Emperor Domitian has traditionally been portrayed as a bloodthirsty tyrant. Ancient sources depict him as cruel, paranoid and authoritarian, debauched, deceitful and unpredictable.Footnote 1 Some modern historians have questioned this portrayal, arguing that it is too dependent on a literary tradition that identified with the senatorial faction which was more hostile to Domitian's policies and political preferences.Footnote 2 A reappraisal of the evidence has revealed an emperor who was considerably better prepared for the job than has traditionally been believed and who was a reasonable administrator.Footnote 3 The reaction of other sectors of the Roman population to his assassination, particularly in the provinces and the army, indicates that he was not as universally hated as senatorial propaganda would lead us to believe.Footnote 4 This does not mean, however, that the literary tradition has to be rejected completely. Even Domitian's staunchest advocates acknowledge that he was an autocrat, who could suppress dissent harshly and act tyrannically.Footnote 5
It is puzzling that such an unlikeable figure should be credited with having greatly limited masters' abilities to violate physically the bodies of their slaves by prohibiting the castration of boys. More than a century of scholarship has placed this prohibition among a series of policies aimed at protecting slaves from abuses.Footnote 6 Southern, for example, has even described it as evidence for ‘the humane side of [Domitian's] character’.Footnote 7 Such a policy, however, would better suit a compassionate ruler rather than a tyrannical autocrat who otherwise showed little interest—other than sexual—in the welfare of slaves.Footnote 8 Authors such as Buckland, Watson, Finley and Bradley have taken a more pessimistic standpoint. They have minimized the importance of the ban and questioned its effectiveness, arguing that its re-enactment by later emperors shows that it did little to protect slaves (see below).
The prevalent view on the castration ban, however, is predicated upon a misunderstanding of Domitian's aims, the nature of our Roman legal sources, and the way in which Roman criminal law worked. On the one hand, it is questionable that this prohibition was intended as a protective measure, part of a larger change in Roman attitudes towards slavery. Slaves’ welfare does not seem to have been the primary motive of the emperor's decision. On the other, contrary to the prevailing consensus, there are good reasons to think that the ban was effective and worked exactly as the emperor intended it to work. With these two widespread ideas dispelled, it will become clear that the prohibition is much better understood when analysed in the context of the Roman tradition of moral and sumptuary laws and in view of the role emperors had to perform when they assumed censorial powers and attempted to reform uses and customs.
Despite Domitian's tyrannical reputation, his decision to outlaw castration was highly praised by the literary tradition.Footnote 9 Suetonius also claimed that Domitian regulated the price of eunuch sales, a claim unsupported by other sources (Dom. 7.1):
castrari mares uetuit; spadonum, qui residui apud mangones erant, pretia moderatus est.
He forbade the castration of males; he put down the price of the eunuchs who remained under the power of slave mongers.
According to Cassius Dio, Domitian forbade castration even though he was in love with a eunuch called Earinus, a relationship which outlasted the prohibition for at least almost a decade (67.2.2–3):Footnote 10
πᾶν γὰρ τὸ ὑπὲρ τοὺς πολλοὺς ἀγαπηθέν τε ὑπ᾽ αὐτῶν καὶ δυνηθὲν ἐν ἐχθροῦ μοίρᾳ ἐτίθετο. καὶ διὰ τοῦτο, καίπερ καὶ αὐτὸς Ἐαρίνου τινὸς εὐνούχου ἐρῶν, ὅμως, ἐπειδὴ καὶ ὁ Τίτος ἰσχυρῶς περὶ τοὺς ἐκτομίας ἐσπουδάκει, ἀπηγόρευσεν ἐπὶ ἐκείνου ὕβρει μηδένα ἔτι ἐν τῇ τῶν Ῥωμαίων ἀρχῇ ἐκτέμνεσθαι.
