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@@ -1,12032 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Private Life of the Romans, by
-Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Private Life of the Romans
-
-Author: Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40549]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Ron Swanson
-
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS
-
-
-BY HAROLD WHETSTONE JOHNSTON
-
-PROFESSOR OF LATIN IN THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY
-
-
-
-
-CHICAGO
-
-SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY
-
-1909
-
-
-
-
-BY THE SAME AUTHOR (_Scott, Foresman and Company_)
-
-SELECTED ORATIONS AND LETTERS OF CICERO
-
-LATIN MANUSCRIPTS
-
-THE METRICAL LICENSES OF VERGIL
-
-
-
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY
-
-
-
-
-ROBT. O. LAW CO., PRINTERS AND BINDERS, CHICAGO.
-
-TYPOGRAPHY BY MARSH, AITKEN & CURTIS COMPANY, CHICAGO.
-
-
-
-
-_CHARLES S. RANNELLS_
-
- _MEMOR_
-_ACTAE NON ALIO REGE PUERTIAE_
-
-_AMORIS CAUSA_
-
-_D D D_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-In preparing this book I have had in mind the needs of three classes
-of students.
-
-It is intended in the first place for seniors in high schools and
-freshmen in colleges, and is meant to give such an account of the
-Private Life of the Romans in the later Republic and earlier Empire as
-will enable them to understand the countless references to it in the
-Latin texts which they read in the class-room. It is hoped that the
-book contains all that they will need for this purpose and nothing
-that is beyond their comprehension.
-
-It is intended in the second place for more advanced college students
-who may be taking lectures on the subjects of which it treats. The
-work of both teacher and student will be made less irksome and more
-effective if the student is aided in the taking of notes by even so
-general a knowledge of the subject (previously announced to the class)
-as is here given. This I know from actual experience with my own
-classes.
-
-In the third place it is intended for readers and students of Roman
-history, who are engaged chiefly with important political and
-constitutional questions, and often feel the need of a simple and
-compact description of domestic life, to give more reality to the
-shadowy forms whose public careers they are following. Such students
-will find the Index especially useful.
-
-The book is written as far as possible in English: that is, no great
-knowledge of Latin is presumed on the part of the reader. I have tried
-not to crowd the text with Latin words, even when they are immediately
-explained, and those given will usually be found worth remembering.
-Quotations from Latin authors are very few, and the references to
-their works, fewer still, are made to well-known passages only.
-
-To every chapter are prefixed references to the standard secondary
-authorities in English and German. Primary sources are not indicated:
-they would be above the heads of the less advanced students, and to
-the more advanced the lecturer will prefer to indicate the sources on
-which his views are based. It is certain, however, that all these
-sources are indicated in the authorities named, and the teacher
-himself may occasionally find the references helpful.
-
-The illustrations are numerous and are intended to illustrate. Many
-others are referred to in the text, which limited space kept me from
-using, and I hope that Schreiber's Atlas, at least, if not
-Baumeister's Denkmaeler, may be within the reach of students in
-class-room or library.
-
-It goes without saying that there must be many errors in a book like
-this, although I have done my best to make it accurate. When these
-errors are due to relaxed attention or to ignorance, I shall be
-grateful to the person who will point them out. When they are due to
-mistaken judgment, the teacher will find in the references, I hope,
-sufficient authorities to convince his pupils that he is right and I
-am wrong.
-
-H. W. JOHNSTON.
-
-THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY,
-
-February, 1903.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.--Scope of the Book §1; Public and Private
- Antiquities §2; Antiquities and History §4; Antiquities and
- Philology §6; Sources §9; Reference Books §13; Systematic
- Treatises §14; Encyclopedic Works §15; Other Books §16
-
-I. THE FAMILY.--The Household §17; The Splitting Up of a House
- §19; Other Meanings of _Familia_ §21; _Agnātī_ and
- _Cognātī_ §23; _Adfīnēs_ §26; The Family Cult §27; Adoption
- §30; The _Patria Potestās_ §31; Limitations §32; Extinction
- of the _Potestās_ §34; _Manus_ §35; _Dominica Potestās_ §37
-
-II. THE NAME.--The Triple Name §38; The _Praenōmen_ §41; The
- _Nōmen_ §46; The _Cognōmen_ §48; Additional Names §51;
- Confusion of Names §55; Names of Women §57; Names of Slaves
- §58; Names of Freedmen §59; Naturalized Citizens §60
-
-III. MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN.--Early Forms of Marriage
- §61; _Iūs Cōnūbiī_ §64; _Nūptiae Iūstae_ §67; Betrothals
- §70; The Dowry §72; Essential Forms §73; The Wedding Day
- §75; The Wedding Garments §76; The Ceremony §79; The
- Wedding Feast §85; The Bridal Procession §86; The Position
- of Women §90
-
-IV. CHILDREN AND EDUCATION.--Legal Status §94; _Susceptiō_ §95;
- _Diēs Lūstricus_ §97; The _Bulla_ §99; Nurses §100;
- Playthings §102; Pets and Games §103; Home Training §104;
- Schools §108; Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools §110;
- Grammar Schools §112; Schools of Rhetoric §115; Travel
- §116; Apprenticeship §117; Remarks on the Schools §119; The
- Teacher §121; Schooldays and Holidays §122; The
- _Paedagōgus_ §123; Discipline §124; End of Childhood §125;
- The _Līberalia_ §127
-
-V. DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES.--Growth of Slavery
- §129; Numbers of Slaves §131; Sources of Supply §134; Sales
- of Slaves §139; Prices of Slaves §140; Public and Private
- Slaves §141; Private Slaves §142; Industrial Employment
- §143; The _Familia Rūstica_ §145; Farm Slaves §146; The
- _Vīlīcus_ §148; The _Familia Urbāna_ §149; Legal Status of
- Slaves §156; The Treatment of Slaves §158; Food and Dress
- §160; The _Pecūlium_ §162; Punishments §166; Manumission
- §175; The Clients §176; The Old Clients §177; Mutual
- Obligations §179; The New Clients §181; Duties and Rewards
- §182; The _Hospitēs_ §183; _Hospitium_ §184; Obligations of
- _Hospitium_ §185
-
-VI. THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE.--_Domus_ §186; The Development
- of the House §188; The _Vestibulum_ §194; The _Ōstium_
- §195; The _Ātrium_ §196; The Change in the _Ātrium_ §197;
- The _Ālae_ §200; The _Tablīnum_ §201; The Peristyle §202;
- Private Rooms §203; The House of Pansa §208; The Walls
- §210; _Pariēs Caementīcius_ §211; Wall Facings §212; Floors
- and Ceilings §213; Roofs §214; The Doors §215; The Windows
- §217; Heating §218; Water Supply §219; Decoration §220;
- Furniture §222; Principal Articles §223; The Couches §224;
- The Chairs §225; Tables §227; The Lamps §228; Chests and
- Cabinets §230; Other Articles §232; The Street §233
-
-VII. DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS.--_Indūtus_: The _Subligaculum_
- §235; The Tunic §236; _Amictus_: The _Toga_ §240; Form and
- Arrangement §241; Kinds of Togas §246; The _Lacerna_ §247;
- The _Paenula_ §248; Other Wraps §249; Footgear: The
- _Soleae_ §250; The _Calceī_ §251; Coverings for the Head
- §252; The Hair and Beard §253; Jewelry §255; Dress of Women
- §257; The _Tunica Interior_ §258; The _Stola_ §259; The
- _Palla_ §261; Shoes and Slippers §262; Dressing of the Hair
- §263; Accessories §266; Jewelry §267; Dress of the Children
- and Slaves §268; Materials §269; Colors §270; Manufacture
- §271
-
-VIII. FOOD AND MEALS.--Natural Conditions §272; Fruits §274;
- Garden Produce §275; Meats §277; Fowl and Game §279; Fish
- §280; Cereals §282; Preparation of the Grain §283;
- Breadmaking §287; The Olive §289; Olive Oil §291; Grapes
- §293; Viticulture §294; Vineyards §295; Wine Making §296;
- Beverages §298; Style of Living §299; Hours for Meals §301;
- Breakfast and Luncheon §302; The Formal Meal §303; The
- Dining Couch §304; Places of Honor §305; Other Furniture
- §307; Courses §308; Bills of Fare §309; Serving the Dinner
- §310; The _Comissātiō_ §312; The Banquets of the Rich §315
-
-IX. AMUSEMENTS; BATHS.--General §316; Sports of the Campus §317;
- Games of Ball §318; Games of Chance §319; Knuckle-bones
- §320; Dice §321; Public and Private Games §322; Dramatic
- Performances §323; Staging the Play §324; The Early Theater
- §325; The Later Theater §326; Roman Circuses §328; Plan of
- the Circus §330; The Arena §332; The Barriers §333; The
- _Spīna_ and _Mētae_ §335; The Seats §337; Furnishing the
- Races §339; The Teams §340; The Drivers §341; Famous
- _Aurīgae_ §342; Other Shows of the Circus §343;
- Gladiatorial Combats §344; Popularity of the Combats §346;
- Sources of Supply §347; Schools for Gladiators §349; Places
- of Exhibition §351; Amphitheaters at Rome §352; The
- Amphitheater at Pompeii §353; The Coliseum §356; Styles of
- Fighting §359; Weapons and Armor §360; Announcement of the
- Shows §361; The Fight Itself §362; The Rewards §363; Other
- Shows in the Amphitheater §364; The Daily Bath §365;
- Essentials for the Bath §366; Heating the Bath §368; The
- _Caldārium_ §369; The _Frīgidārium_ and _Ūnctōrium_ §370; A
- Private Bathhouse §371; The Public Baths §372; Management
- §373; Hours Opened §374; Accommodations for Women §375;
- _Thermae_ §376; Baths of Diocletian §378
-
-X. TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS.--In General §379; By Water
- §380; By Land §381; The Vehicles §382; Carriages §383; The
- _Rēda_ and _Cisium_ §384; The Roads §385; Construction
- §387; The Inns §388; Speed §389; Sending Letters §390;
- Writing the Letters §391; Sealing and Opening the Letters
- §392; Books §393; Manufacture of Paper §394; Pens and Ink
- §395; Making the Roll §396; Size of the Rolls §398;
- Multiplication of Books §399; Commercial Publication §400;
- Rapidity and Cost of Publication §401; Libraries §402
-
-XI. SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY.--In
- General §403; Careers of the Nobles §404; Agriculture §405;
- Political Office §406; The Law §407; The Army §408; Careers
- of the Equites §409; The Soldiers §410; The Proletariate
- §411; Professions and Trades §412; Business and Commerce
- §413; The Civil Service §414; The Roman's Day §415; Hours
- of the Day §417
-
-XII. BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES.--Importance of Burial
- §419; Interment and Cremation §420; Places of Burial §421;
- The Tombs §422; The Potter's Field §423; Plan of Tombs and
- Grounds §425; Exterior of the Tombs §427; The _Columbāria_
- §428; Burial Societies §430; Funeral Ceremonies §432; At
- the House §433; The Funeral Procession §434; The Funeral
- Oration §435; At the Tomb §436; After Ceremonies §437;
- Memorial Festivals §438
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-§1. The topics that are discussed in this book have to do with the
-everyday life of the Roman people. Such things will be considered as
-the family, the Roman name, marriage and the position of women,
-children and education, slaves, clients, the house and its furniture,
-clothing, food and meals, amusements, travel and correspondence,
-funeral ceremonies and burial customs, etc. These things are of
-interest to us in the case of any ancient or foreign people; in the
-case of the Romans they are of especial importance, because they help
-to explain the powerful influence which that nation exerted over the
-old world, and make it easier to understand why that influence is
-still felt in some degree to-day.
-
-§2. Public and Private Antiquities.--The subjects that have been named
-above belong to what is called Classical Antiquities, taking their
-place in the subdivision of Roman Antiquities as opposed to Greek
-Antiquities. They are grouped loosely together as Private Antiquities
-in opposition to what we call Public Antiquities. Under the latter
-head we consider the Roman as a citizen, and we examine the several
-classes of citizens, their obligations and their privileges; we study
-the form of their government, its officers and machinery, its
-legislative, judicial, and executive procedure, its revenues and
-expenditures, etc. It is evident that no hard and fast line can be
-drawn between the two branches of the subject: they cross each other
-at every turn. One scarcely knows, for example, under which head to
-put the religion of the Romans or their games in the circus.
-
-§3. In the same way, the daily employment of a slave, his keep, his
-punishments, his rewards, are properly considered under the head of
-Private Antiquities. But the state undertook sometimes to regulate by
-law the number of slaves that a master might have, the state regulated
-the manumission of the slave and gave him certain rights as a
-freedman, and these matters belong to Public Antiquities. So, too, a
-man might or might not be eligible to certain state offices according
-to the particular ceremony used at the marriage of his parents. It
-will be found, therefore, that the study of Private Antiquities can
-not be completely separated from its complement, though in this book
-the dividing line will be crossed as seldom as possible.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: Students in secondary schools will find useful for
-preliminary reading the outline of the Roman Constitution in the
-Introduction to the author's "Selected Orations and Letters of
-Cicero." For more advanced students three books have lately appeared
-on this subject: Abbott's "Roman Political Institutions," Granrud's
-"Roman Constitutional History," and Greenidge's "Roman Public Life."]
-
-§4. Antiquities and History.--It is just as impossible to draw the
-boundary line between the subjects of Antiquities and History. The
-older history, it is true, concerned itself little with the private
-life of the people, almost solely with the rise and fall of dynasties.
-It told us of kings and generals, of the wars they waged, the
-victories they won, and the conquests they made. Then, in course of
-time, institutions took the place of dynasties and parties the place
-of heroes, and history traced the growth of great political ideas:
-such masterpieces as Thirlwall's and Grote's histories of Greece are
-largely constitutional histories. But changes in international
-relations affect the private life of a people as surely, if not as
-speedily, as they affect the machinery of government. You can not
-bring into contact, friendly or unfriendly, two different
-civilizations without a change in the peoples concerned, without
-altering their occupations, their ways of living, their very ideas of
-life and its purposes. These changes react in turn upon the temper and
-character of a people, they affect its capacity for self-government
-and the government of others, and in the course of time they bring
-about the movements of which even the older history took notice. Hence
-our recent histories give more and more space to the life of the
-common people, to the very matters, that is, that were mentioned in
-the first paragraph as belonging to Private Antiquities. This may be
-seen in such titles as these: Green's "History of the English People,"
-McMaster's "History of the People of the United States."
-
-§5. On the other hand it is equally true that a knowledge of political
-history is necessary for the study of Private Antiquities. We shall
-find the Romans giving up certain ways of living and habits of
-thinking that seemed to have become fixed and characteristic. These
-changes we could not explain at all, if political history did not
-inform us that just before they took place the Romans had come into
-contact with the widely different ideas and opposing civilizations of
-other nations. The most important event of this sort was the
-introduction of Greek culture after the Punic wars, and to this we
-shall have to refer again and again. It follows from all this that
-students who have had even the most elementary course in Roman history
-have already some knowledge of Private Antiquities, and that those who
-have not studied the history of Rome at all will find very helpful the
-reading of even the briefest of our school histories.
-
-§6. Antiquities and Philology.--The subject of Classical Antiquities
-has always been regarded as a branch--"discipline" is the technical
-word--of Classical Philology since Friedrich August Wolf (1759-1824)
-made Philology a science. It is quite true that in the common
-acceptation of the word Philology is merely the science of language,
-but even here Antiquities has an important part to play. It is
-impossible to read understandingly an ode of Horace or an oration of
-Cicero, if one is ignorant of the social life and the political
-institutions of Rome. But Classical Philology is much more than the
-science of understanding and interpreting the classical languages. It
-claims for itself the investigation of Greek and Roman life in all its
-aspects, social, intellectual, and political, so far as it has become
-known to us from the surviving literary, epigraphic, and monumental
-records. Whitney puts it thus: Philology deals with human speech and
-with all that speech discloses as to the nature and history of man. If
-it is hard to remember these definitions one can hardly forget the
-epigram of Benoist: Philology is the geology of the intellectual
-world. Under this, the only scientific conception of Philology, the
-study of Antiquities takes at once a higher place. It becomes the end
-with linguistics the means, and this is the true relation between
-them.
-
-§7. But it happens that the study of the languages in which the
-records of classical antiquity are preserved must first occupy the
-investigator, and that the study of language as mere language, its
-origin, its growth, its decay, is in itself very interesting and
-profitable. It happens, moreover, that the languages of Greece and
-Rome can not be studied apart from literatures of singular richness,
-beauty, and power, and the study of literature has always been one of
-the most attractive and absorbing to cultivated men. It is not hard to
-understand, therefore, why the study of Antiquities has not been more
-prominent in connection with philological training. It was the end to
-which only the few pressed on. It was reserved, at least in systematic
-form, for the trained scholar in the university. In the congested
-condition of the old curricula in our colleges it was crowded out by
-the more obvious, but not more essential or interesting, subjects of
-linguistics and literary criticism, or it was presented at best in the
-form of scrappy notes on the authors read in the classroom or in the
-dismembered alphabetical arrangement of a dictionary.
-
-§8. Within the last few years, however, a change has been taking
-place, a change due to several causes. In the first place, the
-literary criticism which was once taught exclusively in connection
-with classical authors and which claimed so large a part of the time
-allotted to classical study has found a more appropriate place in the
-departments of English that were hardly known a generation ago. In the
-second place, the superior preparation in the classics now demanded
-for admission to our colleges has relieved their courses of much
-elementary linguistic drill that was formerly necessary. In the third
-place, the last half century has seen a greater advance in the
-knowledge of Antiquities than all the years before, and it is now
-possible to present in positive dogmatic form much that was recently
-mere guesswork and speculation. Finally, modern theories of education,
-which have narrowed the stream of classical instruction only to deepen
-its channel and quicken its current, have caused more stress to be
-laid upon the points of contact between the ancient and the modern
-world. The teacher of the classics has come to realize that the
-obligations of the present to the past are not to be so clearly
-presented and so vividly appreciated in connection with the formal
-study of art and literature as in the investigation of the great
-social, political, and religious problems which throughout all the
-ages have engaged the thought of cultivated men.
-
-§9. Sources.--It has been already remarked (§6) that Classical
-Philology draws its knowledge from three sources, the literary,
-epigraphic, and monumental remains of Greece and Rome. It is necessary
-that we should understand at the outset precisely what is meant by
-each of these. By literary sources we mean the writings of the Greeks
-and Romans, that is, the books which they published, that have come
-down to us. The form of these books, the way they were published and
-have been preserved, will be considered later. For the present it is
-sufficient to say that a mere fraction only of these writings has come
-down to our day, and that of these poor remnants we possess no
-originals but merely more or less imperfect copies. It is true,
-nevertheless, that these form as a whole the most important of our
-sources of information, largely because they have been most carefully
-studied and are best understood.
-
-§10. By epigraphic sources we mean the words that were written,
-scratched, cut, or stamped on hard materials, such as metal, stone, or
-wood, without thought of literary finish. These vary from single words
-to records of very considerable extent, and are briefly called
-inscriptions. The student may get a good idea of the most ancient and
-curious by merely turning over a few pages of Ritschl's "Priscae
-Latinitatis Monumenta Epigraphica" or of Egbert's "Latin
-Inscriptions." Of one sort of great importance, the legends on coins
-and medals, many have found their way into American museums. With
-modern inscriptions on similar materials and for similar purposes
-every student is, of course, familiar.
-
-§11. By monumental evidence we mean all the things actually made by
-the Greeks and Romans that have come down to us. These things are
-collectively very numerous and of very many kinds: coins, medals,
-pieces of jewelry, armor, pottery, statues, paintings, bridges,
-aqueducts, fortifications, ruins of cities, etc. It is impossible to
-enumerate them all. It is upon such remains as these that most of the
-inscriptions mentioned above are preserved. Of the most importance for
-the study of the private life of the Romans are the ruins of the city
-of Pompeii preserved to us by the protection of the ashes that buried
-it at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius in the year 79 A.D.
-
-§12. It will be seen at once that the importance of these sources will
-vary with the nature of the subject we are studying and the fullness
-of their preservation. For example, we may read in a Roman poet a
-description of an ornament worn by a bride. A painting of a bride
-wearing such an ornament would make the description clearer, but any
-doubt that might remain would be removed if there should be found in
-the ruins of Pompeii a similar ornament with its character proved by
-an inscription upon it. In this case the three sources would have
-contributed to our knowledge. For other matters, especially intangible
-things, we may have to rely solely upon descriptions, that is, upon
-literary sources. But it may well happen that no Roman wrote a set
-description of the particular thing that we are studying, or if he did
-that his writings have been lost, so that we may be forced to build up
-our knowledge bit by bit, by putting together laboriously the scraps
-of information, mere hints perhaps, that we find scattered here and
-there in the works of different authors, and these perhaps of very
-different times. It is not hard to understand, therefore, that our
-knowledge of some things pertaining to Roman antiquities may be fairly
-complete, while of others we may have no knowledge at all. It may be
-worth remarking of literary sources that the more common and familiar
-a thing was to the ancients, the less likely is it that we shall find
-a description of it in ancient literature.
-
-§13. Reference Books.--The collecting and arranging of the information
-gleaned from these sources has been the task of philologists from very
-early times, but so much has been added to our knowledge by recent
-discoveries that all but the latest books may be neglected by the
-student. A very full list of books treating of Roman Antiquities may
-be found in Hübner's "Bibliographie der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft," and a convenient list in Professor Kelsey's
-"Fifty Topics in Roman Antiquities with References," but the student
-should not fail to notice at the head of each chapter the lists of
-authorities to be consulted in the books specifically mentioned below.
-These have been arranged in two classes, systematic treatises and
-encyclopedic works, and the student who lacks time to consult all the
-references should select one at least of the better and larger works
-in each class for regular and methodical study.
-
-§14. Systematic Treatises:
-
-Marquardt, Joachim, "Das Privatleben der Römer," 2d edition by A. Mau.
-This is the seventh volume of the _Handbuch der römischen Alterthümer_
-by Marquardt and Mommsen. It is the fullest and most authoritative of
-all the treatises on the subject and has a few illustrations.
-
-Voigt, Moritz, "Die Römischen Privataltertümer," 2d edition. This is a
-part of the fourth volume of the _Handbuch der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft_ by Iwan von Müller. It is the latest work on
-the subject, especially rich in the citation of authorities.
-
-Guhl and Koner, "Leben der Griechen und Römer," 6th edition by
-Engelmann. A standard and authoritative work enriched by copious
-illustrations. There is an English translation of an earlier edition
-which may be used by those who read no German.
-
-Becker, W. A., "Gallus oder römische Scenen aus der Zeit Augusts," new
-edition by Hermann Göll. This is a standard authority in the form of a
-novel. The story is of no particular interest, but the notes and
-excursuses are of the first importance. There is an English
-translation of the first edition which may be used with caution by
-those who read no German.
-
-Friedländer, L., "Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms in der
-Zeit von August bis zum Ausgang der Antonine," 6th edition. This is
-the great authority for the time it covers and will be found to
-include practically the history from the earliest times of all the
-matters of which it treats.
-
-Blümner, Hugo, "Technologie und Terminologie der Gewerbe und Künste
-bei Griechen und Römern." The very best description of the arts and
-industries of ancient Greece and Rome.
-
-Ramsay, William, "A Manual of Roman Antiquities," 15th edition,
-revised and partly rewritten by Rodolfo Lanciani. This includes public
-as well as private antiquities, but the revision seems to have been
-but partial and the larger part of the book is hopelessly out of date.
-
-Wilkins, A. S., "Roman Antiquities," and Preston and Dodge, "The
-Private Life of the Romans." Two little books, of which the former is
-by a good scholar and is worth reading.
-
-§15. Encyclopedic Works:
-
-Pauly-Wissowa, "Real-Encyclopädie der classischen
-Altertumswissenschaft." A monumental work, destined to be for many
-years the great authority upon the subject. Unfortunately it is
-appearing very slowly and has reached only the word _Demodoros_. There
-are a few illustrations.
-
-Smith, William, "A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities," revised
-edition by Wayte and Marindin. This is the very best work of the sort
-in English, the best possibly of similar size in any language.
-
-Baumeister, "Denkmäler des klassischen Altertums." The most richly
-illustrated work on the subject, absolutely indispensable.
-
-"Harper's Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities." Largely
-from Smith, but with valuable additions.
-
-Rich, "Dictionary of Roman and Greek Antiquities." A convenient manual
-with many illustrations. Very good for ready reference.
-
-Schreiber, "Atlas of Classical Antiquities." A very copious collection
-of illustrations bearing on Greek and Roman life. The illustrations
-are accompanied by explanatory text.
-
-Seyffert-Nettleship, "Dictionary of Classical Antiquities." The
-illustrations are numerous and the book is of some value on the side
-of ancient art.
-
-Lübker, "Real-Lexicon des klassischen Altertums," 7th edition by Max
-Erler. The best brief handbook for those who read German. It is
-compact and accurate.
-
-§16. Other Books.--Besides these, three books may be mentioned
-treating of the discoveries at Pompeii, the importance of which has
-been mentioned (§11):
-
-Overbeck, J., "Pompeii," 4th edition by August Mau, the standard
-popular work upon the subject, richly supplied with illustrations.
-
-Mau, August, "Pompeii, its Life and Art," translated by Kelsey. This
-is the best account of the treasures of the buried city that has
-appeared in English, at once interesting and scholarly.
-
-Gusman, Pierre, "Pompeii, the City, its Life and Art," translated by
-Simmonds and Jourdain. The very best collection of illustrations, but
-not so trustworthy in letterpress.
-
-Finally the student should be warned not to neglect a book merely
-because it happens to be written in a language that he does not read
-fluently: the very part that he wants may happen to be easy to read,
-and many of these books contain illustrations that tell their own
-story independently of the letterpress that accompanies them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE FAMILY
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, pp. 1-6; Voigt, 307-311, 386-388; Göll, II.
-1-4, 61-65, 187; Pauly-Wissowa, under _adfīnitās_, _agnātiō_,
-_cognātiō_; Smith, under _cognātī_, _familia_, _patria potestās_;
-Seyffert, under _agnātiō_, _cognātiō_, _familia_, _manus_; Lübker,
-under _agnātiō_, _cognātiō_, _familia_, _manus_, _patria potestās_.
-
-Look up the word _familia_ in Harper's lexicon and notice carefully
-its range of meanings.
-
-See also Muirhead, "Roman Law," pp. 24-33, and the paragraph on the
-Quiritian Family in the article on Roman Law by the same writer in the
-"Encyclopaedia Britannica," Vol. XX.
-
-
-§17. The Household.--If by our word family we usually understand a
-group of husband, wife, and children, we may acknowledge at once that
-it does not correspond exactly to any of the meanings of the Latin
-_familia_, varied as the dictionaries show these to be. Husband, wife,
-and children did not necessarily constitute an independent family
-among the Romans, and were not necessarily members even of the same
-family. Those persons made up the Roman _familia_, in the sense
-nearest to its English derivative, who were subject to the authority
-of the same Head of the House (_pater familiās_). These persons might
-make a host in themselves: wife, unmarried daughters, sons real or
-adopted, married or unmarried, with their wives, sons, unmarried
-daughters, and even remoter descendants (always through males), yet
-they made but one _familia_ in the eyes of the Romans. The Head of
-such a family--"household" or "house" is the nearest English word--was
-always _suī iūris_ ("independent," "one's own master"), while the
-others were _aliēnō iūrī subiectī_ ("dependent").
-
-§18. The authority of the _pater familiās_ over his wife was called
-_manus_, over his descendants _patria potestās_, over his chattels
-_dominica potestās_. So long as he lived and retained his citizenship,
-these powers could be terminated only by his own deliberate act. He
-could dispose of his property by gift or sale as freely as we do now.
-He might "emancipate" his sons, a very formal proceeding
-(_ēmancipātiō_) by which they became each the Head of a new family,
-though they were childless themselves or unmarried or even mere
-children. He might also emancipate an unmarried daughter, who thus in
-her own self became an independent family. Or he might give her in
-marriage to another Roman citizen, an act by which she passed by early
-usage (§61) into the family of which her husband was Head, if he was
-_suī iūris_, or of which he was a member, if he was still _aliēnō iūrī
-subiectus_. It must be carefully noticed, on the other hand, that the
-marriage of a son did not make him a _pater familiās_ or relieve him
-in any degree from the _patria potestās_: he and his wife and their
-children were subject to the same Head of the House as he had been
-before his marriage. On the other hand, the Head of the House could
-not number in his _familia_ his daughter's children: legitimate
-children always followed the father, while an illegitimate child was
-from the moment of birth in himself or herself an independent family.
-
-§19. The Splitting Up of a House.--Emancipation was not very common
-and it usually happened that the household was dissolved only by the
-death of the Head. When this occurred, as many new households were
-formed as there were persons directly subject to his _potestās_ at the
-moment of his death: wife, sons, unmarried daughters, widowed
-daughters-in-law, and children of a deceased son. The children of a
-surviving son, it must be noticed, merely passed from the _potestās_
-of their grandfather to that of their father. A son under age or an
-unmarried daughter was put under the care of a guardian (_tūtor_),
-selected from the same _gēns_, very often an older brother, if there
-was one. The following diagram will make this clearer:
-
- 1Gaius (_pater familiās_) = (†)2Gaia (_māter familiās_)
- |
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- | | | | |
-3Faustus = 4Tullia (†)5Balbus = 6Licinia 7Publius 8Terentia |
- | | 9Marcus = 10Terentia Minor
- ----------- ------------ |
- | | | | ------------
-11Titus 12Tiberius 13Quintus 14Sextius | |
- 15Servius 16Decimus
-
-§20. It is assumed that Gaius is a widower who has had five children,
-three sons and two daughters. Of the sons, Faustus and Balbus married
-and had each two children; Balbus then died. Of the daughters,
-Terentia Minor married Marcus and became the mother of two children.
-Publius and Terentia were unmarried at the death of Gaius, who had
-emancipated none of his children. It will be noticed:
-
-1. The living descendants of Gaius were ten (3, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13,
-14, 15, 16), his son Balbus being dead.
-
-2. Subject to his _potestās_ were nine (3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13,
-14).
-
-3. His daughter Terentia Minor (10) had passed out of his _potestās_
-by her marriage with Marcus (9), and her children (15, 16) alone out
-of all the descendants of Gaius had not been subject to him.
-
-4. At his death are formed six independent families, one consisting of
-four persons (3, 4, 11, 12), the others of one person each (6, 7, 8,
-13, 14).
-
-5. Titus and Tiberius (11, 12) have merely passed out of the
-_potestās_ of their grandfather Gaius to come under that of their
-father Faustus.
-
-§21. Other Meanings of Familia.--The word _familia_ was also very
-commonly used in a slightly wider sense to include in addition to the
-persons named above (§17) all the slaves and clients and all the
-property real and personal belonging to the _pater familiās_, or
-acquired and used by the persons under his _potestās_. The word was
-also used of the slaves alone, and rarely of the property alone. In a
-still wider and more important sense the word was applied to a larger
-group of related persons, the _gēns_, consisting of all the
-"households" (_familiae_ in the sense of §17) who derived their
-descent through males from a common ancestor. This remote ancestor,
-could his life have lasted through all the intervening centuries,
-would have been the _pater familiās_ of all the persons included in
-the _gēns_, and all would have been subject to his _potestās_.
-Membership in the _gēns_ was proved by the possession of the _nōmen_,
-the second of the three names that every citizen of the Republic
-regularly had (§38).
-
-§22. Theoretically this _gēns_ had been in prehistoric times one of
-the _familiae_, "households," whose union for political purposes had
-formed the state. Theoretically its _pater familiās_ had been one of
-the Heads of Houses who in the days of the Kings had formed the
-_patrēs_, or assembly of old men (_senātus_). The splitting up of this
-prehistoric household in the manner explained in §19, a process
-repeated generation after generation, was believed to account for the
-numerous _familiae_ who claimed connection with the great _gentēs_ in
-later times. The _gēns_ had an organization of which little is known.
-It passed resolutions binding upon its members; it furnished guardians
-for minor children, and curators for the insane and for spendthrifts.
-When a member died without leaving natural heirs, it succeeded to such
-property as he did not dispose of by will and administered it for the
-common good of all its members. These members were called _gentīlēs_,
-were bound to take part in the religious services of the _gēns_
-(_sacra gentīlīcia_), had a claim to the common property, and might if
-they chose be laid to rest in the common burial ground.
-
-Finally, the word _familia_ was often applied to certain branches of a
-_gēns_ whose members had the same _cognōmen_ (§48), the last of the
-three names mentioned in §21. For this use of _familia_ a more
-accurate word is _stirps_.
-
-§23. Agnati.--It has been remarked (§18) that the children of a
-daughter could not be included in the _familia_ of her father, and
-(§21) that membership in the larger organization called the _gēns_ was
-limited to those who could trace their descent through males. All
-persons who could in this way trace their descent through males to a
-common ancestor, in whose _potestās_ they would be were he alive, were
-called _agnātī_, and this _agnātiō_ was the closest tie of
-relationship known to the Romans. In the list of _agnātī_ were
-included two classes of persons who would seem by the definition to be
-excluded. These were the wife, who passed by _manus_ into the family
-of her husband (§18), becoming by law his agnate and the agnate of all
-his agnates, and the adopted son. On the other hand a son who had been
-emancipated (§18) was excluded from _agnātiō_ with his father and his
-father's agnates, and could have no agnates of his own until he
-married or was adopted into another _familia_. The following diagram
-will make this clearer:
-
- 1Gaius (_pater familiās_) = 2Gaia (_māter familiās_)
- |
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- | : | | | |
-3Faustus = 4Tullia : 5Balbus = 6Licinia 7Publius 8Terentia |
- | : [Emancipated]| [Emancipated] |
- ----------- : ------------ 9Marcus = 10Terentia Minor
- | | : | | |
-11Titus 12Tiberius : 13Quintus 14Sextius -------------
- : | |
- :[Servius adopted by Gaius] 15Servius 16Decimus
- :.........................[Emancipated]
-
-§24. It is supposed that Gaius and Gaia have five children (Faustus,
-Balbus, Publius, Terentia, and Terentia Minor), and six grandsons
-(Titus and Tiberius the sons of Faustus, Quintus and Sextius the sons
-of Balbus, and Servius and Decimus the sons of Terentia Minor). Gaius
-has emancipated two of his sons, Balbus and Publius, and has adopted
-his grandson Servius, who had previously been emancipated by his
-father Marcus. There are four sets of _agnātī_:
-
-1. Gaius, his wife, and those whose _pater familiās_ he is, viz.:
-Faustus, Tullia the wife of Faustus, Terentia, Titus, Tiberius, and
-Servius, a son by adoption (1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 11, 12, 15).
-
-2. Balbus, his wife, and their two sons (5, 6, 13, and 14).
-
-3. Publius, who is himself a _pater familiās_, but has no _agnātī_ at
-all.
-
-4. Marcus, his wife Terentia Minor, and their child Decimus (9, 10,
-16). Notice that the other child, Servius (15), having been
-emancipated by Marcus is no longer agnate to his father, mother, or
-brother.
-
-§25. Cognati, on the other hand, were what we call blood relations, no
-matter whether they traced their relationship through males or
-females, and regardless of what _potestās_ had been over them. The
-only barrier in the eyes of the law was loss of citizenship (§18), and
-even this was not always regarded. Thus, in the table last given,
-Gaius, Faustus, Balbus, Publius, Terentia, Terentia Minor, Titus,
-Tiberius, Quintus, Sextius, Servius, and Decimus are all cognates with
-one another. So, too, is Gaia with all her descendants mentioned. So
-also are Tullia, Titus, and Tiberius; Licinia, Quintus, and Sextius;
-Marcus, Servius, and Decimus. But husband and wife (Gaius and Gaia,
-Faustus and Tullia, Balbus and Licinia, Marcus and Terentia Minor)
-were not cognates by virtue of their marriage, though that made them
-agnates. In fact public opinion discountenanced the marriage of
-cognates within the sixth (later the fourth) degree, and persons
-within this degree were said to have the _iūs ōsculī_. The degree was
-calculated by counting from one of the interested parties through the
-common ancestor to the other and may be easily understood from the
-table given in Smith's "Dictionary of Antiquities" under _cognātī_, or
-the one given here (Fig. 1). Cognates did not form an organic body in
-the state as did the agnates (§22), but the 22d of February was set
-aside to commemorate the tie of blood (_cāra cognātiō_), and on this
-day presents were exchanged and family reunions probably held. It must
-be understood, however, that _cognātiō_ gave no legal rights or claims
-under the Republic.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 1. TABLE OF RELATIONSHIP]
-
-§26. Adfines.--Persons connected by marriage only were called
-_adfīnēs_, as a wife with her husband's cognates and he with hers.
-There were no formal degrees of _adfīnitās_, as there were of
-_cognātiō_. Those adfīnēs for whom distinctive names were in common
-use were: _gener_, son-in-law; _nurus_, daughter-in-law; _socer_,
-father-in-law; _socrus_, mother-in-law; _prīvignus_, _prīvigna_,
-step-son, step-daughter; _ritricus_, step-father; _noverca_,
-step-mother. If we compare these names with the awkward compounds that
-do duty for them in English, we shall have additional proof of the
-stress laid by the Romans on family ties: two women who married
-brothers were called _iānītrīcēs_, a relationship for which we do not
-have even a compound. The names of blood relations tell the same
-story: a glance at the table of cognates will show how strong the
-Latin is here, how weak the English. We have "uncle," "aunt," and
-"cousin," but between _avunculus_ and _patruus_, _mātertera_ and
-_amita_, _patruēlis_ and _cōnsōbrīnus_, we can distinguish only by
-descriptive phrases. For _atavus_ and _tritavus_ we have merely the
-indefinite "forefathers." In the same way the language testifies to
-the headship of the father. We speak of the "mother country" and
-"mother tongue," but to the Roman these were _patria_ and _sermō
-patrius_. As the _pater_ stood to the _fīlius_, so stood the
-_patrōnus_ to the _cliēns_, the _patriciī_ to the _plēbēiī_, the
-_patrēs_ (=senators) to the rest of the citizens, and _Iūpiter_ (Jove
-the Father) to the other gods of Olympus.
-
-§27. The Family Cult.--It has been said (§23) that _agnātiō_ was the
-closest tie known to the Romans. The importance they attached to the
-agnatic family is largely explained by their ideas of the future life.
-They believed that the souls of men had an existence apart from the
-body, but not in a separate spirit-land. They conceived of the soul as
-hovering around the place of burial and requiring for its peace and
-happiness that offerings of food and drink should be made to it
-regularly. Should these offerings be discontinued, the soul would
-cease to be happy itself, and might become perhaps a spirit of evil.
-The maintenance of these rites and ceremonies devolved naturally upon
-the descendants from generation to generation, whom the spirits in
-turn would guide and guard.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 2. LUCIUS JUNIUS BRUTUS]
-
-§28. The Roman was bound, therefore, to perform these acts of
-affection and piety so long as he lived himself, and bound no less to
-provide for their performance after his death by perpetuating his race
-and the family cult. A curse was believed to rest upon the childless
-man. Marriage was, therefore, a solemn religious duty, entered into
-only with the approval of the gods ascertained by the auspices. In
-taking a wife to himself the Roman made her a partaker of his family
-mysteries, a service that brooked no divided allegiance. He therefore
-separated her entirely from her father's family, and was ready in turn
-to surrender his daughter without reserve to the husband with whom she
-was to minister at another altar. The _pater familiās_ was the priest
-of the household, and those subject to his _potestās_ assisted in the
-prayers and offerings, the _sacra familiāria_.
-
-§29. But it might be that a marriage was fruitless, or that the Head
-of the House saw his sons die before him. In this case he had to face
-the prospect of the extinction of his family, and his own descent to
-the grave with no posterity to make him blessed. One of two
-alternatives was open to him to avert such a calamity. He might give
-himself in adoption and pass into another family in which the
-perpetuation of the family cult seemed certain, or he might adopt a
-son and thus perpetuate his own. He usually followed the latter
-course, because it secured peace for the souls of his ancestors no
-less than for his own.
-
-§30. Adoption.--The person adopted might be either a _pater familiās_
-himself or, more usually, a _fīlius familiās_. In the case of the
-latter the process was called _adoptiō_ and was a somewhat complicated
-proceeding by which the natural parent conveyed his son to the other,
-the effect being to transfer the adopted person from one family to the
-other. The adoption of a _pater familiās_ was a much more serious
-matter, for it involved the extinction of one family (§29) in order to
-prevent the extinction of another. It was called _adrogātiō_ and was
-an affair of state. It had to be sanctioned by the _pontificēs_, the
-highest officers of religion, who had probably to make sure that the
-_adrogātus_ had brothers enough to attend to the interests of the
-ancestors whose cult he was renouncing. If the _pontificēs_ gave their
-consent, it had still to be sanctioned by the _comitia curiata_, as
-the adrogation might deprive the _gēns_ of its succession to the
-property of the childless man (§22). If the _comitia_ gave consent,
-the _adrogātus_ sank from the position of Head of a House to that of a
-_fīlius familiās_ in the household of his adoptive father. If he had
-wife and children, they passed with him into the new family, and so
-did all his property. Over him the adoptive father had _potestās_ as
-over a son of his own, and looked upon him as flesh of his flesh and
-bone of his bone. We can have at best only a feeble and inadequate
-notion of what adoption meant to the Romans.
-
-§31. The Patria Potestas.--The authority of the _pater familiās_ over
-his descendants was called usually the _patria potestās_, but also the
-_patria maiestās_, the _patrium iūs_, and the _imperium paternum_. It
-was carried to a greater length by the Romans than by any other
-people, a length that seems to us excessive and cruel. As they
-understood it, the _pater familiās_ had absolute power over his
-children and other agnatic descendants. He decided whether or not the
-newborn child should be reared; he punished what he regarded as
-misconduct with penalties as severe as banishment, slavery, and death;
-he alone could own and exchange property--all that his descendants
-earned or acquired in any way was his: according to the letter of the
-law they were little better than his chattels. If his right to one of
-them was disputed, he vindicated it by the same form of action that he
-used to maintain his right to a house or a horse; if one was stolen,
-he proceeded against the abductor by the ordinary action for theft; if
-for any reason he wished to transfer one of them to a third person, it
-was done by the same form of conveyance that he employed to transfer
-inanimate things. The jurists boasted that these powers were enjoyed
-by Roman citizens only.
-
-§32. Limitations.--But however stern this authority was theoretically,
-it was greatly modified in practice, under the Republic by custom,
-under the Empire by law. King Romulus was said to have ordained that
-all sons should be reared and also all firstborn daughters;
-furthermore that no child should be put to death until its third year,
-unless it was grievously deformed. This at least secured life for the
-child, though the _pater familiās_ still decided whether it should be
-admitted to his household, with the implied social and religious
-privileges, or be disowned and become an outcast. King Numa was said
-to have forbidden the sale into slavery of a son who had married with
-the consent of his father. But of much greater importance was the
-check put upon arbitrary and cruel punishments by custom. Custom, not
-law, obliged the _pater familiās_ to call a council of relatives and
-friends (_iūdicium domesticum_) when he contemplated inflicting severe
-punishment upon his children, and public opinion obliged him to abide
-by their verdict. Even in the comparatively few cases where tradition
-tells us that the death penalty was actually inflicted, we usually
-find that the father acted in the capacity of a magistrate happening
-to be in office when the offense was committed, or that the penalties
-of the ordinary law were merely anticipated, perhaps to avoid the
-disgrace of a public trial and execution.
-
-§33. So, too, in regard to the ownership of property the conditions
-were not really so hard as the strict letter of the law makes them
-appear to us. It was customary for the Head of the House to assign to
-his children property, _pecūlia_ ("cattle of their own"), for them to
-manage for their own benefit. And more than this, although the _pater
-familiās_ held legal title to all their acquisitions, yet practically
-all property was acquired for and belonged to the household as a
-whole, and he was in effect little more than a trustee to hold and
-administer it for the common benefit. This is shown by the fact that
-there was no graver offense against public morals, no fouler blot on
-private character, than to prove untrue to this trust, _patrimōnium
-prōfundere_. Besides this, the long continuance of the _potestās_ is
-in itself a proof that its rigor was more apparent than real.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 3. PUBLIUS CORNELIUS SCIPIO AFRICANUS]
-
-§34. Extinction of the Potestas.--The _patria potestās_ was
-extinguished in various ways:
-
-1. By the death of the _pater familiās_, as has been explained in §19.
-
-2. By the emancipation of the son or daughter.
-
-3. By the loss of citizenship by either father or son.
-
-4. If the son became a _flāmen diālis_ or the daughter a _virgō
-vestālis_.
-
-5. If either father or child was adopted by a third party.
-
-6. If the daughter passed by formal marriage into the power (_in
-manum_) of a husband, though this did not essentially change her
-dependent condition (§35).
-
-7. If the son became a public magistrate. In this case the _potestās_
-was suspended during the period of office, but after it expired the
-father might hold the son accountable for his acts, public and
-private, while holding the magistracy.
-
-§35. Manus.--The subject of marriage will be considered later; at this
-point it is only necessary to define the power over the wife possessed
-by the husband in its most extreme form, called by the Romans _manus_.
-By the oldest and most solemn form of marriage the wife was separated
-entirely from her father's family (§28) and passed into her husband's
-power or "hand" (_conventiō in manum_). This assumes, of course, that
-he was _suī iūris_; if he was not, then though nominally in his "hand"
-she was really subject as he was to his _pater familiās_. Any property
-she had of her own, and to have had any she must have been independent
-before her marriage, passed to him as a matter of course. If she had
-none, her _pater familiās_ furnished a dowry (_dōs_), which shared the
-same fate. Whatever she acquired by her industry or otherwise while
-the marriage lasted also became her husband's. So far, therefore, as
-property rights were concerned the _manus_ differed in no respect from
-the _patria potestās_: the wife was _in locō fīliae_, and on the
-husband's death took a daughter's share in his estate.
-
-§36. In other respects _manus_ conferred more limited powers. The
-husband was required by law, not merely obliged by custom, to refer
-alleged misconduct of his wife to the _iūdicium domesticum_, and this
-was composed in part of her cognates (§25). He could put her away for
-certain grave offenses only; if he divorced her without good cause he
-was punished with the loss of all his property. He could not sell her
-at all. In short, public opinion and custom operated even more
-strongly for her protection than for that of her children. It must be
-noticed, therefore, that the chief distinction between _manus_ and
-_patria potestās_ lay in the fact that the former was a legal
-relationship based upon the consent of the weaker party, while the
-latter was a natural relationship antecedent to all law and choice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 4. LUCIUS CORNELIUS SULLA]
-
-§37. Dominica Potestas.--The right of ownership in his property
-(_dominica potestās_) was absolute in the case of a _pater familiās_
-and has been sufficiently explained in preceding paragraphs. This
-ownership included slaves as well as inanimate things, and slaves as
-well as inanimate things were mere chattels in the eyes of the law.
-The influence of custom and public opinion, so far as these tended to
-mitigating the horrors of their condition, will be discussed later. It
-will be sufficient to say here that there was nothing to which the
-slave could appeal from the judgment of his master. It was final and
-absolute.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE NAME
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 7-27; Voigt, 311, 316 f., 454; Pauly-Wissowa,
-under _cognōmen_; Smith, Harper, and Lübker, under _nōmen_.
-
-See also: Egbert, "Latin Inscriptions," Chapter IV; Cagnat, "Cours
-d'Epigraphie Latine," Chapter I; Hübner, "Römische Epigraphik," pp.
-653-680 of Müller's _Handbuch_, Vol. I.
-
-
-§38. The Triple Name.--Nothing is more familiar to the student of
-Latin than the fact that the Romans whose works he reads first have
-each a threefold name, Caius Julius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero,
-Publius Vergilius Maro. This was the system that prevailed in the best
-days of the Republic, but it was itself a development, starting with a
-more simple form in earlier times and ending in utter confusion under
-the Empire. The earliest legends of Rome show us single names,
-Romulus, Remus, Faustulus; but side by side with these we find also
-double names, Numa Pompilius, Ancus Marcius, Tullus Hostilius. It is
-possible that single names were the earliest fashion, but when we pass
-from legends to real history the oldest names that we find are double,
-the second being always in the genitive case, representing the father
-or the Head of the House: Marcus Marci, Caecilia Metelli. A little
-later these genitives were followed by the letter _f_ (for _fīlius_ or
-_fīlia_) or _uxor_, to denote the relationship. Later still, but very
-anciently nevertheless, we find the freeborn man in possession of the
-three names with which we are familiar, the _nōmen_ to mark the clan
-(_gēns_), the _cognōmen_ to mark the family, and the _praenōmen_ to
-mark the individual. The regular order of the three names is
-_praenōmen_, _nōmen_, _cognōmen_, although in poetry the order is
-often changed to adapt the name to the meter.
