Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T13:22:22.524Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Troubled Beginning: Rome and its Reluctant Allies in the Fourth Century bc *

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2017

Marian Helm*
Affiliation:
Ruhr-Universität Bochum [email protected]

Abstract

This article examines the origins of the Roman alliance system in the second half of the 4th century. The significance of the allies for the creation of a Mediterranean empire is undisputed; allied troops provided the Roman Republic with a manpower reservoir unmatched by any of its opponents. However, the stunning achievement of incorporating defeated foes into the military in equal numbers to Roman troops has been somewhat neglected and been taken as a given fact. A careful analysis of the years following the Latin War and the Samnite Wars reveals a constellation which does not suggest that the immediate creation of a more or less beneficial system of alliances was a primary Roman objective. Instead it will be argued that the evidence indicates a rather different development, where the challenge of organising and integrating the captured territory was a dynamic and at times arduous process, for which the setbacks – and indeed the crisis – of the so-called Second Samnite War served as a major catalyst.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Australasian Society for Classical Studies 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

I would like to express my deepest gratitude to Jeremy Armstrong and James Richardson for their comments and advice on the written version of the paper. Of course, the responsibility for all errors and omissions remains with the author.

References

Alföldi, A. (1965), Early Rome and the Latins. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Armstrong, J. (2016), War and Society in Early Rome. From Warlords to Generals. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Attema, P. et al. (2011), Between Satricum and Antium. Settlement Dynamics in a Coastal Landscape in Latium Vetus. Leuven.Google Scholar
Baranowski, D. W. (1993), ‘Roman Military Forces in 225 B.C. (Polybius 2.23-4)’, Historia 42, 181-202.Google Scholar
Beck, H. (2005), Karriere und Hierarchie: Die römische Aristokratie und die Anfänge des cursus honorum in der mittleren Republik. Berlin.Google Scholar
Beck, H. (2015), ‘Beyond “Foreign Clienteles” and “Foreign Clans”: Some Remarks on the Intermarriage between Roman and Italian Elites’, in M. Jehne and F. Pina Polo (eds), Foreign clientelae in the Roman Empire: A Reconsideration. 57-72. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Beck, H., A. Duplá, M. Jehne, and F. Pina Polo (eds) (2011), Consuls and Res Publica. Holding High Office in the Roman Republic. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bispham, E. (2006), ‘ Coloniam deducere: How Roman was Roman Colonization During the Middle Republic?’, in G. Bradley and J.-P. Wilson (eds), Greek and Roman Colonization. Origins, Ideologies and Interactions. 73-160. Swansea.Google Scholar
Bispham, E. (2012), ‘Rome and Antium: Pirates, Polities and Identity in the Middle Republic’, in S. T. Roselaar (ed.), Processes of Integration and Identity Formation in the Roman Republic. 227-246. Leiden.Google Scholar
Bleckmann, B. (1999), ‘Rom und die Kampaner von Rhegion’, Chiron 29, 123-146.Google Scholar
Bleckmann, B. (2002), Die römische Nobilität im Ersten Punischen Krieg. Untersuchungen zur aristokratischen Konkurrenz in der Republik. Berlin.Google Scholar
Bourdin, S. (2012), Les peuples de l’Italie préromaine. Identités, territoires et relations inter-ethniques en Italie centrale et septentrionale (VIIIe – Ier s. av. J.-C.). Rome.Google Scholar
Bradley, G. (2006), ‘Colonisation and Identity in Republican Italy’, in G. Bradley and J.-P. Wilson (eds), Greek and Roman Colonization. Origins, Ideologies and Interactions. 161-187. Swansea.Google Scholar
