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The Beginnings of Rome: Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (c.1000-264 BC) PDF

527 Pages·2012·10.29 MB·English
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THE BEGINNINGS OF ROME The beginnings of Rome, once thought to be lost in the mists of legend, are now being revealed by an ever-increasing body of archaeological evidence, muchofitunearthedduringthepasttwenty-fiveyears.Thisnewmaterialhas made it possible to trace the development of Rome from an iron-age village to a major state which eventually outstripped its competitors and became a Mediterranean power. The study of this period raises acute questions of historical method, demanding analysis of many different kinds of archaeo logical evidence in conjunctionwithliterarysources. Professor Cornell uses the results of up-to-date archaeological techniques and takes current methodological debates into account. The Beginnings of Rome offers newand oftencontroversialanswers to majorquestions suchas Rome's relations with the Etruscans, the conflict between patricians and plebeians, the causes of Roman imperialism and the growth of aslave-based economy. Coveringtheperiodfrom c.1000BC to 264 BC, The BeginningsofRome is the most comprehensive study of this subject. It is essential reading for all students of Roman history. T.J.CornellisProfessorofAncientHistoryatthe UniversityofManchester. ROUTLEDGE HISTORY OF THE ANCIENT WORLD General Editor: Fergus Millar THE ANCIENT NEAR EASTc. 3000-330 BC AmelieKuhrt THE GREEK WORLD 479-323 BC Simon Hornblower THE BEGINNINGS OF ROME c. 1000-264 BC T.J. Cornell THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD IN LATEANTIQUITY AD 395-600 AverilCameron GREECE IN THE MAKING 1200-479 BC RobinOsborne THE ROMAN WORLD 44 BC-AD 180 Martin Goodman THE GREEK WORLD AFTER ALEXANDER 323-30 BC GrahamShipley THE BEGINNINGS OF ROME Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (c. 1000-264 Be) T.]. Cornell I~ ~~~~~~n~~~up LONDONAND NEWYORK First published 1995 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN Simultaneously published in the USAand Canada by Routledge 270 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016 Routledgeisan imprintofthe Taylor&Francis Group, an informa business ©1995 T.]. Cornell Typeset in Garamond by Ponting-Green Publishing Services, Chesham, Bucks Allrights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British LibraryCataloguing in PublicationData Cornell, Tim Beginnings of Rome 1000-264 B.C. (Routledge History of the Ancient World) 1.Title II. Series 937.01 LibraryofCongress Cataloging in PublicationData Cornell, Tim. The beginnings of Rome, 1000-264 B.C./T.]. Cornell. p. em. - (Routledge history of the ancient world) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Rome-History-Kings, 753-510 B.C. 1.Title. II. Series. DG233.C67 1995 937/.01-dc20 94-43757 ISBN978-0-415-01595-0 (hbk) ISBN978-0-415-01596-7 (pbk) ForMary CONTENTS Listoffigures Xl Lists ofmapsandtables Xlll Preface XIV Listofabbreviations XVll1 INTRODUCTION:THE EVIDENCE 1 1 Historicalaccounts 1 2 The sourcesofoursources: lost historicalaccounts 4 3 The sourcesofoursources: Greek accounts 7 4 The sourcesofoursources:family tradition 9 5 The sourcesofoursources: oraltradition 10 6 The sourcesofoursources: documentsandarchives 12 7 The reliability oftheannalistictradition 16 8 The antiquarians 18 9 The sourcesandmethodsoftheantiquarians 24 10 Archaeologicalevidence 26 2 THE PRE-ROMANBACKGROUND 31 1 Early Italy 31 2 The Italian Iron Age 33 3 Literary evidence 36 4 The languages ofItaly 41 5 Who were the Etruscans? 