome.
Trajan
Eugène Delacroix. The Justice of Trajan (fragment).
Nerva
died in 98 AD and the successor was his heir, the general Trajan.
Trajan was born in a non-patrician family from Hispania and his
preeminence emerged in the army, under Domitian. He is the second of the
Five Good Emperors, the first being Nerva.
Trajan was greeted by
the people of Rome with enthusiasm, which he justified by governing
well and without the bloodiness that had marked Domitian's reign. He
freed many people who had been unjustly imprisoned by Domitian and
returned private property that Domitian had confiscated; a process begun
by Nerva before his death.[101]
Trajan conquered Dacia, and
defeated the king Decebalus, who had defeated Domitian's forces. In the
First Dacian War (101–102), the defeated Dacia became a client kingdom;
in the Second Dacian War (105–106), Trajan completely devastated the
enemy's resistance and annexed Dacia to the Empire. Trajan also annexed
the client state of Nabatea to form the province of Arabia Petraea,
which included the lands of southern Syria and northwestern Arabia.[102]
He
erected many buildings that still survive to this day, such as Trajan's
Forum, Trajan's Market and Trajan's Column. His main architect was
Apollodorus of Damascus; Apollodorus made the project of the Forum and
of the Column, and also reformed the Pantheon. Trajan's triumphal arches
in Ancona and Beneventum are other constructions projected by him. In
Dacian War, Apollodorus made a great bridge over the Danube for
Trajan.[103]
Trajan's final war was against Parthia. When Parthia
appointed a king for Armenia who was unacceptable (Parthia and Rome
shared dominance over Armenia) to Rome, he declared war. He probably
wanted to be the first Roman leader to conquer Parthia, and repeat the
glory of Alexander the Great, conqueror of Asia, whom Trajan next
followed in the clash of Greek-Romans and the Persian cultures.[104] In
113 he marched to Armenia and deposed the local king. In 115 Trajan
turned south into the core of Parthian hegemony, taking the Northern
Mesopotamian cities of Nisibis and Batnae and organizing a province of
Mesopotamia in the beginning of 116, when coins were issued announcing
that Armenia and Mesopotamia had been put under the authority of the
Roman people.[105]
In that same year, he captured Seleucia and
the Parthian capital Ctesiphon. After defeating a Parthian revolt and a
Jewish revolt, he withdrew due to health issues. In 117, his illness
grew and he died of edema. He nominated Hadrian as his heir. Under
Trajan's leadership the Roman Empire reached the peak of its territorial
expansion; Rome's dominion now spanned 2,500,000 square miles
(6,474,970 square kilometres).[106]
From Hadrian to Commodus
The
prosperity brought by Nerva and Trajan continued in the reigns of
subsequent emperors, from Hadrian to Marcus Aurelius. Hadrian withdrew
all the troops stationed in Parthia and Mesopotamia, abandoning Trajan's
conquests. Hadrian's government was very peaceful, since he avoided
wars: he constructed fortifications and walls, like the famous Hadrian's
Wall between Roman Britain and the barbarians of modern-day Scotland.
A
famous philhellenist, he promoted culture, specially the Greek culture.
He also forbade torture and humanized the laws. Hadrian built many
aqueducts, baths, libraries and theaters; additionally, he traveled
nearly every single province in the Empire to check the military and
infrastructural conditions.[107]
After Hadrian's death at 138,
his successor Antoninus Pius built temples, theaters, and mausoleums,
promoted the arts and sciences, and bestowed honours and financial
rewards upon the teachers of rhetoric and philosophy. Antoninus made few
initial changes when he became emperor, leaving intact as far as
possible the arrangements instituted by Hadrian. Antoninus expanded the
Roman Britain by invading southern Scotland and building the Antonine
Wall.[108] He also continued Hadrian's policy of humanizing the laws. He
died in 161 AD.
Marcus Aurelius, known as the Philosopher, was
the last of the Five Good Emperors. He was a stoic philosopher and wrote
a book called Meditations. He defeated barbarian tribes in the
Marcomannic Wars as well as the Parthian Empire.[109] His co-emperor,
Lucius Verus died in 169 AD, probably victim of the Antonine Plague, a
pandemic that swept nearly five million people through the Empire in
165–180 AD.[110]
From Nerva to Marcus Aurelius, the empire
achieved an unprecedented happy and glorious status. The powerful
influence of laws and manners had gradually cemented the union of the
provinces. All the citizens enjoyed and abused the advantages of wealth.
The image of a free constitution was preserved with decent reverence.
The Roman senate appeared to possess the sovereign authority, and
devolved on the emperors all the executive powers of government. The
Five Good Emperors' rule is considered the golden era of the
Empire.[111]
Commodus, son of Marcus Aurelius, became emperor
after his father's death. He is not counted as one of the Five Good
Emperors. Firstly, this was due to his direct kinship with the latter
emperor; in addition, he was passive in comparison with his
predecessors, who were frequently leading their armies in person.
Commodus usually took part on gladiatorial combats, which often
symbolized brutality and roughness. He killed many citizens, and his
reign was the beginning of Roman decadence, as stated Cassius Dio:
"(Rome has transformed) from a kingdom of gold to one of iron and
rust."[112]
Severan dynasty
Commodus was killed by a
conspiracy involving Quintus Aemilius Laetus and his wife Marcia in late
192 AD. The following year is known as the Year of the Five Emperors.
Pertinax, Didius Julianus, Pescennius Niger, Clodius Albinus and
Septimius Severus fought for the imperial dignity. After many battles
against the other generals, Severus established himself as the new
emperor. He and his successors governed with the legions' support – and
they paid money for this support. The changes on coinage and military
expenditures were the root of the financial crisis that marked the
Crisis of the Third Century.
Septimius Severus
Septimius Severus at Glyptothek, Munich
Severus
was enthroned after invading Rome and having Didius Julianus killed.
His two other rivals, Pescennius Niger and Clodius Albinus, were both
were hailed as Imperator. Severus quickly subdued Niger in Byzantium and
promised to Albinus the title of Caesar (which meant he would be a
co-emperor).[113] However, Severus betrayed Albinus by blaming him for a
plot against his life. Severus marched to Gaul and defeated Albinus.
For these acts, Machiavelli said that Severus was "a ferocious lion and a
clever fox"[114]
Severus attempted to revive totalitarianism and
in an address to people and the Senate, he praised the severity and
cruelty of Marius and Sulla, which worried the senators.[115] When
Parthia invaded Roman territory, Severus waged war against that country.
He seized the cities of Nisibis, Babylon and Seleucia. Reaching
Ctesiphon, the Parthian capital, he ordered plundering and his army slew
and captured many people. Albeit this military success, he failed in
invading Hatra, a rich Arabian city. Severus killed his legate, for the
latter was gaining respect from the legions; and his soldiers were hit
by famine. After this disastrous campaign, he withdrew.[116]
Severus
also intended to vanquish the whole of Britain. In order to achieve
this, he waged war against the Caledonians. After many casualties in the
army due to the terrain and the barbarians' ambushes, Severus went
himself to the field. However, he became ill and died in 211 AD.
From Caracalla to Alexander Severus
Upon
the death of Severus, his sons Caracalla and Geta were made emperors.
