The abundance of private and voluntary associations was a key characteristic of the Roman world, in the West and in the East, during the late Republic and the High Empire.Footnote 1 Most of the time, those communities were called collegia, corpora or sodalicia and their social recruitment was rooted in the urban plebs, the plebeians.Footnote 2 From a certain point of view, they were very diverse. Indeed, their specific names suggested that their members decided to unite for different reasons: because they had the same occupation, the same geographical origin or the same devotion to a specific god, for instance. Nevertheless, they were usually engaged in very similar activities. All of them were religious associations.Footnote 3 Feasts gave opportunities to have convivial banquets amongst friends, often in a common meeting-place. This collective life followed precise rules that, in some cases, were written down in a single document: a proper regulation.Footnote 4 In a very few cases, associations had such a text engraved and displayed as their lex collegii, ‘law of the collegium’. This expression appears on three long inscriptions and corresponds to a set of rules that members gave to themselves, of their own accord or at the request of a benefactor. The jurist Gaius defined such association rules as a pactio, ‘agreement, contract’, that members were free to draw up, as long as they did not break public laws.Footnote 5 In fact, associations’ regulations included calendars of meetings and ceremonies, as well as various clauses of internal regulation. Nonetheless, they do not provide a global and rational vision of the whole organisation. For example, they do not describe any decision-making procedure, although preserved decrees demonstrate that such a procedure was very codified. Yet this incompleteness is not surprising. Inscriptions of city charters, in particular from Hispania, are a useful parallel in this respect: although they are much longer than associations’ regulations, they still do not offer a global description of city governance either. The leges collegiorum, ‘laws of the collegia’, form a very narrow category of Roman documents, in general, and of inscriptions engraved by associations, in particular. However, we cannot ignore them, and the first part of this chapter intends to briefly present the evidence. However, these leges cannot answer all of our questions by themselves only: they are no doubt fascinating inscriptions, but they become even more interesting when we compare them with the whole epigraphic production of Roman associations and complete their content with information given by other kinds of inscriptions. In fact, lists of members, decrees, honorific inscriptions, religious dedications or association titles inscribed on epitaphs reflect inner regulations too. This epigraphic production reveals a scrupulous attention paid by associations to formal procedures and internal hierarchies.
In this respect, the city of Ostia in the second and third centuries AD provides a great viewpoint on this phenomenon.Footnote 6 A good number of collegia and corpora have left many inscriptions of all kinds, especially lists of members. Ostian epigraphy, like the evidence from other great harbours of the western Mediterranean, preserves the existence of several associations. Many of them were professional associations that gathered individuals who had the same occupation. Some of their crafts and trades were harbour occupations, strictly speaking. For instance, associations of lenuncularii, ‘tugboatmen’, are quite well known:Footnote 7 they were local boatmen who tugged maritime ships or unloaded cargoes at sea. Some of them were called lenuncularii auxiliarii, ‘auxiliary tugboatmen’, because their workboats helped seagoing crafts. Other lenuncularii and/or scapharii were related to a specific traiectus, ‘ferry service’, especially the traiectus Luculli and the traiectus Rusticeli, which were probably linked to specific docks. All of the lenuncularii were divided into five corpora lenunculariorum Ostiensium, ‘corporations of Ostian tugboatmen’, from the first decades of the third century at the latest.Footnote 8 Furthermore, some professional associations unrelated to sea trade also played a great part in Ostia’s urban life. For instance, at the end of the second century AD, the collegium fabrum tignuariorum Ostiensium, ‘association of Ostian carpenters (working with beams)’, had more than 300 members:Footnote 9 although strictly speaking they were carpenters, they also ran building enterprises. In Ostia as much as elsewhere, the cult of a specific god or the celebration of a specific rite was also the raison d’être of many associations. For example, the dendrophori (literally ‘tree-bearers’) every 22 March performed a procession in honour of the goddess Cybele, parading a pine-tree symbolising Attis.Footnote 10 Professional and other associations from Ostia, in particular those mentioned above, give practical information about functioning rules: the second part of this chapter will emphasise this point. Finally, some inscriptions present few Ostian corpora as orders (ordines). The third part of this study investigates the meaning and interpretation of this concept: this is in fact crucial to the understanding of Roman collegia as ‘well-ordered’ groups.
