Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
fi nanciers and businessmen. Both classes used their status to acquire
substantial wealth and land holdings in the provinces.
These elites took on compliant kings and chiefs in Spain, Gaul, and
Britain as clients, sponsoring their entry into imperial society. Most
of these former chieftains and war leaders gradually became landed
Roman gentlemen. Roman citizenship did not release them from the
obligation of paying direct taxes, but it brought limited immunity
from local laws and an exemption from tribute and forced labor. NonRomans eventually accounted for a signifi cant portion of the imperial
aristocracy of the later principate. Native-born Italians constituted
90 percent of the Senate under Augustus, but by the beginning of
the second century a.d. only 40 percent of all senators were from
the inner provinces. There was a backlash against ennoblement of so
many provincials under the Julio-Claudians, but Tacitus recorded a
potent speech by Claudius defending the admission of Gallic nobles
to the Senate in a.d. 48:
What else was the downfall of Sparta and Athens, than that they held
the conquered in contempt as foreigners? But our founder Romulus’s wisdom made him on several occasions both fi ght against and
naturalize a people on the same day! . . . If you examine the whole
of our wars, none was fi nished in a shorter time than that against
the Gauls; from then on there has been continuous and loyal peace.
Now that customs, culture, and marriage ties have blended them
with us, let them also bring their gold and riches instead of holding
them apart.14
Later empire builders, who found it essential to keep their subjects
at arm’s length, would have found this unthinkable. Identity was far
Roman
Britain 37
more fl exible in the classical era, and Roman conquerors freely borrowed from subject cultures. They unashamedly worshipped a host
of cults from Germany, Syria, Egypt, and Persia alongside their own
Greco-Roman gods and the divine emperor himself. These syncretic
practices allowed subject elites to embrace an imperial identity without
entirely abandoning their own cultures. Emperor Caracalla’s decision
to make every free resident of the empire a citizen in the early third
century a.d. was most likely a tacit admission that the assimilative
process had gone so far that the formal distinction between citizen
and subject underpinning the crudest forms of imperial exploitation
had become largely meaningless.
Historians of empire often equated this romanization with the
twentieth-century concepts of modernization and westernization on
the assumption that it entailed the progression from barbarism to
civilization. At the elite level Rome’s subjects learned Latin, adopted
Roman manners, copied Greco-Roman architecture, and purchased
Roman products. Yet romanization did not mean the domination
of one culture over another. Imperial society was never uniform
at the grassroots, and the term really meant only an acceptance of
Roman authority. Greeks, Jews, and Egyptians never became Romans,
although to varying degrees they acknowledged Roman rule. If there
was a common imperial identity at the heart of the romanization process, it emerged through cultural exchanges with the subject peoples
of the empire. Romanization thus described the spread of a hybrid
culture that emerged as Romans adopted local norms to govern conquered populations and conquered populations encountered Roman
functionaries, celebrations, monuments, and commerce.
The scope of romanization was relatively limited in the wealthy
and culturally coherent eastern provinces where Alexander the
Great’s empire left a Hellenic counterweight to Roman culture. It had
a greater impact in the west, where less coherent tribal communities
were more open to Rome’s ideas and material culture. Spaniards and
Gauls became senators, but romanization and token citizenship after
Caracalla’s decree probably meant relatively little beyond the provincial level. The evidence is scanty, but it appears that there were no British senators and few auxiliary commanders in the fi rst century a.d.
This convenient lacuna allowed later generations to bend the
Roman imperial record to suit their needs. Debates over the scope
38 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
and infl uence of romanization predictably refl ected the national,
class, and methodological biases of the observer. Insisting that preconquest identities survived under Roman rule, nationalistic British
historians and archaeologists point to the survival of popular Celtic
forms in jewelry and religious shrines in arguing that romanization
infl uenced only a thin layer of Roman British society.15 Alternatively,
just as apologists for the empires of the twentieth century adopted a
balance sheet standard in counting railways, hospitals, and schools as
imperial achievements, those who imagined a civilizing Rome paid
the most attention to roads, aqueducts, villas, art, and literature. By
their reckoning, the high material culture of the empire suggested
that Roman rule was benevolent and uplifting. Depicting preconquest
Britain as affl icted with Hobbesian “endemic warfare,” one sympathetic scholar credited Roman rule with giving Britons the “freedom
to live the good life.”16
This may have been true for the
civitas
rulers who became imperial
gentlemen, but the initial stages of Roman rule brought signifi cant
hardship for subject majorities. Roman conquerors plundered and
disrupted local economies, seized land, and requisitioned labor. As
with most imperial projects, the real wealth of the Roman Empire
came from the exploitation of its subjects. Monumental construction
projects and the enormous surpluses needed to sustain the imperial bureaucracy, military, and artistic classes most likely consumed
wealth produced by huge amounts of coerced labor. Leading citizens
such as Cicero occasionally urged administrators to respect the interests of provincial populations, but defeated peoples were entirely at
the mercy of Roman soldiers, magistrates, and politically connected
metropolitan aristocrats.
Although they may appear cultured and urbane by contemporary
standards, Roman empire builders enslaved conquered populations in
enormous numbers. This was fairly typical behavior in the ancient
world, for victorious armies had the assumed right to dispose of their
captives as they wished. Republican Romans took tens of thousands, if
not hundreds of thousands, of slaves from Carthage, Spain, Gaul, and
captured eastern cities. Rebels continued to meet this fate under the
principate, and Emperor Vespasian enslaved ninety-seven thousand
residents of Jerusalem after razing the city during the Jewish Revolt.