Caracalla got rid of his brother in that same year. Like his father,
Caracalla was a warlike man. He continued Severus' policy, and gained
respect from the legions. Caracalla was a cruel man, and ordered several
slayings during his reign. He ordered the death of people of his own
circle, like his tutor, Cilo, and a friend of his father, Papinian.
Knowing
that the citizens of Alexandria disliked him and were speaking ill of
his character, he slew almost the entire population of the city.
Arriving there, he served a banquet for the notable citizens. After
that, his soldiers killed all the guests, and he marched into the city
with the army, slaying most of Alexandria's people.[117][118] In 212, he
issued the Edict of Caracalla, giving full Roman citizenship to all
free men living in the Empire. Caracalla was murdered by one of his
soldiers during a campaign in Parthia, in 217 AD.
The Praetorian
prefect Macrinus, who ordered Caracalla's murder, assumed power. His
brief reign ended in 218, when the youngster Elagabalus, a relative of
the Severi, gained support from the legionaries and fought against
Macrinus. Elagabalus was an incompetent and lascivious ruler,[119] who
was well known for extreme extravagance. Cassius Dio, Herodian and the
Historia Augusta have many accounts about his extravagance.
Elagabalus
was succeeded by his cousin Alexander Severus. Alexander waged war
against many foes, like the revitalized Persia and German peoples who
invaded Gaul. His losses made the soldiers dissatisfied with the
emperor, and some of them killed him during his German campaign, in 235
AD.[120]
Crisis of the Third Century
Main article: Crisis of the Third Century
The Roman Empire suffered internal schisms, forming the Palmyrene Empire and the Gallic Empire
A
disastrous scenario emerged after the death of Alexander Severus: the
Roman state was plagued by civil wars, external invasions, political
chaos, pandemics and economic depression.[121][122] The old Roman values
had fallen, and Mithraism and Christianity had begun to spread through
the populace. Emperors were no longer men linked with nobility; they
usually were born in lower-classes of distant parts of the Empire. These
men rose to prominence through military ranks, and became emperors
through civil wars.
There were 26 emperors in a 49-year period, a
signal of political instability. Maximinus Thrax was the first ruler of
that time, governing for just three years. Others ruled just for a few
months, like Gordian I, Gordian II, Balbinus and Hostilian. The
population and the frontiers were abandoned, since the emperors were
mostly concerned with defeating rivals and establishing their power.
The
economy also suffered during that epoch. The massive military
expenditures from the Severi caused a devaluation of Roman coins.
Hyperinflation came at this time as well. The Plague of Cyprian broke
out in 250 and killed a huge portion of the population.[123]
In
260 AD, the provinces of Syria Palaestina, Asia Minor and Egypt
separated from the rest of the Roman state to form the Palmyrene Empire,
ruled by Queen Zenobia and centered on Palmyra. In that same year the
Gallic Empire was created by Postumus, retaining Britain and Gaul.[124]
These countries separated from Rome after the capture of emperor
Valerian, who was the first Roman ruler to be captured by enemies;
Valerian was captured and executed by the Sassanids of Persia – a
humiliating fact for the Romans.[123]
The crisis began to recede
during the reigns of Claudius Gothicus (268–270), who defeated the Goths
invaders, and Aurelian (271–275), who reconquered both Gallic and
Palmyrene Empire[125][126] During the reign of Diocletian, a more
competent ruler, the crisis was overcome.
Empire - the Dominate
Main article: Roman Empire
Diocletian
In
284 AD, Diocletian was hailed as Imperator by the eastern army.
Diocletian healed the empire from the crisis, by political and economic
shifts. A new form of government was established: the Tetrarchy. The
Empire was divided among four emperors, two in the West and two in the
East. The first tetrarchs were Diocletian (in the East), Maximian (in
the West), and two junior emperors, Galerius (in the East) and Flavius
Constantius (in the West). To adjust the economy, Diocletian made
several tax reforms.[127]
Diocletian expelled the Persians who
plundered Syria and conquered some barbarian tribes with Maximian. He
adopted many behaviors of Eastern monarchs, like wearing pearls and
golden sandals and robes. Anyone in presence of the emperor had now to
prostrate himself[128] – a common act in the East, but never practiced
in Rome before. Diocletian did not use a disguised form of Republic, as
the other emperors since Augustus had done.[129]
Diocletian was
also responsible for a significant Christian persecution. In 303 he and
Galerius started the persecution and ordered the destruction of all the
Christian churches and scripts and forbade Christian worship.[130]
Diocletian
abdicated in 305 AD together with Maximian, thus, he was the first
Roman emperor to resign. His reign ended the traditional form of
imperial rule, the Principate (from princeps) and started the Dominate
(from Dominus, "Master").
Constantine and Christianity
Constantine
assumed the empire as a tetrarch in 306. He conducted many wars against
the other tetrarchs. Firstly he defeated Maxentius in 312. In 313, he
issued the Edict of Milan, which granted liberty for Christians to
profess their religion.[131] Constantine was converted to Christianity,
enforcing the Christian faith. Therefore, he began the Christianization
of the Empire and of Europe – a process concluded by the Catholic Church
in the Middle Ages.
The Franks and the Alamanni were defeated by
him during 306–308. In 324 he defeated another tetrarch, Licinius, and
controlled all the empire, as it was before Diocletian. To celebrate his
victories and Christianity's relevance, he rebuilt Byzantium and
renamed it Nova Roma ("New Rome"); but the city soon gained the informal
name of Constantinople ("City of Constantine").[132][133] The city
served as a new capital for the Empire. In fact, Rome had lost its
central importance since the Crisis of the Third Century-–Mediolanum was
the capital from 286 to 330, and continued to hold the imperial court
of West until the reign of Honorius, when Ravenna was made capital, in
the 5th century.[134] Between 290 and 330, half a dozen new capitals had
been established by the members of the Tetrarchy, officially or not:
Antioch, Nicomedia, Thessalonike, Sirmium, Milan, and Trier.[135]
Constantine's
administrative and monetary reforms, reuniting the Empire under one
emperor, and rebuilding the city of Byzantium changed the high period of
the ancient world.
Germanic and Hunnic invasions of the Roman Empire, 100–500 AD
Fall of the Western Roman Empire
Main article: Fall of the Western Roman Empire
In
the late 4th and 5th centuries the Western Empire entered a critical
stage which terminated with the fall of the Western Roman Empire.[136]
Under the last of the Constantinians and the Valentinian dynasty, Rome
lost decisive battles against the Persians and Germanic barbarians: in
363, emperor Julian the Apostate was killed in the Battle of Samarra,
against the Persians and the Battle of Adrianople cost the life of
emperor Valens (364–378); the victorious Goths were never expelled from
the Empire nor assimilated.[137] Theodosius (379–395) gave even more
force to the Christian faith; after his death, the Empire was divided
into the Eastern Roman Empire, ruled by Arcadius and the Western Roman
Empire, commanded by Honorius; both were Theodosius' sons.