The Preserved Leges Collegiorum
During the High Empire, a few Italian associations engraved their own regulations: these are the object of review in this section.
The lex familiae Siluani, ‘law of the family (that is to say, association) of the god Silvanus’, from Trebula Mutuesca and three other blocks of travertine were part of the same epigraphic monument.Footnote 11 One of them mentions the consuls in charge during the summer and the autumn of AD 60; it also indicates the precise date of 15 July. The regulation was added to an album, ‘membership list’, of seventy-eight cultores, ‘worshippers, members’, maybe shortly after the making of that list. Its clauses were essentially financial: they aim at regulating the use of common funds and at inflicting fines on members who were disrespectful towards the regulations. Rules punished fights and disorder but the familia was essentially concerned with worship, funerals and banquets: it was strictly forbidden to invite to ceremonies people who were not officially members of the collegium and thus registered on the album.Footnote 12 The monument was erected at the expenses of the donor M. Valerius Dexter;Footnote 13 however, M. Valerius Firmus,Footnote 14 probably Dexter’s son, seems to have paid for engraving the law.
The second and very famous lex collegii is the regulation inscribed by the cultores, ‘worshippers’, of Diana and Antinous from Lanuvium.Footnote 15 L. Caesennius Rufus, patron of the city and benefactor of the cultores, asked them to engrave the inscription during a general meeting held in June AD 136.Footnote 16 But the collegium did exist from AD 133. The marble table had the practical utility of recalling common rules. Yet the cultores had not felt the need for it for three years, before their benefactor wished to emphasise his generosity: he had in fact instituted a perpetual foundation of 16,000 sesterces in order to finance annual ceremonies in honour of the collegium’s deities. Moreover, the table of Lanuvium not only was an internal regulation but also alluded to a senatus consultum, a decree of the Roman Senate, whereby the collegium had received the ius coeundi, ‘right of association’. It reminded the common goal: to contribute in order to celebrate the funerals of deceased members. Various clauses then formed the lex collegii itself: it dealt with an entry fee, with the payment of a funeraticium, ‘funerary indemnity’, to the relatives of the deceased – which would cover costs of funerals – and with the organisation of banquets. The collegium did not provide any funeraticium if the deceased had not properly paid his contributions to the association. Some specific cases were also considered, such as death far from Lanuvium, intestate (that is to say, in absence of a will), without burial because of masters’ cruelty or by suicide. About drinks and banquets, dispositions dealt with the calendar of the ceremonies, with privileges and duties of the dignitaries and with correct behaviour.
The regulation of the Roman negotiantes eborarii et citrarii, ‘ivory and citrus-wood workers’, also dates back to the Principate of Hadrian.Footnote 17 The inscription comes from the Trastevere district, where the eborarii et citrarii had their meeting-place (schola). Its text is fragmentary and focuses on banquets and money distributions, which celebrated birthdays of a donor, of his son and of the emperor. Only one general clause, about inclusion of new members, is preserved: it established the dismissal of officials, if they had admitted in the collegium individuals who were not actual eborarii or citrarii. In that case, the collegium had to remove the name of those unscrupulous curatores, ‘officials’, from its album.