-
-§39. Great formality required even more than the three names. In
-official documents and in the state records it was usual to insert
-between a man's _nōmen_ and _cognōmen_ the _praenōmina_ of his father,
-grandfather, and great-grandfather, and sometimes even the name of the
-tribe to which he belonged. So Cicero might write his name: M. Tullius
-M. f. M. n. M. pr. Cor. Cicero; that is, Marcus Tullius Cicero, son
-(_fīlius_) of Marcus, grandson (_nepōs_) of Marcus, great-grandson
-(_pronepōs_) of Marcus, of the tribe Cornelia. See another example in
-§427.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 5. MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO]
-
-§40. On the other hand even the triple name was too long for ordinary
-use. Children, slaves, and intimate friends addressed the citizen,
-master, and friend by his _praenōmen_ only. Ordinary acquaintances
-used the _cognōmen_ with the _praenōmen_ prefixed for emphatic
-address. In earnest appeals we find the _nōmen_ also used, with
-sometimes the _praenōmen_ or the possessive _mī_ prefixed. When two
-only of the three names are thus used in familiar intercourse the
-order varies. If the _praenōmen_ is one of the two, it always stands
-first, except in the poets for metrical reasons and in a few places in
-prose where the text is uncertain. If the _praenōmen_ is omitted, the
-arrangement varies: the older writers and Cicero put the _cognōmen_
-first, _Ahāla Servilius_ (Cic. Milo, 3, 8: cf. _C. Servilius Ahāla_,
-Cat. I., 1, 3). Caesar puts the nōmen first; Horace, Livy, and Tacitus
-have both arrangements, while Pliny adheres to Caesar's usage. It will
-be convenient to consider the three names separately, and to discuss
-the names of men before considering those of the other members of the
-_familia_.
-
-§41. The Praenomen.--The number of names used as _praenōmina_ seems to
-us preposterously small as compared with our Christian names, to which
-they in some measure correspond. It was never much in excess of
-thirty, and in Sulla's time had dwindled to eighteen. The full list is
-given by the authorities named above, but the following are all that
-are often found in our school and college authors: _Aulus_ (_A_),
-_Decimus_ (_D_), _Gāius_ (_C_), _Gnaeus_ (_CN_), _Kaesō_ (_K_),
-_Lūcius_ (_L_), _Mānius_ (_M'_), _Mārcus_ (_M_), _Pūblius_ (_P_),
-_Quīntus_ (_Q_), _Servius_ (_SER_), _Sextus_ (_SEX_), _Spurius_
-(_SP_), _Tiberius_ (_TI_), and _Titus_ (_T_). The forms of these names
-were not absolutely fixed, and we find for _Gnaeus_ the forms
-_Gnaivos_ (early), _Naevos_, _Naeus_, and _Gnēus_ (rare); so also for
-_Servius_ we find _Sergius_, the two forms going back to an ancient
-_Serguius_. The abbreviations also vary: for _Aulus_ we find regularly
-_A_, but also _AV_ and _AVL_; for _Sextus_ we find _SEXT_ and _S_ as
-well as _SEX_, and similar variations are found in the case of other
-names.
-
-§42. But small as this list seems to us the natural conservatism of
-the Romans found in it a chance to display itself, and the great
-families repeated the names of their children from generation to
-generation in such a way as to make the identification of the
-individual very difficult in modern times. Thus the Aemilii contented
-themselves with seven of these _praenōmina_, _Gāius_, _Gnaeus_,
-_Lūcius_, _Mānius_, _Mārcus_, _Quīntus_, and _Tiberius_, but used in
-addition one that is not found in any other gens, _Māmercus_ (_MAM_).
-The Claudii used six, _Gāius_, _Decimus_, _Lūcius_, _Pūblius_,
-_Tiberius_, and _Quīntus_, with the additional name _Appius_ (_APP_),
-of Sabine origin, which they brought to Rome. The Cornelii used seven,
-_Aulus_, _Gnaeus_, _Lūcius_, _Mārcus_, _Pūblius_, _Servius_, and
-_Tiberius_. A still smaller number sufficed for the Julian gens,
-_Gāius_, _Lūcius_, and _Sextus_, with the name _Vopiscus_, which went
-out of use in very early times. And even these selections were subject
-to further limitations. Thus, of the _gēns Claudia_ only one branch
-(_stirps_), known as the _Claudiī Nerōnēs_, used the names _Decimus_
-and _Tiberius_, and out of the seven names used in the _gēns Cornēlia_
-the branch of the Scipios (_Cornēliī Scīpiōnēs_) used only _Gnaeus_,
-_Lūcius_, and _Pūblius_. Even after a _praenōmen_ had found a place in
-a given family, it might be deliberately discarded: thus, the Claudii
-gave up the name _Lūcius_ and the Manlii the name _Mārcus_ on account
-of the disgrace brought upon their families by men who bore these
-names; and the Antonii never used the name _Mārcus_ after the downfall
-of the famous triumvir, Marcus Antonius.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 6. CAESAR]
-
-§43. From the list of names usual in his family the father gave one to
-his son on the ninth day after his birth, the _diēs lūstricus_. It was
-a custom then, one that seems natural enough in our own times, for the
-father to give his own _praenōmen_ to his firstborn son; Cicero's name
-(§39) shows the name _Mārcus_ four times repeated, and it is probable
-that he came from a long line of eldest sons. When these names were
-first given they must have been chosen with due regard to their
-etymological meanings and have had some relation to the circumstances
-attending the birth of the child: Livy in speaking of the mythical
-Silvius Aeneas gives us to understand that he received his first name
-because he was born in a forest (_silva_).
-
-§44. So, _Lūcius_ meant originally "born by day," _Mānius_, "born in
-the morning"; _Quīntus_, _Sextus_, _Decimus_, _Postumus_, etc.,
-indicated the succession in the family; _Tullus_ was connected with
-the verb _tollere_ in the sense of "acknowledge" (§95), _Servius_ with
-_servāre_, _Gāius_ with _gaudēre_. Others are associated with the name
-of some divinity, as _Mārcus_ and _Māmercus_ with Mars, and _Tiberius_
-with the river god Tiberis. But these meanings in the course of time
-were forgotten as completely as we have forgotten the meanings of our
-Christian names, and even the numerals were employed with no reference
-to their proper force: Cicero's only brother was called _Quīntus_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 7. AUGUSTUS]
-
-§45. The abbreviation of the _praenōmen_ was not a matter of mere
-caprice, as is the writing of initials with us, but was an established
-custom, indicating perhaps Roman citizenship. The _praenōmen_ was
-written out in full only when it was used by itself or when it
-belonged to a person in one of the lower classes of society. When
-Roman names are carried over into English, they should always be
-written out in full and pronounced accordingly. In the same way, when
-we read a Latin author and find a name abbreviated, the full name
-should always be pronounced if we read aloud or translate.
-
-§46. The Nomen.--This, the all-important name, is called for greater
-precision the _nōmen gentīle_ and the _nōmen gentīlicium_. The child
-inherited it, as one inherits his surname now, and there was,
-therefore, no choice or selection about it. The _nōmen_ ended
-originally in _-ius_, and this ending was sacredly preserved by the
-patrician families: the endings _-eius_, _-aius_, _-aeus_, and _-eus_
-are merely variations from it. Other endings point to a non-Latin
-origin of the gens. Those in _-ācus_ (_Avidiācus_) are Gallic, those
-in _-na_ (_Caecīna_) are Etruscan, those in _-ēnus_ or _-iēnus_
-(_Salvidiēnus_) are Umbrian or Picene. Some others are formed from the
-name of the town from which the family sprang, either with the regular
-terminations _-ānus_ and _-ēnsis_ (_Albānus_, _Norbānus_,
-_Aquiliēnsis_), or with the suffix _-ius_ (_Perusius_, _Parmēnsius_)
-in imitation of the older and more aristocratic use. Standing entirely
-apart is the _nōmen_ of the notorious _Gāius Verrēs_, which looks like
-a _cognōmen_ out of place (§55).
-
-§47. The _nōmen_ belonged by custom to all connected with the gens, to
-the plebeian as well as the patrician branches, to men, women,
-clients, and freedmen without distinction. It was perhaps the natural
-desire to separate themselves from the more humble bearers of their
-_nōmen_ that led patrician families to use a limited number of
-_praenōmina_, avoiding those used by their clansmen of inferior social
-standing. At any rate it is noticeable that the plebeian families, as
-soon as political nobility and the busts in their halls gave them a
-standing above their fellows, showed the same exclusiveness in the
-selection of names for their children that the patricians had
-displayed before them (§42).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 8. NERO]
-
-§48. The Cognomen.--Besides the individual name and the name that
-marked his _gēns_, the Roman had often a third name, called the
-_cognōmen_, that served to indicate the family or branch of the _gēns_
-to which he belonged. Almost all the great _gentēs_ were thus divided,
-some of them into numerous branches. The Cornelian gens, for example,
-included the plebeian Dolabellae, Lentuli, Cethegi, and Cinnae, in
-addition to the patrician Scipiones, Maluginenses, Rufini, etc. The
-recognition of a group of clansmen as such a branch, or _stirps_, and
-as entitled to transmit a common _cognōmen_ required the formal
-consent of the whole _gēns_, and carried with it the loss of certain
-privileges as _gentīlēs_ to the members of the _stirps_.
-
-§49. From the fact that in the official name (§39) the _cognōmen_
-followed the name of the tribe, it is generally believed that the
-oldest of these _cognōmina_ did not go back beyond the time of the
-division of the people into tribes. It is also generally believed that
-the _cognōmen_ was originally a nickname, bestowed on account of some
-personal peculiarity or characteristic, sometimes as a compliment,
-sometimes in derision. So, we find many pointing at physical traits,
-such as _Albus_, _Barbātus_, _Cincinnātus_, _Claudus_, _Longus_ (all
-originally adjectives), and the nouns _Nāsō_ and _Capitō_ ("the man
-with a nose," "with a head"); others refer to the temperament, such as
-_Benignus_, _Blandus_, _Catō_, _Serēnus_, _Sevērus_; others still
-denote origin, such as _Gallus_, _Ligus_, _Sabīnus_, _Siculus_,
-_Tuscus_. These names, it must be remembered, descended from father to
-son, and would naturally lose their appropriateness as they passed
-along, until in the course of time their meanings were entirely lost
-sight of, as were those of the _praenōmina_ (§44).
-
-§50. Under the Republic the patricians had almost without exception
-this third or family name; we are told of but one man, Caius Marcius,
-who lacked the distinction. With the plebeians the _cognōmen_ was not
-so common, perhaps its possession was the exception. The great
-families of the Marii, Mummii, and Sertorii had none, although the
-plebeian branches of the Cornelian gens (§48), the Tullian gens, and
-others, did. The _cognōmen_ came, therefore, to be prized as an
-indication of ancient lineage, and individuals whose nobility was new
-were anxious to acquire it to transmit to their children. Hence many
-assumed _cognōmina_ of their own selection. Some of these were
-conceded by public opinion as their due, as in the case of Cnaeus
-Pompeius, who took _Magnus_ as his _cognōmen_. Others were derided by
-their contemporaries, as we deride the made-to-order coat of arms of
-some nineteenth century upstart. It is probable, however, that only
-nobles ventured to assume _cognōmina_ under the Republic, though under
-the Empire their possession was hardly more than the badge of freedom.
-
-§51. Additional Names.--Besides the three names already described, we
-find not infrequently, even in Republican times, a fourth or fifth.
-These were also called _cognōmina_ by a loose extension of the word,
-until in the fourth century of our era the name _agnōmina_ was given
-them by the grammarians. They may be conveniently considered under
-four heads:
-
-In the first place, the process that divided the gens into branches
-might be continued even further. That is, as the _gēns_ became
-numerous enough to throw off a _stirps_, so the _stirps_ in process of
-time might throw off a branch of itself, for which there is no better
-name than the vague _familia_. This actually happened very frequently:
-the _gēns Cornēlia_, for example, threw off the _stirps_ of the
-_Scīpiōnēs_, and these in turn the family or "house" of the _Nāsīcae_.
-So we find the quadruple name _Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō Nāsīca_, in
-which the last name was probably given very much in the same way as
-the third had been given before the division took place.
-
-§52. In the second place, when a man passed from one family to another
-by adoption (§30) he regularly took the three names of his adoptive
-father and added his own _nōmen gentīle_ with the suffix _-ānus_.
-Thus, Lucius Aemilius Paulus, the son of Lucius Aemilius Paulus
-Macedonicus (see §53 for the last name), was adopted by Publius
-Cornelius Scipio, and took as his new name _Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō
-Aemiliānus_. In the same way, when Caius Octavius Caepias was adopted
-by Caius Julius Caesar, he became _Gāius Iūlius Caesar Octāviānus_,
-and is hence variously styled Octavius and Octavianus in the
-histories.
-
-§53. In the third place, an additional name, sometimes called
-_cognōmen ex virtūte_, was often given by acclamation to a great
-statesman or victorious general, and was put after his _cognōmen_. A
-well known example is the name of Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus,
-the last name having been given him after his defeat of Hannibal. In
-the same way, his grandson by adoption, the Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Aemilianus mentioned above, received the same honorable name after he
-had destroyed Carthage, and was called _Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō
-Africānus Aemiliānus_. Such a name is Macedonicus given to Lucius
-Aemilius Paulus for his defeat of Persens, and the title Augustus
-given by the senate to Octavianus. It is not certainly known whether
-or not these names passed by inheritance to the descendants of those
-who originally earned them, but it is probable that the eldest son
-only was strictly entitled to take his father's title of honor.
-
-§54. In the fourth place, the fact that a man had inherited a nickname
-from his ancestors in the form of a _cognōmen_ (§49) did not prevent
-his receiving another from some personal characteristic, especially as
-the inherited name had often no application, as we have seen, to its
-later possessor. To some ancient Publius Cornelius was given the
-nickname _Scīpiō_ (§49), and in the course of time this was taken by
-all his descendants without thought of its appropriateness and became
-a _cognōmen_; then to one of these descendants was given another
-nickname for personal reasons, _Nāsīca_, and in course of time it lost
-its individuality and became the name of a whole family (§51); then in
-precisely the same way a member of this family became prominent enough
-to need a separate name and was called _Corculum_, his full name being
-_Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō Nāsīca Corculum_. It is evident that there
-is no reason why the expansion should not have continued indefinitely.
-Such names are Publius Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, Quintus Caecilius
-Metellus Celer, and Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio. It is
-also evident that we can not always distinguish between a mere
-nickname, one belonging strictly to this paragraph, and the additional
-_cognōmen_ that marked the family off from the rest of the _stirps_ to
-which it belonged. It is perfectly possible that the name Spinther
-mentioned above has as good a right as Nasica to a place in the first
-division (§51).
-
-§55. Confusion of Names.--A system so elaborate as that we have
-described was almost sure to be misunderstood or misapplied, and in
-the later days of the Republic and under the Empire we find all law
-and order disregarded. The giving of the _praenōmen_ to the child
-seems to have been delayed too long sometimes, and burial inscriptions
-are numerous which have in place of a first name the word _pūpus_
-(_PVP_) "child," showing that the little one had died unnamed. One
-such inscription gives the age of the unnamed child as sixteen years.
-Then confusion was caused by the misuse of the _praenōmen_. Sometimes
-two are found in one name, e.g., _Pūblius Aelius Aliēnus Archelāus
-Mārcus_. Sometimes words ending like the _nōmen_ in _-ius_ were used
-as _praenōmina_: Cicero tells us that one _Numerius Quīntius Rūfus_
-owed his escape from death in a riot to his ambiguous first name. The
-familiar Gāius must have been a _nōmen_ in very ancient times. Like
-irregularities occur in the use of the _nōmen_. Two in a name were not
-uncommon, one being derived from the family of the mother perhaps;
-occasionally three or four are used, and fourteen are found in the
-name of one of the consuls of the year 169 A.D. Then by a change, the
-converse of that mentioned above, a word might go out of use as a
-_praenōmen_ and become a _nōmen_: Cicero's enemy _Lūcius Sergius
-Catilīna_ had for his gentile name _Sergius_, which had once been a
-first name (§41). The _cognōmen_ was similarly abused. It ceased to
-denote the family and came to distinguish members of the same family,
-as the _praenōmina_ originally had done: thus the three sons of Marcus
-Annaeus Seneca, for example, were called _Mārcus Annaeus Novātus_,
-_Lūcius Annaeus Seneca_, and _Lūcius Annaeus Mela_. So, too, a word
-used as a _cognōmen_ in one name might be used as a fourth element in
-another: for example in the names _Lūcius Cornēlius Sulla_ and _Lūcius
-Cornēlius Lentulus Sura_ the third and fourth elements respectively
-are really the same, being merely shortened forms of _Surula_. Finally
-it may be remarked that the same name might be arranged differently at
-different times: in the consular lists we find the same man called
-_Lūcius Lūcrētius Tricipitīnus Flāvus_ and _Lūcius Lūcrētius Flāvus
-Tricipitīnus_.
-
-§56. There is even greater variation in the names of persons who had
-passed from one family into another by adoption. Some took the
-additional name (§52) from the _stirps_ instead of from the _gēns_,
-that is, from the _cognōmen_ instead of from the _nōmen_. A son of
-Marcus Claudius Marcellus was adopted by a certain Publius Cornelius
-Lentulus and ought to have been called _Pūblius Cornēlius Lentulus
-Claudiānus_; he took instead the name _Pūblius Cornēlius Lentulus
-Marcellīnus_, and this name descended to his children. The confusion
-in this direction is well illustrated by the name of the famous Marcus
-Junius Brutus. A few years before Caesar fell by his hand, Brutus, as
-we usually call him, was adopted by his mother's brother, Quintus
-Servilius Caepio, and ought to have been called _Quīntus Servīlius
-Caepiō Iūniānus_. For some reason unknown to us he retained his own
-_cognōmen_, and even his close friend Cicero seems scarcely to know
-what to call him. Sometimes he writes of him as _Quīntus Caepiō
-Brūtus_, sometimes as _Mārcus Brūtus_, sometimes simply as _Brūtus_.
-The great scholar of the first century, Asconius, calls him _Mārcus
-Caepiō_. Finally it may be noticed that late in the Empire we find a
-man struggling under the load of forty names.
-
-§57. Names of Women.--No very satisfactory account of the names of
-women can be given, because it is impossible to discover any system in
-the choice and arrangement of those that have come down to us. It may
-be said in general that the threefold name was unknown in the best
-days of the Republic, and that _praenōmina_ were rare and when used
-were not abbreviated. We find such _praenōmina_ as _Paulla_ and
-_Vibia_ (the masculine forms of which early disappeared), _Gāia_,
-_Lūcia_, and _Pūblia_, and it is probable that the daughter took these
-from her father. More common were the adjectives _Maxuma_ and _Minor_,
-and the numerals _Secunda_ and _Tertia_, but these unlike the
-corresponding names of men seem always to have denoted the place of
-the bearer among a group of sisters. It was more usual for the
-unmarried woman to be called by her father's _nōmen_ in its feminine
-form, _Tullia_, _Cornēlia_, with the addition of her father's
-_cognōmen_ in the genitive case, _Caecilia Metellī_, followed later by
-the letter _f_ (=_filia_) to mark the relationship. Sometimes she used
-her mother's _nōmen_ after her father's. The married woman, if she
-passed into her husband's hand (_manus_, §35) by the ancient patrician
-ceremony, originally took his _nōmen_, just as an adopted son took the
-name of the family into which he passed, but it can not be shown that
-the rule was universally or even usually observed. Under the later
-forms of marriage she retained her maiden name. In the time of the
-Empire we find the threefold name for women in general use, with the
-same riotous confusion in selection and arrangement as prevailed in
-the case of the names of men at the same time.
-
-§58. Names of Slaves.--Slaves had no more right to names of their own
-than they had to other property, but took such as their masters were
-pleased to give them, and even these did not descend to their
-children. In the simpler life of early times the slave was called
-_puer_, just as the word "boy" was once used in this country for
-slaves of any age. Until late in the Republic the slave was known only
-by this name corrupted to _por_ and affixed to the genitive of his
-master's first name: _Mārcipor_ (=_Mārcī puer_), "Marcus's slave."
-When slaves became numerous this simple form no longer sufficed to
-distinguish them, and they received individual names. These were
-usually foreign names, often denoting the nationality of the slave,
-sometimes, in mockery perhaps, the high-sounding appellations of
-eastern potentates, such names as Afer, Eleutheros, Pharnaces. By this
-time, too, the word _servus_ had supplanted _puer_. We find,
-therefore, that toward the end of the Republic the full name of a
-slave consisted of his individual name followed by the _nōmen_ and
-_praenōmen_ (the order is important) of his master and the word
-_servus_: _Pharnacēs Egnātiī Pūbliī servus_. When a slave passed from
-one master to another he took the _nōmen_ of the new master and added
-to it the _cognōmen_ of the old with the suffix _-ānus_: when Anna the
-slave of Maecenas became the property of Livia, she was called _Anna
-Līviae serva Maecēnātiāna_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 9. TRAJAN]
-
-§59. Names of Freedmen.--The freedman regularly kept the individual
-name which he had had as a slave, and was given the _nōmen_ of his
-master with any _praenōmen_ the latter assigned him. Thus, Andronicus,
-the slave of Marcus Livius Salinator, became when freed _Lūcius Līvius
-Andronīcus_, the individual name coming last as a sort of _cognōmen_.
-It happened naturally that the master's _praenōmen_ was often given,
-especially to a favorite slave. The freedman of a woman took the name
-of her father, e.g., _Mārcus Līvius Augustae l Ismarus_; the letter
-_l_ stands for _lībertus_, and was inserted in all formal documents.
-Of course the master might disregard the regular form and give the
-freedman any name he pleased. Thus, when Cicero manumitted his slaves
-Tiro and Dionysius he called the former in strict accord with custom
-_Mārcus Tullius Tīrō_, but to the latter he gave his own _praenōmen_
-and the _nōmen_ of his friend Titus Pomponius Atticus, the new name
-being _Mārcus Pomponius Dionysius_. The individual names (Pharnaces,
-Dionysius, etc.) were dropped by the descendants of freedmen, who were
-anxious with good reason to hide all traces of their mean descent.
-
-§60. Naturalized Citizens.--When a foreigner was given the right of
-citizenship, he took a new name, which was arranged on much the same
-principles as have been explained in the cases of freedmen. His
-original name was retained as a sort of _cognōmen_, and before it were
-written the _praenōmen_ that suited his fancy and the _nōmen_ of the
-person, always a Roman citizen, to whom he owed his citizenship. The
-most familiar example is that of the Greek poet Archias, whom Cicero
-defended under the name of _Aulus Licinius Archiās_ in the well-known
-oration. He had long been attached to the family of the Luculli and
-when he was made a citizen took as his _nōmen_ that of his
-distinguished patron Lucius Licinius Lucullus; we do not know why he
-selected the first name Aulus. Another example is that of the Gaul
-mentioned by Caesar (B. G., I, 47), _Gāius Valerius Cabūrus_. He took
-his name from Caius Valerius Flaccus, the governor of Gaul at the time
-that he was given his citizenship. It is to this custom of taking the
-names of governors and generals that is due the frequent occurrence of
-the name Julius in Gaul, Pompeius in Spain, and Cornelius in Sicily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 28-80; Voigt, 318, 449; Göll, II, 5 f.;
-Friedländer, I, 451 f.; Ramsay, 293 f., 477; Preston, 8 f.; Smith,
-_mātrimōnium_; Baumeister, 696 f.; Harper, _cōnūbium_, _mātrimōnium_;
-Lübker, 364; Pauly-Wissowa, _coēmptiō_, _cōnfarreātiō_, _cōnūbium_.
-
-
-§61. Early Forms of Marriage.--Polygamy was never practiced at Rome,
-and we are told that for five centuries after the founding of the city
-divorce was entirely unknown. Up to the time of the Servian
-constitution (date uncertain) the patricians were the only citizens
-and intermarried only with patricians and with members of surrounding
-communities having like social standing. The only form of marriage
-known to them was the stately religious ceremonial called, as will be
-explained hereafter, _cōnfarreātiō_. With the direct consent of the
-gods, with the _pontificēs_ celebrating the solemn rites, in the
-presence of the accredited representatives of his _gēns_, the
-patrician took his wife from her father's family into his own (§28),
-to be a _māter familiās_, to rear him children who should conserve the
-family mysteries, perpetuate his ancient race, and extend the power of
-Rome. By this, the one legal marriage of the time, the wife passed _in
-manum virī_, and the husband acquired over her practically the same
-rights as he had over his own children (§§35, 36) and other dependent
-members of his family. Such a marriage was said to be _cum conventiōne
-uxōris in manum virī_ (§35).
-
-§62. During this period, too, the free non-citizens (§§177, 178), the
-plebeians, had been busy in marrying and giving in marriage. There is
-little doubt that their unions had been as sacred in their eyes, their
-family ties as strictly regarded and as pure, as those of the
-patricians, but these unions were unhallowed by the national gods and
-unrecognized by the civil law, simply because the plebeians were not
-yet citizens. Their form of marriage was called _ūsus_, and consisted
-essentially in the living together of the man and woman as husband and
-wife for a year, though there were, of course, conventional forms and
-observances, about which we know absolutely nothing. The plebeian
-husband might acquire the same rights over the person and property of
-his wife as the patrician, but the form of marriage did not in itself
-involve _manus_. The wife might remain a member of her father's family
-and retain such property as he allowed her (§33) by merely absenting
-herself from her husband for the space of a _trinoctium_ each year. If
-she did this the marriage was _sine conventiōne in manum_, and the
-husband had no control over her property; if she did not, the marriage
-like that of the patricians was _cum conventiōne in manum_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 10. HADRIAN]
-
-§63. At least as far back as the time of Servius goes another Roman
-form of marriage, also plebeian, though not so ancient as _ūsus_. It
-was called _coēmptiō_ and was a fictitious sale, by which the _pater
-familiās_ of the woman, or her guardian (_tūtor_) if she was _suī
-iūris_, transferred her to the man _mātrimōniī causā_. This form must
-have been a survival of the old custom of purchase and sale of wives,
-but we do not know when it was introduced among the Romans. It carried
-_manus_ with it as a matter of course and seems to have been regarded
-socially as better form than _ūsus_. The two existed for centuries
-side by side, but _coēmptiō_ survived _ūsus_ as a form of marriage
-_cum conventiōne in manum_.
-
-§64. Ius Conubii.--While the Servian constitution made the plebeians
-citizens and thereby legalized their forms of marriage, it did not
-give them the right of intermarriage with the patricians. Many of the
-plebeian families were hardly less ancient than the patricians, many
-were rich and powerful, but it was not until 445 B.C. that marriages
-between the two orders were formally sanctioned by the civil law. The
-objection on the part of the patricians was largely a religious one:
-The gods of the state were patrician gods, the auspices could be taken
-by patricians only, the marriages of patricians only were sanctioned
-by heaven. Their orators protested that the unions of the plebeians
-were no better than promiscuous intercourse, they were not _iūstae
-nūptiae_ (§67); the plebeian wife was taken _in mātrimōnium_, she was
-at best an _uxor_, not a _māter familiās_; her offspring were
-"mother's children," not _patriciī_.
-
-§65. Much of this was class exaggeration, but it is true that at this
-early date the _gēns_ was not so highly valued by the plebeians as by
-the patricians, and that the plebeians assigned to cognates certain
-duties and privileges that devolved upon the patrician _gentīlēs_.
-With, the _iūs cōnūbiī_ many of these points of difference
-disappeared. New conditions were fixed for _iūstae nūptiae_;
-_coēmptiō_ by a sort of compromise became the usual form of marriage
-when one of the parties was a plebeian; and the stigma disappeared
-from the word _mātrimōnium_. On the other hand patrician women learned
-to understand the advantages of a marriage _sine conventiōne_ and
-marriage with _manus_ gradually became less frequent, the taking of
-the auspices before the ceremony came to be considered a mere form,
-and marriage began to lose its sacramental character, and with these
-changes came later the laxness in the marital relation and the freedom
-of divorce that seemed in the time of Augustus to threaten the very
-life of the commonwealth.
-
-§66. It is probable that by the time of Cicero marriage with _manus_
-was uncommon, and consequently that _cōnfarreātiō_ and _coēmptiō_ had
-gone out of general use. To a limited extent, however, the former was
-retained until Christian times, because certain priestly offices
-(_flāminēs maiōrēs_ and _rēgēs sacrōrum_) could be filled only by
-persons whose parents had been married by the confarreate ceremony,
-the one sacramental form, and who had themselves been married by the
-same form. But so great became the reluctance of women to submit to
-_manus_, that in order to fill even these few priestly offices it was
-found necessary under Tiberius to eliminate _manus_ from the
-confarreate ceremony.
-
-§67. Nuptiae Iustae.--There were certain conditions that had to be
-satisfied before a legal marriage could be contracted even by
-citizens. It was required:
-
-1. That the consent of both parties should be given, or of the _pater
-familiās_ if one or both were _in potestāte_. Under Augustus it was
-provided that the _pater familiās_ should not withhold his consent
-unless he could show valid reasons for doing so.
-
-2. That both parties should be _pūberēs_; there could be no marriage
-between children. Although no precise age was fixed by law, it is
-probable that fourteen and twelve were the lowest limit for the man
-and woman respectively.
-
-3. That both man and woman should be unmarried. Polygamy was never
-practiced at Rome.
-
-§68. 4. That the parties should not be nearly related. The
-restrictions in this direction were fixed rather by public opinion
-than by law and varied greatly at different times, becoming gradually
-less severe. In general it may be said that marriage was absolutely
-forbidden between ascendants and descendants, between other cognates
-within the fourth degree (§25), and the nearer _adfīnēs_ (§26). If the
-parties could satisfy these conditions they might be legally married,
-but distinctions were still made that affected the civil status of the
-children, although no doubt was cast upon their legitimacy or upon the
-moral character of their parents.
-
-§69. If the husband and wife were both Roman citizens, their marriage
-was called _iūstae nūptiae_, which we may translate "regular
-marriage," their children were _iūstī līberī_ and were by birth _cīvēs
-optimō iūre_, "possessed of all civil rights."
-
-If but one of the parties was a Roman citizen and the other a member
-of a community having the _iūs cōnūbiī_ but not the full _cīvitās_,
-the marriage was still called _iūstae nūptiae_, but the children took
-the civil standing of the father. This means that if the father was a
-citizen and the mother a foreigner, the children were citizens; but if
-the father was a foreigner and the mother a citizen, the children were
-foreigners (_peregrīnī_) with the father.
-
-But if either of the parties was without the _iūs cōnūbiī_, the
-marriage, though still legal, was called _nūptiae iniūstae_ or
-_mātrimōnium iniūstum_, "an irregular marriage," and the children,
-though legitimate, took the civil position of the parent of lower
-degree. We seem to have something analogous to this in the loss of
-social standing which usually follows the marriage of a person with
-one of distinctly inferior position.
-
-§70. Betrothals.--Betrothal (_spōnsālia_) as a preliminary to marriage
-was considered good form but was not legally necessary and carried
-with it no obligations that could be enforced by law. In the
-_spōnsālia_ the maiden was promised to the man as his bride with
-"words of style," that is, in solemn form. The promise was made, not
-by the maiden herself, but by her _pater familiās_, or by her _tūtor_
-if she was not _in potestāte_. In the same way, the promise was made
-to the man directly only in case he was _suī iūris_, otherwise to the
-Head of his House, who had asked for him the maiden in marriage. The
-"words of style" were probably something like this:
-
-"_Spondēsne Gāiam, tuam fīliam_ (or if she was a ward: _Gāiam, Lūciī
-fīliam_), _mihi_ (or _fīliō meō_) _uxōrem darī?_"
-
-"_Dī bene vortant! Spondeō._"
-
-"_Dī bene vortant!_"
-
-§71. At any rate the word _spondeō_ was technically used of the
-promise, and the maiden was henceforth _spōnsa_. The person who made
-the promise had always the right to cancel it. This was usually done
-through an intermediary (_nūntius_), and hence the formal expression
-for breaking an engagement was _repudium renūntiāre_, or simply
-_renūntiāre_. While the contract was entirely one-sided, it should be
-noticed that a man was liable to _īnfāmia_ if he formed two
-engagements at the same time, and that he could not recover any
-presents made with a view to a future marriage if he himself broke the
-engagement. Such presents were almost always made, and while we find
-that articles for personal use, the toilet, etc., were common, a ring
-was usually given. The ring was worn on the third finger of the left
-hand, because it was believed that a nerve ran directly from this
-finger to the heart. It was also usual for the _spōnsa_ to make a
-present to her betrothed.
-
-§72. The Dowry.--It was a point of honor with the Romans, as it is now
-with some European nations, for the bride to bring to her husband a
-dowry (_dōs_). In the case of a girl _in potestāte_ this would
-naturally be furnished by the Head of her House; in the case of one
-_suī iūris_ it was furnished from her own property, or if she had none
-was contributed by her relatives. It seems that if they were reluctant
-she might by process of law compel her ascendants at least to furnish
-it. In early times, when marriage _cum conventiōne_ prevailed, all the
-property brought by the bride became the property of her husband, or
-of his _pater familiās_ (§35), but in later times, when _manus_ was
-less common, and especially after divorce had become of frequent
-occurrence, a distinction was made. A part of the bride's possessions
-was reserved for her own exclusive use, and a part was made over to
-the groom under the technical name of _dōs_. The relative proportions
-varied, of course, with circumstances.
-
-§73. Essential Forms.--There were really no legal forms necessary for
-the solemnization of a marriage; there was no license to be procured
-from the civil authorities, the ceremonies simple or elaborate did not
-have to be performed by persons authorized by the state. The one thing
-necessary was the consent of both parties, if they were _suī iūris_,
-or of their _patrēs familiās_, if they were _in potestāte_. It has
-been already remarked (§67, 1) that the _pater familiās_ could refuse
-his consent for valid reasons only; on the other hand, he could
-command the consent of persons subject to him. It is probable that
-parental and filial affection (_pietās_) made this hardship less
-rigorous than it now seems to us (§§32, 33).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 11. ANTONINUS PIUS]
-
-§74. But while this consent was the only condition for a legal
-marriage, it had to be shown by some act of personal union between the
-parties; that is, the marriage could not be entered into by letter or
-by the intervention of a third party. Such an overt act was the
-joining of hands (_dextrārum iūnctiō_) in the presence of witnesses,
-or the escorting of the bride to her husband's house, never omitted
-when the parties had any social standing, or in later times the
-signing of the marriage contract. It was never necessary to a valid
-marriage that the parties should live together as man and wife,
-though, as we have seen (§62), this living together of itself
-constituted a legal marriage.
-
-§75. The Wedding Day.--It will be noticed that superstition played an
-important part in the arrangements for a wedding two thousand years
-ago, as it does now. Especial pains had to be taken to secure a lucky
-day. The Kalends, Nones, and Ides of each month, and the day following
-each of them, were unlucky. So was all of May and the first half of
-June, on account of certain religious ceremonies observed in these
-months, the Argean offerings and the _Lemūria_ in May and the _diēs
-religiōsī_ connected with Vesta in June. Besides these the _diēs
-parentālēs_, February 13-21, and the days when the entrance to the
-lower world was supposed to be open, August 24, October 5, and
-November 8, were carefully avoided. One-third of the year, therefore,
-was absolutely barred. The great holidays, too, and these were legion,
-were avoided, not because they were unlucky, but because on these days
-friends and relatives were sure to have other engagements. Women
-marrying for the second time chose these very holidays to make their
-weddings less conspicuous.
-
-§76. The Wedding Garments.--On the eve of her wedding day the bride
-dedicated to the _Larēs_ of her father's house her _bulla_ (§99) and
-the _toga praetexta_, which married women did not wear, and also if
-she was not much over twelve years of age her childish playthings. For
-the sake of the omen she put on before going to sleep the _tunica
-rēcta_, or _rēgilla_, woven in one piece and falling to the feet. A
-very doubtful picture is shown in Rich under the word _rëcta_. It
-seems to have derived its name from having been woven in the
-old-fashioned way at an upright loom. This same tunic was worn at the
-wedding.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 12. DRESSING THE BRIDE]
-
-§77. On the morning of the wedding day the bride was dressed for the
-ceremony by her mother, and Roman poets show unusual tenderness as
-they describe her solicitude. There is a wall painting of such a
-scene, found at Pompeii and reproduced in Fig. 12. The chief article
-of dress was the _tunica rēgilla_ already mentioned, which was
-fastened around the waist with a band of wool tied in the knot of
-Hercules (_nodus Herculāneus_), probably because Hercules was the
-guardian of wedded life. This knot the husband only was privileged to
-untie. Over the tunic was worn the bridal veil, the flame-colored veil
-(_flammeum_), shown in Fig. 13. So important was the veil of the bride
-that _nūbere_, "to veil one's self," is the regular word for "marry"
-when used of a woman.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 13. THE FLAMMEUM]
-
-§78. Especial attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, but
-unfortunately we have no picture preserved to us to make its
-arrangement clear. We only know that it was divided into six locks by
-the point of a spear, probably a reminiscence of the ancient marriage
-by capture, and that these locks perhaps braided were kept in position
-by ribbons (_vittae_). The bride had also a wreath of flowers and
-sacred plants gathered by herself. The groom wore of course the toga
-and had a similar wreath of flowers on his head. He was accompanied to
-the home of the bride at the proper time by relatives, friends, and
-clients, who were bound to do him every honor on his wedding day.
-
-§79. The Ceremony.--The house of the bride's father, where the
-ceremony was performed, was decked with flowers, boughs of trees,
-bands of wool, and tapestries. The guests arrived before the hour of
-sunrise, and even then the omens had been already taken. In the
-ancient confarreate ceremony these were taken by the public augur, but
-in later times, no matter what the ceremony, the haruspices merely
-consulted the entrails of a sheep which had been killed in sacrifice.
-When the marriage ceremonies are described it must be remembered that
-only the consent was necessary (§73) with the act expressing the
-consent, and that all other forms and ceremonies were unessential and
-variable. Something depended upon the particular form used, but more
-upon the wealth and social position of the families interested. It is
-probable that most weddings were a good deal simpler than those
-described by our chief authorities.
-
-§80. After the omens had been pronounced favorable the bride and groom
-appeared in the atrium, the chief room, and the wedding began. This
-consisted of two parts:
-
-1. The ceremony proper, varying according to the form used
-(_cōnfarreātiō_, _coēmptiō_, or _ūsus_), the essential part being the
-consent before witnesses.
-
-2. The festivities, including the feast at the bride's home, the
-taking of the bride with a show of force from her mother's arms, the
-escort to her new home (the essential part), and her reception there.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 14. A MARRIAGE SCENE]
-
-§81. The confarreate ceremony began with the _dextrārum iūnctiō_. The
-bride and groom were brought together by the _prōnuba_, a matron
-married to her first husband, and joined hands in the presence of ten
-witnesses representing the ten _gentēs_ of the _cūria_. These are
-shown on an ancient sarcophagus found at Naples (Fig. 14). Then
-followed the words of consent spoken by the bride: _Quandō tū Gāius,
-ego Gāia_. The formula was unchanged, no matter what the names of the
-bride and groom, and goes back to a time when _Gāius_ was a _nōmen_,
-not a _praenōmen_ (§55). It implied that the bride was actually
-entering the _gēns_ of the groom (§§23, 28, 35), and was probably
-chosen for its lucky meaning (§44). Even in marriages _sine
-conventiōne_ the old formula came to be used, its import having been
-lost in lapse of time. The bride and groom then took their places side
-by side at the left of the altar and facing it, sitting on stools
-covered with the pelt of the sheep slain for the sacrifice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 15. A CAMILLUS]
-
-§82. A bloodless offering was then made to Jupiter by the _Pontifex
-Maximus_ and the _Flāmen Diālis_, consisting of the cake of spelt
-(_farreum lībum_) from which the _cōnfarreātiō_ got its name. With the
-offering to Jupiter a prayer was recited by the Flamen to Juno as the
-goddess of marriage, and to Tellus, Picumnus, and Pilumnus, deities of
-the country and its fruits. The utensils necessary for the offering
-were carried in a covered basket (_cumerus_) by a boy called
-_camillus_ (Fig. 15), whose parents must have both been living at the
-time (_patrīmus et mātrīmus_). Then followed the congratulations, the
-guests using the word _fēlīciter_.
-
-§83. The _coēmptiō_ began with the fictitious sale, carried out in the
-presence of no less than five witnesses. The purchase money
-represented by a single coin was laid in the scales held by a
-_lībripēns_. The scales, scaleholder, coin, and witnesses were all
-necessary for this kind of marriage. Then followed the _dextrārum
-iūnctiō_ and the words of consent, borrowed, as has been said, from
-the confarreate ceremony. Originally the groom had asked the bride:
-_An sibi māter familiās esse vellet._ She assented, and put to him a
-similar question: _An sibi pater familiās esse vellet._ To this he too
-gave the answer "Yes." A prayer was then recited and sometimes perhaps
-a sacrifice offered, after which came the congratulations as in the
-other and more elaborate ceremony.
-
-§84. The third form, that is, the ceremonies preliminary to _ūsus_,
-probably admitted of more variation than either of the others, but no
-description has come down to us. We may be sure that the hands were
-clasped, the words of consent spoken, and congratulations offered, but
-we know of no special customs or usages. It was almost necessary for
-the three forms to get more or less alike in the course of time,
-though the cake of spelt could not be borrowed from the confarreate
-ceremony by either of the others, or the scales and their holder from
-the ceremony of _coēmptiō_.
-
-§85. The Wedding Feast.--After the conclusion of the ceremony came the
-wedding feast (_cēna nūptiālis_) lasting until evening. There can be
-no doubt that this was regularly given at the house of the bride's
-father and that the few cases when we know that it was given at the
-groom's house were exceptional and due to special circumstances which
-might cause a similar change to-day. The feast seems to have concluded
-with the distribution among the guests of pieces of the wedding cake
-(_mustāceum_), which was made of meal steeped in must (§296) and
-served on bay leaves. There came to be so much extravagance at these
-feasts and at the _repōtia_ mentioned below (§89) that under Augustus
-it was proposed to limit their cost by law to one thousand sesterces
-($50), a piece of sumptuary legislation as vain as such restrictions
-have usually proved to be.
-
-§86. The Bridal Procession.--After the wedding feast the bride was
-formally taken to her husband's house. This ceremony was called
-_dēductiō_, and as it was essential to the validity of the marriage
-(§74) it was never omitted. It was a public function, that is, any one
-might join the procession and take part in the merriment that
-distinguished it, and we are told that persons of rank did not scruple
-to wait in the street to see the bride. As evening approached the
-procession was formed before the house with torch bearers and flute
-players at its head. When all was ready the marriage hymn
-(_hymenaeus_) was sung and the groom took the bride with a show of
-force from the arms of her mother. The Romans saw in this custom a
-reminiscence of the rape of the Sabines, but it probably goes far back
-beyond the founding of Rome to the custom of marriage by capture that
-prevailed among many peoples. The bride then took her place in the
-procession attended by three boys, _patrīmī et mātrīmī_ (§82); two of
-these walked by her side, holding each a hand, while the other carried
-before her the wedding torch of white thorn (_spīna alba_). Behind the
-bride were carried the distaff and spindle, emblems of domestic life.
-The _camillus_ with his _cumerus_ also walked in the procession.
-
-§87. During the march were sung the _versūs Fescennīnī_, abounding in
-coarse jests and personalities. The crowd also shouted the ancient
-marriage cry, the significance of which the Romans themselves did not
-understand. We find it in at least five forms, all variations of the
-name Talassius or Talassio, who was probably a Sabine divinity, though
-his functions are unknown. Livy derives it from the supposed name of a
-senator in the time of Romulus. The bride dropped on the way one of
-three coins which she carried as an offering to the _Larēs
-compitālēs_; of the other two she gave one to the groom as an emblem
-of the dowry she brought him, and one to the _Larēs_ of his house. The
-groom meanwhile scattered nuts through the crowd. This is explained by
-Catullus as a token of his having become a man and having put away
-childish things (§103), but the nuts were rather a symbol of
-fruitfulness. The custom survives in the throwing of rice in modern
-times.
-
-§88. When the procession reached the house, the bride wound the door
-posts with bands of wool, probably a symbol of her own work as
-mistress of the household, and anointed the door with oil and fat,
-emblems of plenty. She was then lifted carefully over the threshold,
-in order to avoid the chance of so bad an omen as a slip of the foot
-on entering the house for the first time. Others, however, see in the
-custom another survival of marriage by capture. She then pronounced
-again the words of consent: _Ubi tū Gāius, ego Gāia_, and the doors
-were closed against the general crowd; only the invited guests entered
-with the pair.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 16. THE MARRIAGE COUCH]
-
-§89. The husband met the wife in the atrium and offered her fire and
-water in token of the life they were to live together and her part in
-the home. Upon the hearth was ready the wood for a fire, and this the
-bride kindled with the marriage torch which had been carried before
-her. The torch was afterwards thrown among the guests to be scrambled
-for as a lucky possession. A prayer was then recited by the bride and
-she was placed by the _prōnuba_ on the _lectus geniālis_ (Fig. 16),
-which always stood on the wedding night in the atrium. Here it
-afterwards remained as a piece of ornamental furniture only. On the
-next day was given in the new home the second wedding feast
-(_repōtia_) to the friends and relatives, and at this feast the bride
-made her first offering to the gods as a _mātrōna_. A series of feasts
-followed, given in honor of the newly wedded pair by those in whose
-social circles they moved.
-
-§90. The Position of Women.--With her marriage the Roman woman reached
-a position unattained by the women of any other nation in the ancient
-world. No other people held its women in so high respect; nowhere else
-did they exert so strong and beneficent an influence. In her own house
-the Roman matron was absolute mistress. She directed its economy and
-supervised the tasks of the household slaves but did no menial work
-herself. She was her children's nurse, and conducted their early
-training and education. Her daughters were fitted under their mother's
-eye to be mistresses of similar homes, and remained her closest
-companions until she herself had dressed them for the bridal and their
-husbands had torn them from her arms. She was her husband's helpmeet
-in business as well as in household affairs, and he often consulted
-her on affairs of state. She was not confined at home to a set of
-so-called women's apartments, as were her sisters in Greece; the whole
-house was hers. She received her husband's guests and sat at table
-with them. Even when subject to the _manus_ of her husband the
-restraint was so tempered by law and custom (§36) that she could
-hardly have been chafed by the fetters which had been forged with her
-own consent (§73).
-
-§91. Out of the house the matron's dress (_stola mātrōnālis_, §259)
-secured for her the most profound respect. Men made way for her in the
-street; she had a place at the public games, at the theaters, and at
-the great religious ceremonies of state. She could give testimony in
-the courts, and until late in the Republic might even appear as an
-advocate. Her birthday was sacredly observed and made a joyous
-occasion by the members of her household, and the people as a whole
-celebrated the _Mātrōnālia_, the great festival on the first of March,
-and gave presents to their wives and mothers. Finally, if she came of
-a noble family, she might be honored, after she had passed away, with
-a public eulogy, delivered from the _rostra_ in the forum.
-
-§92. It must be admitted that the education of women was not carried
-far at Rome, and that their accomplishments were few, and rather
-useful and homely than elegant. But the Roman women spoke the purest
-and best Latin known in the highest and most cultivated circles, and
-so far as accomplishments were concerned their husbands fared no
-better. Respectable women in Greece were allowed no education at all.
-
-§93. It must be admitted, too, that a great change took place in the
-last years of the Republic. With the laxness of the family life, the
-freedom of divorce, and the inflow of wealth and extravagance, the
-purity and dignity of the Roman matron declined, as had before
-declined the manhood and the strength of her father and her husband.
-It must be remembered, however, that ancient writers did not dwell
-upon certain subjects that are favorites with our own. The simple joys
-of childhood and domestic life, home, the praises of sister, wife, and
-mother may not have been too sacred for the poet and the essayist of
-Rome, but the essayist and the poet did not make them their themes.
-The mother of Horace must have been a singularly gifted woman, but she
-is never mentioned by her son. The descriptions of domestic life,
-therefore, that have come down to us are either from Greek sources, or
-are selected from precisely those circles where fashion, profligacy,
-and impurity made easy the work of the satirist. It is, therefore,
-safe to say that the pictures painted for us in the verse of Catullus
-and Juvenal, for example, are not true of Roman women as a class in
-the times of which they write. The strong, pure woman of the early day
-must have had many to imitate her virtues in the darkest times of the
-Empire. There were mothers then, as well as in the times of the
-Gracchi; there were wives as noble as the wife of Marcus Brutus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-CHILDREN AND EDUCATION
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 80-134; Voigt, 322 f., 397 f., 455 f.; Göll,
-"Gallus," II, 65-113; Friedländer, I, 456 f., III, 376 f.; Ramsay, 475
-f.; Smith, _lūdus litterārius_; Harper, _education_; Baumeister, 237,
-1588 f.; Schreiber, Pl. 79, 82, 89, 90; Lübker, _Erziehung_.
-
-
-§94. Legal Status.--The position of the children in the _familia_ has
-been already explained (§§31, 32). It has been shown that in the eyes
-of the law they were little better than the chattels of the Head of
-the House. It rested with him to grant them the right to live; all
-that they earned was his; they married at his bidding, and either
-remained under his _potestās_ or passed under another no less severe.
-It has also been suggested that custom (§32) and _pietās_ (§73) had
-made this condition less rigorous than it seems to us.
-
-§95. Susceptio.--The power of the _pater familiās_ was displayed
-immediately after the birth of the child. By invariable custom it was
-laid upon the ground at his feet. If he raised (_tollere_,
-_suscipere_) it in his arms, he acknowledged it as his own by the act
-(_susceptiō_) and admitted it to all the rights and privileges that
-membership in a Roman family implied. If he refused to do so, the
-child became an outcast, without family, without the protection of the
-spirits of the dead (§27), utterly friendless and forsaken. The
-disposal of the child did not ordinarily call for any act of downright
-murder, such as was contemplated in the case of Romulus and Remus and
-was afterwards forbidden by Romulus the King (§32). The child was
-simply "exposed" (_expōnere_), that is, taken by a slave from the
-house and left on the highway to live or to die. When we consider the
-slender chance for life that the newborn child has with even the
-tenderest care, the result of this exposure will not seem doubtful.