The
situation became more critical in 408, after the death of Stilicho, a
general who tried to reunite the Empire and repel barbarian invasion in
the early years of the 5th century. The professional field army
collapsed. In 410, the Theodosian dynasty saw the Visigoths sack
Rome.[138] During the 5th century, the Western Empire saw a significant
reduction of its territory. The Vandals conquered North Africa, the
Visigoths claimed Gaul, Hispania was taken by the Suebi, Britain was
abandoned by the central government, and the Empire suffered further
from the invasions of Attila, chief of the
Huns.[139][140][141][142][143][144]
General Orestes refused to
meet the demands of the barbarian "allies" who now formed the army, and
tried to expel them from Italy. Unhappy with this, their chieftain
Odoacer defeated and killed Orestes, invaded Ravenna and dethroned
Romulus Augustus, son of Orestes. This event happened in 476, and
historians usually take it as the mark of the end of Classical Antiquity
and beginning of the Middle Ages.[145][146]
After some 1200
years of independence and nearly 700 years as a great power, the rule of
Rome in the West ended.[147] Various reasons why it ended have been
proposed ever since, including loss of Republicanism, moral decay,
military tyranny, class war, slavery, economic stagnation, environmental
change, disease, the decline of the Roman race, as well as the
inevitable ebb and flow that all civilizations experience. At the time
many pagans argued Christianity and the decline of traditional Roman
religion were responsible, as did some rationalist thinkers of the
modern era due to a change from a martial to a more pacifist religion
that lessened the size of available soldiers, while Christians such as
Saint Augustine argued the sinful nature of Roman society itself was to
blame.[148]
The Eastern Empire had a different fate. It survived
for almost 1000 years after the fall of its Western counterpart and
became the most stable Christian realm during the Middle Ages. During
the 6th century, Justinian briefly reconquered Northern Africa and
Italy, but Byzantine possessions in the West were reduced to southern
Italy and Sicily within a few years after Justinian's death.[149] In the
east, partially resulting from the destructive Plague of Justinian, the
Byzantines were threatened by the rise of Islam, whose followers
rapidly conquered the territories of Syria, Armenia and Egypt during the
Byzantine-Arab Wars, and soon presented a direct threat to
Constantinople.[150][151] In the following century, the Arabs also
captured southern Italy and Sicily.[152] Slavic populations were also
able to penetrate deep into the Balkans.
The Byzantines, however,
managed to stop further Islamic expansion into their lands during the
8th century and, beginning in the 9th century, reclaimed parts of the
conquered lands.[23][153] In 1000 AD, the Eastern Empire was at its
height: Basileios II reconquered Bulgaria and Armenia, culture and trade
flourished.[154] However, soon after the expansion was abruptly stopped
in 1071 with their defeat in the Battle of Manzikert. The aftermath of
this important battle sent the empire into a protracted period of
decline. Two decades of internal strife and Turkic invasions ultimately
paved the way for Emperor Alexius I Comnenus to send a call for help to
the Western Europe kingdoms in 1095.[150]
The West responded with
the Crusades, eventually resulting in the Sack of Constantinople by
participants in the Fourth Crusade. The conquest of Constantinople in
1204 fragmented what remained of the Empire into successor states, the
ultimate victor being that of Nicaea.[155] After the recapture of
Constantinople by Imperial forces, the Empire was little more than a
Greek state confined to the Aegean coast. The Byzantine Empire collapsed
when Mehmed II conquered Constantinople on 29 May, 1453.[156]
Historiography
Main article: Roman historiography
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Rome has
a very rich history, which was explored by many authors, both ancient
and modern. The first history works were written after the First Punic
War. Many of these works were made for propaganda of the Roman culture
and customs, and also as moral essays.[citation needed] Although the
diversity of works, many of them are lost and due to this, there are
large gaps in Roman history, which are filled by unreliable works, as
the Historia Augusta and books from obscure authors. However, there
remain a number of accounts of Roman History.
In Roman times
There
is a huge variety of historians who lived in Roman times and wrote on
Rome. The first historians used their works for lauding of Roman culture
and customs. By the end of Republic, some historians distorted their
histories to flatter their patrons – this happened on the time of
Marius' and Sulla's clash.[157] Caesar wrote his own histories to make a
complete account of his military campaigns in Gaul and in the Civil
War.
In the Empire, the biographies of famous men and early
emperors flourished, examples being The Twelve Caesars of Suetonius, and
Plutarch's Parallel Lives. Other major works of Imperial times were
that of Livy and Tacitus.
Polybius – The Histories
Sallust – Bellum Catilinae and Bellum Jugurthinum
Julius Caesar – De Bello Gallico and De Bello Civili
Livy – Ab urbe condita
Dionysius of Halicarnassus – Roman Antiquities
Pliny the Elder – Naturalis Historia
Josephus – The Jewish War
Suetonius – The Twelve Caesars (De Vita Caesarum)
Tacitus – Annales and Histories
Plutarch – Parallel Lives (a series of biographies of famous Roman and Greek men)
Cassius Dio – Historia Romana
Herodian – History of the Roman Empire since Marcus Aurelius
In modern times
After
the Renaissance, Roman history occupied a prominent place in Western
culture. A new generation of historians, some with views very different
from those of their predecessors, revisited the subject, analyzing life
in ancient Rome and discussing what it meant to be a Roman.
Edward Gibbon (1737–1794) – The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
John Bagnall Bury (1861–1927) – History of the Later Roman Empire
Michael Grant (1914–2004) – The Roman World[158]
Barbara Levick (born 1932) – Claudius[159]
Barthold Georg Niebuhr (1776–1831)
Michael Rostovtzeff (1870–1952)
Howard Hayes Scullard (1903–1983) – The History of the Roman World[160]
Ronald Syme (1903–1989) – The Roman Revolution[161]
Adrian Goldsworthy (born 1969) – Caesar: The Life of a Colossus and How Rome fell[162]
Society
The Roman Forum, the political, economic, cultural, and religious center of the city during the Republic and later Empire
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The
imperial city of Rome was the largest urban center of its time, with a
population of about one million people (about the size of London in the
early 19th century, when London was the largest city in the world), with
a low-end estimate of 450,000.[163][164][165] The public spaces in Rome
resounded with such a din of hooves and clatter of iron chariot wheels
that Julius Caesar had once proposed a ban on chariot traffic during the
day. Historical estimates show that around 20 percent of the population
under jurisdiction of ancient Rome (25–40%, depending on the standards
used, in Roman Italy)[166] lived in innumerable urban centers, with
population of 10,000 and more and several military settlements, a very
high rate of urbanization by pre-industrial standards. Most of these
centers had a forum, temples, and other buildings similar to those in
Rome.
Class structure
Main articles: Social class in ancient Rome and Status in Roman legal system
Roman
society is largely viewed as hierarchical, with slaves (servi) at the
bottom, freedmen (liberti) above them, and free-born citizens (cives) at
the top. Free citizens were also divided by class. The broadest, and
earliest, division was between the patricians, who could trace their
ancestry to one of the 100 Patriarchs at the founding of the city, and
the plebeians, who could not. This became less important in the later
Republic, as some plebeian families became wealthy and entered politics,
and some patrician families fell on hard times. Anyone, patrician or
plebeian, who could count a consul as his ancestor was a noble
(nobilis); a man who was the first of his family to hold the consulship,
such as Marius or Cicero, was known as a novus homo ("new man") and
ennobled his descendants. Patrician ancestry, however, still conferred
considerable prestige, and many religious offices remained restricted to
patricians.