The lex collegii Aesculapi et Hygiae, ‘law of the association of Asclepius and Hygieia’, seems so specific that some historians have considered it a simple decree, much more than a real law.Footnote 18 Yet the words ‘lex collegii’ do appear on this stone, engraved in AD 153. It describes a foundation instituted by Salvia Marcellina and her brother-in-law, the imperial freedman P. Aelius Zeno: they were the collegium’s mother and father. Above all, the so-called law precisely set a festive calendar. It also reveals funerary activities, as in Lanuvium and Trebula Mutuesca. The inscription also refers to a fine inflicted on officials (quinquennales or curatores) who would not enforce the rules – however, given its deterrent amount of 20,000 sesterces, it is likely that the collegium never imposed such a penalty.Footnote 19
In addition to regulations proper, a very few inscriptions contain reference to leges collegiorum. In Pozzuoli, the corpus Heliopolitanorum, ‘association of Heliopolitans’, gathered the cultores Iouis Heliopolitani Berytenses qui Puteoli consistent, ‘Berytian worshippers of Heliopolitan Jupiter, who are settled in Pozzuoli’.Footnote 20 This religious association of Levantine migrants possessed a field, with a cisterna, ‘cistern’, and tabernae, ‘stalls’: its property consisted in a ius possessorum (literally a ‘right of holders’) that the cultores could keep, if they did nothing against the association law.Footnote 21 Finally, we may leave Italy just for a moment and mention a wax-tablet discovered in Alburnus Maior in Dacia with the act of dissolution of a collegium Iouis Cerneni, ‘association of Jupiter Cernenus’Footnote 22 Its curatores had in fact rendered their accounts for good: the number of contributors had become too low to ensure the proper functioning of the association and the cultores of Jupiter Cernenus had not met on the days prescribed by their law for a long time.Footnote 23
This small group of documents recording regulations by collegia has recently grown, thanks to three new documents from Ostia published by N. Laubry and F. Zevi.Footnote 24 Amongst these three fragments, one belongs to an already-known document; the two others are independent. They are related to three unknown communities, which organised funerary services for their members. The first of them might have been related to the cult of Cybele, given its discovery in the Campus Magnae Matris, the area in the southern part of Ostia where a temple complex of Cybele was built in the Hadrianic period.Footnote 25 The second fragment is an opisthograph:Footnote 26 the vestige of an album appears on one side, whereas the text inscribed on the other side is identical to the first fragment. This makes hypothetical restorations easier, even though only a very small part of the original inscription can be determined. At any rate, we are able to recover its general meaning. The text recalls an important decision of the Roman Senate, taken at the request of the emperor in AD 121. In fact, during the Principate of Hadrian, the right of association, settled by Augustus around 7 BC, went through a significant shift: this change might have consisted in the recognition of funerary activities as a criterion of public usefulness, whereby associations could be formally authorised.Footnote 27 Apparently, the inscriptions from Ostia aimed at celebrating a public decision: by engraving such a document, the main goal of the collegia had probably nothing to do with the regulation of their common life, from an internal point of view – even though rules about funerary activities may have of course followed the quotation of the senatus consultum. The third fragment certainly belonged to a lex collegii:Footnote 28 it dealt with money distribution during members’ funerals (exequiarium) and with the curatores in charge of these ceremonies; it further mentions the contribution of one amphora of wine, in uncertain circumstances, as well as a procedure of accountability that had to be followed; fines were also inflicted in case of dispute or fight.
To sum up, the fragments from Ostia, the lex familiae Siluani and the lex collegii Dianae et Antinoi obviously belong to the same typology of documents and attest a common practice, with interesting similarities and dissimilarities between them. The recent publication of new evidence gives us hope for progress in the field; however, we should probably not raise our expectations too high. New discoveries will scarcely change the picture, because Roman associations did not usually engrave their regulations. It was a much less common practice than the drawing-up of an album: it suffices to compare, for instance, the three possible fragments of leges collegiorum with the much higher number of fragmentary membership lists preserved from Ostia.Footnote 29 Most of the time, regulations were not inscribed for their own sake but only to celebrate a benefaction: a financial gift or a favourable public decision. As a result, we have to consider the whole epigraphic production of Roman associations to better appreciate their internal rules.