45 3 THE ORIGINS OFROME 48 1 Archaeologyin Romeand OldLatium:the natureofthe evidence 48 2 The characterofthe settlements 53 3 The ancienttradition 57 4 The origin ofthe legends:RomulusandRemus 60 5 The origin ofthe legends:Aeneasandthe Trojans 63 6 The origin ofthe legends: EvanderandHercules 68 Vll CONTENTS 7 The historicalvalue ofthe legends 70 8 Archaicformulae andinstitutional'fossils' 73 9 The Sabines andearly Rome 75 10 Rome's Indo-European heritage 77 11 Conclusions 80 4 THE RISEOF THE CITY-STATE 81 1 Aristocrats, clans,andthe 'orientalising'phase 81 2 Greek colonisation anditseffects 86 3 Urbanisation 92 4 The city-state:theoreticalproblems 97 5 Literacyanditsuses:the calendarofNuma 103 6 Changes infunerarypractice 105 7 Sanctuaries 108 8 Institutions 114 5 TRADITIONAL HISTORY: KINGS, QUEENS, EVENTS AND DATES 119 1 The seven kings 119 2 The chronologyofthe regalperiod: general 121 3 The chronology ofthe regalperiod: the Tarquin dynasty 122 4 The Tarquins: anewphase ofRoman history? 127 5 Who was Servius Tullius? 130 6 The nature ofkingship at Rome 141 7 Adventurersandtyrants 143 6 THEMYTH OF 'ETRUSCANROME' 151 1 'Etruscheria' 151 2 Etruscan rule in Latiumand Campania 153 3 The Tarquins andthe nature ofEtruscan rule in Rome 156 4 Etruscan culturaldomination 159 5 RomeandEtruscan culture: alternative models 163 6 The evidence ofthe sources 165 7 Conclusion 169 7 THE REFORMS OF SERVIUSTULLIUS 173 1 The localtribes 173 2 The centuriate organisation 179 3 The origins ofthe centuriate organisation: Fraccaro'stheory 181 4 The hoplitephalanx 183 5 Subsequent developments 186 6 Centuriesandtribes:the problem 190 7 Centuriesandtribes:apossible solution 192 8 Politicalimplicationsofthe centuriate reform 194 VI11 CONTENTS 8 THE POWEROF ROME INTHE SIXTH CENTURY 198 1 The walls ofRome 198 2 The sacredboundaryandthe 'city ofthefour regions' 202 3 Territory andpopulation 204 4 'La grande Roma dei Tarquinii' 208 5 The treaty betweenRomeand Carthage 210 9 THE BEGINNINGS OFTHE ROMAN REPUBLIC 215 1 The expulsion ofthe kings 215 2 Theproblem ofchronology 218 3 The 'departure ofthe Etruscans' 223 4 The new republic 226 5 OtherItalian republics 230 6 The separation ofpoliticalandreligiousfunctions 232 7 Conclusion 236 Appendix:anote on the Regia 239 10 PATRICIANS AND PLEBEIANS 242 1 The nature ofthe problem 242 2 Thepatricians, the Senate, andthe cavalry 245 3 The origin andnature ofpatricianprivilege 251 4 The 'closingofthe patriciate' 252 5 The riseoftheplebs 256 6 The 'state within the state' 258 7 Plebeian grievances: debtandfood shortages 265 8 Plebeian grievances:agrarian problems 268 11 THETWELVETABLES 272 1 The Decemvirate 272 2 The Valerio-Horatian Laws 276 3 The nature ofthe code 278 4 The laws:slavery, debtandnexum 280 5 The laws:family andproperty 284 6 The laws:economicimplications 287 7 The laws:socialdistinctions 288 12 WARSAND EXTERNAL RELATIONS, 509-345Be 293 1 Romeandthe Latin League 293 2 The foedus Cassianum anditsconsequences 299 3 Early Latin colonies 301 4 The incursions ofthe Sabines, Aequiand Volsci 304 5 The conflictbetween Romeand Veii 309 6 The Gallic catastrophe 313 7 The Roman recovery 318 8 The beginningsofRoman expansion 322 IX CONTENTS 13 THE EMANCIPATION OFTHE PLEBS 327 1 Economicandsocialproblems:publicland 327 2 Economicandsocialproblems: the debt crisis 330 3 The Licinio-Sextian Rogations 333 4 The riseofthe nobility 340 14 THE ROMAN CONQUESTOF ITALY 345 1 The outbreak ofthe Samnite Wars 345 2 The Latin revoltanditsconsequences 347 3 The SecondSamnite War 352 4 The Roman conquestofcentralItaly 355 5 The battleofSentinum anditsconsequences 359 6 The invasion ofPyrrhusandthe unification ofItaly 363 7 The nature ofRoman control in Italyandthe dynamics of imperialism 364 15 ROME INTHE AGE OFTHE ITALIANWARS 369 1 The transformation ofthe state 369 2 The careerofAppius Claudius Caecus 373 3 The LexHortensia anditseffects 377 4 Economicdevelopments 380 5 Epilogue: Roman societyandculture on the eve ofthe Punic Wars 390 Appendix:anote on early Roman chronology 399 Notes 403 Bibliography 472 Index 492 x

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