-
-§96. But there was a chance for life, and the mother, powerless to
-interpose in her infant's behalf, often sent with it some trinkets or
-trifling articles of jewelry that would serve perhaps to identify it,
-if it should live. Even if the child was found in time by persons
-disposed to save its life, its fate might be worse than death. Slavery
-was the least of the evils to which it was exposed. Such foundlings
-often fell into the hands of those whose trade was beggary and who
-trained children for the same profession. In the time of the Empire,
-at least, they cruelly maimed and deformed their victims, in order to
-excite more readily the compassion of those to whom they appealed for
-alms. Such things are still done in southern Europe.
-
-§97. Dies Lustricus.--The first eight days of the life of the
-acknowledged child were called _prīmordia_, and were the occasion of
-various religious ceremonies. During this time the child was called
-_pūpus_ (§55), although to weak and puny children the individual name
-might be given soon after birth. On the ninth day in the case of a
-boy, on the eighth in the case of a girl, the _praenōmen_ (§43) was
-given with due solemnity. A sacrifice was offered and the ceremony of
-purification was performed, which gave the day its name, _diēs
-lūstricus_, although it was also called the _diēs nōminum_ and
-_nōminālia_. These ceremonies seem to have been private; that is, it
-can not be shown that there was any taking of the child to a
-_templum_, as there was among the Jews, or any enrollment of the name
-upon an official list. In the case of the boy the registering of the
-name on the list of citizens may have occurred at the time of putting
-on the _toga virīlis_ (§127).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 17. CREPUNDIA]
-
-§98. The _diēs lūstricus_ was, however, a time of rejoicing and
-congratulation among the relatives and friends, and these together
-with the household slaves presented the child with little metal toys
-or ornaments in the form of flowers, miniature axes and swords, and
-especially figures shaped like a half-moon (_lūnulae_), etc. These,
-called collectively _crepundia_, were strung together and worn around
-the neck and over the breast (Fig. 17). They served in the first place
-as playthings to keep the child amused, hence the name "rattles," from
-_crepō_. Besides, they were a protection against witchcraft or the
-evil eye (_fascinātiō_), especially the _lūnulae_. More than this,
-they were a means of identification in the case of lost or stolen
-children, and for this reason Terence calls them _monumenta_. Such
-were the trinkets sometimes left with an abandoned child (§96), their
-value depending, of course, upon the material of which they were made.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 18. THE BULLA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 19. GIRL'S NECKLACE]
-
-§99. The Bulla.--But of more significance than these was the _bulla
-aurea_, which the father hung around the child's neck on this day, if
-he had not done so at the time of the _susceptiō_. It consisted of two
-concave pieces of gold, like a watch case (Fig. 18), fastened together
-by a wide spring of the same metal and containing an amulet as a
-protection against _fascinātiō_. It was hung around the neck by a
-chain or cord and worn upon the breast. The _bulla_ came originally
-from Etruria,[1] and for a long time the children of patricians only
-were allowed to wear those of gold, the plebeians contenting
-themselves with an imitation made of leather, hung on a leathern
-thong. In the course of time the distinction ceased to be observed, as
-we have seen such distinctions die out in the use of names and in the
-marriage ceremonies, and by Cicero's time the _bulla aurea_ might be
-worn by the child of any freeborn citizen. The choice of material
-depended rather upon the wealth and generosity of the father than upon
-his social position. The girl wore her _bulla_ (Fig. 19) until the eve
-of her wedding day, laying it aside with other childish things, as we
-have seen (§76); the boy wore his until he assumed the _toga virīlis_,
-when it was dedicated to the _Larēs_ of the house and carefully
-preserved. If the boy became a successful general and won the coveted
-honor of a triumph, he always wore his _bulla_ in the triumphal
-procession as a protection against envy.
-
-[Footnote 1: The influence of Etruria upon Rome faded before that of
-Greece (§5), but from Etruria the Romans got the art of divination,
-certain forms of architecture, the insignia of royalty, and the games
-of the circus and the amphitheater.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 20. CHILD IN LITTER]
-
-§100. Nurses.--The mother was the child's nurse (§90) not only in the
-days of the Republic but even into the Empire, the Romans having
-heeded the teachings of nature in this respect longer than any other
-civilized nation of the old world. Of course it was not always
-possible then, as it is not always possible now, for the mother to
-nurse her children, and then her place was taken by a slave
-(_nūtrīx_), to whom the name _māter_ seems to have been given out of
-affection. In the ordinary care of the children, too, the mother was
-assisted, but only assisted, by slaves. Under the eye of the mother,
-slaves washed and dressed the child, told it stories, sang it
-lullabies, and rocked it to sleep on the arm or in a cradle. None of
-these nursery stories have come down to us, but Quintilian tells us
-that Aesop's fables resembled them. For a picture of a cradle see
-Smith under the words _cūnae_ and _cūnābula_; in Rich under _cūnāria_
-is a picture of a nurse giving a baby its bath. The place of the
-modern baby carriage was taken by a litter (_lectīca_), and a terra
-cotta figure has come down to us (Fig. 20) representing a child
-carried in such a litter by two men.
-
-§101. After the Punic wars (§5) it became customary for the well-to-do
-to select for the child's nurse a Greek slave, that the child might
-acquire the Greek language as naturally as its own. In Latin
-literature are many passages that testify to the affection felt for
-each other by nurse and child, an affection that lasted on into
-manhood and womanhood. It was a common thing for the young wife to
-take with her into her new home, as her adviser and confidant, the
-nurse who had watched over her in infancy. Faithfulness on the part of
-such slaves was also frequently repaid by manumission.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 21. JOINTED DOLL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 22. CHILDREN PLAYING BALL]
-
-§102. Playthings.--But little is known of the playthings, pets, and
-games of Roman children, because as has been said (§93) domestic life
-was not a favorite theme of Roman writers and no books were then
-written especially for the young. Still there are scattered references
-in literature from which we can learn something, and more is known
-from monumental sources (§10). This evidence shows that playthings
-were numerous and of very many kinds. The _crepundia_ have been
-mentioned already (§98), and these miniature tools and implements seem
-to have been very common. Dolls there were, too, and some of these
-have come down to us, though we can not always distinguish between
-statuettes and genuine playthings. Some were made of clay, others of
-wax, and even jointed arms and legs were not unknown (Fig. 21). Little
-wagons and carts were also common (Schreiber, LXXXII, 10), and Horace
-speaks of hitching mice to toys of this sort. There are numerous
-pictures and descriptions of children spinning tops, making them
-revolve by blows of a whiplash, as in Europe nowadays. Hoops also were
-a favorite plaything, driven with a stick and having pieces of metal
-fastened to them to warn people of their approach. Boys walked on
-stilts and played with balls (Fig. 22), too, but as men enjoyed this
-sport as well, it may be deferred until we reach the subject of
-amusements (§318).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 23. BOY AND GOOSE]
-
-§103. Pets and Games.--Pets were even more common then than now, and
-then as now the dog was easily first in the affections of children
-(Schreiber, LXXXII, 6). The cat, on the other hand, was hardly known
-until very late in the history of Greece and Rome. Birds were very
-commonly made pets, and besides the doves and pigeons which are
-familiar to us as well, we are told that ducks, crows, and quail were
-pets of children. So also were geese, odd as this seems to us, and the
-statue of a child struggling with a goose as large as himself is well
-known (Fig. 23). Monkeys were known, but could not have been common.
-Mice have been mentioned already. Games of many kinds were played by
-children, but we can only guess at the nature of most of them, as we
-have hardly any formal descriptions. There were games corresponding to
-our Odd or Even, Blindman's Buff, Hide and Seek, Jackstones (§320),
-and Seesaw (Schreiber, LXXIX and LXXX). Pebbles and nuts were used in
-games something like our marbles, and there were board-games also. To
-these may be added for boys riding, swimming, and wrestling, although
-these were taken too seriously, perhaps, to be called games and
-belonged rather to their training for the duties of citizenship.
-
-§104. Home Training.--The training of the children was conducted by
-the father and mother in person. More stress was laid upon the moral
-than upon the intellectual development: reverence for the gods,
-respect for the law, unquestioning and instant obedience to authority,
-truthfulness, and self-reliance were the most important lessons for
-the child to learn. Much of this came from the constant association of
-the children with their parents, which was the characteristic feature
-of the home training of the Romans as compared with that of other
-peoples of the time. The children sat at table with their elders or
-helped to serve the meals. Until the age of seven both boys and girls
-had their mother for their teacher. From her they learned to speak
-correctly their native tongue, and Latin rhetoricians tell us that the
-best Latin was spoken by the noble women of the great houses of Rome.
-The mother taught them the elements of reading and writing and as much
-of the simpler operations of arithmetic as children so young could
-learn.
-
-§105. From about the age of seven the boy passed under the care of
-regular teachers, but the girl remained her mother's constant
-companion. Her schooling was necessarily cut short, because the Roman
-girl became a wife so young (§67), and there were things to learn in
-the meantime that books do not teach. From her mother she learned to
-spin and weave and sew: even Augustus wore garments woven by his wife.
-By her mother she was initiated into all the mysteries of household
-economy and fitted to take her place as the mistress of a household of
-her own, to be a Roman _mātrōna_, the most dignified position to which
-a woman could aspire in the ancient world (§§90, 91).
-
-§106. The boy, except during the hours of school, was equally his
-father's companion. If the father was a farmer, as all Romans were in
-earlier times, the boy helped in the fields and learned to plow and
-plant and reap. If the father was a man of high position and lived in
-the capital, the boy stood by him in his hall as he received his
-guests, learned to know their faces, names, and rank, and acquired a
-practical knowledge of politics and affairs of state. If the father
-was a senator, the boy, in the earlier days only it is true,
-accompanied him to the senate house to hear the debates and listen to
-the great orators of the time; and the son could always go with him to
-the forum when he was an advocate or concerned in a public trial.
-
-§107. Then as every Roman was bred a soldier the father trained the
-son in the use of arms and in the various military exercises, as well
-as in the manly sports of riding, swimming, wrestling, and boxing. In
-these exercises strength and agility were kept in view, rather than
-the grace of movement and symmetrical development of form, on which
-the Greeks laid so much stress. On great occasions, too, when the
-cabinets in the atrium were opened and the wax busts of their
-ancestors displayed, the boy and girl of noble family were always
-present and learned the history of the family of which they were a
-part, and with it the history of Rome.
-
-§108. Schools.--The actual instruction given to the children by the
-father would vary with his own education and at best be subject to all
-sorts of interruptions due to his private business or his public
-duties. We find that this embarrassment was appreciated in very early
-times, and that it was customary for a _pater familiās_ who happened
-to have among his slaves one competent to give the needed instruction,
-to turn over to him the actual teaching of the children. It must be
-remembered that slaves taken in war were often much better educated
-than their Roman masters. Not all households, however, would include a
-competent teacher, and it would seem only natural for the fortunate
-owner of such a slave to receive into his house at fixed hours of the
-day the children of his friends and neighbors to be taught together
-with his own.
-
-§109. For this privilege he might charge a fee for his own benefit, as
-we are told that Cato actually did, or he might allow the slave to
-retain as his _pecūlium_ (§33) the little presents given him by his
-pupils in lieu of direct payment. The next step, one taken in times
-too early to be accurately fixed, was to select for the school a more
-convenient place than a private house, one that was central and easily
-accessible, and to receive as pupils all who could pay the modest fee
-that was demanded. To these schools girls as well as boys were
-admitted, but for the reason given in §105 the girls had little time
-for studying more than their mothers could teach them, and those who
-did carry their studies further came usually of families who preferred
-to educate their daughters in the privacy of their own homes and could
-afford to do so. The exceptions to this rule were so few, that from
-this point we may consider the education of boys alone.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 24. WAXED TABLETS AND STILUS]
-
-§110. Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools.--In these elementary
-schools the only subjects taught were reading, writing, and
-arithmetic. In the first, great stress was laid upon the
-pronunciation: the sounds were easy enough but quantity was hard to
-master. The teacher pronounced first syllable by syllable, then the
-separate words, and finally the whole sentence, the pupils pronouncing
-after him at the tops of their voices. In the teaching of writing, wax
-tablets (Fig. 24) were employed, much as slates were a generation ago.
-The teacher first traced with a _stilus_ the letters that served as a
-copy, then he guided the pupil's hand with his own until the child had
-learned to form the letters independently. When some dexterity had
-been acquired, the pupil was taught to use the reed pen and write with
-ink upon papyrus. For practice, sheets were used that had had one side
-written upon already for more important purposes. If any books at all
-were used in these schools, the pupils must have made them for
-themselves by writing from the teacher's dictation.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 25. ABACUS]
-
-§111. In arithmetic mental calculation was emphasized, but the pupil
-was taught to use his fingers in a very elaborate way that is not now
-thoroughly understood, and harder sums were worked out with the help
-of the reckoning board (_abacus_, Fig. 25). In addition to all this,
-attention was paid to the training of the memory, and the pupil was
-made to learn by heart all sorts of wise and pithy sayings and
-especially the Twelve Tables of the Law. These last became a regular
-fetich in the schools, and even when the language in which they were
-written had become obsolete pupils continued to learn and recite them.
-Cicero had learned them in his boyhood, but within his lifetime they
-were dropped from the schools.
-
-§112. Grammar Schools.--Among the results of contact with other
-peoples that followed the Punic wars (§5) was the extension of
-education at Rome beyond these elementary and strictly utilitarian
-subjects. The Greek language came to be generally learned (§101) and
-Greek ideas of education were in some degree adopted. Schools were
-established in which the central thing was the study of the Greek
-poets, and these schools we may call Grammar Schools because the
-teacher was called _grammaticus_. Homer was long the universal
-text-book, and students were not only taught the language, but were
-instructed in the matters of geography, mythology, antiquities,
-history, and ethics suggested by the portions of the text which they
-read. The range of instruction and its value depended entirely upon
-the teacher, as does such instruction to-day, but it was at best
-fragmentary and disconnected. There was no systematic study of any of
-these subjects, not even of history, despite its interest and
-practical value to a world-ranging people like the Romans.
-
-§113. The Latin language was soon made the subject of similar study,
-at first in separate schools. The lack of Latin poetry to work upon,
-for prose authors were not yet made text-books, led to the translation
-by a Greek slave, Livius Andronicus (3d century B.C.), of the Odyssey
-of Homer into Latin Saturnian verses. From this translation, rude as
-the surviving fragments show it to have been, dates the beginning of
-Latin literature, and it was not until this literature had furnished
-poets like Terence, Vergil, and Horace, that the rough Saturnians of
-Livius Andronicus disappeared from the schools.
-
-§114. In these Grammar Schools, Greek as well as Latin, great stress
-seems to have been laid upon elocution, a thing less surprising when
-we consider the importance of oratory under the Republic. The teacher
-had the pupils pronounce after him first the words, then the clauses,
-and finally the complete sentences. The elements of rhetoric were
-taught in some of these schools, but technical instruction in the
-subject was not given until the establishment at a much later period
-of special schools of rhetoric. In the Grammar Schools were also
-taught music and geometry, and these made complete the ordinary
-education of boyhood.
-
-§115. Schools of Rhetoric.--The Schools of Rhetoric were formed on
-Greek lines and conducted by Greek teachers. They were not a part of
-the regular system of education, but corresponded more nearly to our
-colleges, being frequented by persons beyond the age of boyhood and
-with rare exceptions, of the higher classes only. In these schools the
-study of prose authors was begun, but the main thing was the practice
-of composition. This was begun in its simplest form, the narrative
-(_nārrātiō_), and continued step by step until the end in view was
-reached, the practice of public speaking (_dēclāmātiō_). One of the
-intermediate forms was the _suāsōria_, in which the students took
-sides on some disputed point of history and supported their views by
-argument. A favorite exercise also was the writing of a speech to be
-put in the mouth of some person famous in legend or history. How
-effective these could be made is seen in the speeches inserted in
-their histories by Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus.
-
-§116. Travel.--In the case of persons of the noblest and most wealthy
-families, or those whose talents in early manhood promised a brilliant
-future, the training of the schools was sure to be supplemented by a
-period of travel and residence abroad. Greece, Rhodes, and Asia Minor
-were the most frequently visited, whether the young Roman cared for
-the scenes of great historical events and the rich collections of
-works of literature and art, or merely enjoyed the natural charms and
-social splendors of the gay and luxurious capitals of the east. For
-the purposes of serious study Athens offered the greatest attractions
-and might almost have been called the university of Rome, in this
-respect standing to Italy much as Germany now stands to the United
-States. It must be remembered, however, that the Roman who studied in
-Athens was as familiar with Greek as with his native Latin and for
-this reason was much better prepared to profit by the lectures he
-heard than is the average American who now studies on the continent.
-
-§117. Apprenticeship.--There were certain matters, a knowledge of
-which was essential to a successful public life, for training in which
-no provision was made by the Roman system of education. Such matters
-were jurisprudence, administration and diplomacy, and war. It was
-customary, therefore, for the young citizen to attach himself for a
-time to some older man, eminent in these lines or in some one of them,
-in order to gain an opportunity for observation and practical
-experience in the performance of duties that would sooner or later
-devolve upon him. So Cicero learned the civil law under Quintus Mucius
-Scaevola, the most eminent jurist of the time, and in later years the
-young Marcus Coelius Rufus in turn served the same voluntary
-apprenticeship (_tīrōcinium forī_) under Cicero. This arrangement was
-not only very advantageous to the young men but was considered very
-honorable for those under whom they studied.
-
-§118. In the same way the governors of provinces and generals in the
-field were attended by a voluntary staff (_cohors_) of young men, whom
-they had invited to accompany them at state expense for personal or
-political reasons. These _tīrōnēs_ became familiar in this way
-(_tīrōcinium mīlitiae_) with the practical side of administration and
-war, while at the same time they were relieved of many of the
-hardships and dangers suffered by those, less fortunate, who had to
-rise from the ranks. It was this staff of inexperienced young men who
-hid in their tents or went back to Rome when Caesar determined to meet
-Ariovistus in battle, although some of them, no doubt, made gallant
-soldiers and wise commanders afterward.
-
-§119. Remarks on the Schools.--Having considered the possibilities in
-the way of education and training within the reach of the more favored
-few, we may now go back to the Elementary and Grammar Schools to get
-an idea of the actual school life of the ordinary Roman boy. While
-these were not public schools in our sense of the word, that is, while
-they were not supported or supervised by the state, and while
-attendance was not compulsory, it is nevertheless true that the
-elements at least of education, a knowledge of the three R's, were
-more generally diffused among the Romans than among any other people
-of the ancient world. The schools were distinctly democratic in this,
-that they were open to all classes, that the fees were little more
-than nominal, that so far as concerned discipline and the treatment of
-the pupils no distinction was made between the children of the
-humblest and of the most lordly families.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 26. A ROMAN SCHOOL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 27: CARICATURE OF A SCHOOL]
-
-§120. The school was usually in a _pergula_, a shedlike attachment to
-a public building, roofed against the sun and rain, but open at the
-sides and furnished merely with rough benches without backs. The
-children were exposed, therefore, to all the distractions of the busy
-town life around them, and the people living near were in turn annoyed
-by the noisy recitations (§110) and even noisier punishments. A
-picture of a schoolroom from a wall painting in Herculaneum is shown
-in Fig. 26 and an ancient caricature, by a schoolboy probably, in Fig.
-27.
-
-§121. The Teacher.--The teacher was originally a slave, perhaps
-usually a freedman. The position was not an honorable one, though this
-depended upon the character of the teacher himself, and while the
-pupils feared the master they seem to have had little respect for him.
-The pay he received was a mere pittance, varying from three dollars a
-year for the elementary teacher (_litterātor_, _magister litterārum_)
-to five or six times that sum for a _grammaticus_ (§112). In addition
-to the fee, the pupils were expected to bring the master from time to
-time little presents, a custom persisting probably from the time when
-these presents were his only reward (§109). The fees varied, however,
-with the qualifications of the master, and some whose reputations were
-established and whose schools were "fashionable" charged no fees at
-all, but left the amount to be paid (_honōrārium_) to the generosity
-of their patrons.
-
-§122. Schooldays and Holidays.--The schoolday began before sunrise, as
-did all the work at Rome on account of the heat in the middle of the
-day (cf. §79). The students brought candles by which to study until it
-became light, and the roof was soon black with the grime and smoke.
-The session lasted until time for the noonday luncheon and siesta
-(§302), and was resumed in the afternoon. We do not know definitely
-that there was any fixed length for the school-year. We know that it
-regularly began on the 24th of March and that there were numerous
-holidays, notably the Saturnalia in December and the Quinquatria from
-the 19th to the 23rd of March. The great religious festivals, too,
-especially those celebrated with games, would naturally be observed by
-the schools, and apparently the market days (_nūndinae_) were also
-holidays. It was until lately supposed that there was no school from
-the last of June until the first of November, but this view rested
-upon an incorrect interpretation of certain passages of Horace and
-Martial which are now otherwise explained. It is certain, however,
-that the children of wealthy parents would be absent from Rome during
-the hot season, and this would at least cut down the attendance in
-some of the schools and might perhaps close them altogether.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 28. PAEDAGOGUS]
-
-§123. The Paedagogus.--The boy of good family was always attended by a
-trustworthy slave (_paedagōgus_), who accompanied him to school,
-remained with him during the sessions, and saw him safely home again
-when school was out. If the boy had wealthy parents, he might have,
-besides, one or more slaves (_pedisequī_) to carry his satchel and
-tablets. The _paedagōgus_ was usually an elderly man, selected for his
-good character and expected to keep the boy out of all harm, moral as
-well as physical. He was not a teacher, despite the meaning of the
-English derivative, except that after the learning of Greek became
-general a Greek slave was usually selected for the position in order
-that the boy might not forget what he had learned from his nurse
-(§101). The scope of his regular duties is clearly shown by the Latin
-words used sometimes instead of _paedagōgus_: _comes_, _custōs_,
-_monitor_, and _rēctor_. He was addressed by his ward as _dominus_,
-and seems to have had the right to compel obedience by mild
-punishments (Fig. 28). His duties ceased when the boy assumed the toga
-of manhood, but the same warm affection often continued between them
-as between the woman and her nurse (§101).
-
-§124. Discipline.--The discipline seems to have been really Roman in
-its severity, if we may judge from the picture of a school above
-referred to (§120) and by the grim references to the rod and ferule in
-Juvenal and Martial. Horace has given to his teacher, Orbilius, a
-deathless fame by the adjective _plāgōsus_. From Nepos we learn that
-then as now teachers might have appealed to the natural emulation
-between well-bred boys, and we know that prizes, too, were offered.
-Perhaps we may think the ferule well deserved when we read of the
-schoolboy's trick immortalized by Persius. The passage (III, 44 f.) is
-worth quoting in full:
-
- _Saepe oculōs, meminī, tangēbam parvus olīvō,_
- _Grandia sī nōllem moritūrī verba Cātōnis_
- _Discere et īnsānō multum laudanda magistrō!_[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: "Often, I remember, as a small boy I used to give my eyes
-a touch with oil, if I did not want to learn Cato's grand dying
-speech, sure to be rapturously applauded by my wrong-headed master."]
-
-§125. End of Childhood.--There was no special ceremony to mark the
-passing of girlhood into womanhood, but for the boy the attainment of
-his majority was marked by the laying aside of the crimson-bordered
-_toga praetexta_ and the putting on of the pure white _toga virīlis_.
-There was no fixed year, corresponding to the twenty-first with us, in
-which the _puer_ became _iuvenis_; something depended upon the
-physical and intellectual development of the boy himself, something
-upon the will or caprice of his _pater familiās_, more perhaps upon
-the time in which he lived. We may say generally, however, that the
-_toga virīlis_ was assumed between the fourteenth and seventeenth
-years, the later age belonging to the earlier time when citizenship
-carried with it more responsibility than under the Empire and demanded
-a greater maturity.
-
-§126. For the classical period we may put the age required at sixteen,
-and if we add to this the _tīrōcinium_ (§117), which followed the
-donning of the garb of manhood, we shall have the seventeen years
-after the expiration of which the citizen had been liable in ancient
-times to military duty. The day was even less precisely fixed. We
-should expect the birthday at the beginning of the seventeenth year,
-but it seems to have been the more usual, but by no means invariable,
-custom to select for the ceremony the feast of Liber which happened to
-come nearest to the seventeenth birthday. This feast was celebrated on
-the 17th of March and was called the _līberālia_. No more appropriate
-time could have been selected to suggest the freer life of manhood
-upon which the boy was now about to enter.
-
-§127. The Liberalia.--The festivities of the great day began in the
-early morning, when the boy laid before the Lares of his house the
-_bulla_ (§99) and _toga praetexta_, called together the _īnsignia
-pueritiae_. A sacrifice was then offered, and the _bulla_ was hung
-over the hearth, not to be taken down and worn again except on some
-occasion when the man who had worn it as a boy should be in danger of
-the envy of men and gods. The boy then dressed himself in the _tunica
-rēcta_ (§76), having one or two crimson stripes if he was the son of a
-senator or a knight, and over this was carefully draped the _toga
-virīlis_. This was also called in contrast to the gayer garb of
-boyhood the _toga pūra_, and with reference to the freedom of manhood
-the _toga lībera_.
-
-§128. Then began the procession to the forum. The father had gathered
-his slaves and freedmen and clients, had been careful to notify his
-relatives and friends, and had used all his personal and political
-influence to make the escort of his son as numerous and imposing as
-possible. If the ceremony took place on the _līberālia_, the forum was
-sure to be crowded with similar processions of rejoicing friends. Here
-were extended the formal congratulations, and the name of one more
-citizen was added to the official list. An offering was then made in
-the temple of Liber on the Capitoline Hill, and the day ended with a
-feast at the father's house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 135-212; Göll, II, 114-212; Guhl and Koner,
-764-772; Friedländer, I, 404 f.; Ramsay, 124 f.; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_clientēs_; Smith, _servus_, _lībertus_, _cliēns_, _clientēla_,
-_hospitium_; Harper, _servus_, _lībertī_, _clientēs_; Lübker, _servī_,
-_lībertīnus_, _hospitium_, _patrōnus_.
-
-
-§129. Growth of Slavery.--So far as we may learn from history and
-legend, slavery was always known at Rome. In the early days of the
-Republic, however, the farm was the only place where slaves were
-employed. The fact that most of the Romans were farmers and that they
-and their free laborers were constantly called from the fields to
-fight the battles of their country led to a gradual increase in the
-number of slaves, until they were far more numerous than the free
-laborers who worked for hire. We can not tell when the custom became
-general of employing slaves in personal service and in industrial
-pursuits, but it was one of the grossest evils resulting from Rome's
-foreign conquests. In the last century of the Republic all manual
-labor, almost all trades, and certain of what we now call professions
-were in the hands of slaves. Not only were free laborers unable to
-compete with slaves, but every occupation in which slaves engaged was
-degraded in the eyes of freemen, until all labor was looked upon as
-dishonorable. The small farms were gradually absorbed in the vast
-estates of the rich, the sturdy yeomanry of Rome disappeared, and by
-the time of Augustus the freeborn citizens of Italy who were not
-soldiers were either slaveholders themselves or the idle proletariate
-of the cities.
-
-§130. Ruinous as were the economic results of slavery, the moral
-effects were no less destructive. It is to slavery more than to
-anything else that is due the change in the character of the Romans in
-the first century of the Empire. With slaves swarming in their houses,
-ministering to their luxury, pandering to their appetites, directing
-their amusements, managing their business, and even educating their
-children, it is no wonder that the old Roman virtues of simplicity,
-frugality, and temperance declined and perished. And with the passing
-of Roman manhood into oriental effeminacy began the passing of Roman
-sway over the civilized world.
-
-§131. Numbers of Slaves.--We have almost no testimony as to the number
-of slaves in Italy, none even as to the ratio of the free to the
-servile population. We have indirect evidence enough, however, to make
-good the statements in the preceding paragraphs. That slaves were few
-in early times is shown by their names (§58): if it had been usual for
-a master to have more than one slave, such names as _Mārcipor_, and
-Ōlipor would not have sufficed to distinguish them. An idea of the
-rapid increase after the Punic wars may be gained from the number of
-captives sold into slavery by successful generals. Scipio Aemilianus
-is said to have disposed in this way of 60,000 Carthaginians, Marius
-of 140,000 Cimbri, Aemilius Paulus of 150,000 Greeks, Pompeius and
-Caesar together of more than a million of Asiatics and Gauls.
-
-§132. The very insurrections of the slaves, unsuccessful as they
-always were, also testify to their overwhelming numbers. Of the two in
-Sicily, the first lasted from 134 to 132 B.C., and the second from 102
-to 98; the last in spite of the fact that at the close of the first
-the consul Rupilius had crucified 20,000, whom he had taken alive, as
-a warning to others to submit in silence to their servitude. Spartacus
-defied the armies of Rome for two years, and in the decisive battle
-with Crassus (71 B.C.) left 60,000 dead upon the field. Cicero's
-orations against Catiline show clearly that it was the calling out of
-the hordes of slaves by the conspirators that was most dreaded in the
-city.
-
-§133. Of the number under the Empire we may get some idea from more
-direct testimony. Horace tells us that ten slaves were as few as a
-gentleman in even moderate circumstances could afford to own. He
-himself had two in town and eight on his little Sabine farm, and he
-was a poor man and his father had been a slave. Tacitus tells us of a
-city prefect who had four hundred slaves in his mansion. Pliny says
-that one Caius Caecilius Claudius Isodorus left at his death over four
-thousand slaves. Athenaeus (170-230 A.D.) gives us to understand that
-individuals owned as many as ten thousand and twenty thousand. The
-fact that house slaves were commonly divided into "groups of ten"
-(_decuriae_) points in the same direction.
-
-§134. Sources of Supply.--Under the Republic the largest number of
-slaves brought to Rome and offered there for sale were captives taken
-in war, and an idea of the magnitude of this source of supply has
-already been given (§131). The captives were sold as soon as possible
-after they were taken, in order that the general might be relieved of
-the trouble and risk of feeding and guarding such large numbers of men
-in a hostile country. The sale was conducted by a quaestor, and the
-purchasers were the wholesale slave dealers that always followed an
-army along with other traders and peddlers. The spear (_hasta_), which
-was always the sign of a sale conducted under public authority, was
-set up in the ground to mark the place, and the captives had garlands
-on their heads as did the victims offered in sacrifice. Hence the
-expression _sub hastā_ and _sub corōnā vēnīre_ came to have
-practically the same meaning.
-
-§135. The wholesale dealers (_mangōnēs_) assembled their purchases in
-convenient depots, and when sufficient numbers had been collected
-marched them to Rome, in chains and under guard, to be sold to local
-dealers or to private individuals. The slaves obtained in this way
-were usually men and likely to be physically sound and strong for the
-simple reason that they had been soldiers. On the other hand they were
-likely to prove intractable and ungovernable, and many preferred even
-suicide to servitude. It sometimes happened, of course, that the
-inhabitants of towns and whole districts were sold into slavery
-without distinction of age or sex.
-
-§136. Under the Empire large numbers came to Rome as articles of
-ordinary commerce, and Rome became one of the great slave marts of the
-world. The slaves were brought from all the provinces of the Empire:
-blacks from Egypt; swift runners from Numidia; grammarians from
-Alexandria; from Cyrene those who made the best house servants; from
-Greece handsome boys and girls, and well-trained scribes, accountants,
-amanuenses, and even teachers; from Epirus and Illyria experienced
-shepherds; from Cappadocia the most patient and enduring laborers.
-
-§137. Some of these were captives taken in the petty wars that Rome
-was always waging in defense of her boundaries, but these were
-numerically insignificant. Others had been slaves in the countries
-from which they came, and merely exchanged old masters for new when
-they were sent to Rome. Others still were the victims of slave
-hunters, who preyed on weak and defenseless peoples two thousand years
-ago much as they are said to do in Africa in our own time. These
-man-hunts were not prevented, though perhaps not openly countenanced,
-by the Roman governors.
-
-§138. A less important source of supply was the natural increase in
-the slave population as men and women formed permanent connections
-with each other, called _contubernia_. This became of general
-importance only late in the Empire, because in earlier times,
-especially during the period of conquest, it was found cheaper to buy
-than to breed slaves. To the individual owner, however, the increase
-in his slaves in this way was a matter of as much interest as the
-increase of his flocks and herds. Such slaves would be more valuable
-at maturity, for they would be acclimated and less liable to disease,
-and besides would be trained from childhood in the performance of the
-very tasks for which they were destined. They would also have more
-love for their home and for their master's family, for his children
-were often their playmates. It was only natural, therefore, for slaves
-born in the _familia_ to have a claim upon their master's confidence
-and consideration that others lacked, and it is not surprising that
-they were proverbially pert and forward. They were called _vernae_ as
-long as they remained the property of their first master. The
-derivation of the word is not certain, but it is probable that it has
-the same origin as Vesta and means something like "born in the house."
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 29. SALE OF A SLAVE]
-
-§139. Sales of Slaves.--Slave dealers usually offered their wares at
-public auction sales (Fig. 29). These were under the supervision of
-the aediles, who appointed the place and made rules and regulations to
-govern them. A tax was imposed on imported slaves and they were
-offered for sale with their feet whitened with chalk; those from the
-east had also their ears bored, a common sign of slavery among
-oriental peoples. As bids were asked for each slave he was made to
-mount a stone or platform, corresponding to the "block" familiar to
-the readers of our own history. From his neck hung a scroll
-(_titulus_), setting forth his character and serving as a warrant for
-the purchaser. If the slave had defects not made known in this warrant
-the vendor was bound to take him back within six months or make good
-the loss to the buyer. The chief items in the _titulus_ were the age
-and nationality of the slave, and his freedom from such common defects
-as chronic ill-health, especially epilepsy, and tendencies to
-thievery, running away, and suicide. In spite of the guarantee the
-purchaser took care to examine the slaves as closely as possible. For
-this reason they were commonly stripped, made to move around, handled
-freely by the purchaser, and even examined by physicians. If no
-warrant was given by the dealer, a cap (_pilleus_) was put on the
-slave's head at the time of the sale and the purchaser took all risks.
-The dealer might also offer the slaves at private sale, and this was
-the rule in the case of all of unusual value and especially of marked
-personal beauty. These were not exposed to the gaze of the crowd, but
-were offered to those only who were likely to purchase. Private sales
-and exchanges between citizens without the intervention of a regular
-dealer were as common as the sales of other property, and no stigma
-was attached to them. The trade of the _mangōnēs_, on the other hand,
-was looked upon as utterly disreputable, but it was very lucrative and
-great fortunes were often made in it. Vilest of all the dealers were
-the _lēnōnēs_, who kept and sold slaves for immoral purposes only.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 30. THE GAUL AND HIS WIFE]
-
-§140. Prices of Slaves.--The prices of slaves varied as did the prices
-of other commodities. Much depended upon the times, the supply and
-demand, the characteristics and accomplishments of the particular
-slave, and the requirements of the purchaser. Captives bought upon the
-battlefield rarely brought more than nominal prices, because the sale
-was in a measure forced (§134), and because the dealer was sure to
-lose a large part of his purchase on the long march home through
-disease, fatigue, and especially suicide. There is a famous piece of
-statuary representing a hopeless Gaul killing his wife and then
-himself (Fig. 30). We are told that Lucullus once sold slaves in his
-camp at an average price of eighty cents each. In Rome male slaves
-varied in value from $100, paid for common laborers in the time of
-Horace, to $28,000 paid by Marcus Scaurus for an accomplished
-grammarian. Handsome boys, well trained and educated, sold for as much
-as $4,000. Very high prices were also paid for handsome and
-accomplished girls. The music girls in Plautus and Terence cost their
-lovers from $500 to $700, but girls of the lowest class sold for as
-little as $25. It seems strange to us that slaves were matched in size
-and color as carefully as horses are now, and that a well-matched pair
-of boys would bring a much larger sum when sold together than when
-sold separately.
-
-§141. Public and Private Slaves.--Slaves were called _servī pūblicī_
-and _servī prīvātī_ according as they were owned by the state or by
-individuals. The condition of the former was considered the more
-desirable: they were not so likely to be sold, were not worked so
-hard, and were not exposed to the whims of a capricious master. They
-were employed to take care of the public buildings and as servants of
-the magistrates and priests. The quaestors and aediles had great
-numbers of them in their service, and they were drilled as a corps of
-firemen to serve at night under the _triumvirī nocturnī_. Others were
-employed as lictors, jailers, executioners, etc. The number of public
-slaves while considerable in itself was inconsiderable as compared
-with that of those in private service.
-
-§142. Private Slaves.--Private slaves either were employed in the
-personal service of their master and his family or were kept for gain.
-The former, known as the _familia urbāna_, will be described later.
-The latter may be classified according as they were kept for hire or
-employed in the business enterprises of their master. Of these last
-the most important as well as the oldest (§129) class was that of the
-farm laborers (_familia rūstica_). Of the others, engaged in all sorts
-of industries, it may be remarked that it was considered more
-honorable for a master to employ his slaves in enterprises of his own
-than to hire them out to others. At the same time slaves could always
-be hired for any desired purpose in Rome or any other city.
-
-§143. Industrial Employment.--It must be remembered that there were
-practically no freeborn laborers left in the last century of the
-Republic (§129), and that much work was then done by hand that is now
-done by machinery. In work of this sort were employed armies of slaves
-fit only for unskilled labor: porters for the transportation of
-materials and merchandise, stevedores for the lading and discharging
-of vessels, men who handled the spade, pickax, and crowbar, men of
-great physical strength but of little else to make them worth their
-keep. Above these came artisans, mechanics, and skilled workmen of
-every kind: smiths, carpenters, bricklayers, masons, seamen, etc. The
-merchants and shopkeepers required assistants, and so did the millers
-and bakers, the dealers in wool and leather, the keepers of lodging
-houses and restaurants, all who helped to supply the countless wants
-of a great city. Even the professions, as we should call them, were
-largely in the hands of slaves. Books were multiplied by slaves. The
-artists who carved wood and stone, designed furniture, laid mosaics,
-painted pictures, and decorated the walls and ceilings of public and
-private buildings were slaves. So were the musicians and the acrobats,
-actors and gladiators who amused the people at the public games. So
-too, as we have seen (§121), were many of the teachers in the schools,
-and physicians were usually slaves.
-
-§144. And slaves did not merely perform these various functions under
-the direction of their master or of the employer to whom he had hired
-them for the time. Many of them were themselves captains of industry.
-When a slave showed executive ability as well as technical knowledge,
-it was common enough for his master to furnish him with the necessary
-capital to carry on independently the business or profession which he
-understood. In this way slaves were often the managers of estates, of
-banks, of commercial enterprises, though these might take them far
-beyond the reach of their masters' observation, even into foreign
-countries. Sometimes such a slave was expected to pay the master
-annually a fixed sum out of the proceeds of the business; sometimes he
-was allowed to keep for himself a certain share of the profits;
-sometimes he was merely required to repay the sum advanced with
-interest from the time he had received it. In all cases, however, his
-industry and intelligence were stimulated by the hope of acquiring
-sufficient means from the venture to purchase his freedom and
-eventually make the business his own.
-
-§145. The Familia Rustica.--Under this name are comprised the slaves
-that were employed upon the vast estates that long before the end of
-the Republic had supplanted the small farms of the earlier day. The
-very name points at this change, for it implies that the estate was no
-longer the only home of the master. He had become a landlord, living
-in the capital and visiting his lands only occasionally for pleasure
-or for business. The estates may, therefore, be divided into two
-classes: country seats for pleasure and farms or ranches for profit.
-The former were selected with great care, the purchaser having regard
-to their proximity to the city or other resorts of fashion, their
-healthfulness, and the natural beauty of their scenery. They were
-maintained upon the most extravagant scale. There were villas and
-pleasure grounds, parks, game preserves, fish ponds and artificial
-lakes, everything that ministered to open air luxury. Great numbers of
-slaves were required to keep these places in order, and many of them
-were slaves of the highest class: landscape gardeners, experts in the
-culture of fruits and flowers, experts even in the breeding and
-keeping of the birds, game, and fish, of which the Romans were
-inordinately fond. These had under them assistants and laborers of
-every sort, and all were subject to the authority of a superintendent
-or steward (_vīlicus_), who had been put in charge of the estate by
-the master.
-
-§146. Farm Slaves.--But the name _familia rūstica_ is more
-characteristically used of the drudges upon the farms, because the
-slaves employed upon the country seats were more directly in the
-personal service of the master and can hardly be said to have been
-kept for profit. The raising of grain for the market had long ceased
-to be profitable, but various industries had taken its place upon the
-farms. Wine and oil had become the most important products of the
-soil, and vineyards and olive orchards were found wherever climate and
-other conditions were favorable. Cattle and swine were raised in
-countless numbers, the former more for draft purposes and the products
-of the dairy than for beef. Sheep were kept for the wool, and woolen
-garments were worn by the rich and poor alike. Cheese was made in
-large quantities, all the larger because butter was unknown. The
-keeping of bees was an important industry, because honey served, so
-far as it could, the purposes for which sugar is used in modern times.
-Besides these things that we are even now accustomed to associate with
-farming, there were others that are now looked upon as distinct and
-separate businesses. Of these the most important, perhaps, as it was
-undoubtedly the most laborious, was the quarrying of stone; another
-was the cutting of timber and working it up into rough lumber, and
-finally the preparing of sand for the use of the builder. This last
-was of much greater importance relatively then than now, on account of
-the extensive use of concrete at Rome.
-
-§147. In some of these tasks intelligence and skill were required as
-they are to-day, but in many of them the most necessary qualifications
-were strength and endurance, as the slaves took the place of much of
-the machinery of modern times. This was especially true of the men
-employed in the quarries, who were usually of the rudest and most
-ungovernable class, and were worked in chains by day and housed in
-dungeons by night, as convicts have been housed and worked in much
-later times.
-
-§148. The Vilicus.--The management of such an estate was also
-intrusted to a _vīlicus_ (§145), who was proverbially a hard
-taskmaster, simply because his hopes of freedom depended upon the
-amount of profits he could turn into his master's coffers at the end
-of the year. His task was no easy one. Besides planning for and
-overseeing the gangs of slaves already mentioned, he had under his
-charge another body of slaves only less numerous, employed in
-providing for the wants of the others. Everything necessary for the
-farm was produced or manufactured on the farm. Enough grain was raised
-for food, and this grain was ground in the farm mills and baked in the
-farm ovens by millers and bakers who were slaves on the farm. The task
-of turning the mill was usually given to a horse or mule, but slaves
-were often made to do the grinding as a punishment. Wool was carded,
-spun, and woven into cloth, and this cloth was made into clothes by
-the female slaves under the eye of the steward's consort, the
-_vīlica_. Buildings were erected, and the tools and implements
-necessary for the work of the farm were made and repaired. These
-things required a number of carpenters, smiths, and masons, though
-they were not necessarily workmen of the highest class. It was the
-touchstone of a good _vīlicus_ to keep his men always busy, and it is
-to be understood that the slaves were alternately plowmen and reapers,
-vinedressers and treaders of the grapes, perhaps even quarrymen and
-lumbermen, according to the season of the year and the place of their
-toiling.
-
-§149. The Familia Urbana.--The number of slaves kept by the wealthy
-Roman in his city mansion was measured not by his needs, but by the
-demands of fashion and his means. In the early days a sort of butler
-(_ātriēnsis_), or major domo, had relieved the master of his household
-cares, had done the buying, had kept the accounts, had seen that the
-house and furniture were in order, and had looked after the few
-servants who did the actual work. Even under the Republic all this was
-changed. Other slaves, the _prōcūrātor_ and _dispēnsātor_, relieved
-the _ātriēnsis_ of the purchasing of the supplies and the keeping of
-the accounts, and left to him merely the supervision of the house and
-its furniture. The duties of the slaves under him were, in the same
-way, distributed among a number many times greater. Every part of the
-house had its special staff of servants, often so numerous as to be
-distributed into _decuriae_ (§133), with a separate superintendent for
-each division: one for the kitchen, another for the dining-rooms,
-another for the bedrooms, etc.
-
-§150. The very entrance door had assigned to it its special slave
-(_ōstiārius_ or _iānitor_), who was often chained to it like a
-watchdog, in order to keep him literally at his post. And the duties
-of the several sets were again divided and subdivided, each slave
-having some one office to perform, and only one. The names of the
-various functionaries of the kitchen, the dining-rooms, and the
-bedchambers are too numerous to mention, but an idea of the complexity
-of the service may be gained from the number of attendants that
-assisted the master and mistress with their toilets. The former had
-his _ōrnātor_, _tōnsor_, and _calceātor_ (who cared for the feet); the
-latter her hairdressers (_ciniflōnēs_ or _cinerāriī_) and _ōrnātrīx_;
-and besides these each had no less than three or four more to assist
-with the bath. The children, too, had each his or her own attendants,
-beginning with the _nūtrix_, and continuing in the case of the boy
-with the _paedagōgus_ and _pedisequī_ (§123).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 31. LECTICA]
-
-§151. When the master or mistress left the house a numerous retinue
-was deemed necessary. If they walked, slaves went before to clear the
-way (_anteambulōnēs_), and pages and lackeys followed carrying wraps
-or the sunshade and fan of the mistress, and ready to perform any
-little service that might be necessary. The master was always
-accompanied out of the house by his _nōmenclātor_, who prompted him in
-case he had forgotten the name of any one who greeted him. If they did
-not walk, they were carried in litters (_lectīcae_, Fig. 31),
-something like sedan chairs. The bearers were strong men, by
-preference Syrians or Cappadocians (§136), all carefully matched in
-size (§140) and dressed in gorgeous liveries. As each member of the
-household had his own litter and bearers, this one class of slaves
-made an important item in the family budget. And even when they rode
-in this way the same attendants accompanied them as when they walked.
-
-§152. When the master dined at the house of a friend his slaves
-attended him as far as the door at least. Some remained with him to
-care for his sandals, and others (_adversitōrēs_) returned at the
-appointed hour to see him home. A journey out of the city was a more
-serious matter and called for more pomp and display. In addition to
-the horses and mules that drew the carts of those who rode, there were
-mounted outriders and beasts of burden loaded with baggage and
-supplies. Numerous slaves followed on foot, and a band of gladiators
-not infrequently acted as escort and bodyguard. It is not too much to
-say that the ordinary train of a wealthy traveler included scores,
-perhaps hundreds, of slaves.
-
-§153. Among the _familia urbāna_ must be numbered also those who
-furnished amusement and entertainment for the master and his guests,
-especially during and after meals. There were musicians and readers,
-and for persons of less refined tastes, dancers, jesters, dwarfs, and
-even misshapen freaks. Under the Empire little children were kept for
-the same purpose.
-
-§154. Lastly may be mentioned the slaves of the highest class, the
-confidential assistants of the master, the amanuenses who wrote his
-letters, the secretaries who kept his accounts, and the agents through
-whom he collected his income, audited the reports of his stewards and
-managers, made his investments, and transacted all sorts of business
-matters. The greater the luxury and extravagance of the house, the
-more the master would need these trained and experienced men to
-relieve him of cares which he detested, and by their fidelity and
-skill to make possible the gratification of his tastes and passions.
-
-§155. Such a staff as has been described belonged, of course, to a
-wealthy and fashionable man. Persons with more good sense had only
-such slaves as could be profitably employed. Atticus, the friend of
-Cicero, a man of sufficient wealth and social position to defy the
-demands of fashion, kept in his service only _vernae_ (§138), and had
-them so carefully trained that the meanest could read and write for
-him. Cicero, on the other hand, could not think it good form to have a
-slave do more than one kind of work, and Cicero was not to be
-considered a rich man.
-
-§156. Legal Status of Slaves.--The power of the master over the slave,
-called _dominium_ (§37), was absolute. He could assign him the most
-laborious and degrading tasks, punish him even unto death at his sole
-discretion, sell him, and kill him (or turn him out in the street to
-die) when age or illness had made him incapable of labor. Slaves were
-mere chattels in the eyes of the law, like oxen or horses. They could
-not hold property, they could not make contracts, they could testify
-in the courts only on the rack, they could not marry. The free person
-_in potestāte_ was little better off legally (§31), but there were two
-important differences between the son, for example, and the slave. The
-son was relieved of the _potestās_ on the death of the _pater
-familiās_ (§34), but the death of the master did not make the slave
-free. Again, the condition of the son was ameliorated by _pietās_
-(§73) and public opinion (§§32, 33), but there was no _pietās_ for the
-slave and public opinion hardly operated in his behalf. It did enable
-him to hold as his own his scanty savings (§162), and it gave a sort
-of sanction to the permanent unions of male and female slaves called
-_contubernium_, but in other respects it did little for his benefit.
-
-§157. Under the Empire various laws were passed that seemed to
-recognize the slave as a person, not a thing: it was forbidden to sell
-him for the purpose of fighting with wild beasts in the amphitheater;
-it was provided that the slave should not be put to death by the
-master simply because he was too old or too ill to work, and that a
-slave "exposed" (§95) should become free by the act; at last the
-master was forbidden to kill the slave at all without due process of
-law. As a matter of fact these laws were very generally disregarded,
-much as are our laws for the prevention of cruelty to animals, and it
-may be said that it was only the influence of Christianity that at
-last changed the condition of the slave for the better.