[Domitian] placed amongst his enemies anyone who was loved above the rest by [Vespasian and Titus] and who had gained influence. And because of this, although he himself was in love with a certain eunuch Earinus, none the less, since Titus had got eagerly involved with emasculated boys, so as to show insolence towards him, he forbade that from that moment onwards anyone within the Roman empire should be castrated.
No legal text has survived, however, that ascribes the emasculation ban to Domitian. The jurist Venuleius Saturninus credits it to a senatus consultum from the consulship of L. Neratius Priscus (PIR 2 N 350) and M. Annius Verus (PIR 2 A 118), during Nerva's reign, which punished castration with the confiscation of half of the convict's property (Dig. 48.8.6: Venuleius Saturninus libro primo de officio proconsulis):Footnote 11
is, qui seruum castrandum tradiderit, pro parte dimidia bonorum multatur ex senatus consulto, quod Neratio Prisco et Annio Vero consulibus factum est.
He who handed over a slave for castration shall be fined half his property, according to a senatus consultum which was enacted in the consulship of Neratius Priscus and Annius Verus.
It is difficult to say whether this senatus consultum merely revalidated Domitian's original decree or innovated on it, but the former is probably the case. After all, despite their proclaimed hatred for Domitian, his successors did not radically break away from his policies.Footnote 12 The re-enactment of the emasculation ban as a senatorial decree could well have been a gesture of good will towards the Senate from Nerva, who, knowing how lethal senatorial hostility had been to Domitian, did his utmost to avoid alienating the Senate. To court its favour and restore its prestige, he would have introduced some legislation not as imperial edicts and decrees but as senatus consulta, a common practice during the Imperial period.Footnote 13 Some of these senatorial decisions may have built upon or even just confirmed Domitian's decisions and innovations.Footnote 14
Undated references to the ban are found in the works of the jurist Marcianus and in the Pauli Sententiae (Dig. 48.8.3.4–5: Marcianus libro quarto decimo institutionum):
et qui hominem libidinis uel promercii causa castrauerit, ex senatus consulto poena legis Corneliae punitur. legis Corneliae de sicariis et ueneficis poena insulae deportatio est et omnium bonorum ademptio.
And he who castrates a man for the sake of lust or of a good sale, according to a senatus consultum, is subject to the penalty of the lex Cornelia. The penalty of the lex Cornelia of assassins and poisoners is deportation to an island and the total confiscation of property (Pauli Sententiae 5.23.13):
qui hominem inuitum libidinis aut promercii causa castrauit castrandumue curauit, siue is seruus siue liber sit, capite punietur, honestiores publicatis bonis in insulam deportantur.
He who castrated or arranged the castration of an unwilling man for the sake of lust or of a good sale, [no matter] whether he is a slave or a free man, shall suffer capital punishment; people of higher rank should be deported [after] having their property confiscated.
Unlike Venuleius, Marcianus and the Pauli Sententiae do not qualify the confiscation of property envisaged by the prohibition, a difference which I will discuss later.
Why did Domitian show a sudden concern about this specific mutilation? There is no doubt that the operation of castration could be gruesome. Even if ‘steps were taken to make the process less dangerous’, badly cauterized wounds could lead to a painful death.Footnote 15 Despite its harshness and the risks it entailed, however, emasculation was seldom regarded as a punishment and its consequences were not always detrimental to slaves.Footnote 16 Masters sometimes cut their slaves’ tongues and fingers off, gouged their eyes, or broke their limbs (for example Mart. 2.82; Gal. Anim. Pass. 4; AE 1971, 88). These actions rendered slaves almost worthless and dispensable.Footnote 17 None the less, during the Principate at least, no emperor ever made slave masters criminally accountable for mutilating the bodies of their slaves.Footnote 18 Domitian, however, banned the only type of mutilation which made slaves more expensive and desirable. This selective check of masters’ violence against their slaves should at least bring into question the widespread idea that the emperor's main concern was the protection of slaves’ bodily integrity.