The Rules at Work in the Epigraphic Habit of Associations
The epigraphic production of Ostian associations, in general, reveals information concerning internal rules. First, few inscriptions point to the fact that associations kept their own archives. In Ostia, two secretaries of a professional association of carpenters, the collegium fabrum tignuariorum, are attested on an album engraved in AD 198 and on the epitaph of C. Similius Philocyrius.Footnote 30 This man ran the association as president (magister quinquennalis) between AD 235 and 239. When he was a secretary, he probably wrote official acts, to ensure that the association had carried out formal procedures in compliance with its rules.Footnote 31 Those archives constitute a ‘lost memory’, to which few Ostian inscriptions give an indirect access.
Some of the texts refer to admission and exclusion procedures. Admission in a collegium was called adlectio and required the payment of an entry fee. Cn. Sentius Felix’s epitaph reflects this procedure.Footnote 32 Many Ostian associations picked him out as a patron and, in his later years, that is to say in the first decades of the second century AD, he became a public magistrate of Ostia. Before that, he had made his fortune in maritime trade, as shown by his membership in associations of ship-owners and of wine merchants. On his funerary altar, his adoptive son, Cn. Sentius Lucilius Gamala Clodianus, called him a gratis adlectus inter nauicularios maris Hadriatici et ad quadrigam fori uinarii, ‘member admitted for free to the ship-owners of the Adriatic sea and to the association of the wine market’. In order to pay homage to him, both associations exempted him from an admission fee. Cn. Sentius Felix’s exemption seems very honorific, because the lex collegii from Lanuvium insists on cultores paying their fee.Footnote 33 In fact, the word adlectio appears in three laws, engraved by the negotiantes eborarii et citrarii, ‘ivory and citrus-wood workers’, the cultores Dianae et Antinoi, ‘worshippers of Diana and Antinous’ and the cultores Aesculapi et Hygiae, ‘worshippers of Asclepius and Hygieia’. Therefore, Cn. Sentius Felix’s epitaph implies the existence of rules mentioned sporadically by leges collegiorum. Those are fundamental rules, insofar as they reveal the voluntary nature of Roman associations: as a matter of fact, admissions required an application, which could be approved or rejected.Footnote 34
Moreover, associations could expel members who refused to follow common rules.Footnote 35 Laws give almost no information about this exclusion procedure. Only the regulation of the ivory and citrus-wood workers threatens dishonest curatores with dismissal.Footnote 36 Yet, many associations would have pronounced exclusions when the other sanctions – fines especially – had been inefficient. The epigraphic habit seems to shed light on such procedures through erasures on membership lists. Those hammered-out obliterations tend to reveal expulsions, not only simple updates. In fact, the Greek letter theta, engraved next to a name, could indicate a member’s death,Footnote 37 while expulsion from associations may have led to a form of damnatio memoriae.Footnote 38 Although the album of the corpus corporatorum qui pecuniam ad ampliandum templum contulerunt, ‘association of the members who collected funds for the enlargement of the temple’, has unfortunately been lost for centuries,Footnote 39 several early modern copies exist and are reliable for the restitution of the text. The corporati, ‘members’, who contributed to enlarge their temple were in fact members of the corpus scaphariorum et lenunculariorum traiectus Luculli, ‘association of ship-men and tugboatmen of the ferry service of Lucullus’, one of the five associations of boatmen working in the harbour system of Ostia and Portus.Footnote 40 They had their list completed from AD 140 to 172 and erased the names of three corporati. It is tempting to link their probable exclusion with the contributions imposed. Another erasure appears on a later list of nomina corporatorum, ‘members’ names’, inscribed in AD 262.Footnote 41 It mentions patrons and members of a plebs, amongst whom were many Titi Tinucii. Their community was considered as unknown until now, but the comparison between this document, a fragmentary honorific text and a piece of an album allows a possible hypothesis for identification:Footnote 42 the Ostian corpus, in which the Titi Tinucii are so numerous during the second third of the third century AD, might be the corpus traiectus Rusticeli, ‘association of the ferry service of Rusticelus’, another of the five corpora of the boatmen of Ostia. A third and last small fragment is characterised by an erasure, but the corporati who had the list inscribed remain unknown.Footnote 43