Bradley, G. (2014), ‘The Nature of Roman Strategy in Mid-Republican Colonization and Road Building’, in T. Stek and J. Pelgrom (eds), Roman Republican Colonization. New Perspectives from Archaeology and Ancient History. 61-85. Rome.Google Scholar
Briquel, D. (2001), ‘La tombe Andriuolo 114 de Paestum (IX, 31)’, in D. Briquel and J.-P. Thuillier (eds), Le Censeur et les Samnites. 135-146. Paris.Google Scholar
Broadhead, W. (2007), ‘Colonization, Land Distribution, and Veteran Settlement’, in P. Erdkamp (ed.), A Companion to the Roman Army. 148-163. Malden, MA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broughton, T. R. S. (1954), The Magistrates of the Roman Republic, vol. 1. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Brunt, P. (1987), Italian Manpower, 225 B.C.-A.D. 14, 2nd edn. Oxford.Google Scholar
de Cazanove, O. (2001), ‘Itinéraires et étapes de l’avancée romaine entre Samnium, Daunie, Lucanie et Étrurie’, in D. Briquel and J.-P. Thuillier (eds), Le Censeur et les Samnites. 147-192. Paris.Google Scholar
Cels-Saint Hilaire, J. (1995), La République des tribus: du droit de vote et ses enjeux au début de la République romaine (495-300 av. J.-C.). Toulouse.Google Scholar
Chrissanthos, S. G. (1997), ‘Scipio and the Mutiny at Sucro’, Historia 46, 172-184.Google Scholar
Clark, J. H. (2016), ‘Were Tribuni Militum First Elected in 362 or 311 BCE?’, Historia 65, 275-297.Google Scholar
Coarelli, F. (1986), Il Foro Romano, I, Periodo Arcaico, 2nd edn. Rome.Google Scholar
Cornell, T. J. (1989a), ‘The Recovery of Rome’, in F. W. Walbank, A. E. Astin, M. W. Frederiksen, and R. M. Ogilvie (eds), The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. 7.2, 2nd edn. 309-350. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Cornell, T. J. (1989b), ‘The Conquest of Italy’, in F. W. Walbank, A. E. Astin, M. W. Frederiksen, and R. M. Ogilvie (eds), The Cambridge Ancient History vol. 7.2, 2nd edn. 351-419. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Cornell, T. J. (1995), The Beginnings of Rome. Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (c. 1000-264 BC). London.Google Scholar
Cornell, T. J. (2000), ‘The Lex Ovinia and the Emancipation of the Senate’, in C. Bruun (ed.), The Roman Middle Republic. Politics, Religion, and Historiography c. 400-133 B.C. 69-89. Rome.Google Scholar
Drogula, F. K. (2015), Commanders and Command in the Roman Republic and Early Empire. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Eckstein, A. M. (2006), Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Elster, M. (2003), Die Gesetze der mittleren römischen Republik. Text und Kommentar. Darmstadt.Google Scholar
Erdkamp, P. (2007), ‘War and State Formation in the Roman Republic’, in P. Erdkamp (ed.), A Companion to the Roman Army. 96-113. Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Forsythe, G. (2005), A Critical History of Early Rome. From Prehistory to the First Punic War. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Frederiksen, M. (1984), Campania. London.Google Scholar
Fronda, M. P. (2010), Between Rome and Carthage. Southern Italy During the Second Punic War. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galsterer, H. (1976), Herrschaft und Verwaltung im republikanischen Italien. Die Beziehungen Roms zu den italischen Gemeinden vom Latinerfrieden 338 v.Chr. bis zum Bundesgenossenkrieg 91 v.Chr. Munich.Google Scholar
Gnade, M. (2002), Satricum in the Post-Archaic Period. A Case Study of the Interpretation of Archeological Remains as Indicators of Ethno-Cultural Identity. Leuven.Google Scholar
Grossmann, L. (2009), Roms Samnitenkriege. Historische und historiographische Untersuchungen zu den Jahren 327-290 v.Chr. Düsseldorf.Google Scholar