Domitian's interest in this specific type of mutilation is even more puzzling if we take Roman attitudes towards eunuchs into account. Most Roman authors from the Early Principate are bitterly hostile towards eunuchs and show little sympathy for them, probably reflecting a widespread view among the Roman upper classes.Footnote 19 Eunuchs were usually portrayed as a cumulus of vices, physically and morally corrupt.Footnote 20 They were deemed treacherous and disloyal.Footnote 21 Martial and Juvenal despised their effeminacy and lack of virtue and depicted them as perpetrators of adultery and illicit sex.Footnote 22 Tacitus regarded the castration of males as an abominable oriental custom. He claimed that the Parthians did not despise eunuchs, implying that the Romans did (Ann. 6.31). This social reprobation makes eunuchs unlikely candidates to incite the protective instincts of the emperor, especially when other slaves were left to the mercy of their masters’ whims.
Paradoxically, despite the disgust they generated, eunuchs were highly appreciated as sophisticated servants and luxury items. They were highly ‘valued for their attractiveness and desirability’ at least since the second century b.c.Footnote 23 Eunuchs being the ultimate slave, masters paid exorbitant prices for them, as a brief survey of the literature will show.Footnote 24 Pliny the Elder claimed that a certain Clutorius Priscus paid fifty million sestertii for Paezon, one of Sejanus’ eunuchs.Footnote 25 Juvenal complained about parents who gave their children to castration tempted by a good monetary gain (10.304–6). The jurist Vivianus claimed that people castrated boys to make them more expensive (pretiosiores, Dig. 9.2.27.28: Vlpianus). In a sixth-century list of slave prices, a skilled eunuch is valued three times as much as a normal slave (Cod. Iust. 7.7.1.5). Unsurprisingly, ownership of eunuchs became a token of conspicuous consumption amongst the higher ranks of Roman society.Footnote 26 More importantly, being regarded as sophisticated and desirable servants meant that, as in other monarchical ancient and medieval societies, some eunuchs gained power and notoriety within the imperial court during the Julio-Claudian and Flavian dynasties.Footnote 27 They come off the stage during the Antonine period, but resurface during the reign of Caracalla.Footnote 28 According to Lactantius, Diocletian killed the powerful court eunuchs he and previous emperors had relied upon before (De mort. pers. 15), but eunuchs gained notoriety and influence again with Emperor Constantius II (a.d. 337–361; Amm. Marc. 18.4.2–5). In Late Antiquity and in the Byzantine era, they occupied prominent positions of power in the imperial court and in the military.Footnote 29
This apparent contradiction should not surprise us. Ambivalent attitudes towards subordinate groups are not uncommon. Immigrants, for example, are often associated with contradictory traits, some more positive than others.Footnote 30 Subordinate groups can even be particularly appreciated for some jobs and gain prominence in certain professions or in the state bureaucracy even in societies which otherwise discriminate against them.Footnote 31 By the same token, disgust towards and lust for eunuchs could coexist for centuries. But what made eunuchs beautiful and desirable was precisely the operation of castration.Footnote 32 It seems odd, therefore, to regard the castration ban as part of a more general protective policy when its effect was to make slaves less desirable and to curtail their possibilities to climb up the social ladder, become affluent and politically influential, and even enjoy a comfortable life after manumission.