He sent most of them to hard labor in Egypt, but the healthiest and
Roman
Britain 39
best-looking entertained the Roman mob by dying at the hands of
gladiators and wild animals in arenas throughout the empire.17
Imperial apologists point out that educated slaves and freedmen
held signifi cant positions of authority in the emperor’s household and
that owners often manumitted slaves. Admittedly, enslavement did
not mean permanent stigmatization in the modern sense, and Pertinax, who became emperor in the late second century a.d., was the son
of a freedman. Yet these were exceptional cases, for the vast majority
of Roman slaves were the meanest type of manual laborers.
Much of the empire’s wealth between the second century b.c. and
the second century a.d. came from slaves working on great rural
estates in Italy. Slaves constituted approximately 35 percent of the
population of the Italian peninsula under Augustus. An expert on
Roman slavery calculated that the Romans needed to acquire up to
half a million new slaves each year to maintain these levels during
the late republic and early principate.18 A great many of these slaves
faced a grim fate. Their owners worked them like animals, and slaves
could be tortured as a matter of procedure in criminal trials. Tellingly,
massive revolts were common under the late republic. The ability
of the ex-gladiator Spartacus to rally ninety thousand slaves to his
rebellion in 73 b.c. testifi ed to their hopeless and desperate condition,
given that the penalty for revolt was torture and crucifi xion.
The Romans treated slave revolts and provincial rebellions with
such brutality because, like all empire builders, they worried that their
control over their subjects was never completely secure. Defeated
peoples in the Roman Empire tended to rebel in the fi rst generation after the initial conquest, when Roman demands for labor and
taxes were most severe. Organized resistance became less common
late in the fi rst century a.d. after imperial expansion came to an end.
Nevertheless, the Romans still showed no mercy to those who challenged them. On learning that his generals had crushed a revolt by
the Nasamones in the African province of Numidia, Emperor Domitian proudly declared to the Senate: “I have forbidden the Nasamones
to exist.” Similarly, Emperor Severus ordered his forces to be equally
ruthless with enemies who threatened the northern frontier of Roman
Britain in the third century a.d.: “Let no-one escape utter destruction
at our hands; let not the infant still carried in its mother’s womb, if it
be male, escape from its fate.”19 Despite their military supremacy, the
40 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Romans were ever mindful of their security, and these measures were
usually suffi cient to deter potential rebels.
Britons most certainly learned this lesson, but their experience
of Roman imperial rule was not typical. One of the least romanized
provinces in the western empire, it paid meager returns. Yet Roman
Britain fi gures prominently in the imaginations of English-speakers,
for it allows them to pretend that Great Britain is the direct heir of
a grand and majestic Roman Empire. Nonetheless, the Roman era in
British history was not as uplifting or infl uential as contemporary
imperial enthusiasts might imagine.
Classical sources referred to the primary island in the British Isles
as Britannia, thus the inhabitants of this island were Britons. Greek
and Roman sources depict them as prototypical candidates for imperial subjugation. Casting them as giant forest-dwelling barbarians,
Strabo asserted that they had “no experience in gardening or other
agricultural pursuits.” Caesar, who actually visited Britain, granted
that the southern “tribes” were civilized through contacts with more
advanced continental Gauls, but he borrowed from Strabo in describing northern Britons as ferocious tribesmen who lived solely on milk
and meat, dyed themselves blue for war, and shared wives. Tacitus,
who wrote well after the Claudian conquest, continued to depict
northerners as wild and militaristic but added the qualifi cation that
the peace and stability of Roman rule had made them decadent.
For Roman authors and readers, Britain was an alien, exotic land
that was literally beyond the known world. The English Channel was no mere maritime body. It was “Ocean,” a watery boundary that marked the limits of civilization. Life in this remote, cold,
inhospitable, and mist-shrouded land turned Britons into wild men.
In Roman eyes they were a different order of humanity that deserved
conquest.20
These accounts actually tell us very little about the people we now
describe generically as Britons. There were strong continuities in the
material culture of Iron Age southern Britain, but preconquest Britons had distinct and separate identities based on their means of subsistence, political and social organization, and perhaps even language.
Regardless, classical authors invariably portrayed all barbarians—
including Britons—as nomadic, cannibalistic, and sexually immoral.21
These historians provide most of the narrative detail of the Roman
Roman
Britain 41
conquest of Britain, but we need to read them with caution, for most
used Britannia as a backdrop for debates about society and politics
in metropolitan Rome. Evidence demonstrates that Britons, particularly southern Britons, were not isolated and shared a material culture with their Iron Age neighbors across Ocean in Gaul, Belgica, and
Germania.
Contrary to Strabo and Caesar, late pre-Roman Iron Age communities practiced specialized agriculture; mined copper, iron, and tin;
and produced wheel-thrown pottery and fi nished metal goods. The
British Isles most likely experienced signifi cant population growth in
the fi rst century b.c., and competition for resources probably led to
friction and warfare. Britons in the more mountainous northern and
western highland zones had fewer commercial and cultural contacts
with continental Europe, but they produced a suffi cient agricultural
surplus to sustain settled communities. The agrarian lowland regions
of southern Britain supported much higher population densities. In
the rugged regions of Wales and southwest England, populations
clustered around hill forts, while
oppida
, large semiurban settlements