de Haas, T. C. A. (2011), Fields, Farms and Colonists. Intensive Field Survey and Early Roman Colonization in the Pontine Region, Central Italy, vol. 1. Groningen.Google Scholar
Hantos, T. (2003), ‘Über die Entstehung von Herrschaft (am Beispiel der praefecti socium im römisch-republikanischen Heer)’, in T. Hantos (ed.), Laurea Internationalis. Festschrift für Jochen Bleicken zum 75. Geburstag. 313-330. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Harris, W. V. (1979), War and Imperialism in Republican Rome, 327-70 B.C. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harris, W. V. (1984), The Imperialism of Mid-Republican Rome. Rome.Google Scholar
Heurgon, J. (1973), The Rise of Rome to 264 B.C., translated by J. Willis. London.Google Scholar
Hölkeskamp, K.-J. (1993), ‘Conquest, Competition and Consensus: Roman Expansion in Italy and the Rise of the “Nobilitas”’, Historia 42, 12-39.Google Scholar
Hölkeskamp, K.-J. (2001), ‘Capitol, Comitium und Forum. Öffentliche Räume, sakrale Topographie und Erinnerungslandschaften der römischen Republik’, in S. Faller (ed.), Studien zu antiken Identitäten. 97-132. Würzburg.Google Scholar
Hölkeskamp, K.-J. (2004), Rekonstruktionen einer Republik. Die politische Kultur des antiken Rom und die Forschung der letzten Jahrzehnte. Munich.Google Scholar
Hölkeskamp, K.-J. (2011), Die Entstehung der Nobilität. Studien zur sozialen und politischen Geschichte der Römischen Republik im 4. Jh. v.Chr., 2nd edn. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Hölkeskamp, K.-J. (2014), ‘In Defense of Concepts, Categories, and Other Abstractions: Remarks on a Theory of Memory (in the Making)’, in K. Galinsky (ed.), Memoria Romana. Memory in Rome and Rome in Memory. 63-70. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Hölscher, T. (2001), ‘Die Alten vor Augen. Politische Denkmäler und öffentliches Gedächtnis im republikanischen Rom’, in G. Melville (ed.), Institutionalität und Symbolisierung. Verstetigungen kultureller Ordnungsmuster in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart. 183-211. Cologne.Google Scholar
Humbert, M. (1978), Municipium et civitas sine suffragio. L’organisation de la conquête jusqu’à la guerre sociale. Rome.Google Scholar
Humm, M. (2005), Appius Claudius Caecus. La république accomplie. Rome.Google Scholar
Humm, M. (2015), ‘From 390 BC to Sentinum. Political and Ideological Aspects’, in B. Mineo (ed.), A Companion to Livy. 342-366. Chichester.Google Scholar
Ilari, V. (1974), Gli Italici nelle strutture militari romane. Milan.Google Scholar
Jehne, M. (2006), ‘Römer, Latiner und Bundesgenossen im Krieg. Zu Formen und Ausmaß der Integration in der republikanischen Armee’, in M. Jehne and R. Pfeilschifter (eds), Herrschaft ohne Integration. Rom und Italien in republikanischer Zeit. 243-268. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Jehne, M. (2011), ‘The Rise of the Consular as a Social Type in the Third and Second Centuries BC’, in H. Beck, A. Duplá, M. Jehne, and F. Pina Polo (eds), Consuls andRes Publica. Holding High Office in the Roman Republic. 211-231. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jehne, M. and Pfeilschifter, R.(2006), ‘Einleitung: Zum Charakter der römischen Herrschaft in Italien’, in M. Jehne and R. Pfeilschifter (eds), Herrschaft ohne Integration. Rom und Italien in republikanischer Zeit. 7-22. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Kent, P. A. (2012a), The Roman Army’s Emergence from its Italian Origins. Diss. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Kent, P. A. (2012b), Reconsidering socii in Roman Armies Before the Punic Wars’, in S. T. Roselaar (ed.), Processes of Integration and Identity in the Roman Republic. 71-84. Leiden.Google Scholar
Keppie, L. (1987), The Making of the Roman Army from Republic to Empire. London.Google Scholar
Lanfranchi, T. (2015), Les tribuns de la plèbe et la formation de la République romaine, 494-287 avant J.-C. Rome.Google Scholar