According to Cassius Dio, what moved Domitian was a deep-seated hatred for the memory of his brother, who had a penchant for emasculated boys (confirmed by Suet. Tit. 7.1). This, however, seems to have much more to do with Dio's literary construction of the emperor's character than with the real motives behind the legislation. The relationship between the two brothers may not have been based upon great fondness and affection.Footnote 33 But, as Waters has shown, the odium Domitian allegedly felt for his brother is a post-assassination construct.Footnote 34 In Suetonius’ biography of the emperor, instead, the ban is included in an itemized list of imperial initiatives to modify established customs (in communi rerum usu), such as the suspension of distribution of bread baskets (sportula), the reinstating of public dinners (like those of Augustus: Suet. Aug. 74), and the banning of actors from the stage (Suet. Dom. 7.1). These measures can be seen as part of an actively interventionist policy of social engineering and control which constituted ‘a recurrent motive in Flavian propaganda, from the beginning of the dynasty’.Footnote 35
The moralistic undertones of the emasculation ban are better seen in the legal sources that allude to it. According to Marcianus, the decree of the Senate sought to punish the castration of a man for the sake of satisfying one's sexual urges or making a good sale (libidinis aut promercii causa).Footnote 36 Irrespective of whether these represent how Domitian originally devised his prohibition or a later re-elaboration by the Senate, the wording is revealing. The emphasis is not so much on the slave's welfare, let alone on the preservation of his masculinity and bodily integrity, as on the reasons that led Romans, particularly from the upper echelons of society, to seek eunuchs: lust and profit.Footnote 37 That this moralistic tone may stem from Domitian's original prohibition becomes more plausible if we consider in what capacity he may have introduced it, a question which is elusive in the sources.
The exact date of Domitian's ban is not known. Eusebius placed the ban in the year 2098 of the Abrahamic era (a.d. 82; Jer. Chron. 272F), that is, at the beginning of Domitian's reign. Most scholarship has followed suit and accepted an early date (82 or 83).Footnote 38 Jones, however, implies that this dating stems from ‘Suetonius's apparent confusion of pontifical, legislative and censorial material’ and argued that the ban was introduced at least three years later during Domitian's perpetual censorship.Footnote 39 This is confirmed by Statius, who ascribes the emasculation ban to the censor (Silv. 4.3.14–15):Footnote 40
As Statius was not just contemporary with the events but also a poet at the imperial court, his testimony is fairly reliable. We can, therefore, safely conclude that Jones is right and that Domitian decreed his prohibition as part of the censorial correctio morum, which he embarked on in 85.Footnote 41
Initially concerned with conducting the census, the office of censor gradually expanded its powers, intruding even into the private realm.Footnote 42 Expelling a senator from the Senate or depriving a knight from his public horse was often justified by an appeal to their lack of compliance with the mos maiorum. As this was never formally defined, it gave censors extensive clout and allowed them to target all sorts of behaviours regarded as a danger to the state or to the moral fabric of the Roman Republic. One particular area censors turned their attention to was the curbing of luxury and extravagance. This preoccupation gained centrality as the Roman Republic expanded and opportunities for conspicuous consumption, wealth displays and sexual dissipation widened.Footnote 43 During the Early Empire, the office came to be associated with the control of the sexual morality of the upper classes. Tellingly, Plutarch wrote that the censors’ main concern was to preserve Roman citizens from the allure of pleasure (Vit. Cat. Mai. 16):
κορυφὴ δέ τίς ἐστι τιμῆς ἁπάσης ἡ ἀρχὴ καὶ τρόπον τινὰ τῆς πολιτείας ἐπιτελείωσις, ἄλλην τε πολλὴν ἐξουσίαν ἔχουσα καὶ τὴν περὶ τὰ ἤθη καὶ τοὺς βίους ἐξέτασιν. […] φύλακα καὶ σωφρονιστὴν καὶ κολαστὴν τοῦ μηδένα καθ’ ἡδονὰς ἐκτρέπεσθαι καὶ παρεκβαίνειν τὸν ἐπιχώριον καὶ συνήθη βίον ᾑροῦντο.
This office [the censorship] was atop all civic honours, and was, in a way, the culmination of a political career. It entailed a large variety of powers, including the examination of citizens’ customs and lives … they chose a man to watch, admonish and punish that no one should be led astray by pleasures and deviate from his native and customary mode of life.
It is unsurprising, therefore, that emperors would seize any opportunity to use censorial powers (censoria potestas) or the position itself to present themselves as the bulwark and safeguard of Republican moral and sexual righteousness, while acting as autocratic rulers.Footnote 44 ‘Correcting customs’ was a very effective mechanism to show muscle, to impinge on the private life of the emperor's subjects and to get rid of enemies.Footnote 45 In this sense, the emasculation ban should be seen not as an imperial attempt to protect slaves from abuses but as one more in a long list of provisions directed at controlling and disciplining the behaviour of private citizens, especially but not only from the upper echelons of society.