Epigraphy provides evidence about decision making and elections too. The structure of Ostian membership lists implies procedures that aimed at assigning titles to patrons and dignitaries. Patrons did not belong to associations themselves:Footnote 44 as protectors, they were in fact not amongst the group, but above it; therefore, they were listed at the top. Senators and then Roman knights are sometimes named with precedence.Footnote 45 A codified procedure granted the rank of patron but neither the leges collegiorum nor the inscriptions from Ostia give information about it; conversely, this is known from few tabulae patronatus, ‘patronage’s records’, from other Italian cities. For instance, a bronze slab, given in AD 256 by an association of craftsmen (collegium fabrum) from Pisaurum to its new patrons, describes a procedure modelled on senatorial and decurional decrees.Footnote 46 The speech of the magistrates in front of all the members (‘uniuersi collegae conuenerunt’) preceded a formal vote (‘censuer(unt)’). A deputation had to announce the decision to the patrons, to whom the tabula was offered.
Likewise, the mention of officials implies specific rules about elections and title assignment.Footnote 47 In Ostia, the most frequent title for a president was quinquennalis or magister quinquennalis.Footnote 48 Furthermore, many inscriptions refer to the lustrum, the five-year term of office, of each magister quinquennalis of the fabri tignuarii.Footnote 49 For example, C. Similius Philocyrius served during the thirty-sixth lustrum of the collegium. As a matter of fact, the term of office was precisely defined in every Ostian association. In the best-known communities, the number of quinquennales in charge also reflects a high level of stability: the fabri tignuarii always had three quinquennales, certainly in accordance with a formal rule, observed for two centuries. Furthermore, in a few Ostian associations, there was a hierarchy between quinquennales (incumbent officials) and former quinquennales. Those who had received the title of honorary president were styled quinquennales perpetui; before this formal recognition, they were only called quinquennalicii. For a long time, the corpus lenunculariorum traiectus Luculli was the only association known for this organisation. But a small fragment of an album suggests that it did exist amongst the lenuncularii tabularii auxiliarii, ‘auxiliary tugboatmen’, too.Footnote 50 The distinction between quinquennalicii and quinquennales perpetui underlined a strong attachment to codified procedures.
The decision-making process, which led associations to adopt decrees, involves precise functioning rules too. They probably dealt not only with meetings and voting procedures but also with enforcement of common decisions. The expression cura agentibus, ‘through the care of’, followed by the names of officials, is quite frequent in Ostian inscriptions: it is mainly inscribed on statue bases,Footnote 51 but we can also read it on a temple architrave, one that the collegium fabrum tignuariorum dedicated to the deified emperor Pertinax.Footnote 52 In that case, the words cura(m) agentibus suggest an acceptance of work that may have legal implications. The tribute paid to the Roman knight Q. Calpurnius Modestus by the association of the Ostian grain merchants during the mid-second century AD is interesting too.Footnote 53 It describes an action of this corpus through the application of a common decree by two quinquennales and two quaestores, ‘treasurers’. The reference to these financial magistrates recalls the accountability briefly mentioned in a few regulations.Footnote 54 Hence, the use of common funds required formal rules that quaestores had to follow.