de Ligt, L. (2012), Peasants, Citizens and Soldiers. Studies in the Demographic History of Roman Italy 225 BC – AD 100. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linke, B. (1995), Von der Verwandtschaft zum Staat. Die Entstehung politischer Organisationsformen in der frührömischen Geschichte. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Linke, B. (2013), ‘Die Einheit nach der Vielfalt. Die religiöse Dimension des römischen Hegemonialanspruches in Latium (5.-3. Jahrhundert v.Chr.)’, in M. Jehne, B. Linke, and J. Rüpke (eds), Religiöse Vielfalt und soziale Integration. Die Bedeutung der Religion für die kulturelle Identität und die politische Stabilität im republikanischen Italien. 69-94. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Linke, B. (2016), ‘Die Nobilität und der Sieg: Eine komplizierte Beziehung’, in M. Haake and A.-C. Harders (eds), Politische Kultur und soziale Struktur im republikanischen Rom. Akten der internationalen Tagung anlässlich des 70. Todestages von Friedrich Münzer (Münster, 18.-20. Oktober 2012). 384-404. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Lomas, K. (1993), Rome and the Western Greeks, 350 BC – AD 200. Conquest and Acculturation in Southern Italy. London.Google Scholar
Lomas, K. (2012), ‘The Weakest Link: Elite Social Networks in Republican Italy’, in S. T. Roselaar (ed.), Processes of Integration and Identity in the Roman Republic. 197-214. Leiden.Google Scholar
Lomas, K. (2015), ‘Rome, Magna Graecia, and Sicily in Livy from 326 to 200 BC’, in B. Mineo (ed.), A Companion to Livy. 52-64. Chichester.Google Scholar
Martinez-Pinna, J. (2014), ‘Ardea, Sutrium y Nepet: tres casos de “colonización interna”’, Gerion 32, 125-136.Google Scholar
Mineo, B. (ed.) (2015), A Companion to Livy. Chichester.Google Scholar
Moltesen, M. and Brandt, J. R.(1994), Excavation at La Giostra. A Mid-Republican Fortress outside Rome. Rome.Google Scholar
Mouritsen, H. (1998), Italian Unification. A Study in Ancient and Modern Historiography. London.Google Scholar
Mouritsen, H. (2007), ‘The civitas sine suffragio: Ancient Concepts and Modern Ideology’, Historia 56, 141-158.Google Scholar
Münzer, F. (1920), Römische Adelsparteien und Adelsfamilien. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
North, J. (1981), ‘The Development of Roman Imperialism’, JRS 71, 1-9.Google Scholar
Oakley, S. P. (1997-2005), A Commentary on Livy, Books VI-X, 4 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1985), Fortress Attica. Defense of the Athenian Land Frontier, 404-322 B.C. Leiden.Google Scholar
Pelgrom, J. (2008), ‘Settlement Organization and Land Distribution in Latin Colonies Before the Second Punic War’, in L. de Ligt (ed.), People, Land, and Politics. Demographic Development and the Transformation of Roman Italy, 300 BC – AD 14. 333-372. Leiden.Google Scholar
Pelgrom, J. (2014), ‘Roman Colonization and the City-state Model’, in T. Stek and J. Pelgrom (eds), Roman Republican Colonization. New Perspectives from Archaeology and Ancient History. 73-85. Rome.Google Scholar
Pfeilschifter, R. (2007), ‘The Allies in the Republican Army and the Romanization of Italy’, in R. Roth and J. Keller (eds), Roman by Integration: Dimension of Group Identity in Material Culture and Text. 27-42. Portsmouth.Google Scholar
Poma, G. (1990), ‘Considerazioni sul processo di formazione della tradizione annalistica: Il caso della sedizione militare del 342 a.C.’, in W. Eder (ed.), Staat und Staatlichkeit in der frühen römischen Republik. 139-157. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Rathbone, D. (1993), ‘The Census Qualifications of the assidui and the prima classis ’, in H. Sancisi-Weerdenburg (ed.), De Agricultura: In Memoriam Pieter Willem de Neeve (1945-1990). 121-152. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Rawlings, L. (2007), ‘Army and Battle During the Conquest of Italy (350-264 BC)’, in P. Erdkamp (ed.), A Companion to the Roman Army. 45-62. Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Rawson, E. (1971), ‘The Literary Sources for the Pre-Marian Army’, PBSR 39, 13-31.Google Scholar