***
Coupled with this understanding of the emasculation ban as a protective measure is the notion that the prohibition was not particularly effective and that, consequently, it had to be modified and re-enacted. Our legal sources’ disagreement on the penalty envisaged by the ban has given credence to this view. According to Marcianus and the Pauli Sententiae, those who performed castration were deported and lost everything they owned. Conversely, Venuleius Saturninus claimed that offenders were fined only half of their possessions (pro parte dimidia bonorum multatur) and was silent about deportation. Bradley saw this difference between the jurists’ interpretation of the consequences of the ban as proof that ‘Domitian's original order had had little effect’.Footnote 46 This, however, makes little sense: it is difficult to see how making the penalty more lenient would have turned it more effective rather than less. Murison speculated that the senatus consultum alluded to by Marcianus was the original Domitianic resolution, while the tamped down version mentioned by Venuleius was Nerva's attempt to continue Domitian's policy and ‘cast the net wider’ prompted by ‘the necessity of further action’.Footnote 47 While this cannot be entirely ruled out, it is more likely that Domitian promulgated his ban as a censorial edict rather than as a Senate resolution. It is also unlikely that a prohibition would have expanded its scope by becoming half as harsh. Guyot saw Nerva's leniency as an attempt to break away from his predecessor's authoritarian policies.Footnote 48 Hadrian and other post-Nervan emperors, however, specified that performing castrations was punished capitally by deportation and confiscation of property without making any qualifications on the share to be confiscated.Footnote 49 It is hard to believe that they would have preferred to follow the maligned Domitian rather than the ‘good emperor’ Nerva.
Venuleius’ half seizure of property contradicts all legal evidence on Roman capital punishment.Footnote 50 Only non-capital offences entailed a partial confiscation of property and relegatio, which could result in loss of honours and even of status but did not involve loss of citizenship (Dig. 48.22.14.1: Vlpianus).Footnote 51 Conversely, by the late first century a.d. capital punishment entailed the execution of humiliores and the deportatio of honestiores, a type of exile which ‘involved loss of citizenship [and] loss of property’.Footnote 52 Besides, unlike Marcianus and the Pauli Sententiae, Venuleius barely uses ‘operative words’, namely the words of the document cited by the jurist which ‘set out the principle of law’ and which are a good indication that a commentary of a jurist preserves some of the original wording of the law.Footnote 53 Crucially, instead of verb phrases such as Marcianus and Hadrian's poena legis Corneliae puniri/teneri (Dig. 48.8.4.2) or the Pauli Sententiae and Constantine's capite puniri (Cod. Iust. 4.42.1), Venuleius has multare, even though multa was a sub-capital fine.Footnote 54 Venuleius seems to have misinterpreted what penalty the emasculation ban entailed.Footnote 55 It would follow that Nerva's Senate was only confirming Domitian's original prohibition without innovating on its consequences, let alone making it more lenient.
Despite the harshness of the prohibition, demand for eunuchs remained high and it was duly supplied with imports, mostly from the East.Footnote 56 Several imperial rescripts indicate that the practice was not eradicated even within the borders of the Roman empire, where boys continued to be castrated. In a famous rescript to Egnatius Taurinus, proconsul of Baetica (PIR 2 E 34), Hadrian expounded on the legal consequences of castration (Dig. 48.8.4.2: Vlpianus libro septimo de officio proconsulis):
idem diuus Hadrianus rescripsit: ‘constitutum quidem est, ne spadones fierent, eos autem, qui hoc crimine arguerentur, Corneliae legis poena teneri eorumque bona merito fisco meo uindicari debere, sed et in seruos, qui spadones fecerint, ultimo supplicio animaduertendum esse: et qui hoc crimine tenentur, si non adfuerint, de absentibus quoque, tamquam lege Cornelia teneantur, pronuntiandum esse. plane si ipsi, qui hanc iniuriam passi sunt, proclamauerint, audire eos praeses prouinciae debet, qui uirilitatem amiserunt: nemo enim seruumue inuitum sinentemue castrare debet, neue quis se sponte castrandum praebere debet. at si quis aduersus edictum meum fecerit, medico quidem, qui exciderit, capitale erit, item ipsi qui se sponte excidendum praebuit.’