-
-§158. The Treatment of Slaves.--There is nothing in the stern and
-selfish character of the Roman that would lead us to expect from him
-gentleness or mercy in the treatment of his slaves. At the same time
-he was too shrewd and sharp in all matters of business to forget that
-a slave was a piece of valuable property, and to run the risk of the
-loss or injury of that property by wanton cruelty. Much depended, of
-course, upon the character and temper of the individual owner, and
-Juvenal gives us to understand that the mistress was likely to be more
-spiteful and unreasonable than the master. But the case of Vedius
-Pollio, in the time of Augustus, who ordered a slave to be thrown
-alive into a pond as food for the fish because he had broken a goblet,
-may be balanced by that of Cicero, whose letters to his slave Tiro
-disclose real affection and tenderness of feeling. The passionate man
-nowadays may kill or maim the dog or horse, although it has a money
-value and he needs its services, and most of us know of worn-out
-horses turned out upon the common to die. But these things are
-exceptional, and if we consider the age in which the Roman lived and
-pass for a moment the matter of punishments, we may say that he was
-rather pitiless as a taskmaster than habitually cruel to his slaves.
-
-§159. Of the daily life of the town slave we know but little except
-that his work was light and he was the envy of the drudge upon the
-farm. Of the treatment of the latter we get some knowledge from the
-writings of the elder Cato, who may be taken as a fair specimen of the
-rugged farmer of his time (234-149 B.C.). He held that slaves should
-always be at work except in the hours, few enough at best, allowed
-them for sleep, and he took pains to find plenty for his to do even on
-the public holidays. He advised farmers to sell immediately worn-out
-draft cattle, diseased sheep, broken implements, aged and feeble
-slaves, "and other useless things."
-
-§160. Food and Dress.--Slaves were fed on coarse food, but when Cato
-tells us that in addition to the monthly allowance of grain (about a
-bushel) they were to have merely the fallen olives, or, failing these,
-a little salt fish and vinegar, we must remember that this was no less
-and no worse than the common food of the poorer Romans. Every
-schoolboy knows that grain was the only ration of the sturdy soldiers
-that won Caesar's battles for him. A slave was furnished a tunic every
-year, and a cloak and a pair of wooden shoes every two years. Worn-out
-clothes were returned to the _vīlicus_ to be made up into patchwork
-quilts. We are told that this same _vīlicus_ often cheated the slaves
-by stinting their allowance for his own benefit, and we can not doubt
-that he, a slave himself, was more likely to be brutal and cruel than
-the master would have been.
-
-§161. But entirely apart from the grinding toil and the harshness and
-insolence of the master and the overseer, the mere restraint from
-liberty was torture enough in itself. There was little chance of
-escape by flight. The Greek slave might hope to cross the boundary of
-the little principality in which he served, to find freedom and refuge
-under the protection of an adjoining power. But Italy was not cut up
-into hostile communities, and should the slave by a miracle reach the
-Rubicon or the sea, no neighboring state would dare defend him or even
-hide him from his Roman master. If he attempted flight, he must live
-the life of an outlaw, with organized bands of slave hunters on his
-track, with a reward offered for his return, and unspeakable tortures
-awaiting him as a warning for others. It is no wonder, then, that vast
-numbers of slaves sought rest from their labors by a voluntary death
-(§140). It must be remembered that many of them were men of good birth
-and high position in the countries from which they came, some of them
-even soldiers, taken on the field of battle with weapons in their
-hands.
-
-§162. The Peculium.--We have seen that the free man _in potestāte_
-could not legally hold property, that all that he acquired belonged
-strictly to his _pater familiās_ (§31). We have also seen that he was
-allowed to hold, manage and use property assigned to him by the _pater
-familiās_, just as if it had been his own (§33). The same thing was
-true in the case of a slave, and the property was called by the same
-name (_pecūlium_). His claim to it could not be maintained by law, but
-was confirmed by public opinion and by inviolable custom. If the
-master respected these, there were several ways in which an
-industrious and frugal slave could scrape together bit by bit a little
-fund of his own, depending in great measure, of course, upon the
-generosity of his master and his own position in the _familia_.
-
-§163. If he belonged to the _familia rūstica_, the opportunities were
-not so good, but by stinting himself he might save something from his
-monthly allowance of food (§160), and he might, perhaps, do a little
-work for himself in the hours allowed for sleep and rest, tilling, for
-example, a few square yards of garden for his own benefit. If he were
-a city slave there were besides these chances the tips from his
-master's friends and guests, and perhaps a bribe for some little piece
-of knavery or a reward for its success. We have already seen that a
-slave teacher received presents from his pupils (§121). It was no
-uncommon thing either, as has been said, for a shrewd master to teach
-a slave a trade and allow him to keep a portion of the increased
-earnings which his deftness and skill would bring. More rarely the
-master would furnish the capital and allow the slave to start in
-business and retain a portion of the profits (§144).
-
-§164. For the master the custom was undoubtedly profitable in the long
-run. It stimulated the slave's energy and made him more contented and
-cheerful. It also furnished a means of control more effective than the
-severest corporal punishment, and that without physical injury to the
-chattel. To the ambitious slave the _pecūlium_ gave at least a chance
-of freedom, for he hoped to save enough in time to buy himself from
-his master. Many, of course, preferred to use their earnings to
-purchase little comforts and luxuries nearer than distant liberty.
-Some upon whom a high price was set by their owners used their
-_pecūlium_ to buy for themselves cheaper slaves, whom they hired out
-to the employers of laborers already mentioned (§143). In this way
-they hoped to increase their savings more rapidly. The slave's slave
-was called _vicārius_, and legally belonged to the owner of his
-master, but public opinion regarded him as a part of the
-slave-master's _pecūlium_. The slave had a life interest only in his
-savings, that is, they did not pass to his heirs on his death, for a
-slave could have no "heirs," and he could not dispose of them by will.
-If he died in slavery his property went to his master. Public slaves
-(§141) were allowed as one of their greatest privileges to dispose of
-one-half of their property by will.
-
-§165. At the best the accumulation of a sum large enough (§140) to buy
-his liberty was pitifully slow and painful for the slave, all the more
-because the more energetic and industrious he was, the higher the
-price that would be set upon him. We can not help feeling a great
-respect for the man who at so great a price obtained his freedom. We
-can sympathize, too, with the poor fellows who had to take from their
-little hoards to make to the members of their masters' families the
-presents that were expected on such great occasions as the marriage of
-one of them, the naming of a child (§98), or the birthday of the
-mistress (§91).
-
-§166. Punishments.--It is not the purpose of the following sections to
-catalogue the fiendish tortures sometimes inflicted upon slaves by
-their masters. They were not very common for the reason suggested in
-§158, and were no more characteristic of the ordinary correction of
-slaves than lynching and whitecapping are characteristic of the
-administration of justice in Georgia and Indiana. Certain punishments,
-however, are so frequently mentioned in Latin literature, that a
-description of them is necessary in order that the passages in which
-they occur may be understood by the reader.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 32. FLAGELLUM]
-
-§167. The most common punishment for neglect of duty or petty
-misconduct was a beating with a stick or flogging with a lash. If the
-picture of a Roman school already referred to (§119) gives a correct
-idea of the punishments inflicted upon a schoolboy with the consent of
-his parents, we should expect that of a slave to be as severe as
-regard for his usefulness afterwards would permit. Hence we find that
-for the single rod or stick was often substituted a bundle of rods,
-usually elm (_ulmī_) corresponding to the birch of England and the
-hickory of America. For the lash or rawhide (_scutica_ or _lōrum_) was
-often used a sort of cat-o'-nine-tails, made of cords or thongs of
-leather. When the offense was more serious, bits of bone were attached
-to this, and even metal buttons, to tear the flesh, and the instrument
-was called a _flagrum_ or _flagellum_ (Fig. 32). It could not have
-been less severe than the knout of Russia, and we may well believe
-that slaves died beneath its blows. To render the victim incapable of
-resistance he was sometimes drawn up to a beam by the arms, and
-weights were even attached to his feet, so that he could not so much
-as writhe under the torture.
-
-§168. In the comedies are many references to these punishments, and
-the slaves make grim jests on the rods and the scourge, taunting each
-other with the beatings they have had or deserve to have. Sometimes
-the rods are parasites, who shave close the person to whom they attach
-themselves; sometimes they are pens, the back of the culprit being the
-copybook; sometimes they are catapults, dealing darts and death.
-Sometimes the victim is a bottomless abyss of rods; sometimes he has
-absorbed so much essence of elm that he is in danger of himself
-becoming a tree; sometimes he is an anvil; sometimes he is a solid
-melting under the blows; sometimes he is a garden well watered by
-blows. Sometimes an entertainment is being prepared scot-free for his
-back; and sometimes his back is a beautifully embroidered carpet.
-
-§169. Another punishment for offenses of the same trivial nature
-resembled the stocks of old New England days. The offender was exposed
-to the derision of his fellows with his limbs so confined that he
-could make no motion at all, could not so much as brush a fly from his
-face. Variations of this form of punishment are seen in the _furca_
-and in the "making a quadruped out of a man." The latter must have
-been something like the "bucking and gagging" used as a punishment in
-the militia; the former was so common that _furcifer_ became a mere
-term of abuse. The culprit carried upon his shoulders a log of wood,
-shaped like a V, and had his arms stretched out before him with his
-hands fastened to the ends of the fork. This log he had to carry
-around in order that the other members of the _familia_ might see him
-and take warning. Sometimes to this punishment was added a lashing as
-he moved painfully along.
-
-§170. Less painful and degrading for the moment, but far more dreaded
-by the slave, was a sentence to harder labor than he had been
-accustomed to perform. The final penalty for misconduct on the part of
-a city slave, for whom the rod had been spoiled in vain, was
-banishment to the farm, and to this might be added at a stroke the
-odious task of grinding at the mill (§148), or the crushing toil of
-labor in the quarries. The last were the punishments of the better
-class of farm slaves, while the desperate and dangerous class of
-slaves who regularly worked in the quarries paid for their misdeeds
-under the scourge and in heavier shackles by day and fewer hours of
-rest by night. These may be compared to the galley slaves of later
-times. Those utterly incorrigible might be sold for gladiators.
-
-§171. For actual crimes, not mere faults or offenses, the punishments
-were far more severe. Slaves were so numerous (§131) and their various
-employments gave them such free access to the person of the master,
-that his property and very life were always at their mercy. It was
-indeed a just and gentle master that did not sometimes dream of a
-slave holding a dagger at his throat. There was nothing within the
-confines of Italy so much dreaded as an uprising of the slaves. It was
-simply this haunting fear that led to the inhuman tortures inflicted
-upon the slave guilty of an attempt upon the life of his master or of
-the destruction of his property. The Romans had not learned twenty
-centuries ago, as some of our own citizens have not yet learned, that
-crimes are not lessened by increasing the sufferings of the criminals.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 33. SLAVE'S COLLAR--_Servus sum dom(i)ni mei
-Scholastici v(iri) sp(ectabilis). Tene me ne fugiam de domo
-Pulverata._]
-
-§172. The runaway slave was a criminal: he had stolen himself. He was
-also guilty of setting a bad example to his fellow slaves; and, worst
-of all, runaway slaves always became bandits (§161) and they might
-find a Spartacus to lead them (§132). There were, therefore, standing
-rewards for the capture of _fugitīvī_, and there were men who made it
-their business to track them down and return them to their masters.
-The _fugitīvus_ was brought back in shackles, and was sure to be
-flogged within an inch of his life and sent to the quarries for the
-rest of his miserable days. Besides this, he was branded on the
-forehead with the letter F, for _fugitīvus_, and sometimes had a metal
-collar riveted about his neck. One such, still preserved at Rome, is
-shown in Fig. 33, and another has the inscription:
-
- FUGI. TENE ME. CUM REVOCAVERIS ME D. M.
- ZONINO, ACCIPIS SOLIDUM.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: I have run away. Catch me. If you take me back to my
-master Zoninus you'll be rewarded.]
-
-§173. For an attempt upon the life of the master the penalty was death
-in its most agonizing form, by crucifixion. This was also the penalty
-for taking part in an insurrection, witness the twenty thousand
-crucified in Sicily (§132) and the six thousand crosses that Pompeius
-erected along the road to Rome, each bearing the body of one of the
-survivors of the final battle in which Spartacus fell. And the
-punishment was inflicted not only upon the slave guilty of his
-master's life, but also upon the family of the slave, if he had wife
-(§156) and children. If the guilty man could not be found, his
-punishment was made certain by the crucifixion of all the slaves of
-the murdered man. Tacitus tells us that in the reign of Nero four
-hundred slaves were executed for the murder of their master, Pedianus
-Secundus, by one of their number undetected.
-
-§174. The cross stood to the slave as the horror of horrors. The very
-word (_crux_) was used among them as a curse, especially in the form
-_ad (malam) crucem_. The various minor punishments were inflicted at
-the order of the master or his representative by some fellow slave
-called for the time _carnifex_ or _lōrārius_, though these words by no
-means imply that he was regularly or even commonly designated for the
-disagreeable duty. Still, the administration of punishment to a fellow
-slave was felt to be degrading, and the word _carnifex_ was apt to
-attach itself to such a person and finally came to be a standing term
-of abuse and taunt. It is applied to each other by quarreling slaves,
-apparently with no notion of its literal meaning, as many vulgar
-epithets are applied to-day. The actual execution of a death sentence
-was carried out by one of the _servī pūblicī_ (§141) at a fixed place
-of execution outside of the city walls.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 34. COIN, SHOWING THE PILLEUS]
-
-§175. Manumission.--The slave might purchase his freedom from his
-master by means of his savings, as we have seen (§164), or he might be
-set free as a reward for faithful service or some special act of
-devotion. In either case it was only necessary for the master to
-pronounce him free in the presence of witnesses, though a formal act
-of manumission often took place before a praetor. The new-made
-freedman set proudly on his head the cap of liberty (_pilleus_), often
-seen on Roman coins (Fig. 34). He was now called _lībertus_ in
-reference to his master, _lībertīnus_ in reference to others; his
-master was no longer _dominus_, but _patrōnus_. The relation that now
-existed between them was one of mutual helpfulness. The patron
-assisted the freedman in business, often supplying the means with
-which he was to make a start in his new life. It the freedman died
-first, the patron paid the expenses of a decent funeral and had the
-body buried near the spot where his own ashes would be laid. He became
-the guardian of the freedman's children, or if no heirs were left, he
-himself inherited the property. The freedman was bound to show his
-patron marked deference and respect on all occasions, to attend him
-upon public occasions, to assist him in case of reverse of fortune,
-and in short to stand to him in the same relation as the client had
-stood to the patron in the brave days of old.
-
-§176. The Clients.--The word _cliēns_ (from _clueō_; therefore
-"hearer," "one who obeys") is used in Roman history of two very
-different classes of dependents, who are separated by a considerable
-interval of time and may be roughly distinguished as the Old Clients
-and the New. The former played an important part under the Kings, and
-especially in the struggles between the patricians and plebeians in
-the early days of the Republic, but had practically disappeared by the
-time of Cicero. The latter are first heard of after the Empire was
-well advanced, and never had any political significance. Between the
-two classes there is absolutely no connection, and the student must be
-careful to notice that the later is not a development of the earlier
-class.
-
-§177. The Old Clients.--Clientage (_clientēla_) goes back beyond the
-founding of Rome to the most ancient social institutions of the
-Italian communities. The _gentēs_ who settled on the hills along the
-Tiber (§22) had brought with them as a part of their _familiae_ (§21)
-numerous free retainers, who seem to have farmed their lands, tended
-their flocks, and done them certain personal services in return for
-protection against cattle thieves, raiders, and open enemies. These
-retainers were regarded as inferior members of the _gēns_ to which
-they had severally attached themselves, had a share in the increase of
-the flocks and herds (§33, _pecūlia_), and were given the clan name
-(§47), but they had no right of marriage with persons of the higher
-class and no voice in the government. They were the original _plēbs_,
-while the _gentīlēs_ (§22) were the _populus_ of Rome.
-
-§178. Rome's policy of expansion soon brought within the city a third
-element, distinct from both _gentīlēs_ and _clientēs_. Conquered
-communities, especially those dangerously near, were made to destroy
-their own strongholds (_oppida_) and move in mass to the city. Those
-who possessed already the gentile organization were allowed to become
-a part of the _populus_, or governing body, and these, too, brought
-their _clientēs_ with them. Those who had no such organization either
-attached themselves to the _gentēs_ as clients, or preferring personal
-independence settled here and there, in and about the city, to make a
-living as best they might. Some were possessed of means as large
-perhaps as those of the patricians; others were artisans and laborers,
-hewers of wood and drawers of water; but all alike were without
-political rights and occupied the lowest position in the new state.
-Their numbers increased rapidly with the expansion of Roman territory,
-and they soon outnumbered the patricians with their retainers, with
-whom, of course, as conquered people they could have no sympathies or
-social ties. To them also the name of _plēbs_ was given, and the old
-_plēbs_, the _clientēs_, began to occupy an intermediate position in
-the state, though politically included with the plebeians. Many of
-them, owing perhaps to the dying out of ancient patrician families,
-gradually lost their dependent relation and became identified in
-interests with the newer element.
-
-§179. Mutual Obligations.--The relation between the patrician patrons
-and the plebeian clients is not now thoroughly understood; the
-problems connected with it seem beyond solution. We know that it was
-hereditary and that the great houses boasted of the number of their
-clients and were eager to increase them from generation to generation.
-We know that it was regarded as something peculiarly sacred, that the
-client stood to the patron as little less than a son. Vergil tells us
-that a special punishment in the underworld awaited the patron who
-defrauded a client. We read, too, of instances of splendid loyalty to
-their patrons on the part of clients, a loyalty to which we can only
-compare in modern times that of Highlanders to the chief of their
-clan. But when we try to get an idea of the reciprocal duties and
-obligations we find little in our authorities that is definite (§12,
-end). The patron furnished means of support for the client and his
-family (§177), gave him the benefit of his advice and counsel, and
-assisted him in his transactions with third parties, representing him
-if necessary in the courts. On the other hand the client was bound to
-advance the interests of his patron in every possible way. He tilled
-his fields, herded his flocks, attended him in war, and assisted him
-in special emergencies with money.
-
-§180. It is evident that the mutuality of this relation depended
-solely upon the predominant position of the patron in the state. So
-long as the patricians were the only full citizens, so long, that is,
-as the plebeians had no civil rights, the client might well afford to
-sacrifice his personal independence for the sake of the countenance
-and protection of one of the mighty. In the case of disputes over
-property, for example, the support of his patron would assure him
-justice even against a patrician, and might secure more than justice
-were his opponent a plebeian without another such advocate. It is
-evident, too, that the relation could not long endure after the
-equalization of the orders. For a generation or two the patron and the
-client might stand together against their old adversaries, but sooner
-or later the client would see that he was getting no equivalent for
-the service he rendered, and his children or his children's children
-would throw off the yoke. The introduction of slavery, on the other
-hand, helped to make the patron independent of the client, and while
-we can hardly tell whether its rapid growth (§129) was the cause or
-the effect of declining clientage, it is nevertheless significant that
-the new relation of _patrōnus_ and _lībertus_ (§175) marks the
-disappearance of that of _patrōnus_ and _cliēns_ in the old and better
-sense of the words.
-
-§181. The New Clients.--The new clients need not detain us long. They
-came in with the upstart rich, who counted a long train of dependents
-as necessary to their state as a string of high-sounding names (§50),
-or a mansion crowded with useless slaves (§155). These dependents were
-simply obscure and needy men who toadied to the rich and great for the
-sake of the crumbs that fell from their tables. There might be among
-them men of perverted talents, philosophers or poets like Martial and
-Statius, but they were all at best a swarm of cringing, fawning,
-time-serving flatterers and parasites. It is important to understand
-that there was no personal tie between the new patron and the new
-client, no bond of hereditary association. No sacrifice was involved
-on either side. The client did not attach himself for life to one
-patron for better or for worse; he frequently paid his court to
-several at a time and changed his masters as often as he could hope
-for better things. The patron in like manner dismissed a client when
-he had tired of him.
-
-§182. Duties and Rewards.--The service, however mean and degrading,
-was easy enough. The chief duty was the _salūtātiō_: the clients
-arrayed in the toga, the formal dress for all social functions,
-assembled early in the morning in the great man's hall to greet him
-when he first appeared. This might be all required of them for the
-day, and there might be time to hurry through the streets to another
-house to pay similar homage to another patron, perhaps to others
-still, for the rich slept late. On the other hand the patron might
-command their attendance in the house or by his litter (§151), if he
-was going out, and keep them at his side the whole day long. Then
-there was no chance to wait upon the second patron, but every chance
-to be forgotten by him. And the rewards were no greater than the
-services. A few coins for a clever witticism or a fulsome compliment;
-a cast-off toga occasionally, for a shabby dress disgraced the levee;
-or an invitation to the dinner table if the patron was particularly
-gracious. One meal a day was always expected, and felt to be the due
-of the client. But sometimes the patron did not receive and the
-clients were sent empty away. Sometimes, too, after a day's attendance
-the hungry and tired train were dismissed with a gift of cold food
-distributed in little baskets (_sportulae_), a poor and sorry
-substitute for the good cheer they had hoped for. From these baskets
-the "dole," as we should call it now, came to be called _sportula_
-itself, and in the course of time an equivalent in money, fixed
-finally at about thirty cents, took the place of this. But it was
-something to be admitted to the familiar presence of the rich and
-fashionable, there was always the hope of a little legacy, if the
-flattery was adroit, and even the dole would enable one to live more
-easily than by work, especially if one could stand well with several
-patrons and draw the dole from each of them.
-
-§183. The Hospites.--Finally we come to the _hospitēs_, though these
-in strictness ought not to be reckoned among the dependents. It is
-true that they were often dependent on others for protection and help,
-but it is also true that they were equally ready and able to extend
-like help and protection to others who had the right to claim
-assistance from them. It is important to observe that _hospitium_
-differed from clientship in this respect, that the parties to it were
-actually on the footing of absolute equality. Although at some
-particular time one might be dependent upon the other for food or
-shelter, at another time the relations might be reversed and the
-protector and the protected change places.
-
-§184. _Hospitium_, in its technical sense, goes back to a time when
-there were no international relations, to the time when stranger and
-enemy were not merely synonymous words, but absolutely the same word.
-In this early stage of society, when distinct communities were
-numerous, every stranger was looked upon with suspicion, and the
-traveler in a state not his own found it difficult to get his wants
-supplied, even if his life was not actually in danger. Hence the
-custom arose for a man engaged in commerce or in any other occupation
-that might compel him to visit a foreign country to form previously a
-connection with a citizen of that country, who would be ready to
-receive him as a friend, to supply his needs, to vouch for his good
-intentions, and to act if necessary as his protector. Such a
-relationship, called _hospitium_, was always strictly reciprocal: if A
-agreed to entertain and protect B, when B visited A's country, then B
-was bound to entertain and protect A, if A visited B's country. The
-parties to an agreement of this sort were called _hospitēs_, and hence
-the word _hospes_ has a double signification, at one time denoting the
-entertainer, at another the guest.
-
-§185. Obligations of Hospitium.--The obligations imposed by this
-covenant were of the most sacred character, and any failure to regard
-its provisions was sacrilege, bringing upon the offender the anger of
-_Iuppiter Hospitālis_. Either of the parties might cancel the bond,
-but only after a formal and public notice of his intentions. On the
-other hand the tie was hereditary, descending from father to son, so
-that persons might be _hospitēs_ who had never so much as seen each
-other, whose immediate ancestors even might have had no personal
-intercourse. As a means of identification the original parties
-exchanged tokens _tesserae hospitālēs_, (see Rich and Harper, s. v.),
-by which they or their descendants might recognize each other. These
-tokens were carefully preserved, and when a stranger claimed
-_hospitium_ his _tessera_ had to be produced and submitted for
-examination. If it was found to be genuine, he was entitled to all the
-privileges that the best-known guest-friend could expect. These seem
-to have been entertainment so long as he remained in his host's city,
-protection including legal assistance if necessary, nursing and
-medical attendance in case of illness, the means necessary for
-continuing his journey, and honorable burial if he died among
-strangers. It will be noticed that these are almost precisely the
-duties devolving upon members of our great benevolent societies at the
-present time when appealed to by a brother in distress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 213-250, 607-645; Göll, II, 213-417; Guhl and
-Koner, 556-580, 676-688, 705-725; Ramsay, 516-521; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_ātrium_, _compluvium_; Smith, Harper, Rich, under _domus_, _mūrus_,
-_tegula_, and the other Latin words used in the text; Lübker, 507-509;
-Baumeister, 1365 f., 631, 927 f., 1373 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 239-348,
-361-373, 446-474; Overbeck, 244-376, 520-537; Gusman, 253-316.
-
-
-§186. Domus.--The house with which we are concerned is the residence
-(_domus_) of the single household, as opposed to lodging houses or
-apartment houses (_īnsulae_) intended for the accommodation of several
-families, and the residence, moreover, of the well-to-do citizen, as
-opposed on the one hand to the mansion of the millionaire and on the
-other to the hovels of the very poor. At the same time it must be
-understood that the Roman house did not show as many distinct types as
-does the American house of the present time. The Roman was naturally
-conservative, he was particularly reluctant to introduce foreign
-ideas, and his house in all times and of all classes preserved certain
-main features essentially unchanged. The proportion of these might
-vary with the size and shape of the lot at the builder's disposal, the
-number of apartments added would depend upon the means and tastes of
-the owner, but the kernel, so to speak, is always the same, and this
-makes the general plan much less complex, the description much less
-confusing.
-
-§187. Our sources of information are unusually abundant. Vitruvius, an
-architect and engineer of the time of Caesar and Augustus, has left a
-work on building, giving in detail his own principles of construction;
-the works of many of the Roman writers contain either set descriptions
-of parts of houses or at least numerous hints and allusions that are
-collectively very helpful; and finally the ground plans of many houses
-have been uncovered in Rome and elsewhere, and in Pompeii we have even
-the walls of some houses left standing. There are still, however,
-despite the fullness and authority of our sources, many things in
-regard to the arrangement and construction of the house that are
-uncertain and disputed (§12, end).
-
-§188. The Development of the House.--The primitive Roman house came
-from the Etruscans. It goes back to the simple farm life of early
-times, when all members of the household, father, mother, children,
-and dependents, lived in one large room together. In this room the
-meals were cooked, the table spread, all indoor work performed, the
-sacrifices offered to the Lares (§27), and at night a space cleared in
-which to spread the hard beds or pallets. The primitive house had no
-chimney, the smoke escaping through a hole in the middle of the roof.
-Rain could enter where the smoke escaped, and from this fact the hole
-was called the _impluvium_; just beneath it in later times a basin
-(_compluvium_) was hollowed out in the floor to catch the water for
-domestic purposes. There were no windows, all natural light coming
-through the _impluvium_ or, in pleasant weather, through the open
-door. There was but one door, and the space opposite it seems to have
-been reserved as much as possible for the father and mother. Here was
-the hearth, where the mother prepared the meals, and near it stood the
-implements she used in spinning and weaving; here was the strong box
-(_ārca_), in which the master kept his valuables, and here their couch
-was spread.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 35. CINERARY URN]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 36. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-§189. The outward appearance of such a house is shown in the Etruscan
-cinerary urns (Fig. 35; see also Smith, I, 668; Schreiber, LIII, 5;
-Baumeister, Fig. 146) found in various places in Italy. The ground
-plan is a simple rectangle, as shown in Figure 36, without partitions.
-This may be regarded as historically and architecturally the kernel of
-the Roman house; it is found in all of which we have any knowledge.
-Its very name (_ātrium_), denoting originally the whole house, was
-also preserved, as is shown in the names of certain very ancient
-buildings in Rome used for religious purposes, the _ātrium Vestae_,
-the _ātrium Lībertātis_, etc., but afterwards applied to the
-characteristic single room. The name was once supposed to mean "the
-black (_āter_) room," but many scholars recognize in it the original
-Etruscan word for house.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 37. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-§190. The first change in the primitive house came in the form of a
-shed or "lean-to" on the side of the _ātrium_ opposite the door. It
-was probably intended at first for merely temporary purposes, being
-built of wooden boards (_tabulae_), and having an outside door and no
-connection with the _ātrium_. It could not have been long, however,
-until the wall between was broken through, and this once done and its
-convenience demonstrated, the partition wall was entirely removed, and
-the second form of the Roman house resulted (Fig. 37). This
-improvement also persisted, and the _tablīnum_ is found in all the
-houses from the humblest to the costliest of which we have any
-knowledge.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 38. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-§191. The next change was made by widening the _ātrium_, but in order
-that the roof might be more easily supported walls were erected along
-the lines of the old _ātrium_ for about two-thirds of its depth. These
-may have been originally mere pillars, as nowadays in our cellars, not
-continuous walls. At any rate, the _ātrium_ at the end next the
-_tablīnum_ was given the full width between the outside walls, and the
-additional spaces, one on each side, were called _ālae_. The
-appearance of such a house as seen from the entrance door must have
-been much like that of an Anglican or Roman Catholic church. The open
-space between the supporting walls corresponded to the nave, the two
-_ālae_ to the transepts, while the bay-like _tablīnum_ resembled the
-chancel. The space between the outside walls and those supporting the
-roof was cut off into rooms of various sizes, used for various
-purposes (Fig. 38). So far as we know they received light only from
-the _ātrium_, for no windows are assigned to them by Roman writers,
-and none are found in the ruins, but it is hardly probable that in the
-country no holes were made for light and air, however considerations
-of privacy and security may have influenced builders in the towns.
-From this ancient house we find preserved in its successors all
-opposite the entrance door: the _ātrium_ with its _ālae_ and
-_tablīnum_, the _impluvium_ and _compluvium_. These are the
-characteristic features of the Roman house, and must be so regarded in
-the description which follows of later developments under foreign
-influence.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 39. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-§192. The Greeks seem to have furnished the idea next adopted by the
-Romans, a court at the rear of the _ātrium_, open to the sky,
-surrounded by rooms, and set with flowers, trees, and shrubs. The open
-space had columns around it, and often a fountain in the middle (Fig.
-39). This court was called the _peristylum_ or _peristylium_.
-According to Vitruvius its breadth should have exceeded its depth by
-one-third, but we do not find these or any other proportions strictly
-observed in the houses that are known to us. Access to the
-_peristylium_ from the _ātrium_ could be had through the _tablīnum_,
-though this might be cut off from it by folding doors, and by a narrow
-passage[1] by its side. The latter would be naturally used by servants
-and by others who did not wish to pass through the master's room. Both
-passage and _tablīnum_ might be closed on the side of the _ātrium_ by
-portières. The arrangement of the various rooms around the court seems
-to have varied with the notions of the builder, and no one plan for
-them can be laid down. According to the means of the owner there were
-bedrooms, dining-rooms, libraries, drawing-rooms, kitchen, scullery,
-closets, private baths, together with the scanty accommodations
-necessary even for a large number of slaves. But no matter whether
-these rooms were many or few they all faced the court, receiving from
-it light and air, as did the rooms along the sides of the _ātrium_.
-There was often a garden behind the court.
-
-[Footnote 1: This passage is called _faucēs_ in the older books. Mau
-has shown that the _faucēs_ was on the entrance side of the _ātrium_.
-He calls the passage by the _tablīnum_ the _andrōn_.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 40. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-§193. The next change took place in the city and town house only,
-because it was due to conditions of town life that did not obtain in
-the country. In ancient as well as in modern times business was likely
-to spread from the center of the town into residence districts, and it
-often became desirable for the owner of a dwelling-house to adapt it
-to the new conditions. This was easily done in the case of the Roman
-house on account of the arrangement of the rooms. Attention has
-already been called to the fact that the rooms all opened to the
-interior of the house, that no windows were placed in the outer walls,
-and that the only door was in front. If the house faced a business
-street, it is evident that the owner could, without interfering with
-the privacy of his house or decreasing its light, build rooms in front
-of the _ātrium_ for commercial purposes. He reserved, of course, a
-passageway to his own door, narrower or wider according to the
-circumstances. If the house occupied a corner, such rooms might be
-added on the side as well as in front (Fig. 40), and as they had no
-necessary connection with the interior they might be rented as
-living-rooms, as such rooms often are in our own cities. It is
-probable that rooms were first added in this way for business purposes
-by an owner who expected to carry on some enterprise of his own in
-them, but even men of good position and considerable means did not
-hesitate to add to their incomes by renting to others these
-disconnected parts of their houses. All the larger houses uncovered in
-Pompeii are arranged in this manner. One occupying a whole square and
-having rented rooms on three sides is described in §208. Such a
-detached house was called an _īnsula_.
-
-§194. The Vestibulum.--Having traced the development of the house as a
-whole and described briefly its permanent and characteristic parts, we
-may now examine these more closely and at the same time call attention
-to other parts introduced at a later time. It will be convenient to
-begin with the front of the house. The city house was built even more
-generally than now on the street line. In the poorer houses the door
-opening into the _ātrium_ was in the front wall, and was separated
-from the street only by the width of the threshold. In the better sort
-of houses, those described in the last section, the separation of the
-_ātrium_ from the street by the row of stores gave opportunity for
-arranging a more imposing entrance. A part at least of this space was
-left as an open court, with a costly pavement running from the street
-to the door, adorned with shrubs and flowers, with statuary even, and
-trophies of war, if the owner was rich and a successful general. This
-courtyard was called the _vestibulum_. The derivation of the word is
-disputed, but it probably comes from _ve-_, "apart," "separate," and
-_stāre_ (cf. _prōstibulum_ from _prōstāre_), and means "a private
-standing place"; other explanations are suggested in the dictionaries.
-The important thing to notice is that it does not correspond at all to
-the part of a modern house called after it the vestibule. In this
-_vestibulum_ the clients gathered, before daybreak perhaps (§182), to
-wait for admission to the _ātrium_, and here the _sportula_ was doled
-out to them. Here, too, was arranged the wedding procession (§86), and
-here was marshaled the train that escorted the boy to the forum the
-day that he put away childish things (§128). Even in the poorer houses
-the same name was given to the little space between the door and the
-edge of the sidewalk.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 41. MOSAIC DOG]
-
-§195. The Ostium.--The entrance to the house was called the _ōstium_.
-This includes the doorway and the door itself, and the word is applied
-to either, though _forēs_ and _iānua_ are the more precise words for
-the door. In the poorer houses (§194) the _ōstium_ was directly on the
-street, and there can be no doubt that it originally opened directly
-into the _ātrium_; in other words, the ancient _ātrium_ was separated
-from the street only by its own wall. The refinement of later times
-led to the introduction of a hall or passageway between the
-_vestibulum_ and the _ātrium_, and the _ōstium_ opened into this hall
-and gradually gave its name to it. The threshold (_līmen_) was broad,
-the door being placed well back, and often had the word _salvē_ worked
-on it in mosaic. Over the door were words of good omen, _Nihil intret
-malī_, for example, or a charm against fire. In the great houses where
-an _ōstiārius_ or _iānitor_ (§150) was kept on duty, his place was
-behind the door, and sometimes he had here a small room. A dog was
-often kept chained in the _ōstium_, or in default of one a picture was
-painted on the wall or worked in mosaic on the floor (Fig. 41) with
-the warning beneath it: _Cavē canem!_ The hallway was closed on the
-side of the _ātrium_ with a curtain (_vēlum_). This hallway was not so
-long that through it persons in the _ātrium_ could not see passers-by
-in the street.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 42. IMPLUVIUM IN TUSCAN ATRIUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 43. SECTION OF TUSCAN ATRIUM]
-
-§196. The Atrium.--The _ātrium_ (§188) was the kernel of the Roman
-house, and to it was given the appropriate name _cavum aedium_. It is
-possible that this later name belonged strictly to the unroofed
-portion only, but the two words came to be used indiscriminately. The
-old view that the _cavum aedium_ was a middle court between the
-_ātrium_ and the _peristylium_ is still held by a few scholars, but is
-not supported by the monumental evidence (§187). The most conspicuous
-features of the _ātrium_ were the _impluvium_ and the _compluvium_
-(§188). The water collected in the latter was carried into cisterns;
-over the former a curtain could be drawn when the light was too
-intense, as over a photographer's skylight nowadays. We find that the
-two words were carelessly used for each other by Roman writers. So
-important was the _impluvium_ to the _ātrium_, that the latter was
-named from the manner in which the former was constructed. Vitruvius
-tells us that there were four styles. The first was called the _ātrium
-Tūscanicum_. In this the roof was formed by two pairs of beams
-crossing each other at right angles, the inclosed space being left
-uncovered and thus forming the _impluvium_ (Figs. 42, 43). The name
-(§188) as well as the simple construction shows that this was the
-earliest form of the _ātrium_, and it is evident that it could not be
-used for rooms of very large dimensions. The second was called the
-_ātrium tetrastylon_. The beams were supported at their intersections
-by pillars or columns. The third, _ātrium Corinthium_, differed from
-the second only in having more than four supporting pillars. It is
-probable that these two similar styles came in with the widening of
-the _ātrium_ (§191). The fourth was called the _ātrium displuviātum_.
-In this the roof sloped toward the outer walls, as shown in the
-cinerary urn mentioned in §189, and the water was carried off by
-gutters on the outside, the _compluvium_ collecting only so much as
-actually fell into it from the heavens. We are told that there was
-another style of _ātrium_, the _testūdinātum_, which was covered all
-over and had neither _impluvium_ nor _compluvium_. We do not know how
-this was lighted; perhaps by windows in the ālae.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 44. SMALL HOUSE AT POMPEII]
-
-§197. The Change in the Atrium.--The _ātrium_ as it was in the early
-days of the Republic has been described in §188. The simplicity and
-purity of the family life of that period lent a dignity to the
-one-room house that the vast palaces of the late Republic and Empire
-failed utterly to inherit. By Cicero's time the _ātrium_ had ceased to
-be the center of domestic life; it had become a state apartment used
-only for display. We do not know the successive steps in the process
-of change. Probably the rooms along the sides (§191) were first used
-as bedrooms, for the sake of greater privacy. The need of a detached
-room for the cooking must have been felt as soon as the _peristylium_
-was adopted (it may well be that the court was originally a kitchen
-garden), and then of a dining-room convenient to it. Then other rooms
-were added about this court and these were made sleeping-apartments
-for the sake of still greater privacy. Finally these rooms were needed
-for other purposes (§192) and the sleeping-rooms were moved again,
-this time to an upper story. When this second story was added we do
-not know, but it presupposes the small and costly lots of a city. Even
-the most unpretentious houses in Pompeii have in them the remains of
-staircases (Fig. 44).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 45. ATRIUM IN HOUSE OF SALLUST IN POMPEII]
-
-§198. The _ātrium_ was now fitted up with all the splendor and
-magnificence that the owner's means would permit. The opening in the
-roof was enlarged to admit more light, and the supporting pillars
-(§196) were made of marble or costly woods. Between these pillars and
-along the walls statues and other works of art were placed. The
-_compluvium_ became a marble basin, with a fountain in the center, and
-was often richly carved or adorned with figures in relief. The floors
-were mosaic, the walls painted in brilliant colors or paneled with
-marbles of many hues, and the ceilings were covered with ivory and
-gold. In such a hall (Fig. 45) the host greeted his guests (§185), the
-patron received his clients (§182), the husband welcomed his wife
-(§89), and here his body lay in state when the pride of life was over.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 46. RUINS OF THE HOUSE OF THE POET IN POMPEII]
-
-§199. Still some memorials of the older day were left in even the most
-imposing _ātrium_. The altar to the Lares and Penates remained near
-the place where the hearth had been, though the regular sacrifices
-were made in a special chapel in the _peristylium_. In even the
-grandest houses the implements for spinning were kept in the place
-where the matron had once sat among her maidservants (§§86, 105), as
-Livy tells us in the story of Lucretia. The cabinets retained the
-masks of simpler and may be stronger men (§107), and the marriage
-couch stood opposite the _ōstium_ (hence its other name, _lectus
-adversus_), where it had been placed on the wedding night (§89),
-though no one slept in the _ātrium_. In the country much of the
-old-time use of the _ātrium_ survived even Augustus, and the poor, of
-course, had never changed their style of living. What use was made of
-the small rooms along the sides of the _ātrium_, after they had ceased
-to be bedchambers, we do not know; they served perhaps as conversation
-rooms, private parlors, and drawing-rooms.
-
-§200. The Alae.--The manner in which the _ālae_, or wings, were formed
-has been explained (§191); they were simply the rectangular recesses
-left on the right and left of the _ātrium_, when the smaller rooms on
-the sides were walled off. It must be remembered that they were
-entirely open to the _ātrium_, and formed a part of it, perhaps
-originally furnishing additional light from windows in their outer
-walls. In them were kept the _imāginēs_, as the wax busts of those
-ancestors who had held curule offices were called, arranged in
-cabinets in such a way that, by the help of cords running from one to
-another and of inscriptions under each of them, their relation to each
-other could be made clear and their great deeds kept in mind. Even
-when Roman writers or those of modern times speak of the _imāginēs_ as
-in the _ātrium_, it is the _ālae_ that are intended.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 47. VIEW FROM THE ATRIUM]
-
-§201. The Tablinum.--The probable origin of the _tablīnum_, has been
-explained above (§190), and its name has been derived from the
-material (_tabulae_, "planks") of the "lean-to," perhaps a summer
-kitchen, from which it developed. Others think that the room received
-its name from the fact that in it the master kept his account books
-(_tabulae_) as well as all his business and private papers. He kept
-here also the money chest or strong box (_ārca_), which in the olden
-time had been chained to the floor of the _ātrium_, and made the room
-in fact his office or study. By its position it commanded the whole
-house, as the rooms could be entered only from the _ātrium_ or
-_peristylium_, and the _tablīnum_ was right between them. The master
-could secure entire privacy by closing the folding doors which cut off
-the private court, or by pulling the curtains across the opening into
-the great hall. On the other hand, if the _tablīnum_ was left open,
-the guest entering the _ōstium_ must have had a charming vista,
-commanding at a glance all the public and semi-public parts of the
-house (Fig. 47). Even when the _tablīnum_ was closed, there was free
-passage from the front of the house to the rear through the short
-corridor (§192) by the side of the _tablīnum_. It should be noticed
-that there was only one such passage, though the older authorities
-assert that there were two.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 48. THE PERISTYLE FROM HOUSE IN POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 49. ROOF OF PERISTYLE]
-
-§202. The Peristyle.--The _peristylium_ or _peristylum_ was adopted,
-as we have seen (§192), from the Greeks, but despite the way in which
-the Roman clung to the customs of his fathers it was not long in
-becoming the more important of the two main sections of the house. We
-must think of a spacious court (Fig. 48) open to the sky, but
-surrounded by a continuous row of buildings, or rather rooms, for the
-buildings soon became one, all facing it and having doors and latticed
-windows opening upon it. All these buildings had covered porches on
-the side next the court (Fig. 49), and these porches forming an
-unbroken colonnade on the four sides were strictly the peristyle,
-though the name came to be used of the whole section of the house,
-including court, colonnade, and surrounding rooms. The court was much
-more open to the sun than the _ātrium_, and all sorts of rare and
-beautiful plants and flowers bloomed and flourished in it, protected
-by the walls from cold winds. Fountains and statuary adorned the
-middle part; the colonnade furnished cool or sunny promenades, no
-matter what the time of day or the season of the year. Loving the open
-air and the charms of nature as the Romans did, it is no wonder that
-they soon made the peristyle the center of their domestic life in all
-the houses of the better class, and reserved the _ātrium_ for the more
-formal functions which their political and public position demanded
-(§197). It must be remembered that there was often a garden behind the
-peristyle, and there was also very commonly a direct connection with
-the street.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 50. KITCHEN RANGE]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 51. LATRINA]
-
-§203. Private Rooms.--The rooms surrounding the court varied so much
-with the means and tastes of the owners of the houses that we can
-hardly do more than give a list of those most frequently mentioned in
-literature. It is important to remember that in the town house all
-these rooms received their light by day from the court (§193), while
-in the country there may well have been windows and doors in the
-exterior wall (§191). First in importance comes the kitchen
-(_culīna_), placed on the side of the court opposite the _tablīnum_.
-It was supplied with an open fireplace for roasting and boiling, and
-with a stove (Fig. 50) not unlike the charcoal affairs still used in
-Europe. Near it was the bakery, if the mansion required one, supplied
-with an oven. Near it, too, was the bathhouse (_lātrīna_) with the
-necessary closet, in order that all might use the same connection with
-the sewer (Fig. 51). If the house had a stable, it was also put near
-the kitchen, as nowadays in Latin countries.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 52. DINING-ROOM IN COURT]
-
-§204. The dining-room (_trīclīnium_) may be mentioned next. It was not
-necessarily in immediate juxtaposition to the kitchen, because the
-army of slaves (§149) made its position of little importance so far as
-convenience was concerned. It was customary to have several trīclīnia
-for use at different seasons of the year, in order that the room might
-be warmed by the sun in winter, and in summer escape its rays.
-Vitruvius thought that its length should be twice its breadth, but the
-ruins show no fixed proportions. The Romans were so fond of the air
-and the sky that the court must have often served as a dining-room,
-and Horace has left us a charming picture of the master dining under
-an arbor attended by a single slave. Such an outdoor dining-room is
-found in the so-called House of Sallust at Pompeii (Fig. 52).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 53. BEDROOM]
-
-§205. The sleeping-rooms (_cubicula_) were not considered so important
-by the Romans as by us, for the reason, probably, that they were used
-merely to sleep in and not for living-rooms as well. They were very
-small and the furniture was scant (Fig. 53) in even the best houses.
-Some of these seem to have had anterooms in connection with the
-_cubicula_, which were probably occupied by attendants (§150), and in
-even the ordinary houses there was often a recess for the bed. Some of
-the bedrooms seem to have been used merely for the midday siesta
-(§122), and these were naturally situated in the coolest part of the
-court; they were called _cubicula diurna_. The others were called by
-way of distinction _cubicula nocturna_ or _dormitōria_, and were
-placed so far as possible on the west side of the court in order that
-they might receive the morning sun. It should be remembered that in
-the best houses the bedrooms were preferably in the second story of
-the peristyle.
-
-§206. A library (_bibliothēca_) had a place in the house of every
-Roman of education. Collections of books were large as well as
-numerous, and were made then as now by persons even who cared nothing
-about their contents. The books or rolls, which will be described
-later, were kept in cases or cabinets around the walls, and in one
-library discovered in Herculaneum an additional rectangular case
-occupied the middle of the room. It was customary to decorate the room
-with statues of Minerva and the Muses, and also with the busts and
-portraits of distinguished men. Vitruvius recommends an eastern aspect
-for the _bibliothēca_, probably to guard against dampness.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 54. CHAPEL IN HOUSE]
-
-§207. Besides these rooms, which must have been found in all good
-houses, there were others of less importance, some of which were so
-rare that we scarcely know their uses. The _sacrārium_ was a private
-chapel (Fig. 54) in which the images of the gods were kept, acts of
-worship performed, and sacrifices offered. The Lar or tutelary
-divinity of the house seems, however, to have retained his ancient
-place in the _ātrium_. The _oecī_ were halls or saloons, corresponding
-perhaps to our parlors and drawing-rooms, used occasionally, it may
-be, for banquet halls. The _exedrae_ were rooms supplied with
-permanent seats which seem to have been used for lectures and similar
-entertainments. The _sōlārium_ was a place to bask in the sun,
-sometimes a terrace, often the flat roof of the house, which was then
-covered with earth and laid out like a garden and made beautiful with
-flowers and shrubs. Besides these there were, of course, sculleries,
-pantries, and storerooms. The slaves had to have their quarters
-(_cellae servōrum_), in which they were packed as closely as possible.