Finally, epigraphy does not simply reflect rules: epigraphic habit was sometimes a means for ensuring the respect for rules. We have seen that several regulations have been inscribed on stone in the context of foundations: benefactors wanted to be sure that associations would not forget or neglect their will. Display of inscriptions in common headquarters results from this concern. Conversely, the Ostian dendrophori honoured their benefactors and displayed the self-awareness of their duties towards them with another kind of inscription: a marble slab placed in their schola, ‘clubhouse’, listed all the benefactors’ birthdays that the worshippers of Cybele and Attis had to celebrate.Footnote 55 One of the benefactors was the patron and quinquennalis perpetuus C. Iulius Cocilius Hermes, who apparently cared a lot about the permanency of his foundation: he gave 6,000 sesterces to the dendrophori, in addition to a silver statue, and required them to celebrate his birthday, using the interest accruing from his gift for the payment of the related expenses – otherwise, the money would be given to the fabri tignuarii Ostienses.Footnote 56 Another example is A. Egrilius Faustus, quinquennalis of the lenuncularii traiectus Luculli, who had instituted a testamentary foundation for the benefit of his corpus: it was written on its album, which gave great publicity to Faustus’ generosity and effort.Footnote 57 Membership lists could also indicate and ensure exemptions from contributions granted to members: amongst the plebeians of his corpus, Sergius Bictor, a shipbuilder from Portus, is described as an immunis, ‘exempt’;Footnote 58 another one was a sesquiplicarius, ‘official entitled to an extra share and a half’, who – like the officials amongst the cultores Dianae et Antinoi – received one and a half more during distributions. Therefore, an album could be a reference document, recording formal decisions.
Furthermore, like the cultores from Lanuvium did above their lex collegii, Ostian associations indicated that they had received a formal authorisation from the Roman Senate. On their album or on other inscriptions, they called themselves associations of corporati quibus ex Senatus consulto coire licet, ‘association’s members to whom right of association has been granted by decree of the Senate’.Footnote 59 The practice was quite frequent, although not systematic: this mention was therefore not at all compulsory. It stemmed from a desire to appear as well-established and thus respectable communities. The fact that some associations presented themselves as an ordo, ‘order’, was part of the same behaviour.
Collegia or Ordines?
Even if available documents give a very partial view of the situation, Roman associations followed precise internal rules. Therein, they intended to constitute well-ordered societies, even though they did not always achieve this objective. Beyond their regulations, the way associations called themselves on inscriptions further shows that they wished to appear as ‘well-ordered societies’. Probably exactly for this purpose, they used the expression ordo corporatorum, ‘order of association’s members’, at the beginning of several Ostian membership lists. A still-unpublished fragment illustrates this point: it belonged to the album engraved in AD 192 by the corpus lenunculariorum pleromariorum auxiliariorum, ‘association of auxiliary boatmen on lighters [used to unload larger freighters]’.Footnote 60 Until now, these boatmen have been known only by another list, from AD 200.Footnote 61 Both inscriptions employed the words ordo corporatorum, as it was the appropriate formulation in such a context. As a matter of fact, the unpublished fragment completes a small series of well-known inscriptions. Two of them are membership lists established by the corpus lenunculariorum traiectus Luculli, also known as the ordo corporatorum qui pecuniam ad ampliandum templum contulerunt, ‘association of the members who collected funds for the enlargement of the temple’.Footnote 62 Likewise, on their membership lists, the lenuncularii tabularii auxiliarii seem to have always defined their group as an ordo corporatorum. Three different lists from AD 152, 192 and 213 tend to prove this.Footnote 63 The true significance of the practice of calling themselves ‘ordines’ is difficult to understand, because the notion of ordo is complex. The word itself is polysemous: we must try to determine its exact meaning on inscriptions engraved by collegia.
On the one hand, this term was partly used in a concrete sense; on the other hand, its use resulted from a practice of imitation. But neither explanation is completely sufficient. The word ordo could mean very concretely a line of things or men placed next to each other: a row. Therefore, one can wonder if Ostian ordines corporatorum were nothing but ordered lists of association members. The expression nomina corporatorum, ‘members’ names’, was sometimes engraved instead of ordo corporatorum, which designated the album as a register.Footnote 64 Yet, on other inscriptions, ordo indisputably meant more than ‘register’ and did not only define a group listed in a hierarchical fashion. Associations’ regulations contribute to prove it.