The Deified Hadrian also stated in a rescript: ‘It has been established that men should not be made eunuchs, and those who are charged with this crime are liable to the penalty of the lex Cornelia and their property has to be deservedly confiscated by my treasury. But also slaves who castrated others shall be punished with the severest penalty. And those who are liable for this crime, if they were not present [in court], they have to be tried in absentia as if they were liable under the lex Cornelia. It is clear that, if those who have suffered this damage demand justice, the governor of the province has to listen to those who have lost their virility. For no one should castrate a freeman or a slave, either against his will or with his consent. Nor should anyone offer himself spontaneously to be castrated. And if anyone acts against my edict, the physician who extirpated [the organs] shall suffer capital punishment, as shall he who offered himself to be extirpated.’
Hadrian ordered that whoever performed a castration had to be exiled and have his property confiscated if they were free. If they were slaves, they had to be executed (ultimum supplicium), as they could not own property which could be confiscated.Footnote 57 constitutum quidem est indicates that he was drawing upon existing legislation, either Domitian's prohibition or its re-enactment by a senatus consultum during Nerva's reign.Footnote 58 Hadrian sent another rescript to Ninnius Hasta (PIR 2 N 101), proconsul of Africa in 128 and 129 (Dig. 48.8.5: Paulus libro secundo de officio proconsulis):
hi quoque, qui thlibias faciunt, ex constitutione diui Hadriani ad Ninnium Hastam in eadem causa sunt, qua hi qui castrant.
Those who crush the testicles [of a man], by a constitution of the Divine Hadrian addressed to Ninius Hasta, are of the same class as those who castrate.
Ninnius Hasta's letter to the emperor has not come down to us, but the story is easy to reconstruct. castrare means to cut someone's testicles off with a sharp tool—a knife or a scalpel. thliblias facere involves the removal of testicles by pressing or squeezing, sometimes by accident.Footnote 59 Ninnius Hasta was presumably presented with a man whose testicles had been removed by crushing. If he interpreted the verb castrare in its strict sense, he would have been uncertain of whether the prohibition to castrate covered this case. Hadrian did not see any substantial difference between the two methods and so decided that the penalty applied.Footnote 60
Castration continued worrying emperors even in Late Antiquity, as two imperial letters preserved in Justinian's Code show. In a rescript, Constantine I reminds the military commander of Mesopotamia Aurelius Ursinus (PLRE I page 987, Aur. Ursinus 2) that ‘making eunuchs’ (eunuchos facere) was forbidden in the whole of the Roman empire (Cod. Iust. 4.42.1):
Imperator Constantinus: ‘si quis post hanc sanctionem in orbe Romano eunuchos fecerit, capite puniatur: mancipio tali nec non etiam loco, ubi hoc commissum fuerit domino sciente et dissimulante, confiscando.’ (Const. A. Vrsino duci Mesopotamiae. d. VI K. Mart.)
Emperor Constantine: ‘If anyone after this decree made eunuchs in the whole of the Roman world, may they be punished capitally: the slave, like the place where this act was committed with the knowledge and connivance of the master, shall be confiscated.’ (Constantine to Aurelius Ursinus, commander of Mesopotamia, 24 February [325–337?])
Constantine claimed that castration was to be regarded as a capital crime after ‘this decree’ (hanc sanctionem). It is not clear whether he was referring to his own decision or to a decision of one of his predecessors, but this is immaterial. What matters is that more than two centuries after Domitian introduced the ban, boys were still being castrated.