A class division originally based on military
service became more important. Membership of these classes was
determined periodically by the Censors, according to property. The
wealthiest were the Senatorial class, who dominated politics and command
of the army. Next came the equestrians (equites, sometimes translated
"knights"), originally those who could afford a warhorse, who formed a
powerful mercantile class. Several further classes, originally based on
what military equipment their members could afford, followed, with the
proletarii, citizens who had no property at all, at the bottom. Before
the reforms of Marius they were ineligible for military service and are
often described as being just above freed slaves in wealth and prestige.
Voting
power in the Republic was dependent on class. Citizens were enrolled in
voting "tribes", but the tribes of the richer classes had fewer members
than the poorer ones, all the proletarii being enrolled in a single
tribe. Voting was done in class order and stopped as soon as most of the
tribes had been reached, so the poorer classes were often unable even
to cast their votes.
Women shared some basic rights with their
male counterparts, but were not fully regarded as citizens and were thus
not allowed to vote or take part in politics. At the same time the
limited rights of women gradually were expanded (due to emancipation)
and women reached freedom from paterfamilias, gained property rights and
even had more juridical rights than their husbands, but still they had
no voting rights and were absent from politics.[167]
Allied
foreign cities were often given the Latin Right, an intermediary level
between full citizens and foreigners (peregrini), which gave their
citizens rights under Roman law and allowed their leading magistrates to
become full Roman citizens. While there were varying degrees of Latin
rights, the main division was between those cum suffragio ("with vote";
enrolled in a Roman tribe and able to take part in the comitia tributa)
and sine suffragio ("without vote"; could not take part in Roman
politics). Some of Rome's Italian allies were given full citizenship
after the Social War of 91–88 BC, and full Roman citizenship was
extended to all free-born men in the Empire by Caracalla in 212.
Family
A
group portrait depicted on glass, dating from c. 250 AD, showing a
mother, son and daughter. It was once considered a depiction of the
family of Valentinian III.
The basic units of Roman society were
households and families.[168] Households included the head (usually the
father) of the household, pater familias (father of the family), his
wife, children, and other relatives. In the upper classes, slaves and
servants were also part of the household.[168] The power of the head of
the household was supreme (patria potestas, "father's power") over those
living with him: He could force marriage (usually for money) and
divorce, sell his children into slavery, claim his dependents' property
as his own, and even had the right to punish or kill family members
(though this last right apparently ceased to be exercised after the 1st
century BC).[169]
Patria potestas even extended over adult sons
with their own households: A man was not considered a paterfamilias, nor
could he truly hold property, while his own father lived.[169][170]
During the early period of Rome's history, a daughter, when she married,
fell under the control (manus) of the paterfamilias of her husband's
household, although by the late Republic this fell out of fashion, as a
woman could choose to continue recognizing her father's family as her
true family.[171] However, as Romans reckoned descent through the male
line, any children she had belonged to her husband's family.[172]
Little
affection was shown for the children of Rome. The mother or an elderly
relative often raised both boys and girls. Unwanted children were often
sold as slaves. Children might have waited on tables for the family, but
they could not have participated in the conversation.
In noble
families a Greek nurse usually taught the children Latin and Greek.
Their father taught the boys how to swim and ride, although he sometimes
hired a slave to teach them instead. At seven, a boy began his
education. Having no school building, classes were held on a rooftop (if
dark, the boy had to carry a lantern to school). Wax-covered boards
were used because paper, papyrus, and parchment were too expensive—or he
could just write in the sand. A loaf of bread to be eaten was also
carried.[173]
Groups of related households formed a family
(gens). Families were based on blood ties or adoption, but were also
political and economic alliances. Especially during the Roman Republic,
some powerful families, or Gentes Maiores, came to dominate political
life.
In ancient Rome, marriage was often regarded more as a
financial and political alliance than as a romantic association,
especially in the upper classes (see marriage in ancient Rome). Fathers
usually began seeking husbands for their daughters when these reached an
age between twelve and fourteen. The husband was usually older than the
bride. While upper class girls married very young, there is evidence
that lower class women often married in their late teens or early 20s.
Education
Main article: Roman school
In
the early Republic, there were no public schools, so boys were taught
to read and write by their parents, or by educated slaves, called
paedagogi, usually of Greek origin.[174][175][176] The primary aim of
education during this period was to train young men in agriculture,
warfare, Roman traditions, and public affairs.[23] Young boys learned
much about civic life by accompanying their fathers to religious and
political functions, including the Senate for the sons of nobles.[23]
The sons of nobles were apprenticed to a prominent political figure at
the age of 16, and campaigned with the army from the age of 17 (this
system was still in use among some noble families into the imperial
era).[23]
Educational practices were modified after the conquest
of the Hellenistic kingdoms in the 3rd century BC and the resulting
Greek influence, although it should be noted that Roman educational
practices were still much different from Greek ones.[23][177] If their
parents could afford it, boys and some girls at the age of 7 were sent
to a private school outside the home called a ludus, where a teacher
(called a litterator or a magister ludi, and often of Greek origin)
taught them basic reading, writing, arithmetic, and sometimes Greek,
until the age of 11.[23][176][178]
Beginning at age 12, students
went to secondary schools, where the teacher (now called a grammaticus)
taught them about Greek and Roman literature.[23][23] At the age of 16,
some students went on to rhetoric school (where the teacher, usually
Greek, was called a rhetor).[23][23] Education at this level prepared
students for legal careers, and required that the students memorize the
laws of Rome.[23] Pupils went to school every day, except religious
festivals and market days. There were also summer holidays.
Government
Main articles: Roman Constitution and History of the Roman Constitution
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Initially,
Rome was ruled by kings, who were elected from each of Rome's major
tribes in turn.[179] The exact nature of the king's power is uncertain.
He may have held near-absolute power, or may also have merely been the
chief executive of the Senate and the people. At least in military
matters, the king's authority (Imperium) was likely absolute. He was
also the head of the state religion. In addition to the authority of the
King, there were three administrative assemblies: the Senate, which
acted as an advisory body for the King; the Comitia Curiata, which could
endorse and ratify laws suggested by the King; and the Comitia Calata,
which was an assembly of the priestly college that could assemble the
people to bear witness to certain acts, hear proclamations, and declare
the feast and holiday schedule for the next month.
Representation of a sitting of the Roman Senate: Cicero attacks Catilina, from a 19th-century fresco.
The
class struggles of the Roman Republic resulted in an unusual mixture of
democracy and oligarchy. The word republic comes from the Latin res
publica, which literally translates to "public business". Roman laws
traditionally could only be passed by a vote of the Popular assembly
(Comitia Tributa). Likewise, candidates for public positions had to run
for election by the people. However, the Roman Senate represented an
oligarchic institution, which acted as an advisory body.
In the
Republic, the Senate held actual authority (auctoritas), but no real
legislative power; it was technically only an advisory council. However,
as the Senators were individually very influential, it was difficult to
accomplish anything against the collective will of the Senate. New
Senators were chosen from among the most accomplished patricians by
Censors (Censura), who could also remove a Senator from his office if he
was found "morally corrupt"; a charge that could include bribery or, as
under Cato the Elder, embracing one's wife in public. Later, under the
reforms of the dictator Sulla, Quaestors were made automatic members of
the Senate, though most of his reforms did not survive.