In the lex collegii Aesculapi et Hygiae, for instance, ordo designated the collegium itself, as an active entity. At the end, the document is in fact presented as a decree passed by ‘our order’ during a general meeting: hoc decretum ordini n(ostro) placuit in conuentu pleno, ‘our ordo issued this decree in a general assembly’. Just before this, the inscription alluded to decisions quos ordo collegi n(ostri) decreuit, ‘which the ordo of our association decreed’.Footnote 65 A statue base from Lavinium, in Latium, helps to understand what ordo could mean in such a context.Footnote 66 It was inscribed first in September AD 227, in honour of C. Servilius Diodorus, a Roman knight who had just become a Laurens Lauinas priest. A stone copy of several documents appears on three faces: the dossier deals with a perpetual foundation, which benefitted the local collegium dendrophorum. In return, C. Servilius Diodorus received the title of patron in AD 228 and sent a letter of thanks. Then, a formal decree was added to the epigraphic dossier on another side of the base. At the beginning of this fourth text, the group gathered to vote the decree is called the ordo collegii dendrophorum: in this document, too, the word ordo seems to designate the group itself, without being a simple synonym of collegium, if we admit that the expression ordo collegii is not totally redundant. Its use may aim at highlighting which kind of community the collegium was, especially when its members met in a general assembly.Footnote 67 In this solemn occasion, the group was ‘ordered’, insofar as the members had gathered officially, hierarchically and sitting next to each other – in rows – to make a legitimate decision. In fact, this point makes the regulation of the negotiantes eborarii et citrarii clearer: members of the collegium convened in a formal assembly, that is to say, as an ordo, and were entitled to erase from the album the names of dignitaries guilty of fraudulent admission, that is to say, to vote their revocation.Footnote 68
However, Roman associations were not ordines in the same way as the senatorial order or the equestrian order. They were neither ordines in the same way as the orders of apparitores, ‘attendants’, assisting the Roman magistrates, nor as the ordines of city councillors or even of Augustales.Footnote 69 Indeed, Roman collegia were private and voluntary associations. They gathered priuati, ‘private persons’, and were free to recruit, or not, individuals who wanted to join them. On the contrary, membership in the ‘real’ ordines resulted from a public decision made by a civic authority and not from a co-optation.Footnote 70 The legal status of Roman collegia was very different. The choice of calling themselves ordines was part of a more general behaviour, which underlines the strong integration of collegia to a broader socio-cultural environment: Roman associations imitated public structures meticulously to gain respectability. For instance, the presidents of the collegium fabrum tignuariorum Ostiensium bore the title of magister quinquennalis; however, they obviously had almost nothing to do with the ‘real’ magistrates from a legal and public point of view. They remained private individuals. Is the expression ordo corporatorum part of the same behaviour? The collegium dendrophorum from Lavinium was defined as an ordo when they voted a decree, which looked exactly like a decretum decurionum, ‘decree of city councillors’. O. M. van Nijf has defined an ‘ordo-making’ process to qualify this mimetic attitude:Footnote 71 it consisted in ‘a form of collective self representation as a respected status group in society, that adopted the form of self representation of the Roman elites’. Hence, Roman associations imitated groups and structures socially and legally very different from them. These higher ordines fascinated the wealthiest members of collegia, who were also the most keen for social climbing: many association dignitaries expected to join an ordo Augustalium or an ordo of apparitores;Footnote 72 they would have entered an ordo decurionum, ‘decurional order’, with enthusiasm, but their social condition or – in the case of the numerous freedmen amongst them – their legal status usually prevented them from doing so.Footnote 73 Hence, they placed this ambition on their sons, who sometimes became decuriones or even members of the equestrian order. To some extent and due to the social motivations of their members, associations would have pretended to be ordines, but were not ‘real’ ordines. Yet, although this explanation is partly right, it is not completely convincing either.