About a century and a half later, Emperor Leo I forbade the sale of men of Roman stock who had been castrated either in foreign lands or on Roman soil (Cod. Iust. 4.42.2):
Imperator Leo: ‘Romanae gentis homines siue in barbaro siue in Romano solo eunuchos factos nullatenus quolibet modo ad dominium cuiusdam transferri iubemus: poena grauissima statuenda aduersus eos, qui hoc perpetrare ausi fuerint, tabellione uidelicet, qui huiusmodi emptionis siue cuiuslibet alterius alienationis instrumenta conscripserit, et eo, qui octauam uel aliquod uectigalis causa pro his susceperit, eidem poenae subiciendo. barbarae autem gentis eunuchos extra loca nostro imperio subiecta factos cunctis negotiatoribus uel quibuscumque aliis emendi in commerciis et uendendi ubi uoluerint tribuimus facultatem.’ (Leo A. Viuiano P. P. [459–460])
Emperor Leo: ‘We order that the ownership of men of the Roman stock, who have been made eunuchs either in a barbarous country or on Roman soil, can, under no circumstances, be transferred to anyone; and that the severest penalty shall be inflicted upon those who have dared to commit such an offence, including the notary who drew up the instrument of sale or of any other kind of alienation; and he who received the octaua, or anything else by way of tax, shall be subjected to the same penalty. We, however, grant authority to all traders to buy or sell, wherever they please, eunuchs of barbarous nations who have been made such outside the boundaries of our empire.’ (Leo to A. Vivianus, Praetorian Prefect [459–460])
Unlike the concerns of his predecessors, Leo's main concern was the sale of Romans who had been castrated rather than the act of castration itself. The penalty for participating in such transaction had to be the harshest (grauissima)—namely, capital punishment (see above). The measure seems to have been aimed at discouraging the monetary allure of castrating a slave boy to render him more profitable. The import of non-Roman eunuchs from outwith the Roman empire, however, was authorized. In this respect, Leo distanced himself from his predecessors, perhaps acknowledging a practice that brought fiscal profits to the empire (see n. 56 above).
Several scholars have seen these imperial rescripts as proof of the Roman state's lack of will and ability to protect slaves from physical abuse. Buckland, for example, claimed that the interventions of the emperors ‘shew that this legislation was ineffective’.Footnote 61 Following into his footsteps, Finley curtly described Domitian's prohibition as ‘ineffectual’.Footnote 62 Watson saw the severity with which castration was punished as proof that ‘the practice [was] not easily eradicated’.Footnote 63 For Guyot, the numerous occasions in which castration was mentioned in imperial rescripts was a sign that ‘no great emphasis was placed on compliance with the law’.Footnote 64 Bradley dismissed any real concern on the part of Domitian and his successors, and he claimed that the repeated need to enforce the prohibition against castration proves that ‘earlier legislation […] had simply become a dead letter’.Footnote 65 In his textbook on Roman law, du Plessis claims that the survival of castration after Domitian's prohibition made ‘the imposition of strong sanctions’ a necessity, implying not only that the ban was ineffective but also that later emperors such as Hadrian had to make it harsher.Footnote 66 Rotman has been less pessimistic, but he concluded that the legislation ‘did not manage to prevent totally the practice’.Footnote 67 In other words, the alleged ineffectiveness of Domitian's emasculation ban, embodied by the Roman state's inability to eradicate the practice, has become established orthodoxy.
This consensus, however, is predicated upon debatable premises. To begin with, banning a practice does not necessarily make it disappear. The relationship between the severity of punishment and its power of deterrence is never straightforward, and criminal conducts are very seldom totally discouraged by new penalties and prohibitions.Footnote 68 What the enactment of a prohibition shows is not so much that an action or conduct now deemed criminal has ceased to exist, as how the constituted authorities aim to respond in case such action is carried out—in other words, in what manner enacted laws are to be enforced.