The
Republic had no fixed bureaucracy, and collected taxes through the
practice of tax farming. Government positions such as quaestor, aedile,
or praefect were funded from the office-holder's private finances. To
prevent any citizen from gaining too much power, new magistrates were
elected annually and had to share power with a colleague. For example,
under normal conditions, the highest authority was held by two consuls.
In an emergency, a temporary dictator could be appointed. Throughout the
Republic, the administrative system was revised several times to comply
with new demands. In the end, it proved inefficient for controlling the
ever-expanding dominion of Rome, contributing to the establishment of
the Roman Empire.
In the early Empire, the pretense of a
republican form of government was maintained. The Roman Emperor was
portrayed as only a princeps, or "first citizen", and the Senate gained
legislative power and all legal authority previously held by the popular
assemblies. However, the rule of the Emperors became increasingly
autocratic, and the Senate was reduced to an advisory body appointed by
the Emperor. The Empire did not inherit a set bureaucracy from the
Republic, since the Republic did not have any permanent governmental
structures apart from the Senate. The Emperor appointed assistants and
advisers, but the state lacked many institutions, such as a centrally
planned budget. Some historians have cited this as a significant reason
for the decline of the Roman Empire.
Further information: History of citizenship § Roman conceptions of citizenship
Law
Main article: Roman law
The
roots of the legal principles and practices of the ancient Romans may
be traced to the Law of the Twelve Tables promulgated in 449 BC and to
the codification of law issued by order of Emperor Justinian I around
530 AD (see Corpus Juris Civilis). Roman law as preserved in Justinian's
codes continued into the Byzantine Empire, and formed the basis of
similar codifications in continental Western Europe. Roman law
continued, in a broader sense, to be applied throughout most of Europe
until the end of the 17th century.
The major divisions of the law
of ancient Rome, as contained within the Justinian and Theodosian law
codes, consisted of Ius Civile, Ius Gentium, and Ius Naturale. The Ius
Civile ("Citizen Law") was the body of common laws that applied to Roman
citizens.[180] The Praetores Urbani (sg. Praetor Urbanus) were the
people who had jurisdiction over cases involving citizens. The Ius
Gentium ("Law of nations") was the body of common laws that applied to
foreigners, and their dealings with Roman citizens.[168] The Praetores
Peregrini (sg. Praetor Peregrinus) were the people who had jurisdiction
over cases involving citizens and foreigners. Ius Naturale encompassed
natural law, the body of laws that were considered common to all beings.
Economy
Main articles: Roman agriculture, Roman commerce, Roman finance and Roman currency
Night view of Trajan's Market, built by Apollodorus of Damascus
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Ancient
Rome commanded a vast area of land, with tremendous natural and human
resources. As such, Rome's economy remained focused on farming and
trade. Agricultural free trade changed the Italian landscape, and by the
1st century BC, vast grape and olive estates had supplanted the yeoman
farmers, who were unable to match the imported grain price. The
annexation of Egypt, Sicily and Tunisia in North Africa provided a
continuous supply of grains. In turn, olive oil and wine were Italy's
main exports. Two-tier crop rotation was practiced, but farm
productivity was low, around 1 ton per hectare.
Industrial and
manufacturing activities were smaller. The largest such activities were
the mining and quarrying of stones, which provided basic construction
materials for the buildings of that period. In manufacturing, production
was on a relatively small scale, and generally consisted of workshops
and small factories that employed at most dozens of workers. However,
some brick factories employed hundreds of workers.
The economy of
the early Republic was largely based on smallholding and paid labor.
However, foreign wars and conquests made slaves increasingly cheap and
plentiful, and by the late Republic, the economy was largely dependent
on slave labor for both skilled and unskilled work. Slaves are estimated
to have constituted around 20% of the Roman Empire's population at this
time and 40% in the city of Rome. Only in the Roman Empire, when the
conquests stopped and the prices of slaves increased, did hired labor
become more economical than slave ownership.
Although barter was
used in ancient Rome, and often used in tax collection, Rome had a very
developed coinage system, with brass, bronze, and precious metal coins
in circulation throughout the Empire and beyond—some have even been
discovered in India. Before the 3rd century BC, copper was traded by
weight, measured in unmarked lumps, across central Italy. The original
copper coins (as) had a face value of one Roman pound of copper, but
weighed less. Thus, Roman money's utility as a unit of exchange
consistently exceeded its intrinsic value as metal. After Nero began
debasing the silver denarius, its legal value was an estimated one-third
greater than its intrinsic value.
Horses were expensive and
other pack animals were slower. Mass trade on the Roman roads connected
military posts, where Roman markets were centered.[181] These roads were
designed for wheels.[182] As a result, there was transport of
commodities between Roman regions, but increased with the rise of Roman
maritime trade in the 2nd century BC. During that period, a trading
vessel took less than a month to complete a trip from Gades to
Alexandria via Ostia, spanning the entire length of the
Mediterranean.[106] Transport by sea was around 60 times cheaper than by
land, so the volume for such trips was much larger.
Some
economists like Peter Temin consider the Roman Empire a market economy,
similar in its degree of capitalistic practices to 17th century
Netherlands and 18th century England.[183]
Military
Main articles:
Military history of ancient Rome, Roman military, Structural history of
the Roman military, Roman army and Roman navy
Part of a series on the
Military of ancient Rome
753 BC – AD 476
Structural history
Army
Unit types and ranks Legions
Auxiliaries Generals
Navy
Fleets Admirals
Campaign history
Wars Battles
Decorations and punishments
Technological history
Military engineering
Castra Siege engines
Triumphal arches Roads
Political history
Strategy and tactics
Infantry tactics
Frontiers and fortifications
Limes Hadrian's Wall
Portal icon Military of ancient Rome portal
v t e
Modern replica of lorica segmentata type armor, used in conjunction with the popular chainmail after the 1st century AD
The
early Roman army (c. 500 BC) was, like those of other contemporary
city-states influenced by Greek civilization, a citizen militia that
practiced hoplite tactics. It was small (the population of free men of
military age was then about 9,000) and organized in five classes (in
parallel to the comitia centuriata, the body of citizens organized
politically), with three providing hoplites and two providing light
infantry. The early Roman army was tactically limited and its stance
during this period was essentially defensive.[184]
By the 3rd
century BC, the Romans abandoned the hoplite formation in favor of a
more flexible system in which smaller groups of 120 (or sometimes 60)
men called maniples could maneuver more independently on the
battlefield. Thirty maniples arranged in three lines with supporting
troops constituted a legion, totaling between 4,000 and 5,000 men.[185]
The
early Republican legion consisted of five sections, each of which was
equipped differently and had different places in formation: the three
lines of manipular heavy infantry (hastati, principes and triarii), a
force of light infantry (velites), and the cavalry (equites). With the
new organization came a new orientation toward the offensive and a much
more aggressive posture toward adjoining city-states.[185]
At
nominal full strength, an early Republican legion included 4,000 to
5,000 men: 3,600 to 4,800 heavy infantry, several hundred light
infantry, and several hundred cavalrymen.[186] Legions were often
significantly understrength from recruitment failures or following
periods of active service due to accidents, battle casualties, disease
and desertion. During the Civil War, Pompey's legions in the east were
at full strength because they were recently recruited, while Caesar's
legions were often well below nominal strength after long active service
in Gaul. This pattern also held true for auxiliary forces.[187]
Until
the late Republican period, the typical legionary was a property-owning