-Cellars under the houses seem to have been rare, though some have been
-found at Pompeii.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 55. HOUSE OF PANSA]
-
-§208. The House of Pansa.--Finally we may describe a house that
-actually existed, taking as an illustration one that must have
-belonged to a wealthy and influential man, the so-called House of
-Pansa at Pompeii (Fig. 55; and see also Overbeck's _Pompeii_, p. 325;
-Harper, p. 549; Becker, II, p. 214; Smith, I, p. 681; Schreiber, LIII,
-16; the various plans are slightly different). The house occupied an
-entire square, facing a little east of south. Most of the rooms on the
-front and sides were rented out for shops or stores; in the rear was a
-garden. The rooms that did not belong to the house proper are shaded
-in the plan here given. The _vestibulum_, marked 1 in the plan, is the
-open space between two of the shops (§193). Behind it is the _ōstium_
-(1'), with a figure of a dog (§195) in mosaic, opening into the
-_ātrium_ (2, 2) with three rooms on each side, the _ālae_ (2', 2')
-being in the regular place, the _compluvium_ (3) in the middle, the
-_tablīnum_ (4) opposite the _ōstium_, and the passage on the eastern
-side (5). The _ātrium_ is of the _Tūscanicum_ style (§196), and is
-paved with concrete; the _tablīnum_ and the passage have mosaic
-floors. From these, steps lead down into the court, which is lower
-than the _ātrium_, measures 65 by 50 feet, and is surrounded by a
-colonnade with sixteen pillars. There are two rooms on the side next
-the _ātrium_, one of these (6) has been called the _bibliothēca_
-(§206), because a manuscript was found in it, but its purpose is
-uncertain; the other (6') was possibly a dining-room. The court has
-two projections (7', 7') much like the _ālae_, which have been called
-_exedrae_ (§207); it will be noticed that one of these has the
-convenience of an exit (§202) to the street. The rooms on the west and
-the small room on the east can not be definitely named. The large room
-on the east (T) is the main dining-room (§204), the remains of the
-dining couches being marked on the plan. The kitchen is at the
-northwest corner (13), with the stable (14) next to it (§203, end);
-off the kitchen is a paved yard (15) with a gateway into the street by
-which a cart could enter. East of the kitchen and yard is a narrow
-passage connecting the peristyle with the garden (§202). East of this
-are two rooms, the larger of which (9) is one of the most imposing
-rooms of the house, 33 by 24 feet in size, with a large window guarded
-by a low balustrade, and opening into the garden. This was probably an
-_oecus_ (§207). In the center of the court is a basin about two feet
-deep, the rim of which was once decorated with figures of water plants
-and fish. Along the whole north end of the house ran a long veranda
-(16, 16), overlooking the garden (11, 11) in which was a sort of
-summer house (12). The house had an upper story, but the stairs
-leading to it are in the rented rooms, suggesting that the upper floor
-was not occupied by Pansa's family.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 56. SECTION OF THE HOUSE OF PANSA IN POMPEII]
-
-§209. Of the rooms facing the street it will be noticed that one,
-lightly shaded in the plan, is connected with the _ātrium_; it was
-probably used for some business conducted by Pansa himself (§193,
-end), possibly with a slave (§144) or a freedman (§175) in immediate
-charge of it. Of the others the suites on the east side (A, B) seem to
-have been rented out as living apartments. The others were shops and
-stores. The four connected rooms on the west, near the front, seem to
-have been a large bakery; the room marked C was the salesroom, with a
-large room opening off of it containing three stone mills, troughs for
-kneading the dough, a water tap with sink, and a recessed oven. The
-uses of the others are uncertain. The section plan (Fig. 56)
-represents the appearance of the house if all were cut away on one
-side of a line drawn from front to rear through the middle of the
-house. It is, of course, largely conjectural, but gives a clear idea
-of the general way in which the division walls and roof must have been
-arranged.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 57. WALL OF ROMULUS]
-
-§210. The Walls.--The materials of which the wall (_pariēs_) was
-composed varied with the time, the place, and the cost of
-transportation. Stone and unburned bricks (_laterēs crūdī_) were the
-earliest materials used in Italy, as almost everywhere else, timber
-being employed for merely temporary structures, as in the addition
-(§190) from which the _tablīnum_ developed. For private houses in very
-early times and for public buildings in all times, walls of dressed
-stone (_opus quadrātum_) were laid in regular courses, precisely as in
-modern times (Fig. 57). Over the wall was spread a coating of fine
-marble stucco for decorative purposes, which gave it a finish of
-dazzling white. For less pretentious houses, not for public buildings,
-the sun-dried bricks were largely used up to about the beginning of
-the first century B.C. These, too, were covered with the stucco, for
-protection against the weather as well as for decoration, but even the
-hard stucco has not preserved walls of this perishable material to our
-times. In classical times a new material had come into use, better
-than either brick or stone, cheaper, more durable, more easily worked
-and transported, which was employed almost exclusively for private
-houses, and very generally for public buildings. Walls constructed in
-the new way (_opus caementīcium_) are variously called "rubble-work"
-or "concrete" in our books of reference, but neither term is quite
-descriptive; the _opus caementīcium_ was not laid in courses, as is
-our rubble-work, while on the other hand larger stones were used in it
-than in the concrete of which walls for buildings are now constructed.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 58. METHOD OF CASTING CONCRETE WALLS]
-
-§211. Paries Caementicius.--The materials varied with the place. At
-Rome lime and volcanic ashes (_lapis Puteolānus_) were used with
-pieces of stone as large or larger than the fist. Brickbats sometimes
-took the place of stone, and sand (§146) that of the volcanic ashes;
-potsherds crushed fine were better than the sand. The harder the
-stones the better the concrete; the very best was made with pieces of
-lava, the material with which the roads were generally paved. The
-method of forming the concrete walls was the same as that of modern
-times, familiar to us all in the construction of sidewalks. It will be
-easily understood from the illustration (Fig. 58). Upright posts,
-about 5 by 6 inches thick, and from 10 to 15 feet in height, were
-fixed about 3 feet apart along the line of both faces of the intended
-wall. On the outside of these were nailed horizontally boards, 10 or
-12 inches wide, overlapping each other. Into the intermediate space
-the semi-fluid concrete was poured, receiving the imprint of posts and
-boards. When the concrete had hardened, the frame-work was removed and
-placed on top of it and the work continued until the wall had reached
-the required height. Walls made in this way varied in thickness from a
-seven-inch partition wall in an ordinary house to the eighteen-foot
-walls of the Pantheon of Agrippa. They were far more durable than
-stone walls, which might be removed stone by stone with little more
-labor than was required to put them together; the concrete wall was a
-single slab of stone throughout its whole extent, and large parts of
-it might be cut away without diminishing the strength of the rest in
-the slightest degree.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 59. WALL FACINGS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 60. BRICK FOR FACING WALL]
-
-§212. Wall Facings.--Impervious to the weather though these walls
-were, they were usually faced with stone or kiln-burned brick
-(_laterēs coctī_). The stone employed was usually the soft tufa, not
-nearly so well adapted to stand the weather as the concrete itself.
-The earliest fashion was to take bits of stone having one smooth face
-but of no regular size or shape and arrange them with the smooth faces
-against the frame-work as fast as the concrete was poured in; when the
-frame-work was removed the wall presented the appearance shown at A in
-Fig. 59. Such a wall was called _opus incertum_. In later times the
-tufa was used in small blocks having the smooth face square and of a
-uniform size. A wall so faced looked as if covered with a net (B in
-Fig. 59) and was therefore called _opus rēticulātum_. A section at a
-corner is shown at C. In either case the exterior face of the wall was
-usually covered with a fine limestone or marble stucco, which gave a
-hard finish, smooth and white. The burned bricks were triangular in
-shape, but their arrangement and appearance can be more easily
-understood from the illustration (Fig. 60) than from any description
-that could be given here. It must be noticed that there were no walls
-made of _laterēs coctī_ alone, even the thin partition walls having a
-core of concrete.
-
-§213. Floors and Ceilings.--In the poorer houses the floor (_sōlum_)
-of the first story was made by smoothing the ground between the walls,
-covering it thickly with small pieces of stone, bricks, tile, and
-potsherds, and pounding all down solidly and smoothly with a heavy
-rammer (_fistūca_). Such a floor was called _pavīmentum_, and the name
-came gradually to be used of floors of all kinds. In houses of a
-better sort the floor was made of stone slabs fitted smoothly
-together. The more pretentious houses had concrete floors, made as has
-been described. Floors of upper stories were sometimes made of wood,
-but concrete was used here, too, poured over a temporary flooring of
-wood. Such a floor was very heavy, and required strong walls to
-support it; examples are preserved of the thickness of eighteen inches
-and a span of twenty feet. A floor of this kind made a perfect ceiling
-for the room below, requiring only a finish of stucco. Other ceilings
-were made much as they are now, laths being nailed on the stringers or
-rafters and covered with mortar and stucco.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 61. HUT OF ROMULUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 62. TILE FOR ROOF]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 63. TILE ROOF]
-
-§214. Roofs.--The construction of the roofs (_tēcta_) differed very
-little from the modern method, as may be seen in the illustration
-shown in §196. They varied as much as ours do in shape, some being
-flat, others sloping in two directions, others in four. In the most
-ancient times the covering was a thatch of straw, as in the so-called
-hut of Romulus (_casa Rōmulī_) on the Palatine Hill preserved even
-under the Empire as a relic of the past (Fig. 61). Shingles followed
-the straw, only to give place in turn to tiles. These were at first
-flat, like our shingles, but were later made with a flange on each
-side (Fig. 62) in such a way that the lower part of one would slip
-into the upper part of the one below it on the roof. The tiles
-(_tēgulae_) were laid side by side and the flanges covered by other
-tiles, called _imbricēs_ (Fig. 63) inverted over them. Gutters also of
-tile ran along the eaves to conduct the water into cisterns, if it was
-needed for domestic purposes. The appearance of the completed roof is
-shown in Fig. 49, §202.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 64. DOOR OF ROMAN HOUSE]
-
-§215. The Doors.--The Roman doorway, like our own, had four parts: the
-threshold (_līmen_), the two jambs (_postēs_), and the lintel (_līmen
-superum_). The lintel was always of a single piece of stone and
-peculiarly massive. The doors were exactly like those of modern times,
-except in the matter of hinges, for while the Romans had hinges like
-ours they did not use them on their doors. The door-hinge was really a
-cylinder of hard wood, a little longer than the door and of a diameter
-a little greater than the thickness of the door, terminating above and
-below in pivots. These pivots turned in sockets made to receive them
-in the threshold and lintel. To this cylinder the door was mortised,
-their combined weight coming upon the lower pivot. The cut (Fig. 64)
-makes this clear, and reminds one of an old-fashioned homemade gate.
-The comedies are full of references to the creaking of these doors.
-
-§216. The outer door of the house was properly called _iānua_, an
-inner door _ōstium_, but the two words came to be used
-indiscriminately, and the latter was even applied to the whole
-entrance (§195). Double doors were called _forēs_, and the back door,
-usually opening into a garden (§208), was called the _postīcum_. The
-doors opened inwards and those in the outer wall were supplied with
-bolts (_pessulī_) and bars (_serae_). Locks and keys by which the
-doors could be fastened from without were not unknown, but were very
-heavy and clumsy. Finally it should be noticed that in the interiors
-of private houses doors were not nearly so common as now, the Romans
-preferring portières (_vēla_, _aulaea_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 65. WINDOW]
-
-§217. The Windows.--In the principal rooms of the house the windows
-opened on the court, as has been seen, and it may be set down as a
-rule that in rooms situated on the first floor and used for domestic
-purposes there were no windows opening on the street. In the upper
-floors there must have been windows on the street in such apartments
-as had no outlook on the court, as in those for example above the
-rented rooms in the House of Pansa (§208). Country houses may also
-have had outside windows in the first story (§203). All the windows
-(_fenestrae_) were small (Fig. 65), hardly larger than three feet by
-two. Some were provided with shutters, which were made to slide
-backward and forward in a frame-work on the outside of the wall. These
-shutters were sometimes in two parts moving in opposite directions,
-and when closed were said to be _iūnctae_. Other windows were
-latticed, and others still were covered with a fine network to keep
-out mice and other objectionable animals. Glass was known to the
-Romans of the Empire but was too expensive for general use. Talc and
-other translucent materials were also employed in window frames as a
-protection against cold, but only in very rare instances.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 66. STOVE FOR HEATING]
-
-§218. Heating.--Even in the mild climate of Italy the houses must
-often have been too cold for comfort. On merely chilly days the
-occupants probably contented themselves with moving into rooms warmed
-by the direct rays of the sun (§204), or with wearing wraps or heavier
-clothing. In the more severe weather of actual winter they used
-charcoal stoves or braziers of the sort that is still used in the
-countries of southern Europe. They were merely metal boxes (Fig. 66)
-in which hot coals could be put, with legs to keep the floors from
-injury and handles by which they could be carried from room to room.
-They were called _foculī_. The wealthy had furnaces resembling ours
-under their houses, the heat being carried to the rooms by tile pipes;
-in some instances the partitions and floors seem to have been made of
-hollow tiles, through which the hot air circulated, warming the rooms
-without being admitted to them. These furnaces had chimneys, but
-furnaces were seldom used.
-
-§219. Water Supply.--All the important towns of Italy had abundant
-supplies of water piped from hills and brought sometimes from a
-considerable distance. The Romans' aqueducts were among their most
-stupendous and most successful works of engineering. Mains were laid
-down the middle of the streets and from these the water was piped into
-the houses. There was often a tank in the upper part of the house,
-from which the water was distributed as it was needed. It was not
-usually carried into many of the rooms, but there was always a jet or
-fountain in the court (§202), in the bathhouse, the garden, and the
-closet. The bathhouse had a separate heating apparatus of its own,
-which kept the room or rooms at the desired temperature and furnished
-hot water as required.
-
-§220. Decoration.--The outside of the house was left severely plain,
-the walls being merely covered with stucco, as we have seen (§212).
-The interior was decorated to suit the tastes and means of the owner,
-not even the poorer houses lacking charming effects in this direction.
-At first the stucco-finished walls were merely marked off into
-rectangular panels (_abacī_), which were painted deep, rich colors,
-reds and yellows predominating. Then in the middle of these panels
-simple center-pieces were painted and the whole surrounded with the
-most brilliant arabesques. Then came elaborate pictures, figures,
-interiors, landscapes, etc., of large size and most skillfully
-executed, all painted directly upon the wall, as in some of our public
-buildings to-day. Illustrations of these decorations may be found in
-Baumeister II, L, and LI, and in colors in Gusman IX-XI, Kelsey XI. A
-little later the walls began to be covered with panels of thin slabs
-of marble with a baseboard and cornice. Beautiful effects were
-produced by combining marbles of different tints, and the Romans
-ransacked the world for striking colors. Later still came raised
-figures of stucco work, enriched with gold and colors, and mosaic
-work, chiefly of minute pieces of colored glass which had a jewel-like
-effect.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 67. MOSAIC THRESHOLD]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 68. CARVED DOORWAY]
-
-§221. The doors and doorways gave opportunities for treatment equally
-artistic. The doors were richly paneled and carved, or were plated
-with bronze, or made of solid bronze. The threshold was often of
-mosaic (see the example from Pompeii in Fig. 67). The _postēs_ were
-sheathed with marble elaborately carved, as in the example from
-Pompeii, shown in Fig. 68. The floors were covered with marble tiles
-arranged in geometrical figures with contrasting colors, much as they
-are now in public buildings, or with mosaic pictures only less
-beautiful than those upon the walls. The most famous of these, "Darius
-at the Battle of Issus," is shown in black and white in all our
-reference books (best in Baumeister under _Mosaik_, Fig. 1000, and in
-colors in Overbeck after p. 612). It measures sixteen feet by eight,
-but despite its size has no less than one hundred and fifty separate
-pieces to each square inch. The ceilings were often barrel-vaulted and
-painted brilliant colors, or were divided into panels (_lacūs_,
-_lacūnae_), deeply sunk, by heavy intersecting beams of wood or
-marble, and then decorated in the most elaborate manner with raised
-stucco work, or gold or ivory, or with bronze plates heavily
-gilded.[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: The magnificence of some of the great houses, even in
-Republican times, may be inferred from the prices paid for them.
-Cicero paid about $140,000 for his; the consul Messala the same price
-for his; Clodius $600,000 for his, the most costly known to us. All
-these were on the Palatine Hill, where ground was costly, too.]
-
-§222. Furniture.--Our knowledge of Roman furniture is largely
-indirect, because only such articles have come down to us as were made
-of stone or metal. Fortunately the secondary sources are abundant and
-good. Many articles are incidentally described in works of literature,
-many are shown in the wall paintings mentioned above (§220), and some
-have been restored from casts taken in the hardened ashes of Pompeii
-and Herculaneum. In general we may say that the Romans had very few
-articles of furniture in their houses, and that they cared less for
-comfort, not to say luxurious ease, than they did for costly
-materials, fine workmanship, and artistic forms. The mansions on the
-Palatine were enriched with all the spoils of Greece and Asia, but it
-may be doubted whether there was a comfortable bed within the walls of
-Rome.
-
-§223. Principal Articles.--Many of the most common and useful articles
-of modern furniture were entirely unknown to the Romans. No mirrors
-hung on their walls, they had no desks or writing tables, no dressers
-or chiffoniers, no glass-doored cabinets for the display of
-bric-a-brac, tableware, or books, no mantels, no hat-racks even. The
-principal articles found in even the best houses were couches or beds,
-chairs, tables, and lamps. If to these we add chests or cabinets, an
-occasional brazier (§218), and still rarer water-clock, we shall have
-everything that can be called furniture except tableware and kitchen
-utensils. Still it must not be thought that their rooms presented a
-desolate or dreary appearance. When one considers the decorations
-(§§220, 221), the stately pomp of the _ātrium_ (§198), and the rare
-beauty of the peristyle (§202), it is evident that a very few articles
-of real artistic excellence were more in keeping with them than would
-have been the litter and jumble that we now think necessary in our
-rooms.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 69. THE LECTUS]
-
-§224. The Couches.--The couch (_lectus_, _lectulus_) was found
-everywhere in the Roman house, a sofa by day, a bed by night. In its
-simplest form it consisted of a frame of wood with straps across the
-top on which was laid a mattress. At one end there was an arm, as in
-the case of our sofas; sometimes there was an arm at each end, and a
-back besides. It was always provided with pillows and rugs or
-coverlets. The mattress was originally stuffed with straw, but this
-gave place to wool and even feathers. In some of the bedrooms of
-Pompeii the frame seems to have been lacking, the mattress being laid
-on a support built up from the floor (§205). The couches used for beds
-seem to have been larger than those used as sofas, and they were so
-high that stools (Fig. 69) or even steps were necessary
-accompaniments. As a sofa the _lectus_ was used in the library for
-reading and writing, the student supporting himself on the left arm
-and holding the book or writing with the right hand. In the
-dining-room it had a permanent place, as will be described later. Its
-honorary position in the great hall has been already mentioned (§199).
-It will be seen that the _lectus_ could be made highly ornamental. The
-legs and arms were carved or made of costly woods, or inlaid or plated
-with tortoise-shell or the precious metals. We even read of frames of
-solid silver. The coverings were often made of the finest fabrics,
-dyed the most brilliant colors and worked with figures of gold.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 70. THE SELLA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 71. CURULE CHAIRS]
-
-§225. The Chairs.--The primitive form of seat (_sedīle_) among the
-Romans as elsewhere was the stool or bench with four perpendicular
-legs and no back. The remarkable thing is that it did not give place
-to something better as soon as means permitted. The stool (_sella_)
-was the ordinary seat for one person (Fig. 70), used by men and women
-resting or working, and by children and slaves at their meals as well.
-The bench (_subsellium_) differed from the stool only in accommodating
-more than one person. It was used by senators in the _cūria_, by the
-jurors in the courts, and by boys in the school (§120), as well as in
-private houses. A special form of the _sella_ was the famous curule
-chair (_sella curūlis_), having curved legs of ivory (Fig. 71). The
-curule chair folded up like our camp-stools for convenience of
-carriage and had straps across the top to support the cushion which
-formed the seat.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 72. THE SOLIUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 73. CATHEDRA]
-
-§226. The first improvement upon the _sella_ was the _solium_, a
-stiff, straight, high-backed chair with solid arms, looking as if cut
-from a single block of wood (Fig. 72), and so high that a footstool
-was as necessary with it as with a bed (§224). Poets represented gods
-and kings as seated in such a chair, and it was kept in the _ātrium_
-for the use of the patron when he received his clients (§§182, 198).
-Lastly, we find the _cathedra_, a chair without arms, but with a
-curved back (Fig. 73) sometimes fixed at an easy angle (_cathedra
-supīna_), the only approximation to a comfortable seat that the Romans
-knew. It was at first used by women only, being regarded as too
-luxurious for men, but finally came into general use. Its employment
-by teachers in the schools of rhetoric (§115) gave rise to the
-expression _ex cathedrā_, applied to authoritative utterances of every
-kind, and its use by bishops explains our word cathedral. Neither the
-_solium_ nor the _cathedra_ was upholstered, but with them both were
-used cushions and coverings as with the _lectī_, and they afforded
-like opportunities for skillful workmanship and lavish decoration.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 74. MENSA DELPHICA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 75. ADJUSTABLE TABLE]
-
-§227. Tables.--The table (_mēnsa_) was the most important article of
-furniture in the Roman house whether we consider its manifold uses, or
-the prices often paid for certain kinds. They varied in form and
-construction as much as our own, many of which are copied directly
-from Roman models. All sorts of materials were used for their supports
-and tops, stone, wood, solid or veneered, the precious metals,
-probably in thin plates only. The most costly, so far as we know, were
-the round tables made from cross-sections of the citrus-tree, found in
-Africa. The wood was beautifully marked and single pieces could be had
-from three to four feet in diameter. For one of these Cicero paid
-$20,000, Asinius Pollio $44,000, King Juba $52,000, and the family of
-the Cethegi possessed one valued at $60,000. Special names were given
-to tables of certain forms. The _monopodium_ was a table or stand with
-but one support, used especially to hold a lamp or toilet articles.
-The _abacus_ was a table with a rectangular top having a raised rim
-and used for plate and dishes, in the place of the modern sideboard.
-The _delphica_ (sc. _mēnsa_) had three legs, as shown in Fig. 74.
-Tables were frequently made with adjustable legs, so that the height
-might be altered; the mechanism is clearly shown in the cut (Fig. 75).
-On the other hand the permanent tables in the _trīclīnia_ (§204) were
-often built up from the floor of solid masonry or concrete, having
-tops of polished stone or mosaic. The table gave a better opportunity
-than even the couch or chair for artistic workmanship, especially in
-the matter of carving and inlaying the legs and top.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 76. VARIOUS FORMS OF LAMPS]
-
-§228. The Lamps.--The Roman lamp (_lucerna_) was essentially simple
-enough, merely a vessel that would hold oil or melted grease with a
-few threads twisted loosely together for a wick and drawn out through
-a hole in the cover or top (Fig. 76). The light thus furnished must
-have been very uncertain and dim. There was no glass to keep the flame
-steady, much less was there a chimney or central draft. As works of
-art, however, they were exceedingly beautiful, those of the cheapest
-material being often of graceful form and proportions, while to those
-of costly material the skill of the artist in many cases must have
-given a value far above that of the rare stones or precious metals of
-which they were made.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 77. BASES FOR LAMPS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 78. CANDELABRA]
-
-§229. Some of these lamps (cf. Fig. 76) were intended to be carried in
-the hand, as shown by the handles, others to be suspended from the
-ceiling by chains. Others still were kept on tables expressly made for
-them, as the _monopodia_ (§227) commonly used in the bedrooms, or the
-tripods shown in Fig. 77. For lighting the public rooms there were,
-besides these, tall stands, like those of our piano lamps, examples of
-which may be seen in the last cut (Fig. 78). On some of these, several
-lamps perhaps were placed at a time. The name of these stands
-(_candēlābra_) shows that they were originally intended to hold wax or
-tallow candles (_candēlae_), and the fact that these candles were
-supplanted in the houses of the rich by the smoking and ill-smelling
-lamp is good proof that the Romans were not skilled in the art of
-making them. Finally it may be noticed that a supply of torches
-(_facēs_) of dry, inflammable wood, often soaked in oil or smeared
-with pitch, was kept near the outer door for use upon the streets.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 79. STRONG BOX]
-
-§230. Chests and Cabinets.--Every house was supplied with chests
-(_ārcae_) of various sizes for the purpose of storing clothes and
-other articles not always in use, and for the safe keeping of papers,
-money, and jewelry. The material was usually wood, often bound with
-iron and ornamented with hinges and locks of bronze. The smaller
-_ārcae_, used for jewel cases, were often made of silver or even gold.
-Of most importance, perhaps, was the strong box kept in the _tablīnum_
-(§201), in which the _pater familiās_ stored his ready money. It was
-made as strong as possible so that it could not easily be opened by
-force, and was so large and heavy that it could not be carried away
-entire. As an additional precaution it was sometimes chained to the
-floor. This, too, was often richly carved and mounted, as is seen in
-the illustration from Pompeii (Fig. 79).
-
-§231. The cabinets (_armāria_) were designed for similar purposes and
-made of similar materials. They were often divided into compartments
-and were always supplied with hinges and locks. Two of the most
-important uses of these cabinets have been mentioned already: in the
-library (§206) for the preserving of books against mice and men, and
-in the _ālae_ (§200) for the keeping of the _imāginēs_, or death-masks
-of wax. It must be noticed that they lacked the convenient glass doors
-of the cabinets or cases that we use for books and similar things, but
-they were as well adapted to decorative purposes as the other articles
-of furniture that have been mentioned.
-
-§232. Other Articles.--The heating stove, or brazier, has been already
-described (§218). It was at best a poor substitute for the poorest
-modern stove. The place of our clock was taken in the court or garden
-by the sun-dial (_sōlārium_), such as is often seen nowadays in our
-parks, which measured the hours of the day by the shadow of a stick or
-pin. It was introduced into Rome from Greece in 268 B.C. About a
-century later the water-clock (_clepsydra_) was also borrowed from the
-Greeks, a more useful invention because it marked the hours of the
-night as well as of the day and could be used in the house. It
-consisted essentially of a vessel filled at a regular time with water,
-which was allowed to escape from it at a fixed rate, the changing
-level marking the hours on a scale. As the length of the Roman hours
-varied with the season of the year and the flow of the water with the
-temperature, the apparatus was far from accurate. Shakspere's striking
-of the clock in "Julius Caesar" (II, i, 192) is an anachronism. Of the
-other articles sometimes reckoned as furniture, the tableware and
-kitchen utensils, some account will be given elsewhere.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 80. A STREET IN POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 81. A PUBLIC FOUNTAIN]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 82. STEPPING-STONES]
-
-§233. The Street.--It is evident from what has been said that a
-residence street in a Roman town must have been severely plain and
-monotonous in its appearance. The houses were all of practically the
-same style, they were finished alike in stucco (§212), the windows
-were few and in the upper stories only, there were no lawns or
-gardens, there was nothing in short to lend variety or to please the
-eye, except perhaps the decorations of the _vestibula_ (§194), or the
-occasional extension of one story over another (_maeniānum_, Fig. 80),
-or a public fountain (Fig. 81). The street itself was paved, as will
-be explained hereafter, and was supplied with a footway on either side
-raised from twelve to eighteen inches above its surface. The
-inconvenience of such a height to persons crossing from one footway to
-the other was relieved by stepping-stones (_pondera_) of the same
-height firmly fixed at suitable distances from each other across the
-street. These stepping-stones were placed at convenient points on each
-street, not merely at the intersections of two or more streets. They
-were usually oval in shape, had flat tops, and measured about three
-feet by eighteen inches, the longer axis being parallel with the walk.
-The spaces between them were often cut into deep ruts by the wheels of
-vehicles, the distance between the ruts showing that the wheels were
-about three feet apart. The arrangement of the stepping-stones is
-shown clearly in Fig. 82, but it is hard to see how the draft-cattle
-managed to work their way between them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 475-606; Voigt, 329-335, 404-412; Göll, III,
-189-310; Guhl and Koner, 728-747; Ramsay, 504-512; Blümner, I,
-189-307; Smith, Harper, Rich, under _toga_, _tunica_, _stola_,
-_palla_, and the other Latin words in the text; Lübker, under
-_Kleidung_; Baumeister, 574 f., 1822-1846; Pauly-Wissowa, under
-_calceī_.
-
-
-§234. From the earliest to the latest times the clothing of the Romans
-was very simple, consisting ordinarily of two or three articles only
-besides the covering of the feet. These articles varied in material,
-style, and name from age to age, it is true, but were practically
-unchanged during the Republic and the early Empire. The mild climate
-of Italy (§218) and the hardening effect of the physical exercise of
-the young (§107) made unnecessary the closely fitting garments to
-which we are accustomed, while contact with the Greeks on the south
-and perhaps the Etruscans on the north gave the Romans a taste for the
-beautiful that found expression in the graceful arrangement of their
-loosely flowing robes. The clothing of men and women differed much
-less than in modern times, but it will be convenient to describe their
-garments separately. Each article was assigned by Latin writers to one
-of two classes and called from the way it was put on _indūtus_ or
-_amictus_. To the first class we may give the name of under garments,
-to the second outer garments, though these terms very inadequately
-represent the Latin words.
-
-§235. The Subligaculum.--Next the person was worn the _subligāculum_,
-the loin-cloth familiar to us in pictures of ancient athletes and
-gladiators (see Fig. 151, §344, and the culprit in Fig. 26, §119), or
-perhaps the short drawers (trunks), worn nowadays by bathers or
-college athletes. We are told that in the earliest times this was the
-only under garment worn by the Romans, and that the family of the
-Cethegi adhered to this ancient practice throughout the Republic,
-wearing the toga immediately over it. This, too, was done by
-individuals who wished to pose as the champions of old-fashioned
-simplicity, as for example the younger Cato, and by candidates for
-public office. In the best times, however, the _subligāculum_ was worn
-under the tunic or replaced by it.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 83. THE TUNIC]
-
-§236. The Tunic.--The tunic was also adopted in very early times and
-came to be the chief article of the kind covered by the word
-_indūtus_. It was a plain woolen shirt, made in two pieces, back and
-front, sewed together at the sides, and resembled somewhat the modern
-sweater. It had very short sleeves, covering hardly half of the upper
-arm, as shown in Fig. 83. It was long enough to reach from the neck to
-the calf, but if the wearer wished for greater freedom for his limbs
-he could shorten it by merely pulling it through a girdle or belt worn
-around the waist. Tunics with sleeves reaching to the wrists (_tunicae
-manicātae_), and tunics falling to the ankles (_tunicae tālārēs_) were
-not unknown in the late Republic, but were considered unmanly and
-effeminate.
-
-§237. The tunic was worn in the house without any outer garment and
-probably without a girdle; in fact it came to be the distinctive
-house-dress as opposed to the toga, the dress for formal occasions
-only. It was also worn with nothing over it by the citizen while at
-work, but he never appeared in public without the toga over it, and
-even then, hidden by the toga though it was, good form required the
-wearing of the girdle with it. Two tunics were often worn (_tunica
-interior_, or _subūcula_, and _tunica exterior_), and persons who
-suffered from the cold, as did Augustus for example, might wear a
-larger number still when the cold was very severe. The tunics intended
-for use in the winter were probably thicker and warmer than those worn
-in the summer, though both kinds were of wool.
-
-§238. The tunic of the ordinary citizen was the natural color of the
-white wool of which it was made, without trimmings or ornaments of any
-kind. Knights and senators, on the other hand, had stripes of purple,
-narrow and wide respectively, running from the shoulder to the bottom
-of the tunic both behind and in front. These stripes were either woven
-in the garment or sewed upon it. From them the tunic of the knight was
-called _tunica angustī clāvī_ (or _angusticlāvia_), and that of the
-senator _lātī clāvī_ (or _lāticlāvia_). Some authorities think that
-the badge of the senatorial tunic was a single broad stripe running
-down the middle of the garment in front and behind, but unfortunately
-no picture has come down to us that absolutely decides the question.
-Under this official tunic the knight or senator wore usually a plain
-_tunica interior_. When in the house he left the outer tunic unbelted
-in order to display the stripes as conspicuously as possible.
-
-§239. Besides the _subligāculum_ and the _tunica_ the Romans had no
-regular underwear. Those who were feeble through age or ill health
-sometimes wound strips of woolen cloth (_fasciae_) around the legs for
-the sake of additional warmth. These were called _feminālia_ or
-_tībiālia_ according as they covered the upper or lower part of the
-leg. Such persons might also use similar wrappings for the body
-(_ventrālia_) and even for the throat (_fōcālia_), but all these were
-looked upon as the badges of senility or decrepitude and formed no
-part of the regular costume of sound men. It must be especially
-noticed that the Romans had nothing corresponding to our trousers or
-even long drawers, the _braccae_ or _brācae_ being a Gallic article
-that was not used at Rome until the time of the latest emperors. The
-phrase _nātiōnēs brācātae_ in classical times was a contemptuous
-expression for the Gauls in particular and barbarians in general.
-
-§240. The Toga.--Of the outer garments or wraps the most ancient and
-the most important was the _toga_ (cf. _tegere_). Whence the Romans
-got it we do not know, but it goes back to the very earliest time of
-which tradition tells, and was the characteristic garment of the
-Romans for more than a thousand years. It was a heavy, white, woolen
-robe, enveloping the whole figure, falling to the feet, cumbrous but
-graceful and dignified in appearance. All its associations suggested
-formality. The Roman of old tilled his fields clad only in the
-_subligāculum_; in the privacy of his home or at his work the Roman of
-every age wore the comfortable, blouse-like _tunica_; but in the
-forum, in the _comitia_, in the courts, at the public games,
-everywhere that social forms were observed he appeared and had to
-appear in the toga. In the toga he assumed the responsibilities of
-citizenship (§127), in the toga he took his wife from her father's
-house to his (§78), in the toga he received his clients also toga-clad
-(§182), in the toga he discharged his duties as a magistrate, governed
-his province, celebrated his triumph, and in the toga he was wrapped
-when he lay for the last time in his hall (§198). No foreign nation
-had a robe of the same material, color, and arrangement; no foreigner
-was allowed to wear it, though he lived in Italy or even in Rome
-itself; even the banished citizen left the toga with his civil rights
-behind him. Vergil merely gave expression to the national feeling when
-he wrote the proud verse (Aen. I, 282):
-
- Rōmānōs, rērum dominōs, gentemque togātam.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: The Romans, lords of deeds, the race that wears the
-toga.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 84. TIBERIUS IN THE TOGA]
-
-§241. Form and Arrangement.--The general appearance of the toga is
-known to every schoolboy; of few ancient garments are pictures so
-common and in general so good (Becker, p. 203; Guhl and Koner, p. 729;
-Baumeister, p. 1823; Schreiber, LXXXV, 8-10; Harper, Rich, and Smith,
-s.v.). They are derived from numerous statues of men clad in it, which
-have come down to us from ancient times, and we have besides full and
-careful descriptions of its shape and of the manner of wearing it in
-the works of writers who had worn it themselves. As a matter of fact,
-however, it has been found impossible to reconcile the descriptions in
-literature with the representations in art (Fig. 84) and scholars are
-by no means agreed as to the precise cut of the toga or the way it was
-put on. It is certain, however, that in its earlier form it was
-simpler, less cumbrous, and more closely fitted to the figure than in
-later times, and that even as early as the classical period its
-arrangement was so complicated that the man of fashion could not array
-himself in it without assistance.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 85. BACK OF TOGA]
-
-§242. Scholars who lay the greater stress on the literary authorities
-describe the cut and arrangement of the toga about as follows: It
-consisted of one piece of cloth of semicircular cut, about five yards
-long by four wide, a certain portion of which was pressed into long
-narrow plaits. This cloth was doubled lengthwise, not down the center
-but so that one fold was deeper than the other. It was then thrown
-over the left shoulder in such a manner that the end in front reached
-to the ground, and the part behind (Fig. 85) was in length about twice
-a man's height. This end was then brought around under the right arm
-and again thrown over the left shoulder so as to cover the whole of
-the right side from the armpit to the calf. The broad folds in which
-it hung over were thus gathered together on the left shoulder. The
-part which crossed the breast diagonally was known as the _sinus_, or
-bosom. It was deep enough to serve as a pocket for the reception of
-small articles. According to this description the toga was in one
-piece and had no seams.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 86. CUT OF TOGA]
-
-§243. Those who attempt the reconstruction of the toga wholly or
-chiefly from works of art find it impossible to reproduce on the
-living form the drapery seen on the statues, with a toga of one piece
-of goods or of a semicircular pattern. An experimental form is shown
-in Fig. 86, and resembles that of a lamp shade cut in two and
-stretched out to its full extent. The dotted line _GC_ is the straight
-edge of the goods; the heavy lines show the shape of the toga after it
-had been cut out, and had had sewed upon it the ellipse-like piece
-marked _FRAcba_. The dotted line _GE_ is of a length equivalent to the
-height of a man at the shoulder, and the other measurements are to be
-calculated proportionately. When the toga is placed on the figure the
-point _E_ must be on the left shoulder, with the point _G_ touching
-the ground in front. The point _F_ comes at the back of the neck, and
-as the larger part of the garment is allowed to fall behind the figure
-the points _L_ and _M_ will fall on the calves of the legs behind, the
-point _a_ under the right elbow, and the point _b_ on the stomach. The
-material is carried behind the back and under the right arm and then
-thrown over the left shoulder again. The point _c_ will fall on _E_,
-and the portion _OPCa_ will hang down the back to the ground, as shown
-in Fig. 85, §242. The part _FRA_ is then pulled over the right
-shoulder to cover the right side of the chest and form the _sinus_,
-and the part running from the left shoulder to the ground in front is
-pulled up out of the way of the feet, worked under the diagonal folds
-and allowed to fall out a little to the front. The front should then
-present an appearance similar to that shown in the figure in §241. It
-will be found in practice, however, that much of the grace of the toga
-must have been due to the trained _vestiplicus_, who kept it properly
-creased when it was not in use and carefully arranged each fold after
-his master had put it on. We are not told of any pins or tapes to hold
-it in place, but are told that the part falling from the left shoulder
-to the ground behind kept all in position by its own weight, and that
-this weight was sometimes increased by lead sewed in the hem.
-
-§244. It is evident that in this fashionable toga the limbs were
-completely fettered, and that all rapid, not to say violent, motion
-was absolutely impossible. In other words the toga of the
-ultrafashionable in the time of Cicero was fit only for the formal,
-stately, ceremonial life of the city. It is easy to see, therefore,
-how it had come to be the emblem of peace, being too cumbrous for use
-in war, and how Cicero could sneer at the young dandies of his time
-for wearing "sails not togas." We can also understand the eagerness
-with which the Roman welcomed a respite from civic and social duties.
-Juvenal sighed for the freedom of the country, where only the dead had
-to wear the toga. Martial praises the unconventionality of the
-provinces for the same reason. Pliny makes it one of the attractions
-of his villa that no guest need wear the toga there. Its cost, too,
-made it all the more burdensome for the poor, and the working classes
-could scarcely have worn it at all.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 87. THE EARLIER TOGA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 88. THE CINCTUS GABINUS]
-
-§245. The earlier toga must have been simpler by far, but no certain
-representation of it has come down to us. The Dresden statue, often
-used to illustrate its arrangement (Smith, Fig. 7, p. 848_b_;
-Schreiber LXXXV, 8; Marquardt, Fig. 2, p. 558; Baumeister, Fig. 1921),
-is more than doubtful, the garment being probably a Greek mantle of
-some sort. An approximate idea of it may be gained perhaps from a
-statue in Florence of an Etruscan orator (Fig. 87), which corresponds
-very closely with the descriptions of it in literary sources. At any
-rate it was possible for men to fight in it by tying the trailing ends
-around the body and drawing the back folds over the head. This was
-called the _cinctus Gabīnus_, and long after the toga had ceased to be
-worn in war this _cinctus_ was used in certain ceremonial observances.
-It is shown in Fig. 88, though the toga is one of later times.
-
-§246. Kinds of Togas.--The toga of the ordinary citizen was, like the
-tunic (§238), of the natural color of the white wool of which it was
-made, and varied in texture, of course, with the quality of the wool.
-It was called _toga pūra_ (or _virīlis_, _lībera_ §127). A dazzling
-brilliancy could be given to the toga by a preparation of fuller's
-chalk, and one so treated was called _toga splendēns_ or _candida_. In
-such a toga all persons running for office arrayed themselves, and
-from it they were called _candidātī_. The curule magistrates, censors,
-and dictators wore the _toga praetexta_, differing from the ordinary
-toga only in having a purple border. It was also worn by boys (§127)
-and by the chief officers of the free towns and colonies. The _toga
-picta_ was wholly of purple covered with embroidery of gold, and was
-worn by the victorious general in his triumphal procession and later
-by the Emperors. The _toga pulla_ was simply a dingy toga worn by
-persons in mourning or threatened with some calamity, usually a
-reverse of political fortune. Persons assuming it were called
-_sordidātī_ and were said _mūtāre vestem_. This _vestis mūtātiō_ was a
-common form of public demonstration of sympathy with a fallen leader.
-In this case curule magistrates contented themselves with merely
-laying aside the _toga praetexta_ for the _toga pūra_, and only the
-lower orders wore the _toga pulla_.
-
-§247. The Lacerna.--In Cicero's time there was just coming into
-fashionable use a mantle called _lacerna_, which seems to have been
-first used by soldiers and the lower classes and then adopted by their
-betters on account of its convenience. These wore it at first over the
-toga as a protection against dust and sudden showers. It was a woolen
-mantle, short, light, open at the sides, without sleeves, but fastened
-with a brooch or buckle on the right shoulder. It was so easy and
-comfortable that it began to be worn not over the toga but instead of
-it, and so generally that Augustus issued an edict forbidding it to be
-used in public assemblages of citizens. Under the later Emperors,
-however, it came into fashion again, and was the common outer garment
-at the theaters. It was made of various colors, dark naturally for the
-lower classes, white for formal occasions, but also of brighter hues.
-It was sometimes supplied with a hood (_cucullus_), which the wearer
-could pull over the head as a protection or a disguise. No
-representation of the _lacerna_ in art has come down to us that can be
-positively identified; that in Rich s.v. is very doubtful. The
-military cloak, first called the _trabea_, then _palūdāmentum_ and
-_sagum_, was much like the _lacerna_, but made of heavier material.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 89. THE PAENULA]
-
-§248. The Paenula.--Older than the _lacerna_ and used by all sorts and
-conditions of men was the _paenula_ (Fig. 89), a heavy coarse wrap of
-wool, leather, or fur, used merely for protection against rain or
-cold, and therefore never a substitute for the toga or made of fine
-materials or bright colors. It seems to have varied in length and
-fullness, but to have been a sleeveless wrap, made in one piece with a
-hole in the middle, through which the wearer thrust his head. It was,
-therefore, classed with the _vestīmenta clausa_, or closed garments,
-and must have been much like the modern poncho. It was drawn on over
-the head, like a tunic or sweater, and covered the arms, leaving them
-much less freedom than the _lacerna_ did. In those of some length
-there was a slit in front running from the waist down, and this
-enabled the wearer to hitch the cloak up over one shoulder, leaving
-one arm comparatively free, but at the same time exposing it to the
-weather. It was worn over either tunic or toga according to
-circumstances, and was the ordinary traveling habit of citizens of the
-better class. It was also commonly worn by slaves, and seems to have
-been furnished regularly to soldiers stationed in places where the
-climate was severe. Like the _lacerna_ it was sometimes supplied with
-a hood.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 90. SOLDIER WEARING THE ABOLLA]
-
-§249. Other Wraps.--Of other articles included under the general term
-_amictus_ we know little more than the names. The _synthesis_ was a
-dinner dress worn at table over the tunic by the ultrafashionable, and
-sometimes dignified by the special name of _vestis cēnātōria_, or
-_cēnātōrium_ alone. It was not worn out of the house except on the
-Saturnalia, and was usually of some bright color. Its shape is
-unknown. The _laena_ and _abolla_ were very heavy woolen cloaks, the
-latter (Fig. 90) being a favorite with poor people who had to make one
-garment do duty for two or three. It was used especially by
-professional philosophers, who were proverbially careless about their
-dress. One is thought to be worn by the man on the extreme left, in
-the picture of a school shown in §119. The _endormis_ was something
-like the modern bath robe, used by men after violent gymnastic
-exercise to keep from taking cold, and hardly belongs under the head
-of dress.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 91. SOLEAE]
-
-§250. Footgear: the Soleae.--It may be set down as a rule that freemen
-did not appear in public at Rome with bare feet, except as nowadays
-under the compulsion of the direst poverty. Two styles of footwear
-were in use, slippers or sandals (_soleae_) and shoes (_calceī_). The
-slipper consisted essentially of a sole of leather or matting attached
-to the foot in various ways (see the several styles in Fig. 91).
-Custom limited its use to the house and it went characteristically
-with the tunic (§237), when that was not covered by an outer garment.
-Oddly enough, it seems to us, the slippers were not worn at meals.
-Host and guests wore them into the dining-room, but as soon as they
-had taken their places on the couches (§224) slaves removed the
-slippers from their feet and cared for them until the meal was over
-(§152). Hence the phrase _soleās poscere_ came to mean "to prepare to
-take leave." When a guest went out to dinner in a _lectīca_ (§151) he
-wore the _soleae_, but if he walked he wore the regular out-door shoes
-(_calceī_) and had his slippers carried by a slave.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 92. ROMAN SHOES]
-
-§251. The Calcei.--Out of doors the _calceus_ was always worn,
-although it was much heavier and less comfortable than the _solea_.
-Good form forbade the toga to be worn without the _calceī_, and they
-were worn also with all the other garments included under the word
-_amictus_. The _calceus_ was essentially our shoe, made on a last of
-leather, covering the upper part of the foot as well as protecting the
-sole, fastened with laces or straps. The higher classes had shoes
-peculiar to their rank. The shoe for senators is best known to us
-(_calceus senātōrius_), and is shown in Fig. 92; but we know only its
-shape, not its color. It had a thick sole, was open on the inside at
-the ankle, and was fastened by wide straps which ran from the juncture
-of the sole and the upper, were wrapped around the leg and tied above
-the instep. The _mulleus_ or _calceus patricius_ was worn originally
-by patricians only, but later by all curule magistrates. It was shaped
-like the senator's shoe, was red in color like the fish from which it
-was named, and had an ivory or silver ornament of crescent shape
-(_lūnula_) fastened on the outside of the ankle. We know nothing of
-the shoe worn by the knights. Ordinary citizens wore shoes that opened
-in front and were fastened by a strap of leather running from one side
-of the shoe near the top. They did not come up so high on the leg as
-those of the senators and were probably of uncolored leather. The
-poorer classes naturally wore shoes of coarser material, often of
-untanned leather (_pērōnēs_), and laborers and soldiers had half-boots
-(_caligae_) of the stoutest possible make, or wore wooden shoes. No
-stockings were worn by the Romans, but persons with tender feet might
-wrap them with _fasciae_ (§239) to keep the shoes and boots from
-chafing them.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 93. THE CAUSIA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 94. THE PETASUS]
-
-§252. Coverings for the Head.--Men of the upper classes in Rome had
-ordinarily no covering for the head. When they went out in bad weather
-they protected themselves, of course, with the _lacerna_ and
-_paenula_, and these, as we have seen (§§247, 248), were provided with
-hoods (_cucullī_). If they were caught without wraps in a sudden
-shower they made shift as best they could by pulling the toga up over
-the head, cf. Fig. 88 in §245. Persons of lower standing, especially
-workmen who were out of doors all day, wore a conical felt cap called
-the _pilleus_, see the illustration in §175. It is probable that this
-was a survival of what had been in prehistoric times an essential part
-of the Roman dress, for it was preserved among the insignia of the
-oldest priesthoods, the Pontifices, Flamines, and Salii, and figured
-in the ceremony of manumission. Out of the city, that is, while
-traveling or while in the country, the upper classes, too, protected
-the head, especially against the sun, with a broad-brimmed felt hat of
-foreign origin, the _causia_ or _petasus_. They are shown in Figs. 93
-and 94. They were worn in the city also by the old and feeble, and in
-later times by all classes in the theaters. In the house, of course,
-the head was left uncovered.
-
-§253. The Hair and Beard.--The Romans in early times wore long hair
-and full beards, as did all uncivilized peoples. Varro tells us that
-professional barbers came first to Rome in the year 300 B.C., but we
-know that the razor and shears were used by the Romans long before
-history begins. Pliny says that the younger Scipio (†129 B.C.) was the
-first of the Romans to shave every day, and the story may be true.
-People of wealth and position had the hair and beard kept in order at
-home by their own slaves (§150), and these slaves, if skillful
-barbers, brought high prices in the market. People of the middle class
-went to public barber shops, and made them gradually places of general
-resort for the idle and the gossiping. But in all periods the hair and
-beard were allowed to grow as a sign of sorrow, and were the regular
-accompaniments of the mourning garb already mentioned (§246). The very
-poor, too, went usually unshaven and unshorn, simply because this was
-the cheap and easy fashion.
-
-§254. Styles varied with the years of the persons concerned. The hair
-of children, boys and girls alike, was allowed to grow long and hang
-around the neck and shoulders. When the boy assumed the toga of
-manhood the long locks were cut off, sometimes with a good deal of
-formality, and under the Empire they were often made an offering to
-some deity. In the classical period young men seem to have worn close
-clipped beards; at least Cicero jeers at those who followed Catiline
-for wearing full beards, and on the other hand declares that their
-companions who could show no signs of beard on their faces were worse
-than effeminate. Men of maturity wore the hair cut short and the face
-shaved clean. Most of the portraits that have come down to us show
-beardless men until well into the second century of our era, but after
-the time of Hadrian (117-138 A.D.) the full beard became fashionable.
-Figs. 2 to 11, §§28-74, are arranged chronologically and will serve to
-show the changes in styles.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 95. SEAL RINGS]
-
-§255. Jewelry.--The ring was the only article of jewelry worn by a
-Roman citizen after he reached the age of manhood (§99), and good
-taste limited him to a single ring. It was originally of iron, and
-though often set with a precious stone and made still more valuable by
-the artistic cutting of the stone, it was always worn more for use
-than ornament. The ring was in fact in almost all cases a seal ring,
-having some device upon it (Fig. 95) which the wearer imprinted in
-melted wax when he wished to acknowledge some document as his own, or
-to secure cabinets and coffers against prying curiosity. The iron ring
-was worn generally until late in the Empire, even after the gold ring
-had ceased to be the special privilege of the knights and had become
-merely the badge of freedom. Even the engagement ring (§71) was
-usually of iron, the setting giving it its material value, although we
-are told that this particular ring was often the first article of gold
-that the young girl possessed.