Rawson, E. (1977), ‘More on the Clientelae of the Patrician Claudii’, Historia 26, 340-357.Google Scholar
Richardson, J. H. (2011), ‘Ap. Claudius Caecus and the Corruption of the Roman Voting Assemblies: a New Interpretation of Livy 9.46.11’, Hermes 139(4), 454-463.Google Scholar
Roselaar, S. T. (2009), ‘ Assidui or proletarii? Property in Roman Citizen Colonies and the vacatio militiae ’, Mnemosyne 62, 609-623.Google Scholar
Roselaar, S. T. (2010), Public Land in the Roman Republic. A Social and Economic History of Ager Publicus in Italy, 396-89 BC. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenstein, N. (2007), ‘Aristocratic Values’, in N. Rosenstein and R. Morstein-Marx (eds), A Companion to the Roman Republic. 365-382. Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Rosenstein, N. (2010), ‘Phalanges in Rome?’, in G. G. Fagan and M. Trundle (eds), New Perspectives on Ancient Warfare. 289-303. Leiden.Google Scholar
Sage, M. (2013), ‘The Rise of Rome’, in B. Campbell and L. A. Trittle (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Warfare in the Classical World. 216-235. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salmon, E. T. (1956), ‘The Resumption of Hostilities after the Caudine Forks’, TAPA 87, 98-108.Google Scholar
Salmon, E. T. (1967), Samnium and the Samnites. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Salmon, E. T. (1969), Roman Colonization under the Republic. London.Google Scholar
Salmon, E. T. (1982), The Making of Roman Italy. London.Google Scholar
Scheidel, W. (2004), ‘Human Mobility in Roman Italy, I: The Free Population’, JRS 94, 1-24.Google Scholar
Schmuhl, Y. (2006), Römische Siegesmonumente republikanischer Zeit. Untersuchungen zu Ursprüngen, Erscheinungsformen und Denkmalpolitik. Hamburg.Google Scholar
Sehlmeyer, M. (1999), Stadtrömische Ehrenstatuen der republikanischen Zeit:Historizität und Kontext von Symbolen nobilitären Standesbewußtseins. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Serrati, J. (2011), ‘The Rise of Rome to 264 BC’, in D. Hoyos (ed.), A Companion to the Punic Wars. 9-27. Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Smith, C. J. (2012), ‘The Feriae Latinae ’, in J. R. Brandt and J. W. Iddeng (eds), Greek & Roman Festivals. Content, Meaning & Practice. 267-288. Oxford.Google Scholar
Stek, T. and Pelgrom, J.(eds) (2014), Roman Republican Colonization. New Perspective from Archaeology and Ancient History. Rome.Google Scholar
Steinby, C. (2007), The Roman Republican Navy: From the Sixth Century to 167 B.C. Helsinki.Google Scholar
Stouder, G. (2015), ‘From 390 BC to Sentinum: Diplomatic and Military Livian History’, in B. Mineo (ed.), A Companion to Livy. 329-341. Chichester.Google Scholar
Taylor, L. (2013), The Voting Districts of the Roman Republic. The Thirty-Five Urban and Rural Tribes, reprinted with updated material by J. Linderski. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Terrenato, N. (2014), ‘Private Vis, Public Virtus. Family Agendas During the Early Roman Expansion’, in T. Stek and J. Pelgrom (eds), Roman Republican Colonization. New Perspectives from Archaeology and Ancient History. 45-59. Rome.Google Scholar
Timpe, D. (1972), ‘Fabius Pictor und die Anfänge der römischen Historiographie’, ANRW I.2, 928-969.Google Scholar
Toynbee, A. (1965), Hannibal’s Legacy, vol. 1. London.Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (2014), ‘Popular Memory’, in K. Galinsky (ed.), Memoria Romana. Memory in Rome and Rome in Memory . 43-62. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Zhmodikov, A. (2000), ‘Roman Republican Heavy Infantrymen in Battle (IV-II Centuries B.C.)’, Historia 49, 67-78.Google Scholar