citizen farmer from a rural area (an adsiduus) who served for
particular (often annual) campaigns,[188] and who supplied his own
equipment and, in the case of equites, his own mount. Harris suggests
that down to 200 BC, the average rural farmer (who survived) might
participate in six or seven campaigns. Freedmen and slaves (wherever
resident) and urban citizens did not serve except in rare
emergencies.[189]
After 200 BC, economic conditions in rural
areas deteriorated as manpower needs increased, so that the property
qualifications for service were gradually reduced. Beginning with Gaius
Marius in 107 BC, citizens without property and some urban-dwelling
citizens (proletarii) were enlisted and provided with equipment,
although most legionaries continued to come from rural areas. Terms of
service became continuous and long—up to twenty years if emergencies
required it although Brunt argues that six- or seven-year terms were
more typical.[190]
Beginning in the 3rd century BC, legionaries
were paid stipendium (amounts are disputed but Caesar famously "doubled"
payments to his troops to 225 denarii a year), could anticipate booty
and donatives (distributions of plunder by commanders) from successful
campaigns and, beginning at the time of Marius, often were granted
allotments of land upon retirement.[191] Cavalry and light infantry
attached to a legion (the auxilia) were often recruited in the areas
where the legion served. Caesar formed a legion, the Fifth Alaudae, from
non-citizens in Transalpine Gaul to serve in his campaigns in
Gaul.[192] By the time of Caesar Augustus, the ideal of the
citizen-soldier had been abandoned and the legions had become fully
professional. Legionaries received 900 sesterces a year and could expect
12,000 sesterces on retirement.[193]
At the end of the Civil
War, Augustus reorganized Roman military forces, discharging soldiers
and disbanding legions. He retained 28 legions, distributed through the
provinces of the Empire.[194] During the Principate, the tactical
organization of the Army continued to evolve. The auxilia remained
independent cohorts, and legionary troops often operated as groups of
cohorts rather than as full legions. A new versatile type of unit - the
cohortes equitatae – combined cavalry and legionaries in a single
formation. They could be stationed at garrisons or outposts and could
fight on their own as balanced small forces or combine with other
similar units as a larger legion-sized force. This increase in
organizational flexibility helped ensure the long-term success of Roman
military forces.[195]
The Emperor Gallienus (253–268 AD) began a
reorganization that created the last military structure of the late
Empire. Withdrawing some legionaries from the fixed bases on the border,
Gallienus created mobile forces (the Comitatenses or field armies) and
stationed them behind and at some distance from the borders as a
strategic reserve. The border troops (limitanei) stationed at fixed
bases continued to be the first line of defense. The basic unit of the
field army was the "regiment", legiones or auxilia for infantry and
vexellationes for cavalry. Evidence suggests that nominal strengths may
have been 1,200 men for infantry regiments and 600 for cavalry, although
many records show lower actual troop levels (800 and 400).[196]
Many
infantry and cavalry regiments operated in pairs under the command of a
comes. In addition to Roman troops, the field armies included regiments
of "barbarians" recruited from allied tribes and known as foederati. By
400 AD, foederati regiments had become permanently established units of
the Roman army, paid and equipped by the Empire, led by a Roman tribune
and used just as Roman units were used. In addition to the foederati,
the Empire also used groups of barbarians to fight along with the
legions as "allies" without integration into the field armies. Under the
command of the senior Roman general present, they were led at lower
levels by their own officers.[196]
Military leadership evolved
over the course of the history of Rome. Under the monarchy, the hoplite
armies were led by the kings of Rome. During the early and middle Roman
Republic, military forces were under the command of one of the two
elected consuls for the year. During the later Republic, members of the
Roman Senatorial elite, as part of the normal sequence of elected public
offices known as the cursus honorum, would have served first as
quaestor (often posted as deputies to field commanders), then as
praetor.[197]
Following the end of a term as praetor or consul, a
Senator might be appointed by the Senate as a propraetor or proconsul
(depending on the highest office held before) to govern a foreign
province. More junior officers (down to but not including the level of
centurion) were selected by their commanders from their own clientelae
or those recommended by political allies among the Senatorial
elite.[197]
Under Augustus, whose most important political
priority was to place the military under a permanent and unitary
command, the Emperor was the legal commander of each legion but
exercised that command through a legatus (legate) he appointed from the
Senatorial elite. In a province with a single legion, the legate
commanded the legion (legatus legionis) and also served as provincial
governor, while in a province with more than one legion, each legion was
commanded by a legate and the legates were commanded by the provincial
governor (also a legate but of higher rank).[198]
During the
later stages of the Imperial period (beginning perhaps with Diocletian),
the Augustan model was abandoned. Provincial governors were stripped of
military authority, and command of the armies in a group of provinces
was given to generals (duces) appointed by the Emperor. These were no
longer members of the Roman elite but men who came up through the ranks
and had seen much practical soldiering. With increasing frequency, these
men attempted (sometimes successfully) to usurp the positions of the
Emperors who had appointed them. Decreased resources, increasing
political chaos and civil war eventually left the Western Empire
vulnerable to attack and takeover by neighboring barbarian peoples.[199]
Less
is known about the Roman navy than the Roman army. Prior to the middle
of the 3rd century BC, officials known as duumviri navales commanded a
fleet of twenty ships used mainly to control piracy. This fleet was
given up in 278 AD and replaced by allied forces. The First Punic War
required that Rome build large fleets, and it did so largely with the
assistance of and financing from allies. This reliance on allies
continued to the end of the Roman Republic. The quinquereme was the main
warship on both sides of the Punic Wars and remained the mainstay of
Roman naval forces until replaced by the time of Caesar Augustus by
lighter and more maneuverable vessels.[200]
As compared with a
trireme, the quinquereme permitted the use of a mix of experienced and
inexperienced crewmen (an advantage for a primarily land-based power),
and its lesser maneuverability permitted the Romans to adopt and perfect
boarding tactics using a troop of about 40 marines in lieu of the ram.
Ships were commanded by a navarch, a rank equal to a centurion, who was
usually not a citizen. Potter suggests that because the fleet was
dominated by non-Romans, the navy was considered non-Roman and allowed
to atrophy in times of peace.[200]
Information suggests that by
the time of the late Empire (350 AD), the Roman navy comprised several
fleets including warships and merchant vessels for transportation and
supply. Warships were oared sailing galleys with three to five banks of
oarsmen. Fleet bases included such ports as Ravenna, Arles, Aquilea,
Misenum and the mouth of the Somme River in the West and Alexandria and
Rhodes in the East. Flotillas of small river craft (classes) were part
of the limitanei (border troops) during this period, based at fortified
river harbors along the Rhine and the Danube. That prominent generals
commanded both armies and fleets suggests that naval forces were treated
as auxiliaries to the army and not as an independent service. The
details of command structure and fleet strengths during this period are
not well known, although fleets were commanded by prefects.[201]
Culture
Main article: Culture of ancient Rome
The seven hills of Rome
Life
in ancient Rome revolved around the city of Rome, located on seven
hills. The city had a vast number of monumental structures like the
Colosseum, the Forum of Trajan and the Pantheon. It had theatres,
gymnasiums, marketplaces, functional sewers, bath complexes complete
with libraries and shops, and fountains with fresh drinking water
supplied by hundreds of miles of aqueducts. Throughout the territory
under the control of ancient Rome, residential architecture ranged from
modest houses to country villas.