-
-§256. Of course there were not wanting men as ready to violate the
-canons of taste in the matter of rings as in the choice of their
-garments or the style of wearing the hair and beard. We need not be
-surprised, then, to read of one having sixteen rings, or of another
-having six for each finger. One of Martial's acquaintances had a ring
-so large that the poet advised him to wear it on his leg, and Juvenal
-tells us of an upstart who wore light rings in the summer and heavy
-rings in the winter. It is a more surprising fact that the ring was
-worn on the joint, not pressed down as far as possible on the finger,
-as we wear them now. If two were worn on the same finger they were
-worn on separate joints, not touching each other. This fashion must
-have seriously interfered with the movement of the finger.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 96. THE MAMILLARE]
-
-§257. Dress of Women.--It has been remarked already (§234) that the
-dress of men and women differed less in ancient than in modern times,
-and we shall find that in the classical period at least the principal
-articles worn were practically the same, however much they differed in
-name and probably in the fineness of their materials. At this period
-the dress of the matron consisted in general of three articles: the
-_tunica interior_, the _tunica exterior_ or _stola_, and the _palla_.
-Beneath the _tunica interior_ there was nothing like the modern
-corset-waist or corset, intended to modify the figure, but a band of
-soft leather (_mamillāre_) was sometimes passed around the body under
-the breasts for a support (Fig. 96), and the _subligāculum_ (§235) was
-also worn by women.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 97. THE STROPHIUM]
-
-§258. The Tunica Interior.--The _tunica interior_ did not differ much
-in material or shape from the tunic for men already described (§236).
-It fitted the figure more closely perhaps than the man's, was
-sometimes supplied with sleeves, and as it reached only to the knee
-did not require a belt to keep it from interfering with the free use
-of the limbs. A soft sash-like band of leather (_strophium_), however,
-was sometimes worn over it, close under the breasts, but merely to
-support them, and in this case we may suppose that the _mamillāre_ was
-discarded. For this sash (Fig. 97) the more general terms _zōna_ and
-_cingulum_ are sometimes used. This tunic was not usually worn alone,
-even in the house, except by young girls.
-
-§259. The Stola.--Over the _tunica interior_ was worn the _tunica
-exterior_, or _stola_, the distinctive dress of the Roman matron
-(§91). It differed in several respects from the tunic worn as a
-house-dress by men. It was open at both sides above the waist and
-fastened on the shoulders by brooches. It was much longer, reaching to
-the feet when ungirded and having in addition a wide border or flounce
-(_īnstita_) sewed to the lower hem. There was also a border around the
-neck, which seems to have been usually of purple. The _stola_ was
-sleeveless if the _tunica interior_ had sleeves, but if the tunic
-itself was sleeveless the _stola_ had them, so that the arm was always
-protected. These sleeves, however, whether in tunic or _stola_, were
-open on the front of the upper arm and only loosely clasped with
-brooches or buttons, often of great beauty and value.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 98. THE ZONA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 99. STATUE OF THE YOUNGER FAUSTINA]
-
-§260. Owing to its great length the _stola_ was always worn with a
-girdle (_zōna_) above the hips (Fig. 98), and through it the _stola_
-itself was pulled until the lower edge of the _īnstita_ barely cleared
-the floor. This gave the fullness about the waist seen in the statue
-of Faustina (Fig. 99), in which the cut of the sleeves can also be
-seen. The _zōna_ was usually entirely hidden by the overhanging folds.
-The _stola_ was the distinctive dress of the matron, as has been said,
-and it is probable that the _īnstita_ was its distinguishing feature;
-that is, the _tunica exterior_ of the unmarried woman had no flounce
-or border, though it probably reached to the floor.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 100. STATUE FROM HERCULANEUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 101. STATUE OF LIVIA]
-
-§261. The Palla.--The _palla_ was a shawl-like wrap for use out of
-doors. It was a rectangular piece of woolen goods, as simple as
-possible in its form, but worn in the most diverse fashions in
-different times. In the classical period it seems to have been wrapped
-around the figure, much as the toga was. One-third was thrown over the
-left shoulder from behind and allowed to fall to the feet. The rest
-was carried around the back and brought forward either over or under
-the right arm at the pleasure of the wearer. The end was then thrown
-back over the left shoulder after the style of the toga, as in the
-marble statue from Herculaneum shown in Fig. 100, or allowed to hang
-loosely over the left arm, as in the statue of Livia (Fig. 101). It
-was possible also to pull the _palla_ up over the head, and this
-method of using it is supposed by some scholars to be shown in the
-statue of Livia, while others see in the covering of the head some
-sort of a veil.
-
-§262. Shoes and Slippers.--What has been said of the footgear of men
-(§§250, 251) applies also to that of women. Slippers (_soleae_) were
-worn in the house, differing from those of men only in being
-embellished as much as possible, sometimes even with pearls. An idea
-of their appearance may be had from the statue of Faustina (§259).
-Shoes (_calceī_) were insisted upon for out-door use, and differed
-from those of men, as they chiefly differ from them now, in being made
-of finer and softer leather. They were often white, or gilded, or of
-bright colors, and those intended for winter wear had sometimes cork
-soles.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 102. STYLES OF DRESSING THE HAIR]
-
-§263. Dressing of the Hair.--The Roman woman regularly wore no hat,
-but covered the head when necessary with the _stola_ or with a veil.
-Much attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, the fashions
-being as numerous and as inconstant as they are to-day. For young
-girls the favorite arrangement, perhaps, was to comb the hair back and
-gather it into a knot (_nōdus_) on the back of the neck. For matrons
-it will be sufficient to call attention to the figures already given
-(§§77, 259, 261), and to show from statues five styles (Fig. 102) worn
-at different times under the Empire, all belonging to ladies of the
-court.
-
-§264. For keeping the hair in position pins were used of ivory,
-silver, and gold, often mounted with jewels. Nets (_rēticula_) and
-ribbons (_vittae_, _taeniae_, _fasciolae_) were also worn, but combs
-were not made a part of the head-dress. The Roman woman of fashion did
-not scruple to color her hair, the golden-red color of the Greek hair
-being especially admired, or to use false hair, which had become an
-article of commercial importance early in the Empire. Mention should
-also be made of the garlands (_corōnae_) of flowers, or of flowers and
-foliage, and of the coronets of pearls and other precious stones that
-were used to supplement the natural or artificial beauty of the hair.
-These are illustrated in Fig. 102 above.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 103. TOILET ARTICLES]
-
-§265. The woman's hairdresser was a female slave (§150), and Juvenal
-tells us that she suffered cruelly from the impatience of her mistress
-(§158), who found the long hairpins shown in the figure a convenient
-instrument of punishment, The _ōrnātrīx_ was an adept in all the
-tricks of the toilet already mentioned, and besides used all sorts of
-unguents, oils, and tonics to make the hair soft and lustrous and to
-cause it to grow abundantly. In Fig. 103 are shown a number of common
-toilet articles: _a_, _b_, _c_, _h_, _i_, and _k_ are hairpins, _d_
-and _g_ are hand mirrors made of highly polished metal, _f_ is a comb,
-and _e_ a box for pomatum or powder.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 104. THE PARASOL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 105. FANS (See also Figure 73, §226)]
-
-§266. Accessories.--The parasol (_umbrāculum_, _umbella_) was commonly
-used by women at Rome at least as early as the close of the Republic,
-and was all the more necessary because they wore no hats or bonnets.
-The parasols were usually carried for them by attendants (§151). From
-vase paintings we learn that they were much like our own in shape
-(Fig. 104, see also Smith and Harper, s.v.; Baumeister, p. 1684;
-Schreiber XCV, 9), and could be closed when not in use. The fan
-(_flābellum_) was used from the earliest times and was made in various
-ways (Fig. 105); sometimes of wings of birds, sometimes of thin sheets
-of wood attached to a handle, sometimes of peacock's feathers
-artistically arranged, sometimes of linen stretched over a frame.
-These fans were not used by the woman herself, being always handled by
-an attendant who was charged with the task of keeping her cool and
-untroubled by flies (see Fig. 73 in §226). Handkerchiefs (_sūdāria_),
-the finest made of linen, were used by both sexes, but only for wiping
-the perspiration from the face or hands. For keeping the palms cool
-and dry ladies seem also to have used glass balls, or balls of amber,
-the latter, perhaps, for the fragrance also.
-
-§267. Jewelry.--The Roman woman was passionately fond of jewelry, and
-incalculable sums were spent upon the adornment of her person. Rings,
-brooches, pins, jeweled buttons, and coronets have been mentioned
-already, and besides these bracelets, necklaces, and ear-rings or
-pendants were worn from the earliest times by all who could afford
-them. Not only were they made of costly materials, but their value was
-also enhanced by the artistic workmanship that was lavished upon them.
-Almost all the precious stones that are known to us were familiar to
-the Romans and were to be found in the jewel-casket (§230) of the
-wealthy lady. The pearl, however, seems to have been in all times the
-favorite. No adequate description of these articles can be given here;
-no illustrations can do them justice. It will have to suffice that
-Suetonius says that Caesar paid six million sesterces (nearly
-$300,000) for a single pearl, which he gave to Servilia, the mother of
-Marcus Brutus, and that Lollia Paulina, the wife of the Emperor
-Caligula, possessed a single set of pearls and emeralds which is said
-by Pliny the elder to have been valued at forty million sesterces
-(nearly $2,000,000).
-
-§268. Dress of Children and Slaves.--The picture from Herculaneum
-(§119) shows that schoolboys wore the _subligāculum_ and _tunica_, and
-it is probable that no other articles of clothing were worn by either
-boys or girls of the poorer classes. Besides these, children of
-well-to-do parents wore the _toga praetexta_ (§246), which the girl
-laid aside on the eve of her marriage (§76) and the boy when he
-reached the age of manhood (§127). Slaves were furnished a tunic,
-wooden shoes, and in stormy weather a cloak, probably the _paenula_
-(§248). This must have been the ordinary garb of the poorer citizens
-of the working classes, for they would have had little use for the
-toga, at least in later times, and could hardly have afforded so
-expensive a garment.
-
-§269. Materials.--Fabrics of wool, linen, cotton, and silk were used
-by the Romans. For clothes woolen goods were the first to be used, and
-naturally so, for the early inhabitants of Latium were shepherds, and
-woolen garments best suited the climate. Under the Republic wool was
-almost exclusively used for the garments of both men and women, as we
-have seen, though the _subligāculum_ was frequently, and the woman's
-tunic sometimes, made of linen. The best native wools came from
-Calabria and Apulia, that from near Tarentum being the best of all.
-Native wools did not suffice, however, to meet the great demand, and
-large quantities were imported. Linen goods were early manufactured in
-Italy, but were used chiefly for other purposes than clothing until in
-the Empire, and only in the third century of our era did men begin to
-make general use of them. The finest linen came from Egypt, and was as
-soft and transparent as silk. Little is positively known about the use
-of cotton, because the word _carbasus_, the genuine Indian name for
-it, was used by the Romans for linen goods also and when we meet the
-word we can not always be sure of the material meant. Silk, imported
-from China directly or indirectly, was first used for garments under
-Tiberius, and then only in a mixture of linen and silk (_vestēs
-sēricae_). These were forbidden for the use of men in his reign, but
-the law was powerless against the love of luxury. Garments of pure
-silk were first used in the third century.
-
-§270. Colors.--White was the prevailing color of all articles of dress
-throughout the Republic, in most cases the natural color of the wool,
-as we have seen (§246). The lower classes, however, selected for their
-garments shades that required cleansing less frequently, and found
-them, too, in the undyed wool. From Canusium came a brown wool with a
-tinge of red, from Baetica in Spain a light yellow, from Mutina a gray
-or a gray mixed with white, from Pollentia in Liguria the dark gray
-(_pulla_) used, as has been said (§246), for public mourning. Other
-shades from red to deep black were furnished by foreign wools. Almost
-the only artificial color used for garments under the Republic was
-purple, which seems to have varied from what we call crimson, made
-from the native trumpet-shell (_būcinum_ or _mūrex_), to the true
-Tyrian purple. The former was brilliant and cheap, but liable to fade.
-Mixed with the dark _purpura_ in different proportions, it furnished a
-variety of permanent tints. One of the most popular of these tints,
-violet, made the wool cost some $20 a pound, while the genuine Tyrian
-cost at least ten times as much. Probably the stripes worn by the
-knights and senators on the tunics and togas were much nearer our
-crimson than purple. Under the Empire the garments worn by women were
-dyed in various colors, and so, too, perhaps, the fancier articles
-worn by men, such as the _lacerna_ (§247) and the _synthesis_ (§249).
-The _trabea_ of the augurs seems to have been striped with scarlet and
-purple, the _palūdāmentum_ of the general to have been at different
-times white, scarlet, and purple, and the robe of the _triumphātor_
-purple.
-
-§271. Manufacture.--In the old days the wool was spun at home by the
-maidservants working under the eye of the mistress (§199), and woven
-into cloth on the family loom, and this was kept up throughout the
-Republic by some of the proudest families. Augustus wore these
-home-made garments. By the end of the Republic, however, this was no
-longer general, and while much of the native wool was worked up on the
-farms by the slaves directed by the _vīlica_ (§148), cloth of any
-desired quality could be bought in the open market. It was formerly
-supposed that the garments came from the loom ready to wear, but this
-is now known to have been incorrect. We have seen that the tunic was
-made of two separate pieces sewed together (§236), that the toga had
-probably to be fitted as carefully as a modern coat (§243), and that
-even the coarse _paenula_ (§248) could not have been woven or knitted
-in one piece. But ready-made garments were on sale in the towns as
-early as the time of Cato, though perhaps of the cheaper qualities
-only, and in the Empire the trade reached large proportions. It is
-remarkable that with the vast numbers of slaves in the _familia
-urbāna_ (§149 f.) it never became usual to have soiled garments
-cleansed at home. All garments showing traces of use were sent by the
-well-to-do to the fullers (_fullōnēs_) to be washed (Fig. 106),
-whitened (or re-dyed), and pressed. The fact that almost all were of
-woolen materials made skill and care all the more necessary.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 106. FULLERS AT WORK]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FOOD AND MEALS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 264-268, 300-340, 414-465; Voigt, 327-329,
-401-404; Göll, 311-454; Guhl and Koner, 747-759, 702-704; Friedländer,
-III, 29-56; Ramsay, 490-501; Pauly-Wissowa, _cēna_, _comissātiō_;
-Smith, Harper, Rich, _cēna_, _comissātiō_, _olea_ (_olīva_), _vīnum_;
-Baumeister, 845, 2086; Lübker, 724 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 256-260, 267-270.
-
-
-§272. Natural Conditions.--Italy is blessed above all the other
-countries of central Europe with the natural conditions that go to
-make an abundant and varied supply of food. The soil is rich and
-composed of different elements in different parts of the country. The
-rainfall is abundant, and rivers and smaller streams are numerous. The
-line of greatest length runs nearly north and south, but the climate
-depends little upon latitude, being modified by surrounding bodies of
-water, by mountain ranges, and by prevailing winds. These agencies in
-connection with the varying elevation of the land itself produce such
-widely different conditions that somewhere within the confines of
-Italy almost all the grains and fruits of the temperate and subtropic
-zones find the soil and climate most favorable to their growth.
-
-§273. The early inhabitants of the peninsula, the Italian peoples,
-seem to have left for the Romans the task of developing and improving
-these means of subsistence. Wild fruits, nuts, and flesh have always
-been the support of uncivilized peoples, and must have been so for the
-shepherds who laid the foundations of Rome. The very word _pecūnia_
-(from _pecus_; cf. _pecūlium_, §162) shows that herds of domestic
-animals were the first source of Roman wealth. But other words show
-just as clearly that the cultivation of the soil was understood by the
-Romans in very early times: the names Fabius, Cicero, Piso, and Caepio
-are no less ancient than Porcius, Asinius, Vitellius, and Ovidius.[1]
-Cicero puts into the mouth of the elder Cato the statement that to the
-farmer the garden was a second meat supply, but long before Cato's
-time meat had ceased to be the chief article of food. Grain and grapes
-and olives furnished subsistence for all who did not live to eat.
-These gave the wine that maketh glad the heart of man, and oil to make
-his face to shine, and bread that strengtheneth man's heart. On these
-three abundant products of the soil the mass of the people of Italy
-lived of old as they still live to-day. Something will be said of each
-below, after less important products have been considered.
-
-[Footnote 1: The words are connected respectively with _faba_, a bean,
-_cicer_, a chick-pea, _pīstor_, a miller, _caepe_, an onion, _porcus_,
-a pig, _asinus_, an ass, _vitellus_, a calf, and _ovis_, a sheep.]
-
-§274. Fruits.--Besides the olive and the grape, the apple, pear, plum,
-and quince were either native to Italy or were introduced in
-prehistoric times. Careful attention had long been given to their
-cultivation, and by Cicero's time Italy was covered with orchards and
-all these fruits were abundant and cheap in their seasons, used by all
-sorts and conditions of men. By this time, too, had begun the
-introduction of new fruits from foreign lands and the improvement of
-native varieties. Great statesmen and generals gave their names to new
-and better sorts of apples and pears, and vied with each other in
-producing fruits out of season by hothouse culture (§145). Every fresh
-extension of Roman territory brought new fruits and nuts into Italy.
-Among the last were the walnut, hazelnut, filbert, almond, and
-pistachio; the almond after Cato's time and the pistachio not until
-that of Tiberius. Among the fruits were the peach (_mālum Persicum_),
-the apricot (_mālum Armeniacum_), the pomegranate (_mālum Pūnicum_ or
-_grānātum_), the cherry (_cerasus_), brought by Lucullus from the town
-Cerasus in Pontus, and the lemon (_citrus_), not grown in Italy until
-the third century of our era. And besides the introduction of fruits
-for culture large quantities were imported for food, either dried or
-otherwise preserved. The orange, however, strange as it seems to us,
-was not grown by the Romans.
-
-§275. Garden Produce.--The garden did not yield to the orchard in the
-abundance and variety of its contributions to the supply of food. We
-read of artichokes, asparagus, beans, beets, cabbages, carrots,
-chicory, cucumbers, garlic, lentils, melons, onions, peas, the poppy,
-pumpkins, radishes, and turnips, to mention those only whose names are
-familiar to us all. It will be noticed, however, that the vegetables
-most highly prized by us, perhaps, the potato and tomato, were not
-known to the Romans. Of those mentioned the oldest seem to have been
-the bean and the onion, as shown by the names Fabius and Caepio
-already mentioned (§273), but the latter came gradually to be looked
-upon as unrefined and the former to be considered too heavy a food
-except for persons engaged in the hardest toil. Cato pronounced the
-cabbage the finest vegetable known, and the turnip figures in the
-well-known anecdote of Manius Curius (§299).
-
-§276. The Roman gardener gave great attention, too, to the raising of
-green stuffs that could be used for salads. Among these the sorts most
-often mentioned are the cress and lettuce, with which we are familiar,
-and the mallow, no longer used for food. Plants in great variety were
-cultivated for seasoning. The poppy was eaten with honey as a dessert,
-or was sprinkled over bread in the oven. Anise, cumin, fennel, mint,
-and mustard were raised everywhere. And besides these seasonings that
-were found in every kitchen garden, spices were imported in large
-quantities from the east, and the rich imported vegetables of larger
-sizes or finer quality than could be raised at home. Fresh vegetables
-like fresh fruits could not be brought in those days from great
-distances.
-
-§277. Meats.--Besides the pork, beef, and mutton that we still use the
-Roman farmer had goatsflesh at his disposal, and all these meats were
-sold in the towns. Goatsflesh was considered the poorest of all, and
-was used by the lower classes only. Beef had been eaten by the Romans
-from the earliest times, but its use was a mark of luxury until very
-late in the Empire. Under the Republic the ordinary citizen ate beef
-only on great occasions when he had offered a steer or cow to the gods
-in sacrifice. The flesh then furnished a banquet for his family and
-friends, the heart, liver, and lungs (called collectively the _exta_)
-were the share of the priest, and the rest was consumed on the altar.
-Probably the great size of the carcass had something to do with the
-rarity of its use at a time when meat could be kept fresh only in the
-coldest weather; at any rate we must think of the Romans as using the
-cow for dairy purposes and the ox for draft rather than for food.
-
-§278. Pork was widely used by rich and poor alike, and was considered
-the choicest of all domestic meats. The very language testifies to the
-important place it occupied in the economy of the larder, for no other
-animal has so many words to describe it in its different functions.
-Besides the general term _sūs_ we find _porcus_, _porca_, _verrēs_,
-_aper_, _scrōfa_, _māiālis_, and _nefrēns_. In the religious ceremony
-of the _suovetaurīlia_ (_sūs_ + _ovis_ + _taurus_) it will be noticed
-that the swine has the first place, coming before the sheep and the
-bull. The vocabulary describing the parts used for food is equally
-rich; there are words for no less than half a dozen kinds of sausages,
-for example, with pork as their basis. We read, too, of fifty
-different ways of cooking pork.
-
-§279. Fowl and Game.--All the common domestic fowls, chickens, ducks,
-geese, and pigeons, were used by the Romans for food, and besides
-these the wealthy raised various sorts of wild fowl for the table, in
-the game preserves that have been mentioned (§145). Among these were
-cranes, grouse, partridges, snipe, thrushes, and woodcock. In Cicero's
-time the peacock was most highly esteemed, having at the feast much
-the same place of honor as the turkey has with us, but costing as much
-as $10 each. Wild animals were also bred for food in similar
-preserves, the hare and the wild boar being the favorites. The latter
-was served whole upon the table as in feudal times. As a contrast in
-size may be mentioned the dormouse (_glīs_), which was thought a great
-delicacy.
-
-§280. Fish.--The rivers of Italy and the surrounding seas must have
-furnished always a great variety of fish, but in early times fish was
-not much used as food by the Romans. By the end of the Republic,
-however, tastes had changed, and no article of food brought higher
-prices than the rarer sorts of fresh fish. Salt fish was exceedingly
-cheap and was imported in many forms from almost all the Mediterranean
-ports. One dish especially, _tyrotarīchus_, made of salt fish, eggs,
-and cheese, and therefore something like our codfish balls, is
-mentioned by Cicero in about the same way as we speak of hash. Fresh
-fish were all the more expensive because they could be transported
-only while alive. Hence the rich constructed fish ponds on their
-estates, a Marcus Licinius Crassus setting the example in 92 B.C., and
-both fresh-water and salt-water fish were raised for the table. The
-names of the favorite sorts mean little to us, but we find the mullet
-(_mullus_; see §251) and a kind of turbot (_rhombus_) bringing high
-prices, and oysters (_ostreae_) were as popular as they are now.
-
-§281. Before passing to the more important matters of bread, wine, and
-oil, it may be well to mention a few articles that are still in
-general use. The Romans used freely the products of the dairy, milk,
-cream, curds, whey, and cheese. They drank the milk of sheep and goats
-as well as that of cows, and made cheese of the three kinds of milk.
-The cheese from ewes' milk was thought more digestible though less
-palatable than that made of cows' milk, while cheese from goats' milk
-was more palatable but less digestible. It is remarkable that they had
-no knowledge of butter except us a plaster for wounds. Honey took the
-place of sugar on the table and in cooking, for the Romans had only a
-botanical knowledge of the sugar cane. Salt was at first obtained by
-the evaporation of sea-water, but was afterwards mined. Its
-manufacture was a monopoly of the government, and care was taken
-always to keep the price low. It was used not only for seasoning, but
-also as a preservative agent. Vinegar was made from grape juice. In
-the list of articles of food unknown to the Romans we must put tea and
-coffee along with the orange, tomato, potato, butter, and sugar
-already mentioned.
-
-§282. Cereals.--The word _frūmentum_[2] was a general term applied to
-any of the many sorts of grain that were grown for food. Of those now
-in use barley, oats, rye, and wheat were known to the Romans, though
-rye was not cultivated and oats served only as feed for cattle. Barley
-was not much used, for it was thought to lack nutriment, and therefore
-to be unfit for laborers. In very ancient times another grain, spelt
-(_far_), had been grown extensively, but it had gradually gone out of
-use except for the sacrificial cake that had given its name to the
-confarreate ceremony of marriage (§82). In classical times wheat was
-the staple grain grown for food, not differing much from that which we
-use to-day. It was usually planted in the fall, though on some soils
-it would mature as a spring wheat. After the farming land of Italy was
-diverted to other purposes (parks, pleasure grounds, game preserves:
-see §§145, 146), wheat had to be imported from the provinces, first
-from Sicily, then from Africa and Egypt, the home supply being
-inadequate to the needs of the teeming population.
-
-[Footnote 2: The word _frūmentum_ occurs fifty-five times in the
-"Gallic War," meaning any kind of grain that happened to be grown for
-food in the country in which Caesar was campaigning at the time. The
-word "corn" used to translate it in our school editions is the worst
-possible, because to the schoolboy the word "corn" means a particular
-kind of grain, and a kind at that which was unknown to the Romans. The
-general word "grain" is much better for translation purposes.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 107. POUNDING GRAIN]
-
-§283. Preparation of the Grain.--In the earliest times the grain
-(_far_) had not been ground, but merely pounded in a mortar (Fig.
-107). The meal was then mixed with water and made into a sort of
-porridge (_puls_, whence our word "poultice"), which long remained the
-national dish, something like the oatmeal of Scotland. Plautus (†184
-B.C.) jestingly refers to his countrymen as "pulse-eaters." The
-persons who crushed the grain were called _pīnsitōrēs_ or _pīstōrēs_,
-whence the cognomen Pīsō (§273) is said to be derived, and in later
-times the bakers were also called _pīstōrēs_, because they ground the
-grain as well as baked the bread. In the ruins of bakeries we find
-mills as regularly as ovens. See the illustration in §285.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 108. SECTION OF MILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 109. A POMPEIAN MILL WITHOUT ITS FRAME-WORK]
-
-§284. The grinding of the grain into regular flour was done in a mill
-(_mola_). This consisted of three parts, the lower millstone (_mēta_),
-the upper (_catillus_), and the frame-work that surrounded and
-supported the latter and furnished the means to turn it upon the
-_mēta_. All these parts are shown distinctly in the cut (Fig. 108; see
-also Rich, Harper, and Smith under _mola_; Guhl and Koner, p. 774;
-Schreiber LXVII; Baumeister, p. 933), and require little explanation.
-The _mēta_ was, as the name suggests, a cone-shaped stone (_A_)
-resting on a bed of masonry (_B_) with a raised rim, between which and
-the lower edge of the _mēta_ the flour was collected. In the upper
-part of the _mēta_ a beam (_C_) was mortised, ending above in an iron
-pin or pivot (_D_) on which hung and turned the frame-work that
-supported the _catillus_. The _catillus_ (_E_) itself was shaped
-something like an hourglass, or two funnels joined at the neck. The
-upper funnel served as a hopper into which the grain was poured; the
-lower funnel fitted closely over the _mēta_, the distance between them
-being regulated by the length of the pin, mentioned above, according
-to the fineness of the flour desired. The mill without frame-work is
-shown in Fig. 109.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 110. HORSE AND MILL]
-
-§285. The frame-work was very strong and massive on account of the
-heavy weight that was suspended from it. The beams used for turning
-the mill were fitted into holes in the narrow part of the _catillus_
-as shown in the cut. The power required to do the grinding was
-furnished by horses or mules attached to the beams (Fig. 110), or by
-slaves pushing against them. This last method was often used as a
-punishment, as we have seen (§§170, 148). Of the same form but much
-smaller were the hand mills used by soldiers for grinding the
-_frūmentum_ furnished them as rations. Under the Empire water mills
-were introduced, but they are hardly referred to in literature.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 111. BAKERY WITH MILLS]
-
-§286. The transition from the ancient porridge (§283) to bread baked
-in the modern fashion must have been through the medium of thin cakes
-baked in or over the fire. We do not know when bread baked in ovens
-came into use. Bakers (§283) as representatives of a trade do not go
-back beyond 171 B.C., but long before this time, of course, the family
-bread had been made by the _māter familiās_, or by a slave under her
-supervision. After public bakeries were once established it became
-less and less usual for bread to be made in private houses in the
-towns. Only the most pretentious of the city mansions had ovens
-attached, as shown by the ruins. In the country, on the other hand,
-the older custom was always retained (§148). Under Trajan (98-118) it
-became the custom to distribute bread to the people daily, instead of
-grain once a month, and the bakers were organized into a guild
-(_corpus_, _collegium_), and as a corporation enjoyed certain
-privileges and immunities. In Fig. 111 are shown the ruins of a
-Pompeian bakery with several mills in connection with it.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 112. OVEN FOR BREAD]
-
-§287. Breadmaking.--After the flour collected about the edge of the
-_mēta_ (§284) had been sifted, water and salt were added and the dough
-was kneaded in a trough by hand or by a simple machine shown in the
-cut in Schreiber LXVII. Yeast was added as nowadays and the bread was
-baked in an oven much like those still found in parts of Europe. One
-preserved in the ruins of Pompeii is shown in the cut (Fig. 112): at
-_a_ is the oven proper, in which a fire was built, the draft being
-furnished by the openings at _d_. The surrounding chamber, _b_, is
-intended to retain the heat after the fire (usually of charcoal) had
-been raked out into the ashpit, _e_, and the vents closed. The letter
-_f_ marks a receptacle for water, which seems to have been used for
-moistening the bread while baking. After the oven had been heated to
-the proper temperature and the fire raked out, the loaves were put in,
-the vents closed, and the bread left to bake.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 113. SALESROOM OF BAKERY]
-
-§288. There were several qualities of bread, varying with the sort of
-grain, the setting of the millstones (§284) and the fineness of the
-sieves (§287). The very best, made of pure wheat-flour, was called
-_pānis silīgneus_; that made of coarse flour, of flour and bran, or of
-bran alone was called _pānis plebēius_, _castrēnsis_, _sordidus_,
-_rūsticus_, etc. The loaves were circular and rather flat--some have
-been found in the ruins of Pompeii--and had their surface marked off
-by lines drawn from the center into four or more parts. The wall
-painting (Fig. 113) of a salesroom of a bakery, also found in Pompeii,
-gives a good idea of the appearance of the bread. Various kinds of
-cakes and confections were also sold at these shops.
-
-§289. The Olive.--Next in importance to the wheat came the olive. It
-was introduced into Italy from Greece, and from Italy has spread
-through all the Mediterranean countries; but in modern as well as in
-ancient times the best olives are those of Italy. The olive was an
-important article of food merely as a fruit, being eaten both fresh
-and preserved in various ways, but it found its significant place in
-the domestic economy of the Romans in the form of the olive oil with
-which we are familiar. It is the value of the oil that has caused the
-cultivation of the olive to become so general in southern Europe, and
-it is claimed that its use is constantly widening, extending
-especially northward, where wine and oil are said to be supplanting
-the native beer and butter. Many varieties were known to the Romans,
-requiring different climates and soils and adapted to different uses.
-In general it may be said that the larger berries were better suited
-for eating than for oil.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 114. PICKING OLIVES]
-
-§290. The olive was eaten fresh as it ripened and was also preserved
-in various ways. The ripe olives were sprinkled with salt and left
-untouched for five days; the salt was then shaken off, and the olives
-dried in the sun. They were also preserved sweet without salt in
-boiled must (§296). Half ripe olives were picked (Fig. 114) with their
-stems and covered over in jars with the best quality of oil; in this
-way they are said to have retained for more than a year the flavor of
-the fresh fruit. Green olives were preserved whole in strong brine,
-the form in which we know them now, or were beaten into a mass and
-preserved with spices and vinegar. The preparation _epityrum_ was made
-by taking the fruit in any of the three stages, removing the stones,
-chopping up the pulp, seasoning it with vinegar, coriander seeds,
-cumin, fennel, and mint, and covering the mixture in jars with oil
-enough to exclude the air. The result was a salad that was eaten with
-cheese.
-
-§291. Olive Oil.--The oil was used for several purposes. It was
-employed most anciently to anoint the body after bathing, especially
-by athletes; it was used as a vehicle for perfumes, the Romans knowing
-nothing of distillation by means of alcohol; it was burned in lamps
-(§228); it was an indispensable article of food. As a food it was
-employed as butter is now in cooking or as a relish or dressing in its
-natural state. The olive when subjected to pressure yields two fluids.
-The first to flow (_amurca_) is dark and bitter, having the
-consistency of water. It was largely used as a fertilizer, but not as
-a food. The second, which flows after greater pressure, is the oil
-(_oleum_, _oleum olīvum_). The best oil was made from olives not fully
-ripe, but the largest quantity was yielded by the ripened fruit.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 115. OLIVE MILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 116. VAULT FOR STORING OIL]
-
-§292. The olives were picked from the tree (Fig. 114), those that fell
-of their own accord being thought inferior (§160), and were spread
-upon sloping platforms in order that a part of the _amurca_ might flow
-out by itself. Here the fruit remained until a slight fermentation
-took place. It was then subjected to the action of a machine (Fig.
-115) that bruised and pressed it. The oil that flowed out was caught
-in a jar and from it ladled into a receptacle (_lābrum fictile_),
-where it was allowed to settle, the _amurca_ and other impurities
-falling to the bottom. The oil was then skimmed off into another like
-receptacle and again allowed to settle, the process being repeated (as
-often as thirty times if necessary) until all impurities had been left
-behind. The best oil was made by subjecting the berries at first to a
-gentle pressure only. The bruised pulp was then taken out, separated
-from the stones or pits, and pressed a second or even a third time,
-the quality becoming poorer each time. The oil was kept in jars which
-were glazed on the inside with wax or gum to prevent absorption, the
-covers were carefully secured and the jars stored away in vaults (Fig.
-116).
-
-§293. Grapes.--Grapes were eaten fresh from the vines and were also
-dried in the sun and kept as raisins, but they owed their real
-importance in Italy as elsewhere to the wine made from them. The vine
-was not native to Italy, as until recently it was supposed to be, but
-was introduced, probably from Greece, long before history begins. The
-earliest name for Italy known to the Greeks was _Oenōtria_, "the land
-of the vine-pole," and very ancient legends ascribe to Numa
-restrictions upon the use of wine. It is probable that up to the time
-of the Gracchi wine was rare and expensive. The quantity produced
-gradually increased as the cultivation of cereals declined (§146), but
-the quality long remained inferior, all the choice wines being
-imported from Greece and the east. By Cicero's time, however,
-attention was being given to viticulture and to the scientific making
-of wines, and by the time of Augustus vintages were produced that vied
-with the best brought in from abroad. Pliny, writing about the middle
-of the first century of our era, says that of the eighty really choice
-wines then known to the Romans two-thirds were produced in Italy, and
-Arrian of about the same time says that Italian wines were famous as
-far away as India.
-
-§294. Viticulture.--Grapes could be grown almost anywhere in Italy,
-but the best wines were made south of Rome within the confines of
-Latium and Campania. The cities of Praeneste, Velitrae, and Formiae
-were famous for the wines grown on the sunny slopes of the Alban
-hills. A little farther south, near Terracina, was the _ager
-Caecubus_, where was produced the Caecuban wine, pronounced by
-Augustus the noblest of all. Then comes Mt. Massicus with the _ager
-Falernus_ on its southern side, producing the Falernian wines, even
-more famous than the Caecuban. Upon and around Vesuvius, too, fine
-wines were grown, especially near Naples, Pompeii, Cumae, and
-Surrentum. Good wines but less noted than these were produced in the
-extreme south, near Beneventum, Aulon, and Tarentum. Of like quality
-were those grown east and north of Rome, near Spoletium, Caesena,
-Ravenna, Hadria, and Ancona. Those of the north and west, in Etruria
-and Gaul, were not so good.
-
-§295. Vineyards.--The sunny side of a hill was the best place for a
-vineyard. The vines were supported by poles or trellises in the modern
-fashion, or were planted at the foot of trees up which they were
-allowed to climb. For this purpose the elm (_ulmus_) was preferred,
-because it flourished everywhere, could be closely trimmed without
-endangering its life, and had leaves that made good food for cattle
-when they were plucked off to admit the sunshine to the vines. Vergil
-speaks of "marrying the vine to the elm," and Horace calls the plane
-tree a bachelor (_platanus coelebs_), because its dense foliage made
-it unfit for the vineyard. Before the gathering of the grapes the
-chief work lay in keeping the ground clear; it was spaded over once
-each month through the year. One man could properly care for about
-four acres.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 117. MAKING WINE]
-
-§296. Wine Making.--The making of the wine took place usually in
-September, the season varying with the soil and the climate. It was
-anticipated by a festival, the _vīnālia rūstica_, celebrated on the
-19th of August. Precisely what the festival meant the Romans
-themselves did not fully understand, perhaps, but it was probably
-intended to secure a favorable season for the gathering of the grapes.
-The general process of making the wine differed little from that
-familiar to us in Bible stories and still practiced in modern times.
-After the grapes were gathered they were first trodden with the bare
-feet (Fig. 117) and then pressed in the _prēlum_ or _lorcular_. The
-juice as it came from the press was called _mustum_, "new," and was
-often drunk unfermented, as "sweet" cider is now. It could be kept
-sweet from vintage to vintage by being sealed in a jar smeared within
-and without with pitch and immersed for several weeks in cold water or
-buried in moist sand. It was also preserved by evaporation over a
-fire; when it was reduced one-half in this way it became a grape-jelly
-(_dēfrutum_) and was used as a basis for various beverages and for
-other purposes (§290).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 118. WINE CELLAR]
-
-§297. Fermented wine (_vīnum_) was made by collecting the _mustum_ in
-huge vat-like jars (_dōlia_, shown in Fig. 116), large enough to hide
-a man and containing a hundred gallons or more. These were covered
-with pitch within and without and partially buried in the ground in
-cellars or vaults (_vīnāriae cellae_), in which they remained
-permanently. After they were nearly filled with the _mustum_, they
-were left uncovered during the process of fermentation, which lasted
-under ordinary circumstances about nine days. They were then tightly
-sealed and opened only when the wine required attention[3] or was to
-be removed. The cheaper wines were used directly from the _dōlia_, but
-the choicer kinds were drawn off after a year into smaller jars
-(_amphorae_), clarified and sometimes "doctored" in various ways, and
-finally stored in depositories often entirely distinct from the
-cellars (Fig. 118). A favorite place was a room in the upper story of
-the house, where the wine was artificially aged by the heat rising
-from the furnace or even by the smoke escaping from the fire. The
-_amphorae_ were sometimes marked with the name of the wine, and the
-names of the consuls for the year in which they were filled.
-
-[Footnote 3: Spoiled wine was used as vinegar (_acētum_), and vinegar
-that became insipid and tasteless was called _vappa_. This last word
-was used also as a term of reproach for shiftless and worthless men.]
-
-§298. Beverages.--After water and milk, wine was the ordinary drink of
-the Romans of all classes. It must be distinctly understood, however,
-that they always mixed it with water and used more water than wine.
-Pliny mentions one sort of wine that would stand being mixed with
-eight times its own bulk of water. To drink wine unmixed was thought
-typical of barbarism, and among the Romans it was so drunk only by the
-dissipated at their wildest revels. Under the Empire the ordinary
-qualities of wine were cheap enough to be sold at three or four cents
-a quart (§388); the choicer kinds were very costly, entirely beyond
-the reach, Horace gives us to understand, of a man in his
-circumstances. More rarely used than wine were other beverages that
-are mentioned in literature. A favorite drink was _mulsum_, made of
-four measures of wine and one of honey. A mixture of water and honey
-allowed to ferment together was called _mulsa_. Cider also was made by
-the Romans, and wines from mulberries and dates. They also made
-various cordials from aromatic plants, but it must be remembered
-(§281) that they had no knowledge of tea or coffee.
-
-§299. Style of Living.--The table supplies of a given people vary from
-age to age with the development of civilization and refinement, and in
-the same age with the means and tastes of classes and individuals. Of
-the Romans it may be said that during the early Republic, perhaps
-almost through the second century B.C., they cared little for the
-pleasures of the table. They lived frugally and ate sparingly. They
-were almost strictly vegetarians (§273), much of their food was eaten
-cold, and the utmost simplicity characterized the cooking and the
-service of their meals. Everything was prepared by the _māter
-familiās_ or by the maidservants under her supervision (§90). The
-table was set in the _ātrium_ (§188), and the father, mother, and
-children sat around it on stools or benches (§225), waiting upon each
-other and their guests (§104). Dependents ate of the same food, but
-apart from the family. The dishes were of the plainest sort, of
-earthenware or even of wood, though a silver saltcellar was often the
-cherished ornament of the humblest board. Table knives and forks were
-unknown, the food being cut into convenient portions before it was
-served, and spoons being used to convey to the mouth what the fingers
-could not manage. During this period there was little to choose
-between the fare of the proudest patrician and the humblest client.
-The Samnite envoys found Manius Curius, the conqueror of Pyrrhus (275
-B.C.), eating his dinner of vegetables (§275) from an earthen bowl. A
-century later the poet Plautus calls his countrymen a race of porridge
-eaters (_pultiphagōnidae_, §283), and gives us to understand that in
-his time even the wealthiest Romans had in their households no
-specially trained cooks. When a dinner out of the ordinary was given,
-a professional cook was hired, who brought with him to the house of
-the host his utensils and helpers, just as a plumber or surgeon
-responds to a call nowadays.
-
-§300. The last two centuries of the Republic saw all this changed. The
-conquest of Greece and the wars in Asia Minor gave the Romans a taste
-of eastern luxury, and altered their simple table customs, as other
-customs had been altered by like contact with the outside world (§§5,
-101, 112, 192). From this time the poor and the rich no longer fared
-alike. The former constrained by poverty lived frugally as of old:
-every schoolboy knows that the soldiers who won Caesar's battles for
-him lived on grain (§282 and note), which they ground in their
-handmills and baked at their campfires. The very rich, on the other
-hand, aping the luxury of the Greeks but lacking their refinement,
-became gluttons instead of gourmands. They ransacked the world[4] for
-articles of food, preferring the rare and the costly to what was
-really palatable and delicate. They measured the feast by the
-quantities they could consume, reviving the sated appetite by piquant
-sauces and resorting to emetics to prolong the pleasures of the table
-and prevent the effects of over-indulgence. The separate dining-room
-(_trīclīnium_) was introduced, the great houses having two or more
-(§204), and the _oecī_ (§207) were pressed into service for banquet
-halls. The dining couch (§224) took the place of the bench or stool,
-slaves served the food to the reclining guests, a dinner dress (§249)
-was devised, and every _familia urbāna_ (§149) included a high-priced
-chef with a staff of trained assistants. Of course there were always
-wealthy men, Atticus, the friend of Cicero, for example (§155), who
-clung to the simpler customs of the earlier days, but these could make
-little headway against the current of senseless dissipation and
-extravagance. Over against these must be set the fawning poor, who
-preferred the fleshpots of the rich patron (§§181, 182) to the bread
-of honest independence. Between the two extremes was a numerous middle
-class of the well-to-do, with whose ordinary meals we are more
-concerned than with the banquets of the very rich. These meals were
-the _ientāculum_, the _prandium_, and the _cēna_.
-
-[Footnote 4: Gellius (2d century A.D.) gives a list from a satirical
-poem of Varro: Peacock from Samos, heath-cock from Phrygia, crane from
-Media, kid from Ambracia, young tunny-fish from Chalcedon, _mūrēna_
-from Tartessus, cod (?) from Pessinus, oysters from Tarentum, scallop
-from Chios (?), sturgeon (?) from Rhodes, _scarus_ from Cilicia, nuts
-from Thasos, dates from Egypt, chestnuts (?) from Spain.]
-
-§301. Hours for Meals.--Three meals a day was the regular number with
-the Romans as with us, though hygienists were found then, as they may
-be found nowadays, who believed two meals more healthful than three,
-and then as now high livers often indulged in an extra meal taken late
-at night. Custom fixed more or less rigorously the hours for meals,
-though these varied with the age, and to a less extent with the
-occupations and even with the inclinations of individuals. In early
-times in the city and in all periods in the country the chief meal
-(_cēna_) was eaten in the middle of the day, preceded by a breakfast
-(_ientāculum_) in the early morning and followed in the evening by a
-supper (_vesperna_). In classical times the hours for meals in Rome
-were about as they are now in our large cities: that is, the _cēna_
-was postponed until the work of the day was finished, thus crowding
-out the _vesperna_, and a luncheon (_prandium_) took the place of the
-old-fashioned "noon dinner." The evening dinner came to be more or
-less of a social function, guests being present and the food and
-service the best the house could afford, while the _ientāculum_ and
-_prandium_ were in comparison very simple and informal meals.
-
-§302. Breakfast and Luncheon.--The breakfast (_ientāculum_ or
-_iantāculum_) was eaten immediately after rising, the hour varying, of
-course, with the occupation and condition of the individual. It
-consisted usually merely of bread, eaten dry or dipped in wine or
-sprinkled over with salt, though raisins, olives, and cheese were
-sometimes added. Workmen pressed for time seem to have taken their
-breakfast in their hands to eat as they went to the place of their
-labor, and schoolboys often stopped on their way to school (§122) at a
-public bakery (§286) to buy a sort of shortcake or pancake, on which
-they made a hurried breakfast. More rarely the breakfast became a
-regular meal, eggs being served in addition to the things just
-mentioned, and _mulsum_ (§298) and milk drunk with them. It is likely
-that such a breakfast was taken at a later hour and by persons who
-dispensed with the noon meal. The luncheon (_prandium_) came about
-eleven o'clock. It, too, consisted usually of cold food: bread, salads
-(§276), olives, cheese, fruits, nuts, and cold meats from the dinner
-of the day before. Occasionally, however, warm meat and vegetables
-were added, but the meal was never an elaborate one. It is sometimes
-spoken of as a morning meal, but in this case it must have followed at
-about the regular interval an extremely early breakfast, or it must
-itself have formed the breakfast, taken later than usual, when the
-_ientāculum_ for some reason had been omitted. After the _prandium_
-came the midday rest or siesta (_merīdiātiō_), when all work was laid
-aside until the eighth hour, except in the law courts and in the
-senate. In the summer, at least, everybody went to sleep, and even in
-the capital the streets were almost as deserted as at midnight. The
-_vesperna_, entirely unknown in city life, closed the day on the farm.
-It was an early supper which consisted largely of the leavings of the
-noonday dinner with the addition of such uncooked food as a farm would
-naturally supply. The word _merenda_ seems to have been applied in
-early times to this evening meal, then to refreshments taken at any
-time (cf. the English "lunch"), and finally to have gone out of use
-altogether.
-
-§303. The Formal Meal.--The busy life of the city had early crowded
-the dinner out of its original place in the middle of the day and
-fixed it in the afternoon. The fashion soon spread to the towns and
-was carried by city people to their country estates (§145), so that in
-classical times the late dinner (_cēna_) was the regular thing for all
-persons of any social standing throughout the length and breadth of
-Italy. It was even more of a function than it is with us, because the
-Romans knew no other form of purely social intercourse. They had no
-receptions, balls, musicales, or theater parties, no other
-opportunities to entertain their friends or be entertained by them. It
-is safe to say, therefore, that when the Roman was in town he was
-every evening host or guest at a dinner as elaborate as his means or
-those of his friends permitted, unless, of course, urgent business
-claimed his attention or some unusual circumstances had withdrawn him
-temporarily from society. On the country estates the same custom
-prevailed, the guests coming from neighboring estates or being friends
-who stopped unexpectedly, perhaps, to claim entertainment for a night
-as they passed on a journey to or from the city (§388). These dinners,
-formal as they were, are to be distinguished carefully from the
-extravagant banquets of the ostentatious rich. They were in themselves
-thoroughly wholesome, the expression of genuine hospitality. The
-guests were friends, the number was limited, the wife and children of
-the host were present, and social enjoyment was the end in view.
-Before the meal itself is described something must be said of the
-dining-room and its furniture.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 119. TABLE AND COUCHES]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 120. TABLE AND COUCHES]
-
-§304. The Dining Couch.--The position of the dining-room
-(_trīclīnium_) in the Roman house has been described already (§204),
-and it has been remarked (§300) that in classical times the stool or
-bench had given place to the couch. This couch (_lectus trīcliniāris_)
-was constructed much as the common _lectī_ were (§224), except that it
-was made broader and lower, had an arm at one end only, was without a
-back, and sloped from the front to the rear. At the end where the arm
-was, a cushion or bolster was placed, and parallel with it two others
-were arranged in such a way as to divide the couch into three parts.
-Each part was for one person, and a single couch would, therefore,
-accommodate three persons. The dining-room received its name
-(_trīclīnium_) from the fact that it was planned to hold three of
-these couches (_κλίναι_ in Greek), set on three sides of a table, the
-fourth side of which was open. The arrangement varied a little with
-the size of the room. In a large room the couches were set as in Fig.
-119, but if economy of space was necessary they were placed as in Fig.
-120, the latter being probably the more common arrangement of the two.
-Nine may be taken, therefore, as the ordinary number at a Roman dinner
-party. More would be invited only on unusual occasions, and then a
-larger room would be used where two or more tables could be arranged
-in the same way, each accommodating nine guests. In the case of
-members of the same family, especially if one was a child, or when the
-guests were very intimate friends, a fourth person might find room on
-a couch, but this was certainly unusual; probably when a guest
-unexpectedly presented himself some member of the family would
-surrender his place to him. Often the host reserved a place or places
-for friends that his guests might bring without notice. Such uninvited
-persons were called _umbrae_. When guests were present the wife sat on
-the edge of the couch (Fig. 121) instead of reclining, and children
-were usually accommodated on seats at the open side of the table.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 121. WOMAN SITTING ON DINING COUCH]
-
-§305. Places of Honor.--The guest approached the couch from the rear
-and took his place upon it, lying on the left side, with his face to
-the table, and supported by his left elbow, which rested on the
-cushion or bolster mentioned above. The position of his body is
-indicated by the arrows in the cut above (Fig. 119). Each couch and
-each place on the couch had its own name according to its position
-with reference to the others. The couches were called respectively
-_lectus summus_, _lectus medius_, and _lectus īmus_, and it will be
-noticed that persons reclining on the _lectus medius_ had the _lectus
-summus_ on the left and the _lectus īmus_ on the right. Etiquette
-assigned the _lectus summus_ and the _lectus medius_ to guests, while
-the _lectus īmus_ was reserved for the host, his wife, and one other
-member of his family. If the host alone represented the family, the
-two places beside him on the _lectus īmus_ were given to the humblest
-of the guests.