More crucially, we should understand what role provincial governors—or some late antique officials and commanders like the duces—played in the administration of justice. As a derivation of their imperium, governors would hear and decide on criminal cases in the jurisdiction they administered. When they were not sure about whether a law applied in a case they were presented with, or how the law had to be enforced, they could consult the emperor or transfer the case to Rome.Footnote 69 The emperor would consult lawyers and jurists about customs and legislation on the matter and would reply to the governors establishing what course of action had to be taken.Footnote 70 As the content and scope of criminal laws was not always clear, consultations with the emperor were common. From Hadrian's time onwards at least, imperial rescripts which shed light on how to settle complex cases and disputes established precedent and had general effect unless they were ‘restricted to a particular case or class or cases’.Footnote 71 Those rescripts became part of the jurisprudence studied in law schools and collected in legal handbooks such as the Pauli Sententiae and the imperial codes of Late Antiquity. The four rescripts quoted above are examples of this. They are all instances of enforcement of Domitian's prohibition (or its later incarnation as a senatus consultum) which show the Roman law machinery working exactly as it was supposed to work. Moreover, the geographic reach and the temporal scope of these rescripts show that the expected response was applied effectively in the whole of the Roman empire, from the Iberian Peninsula to Mesopotamia, and almost four centuries after the prohibition was enacted. Besides, these rescripts were preserved as test cases. It is likely that many other governors had to decide on these matters, but no record of their decisions has survived. According to a late fourth-century author, castrations were still performed but only in secret (occulte) as a result of the terror prompted by the harshness of the punishment (Ps.-Augustinian, Quest. vet. et nov. test. 115.17). It is impossible to know whether he was describing a common practice or merely drawing upon impressionistic and unreliable anecdotal evidence. But even if it failed to eradicate the practice altogether, the ban did act as a deterrent to some extent and, more importantly, the penalty envisaged by it was often exacted upon those who broke the law. In other words, Domitian's ban was anything but dead letter.Footnote 72
CONCLUSION
My reappraisal of Domitian's emasculation ban has led to a reinterpretation of its purpose and effectiveness which differs from the established consensus. The traditional view which sees it as part of a general trend directed at protecting slaves from bodily abuse stems from a modern repulse of ancient practices and a need to find redeeming features in the Roman reliance on slavery. But it has little explicative power. Roman hostility towards eunuchs makes them unlikely candidates for the compassion of Roman rulers. Moreover, as castration appreciated the monetary value of slaves and increased their chances to gain positions of power, it is hard to see banning it as a protective policy, especially when one considers the absence of similar checks on masters’ powers to mutilate the bodies of their slaves.
Rather than as a humanitarian gesture, the emasculation ban is better understood as another measure against the sexual misconduct and the sumptuary practices of the elite which gradually became one of the tokens of the censorial powers wielded by Roman emperors. Introduced as a censorial decree with strong moralistic undertones, the ban gave Domitian the opportunity to present himself as a guardian of Roman sexual morality and an upholder of the most honourable traditions of the Republic he was technically the head of, at the same time as he destroyed any vestige of Republican freedom.
It also makes little sense to see the constant enforcement of the emasculation ban by Domitian's successors as an indication of either its ineffectiveness or the Roman state's lack of will to enforce its policies. If anything, it shows that the legal mechanisms of the Roman state worked precisely as they were intended to in the whole of the Roman oecumene: they may not have made castration disappear, but they punished it harshly whenever a case was brought before a Roman official. When we consider the institutional set-up within which emperors wielded their powers, it is easier to explain why a tyrannical emperor with little regard for slaves suddenly felt the need to introduce the oddest of ‘protections’. Banning emasculation was an effective tool of social control.
This interpretation of Domitian's prohibition could have several implications for our understanding of what is usually viewed as a change of attitudes towards slaves during the Early Principate which resulted in a series of minor ameliorations of the slave condition. If we found that other allegedly protective measures introduced in the Early Principate were prompted by similar concerns and did little or nothing to improve the condition of Roman slaves, we would need to question whether the Roman state ever intended to check abuses and punish violence against slaves even when it was more than capable of doing it.