In the capital city of Rome,
there were imperial residences on the elegant Palatine Hill, from which
the word palace derives. The low Plebeian and middle Equestrian classes
lived in the city center, packed into apartments, or Insulae, which were
almost like modern ghettos. These areas, often built by upper class
property owners to rent, were often centred upon collegia or taberna.
These people, provided with a free supply of grain, and entertained by
gladatorial games, were enrolled as clients of patrons among the upper
class Patricians, whose assistance they sought and whose interests they
upheld.
Language
Main article: Latin
The native language of
the Romans was Latin, an Italic language the grammar of which relies
little on word order, conveying meaning through a system of affixes
attached to word stems.[202] Its alphabet was based on the Etruscan
alphabet, which was in turn based on the Greek alphabet.[203] Although
surviving Latin literature consists almost entirely of Classical Latin,
an artificial and highly stylized and polished literary language from
the 1st century BC, the spoken language of the Roman Empire was Vulgar
Latin, which significantly differed from Classical Latin in grammar and
vocabulary, and eventually in pronunciation.[204]
While Latin
remained the main written language of the Roman Empire, Greek came to be
the language spoken by the well-educated elite, as most of the
literature studied by Romans was written in Greek. In the eastern half
of the Roman Empire, which later became the Byzantine Empire, Latin was
never able to replace Greek, and after the death of Justinian, Greek
became the official language of the Byzantine government.[205] The
expansion of the Roman Empire spread Latin throughout Europe, and Vulgar
Latin evolved into dialects in different locations, gradually shifting
into many distinct Romance languages.
Religion
Main articles: Religion in ancient Rome and Roman mythology
Archaic
Roman religion, at least concerning the gods, was made up not of
written narratives, but rather of complex interrelations between gods
and humans.[206] Unlike in Greek mythology, the gods were not
personified, but were vaguely defined sacred spirits called numina.
Romans also believed that every person, place or thing had its own
genius, or divine soul. During the Roman Republic, Roman religion was
organized under a strict system of priestly offices, which were held by
men of senatorial rank. The College of Pontifices was uppermost body in
this hierarchy, and its chief priest, the Pontifex Maximus, was the head
of the state religion. Flamens took care of the cults of various gods,
while augurs were trusted with taking the auspices. The sacred king took
on the religious responsibilities of the deposed kings. In the Roman
Empire, emperors were deified,[207][208] and the formalized imperial
cult became increasingly prominent.
As contact with the Greeks
increased, the old Roman gods became increasingly associated with Greek
gods.[209] Thus, Jupiter was perceived to be the same deity as Zeus,
Mars became associated with Ares, and Neptune with Poseidon. The Roman
gods also assumed the attributes and mythologies of these Greek gods.
Under the Empire, the Romans absorbed the mythologies of their conquered
subjects, often leading to situations in which the temples and priests
of traditional Italian deities existed side by side with those of
foreign gods.[210]
Beginning with Emperor Nero in the 1st century
AD, Roman official policy towards Christianity was negative, and at
some points, simply being a Christian could be punishable by death.
Under Emperor Diocletian, the persecution of Christians reached its
peak. However, it became an officially supported religion in the Roman
state under Diocletian's successor, Constantine I, with the signing of
the Edict of Milan in 313, and quickly became dominant. All religions
except Christianity were prohibited in 391 AD by an edict of Emperor
Theodosius I.[211]
Art, music and literature
Main articles: Roman art, Latin literature, Music of ancient Rome, Roman sculpture and Theatre of ancient Rome
Woman playing a kithara.
Roman
painting styles show Greek influences, and surviving examples are
primarily frescoes used to adorn the walls and ceilings of country
villas, though Roman literature includes mentions of paintings on wood,
ivory, and other materials.[212][213] Several examples of Roman painting
have been found at Pompeii, and from these art historians divide the
history of Roman painting into four periods. The first style of Roman
painting was practiced from the early 2nd century BC to the early- or
mid-1st century BC. It was mainly composed of imitations of marble and
masonry, though sometimes including depictions of mythological
characters.[212][213]
The second style of Roman painting began
during the early 1st century BC, and attempted to depict realistically
three-dimensional architectural features and landscapes. The third style
occurred during the reign of Augustus (27 BC – 14 AD), and rejected the
realism of the second style in favor of simple ornamentation. A small
architectural scene, landscape, or abstract design was placed in the
center with a monochrome background. The fourth style, which began in
the 1st century AD, depicted scenes from mythology, while retaining
architectural details and abstract patterns.[212][213]
Portrait
sculpture during the period[which?] utilized youthful and classical
proportions, evolving later into a mixture of realism and idealism.
During the Antonine and Severan periods, ornate hair and bearding, with
deep cutting and drilling, became popular. Advancements were also made
in relief sculptures, usually depicting Roman victories.
Latin
literature was, from its start, influenced heavily by Greek authors.
Some of the earliest extant works are of historical epics telling the
early military history of Rome. As the Republic expanded, authors began
to produce poetry, comedy, history, and tragedy.
Roman music was
largely based on Greek music, and played an important part in many
aspects of Roman life.[214] In the Roman military, musical instruments
such as the tuba (a long trumpet) or the cornu (similar to a French
horn) were used to give various commands, while the bucina (possibly a
trumpet or horn) and the lituus (probably an elongated J-shaped
instrument), were used in ceremonial capacities.[215] Music was used in
the amphitheaters between fights and in the odea, and in these settings
is known to have featured the cornu and the hydraulis (a type of water
organ).[216]
Most religious rituals featured musical
performances, with tibiae (double pipes) at sacrifices, cymbals and
Tambourines at orgiastic cults, and rattles and hymns across the
spectrum.[217] Some music historians believe that music was used at
almost all public ceremonies.[214] Music historians are not certain if
Roman musicians made a significant contribution to the theory or
practice of music.[214]
The graffiti, brothels, paintings, and
sculptures found in Pompeii and Herculaneum suggest that the Romans had a
sex-saturated culture.[218]
Scholarly studies
Interest in
studying, and even idealizing, ancient Rome became prevalent during the
Italian Renaissance, and continues until the present day. Charles
Montesquieu wrote a work Reflections on the Causes of the Grandeur and
Declension of the Romans. The first major work was The History of the
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon, which encompassed
the period from the end of 2nd century to the fall of the Byzantine
Empire in 1453.[219] Like Montesquieu, Gibbon paid high tribute to the
virtue of Roman citizens. Barthold Georg Niebuhr was a founder of the
examination of ancient Roman history and wrote The Roman History,
tracing the period until the First Punic war. Niebuhr tried to determine
the way the Roman tradition evolved. According to him, Romans, like
other people, had an historical ethos preserved mainly in the noble
families.
During the Napoleonic period a work titled The History
of Romans by Victor Duruy appeared. It highlighted the Caesarean period
popular at the time. History of Rome, Roman constitutional law and
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, all by Theodor Mommsen,[220] became very
important milestones. Later the work Greatness and Decline of Rome by
Guglielmo Ferrero was published. The Russian work Очерки по истории
римского землевладения, преимущественно в эпоху Империи (The Outlines on
Roman Landownership History, Mainly During the Empire) by Ivan Grevs
contained information on the economy of Pomponius Atticus, one of the
largest landowners during the end of the Republic.