The expression ordo corporatorum reflects the will to appear as ‘well ordered’ communities; however, the notion of ordo is very polymorphic.Footnote 74 Few social groups, different from orders formally defined by public authorities, were also called ordines – and not in a concrete sense. Private associations were no exception. According to Cl. Nicolet, these uses of ordo were metaphorical and hence ‘inappropriate’.Footnote 75 Nonetheless, it is very difficult to distinguish metaphorical usage from realities resulting from imitation. Terminology, behaviours and concrete organisation of Roman associations were closely connected. Of course, the corporati knew that their associations and the senatorial order, for instance, had not much in common. But in their minds, their corpus was a ‘real’ ordo, because it was:
a formally circumscribed group, whose list of members could be precisely established;
a group, whose membership depended on an individual procedure, which provided each member with a hierarchical position (higher or lower);
a group, whose dignitaries exercised an authority on ordinary members, in particular a coercive power in case of fraud or disorder (as shown by fines and exclusions mentioned above);
a group able to make collective decisions (decreta) through formal procedures of deliberation, vote and archiving.
Therefore, the strong connection between the designation as an ‘ordo corporatorum’ and the existence of formal rules for common life must be stressed. Roman associations wanted to appear as well and strongly structured as possible.
A further example of a similar behaviour may be mentioned here. As far as we know, the collegium fabrum tignuariorum Ostiensium never claimed to be an ordo, but its members were supposed to form a numerus caligatorum, ‘group/unit of booted men (sc. soldiers)’.Footnote 76 This expression clearly belonged to military vocabulary and presented the collegium as something it was not: a military unit. Unlike the members of many collegia fabrum in the Roman West, the fabri tignuarii Ostienses did not serve as firefighters, because ‘real’ soldiers detached from the cohorts of the uigiles, ‘watchmen, police force’, from Rome assumed this task.Footnote 77 Therefore, Ostian builders seem to have had no reason to call themselves as an infantry unit, other than their desire to appear as ‘ordered’ as possible, that is to say, as organised and hierarchical as possible. In this respect, we must keep in mind that the word ordo could also mean ‘a line of soldiers standing side by side’. After all, the way in which the collegium fabrum tignuariorum Ostiensium is called does not seem so odd, even though it is definitely ambiguous.Footnote 78
Conclusion
One should not misunderstand what inscriptions display: in fact, it is an ideal and idealised view. This construction does not simply reflect ancient realities. Roman associations were not always a world of ‘well-ordered societies’. In fact, rules and means to enforce them responded to potential disorders or faults in organisation and discipline – things that could be fatal for an association, as the wax tablet with the act of dissolution of the collegium Iouis Cerneni in Alburnus Maior illustrates. This also points to the important aspect that association rules were not simply ideological: although they certainly reflected the civic values of association members, they also served very practical purposes. In a certain way, the rules and the internal organisation, which they sketched, were more than vital, as they lay at the core of what defined an association proper and distinguished it from another group. An association proper was closed, permanent and organised. Without admission and functioning rules, those characteristics are by default missing: an association did not exist without rules, because rules gave birth to it. Etymologically, a collegium might have united individuals under the same lex, under the same rules.Footnote 79 This is what epigraphic evidence and epigraphic habit of Roman associations also emphasise – regardless of etymology. The well-ordered organisation of Roman collegia demonstrates that their members had completely interiorised values and habits, created and embodied with the greatest intensity by other social categories: the elites. Associations’ regulations and their other inscriptions reveal norms of behaviour, festive practices and procedures shaped on those of the city. This reproduction at the scale of collegia was not at all gratuitous and disinterested: this process was a matter of participation, a matter of civic and social integration. Corporati aimed to gain positions in social hierarchies in the most favourable manner. For dignitaries, in particular, a collegium’s respectability, attained through the image of a strictly ordered community, was often a springboard in a quest for prestige beyond associations.