-
-§306. The places on each couch were named in the same way, (_locus_)
-_summus_, _medius_, and _īmus_, denoted respectively by the figures
-_1_, _2_, and _3_ in the cut. The person who occupied the place
-numbered _1_ was said to be above (_super_, _suprā_) the person to his
-right, while the person occupying the middle place (_2_) was above the
-person on his right and below (_īnfrā_) the one on the left. The place
-of honor on the _lectus summus_ was that numbered _1_, and the
-corresponding place on the _lectus īmus_ was taken by the host. The
-most distinguished guest, however, was given the place on the _lectus
-medius_ marked _3_, and this place was called by the special name
-_locus cōnsulāris_, because if a consul was present it was always
-assigned to him. It will be noticed that it was next the place of the
-host, and besides was especially convenient for a public official; if
-he found it necessary to receive or send a message during the dinner
-he could communicate with the messenger without so much as turning on
-his elbow.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 122. SIDEBOARD]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 123. SIDEBOARD]
-
-§307. Other Furniture.--In comparison with the _lectī_ the rest of the
-furniture of the dining-room played an insignificant part. In fact the
-only other absolutely necessary article was the table (_mēnsa_),
-placed as shown in the figures above between the three couches in such
-a way that all were equally distant from it and free access to it was
-left on the fourth side. The space between the table and the couches
-might be so little that the guests could help themselves, or on the
-other hand so great that slaves could pass between to serve the food.
-The guests had no individual plates to be kept upon the table, so that
-it was used merely to receive the large dishes in which the food was
-served, and certain formal articles, such as the saltcellar (§299) and
-the things necessary for the offering to the gods. The table,
-therefore, was never very large (one such would be almost lost in a
-modern dining-room), but it was often exceedingly beautiful and costly
-(§227). Its beauties were not hidden either by any cloth or covering;
-the table-cloth, as we know it, did not come into use until about the
-end of the first century of our era. The cost and beauty of the
-dishes, too, were limited only by the means and taste of the owner.
-Besides the couches and the table, sideboards (_abacī_) were the only
-articles of furniture usually found in the _trīclīnium_. These varied
-from a simple shelf to tables of different forms and sizes and open
-cabinets, such as shown in Figs. 122 and 123 and in Schreiber LXVII,
-11. They were set out of the way against the walls and served as do
-ours to display plate and porcelain when not in use on the table.
-
-§308. Courses.--In classical times even the simplest dinner was
-divided into three parts, the _gustus_ ("appetizer"), the _cēna_
-("dinner proper"), and the _secunda mēnsa_[5] ("dessert"); the dinner
-was made elaborate by serving each of the parts in several courses.
-The _gustus_ consisted of those things only that were believed to
-excite the appetite or aid the digestion: oysters and other shell-fish
-fresh, sea-fish salted or pickled, certain vegetables that could be
-eaten uncooked, especially onions, and almost invariably lettuce and
-eggs, all with piquant sauces. With these appetizers _mulsum_ (§298)
-was drunk, wine being thought too heavy for an empty stomach, and from
-the drink the _gustus_ was also called the _prōmulsis_; another and
-more significant name for it was _antecēna_. Then followed the real
-dinner, the _cēna_, consisting of the more substantial viands, fish,
-flesh, fowl, and vegetables. With this part of the meal wine was
-drunk, but in moderation, for it was thought to dull the sense of
-taste, and the real drinking began only when the _cēna_ was over. The
-_cēna_ almost always consisted of several courses (_mēnsa prīma_,
-_altera_, _tertia_, etc.), three being thought neither niggardly nor
-extravagant; we are told that Augustus often dined on three courses
-and never went beyond six. The _secunda mēnsa_ closed the meal with
-all sorts of pastry, sweets, nuts, and fruits, fresh and preserved,
-with which wine was freely drunk. From the fact that eggs were eaten
-at the beginning of the meal and apples at the close came the
-proverbial expression, _ab ovō ad māla_.
-
-[Footnote 5: This is the most common form, but the plural also occurs,
-and the adjective may follow the noun.]
-
-§309. Bills of Fare.--We have preserved to us in literature the bills
-of fare of a few meals, probably actually served, which may be taken
-as typical at least of the homely, the generous, and the sumptuous
-dinner. The simplest is given by Juvenal (†2d century A.D.): for the
-_gustus_, asparagus and eggs; for the _cēna_, young kid and chicken;
-for the _secunda mēnsa_, fruits. Two others are given by Martial
-(43-101 A.D.): the first has lettuce, onions, tunny-fish, and eggs cut
-in slices; sausages with porridge, fresh cauliflower, bacon, and
-beans; pears and chestnuts, and with the wine olives, parched peas,
-and lupines. The second has mallows, onions, mint, elecampane,
-anchovies with sliced eggs, and sow's udder in tunny sauce; the _cēna_
-was served in a single course (_ūna mēnsa_), kid, chicken, cold ham,
-haricot beans, and young cabbage sprouts; fresh fruits, with wine, of
-course. The last we owe to Macrobius (†5th century A.D.), who assigns
-it to a feast of the pontifices during the Republic, feasts that were
-proverbial for their splendor. The _antecēna_ was served in two
-courses: first, sea-urchins, raw oysters, three kinds of sea-mussels,
-thrush on asparagus, a fat hen, panned oysters, and mussels; second,
-mussels again, shell-fish, sea-nettles, figpeckers, loin of goat, loin
-of pork, fricasseed chicken, figpeckers again, two kinds of
-sea-snails. The number of courses in which the _cēna_ was served is
-not given: sow's udder, head of wild boar, panned fish, panned sow's
-udder, domestic ducks, wild ducks, hares, roast chicken, starch
-pudding, bread. No vegetables or dessert are mentioned by Macrobius,
-but we may take it for granted that they corresponded to the rest of
-the feast, and the wine that the pontifices drank was famed as the
-best.
-
-§310. Serving the Dinner.--The dinner hour marked the close of the
-day's work, as has been said (§301), and varied, therefore, with the
-season of the year and the social position of the family. In general
-it may be said to have been not before the ninth and rarely after the
-tenth hour (§418). It lasted usually until bedtime, that is, for three
-or four hours at least, though the Romans went to bed early because
-they rose early (§§79, 122). Sometimes even the ordinary dinner lasted
-until midnight, but when a banquet was expected to be unusually
-protracted, it was the custom to begin earlier in order that there
-might be time after it for the needed repose. Such banquets, beginning
-before the ninth hour, were called _tempestīva convīvia_, the word
-"early" in this connection carrying with it about the same reproach as
-our "late" suppers. At the ordinary family dinners the time was spent
-in conversation, though in some good houses (notably that of Atticus,
-cf. §155) a trained slave read aloud to the guests. At "gentlemen's
-dinners" other forms of entertainment were provided, music, dancing,
-juggling, etc., by professional performers (§153).
-
-§311. When the guests had been ushered into the dining-room the gods
-were solemnly invoked, a custom to which our "grace before meat"
-corresponds. Then they took their places on the couches (_accumbere_,
-_discumbere_) as these were assigned them (§306), their sandals were
-removed (§250), to be cared for by their own attendants (§152), and
-water and towels were carried around for washing the hands. The meal
-then began, each course being placed upon the table on a waiter or
-tray (_ferculum_), from which the dishes were passed in regular order
-to the guests. As each course was finished the dishes were replaced on
-the _ferculum_ and removed, and water and towels were again passed to
-the guests, a custom all the more necessary because the fingers were
-used for forks (§299). Between the chief parts of the meal, too, the
-table was cleared and carefully wiped with a cloth or soft sponge.
-Between the _cēna_ proper and the _secunda mēnsa_ a longer pause was
-made and silence was preserved while wine, salt, and meal, perhaps
-also regular articles of food, were offered to the Lares. The dessert
-was then brought on in the same way as the other parts of the meal.
-The signal to leave the couches was given by calling for the sandals
-(§250), and the guests immediately took their departure.
-
-§312. The Comissatio.--Cicero tells us of Cato and his Sabine
-neighbors lingering over their dessert and wine until late at night,
-and makes them find the chief charm of the long evening in the
-conversation. For this reason Cato declares the Latin word _convīvium_
-"a living together," a better word for such social intercourse than
-the one the Greeks used, _symposium_, "a drinking together." The
-younger men in the gayer circles of the capital inclined rather to the
-Greek view and followed the _cēna_ proper with a drinking bout, or
-wine supper, called _comissātiō_ or _compōtātiō_. This differed from
-the form that Cato approved not merely in the amount of wine consumed,
-in the lower tone, and in the questionable amusements, but also in the
-following of certain Greek customs unknown among the Romans until
-after the second Punic war and never adopted in the regular dinner
-parties that have been described. These were the use of perfumes and
-flowers at the feast, the selection of a Master of the Revels, and the
-method of drinking.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 124. END OF DRINKING BOUT]
-
-§313. The perfumes and flowers were used not so much on account of the
-sweetness of their scent, much as the Romans enjoyed it, as because
-they believed that the scent prevented or at least retarded
-intoxication. This is shown by the fact that they did not use the
-unguents and the flowers throughout the whole meal, but waited to
-anoint the head with perfumes and crown it with flowers until the
-dessert and the wine were brought on. Various leaves and flowers were
-used for the garlands (_corōnae convīvālēs_) according to individual
-tastes, but the rose was the most popular and came to be generally
-associated with the _comissātiō_. After the guests had assumed their
-crowns (and sometimes garlands were also worn around the neck), each
-threw the dice, usually calling as he did so upon his sweetheart or
-some deity to help his throw. The one whose throw was the highest
-(§320) was forthwith declared the _rēx_ (_magister_, _arbiter_)
-_bibendī_. Just what his duties and privileges were we are nowhere
-expressly told, but it can hardly be doubted that it was his province
-to determine the proportion of water to be added to the wine (§298),
-to lay down the rules for the drinking (_lēgēs īnsānae_, Horace calls
-them), to decide what each guest should do for the entertainment of
-his fellows, and to impose penalties and forfeits for the breaking of
-the rules.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 125. MIXING BOWL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 126. DRINKING CUPS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 127. CYATHUS]
-
-§314. The wine was mixed under the direction of the _magister_ in a
-large bowl (_crātēr_), the proportions of the wine and water being
-apparently constant for the evening, and from the _crātēr_ (Fig. 125),
-placed on the table in view of all, the wine was ladled by the
-servants into the goblets (_pōcula_, Fig. 126) of the guests. The
-ladle (_cyathus_, Fig. 127) held about one-twelfth of a pint, or more
-probably was graduated by twelfths. The method of drinking seems to
-have differed from that of the regular dinner chiefly in this: at the
-ordinary dinner each guest mixed his wine to suit his own taste and
-drank as little or as much as he pleased, while at the _comissātiō_
-all had to drink alike, regardless of differences in taste and
-capacity. The wine seems to have been drunk chiefly in "healths," but
-an odd custom regulated the size of the bumpers. Any guest might
-propose the health of any person he pleased to name; immediately
-slaves ladled into each goblet as many _cyathī_ (twelfths of a pint)
-as there were letters in the given name, and the goblets had to be
-drained at a draft. The rest of the entertainment was undoubtedly wild
-enough (§310); gambling seems to have been common, and Cicero speaks
-of more disgraceful practices in his speeches against Catiline.
-Sometimes the guests spent the evening roaming from house to house,
-playing host in turn, and making night hideous as they staggered
-through the streets with their crowns and garlands.
-
-§315. The Banquets of the Rich.--Little need be said of the banquets
-of the wealthy nobles in the last century of the Republic and of the
-rich parvenus (§181) who thronged the courts of the earlier Emperors.
-They were arranged on the same plan as the dinners we have described,
-differing from them only in the ostentatious display of furniture,
-plate, and food. So far as particulars have reached us, they were
-grotesque and revolting, judged by the canons of to-day, rather than
-magnificent. Couches made of silver, wine instead of water for the
-hands, twenty-two courses to a single cēna, seven thousand birds
-served at another, a dish of livers of fish, tongues of flamingos,
-brains of peacocks and pheasants mixed up together, strike us as
-vulgarity run mad. The sums spent upon these feasts do not seem so
-fabulous now as they did then. Every season in our great capitals sees
-social functions that surpass the feasts of Lucullus in cost as far as
-they do in taste and refinement. As signs of the times, however, as
-indications of changed ideals, of degeneracy and decay, they deserved
-the notice that the Roman historians and satirists gave them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-AMUSEMENTS; BATHS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 269-296, 834-861; Staatsverwaltung, III,
-504-565; Göll, III, 455-480, 104-157; Guhl and Koner, 643-658,
-804-829, 609-618; Friedländer, II, 295-637; Ramsay, 394-409;
-Pauly-Wissowa, _amphitheātrum_, _calx_, _circus_, _Bader_; Smith,
-Harper, Rich, _amphitheātrum_, _balneae_, _circus_, _gladiātōrēs_,
-_theātrum_, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister, 694, 241-244,
-2089-2111; Lübker, 1073 f., 1199 f., 477 f., 1048 f., 185, 1213;
-Kelsey-Mau, 135-161, 180-220.
-
-
-§316. After the games of childhood (§§102, 103) were passed the Roman
-seemed to lose all instinct for play. Of sport for sport's sake he
-knew nothing, he took part in no games for the sake of excelling in
-them. He played ball before his dinner for the good of the exercise,
-he practiced riding, fencing, wrestling, hurling the discus (Fig.
-128), and swimming for the strength and skill they gave him in arms,
-he played a few games of chance for the excitement the stakes
-afforded, but there was no "national game" for the young men, and
-there were no social amusements in which men and women took part
-together. The Roman made it hard and expensive, too, for others to
-amuse him. He cared nothing for the drama, little for spectacular
-shows, more for farces and variety performances, perhaps, but the one
-thing that really appealed to him was excitement, and this he found in
-gambling or in such amusements only as involved the risk of injury to
-life and limb, the sports of the circus and the amphitheater. We may
-describe first the games in which the Roman participated himself and
-then those at which he was a mere spectator. In the first class are
-field sports and games of hazard, in the second the public and private
-games (_lūdī pūblicī et prīvātī_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 128. DISCUS THROWER]
-
-§317. Sports of the Campus.--The Campus Martius included all the level
-ground lying between the Tiber and the Capitoline and Quirinal hills.
-The northwestern portion of this plain, bounded on two sides by the
-Tiber, which here sweeps abruptly to the west, kept clear of public
-and private buildings and often called simply the _Campus_, was for
-centuries the playground of Rome. Here the young men gathered to
-practice the athletic games mentioned above, naturally in the cooler
-parts of the day. Even men of graver years did not disdain a visit to
-the Campus after the _merīdiātiō_ (§302), in preparation for the bath
-before dinner, instead of which the younger men preferred to take a
-cool plunge in the convenient river. The sports themselves were those
-that we are accustomed to group together as track and field athletics.
-They ran foot races, jumped, threw the discus (Fig. 128), practiced
-archery, and had wrestling and boxing matches. These sports were
-carried on then much as they are now, if we may judge by Vergil's
-description in the Fifth Aeneid, but an exception must be made of the
-games of ball. These seem to have been very dull and stupid as
-compared with ours. It must be remembered, however, that they were
-played more for the healthful exercise they furnished than for the joy
-of the playing, and by men of high position, too--Caesar, Maecenas,
-and even the Emperor Augustus.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 129. FOLLES]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 130. GAME OF BALL]
-
-§318. Games of Ball.--Balls of different sizes are known to have been
-used in the different games, variously filled with hair, feathers, and
-air (_follēs_, Fig. 129). Throwing and catching formed the basis of
-all the games, the bat being practically unknown. In the simplest game
-the player threw the ball as high as he could, and tried to catch it
-before it struck the ground. Variations of this were what we should
-call juggling, the player keeping two or more balls in the air (Fig.
-130), and throwing and catching by turns with another player. Another
-game must have resembled our handball, requiring a wall and smooth
-ground at its foot. The ball was struck with the open hand against the
-wall, allowed to fall back upon the ground and bound, and then struck
-back against the wall in the same manner. The aim of the player was to
-keep the ball going in this way longer than his opponent could.
-Private houses and the public baths often had "courts" especially
-prepared for this amusement. A third game was called _trigōn_, and was
-played by three persons, stationed at the angles of an equilateral
-triangle. Two balls were used and the aim of the player was to throw
-the ball in his possession at the one of his opponents who would be
-the less likely to catch it. As two might throw at the third at the
-same moment, or as the thrower of one ball might have to receive the
-second ball at the very moment of throwing, both hands had to be used
-and a good degree of skill was necessary. Other games, all of throwing
-and catching, are mentioned here and there, but none is described with
-sufficient detail to be clearly understood.
-
-§319. Games of Chance.--The Romans were passionately fond of games of
-chance, and gambling was so universally associated with such games
-that they were forbidden by law, even when no stakes were actually
-played for. A general indulgence seems to have been granted at the
-Saturnalia in December, and public opinion allowed old men to play at
-any time. The laws were hard to enforce, however, as such laws usually
-are, and large sums were won and lost not merely at general gambling
-resorts, but also at private houses. Games of chance, in fact, with
-high stakes, were one of the greatest attractions at the men's dinners
-that have been mentioned (§314). The commonest form of gambling was
-our "heads or tails," coins being used as with us, the value depending
-on the means of the players. Another common form was our "odd or
-even," each player guessing in turn and in turn holding counters
-concealed in his outstretched hand for his opponent to guess. The
-stake was usually the contents of the hand though side bets were not
-unusual. In a variation of this game the players tried to guess the
-actual number of the counters held in the hand. Of more interest,
-however, were the games of knuckle-bones and dice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 131. GIRLS PLAYING WITH KNUCKLE-BONES]
-
-§320. Knuckle-bones.--Knuckle-bones (_tālī_) of sheep and goats, and
-imitations of them in ivory, bronze, and stone, were used as
-playthings by children and for gaming by men. Children played our
-"jackstones" with them, throwing five into the air at once and
-catching as many as possible on the back of the hand (Fig. 131). The
-length of the _tālī_ was greater than their width and they had,
-therefore, four long sides and two ends. The ends were rounded off or
-pointed, so that the _tālī_ could not stand on them. Of the four long
-sides two were broader than the others. Of the two broader sides one
-was concave, the other convex; while of the narrower sides one was
-flat and the other indented. As all the sides were of different shapes
-the _tālī_ did not require marking as do our dice, but for convenience
-they were sometimes marked with the numbers 1, 3, 4, and 6, the
-numbers 2 and 5 being omitted. Four _tālī_ were used at a time, either
-thrown into the air with the hand or thrown from a dice-box
-(_fritillus_), and the side on which the bone rested was counted, not
-that which came up. Thirty-five different throws were possible, of
-which each had a different name. Four aces were the lowest throw,
-called the Vulture, while the highest, called the Venus, was when all
-the _tālī_ came up differently. It was this throw that designated the
-_magister bibendī_ (§313).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 132. PLAYING DICE]
-
-§321. Dice.--The Romans had also dice (_tesserae_) precisely like our
-own. They were made of ivory, stone, or some close-grained wood, and
-had the sides numbered from one to six. Three were used at a time,
-thrown from the _fritillus_, as were the knuckle-bones (Fig. 132), but
-the sides counted that came up. The highest throw was three sixes, the
-lowest three aces. In ordinary gaming the aim of the player seems to
-have been to throw a higher number than his opponent, but there were
-also games played with dice on boards with counters, that must have
-been something like our backgammon, uniting skill with chance. Little
-more of these is known than their names, but a board used for some
-such game is shown in §336 (Fig. 144). If one considers how much space
-is given in our newspapers to the game of baseball, and how impossible
-it would be for a person who had never seen a game to get a correct
-idea of one from the newspaper descriptions only, it will not seem
-strange that we know so little of Roman games.
-
-§322. Public and Private Games.--With the historical development of
-the Public Games this book has no concern (§2). It is sufficient to
-say that these free exhibitions, given first in honor of some god or
-gods at the cost of the state and extended and multiplied for
-political purposes until all religious significance was lost, had come
-by the end of the Republic to be the chief pleasure in life for the
-lower classes in Rome, so that Juvenal declares that the free bread
-(§286) and the games of the circus were the people's sole desire. Not
-only were these games free, but when they were given all public
-business was stopped and all citizens were forced to take a holiday.
-These holidays became rapidly more and more numerous; by the end of
-the Republic sixty-six days were taken up by the games, and in the
-reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) no less than one hundred and
-thirty-five days out of the year were thus closed to business.[1]
-Besides these standing games, others were often given for
-extraordinary events, and funeral games were common when great men
-died. These last were not made legal holidays. For our purposes the
-distinction between public and private games is not important, and all
-may be classified according to the nature of the exhibitions as, _lūdī
-scēnicī_, dramatic entertainments given in a theater, _lūdī
-circēnsēs_, chariot races and other exhibitions given in a circus, and
-_mūnera gladiātōria_, shows of gladiators usually given in an
-amphitheater.
-
-[Footnote 1: There are sixty holidays annually in Indiana, for
-example, and this is about the average for the United States.]
-
-§323. Dramatic Performances.--The history of the development of the
-drama at Rome belongs, of course, to the history of Latin literature.
-In classical times dramatic performances consisted of comedies
-(_cōmoediae_), tragedies (_tragoediae_), farces (_mīmī_), and
-pantomimes (_pantomīmī_). The farces and pantomimes were used chiefly
-as interludes and afterpieces, though with the common people they were
-the most popular of all and outlived the others. Tragedy never had any
-real hold at Rome, and only the liveliest comedies gained favor on the
-stage. Of the comedies the only ones that have come down to us are
-those of Plautus and Terence, all adaptations from Greek originals,
-all depicting Greek life, and represented in Greek costumes (_fābulae
-palliātae_). They were a good deal more like our comic operas than our
-comedies, large parts being recited to the accompaniment of music and
-other parts sung while the actor danced. They were always presented in
-the daytime, as Roman theaters were provided with no means of
-lighting, in the early period after the noon meal (§301), but by
-Cicero's time they had come to be given in the morning. The average
-comedy must have required about two hours for the acting, with
-allowance for the occasional music between the scenes. We read of a
-play being acted twice in a day, but this must have been very
-exceptional, as time had to be allowed for the other more popular
-shows given on the same occasion.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 133. SCENE FROM A COMEDY]
-
-§324. Staging the Play.--The play, as well as the other sports, was
-under the supervision of the officials in charge of the games at which
-it was given. They contracted for the production of the play with some
-recognized manager (_dominus gregis_), who was usually an actor of
-acknowledged ability and had associated with him a troupe (_grex_) of
-others only inferior to himself. The actors were all slaves (§143),
-and men took the parts of women. There was no limit fixed to the
-number of actors, but motives of economy would lead the _dominus_ to
-produce each play with the smallest number possible, and two or even
-more parts were often assigned to one actor. The characters in the
-comedies wore the ordinary Greek dress of daily life and the costumes
-(Fig. 133) were, therefore, not expensive. The only make-up required
-was paint for the face, especially for the actors who took women's
-parts, and the wigs that were used conventionally to represent
-different characters, gray for old men, black for young men, red for
-slaves, etc. These and the few properties (_ōrnāmenta_) necessary were
-furnished by the _dominus_. It seems to have been customary also for
-him to feast the actors at his expense if their efforts to entertain
-were unusually successful.
-
-§325. The Early Theater.--The theater itself deserved no such name
-until very late in the Republic. During the period when the best plays
-were being written (200-160 B.C.) almost nothing was done for the
-accommodation of the actors or the audience. The stage was merely a
-temporary platform, rather wide than deep, built at the foot of a hill
-or a grass-covered slope. There were almost none of the things that we
-are accustomed to associate with a stage, no curtains, no flies, no
-scenery that could be changed, not even a sounding-board to aid the
-actor's voice. There was no way either to represent the interior of a
-house, and the dramatist was limited, therefore, to such situations as
-might be supposed to take place upon a public street. This street the
-stage represented; at the back of it were shown the fronts of two or
-three houses with windows and doors that could be opened, and
-sometimes there was an alley or passageway between two of the houses.
-An altar stood on the stage, we are told, to remind the people of the
-religious origin of the games. No better provision was made for the
-audience than for the actors. The people took their places on the
-slope before the stage, some reclining on the grass, some standing,
-some perhaps sitting on stools they had brought from home. There was
-always din and confusion to try the actor's voice, pushing and
-crowding, disputing and quarreling, wailing of children, and in the
-very midst of the play the report of something livelier to be seen
-elsewhere might draw the whole audience away.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 134. EXTERIOR OF THEATER AT ORANGE]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 135. THEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 136. SECTION OF THEATER OF MARCELLUS (Restored)]
-
-§326. The Later Theater.--Beginning about 145 B.C., however, efforts
-were made to improve upon this poor apology for a theater, in spite of
-the opposition of those who considered the plays ruinous to morals. In
-that year a wooden theater on Greek lines provided with seats was
-erected, but the senate caused it to be pulled down as soon as the
-games were over. It became a fixed custom, however, for such a
-temporary theater with special and separate seats for senators, and
-much later for the knights, to be erected as often as plays were given
-at public games, until in 55 B.C. Pompeius Magnus erected the first
-permanent theater at Rome. It was built of stone after the plans of
-one he had seen at Mytilene and seated at least seventeen thousand
-people; Pliny says forty thousand. This theater showed two noteworthy
-divergences from its Greek model. The Greek theaters were excavated
-out of the side of the hill, while the Roman theater was erected on
-level ground (that of Pompeius in the Campus Martius) and gave,
-therefore, a better opportunity for exterior magnificence. The Greek
-theater had a large circular space for choral performances immediately
-before the stage; in the Roman theater this space, called the
-orchestra then as now, was much smaller, and was assigned to the
-senators. The first fourteen rows of seats rising immediately behind
-them were reserved for the knights. The seats back of these were
-occupied indiscriminately by the people, on the principle apparently
-of first come first served. No other permanent theaters were erected
-at Rome until 13 B.C., when two were constructed. The smaller had room
-for eleven thousand spectators, the larger, erected in honor of
-Marcellus, the nephew of Augustus, for twenty thousand. These improved
-playhouses made possible spectacular elements in the performances that
-the rude scaffolding of early days had not permitted, and these
-spectacles proved the ruin of the legitimate drama. To make realistic
-the scenes representing the pillaging of a city, Pompeius is said to
-have furnished troops of cavalry and bodies of infantry, hundreds of
-mules laden with real spoils of war, and three thousand mixing bowls
-(§314). In comparison with these three thousand mixing bowls, the
-avalanches, runaway locomotives, sawmills in full operation, and
-cathedral scenes of modern times seem poor indeed.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 137. PLAN OF THEATER]
-
-§327. The general appearance of these theaters, the type of hundreds
-erected later throughout the Roman world, may be gathered from Fig.
-137, the plan of a theater on lines laid down by Vitruvius (§187). GH
-is the front line of the stage (_proscaenium_); all behind it is the
-_scaena_, devoted to the actors, all before it is the _cavea_, devoted
-to the spectators. IKL in the rear mark the position of three doors,
-for example, those of the three houses mentioned above (§325). The
-semicircular orchestra CMD is the part appropriated to the senators.
-The seats behind the orchestra, rising in concentric semicircles, are
-divided by five passageways into six portions (_cuneī_), and in a
-similar way the seats above the semicircular passage (_praecīnctiō_)
-shown in the figure are divided by eleven passageways into twelve
-_cuneī_. Access to the seats of the senators was afforded by
-passageways under the higher seats at the right and the left of the
-stage, one of which may be seen in Fig. 135, which represents a part
-of the smaller of the two theaters uncovered at Pompeii, built not far
-from 80 B.C. Over the vaulted passage will be noticed what must have
-been the best seats in the theater, corresponding in some degree to
-the boxes of modern times. These were reserved for the emperor, if he
-was present, for the officials who superintended the games and (on the
-other side) for the Vestals. Access to the higher seats was
-conveniently given by broad stairways constructed under the seats and
-running up to the passageways between the _cuneī_. These are shown in
-Fig. 136, a theoretical restoration of the Marcellus theater mentioned
-above. Behind the highest seats were broad colonnades, affording
-shelter in case of rain, and above them were tall masts from which
-awnings (_vēla_) were spread to protect the people from the sun. The
-appearance of the stage end may be gathered from Fig. 134, showing the
-remains of a Roman theater still existing at Orange,[2] in the south
-of France. It should be noticed that the stage was connected with the
-auditorium by the seats over the vaulted passages to the orchestra,
-and that the curtain was raised from the bottom, to hide the stage,
-not lowered from the top as ours is now. Vitruvius suggested that
-rooms and porticos be built behind the stage, like the colonnades that
-have been mentioned, to afford space for the actors and properties and
-shelter for the people in case of rain.
-
-[Footnote 2: This theater has been restored and used for reproductions
-of the Classical Drama. See the interesting account of it in the
-"Century Magazine" for June, 1895. It is supposed to have been erected
-in the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) and allowed to fall into
-ruins in the fourth century A.D.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 138. VICTORIOUS AURIGA]
-
-§328. Roman Circuses.--The games of the circus were the oldest of the
-free exhibitions at Rome and always the most popular. The word
-_circus_ means simply a ring and the _lūdī circēnsēs_ were therefore
-any shows that might be given in a ring. We shall see below (§343)
-that these shows were of several kinds, but the one most
-characteristic, the one that is always meant when no other is
-specifically named, is that of chariot races. For these races the
-first and really the only necessary condition is a large and level
-piece of ground. This was furnished by the valley between the Aventine
-and Palatine hills, and here in prehistoric times the first Roman race
-course was established. This remained _the_ circus, the one always
-meant when no descriptive term was added, though when others were
-built it was called sometimes by way of distinction the Circus
-Maximus. None of the others ever approached it in size, in
-magnificence, or in popularity.
-
-§329. The second circus to be built at Rome was the _circus
-Flāminius_, founded in 221 B.C. by the same Caius Flaminius, who built
-the Flaminian road. It was located in the southern part of the Campus
-Martius (§317), and like the Circus Maximus was exposed to the
-frequent overflows of the Tiber. Its position is fixed beyond
-question, but the actual remains are very scanty, so that little is
-known of its size or appearance. The third to be established was that
-of Caius (Caligula) and Nero, named from the two emperors who had to
-do with its construction, and erected, therefore, in the first century
-A.D. It lay at the foot of the Vatican hill, but we know little more
-of it than that it was the smallest of the three. These three were the
-only circuses within the city. In the immediate neighborhood, however,
-were three others. Five miles out on the _via Portuēnsis_ was the
-circus of the Arval Brethren. About three miles out on the Appian way
-was the Circus of Maxentius, erected in 309 A.D. This is the best
-preserved of all, and a plan of it is shown in the next paragraph. On
-the same road, some twelve miles from the city, in the old town of
-Bovillae, was a third, making six within easy reach of the people of
-Rome.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 139. PLAN OF THE CIRCUS OF MAXENTIUS]
-
-§330. Plan of the Circus.--All of the Roman circuses known to us had
-the same general arrangement, which will be readily understood from
-the plan of the Circus of Maxentius shown in Fig. 139. The long and
-comparatively narrow stretch of ground which formed the race course
-proper (_arēna_) is almost surrounded by the tiers of seats, running
-in two long parallel lines uniting in a semicircle at one end. In the
-middle of this semicircle is a gate, marked _F_ in the plan, by which
-the victor left the circus when the race was over. It was called,
-therefore, the _porta triumphālis_. Opposite this gate at the other
-end of the arena was the station for the chariots (_AA_ in the plan),
-called _carcerēs_, "barriers," flanked by two towers at the corners
-(_II_), and divided into two equal sections by another gate (_B_),
-called the _porta pompae_, by which processions entered the circus.
-There are also gates (_HH_) between the towers and the seats. The
-exterior appearance of the towers and barriers, called together the
-_oppidum_, is shown in Fig. 140.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 140. OPPIDUM OF A CIRCUS]
-
-§331. The arena is divided for about two-thirds its length by a fence
-or wall (_MM_), called the _spīna_, "backbone." At the end of this
-were fixed pillars (_LL_), called _mētae_, marking the inner line of
-the course. Once around the _spīna_ was a lap (_spatium_,
-_curriculum_), and the fixed number of laps, usually seven to a race,
-was called a _missus_. The last lap, however, had but one turn, that
-at the _mēta prīma_, the one nearest the _porta triumphālis_, the
-finish being a straightaway dash to the _calx_. This was a chalk line
-drawn on the arena far enough away from the second _mēta_ to keep it
-from being obliterated by the hoofs of the horses as they made the
-turn, and far enough also from the _carcerēs_ to enable the driver to
-stop his team before dashing into them. The dotted line (_DN_) is the
-supposed location of the _calx_. It will be noticed that the important
-things about the developed circus are the _arēna_, _carcerēs_,
-_spīna_, _mētae_, and the seats, all of which will be more
-particularly described.
-
-§332. The Arena.--The arena is the level space surrounded by the seats
-and the barriers. The name was derived from the sand used to cover its
-surface to spare as much as possible the unshod feet of the horses. A
-glance at the plan will show that speed could not have been the
-important thing with the Romans that it is with us. The sand, the
-shortness of the stretches, and the sharp turns between them were all
-against great speed. The Roman found his excitement in the danger of
-the race. In every representation of the race course that has come
-down to us may be seen broken chariots, fallen horses, and drivers
-under wheels and hoofs. The distance was not a matter of close
-measurement either, but varied in the several circuses, the Circus
-Maximus being fully 300 feet longer than the Circus of Maxentius. All
-seem to have had constant, however, the number of laps, seven to the
-race, and this also goes to prove that the danger was the chief
-element in the popularity of the contests. The distance actually
-traversed in the Circus of Maxentius may be very closely estimated.
-The length of the _spīna_ is about 950 feet. If we allow fifty feet
-for the turn at each _mēta_, each lap makes a distance of 2,000 feet,
-and six laps, 12,000 feet. The seventh lap had but one turn in it, but
-the final stretch to the _calx_ made it perhaps 300 feet longer than
-one of the others, say 2,300 feet. This gives a total of 14,300 feet
-for the whole _missus_, or about 2.7 miles. Jordan calculates the
-_missus_ of the Circus Maximus at 8.4 kilometers, which would be about
-5.2 miles, but he seems to have taken the whole length of the arena
-into account, instead of that merely of the _spīna_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 141. THE CARCERES]
-
-§333. The Barriers.--The _carcerēs_ were the stations of the chariots
-and teams when ready for the races to begin. They were a series of
-vaulted chambers entirely separated from each other by solid walls,
-and closed behind by doors through which the chariots entered. The
-front of the chamber was formed by double doors, with the upper part
-made of grated bars, admitting the only light which it received. From
-this arrangement the name _carcer_ was derived. Each chamber was large
-enough to hold a chariot with its team, and as a team was composed
-sometimes of as many as seven horses the "prison" must have been
-nearly square. There was always a separate chamber for each chariot.
-Up to the time of Domitian the highest number of chariots was eight,
-but after his time as many as twelve sometimes entered the same race,
-and twelve _carcerēs_ had, therefore, to be provided, although four
-chariots was the usual number. Half of these chambers lay to the
-right, half to the left of the _porta pompae_. The appearance of a
-section of the _carcerēs_ is shown in Fig. 141.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 142. BOX OF THE DATOR LUDORUM]
-
-§334. It will be noticed from the plan (§330) that the _carcerēs_ were
-arranged in a curved line. This is supposed to have been drawn in such
-a way that every chariot, no matter which of the _carcerēs_ it
-happened to occupy, would have the same distance to travel in order to
-reach the beginning of the course proper at the nearer end of the
-_spīna_. There was no advantage in position, therefore, at the start,
-and places were assigned by lot. In later times a starting line
-(_līnea alba_) was drawn with chalk between the second _mēta_ and the
-seats to the right, but the line of _carcerēs_ remained curved as of
-old. At the ends of the row of chambers, towers were built which seem
-to have been the stands for the musicians; over the _porta pompae_ was
-the box of the chief official of the games (_dator lūdōrum_), and
-between his box and the towers were seats for his friends and persons
-connected with the games. In Fig. 142 is shown a victor pausing before
-the box of the _dator_ to receive a prize before riding in triumph
-around the arena.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 143.]
-
-§335. The Spina and Metae.--The _spīna_ divided the race course into
-two parts, making a minimum distance to be run. Its length was about
-two-thirds that of the arena, but it started only the width of the
-track from the _porta triumphālis_, leaving entirely free a much
-larger space at the end near the _porta pompae_. It was perfectly
-straight, but did not run precisely parallel to the rows of seats; at
-the end B in the exaggerated diagram (Fig. 143) the distance BC is
-somewhat greater than the distance AB, in order to allow more room at
-the starting line (_līnea alba_, §334), where the chariots would be
-side by side, than further along the course, where they would be
-strung out. The _mētae_, so named from their shape (§284), were
-pillars erected at the two ends of the _spīna_ and architecturally a
-part of it, though there may have been a space between. In Republican
-times the _spīna_ and the _mētae_ must have been made of wood and
-movable, in order to give free space for the shows of wild beasts and
-the exhibitions of cavalry that were originally given in the circus.
-After the amphitheater was devised the circus came to be used for
-races exclusively and the _spīna_ became permanent. It was built up,
-of most massive proportions, on foundations of indestructible concrete
-(§210 f.) and was adorned with magnificent works of art that must have
-entirely concealed horses and chariots when they passed to the other
-side of the arena.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 144. BOARD-GAME SHOWING SPINA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 145. OBELISK ONCE IN CIRCUS MAXIMUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 146. A CANAL AS SPINA]
-
-§336. A representation of a circus has been preserved to us in a
-board-game of some sort found at Bovillae (§329), which gives an
-excellent idea of the _spīna_, (Fig. 144). We know from various
-reliefs and mosaics that the _spīna_ of the Circus Maximus was covered
-with a series of statues and ornamental structures, such as obelisks,
-small temples or shrines, columns surmounted by statues, altars,
-trophies, and fountains. Augustus was the first to erect an obelisk in
-the Circus Maximus; it was restored in 1589 A.D., and now stands in
-the Piazza del Popolo, measuring without the base about 78 feet in
-height. Constantius erected another (Fig. 145) in the same circus,
-which now stands before the Lateran church, measuring 105 feet. The
-obelisk of the Circus of Maxentius now stands in the Piazza Navona.
-Besides these purely ornamental features, every circus had at each end
-of its _spīna_ a pedestal supporting seven large eggs (_ōva_) of
-marble, one of which was taken down at the end of each lap, in order
-that the people might know just how many remained to be run. Another
-and very different idea for the _spīna_ is shown in Fig. 146 from a
-mosaic at Lyons. This is a canal filled with water, with an obelisk in
-the middle. The _mētae_ in their developed form are shown very clearly
-in this mosaic, three conical pillars of stone set on a semicircular
-plinth, all of the most massive construction.
-
-§337. The Seats.--The seats around the arena in the Circus Maximus
-were originally of wood, but accidents owing to decay and losses by
-fire had led by the time of the Empire to reconstruction in marble
-except perhaps in the very highest rows. The seats in the other
-circuses seem to have been from the first of stone. At the foot of the
-tiers of seats was a marble platform (_podium_) which ran along both
-sides and the curved end, coextensive therefore with them. On this
-_podium_ were erected boxes for the use of the more important
-magistrates and officials of Rome, and here Augustus placed the seats
-of the senators and others of high rank. He also assigned seats
-throughout the whole _cavea_ to various classes and organizations,
-separating the women from the men, though up to his time they had sat
-together. Between the _podium_ and the track was a screen of open
-work, and when Caesar showed wild beasts in the circus he had a canal
-ten feet wide and ten feet deep dug next the _podium_ and filled with
-water as an additional protection. Access to the seats was given from
-the rear, numerous broad stairways running up to the _praecīnctiōnēs_
-(§327), of which there were probably three in the Circus Maximus. The
-horizontal spaces between the _praecīnctiōnēs_ were called _maeniāna_,
-and each of these was in turn divided by stairways into _cuneī_
-(§327), and the rows of seats in the _cuneī_ were called _gradūs_. The
-sittings in the row do not seem to have been marked off any more than
-they are now in the "bleachers" at our baseball grounds. When sittings
-were reserved for a number of persons they were described as so many
-feet in such a row (_gradus_) of such a section (_cuneus_) of such a
-circle (_maeniānum_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 147. RESTORATION OF THE CIRCUS MAXIMUS]
-
-§338. The number of sittings testifies to the popularity of the races.
-The little circus at Bovillae had seats for at least 8,000 people,
-according to Hülsen, that of Maxentius for about 23,000, while the
-Circus Maximus, accommodating 60,000 in the time of Augustus, was
-enlarged to a capacity of nearly 200,000 in the time of Constantius.
-The seats themselves were supported upon arches of massive masonry; an
-idea of their appearance from the outside may be had from the exterior
-view of the Coliseum in §356. Every third of these vaulted chambers
-under the seats seems to have been used for a staircase, the others
-for shops and booths and in the upper parts for rooms for the employés
-of the circus, who must have been very numerous. Galleries seem to
-have crowned the seats, as in the theaters (§327), and balconies for
-the emperors were built in conspicuous places, the ruins not enabling
-their positions to be fixed precisely. An idea of the appearance of
-the seats from within the arena may be had from an attempted
-reconstruction of the Circus Maximus (Fig. 147), the details of which
-are quite uncertain.
-
-§339. Furnishing the Races.--There must have been a time, of course,
-when the races in the circus were open to all who wished to show their
-horses or their skill in driving them, but by the end of the Republic
-no persons of repute took part in the games, and the teams and drivers
-were furnished by racing syndicates (_factiōnēs_), who practically
-controlled the market so far as concerned trained horses and trained
-men. With these syndicates the giver of the games contracted for the
-number of races that he wanted (ten or twelve a day in Caesar's time,
-later twice the number, and even more on special occasions), and they
-furnished everything needed. These syndicates were named from the
-colors worn by their drivers. We hear at first of two only, the red
-(_russāta_) and the white (_albāta_); two more were added, the blue
-(_veneta_) in the time of Augustus probably, and the green (_prasina_)
-soon after, and finally Domitian added the purple and the gold. The
-greatest rivalry existed between these organizations. They spent
-immense sums of money on their horses, importing them from Greece,
-Spain, and Mauritania, and even larger sums, perhaps, upon the
-drivers. They maintained training stables on as large a scale as any
-of which modern times can boast; a mosaic found in one of these
-establishments in Algeria names among the attendants jockeys, grooms,
-stable-boys, saddlers, doctors, trainers, coaches, and messengers, and
-shows the horses covered with blankets in their stalls. This rivalry
-spread throughout the city; each _factiō_ had its partisans, and vast
-sums of money were lost and won as each _missus_ was finished. All the
-tricks of the ring were skillfully practiced; horses were hocused,
-drivers hired from rival syndicates or bribed, and even poisoned, we
-are told, when they were proof against money.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 148. RACING CHARIOT AND TEAM]
-
-§340. The Teams.--The chariot used in the races was low and light,
-closed in front, open behind, with long axles and low wheels to lessen
-the risk of turning over. The driver seems to have stood well forward
-in the car, there being no standing place behind the axle, as shown in
-the cut (Fig. 148). The teams consisted of two horses (_bīgae_), three
-(_trīgae_), four (_quadrīgae_), and in later times six (_sēiugēs_) or
-even seven (_septeiugēs_), but the four-horse team was the most common
-and may be taken as the type. Two of the horses were yoked together,
-one on each side of the tongue, the others were attached to the car
-merely by traces. Of the four the horse to the extreme left was the
-most important, because the _mēta_ lay always on the left and the
-highest skill of the driver was shown in turning it as closely as
-possible. The failure of the horse nearest it to respond promptly to
-the rein or the word might mean the wreck of the car (by going too
-close) or the loss of the inside track (by going too wide), and in
-either case the loss of the race. Inscriptions sometimes give the
-names of all the horses of the team, sometimes only the horse on the
-left is mentioned. Before the races began lists of the horses and
-drivers in each were published for the guidance of those who wished to
-stake their money, and while no time was kept the records of horses
-and men were followed as eagerly as now. From the nature of the course
-(§332) it is evident that strength and courage and above all lasting
-qualities were as essential as speed. The horses were almost always
-stallions (mares are very rarely mentioned), and were never raced
-under five years of age. Considering the length of the course and the
-great risk of accidents it is surprising how long the horses lasted.
-It was not unusual for a horse to win a hundred races (such a horse
-was called _centēnārius_), and one Diocles, himself a famous driver,
-owned a horse that had won two hundred (_ducēnārius_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 149. DRESS OF AN AURIGA]
-
-§341. The Drivers.--The drivers (_agitātōrēs_, _aurīgae_) were slaves
-or freedmen, some of whom had won their freedom by their skill and
-daring in the course. Only in the most corrupt days of the Empire did
-citizens of any social position take actual part in the races. The
-dress of the driver is shown in Fig. 149; especially to be noticed are
-the close fitting cap, the short tunic (always of the color of his
-_factiō_), laced around the body with leathern thongs, the straps of
-leather around the thighs, the shoulder pads, and the heavy leather
-protectors for the legs. Our football players wear like defensive
-armor. The reins were knotted together and passed around the driver's
-body. In his belt he carried a knife to cut the reins in case he
-should be thrown from the car, or to cut the traces if a horse should
-fall and become entangled in them. The races gave as many
-opportunities then as now for skillful driving, and required even more
-of strength and daring. What we should call "fouling" was encouraged.
-The driver might turn his team against another, might upset the car of
-a rival if he could; having gained the inside track he might drive out
-of the straight course to keep a swifter team from passing his. The
-rewards were proportionately great. The successful _aurīga_, despised
-though his station, was the pet and pride of the race-mad crowd, and
-under the Empire at least he was courted and fêted by high and low.
-The pay of successful drivers was extravagant, the rival syndicates
-bidding against each other for the services of the most popular. Rich
-presents, too, were given them when they won their races, not only by
-their _factiōnēs_, but also by outsiders who had backed them and
-profited by their skill.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 150. INSCRIPTION IN HONOR OF CRESCENS]
-
-§342. Famous Aurigae.--The names of some of these victors have come
-down to us in inscriptions (§10) erected in their honor or to their
-memory by their friends. Among these may be mentioned Publius Aelius
-Gutta Calpurnianus (§58) of the late Empire (1,127 victories), Caius
-Apuleius Diocles, a Spaniard (in twenty-four years 4,257 races, l,462
-victories, winning the sum of 35,863,120 sesterces, about $1,800,000),
-Flavius Scorpus (2,048 victories at the age of twenty-seven), Marcus
-Aurelius Liber (3,000 victories), Pompeius Muscosus (3,559 victories).
-To these may be added Crescens, an inscription[3] in honor of whom was
-found at Rome in 1878 and is shown in Fig. 150.
-
-[Footnote 3: "Crescens, a driver of the blue syndicate, of the Moorish
-nation, twenty-two years of age. He won his first victory as a driver
-of a four-horse chariot in the consulship of Lucius Vipstanius
-Messalla on the birthday of the deified Nerva in the twenty-fourth
-race with these horses: Circius, Acceptor, Delicatus, and Cotynus.
-From Messalla's consulship to the birthday of the deified Claudius in
-the consulship of Glabrio he was sent from the barriers six hundred
-and eighty-six times and was victorious forty-seven times. In races
-between chariots with one from each syndicate he won nineteen times,
-with two from each twenty-three times, with three from each five
-times. He held back purposely once, took first place at the start
-eight times, took it from others thirty-eight times. He won second
-place one hundred and thirty times, third place one hundred and eleven
-times. His winnings amounted to 1,558,346 sesterces (about $78,000)."]
-
-§343. Other Shows of the Circus.--The circus was used less frequently
-for other exhibitions than chariot races. Of these may be mentioned
-the performances of the _dēsultōrēs_, men who rode two horses and
-leaped from one to the other while going at full speed, and of trained
-horses who performed various tricks while standing on a sort of
-wheeled platform which gave a very unstable footing. There were also
-exhibitions of horsemanship by citizens of good standing, riding under
-leaders in squadrons, to show the evolutions of the cavalry. The
-_lūdus Trōiae_ was also performed by young men of the nobility, a game
-that Vergil has described in the Fifth Aeneid. More to the taste of
-the crowd were the hunts (_vēnātiōnēs_), when wild beasts were turned
-loose in the circus to slaughter each other or be slaughtered by men
-trained for the purpose. We read of panthers, bears, bulls, lions,
-elephants, hippopotami, and even crocodiles (in artificial lakes made
-in the arena) exhibited during the Republic. In the circus, too,
-combats of gladiators sometimes took place, but these were more
-frequently in the amphitheater. One of the most brilliant spectacles
-must have been the procession (_pompa circēnsis_) which formally
-opened some of the public games. It started from the capitol and wound
-its way down to the Circus Maximus, entering by the _porta pompae_
-(named from it, §330), and passed entirely around the arena. At the
-head in a car rode the presiding magistrate, wearing the garb of a
-triumphant general and attended by a slave who held a wreath of gold
-over his head. Next came a crowd of notables on horseback and on foot,
-then the chariots and horsemen who were to take part in the games.