Cuisine
Main article: Ancient Roman cuisine
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Ancient
Roman cuisine changed over the long duration of this ancient
civilization. Dietary habits were affected by the influence of Greek
culture, the political changes from kingdom to republic to empire, and
empire's enormous expansion, which exposed Romans to many new,
provincial culinary habits and cooking techniques. In the beginning the
differences between social classes were relatively small, but
disparities evolved with the empire's growth.
Games and recreation
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material may be challenged and removed. (September 2014)
The
youth of Rome had several forms of athletic play and exercise, such as
jumping, wrestling, boxing, and racing.[221] In the countryside,
pastimes for the wealthy also included fishing and hunting.[222] The
Romans also had several forms of ball playing, including one resembling
handball.[221] Dice games, board games, and gamble games were popular
pastimes.[221] Women did not take part in these activities. For the
wealthy, dinner parties presented an opportunity for entertainment,
sometimes featuring music, dancing, and poetry readings.[223] Plebeians
sometimes enjoyed similar parties through clubs or associations, but for
most Romans, recreational dining usually meant patronizing
taverns.[223] Children entertained themselves with toys and such games
as leapfrog.[222][223]
Public games were sponsored by leading
Romans who wished to advertise their generosity and court popular
approval; in the Imperial era, this usually meant the emperor. Several
venues were developed specifically for public games. The Colisseum was
built in the Imperial era to host, among other events, gladiatorial
combats. These combats had begun as funeral games around the 4th century
BC, and became popular spectator events in the late Republic and
Empire. Gladiators had an exotic and inventive variety of arms and
armour. They sometimes fought to the death, but more often to an
adjudicated victory, dependent on a referee's decision. The outcome was
usually in keeping with the mood of the watching crowd. Shows of exotic
animals were popular in their own right; but sometimes animals were
pitted against human beings, either armed professionals or unarmed
criminals who had been condemned to a spectacular and theatrical public
death in the arena. Some of these encounters were based on episodes from
Roman or Greek mythology.
Chariot racing was extremely popular
among all classes. In Rome, these races were usually held at the Circus
Maximus, which had been purpose-built for chariot and horse-racing and,
as Rome's largest public place, was also used for festivals and animal
shows.[224] It could seat around 150,000 people;[225] The charioteers
raced in teams, identified by their colours. The track was divided
lengthwise by a barrier that contained obelisks, temples, statues and
lap-counters. The best seats were at the track-side, close to the
action; they were reserved for Senators. Behind them sat the equites
(knights), and behind the knights were the plebs (commoners) and
non-citizens. The donor of the games sat on a high platform in the
stands alongside images of the gods, visible to all. Large sums were bet
on the outcomes of races. Some Romans offered prayers and sacrifices on
behalf of their favourites, or laid curses on the opposing teams, and
some aficionados were members of extremely, even violently partisan
circus factions.
Technology
Main article: Roman technology
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Pont du Gard in France is a Roman aqueduct built in c. 19 BC. It is a World Heritage Site.
Ancient
Rome boasted impressive technological feats, using many advancements
that were lost in the Middle Ages and not rivaled again until the 19th
and 20th centuries. An example of this is Insulated glazing, which was
not invented again until the 1930s. Many practical Roman innovations
were adopted from earlier Greek designs. Advancements were often divided
and based on craft. Artisans guarded technologies as trade
secrets.[226]
Roman civil engineering and military engineering
constituted a large part of Rome's technological superiority and legacy,
and contributed to the construction of hundreds of roads, bridges,
aqueducts, baths, theaters and arenas. Many monuments, such as the
Colosseum, Pont du Gard, and Pantheon, remain as testaments to Roman
engineering and culture.
The Romans were renowned for their
architecture, which is grouped with Greek traditions into "Classical
architecture". Although there were many differences from Greek
architecture, Rome borrowed heavily from Greece in adhering to strict,
formulaic building designs and proportions. Aside from two new orders of
columns, composite and Tuscan, and from the dome, which was derived
from the Etruscan arch, Rome had relatively few architectural
innovations until the end of the Republic.
The Appian Way (Via Appia), a road connecting the city of Rome to the southern parts of Italy, remains usable even today.
In
the 1st century BC, Romans started to use concrete widely. Concrete was
invented in the late 3rd century BC. It was a powerful cement derived
from pozzolana, and soon supplanted marble as the chief Roman building
material and allowed many daring architectural forms.[227] Also in the
1st century BC, Vitruvius wrote De architectura, possibly the first
complete treatise on architecture in history. In late 1st century BC,
Rome also began to use glassblowing soon after its invention in Syria
about 50 BC. Mosaics took the Empire by storm after samples were
retrieved during Lucius Cornelius Sulla's campaigns in Greece.
Concrete
made possible the paved, durable Roman roads, many of which were still
in use a thousand years after the fall of Rome. The construction of a
vast and efficient travel network throughout the Empire dramatically
increased Rome's power and influence. It was originally constructed to
allow Roman legions to be rapidly deployed. But these highways also had
enormous economic significance, solidifying Rome's role as a trading
crossroads—the origin of the saying "all roads lead to Rome". The Roman
government maintained a system of way stations, known as the cursus
publicus, that provided refreshments to couriers at regular intervals
along the roads and established a system of horse relays allowing a
dispatch to travel up to 80 km (50 mi) a day.
The Romans
constructed numerous aqueducts to supply water to cities and industrial
sites and to aid in their agriculture. The city of Rome was supplied by
11 aqueducts with a combined length of 350 km (217 mi).[228] Most
aqueducts were constructed below the surface, with only small portions
above ground supported by arches. Sometimes, where valleys deeper than
500 m (1,640 ft) had to be crossed, inverted siphons were used to convey
water across a valley.[56]
The Romans also made major
advancements in sanitation. Romans were particularly famous for their
public baths, called thermae, which were used for both hygienic and
social purposes. Many Roman houses came to have flush toilets and indoor
plumbing, and a complex sewer system, the Cloaca Maxima, was used to
drain the local marshes and carry waste into the Tiber river.
Some
historians have speculated that lead pipes in the sewer and plumbing
systems led to widespread lead poisoning, which contributed to the
decline in birth rate and general decay of Roman society leading up to
the fall of Rome. However, lead content would have been minimized
because the flow of water from aqueducts could not be shut off; it ran
continuously through public and private outlets into the drains, and
only a few taps were in use.[229] Other authors have raised similar
objections to this theory, also pointing out that Roman water pipes were
thickly coated with deposits that would have prevented lead from
leaching into the water.[230]
Legacy
Main articles: Legacy of the Roman Empire and Classics
External video ImageRomeArchofTitus02.jpg
Ancient Rome[231] (13:47), Smarthistory at Khan Academy
Ancient
Rome is the progenitor of Western civilization.[232][233][234] The
customs, religion, law, technology, architecture, political system,
military, literature, languages, alphabet, government and many factors
and aspects of western civilization are all inherited from Roman
advancements. The rediscovery of Roman culture revitalized Western
civilization, playing a role in the Renaissance and the Age of
Enlightenment.[235][236]