-Then followed priests, arranged by their colleges, and bearers of
-incense and of the instruments used in sacrifices, and statues of
-deities on low cars drawn by mules, horses, or elephants, or else
-carried on litters (_fercula_) on the shoulders of men. Bands of
-musicians headed each division of the procession, a feeble
-reminiscence of which is seen in the parade through the streets that
-precedes the performance of the modern circus.
-
-§344. Gladiatorial Combats.--Gladiatorial combats seem to have been
-known in Italy long before the founding of Rome. We hear of them first
-in Campania and Etruria. In Campania the wealthy and dissolute nobles,
-we are told, made slaves fight to the death at their banquets and
-revels for the entertainment of their guests. In Etruria the combats
-go back in all probability to the offering of human sacrifices at the
-burial of distinguished men in accordance with the ancient belief that
-blood is acceptable to the dead. The victims were captives taken in
-war, and it became the custom gradually to give them a chance for
-their lives by supplying them with weapons and allowing them to fight
-each other at the grave, the victor being spared at least for the
-time. The Romans were slow to adopt the custom, the first exhibition
-being given in the year 264 B.C., almost five centuries after the
-founding of the city. That they derived it from Etruria rather than
-Campania is shown by the fact that the exhibitions were at funeral
-games, the earliest at those of Brutus Pera in 264 B.C., Marcus
-Aemilius Lepidus in 216 B.C., Marcus Valerius Lavinus in 200 B.C., and
-Publius Licinius in 183 B.C.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 151. A "SAMNITE"]
-
-§345. For the first one hundred years after their introduction the
-exhibitions were infrequent as the dates just given show, those
-mentioned being all of which we have any knowledge during the period,
-but after this time they were given more and more frequently and
-always on a larger scale. During the Republic, however, they remained
-in theory at least private games (_mūnera_), not public games
-(_lūdī_); that is, they were not celebrated on fixed days recurring
-annually, and the givers of the exhibitions had to find a pretext for
-them in the death of relatives or friends, and to defray the expenses
-from their own pockets. In fact we know of but one instance in which
-actual magistrates (the consuls Publius and Manlius, 105 B.C.) gave
-such exhibitions, and we know too little of the attendant
-circumstances to warrant us in assuming that they acted in their
-official capacity. Even under the Empire the gladiators did not fight
-on the days of the regular public games. Augustus, however, provided
-funds for "extraordinary shows" under the direction of the praetors.
-Under Domitian the aediles-elect were put in charge of these
-exhibitions which were given regularly in December, the only instance
-known of fixed dates for the _mūnera gladiātōria_. All others of which
-we read are to be considered the freewill offerings to the people of
-emperors, magistrates, or private citizens.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 152. WEAPONS OF GLADIATORS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 153. WOUNDED GLADIATOR]
-
-§346. Popularity of the Combats.--The Romans' love of excitement
-(§316) made the exhibitions immediately and immensely popular. At the
-first exhibition mentioned above, that in honor of Brutus Pera, three
-pairs of gladiators only were shown, but in the three that followed
-the number of pairs rose in order to twenty-two, twenty-five, and
-sixty. By the time of Sulla politicians had found in the _mūnera_ the
-most effective means to win the favor of the people, and vied with one
-another in the frequency of the shows and the number of the
-combatants. Besides this, the same politicians made these shows a
-pretext for surrounding themselves with bands of bravos and bullies,
-all called gladiators whether destined for the arena or not, with
-which they started riots in the streets, broke up public meetings,
-overawed the courts and even directed or prevented the elections.
-Caesar's preparations for an exhibition when he was canvassing for the
-aedileship (65 B.C.) caused such general fear that the senate passed a
-law limiting the number of gladiators that a private citizen might
-employ, and he was allowed to exhibit only 320 pairs. The bands of
-Clodius and Milo made the city a slaughterhouse in 53 B.C., and order
-was not restored until late in the following year when Pompey as "sole
-consul" put an end to the battle of the bludgeons with the swords of
-his soldiers. During the Empire the number actually exhibited almost
-surpasses belief. Augustus gave eight _mūnera_, in which no less than
-ten thousand men fought, but these were distributed through the whole
-period of his reign. Trajan exhibited as many in four months only of
-the year 107 A.D., in celebration of his conquest of the Dacians. The
-first Gordian, emperor in 238 A.D., gave _mūnera_ monthly in the year
-of his aedileship, the number of pairs running from 150 to 500. These
-exhibitions did not cease until the fifteenth century of our era.
-
-§347. Sources of Supply.--In the early Republic the gladiators were
-captives taken in war, naturally men practiced in the use of weapons
-(§161), who thought death by the sword a happier fate than the slavery
-that awaited them (§140). This always remained the chief source of
-supply, though it became inadequate as the demand increased. From the
-time of Sulla training-schools were established in which slaves with
-or without previous experience in war were fitted for the profession.
-These were naturally slaves of the most intractable and desperate
-character (§170). From the time of Augustus criminals were sentenced
-to the arena (later "to the lions"), but only non-citizens, and these
-for the most heinous crimes, treason, murder, arson, and the like.
-Finally in the late Empire the arena became the last desperate resort
-of the dissipated and prodigal, and these volunteers were numerous
-enough to be given as a class the name _auctōrātī_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 154. HELMETS OF GLADIATORS]
-
-§348. As the number of the exhibitions increased it became harder and
-harder to supply the gladiators demanded, for it must be remembered
-that there were exhibitions in many of the cities of the provinces and
-in the smaller towns of Italy as well as at Rome. The lines were,
-therefore, constantly crossed, and thousands died miserably in the
-arena whom only the most glaring injustice could number in the classes
-mentioned above. In Cicero's time provincial governors were accused of
-sending unoffending provincials to be slaughtered in Rome and of
-forcing Roman citizens, obscure and friendless, of course, to fight in
-the provincial shows. Later it was common enough to send to the arena
-men sentenced for the pettiest offenses, when the supply of real
-criminals had run short, and to trump up charges against the innocent
-for the same purpose. The persecution of the Christians was largely
-due to the demand for more gladiators. So, too, the distinction was
-lost between actual prisoners of war and peaceful non-combatants;
-after the fall of Jerusalem all Jews over seventeen years of age were
-condemned by Titus to work in the mines or fight in the arena. Wars on
-the border were waged for the sole purpose of taking men who could be
-made gladiators, and in default of men, children and women were
-sometimes made to fight.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 155. SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS AT POMPEII]
-
-§349. Schools for Gladiators.--The training-schools for gladiators
-(_lūdī gladiātōriī_) have been mentioned already. Cicero during his
-consulship speaks of one at Rome, and there were others before his
-time at Capua and Praeneste. Some of these were set up by wealthy
-nobles for the purpose of preparing their own gladiators for _mūnera_
-which they expected to give; others were the property of regular
-dealers in gladiators, who kept and trained them for hire. The
-business was almost as disreputable as that of the _lēnōnēs_ (§139).
-During the Empire training-schools were maintained at public expense
-and under the direction of state officials not only in Rome, where
-there were four at least of these schools, but also in other cities of
-Italy where exhibitions were frequently given, and even in the
-provinces. The purpose of all the schools, public and private alike,
-was the same, to make the men trained in them as effective fighting
-machines as possible. The gladiators were in charge of competent
-training masters (_lanistae_); they were subject to the strictest
-discipline; their diet was carefully looked after, a special food
-(_sagīna gladiātōria_) being provided for them; regular gymnastic
-exercises were prescribed, and lessons given in the use of the various
-weapons by recognized experts (_magistrī_, _doctōrēs_). In their
-fencing bouts wooden swords (_rudēs_) were used. The gladiators
-associated in a school were collectively called a _familia_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 156. PLAN OF SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS]
-
-§350. These schools had also to serve as barracks for the gladiators
-between engagements, that is, practically as houses of detention. It
-was from the school of Lentulus at Capua that Spartacus had escaped,
-and the Romans needed no second lesson of the sort. The general
-arrangement of these barracks may be understood from the ruins of one
-uncovered at Pompeii, though in this case the buildings had been
-originally planned for another purpose, and the rearrangement may not
-be ideal in all respects. A central court, or exercise ground (Figs.
-155, 156) is surrounded by a wide colonnade, and this in turn by rows
-of buildings two stories in height, the general arrangement being not
-unlike that of the peristyle of a house (§202). The dimensions of the
-court are nearly 120 by 150 feet. The buildings are cut up into rooms,
-nearly all small (about twelve feet square), disconnected and opening
-upon the court, those in the first story being reached from the
-colonnade, those in the second from a gallery to which ran several
-stairways. These small rooms are supposed to be the sleeping-rooms of
-the gladiators, each accommodating two persons. There are seventy-one
-of them (marked _7_ on the plan), affording room for 142 men. The uses
-of the larger rooms are purely conjectural. The entrance is supposed
-to have been at _3_, with a room, _15_, for the watchman or sentinel.
-At _9_ was an _exedra_, where the gladiators may have waited in full
-panoply for their turns in the exercise ground, _1_. The guard-room,
-_8_, is identified by the remains of stocks, in which the refractory
-were fastened for punishment or safe-keeping. They permitted the
-culprits to lie on their backs or sit in a very uncomfortable
-position. At _6_ was the armory or property room, if we may judge from
-articles found in it. Near it in the corner was a staircase leading to
-the gallery before the rooms of the second story. The large room,
-_16_, was the mess-room, with the kitchen, _12_, opening into it. The
-stairway, _13_, gives access to the rooms above kitchen and mess-room,
-possibly the apartments of the trainers and their helpers.
-
-§351. Places of Exhibition.--During the Republic the combats of
-gladiators took place sometimes at the grave or in the circus, but
-regularly in the forum. None of these places was well adapted to the
-purpose, the grave the least of all. The circus had seats enough, but
-the _spīna_ was in the way (§335) and the arena too vast to give all
-the spectators a satisfactory view of a struggle that was confined
-practically to a single spot. In the forum, on the other hand, the
-seats could be arranged very conveniently; they would run parallel
-with the sides, would be curved around the corners, and would inclose
-only sufficient space to afford room for the combatants. The
-inconvenience here was due to the fact that the seats had to be
-erected before each performance and removed after it, a delay to
-business if they were constructed carefully and a menace to life if
-they were put up hastily. These considerations finally led the Romans,
-as they had led the Campanians half a century before, to provide
-permanent seats for the _mūnera_, arranged as they had been in the
-forum, but in a place where they would not interfere with public or
-private business. To these places for shows of gladiators came in the
-course of time to be exclusively applied the word _amphitheātrum_,
-which had been previously given in its correct general sense to any
-place, the circus for example, in which the seats ran all the way
-around, as opposed to the theater in which the rows of seats were
-broken by the stage.
-
-§352. Amphitheaters at Rome.--Just when the first amphitheaters, in
-the special sense of the word, were erected at Rome can not be
-determined with certainty. The elder Pliny (†79 A.D.) tells us that in
-the year 55 B.C. Caius Scribonius Curio built two wooden theaters back
-to back, the stages being, therefore, at opposite ends, and gave in
-them simultaneous theatrical performances in the morning. Then, while
-the spectators remained in their seats, the two theaters were turned
-by machinery and brought together face to face, the stages were
-removed, and in the space they had occupied shows of gladiators were
-given in the afternoon before the united crowds. This story is all too
-evidently invented to account for the perfected amphitheater of
-Pliny's time, which he must have interpreted to mean "a double
-theater." We are also told that Caesar erected a wooden amphitheater
-in 46 B.C., but we have no detailed description of it, and no reason
-to think that it was anything more than a temporary affair. In the
-year 29 B.C., however, an amphitheater was built by Statilius Taurus,
-partially at least of stone, that lasted until the great conflagration
-in the reign of Nero (64 A.D.). Nero himself had previously erected
-one of wood in the Campus. Finally, just before the end of the first
-century of our era, was completed the _amphitheātrum Flāvium_, later
-known as the _colossēum_ or _colisēum_, which was large enough and
-durable enough to make forever unnecessary the erection of other
-similar structures in the city.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 157. EXTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 158. INTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 159. SECTION OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-§353. The Amphitheater at Pompeii.--The essential features of an
-amphitheater may be most easily understood from the ruins of the one
-at Pompeii, erected about 75 B.C., almost half a century before the
-first permanent structure of the sort at Rome (§352), and the earliest
-known to us from either literary or monumental sources. The exterior
-is shown in Fig. 157 (see also Overbeck, pp. 176-180; Mau-Kelsey, pp.
-206-212) and a section in Fig. 159. It will be seen at once that the
-arena and most of the seats lie in a great hollow excavated for the
-purpose, thus making sufficient for the exterior a low wall of hardly
-more than ten to thirteen feet in height. Even this wall was necessary
-on only two sides, as the amphitheater was built in the southeast
-corner of the city and its south and east sides were bounded by the
-city walls. The shape is elliptical, the major axis being 444 feet,
-the minor 342. The arena occupies the middle space. It was encircled
-by thirty-five rows of seats arranged in three divisions, the lowest
-(_īnfima_ or _īma cavea_) having five rows, the second (_media cavea_)
-twelve, and the highest (_summa cavea_) eighteen. A broad terrace ran
-around the amphitheater at the height of the topmost row of seats.
-Access to this terrace was given from without by the double stairway
-on the west, shown in Fig. 157, and by single stairways next the city
-walls on the east and south (_10_ in Fig. 160). Between the terrace
-and the top seats was a gallery, or row of boxes, each about four feet
-square, probably for women. Beneath the boxes persons could pass from
-the terrace to the seats. The amphitheater had seating capacity for
-about 20,000 people.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 160. PLAN OF ARENA IN AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-§354. The arena is shown in Fig. 158, its plan in Fig. 160. It was an
-ellipse with axes of 228 and 121 feet. Around it ran a wall a little
-more than six feet high, on a level with the top of which were the
-lowest seats. For the protection of the spectators when wild animals
-were shown, a grating of iron bars was put up on the top of the arena
-wall. Access to the arena and to the seats of the _cavea īma_ and the
-_cavea media_ was given by the two underground passageways, _1_ and
-_2_ in Fig. 160, of which _2_ turns at right angles on account of the
-city wall on the south. From the arena ran also a third passage, _5_,
-low and narrow, leading to the _porta Libitinēnsis_, through which the
-bodies of the dead were dragged with ropes and hooks. Near the mouths
-of these passages were small chambers or dens, marked _4_, _4_, _6_,
-the purposes of which are not known. The floor of the arena was
-covered with sand, as in the circus (§332), but in this case to soak
-up the blood as well as to give a firm footing to the gladiators.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 161. BISELLIUM]
-
-§355. Of the part of this amphitheater set aside for the spectators
-the _cavea īma_ only was supported upon artificial foundations. All
-the other seats were constructed in sections as means were obtained
-for the purpose, the people in the meantime finding places for
-themselves on the sloping banks as in the early theaters (§325). The
-_cavea īma_ was strictly not supplied with seats all the way around, a
-considerable section on the east and west sides being arranged with
-four low, broad ledges of stone, rising one above the other, on which
-the members of the city council could place the seats of honor
-(_bisellia_, Fig. 161) to which their rank entitled them. In the
-middle of the section on the east the lowest ledge is made of double
-width for some ten feet; this was the place set apart for the giver of
-the games and his friends. In the _cavea media_ and the _cavea summa_
-the seats were of stone resting on the bank of earth. It is probable
-that all the places in the lowest section were reserved for people of
-distinction, that seats in the middle section were sold to the
-well-to-do, and that admission was free to the less desirable seats of
-the highest section.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 162. EXTERIOR OF THE COLISEUM]
-
-§356. The Coliseum.--The Flavian amphitheater (§352) is the best known
-of all the buildings of ancient Rome, because to a larger extent than
-others it has survived to the present day. For our purpose it is not
-necessary to give its history or to describe its architecture; it will
-be sufficient to compare its essential parts with those of its modest
-prototype in Pompeii. The latter was built in the outskirts of the
-city, in a corner in fact of the city walls (§353); the coliseum lay
-almost in the center of Rome, the most generally accessible of all the
-public buildings. The interior of the Pompeian structure was reached
-through two passages and by three stairways only, while eighty
-numbered entrances made it easy for the Roman multitudes to find their
-appropriate places in the coliseum. Much of the earlier amphitheater
-was underground; all of the corresponding parts of the coliseum were
-above the level of the street, the walls rising to a height of nearly
-160 feet. This gave opportunity for the same architectural
-magnificence that had distinguished the Roman theater from that of the
-Greeks (§326). The general effect is shown in Fig. 162, an exterior
-view of the ruins as they exist to-day.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 163. INTERIOR OF COLISEUM]
-
-§357. The interior is shown in Fig. 163. The form is an ellipse with
-axes of 620 and 513 feet, the building covering nearly six acres of
-ground. The arena is also an ellipse, its axes measuring 287 and 180
-feet. The width of the space appropriated for the spectators is,
-therefore, 166½ feet all around the arena. It will be noticed, too,
-that subterranean chambers were constructed under the whole building,
-including the arena. These furnished room for the regiments of
-gladiators, the dens of wild beasts, the machinery for the
-transformation scenes that Gibbon has described in his twelfth
-chapter, and above all for the vast number of water and drainage pipes
-that made it possible to turn the arena into a lake at a moment's
-notice and as quickly to get rid of the water. The wall that
-surrounded the arena was fifteen feet high with the side faced with
-rollers and defended like the one at Pompeii with a grating or network
-of metal above it. The top of the wall was level with the floor of the
-lowest range of seats, called the _podium_ as in the circus (§337),
-and this had room for two or at the most three rows of marble thrones.
-These were for the use of the emperor and the imperial family, the
-giver of the games, the magistrates, senators, Vestal virgins,
-ambassadors of foreign states, and other persons of consequence.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 164. SECTION OF COLISEUM]
-
-§358. The arrangement of the seats with the method of reaching them is
-shown in the sectional plan, Fig. 164. The seats were arranged in
-three tiers (_maeniāna_, §337) one above the other, separated by broad
-passageways and rising more steeply the farther they were from the
-arena, and were crowned by an open gallery. In the plan the _podium_
-is marked A. Twelve feet above it begins the first _maeniānum_, B,
-with fourteen rows of seats reserved for members of the equestrian
-order. Then came a broad _praecīnctiō_ (§327) and after it the second
-_maeniānum_, C, intended for ordinary citizens. Back of this was a
-wall of considerable height and above it the third _maeniānum_, D,
-supplied with rough wooden benches for the lowest classes, foreigners,
-slaves, and the like. The row of pillars along the front of this
-section made the distant view all the worse. Above this was an open
-gallery, E, in which women found an unwelcome place. No other seats
-were open to them unless they were of sufficient distinction to claim
-a place upon the _podium_. At the very top of the outside wall was a
-terrace, F, in which were fixed masts to support the awnings that gave
-protection against the sun. The seating capacity of the coliseum is
-said to have been 80,000, and it had standing room for 20,000 more.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 165. RETIARIUS AND SECUTOR]
-
-§359. Styles of Fighting.--Gladiators fought usually in pairs, man
-against man, but sometimes in masses (_gregātim_, _catervātim_). In
-early times they were actually soldiers, captives taken in war (§347),
-and fought naturally with the weapons and equipment to which they were
-accustomed. When the professionally trained gladiators came in, they
-were given the old names, and were called Samnites, Thracians, etc.,
-according to their arms and tactics. In much later times victories
-over distant peoples were celebrated with combats in which the weapons
-and methods of war of the conquered were shown to the people of Rome;
-thus, after the conquest of Britain _essedāriī_ exhibited in the arena
-the tactics of chariot fighting which Caesar had described generations
-before in his Commentaries. It was natural enough, too, for the people
-to want to see different arms and different tactics tried against each
-other, and so the Samnite was matched against the Thracian, the heavy
-armed against the light armed. This became under the Empire the
-favorite style of combat. Finally when people had tired of the regular
-shows, novelties were introduced that seem to us grotesque; men fought
-blindfold (_andabatae_), armed with two swords (_dimachaerī_), with
-the lasso (_laqueatōrēs_), with a heavy net (_rētiāriī_), and there
-were battles of dwarfs and of dwarfs with women. Of these the
-_rētiārius_ became immensely popular. He carried a huge net in which
-he tried to entangle his opponent, always a _secūtor_ (see below),
-despatching him with a dagger if the throw was successful. If
-unsuccessful he took to flight while preparing his net for another
-throw, of if he had lost his net tried to keep his opponent off with a
-heavy three-pronged spear (_fuscina_), his only weapon beside the
-dagger (Fig. 165).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 166. THRAEX]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 167. VOTIVE GALERUS]
-
-§360. Weapons and Armor.--The armor and weapons used in these combats
-are known from pieces found in various places, some of which are shown
-in Fig. 152, §345, and from paintings and sculpture, but we are not
-always able to assign them to definite classes of gladiators. The
-oldest class was that of the Samnites (Fig. 151, §344). They had
-belts, thick sleeves on the right arm (_manica_), helmets with visors,
-shown in Fig. 154, §348, greaves on the left leg, short swords, and
-the long shield (_scūtum_). Under the Empire the name Samnite was
-gradually lost and gladiators with equivalent equipment were called
-_hoplomachī_ (heavy armed), when matched against the lighter armed
-Thracians, and _secūtōrēs_, when they fought with the _rētiāriī_. The
-Thracians (Fig. 166) had much the same equipment as the Samnites, the
-mark of distinction being the small shield (_parma_) in place of the
-_scūtum_ and, to make up the difference, greaves on both legs. They
-carried a curved sword. The Gauls were heavy armed, but we do not know
-how they were distinguished from the Samnites. In later times they
-were called _murmillōnēs_, from an ornament on their helmets shaped
-like a fish (_mormyr_). The rētiāriī had no defensive armor except a
-leather protection for the shoulder, shown in Fig. 165. Of course the
-same man might appear by turns as Samnite, Thracian, etc., if he was
-skilled in the use of the various weapons; see the inscription in
-§363.
-
-§361. Announcement of the Shows.--The games were advertised in advance
-by means of notices painted on the walls of public and private houses,
-and even on the tombstones that lined the approaches to the towns and
-cities. Some are worded in very general terms, announcing merely the
-name of the giver of the games with the date:
-
- A • SVETTI • CERTI
- AEDILIS • FAMILIA • GLADIATORIA • PUGNAB • POMPEIS
- PR • K • JVNIAS • VENATIO • ET • VELA • ERUNT[4]
-
-[Footnote 4: "On the last day of May the gladiators of the Aedile
-Aulus Suettius Certus will fight at Pompeii. There will also be a hunt
-and the awnings will be used."]
-
-Others promise in addition to the awnings that the dust will be kept
-down in the arena by sprinkling. Sometimes when the troop was
-particularly good the names of the gladiators were announced in pairs
-as they would be matched together, with details as to their equipment,
-the school in which each had been trained, the number of his previous
-battles, etc. To such a notice on one of the walls in Pompeii some one
-added after the show the result of each combat. The following is a
-specimen only of this announcement:
-
- MVNUS • N... • IV • III
- PRID • IDUS • IDIBUS • MAIS
- T M O T
- _v._ PUGNAX • NER • III _v._ CYCNVS • IVL • VIII
- _p._ MVRRANVS • NER • III _m._ ATTICVS • IVL • XIV[5]
-
-[Footnote 5: "The games of N... from the 12th to the 15th of May. The
-Thracian Pugnax, of the gladiatorial school of Nero, who has fought
-three times will be matched against the _murmillō_ Murranus, of the
-same school and the same number of fights. The _hoplomachus_ Cycnus,
-from the school of Julius Caesar, who has fought eight times will be
-matched with the Thracian Atticus of the same school and of fourteen
-fights."]
-
-The letters in italics before the names of the gladiators were added
-after the exhibition by some interested spectator, and stand for
-_vīcit_, _periit_, and _missus_ ("beaten, but spared"). Other
-announcements added to such particulars as those given above the
-statement that other pairs than those mentioned would fight each day,
-this being meant to excite the curiosity and interest of the people.
-
-§362. The Fight Itself.--The day before the exhibition a banquet
-(_cēna lībera_) was given to the gladiators and they received visits
-from their friends and admirers. The games took place in the
-afternoon. After the _ēditor mūneris_ had taken his place (§355), the
-gladiators marched in procession around the arena, pausing before him
-to give the famous greeting: _moritūrī tē salūtant_. All then retired
-from the arena to return in pairs according to the published
-programme. The show began with a series of sham combats, the
-_prōlūsiō_, with blunt weapons. When the people had had enough of this
-the trumpets gave the signal for the real exhibition to begin. Those
-reluctant to fight were driven into the arena with whips or hot iron
-bars. If one of the combatants was clearly overpowered without being
-actually killed, he might appeal for mercy by holding up his finger to
-the _ēditor_. It was customary to refer the plea to the people, who
-waved cloths or napkins to show that they wished it to be granted, or
-pointed their thumbs downward as a signal for death. The gladiator who
-was refused release (_missiō_) received the death blow from his
-opponent without resistance. Combats where all must fight to the death
-were said to be _sine missiōne_, but these were forbidden by Augustus.
-The body of the dead man was dragged away through the _porta
-Libitinēnsis_, sand was sprinkled or raked over the blood, and the
-contests were continued until all had fought.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 168. TESSERA GLADIATORIA][6]
-
-[Footnote 6: _Lepidus Mummēiānī s(ervus). Spectāvit m(ense) Iuniō, C.
-Sentiō Cōnsule._]
-
- D • M • ET • MEMORIAE
- AETERNAE • HYLATIS
- DYMACHAERO • SIVE
- ASSIDARIO • P • VII • RV • I
- ERMAIS • CONIVX
- CONIVGI • KARISSIMO
- P • C • ET • S • AS • D[7]
-
-[Footnote 7: Inscription on tomb of a gladiator. "To the Gods Manes
-and the lasting memory of Hylas, a dimachaerus or essedarius of seven
-victories and head trainer. His wife Ermais erected this monument to
-her beloved husband and dedicated it, reserving the usual rights."]
-
-§363. The Rewards.--Before making his first public appearance the
-gladiator was technically called a _tīrō_. After his first victory he
-received a token of wood or ivory (Fig. 168), which had upon it his
-name and that of his master or trainer, a date, and the letters SP,
-SPECT, SPECTAT, or SPECTAVIT, meaning perhaps _populus spectāvit_.
-When after many victories he had proved himself to be the best of his
-class, or second best, in his _familia_, he received the title of
-_prīmus_, or _secundus_, _pālus_. When he had won his freedom he was
-given a wooden sword (_rudis_). From this the titles _prīma rudis_ and
-_secunda rudis_ seem to have been given to those who were afterwards
-employed as training masters (_doctōrēs_, §349) in the schools. The
-rewards given to famous gladiators by their masters and backers took
-the form of valuable prizes and gifts of money. These may not have
-been so generous as those given to the _aurīgae_ (§341), but they were
-enough to enable them to live in luxury the rest of their lives. The
-class of men, however, who followed this profession probably found
-their most acceptable reward in the immediate and lasting notoriety
-that their strength and courage brought them. That they did not shrink
-from the _īnfamia_ that the profession entailed is shown by the fact
-that they did not try to hide their connection with the amphitheater.
-On the contrary, their gravestones record their classes and the number
-of their victories, and have often cut upon them their likenesses with
-the _rudis_ in their hands.
-
-§364. Other Shows in the Amphitheater.--Of other games that were
-sometimes given in the amphitheaters something has been said in
-connection with the circus (§343). The most important were the
-_vēnātiōnēs_, hunts of wild beasts. These were sometimes killed by men
-trained to hunt them, sometimes made to kill each other. As the
-amphitheater was primarily intended for the butchery of men, the
-_vēnātiōnēs_ given in it gradually but surely took the form of
-man-hunts. The victims were condemned criminals, some of them guilty
-of crimes that deserved death, some of them sentenced on trumped up
-charges, some of them (and among these were women and children)
-condemned "to the lions" for political or religious convictions.
-Sometimes they were supplied with weapons, sometimes they were exposed
-unarmed, even fettered or bound to stakes, sometimes the ingenuity of
-their executioners found additional torments for them by making them
-play the parts of the sufferers in the tragedies of mythology. The
-arena was well adapted, too, for the maneuvering of boats, when it had
-been flooded with water (§357), and naval battles (_naumachiae_) were
-often fought within the coliseum as desperate and as bloody as some of
-those that have given a new turn to the history of the world. The
-earliest exhibitions of this sort were given in artificial lakes, also
-called _naumachiae_. The first of these was dug by Caesar, for a
-single exhibition, in 46 B.C. Augustus had a permanent basin
-constructed in 2 B.C., measuring 1,800 by 1,200 feet, and four others
-at least were built by later emperors.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 169. HALL IN THERMAE OF CARACALLA]
-
-§365. The Daily Bath.--To the Roman of early times the bath had stood
-for health and decency only. He washed every day his arms and legs,
-for the ordinary costume left them exposed (§239), his body once a
-week. He bathed at home, using a very primitive sort of wash-room,
-situated near the kitchen (§203) in order that the water heated on the
-kitchen stove might be carried into it with the least possible
-inconvenience. By the last century of the Republic all this had
-changed, though the steps in the change can not now be followed. The
-bath had become a part of the daily life as momentous as the _cēna_
-itself, which it regularly preceded. It was taken, too, by preference
-in one of the public bathing establishments which were by this time
-operated on a large scale in all parts of Rome and also in the smaller
-towns of Italy and even in the provinces. These offered all sorts of
-baths, plain, plunge, douche, with massage (Turkish), and besides in
-many cases features borrowed from the Greek gymnasia, exercise
-grounds, courts for various games, reading and conversation rooms,
-libraries, gymnastic apparatus, everything in fact that our athletic
-clubs now provide for their members. The accessories had become really
-of more importance than the bathing itself and justify the description
-of the bath under the head of amusements. In places where there were
-no public baths, or where they were at an inconvenient distance, the
-wealthy fitted up bathing places in their houses, but no matter how
-elaborate they were the private baths were merely a makeshift at best.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 170. TEPIDARIUM AT POMPEII]
-
-§366. Essentials for the Bath.--The ruins of the public and private
-baths found all over the Roman world, together with a dissertation by
-Vitruvius, and countless allusions in literature, make very clear the
-general construction and arrangement of the bath, but show that the
-widest freedom was allowed in matters of detail. For the luxurious
-bath of classical times four things were thought necessary: a warm
-ante-room, a hot bath, a cold bath, and the rubbing and anointing with
-oil. All these might have been had in a single room, as all but the
-last are furnished in every modern bathroom, but as a matter of fact
-we find at least three rooms set apart for the bath in very modest
-private houses and often five or six, while in the public
-establishments this number may be multiplied several times. In the
-better equipped houses were provided: (1) A room for undressing and
-dressing (_apodytērium_), usually unheated, but furnished with benches
-and often with lockers for the clothes; (2) the warm ante-room
-(_tepidārium_), in which the bather waited long enough for the
-perspiration to start, in order to guard against the danger of passing
-too suddenly into the high temperature of the next room; (3) the hot
-room (_caldārium_) for the hot bath; (4) the cold room (_frīgidārium_)
-for the cold bath; (5) the _ūnctōrium_, the room for the rubbing and
-anointing with oil that finished the bath, from which the bather
-returned into the _apodytērium_ for his clothes.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 171. STRIGILES]
-
-§367. In the more modest houses space was saved by using a room for
-several purposes. The separate _apodytērium_ might be dispensed with,
-the bather undressing and dressing in either the _frīgidārium_ or
-_tepidārium_ according to the weather; or the _ūnctōrium_ might be
-saved by using the _tepidārium_ for this purpose as well as for its
-own. In this way the suite of five rooms might be reduced to four or
-three. On the other hand, private houses had sometimes an additional
-hot room without water (_lacōnicum_), used for a sweat bath, and a
-public bathhouse would be almost sure to have an exercise ground
-(_palaestra_), with a pool at one side (_piscīna_) for a cold plunge
-and a room adjacent (_dēstrictārium_) in which the sweat and dirt of
-exercise were scraped off with the _strigilis_ (Fig. 171) before and
-after the bath. It must not be supposed that all bathers went the
-round of all the rooms in the order given above, though that was
-common enough. Some would dispense with the hot bath altogether,
-taking instead a sweat in the _lacōnicum_, or failing that, in the
-_caldārium_, removing the perspiration with the strigil, following
-this with a cold bath (perhaps merely a shower or douche) in the
-_frīgidārium_ and the rubbing with linen cloths and anointing with
-oil. Young men who deserted the campus and the Tiber (§317) for the
-_palaestra_ and the bath would content themselves with removing the
-effects of their exercise with the scraper, taking a plunge in the
-open pool, and then a second scraping and the oil. Much would depend
-on the time and the tastes of individuals, and physicians laid down
-strict rules for their patients to follow.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 172. SUSPENSURA]
-
-§368. Heating the Bath.--The arrangement of the rooms, were they many
-or few, depended upon the method of heating. This in early times must
-have been by stoves placed in the rooms as needed, but by the end of
-the Republic the furnace had come into use, heating the rooms as well
-as the water with a single fire. The hot air from the furnace was not
-conducted into the rooms directly, as it is with us, but was made to
-circulate under the floors and through spaces between the walls, the
-temperature of the room depending upon its proximity to the furnace.
-The _lacōnicum_, if there was one, was put directly over the furnace,
-next to it came the _caldārium_ and then the _tepidārium_, while the
-_frīgidārium_ and the _apodytērium_ having no need of heat were at the
-greatest distance from the fire and without connection with it. If
-there were two sets of baths in the same building, as there sometimes
-were for the accommodation of both men and women at the same time, the
-two _caldāria_ were put on opposite sides of the furnace (see the plan
-in §376) and the other rooms were connected with them in the regular
-order, the two entrances being at the greatest distance apart. The
-method of conducting the air under the floors is shown in Fig. 172.
-There were really two floors, the first being even with the top of the
-firepot, the second (_suspēnsūra_) with the top of the furnace.
-Between them was a space of about two feet into which the hot air
-passed. On the top of the furnace, just above the level, therefore, of
-the second floor, were two kettles for heating the water. One was
-placed well back, where the fire was not so hot, and contained water
-that was kept merely warm; the other was placed directly over the fire
-and the water in it, received from the former, was easily kept
-intensely hot. Near them was a third kettle containing cold water.
-From these three kettles the water was piped as needed to the various
-rooms. The arrangement will be easily understood after a study of the
-plans in §§376, 378.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 173. SECTION OF CALDARIUM]
-
-§369. The Caldarium.--The hot water bath was taken in the _caldārium_
-(_cella caldāria_), which served also as a sweat bath when there was
-no _lacōnicum_. It was a rectangular room and in the public baths was
-longer than wide (Vitruvius says the proportion should be 3:2) with
-one end rounded off like an apse or bay window. At the other end stood
-the large hot water tank (_alveus_), in which the bath was taken by a
-number of persons at a time. The _alveus_ (Fig. 173) was built up two
-steps from the floor of the room, its length equal to the width of the
-room and its breadth at the top not less than six feet. At the bottom
-it was not nearly so wide, the back sloping inward, so that the
-bathers could recline against it, and the front having a long broad
-step, for convenience of descent into it, upon which, too, the bathers
-sat. The water was received hot from the furnace, and was kept hot by
-a metal heater (_testūdō_), opening into the _alveus_ and extending
-beneath the floor into the hot air chamber. Near the top of the tank
-was an overflow pipe, and in the bottom was an escape pipe which
-allowed the water to be emptied on the floor of the _caldārium_, to be
-used for scrubbing it. In the apse-like end of the room was a tank or
-large basin of metal (_lābrum_, _solium_), which seems to have
-contained cool water for the douche. In private baths the room was
-usually rectangular and then the _lābrum_ was placed in a corner. For
-the accommodation of those using the room for the sweat bath only,
-there were benches along the wall. The air in the _caldārium_ would,
-of course, be very moist, while that of the _lacōnicum_ would be
-perfectly dry, so that the effect would not be precisely the same.
-
-§370. The Frigidarium and Unctorium.--The _frīgidārium_ (_cella
-frīgidāria_) contained merely the cold plunge bath, unless it was made
-to do duty for the _apodytērium_, when there would be lockers on the
-wall for the clothes (at least in a public bath) and benches for the
-slaves who watched them. Persons who found the bath too cold would
-resort instead to the open swimming pool in the _palaestra_, which
-would be warmed by the sun. In one of the public baths at Pompeii a
-cold bath seems to have been introduced into the _tepidārium_, for the
-benefit, probably, of invalids who found even the _palaestra_ too cool
-for comfort. The final process, that of scraping, rubbing, and oiling,
-was exceedingly important. The bather was often treated twice, before
-the warm bath and after the cold bath; the first might be omitted, but
-the second never. The special room, _ūnctōrium_, was furnished with
-benches and couches. The scrapers and oils were brought by the
-bathers, usually carried along with the towels for the bath by a slave
-(_capsārius_). The bather might scrape (_dēstringere_) and oil
-(_deungere_) himself, or he might receive a regular massage at the
-hands of a trained slave. It is probable that in the large baths
-expert operators could be hired, but we have no direct testimony on
-the subject. When there was no special _ūnctōrium_ the _tepidārium_ or
-_apodytērium_ was made to do instead.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 174. BATH AT CAERWENT]
-
-§371. A Private Bathhouse.--In Fig. 174 is shown the plan of a private
-bath in Caerwent, Monmouthshire, England, the ruins of which were
-discovered in the year 1855. It dates from about the time of
-Constantine (306-333), and small though it is gives a clear notion of
-the arrangement of the rooms. The entrance _A_ leads into the
-_frīgidārium B_, 10'6" x 6'6" in size, with a bath _C_, 10'6" x 3'3".
-Off this is the _apodytērium D_, 10'6" x 13'3", which has the
-apse-like end that the _caldārium_ ought to have. Next is the
-_tepidārium E_, 12' x 12', which contrary to all the rules is the
-largest instead of the smallest of the four main rooms. Then comes the
-_caldārium F_, 12' x 7'6", with its _alveus G_, 6' x 3' x 2', but with
-no sign of its _lābrum_ left, perhaps because the basin was too small
-to require any special foundation. Finally comes the rare _lacōnicum
-H_, 8' x 4', built over one end of the furnace _I_, which was in the
-basement room _KK_. The hot air passed as indicated by the arrows,
-escaping through openings near the roof in the outside wall of the
-_apodytērium_. It should be noticed that there was no direct passage
-from the _caldārium_ to the _frīgidārium_, no special entrance to the
-_lacōnicum_, and that the _tepidārium_ must have served as the
-_ūnctōrium_. The dimensions of the bath as a whole are 31 x 34 feet.
-
-§372. The Public Baths.--To the simpler bathhouse of the earlier times
-as well as to the bath itself was given the name _balneum_
-(_balineum_), used often in the plural, _balnea_, by the dactylic
-poets for metrical convenience. The more complex establishments of
-later times were called _balneae_, and to the very largest with
-features derived from the Greek gymnasia (§365) the name _thermae_ was
-finally given. These words, however, were loosely used and often
-interchanged in practice. Public baths are first heard of after the
-second Punic war. They increased in number rapidly, 170 at least being
-operated in Rome in the year 33 B.C., and later there were more than
-800. With equal rapidity they spread through Italy and the provinces,
-all the towns and many villages even having at least one. They were
-public only in the sense of being open to all citizens who could pay
-the modest fee demanded for their use. Free baths there were none,
-except when some magistrate or public-spirited citizen or candidate
-for office arranged to relieve the people of the fees for a definite
-time by meeting the charges himself. So Agrippa in the year 33 B.C.
-kept open free of charge 170 establishments at Rome. The rich
-sometimes provided free baths for the people in their wills, but
-always for a limited time.
-
-§373. Management.--The first public baths were opened by individuals
-for speculative purposes. Others were built by wealthy men as gifts to
-their native towns, as such men give hospitals and libraries now, the
-administration being lodged with the town authorities who kept the
-buildings in repair and the baths open with the fees collected. Others
-were built by the towns out of public funds, and others still as
-monuments by the later emperors. However started, the management was
-practically the same for all. They were leased for a definite time and
-for a fixed sum to a manager (_conductor_) who paid his expenses and
-made his profits out of the fees which he collected. The fee
-(_balneāticum_) was hardly more than nominal. The regular price at
-Rome for men seems to have been a _quadrāns_, less than a cent, the
-bather furnishing his own towels, oil, etc., as we have seen (§370).
-Women paid more, perhaps twice as much, while children up to a certain
-age, unknown to us, paid nothing. Prices varied, of course, in
-different places. It is likely that higher prices were charged in some
-baths than in others in the same city, either because they were more
-luxuriously equipped or to make them more exclusive and fashionable
-than the rest, but we have no positive knowledge that this was done.
-
-§374. Hours Opened.--The bath was regularly taken between the
-_merīdiātiō_ and _cēna_, the hour varying, therefore, within narrow
-limits in different seasons and for different classes (§310). In
-general it may be said to have been taken about the eighth hour, and
-at this hour all the _conductōrēs_ were bound by their contracts to
-have the baths open and all things in readiness. As a matter of fact
-many people preferred to bathe before the _prandium_ (§302), and some
-at least of the baths in the larger places must have been open then.
-All were regularly kept open until sunset, but in the smaller towns,
-where public baths were fewer, it is probable that they were kept open
-later; at least the lamps found in large numbers in the Pompeian baths
-seem to point at evening hours. It may be taken for granted that the
-managers would keep the doors open as long as was profitable for them.
-
-§375. Accommodations for Women.--Women of respectability bathed in the
-public baths, as they bathe in public places now, but with women only,
-enjoying the opportunity to meet their friends as much as did the men.
-In the large cities there were separate baths devoted to their
-exclusive use. In the larger towns separate rooms were set apart for
-them in the baths intended generally for men. Such a combination is
-shown in the next paragraph and the arrangement has been explained in
-§368. In the very small places the bath was opened to men and women at
-different hours. Late in the Empire we read of men and women bathing
-together, but this was true of women only who had no claim to
-respectability at all.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 175. THERMAE AT POMPEII]
-
-§376. Thermae.--In Fig. 175 is shown a plan of the so-called Stabian
-baths at Pompeii, which gives a correct idea of the smaller _thermae_
-and serves at the same time to illustrate the combination of baths for
-men and women under the same roof. In the plan the unnumbered rooms
-opening upon the surrounding streets were used for shops and stores
-independent of the baths, those opening within were for the use of the
-attendants or for purposes that can not now be determined. The main
-entrance (_1_), on the south, opened upon the _palaestra_ (_2_),
-surrounded on three sides by colonnades and on the west by a bowling
-alley (_3_), where large stone balls were found. Behind the bowling
-alley was the _piscīna_ (_6_) open to the sun, with a room on either
-side (_5_, _7_) for douche baths and a _dēstrictārium_ (_4_) for the
-use of the athletes. There were two side entrances (_8_, _11_) at the
-northwest, with the porter's room (_12_) and manager's office (_10_)
-within convenient reach. The room (_9_) at the head of the bowling
-alley was for the use of the players and may be compared with the
-similar room for the use of the gladiators marked _9_ in Fig. 156
-(§350). Behind the office was the _latrīna_ (_14_).
-
-§377. On the east are the baths proper, the men's to the south. There
-were two _apodytēria_ (_24_, _25_) for the men, each with a separate
-waiting-room for the slaves (_26_, _27_) with a door to the street.
-Then come in order the _frīgidārium_ (_22_), the _tepidārium_ (_23_),
-and the _caldārium_ (_21_). The _tepidārium_, contrary to custom, had
-a cold bath as explained in §370. The main entrance to the women's
-bath was at the northeast (_17_), but there was also an entrance from
-the northwest through the long corridor (_15_), both opening into the
-_apodytērium_ (_16_). This contained in one corner a cold bath, there
-being no separate _frīgidārium_ in the baths for women. Then come in
-the regular position the _tepidārium_ (_18_) and _caldārium_ (_19_).
-The furnace (_20_) was between the two _caldāria_, and the position of
-the three kettles (§368) which furnished the water is clearly shown.
-It should be noticed that there was no _lacōnicum_. It is possible
-that one of the waiting-rooms for men (_24_) may have been used as an
-_ūnctōrium_. The ruins show that the rooms were most artistically
-decorated and there can be no doubt that they were luxuriously
-furnished. The colonnades and the large waiting-rooms gave ample space
-for the lounge after the bath, which the Roman prized so highly.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 176. BATHS OF DIOCLETIAN]
-
-§378. Baths of Diocletian.--The irregularity of plan and the waste of
-space in the Pompeian _thermae_ just described are due to the fact
-that it was rebuilt at various times with all sorts of alterations and
-additions. Nothing can be more symmetrical than the _thermae_ of the
-later emperors, as a type of which is shown in Fig. 176 the plan of
-the Baths of Diocletian, dedicated in 305 A.D. They lay on the east
-side of the city and were the largest and with the exception of those
-of Caracalla the most magnificent of the Roman baths. The plan shows
-the arrangement of the main rooms, all in the line of the minor axis
-of the building; the uncovered _piscīna_ (1), the _apodytērium_ and
-_frīgidārium_ (2), combined as in the women's baths at Pompeii, the
-_tepidārium_ (3), and the _caldārium_ (4) projecting beyond the other
-rooms for the sake of the sunshine. The uses of the surrounding halls
-and courts can not now be determined, but it is clear from the plan
-that nothing was omitted known to the luxury of the time. An idea of
-the magnificence of the central room may be had from Fig. 169 (§365),
-showing the corresponding room in the Baths of Caracalla.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 469-474, 731-738, 799-833; Voigt, 359 f.; Göll,
-II, 418-462, III, 1-45; Guhl and Koner, 538-544, 766 f., 783 f.;
-Friedländer, II, 36-291; Ramsay, 76-78, 512-516; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_carpentum_, _cisium_, _charta_, _Brief_, _Buch_, _Buchhandlung_,
-_Bibliotheken_; Smith, Harper, Rich, Lübker, _viae_, _tabulae_,
-_liber_, _bibliothēca_, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister,
-2079 f., 354, 361-364; Blümner, I, 308-327; Johnston, Latin
-Manuscripts, 13-21, 27-34, 36.
-
-
-§379. For our knowledge of the means of traveling employed by the
-Romans we have to rely upon indirect sources (§12), because if any
-volumes of travel were ever written they have not come down to us. We
-know, however, that while no distance was too great to be traversed,
-no hardships too severe to be surmounted, for the sake of fame or
-fortune, the Roman cared nothing for traveling in itself, for the mere
-pleasure, that is, of sight-seeing. This was partly due to his
-blindness to the charms of nature, more perhaps to his feeling that to
-be out of Rome was to be forgotten. He made once in his life the grand
-tour (§116), he spent a year abroad in the train of some general or
-governor (§118), but this done, only the most urgent private affairs
-or public duties could draw him from Italy. And Italy was to him only
-Rome and his country estates (§145). These he visited when the hot
-months had closed the courts and adjourned the senate, roaming
-restlessly from one to another, impatient for his real life to begin
-again. Even when public or private business called him from Rome, he
-kept in touch with affairs by correspondence, expecting his friends to
-write him voluminous letters, ready himself to return the favor when
-positions should be reversed. So, too, the proconsul kept as near to
-Rome as the boundaries of his province would permit; almost all the
-uprisings in farther Gaul were due to Caesar's habit of hurrying off
-to Italy as soon as winter had put an end to active operations in the
-field.
-
-§380. By Water.--The means of travel were the same as our ancestors
-used a century ago. By water the Roman used sailing vessels, rarely
-canal boats; by land vehicles drawn by horses or mules, for short
-distances sedan chairs or litters. There were, however, no
-transportation companies, no lines of boats or vehicles, that is,
-running between certain places and prepared to carry passengers at a
-fixed price on a regular schedule. The traveler by sea whose means did
-not permit him to buy or charter a vessel for his exclusive use had
-therefore to wait at the port until he found a boat going in the
-desired direction and then make such terms as he could for his
-passage. And there were other inconveniences. The boats were small,
-and this made them uncomfortable in rough weather; the lack of the
-compass caused them to follow the coast as much as possible, and this
-often increased the distance; in winter navigation was usually
-suspended. Traveling by water was, therefore, avoided as much as
-possible. Rather than sail to Athens from Ostia or Naples, for
-example, the traveler would go by land to Brundisium, by sea across to
-Dyrrachium, and continue the journey by land. Between Brundisium and
-Dyrrachium boats were constantly passing, and the only delay to be
-feared was that caused by bad weather. The short voyage, only 100
-miles, was usually made within twenty-four hours.
-
-§381. By Land.--The Roman who traveled by land was distinctly better
-off than Americans of the time of the Revolution. His inns were not so
-good, it is true, but his vehicles and cattle were fully equal to
-theirs, and his roads were the best that have ever been built.
-Horseback riding was not a recognized mode of traveling (the Romans
-had no saddles), but there were vehicles with two wheels and with
-four, for one horse and for two or more, covered and uncovered. These
-were kept for hire near the gates of all important towns, but the
-price is not known. To save the trouble of loading and unloading the
-baggage it is probable that persons going great distances took their
-own vehicles and merely hired fresh horses from time to time. There
-were, however, no postroutes, and no places where horses were changed
-at the end of regular stages for ordinary travelers, though there were
-such arrangements for couriers and officers of the government,
-especially in the provinces. For short journeys and when haste was not
-necessary travelers would naturally use their own horses as well as
-their own carriages. Of the pomp that often accompanied such journeys
-something has been said in §152.
-
-§382. The Vehicles.--The streets of Rome were so narrow (the widest
-not over twenty-five feet, the average about fourteen) that wagons and
-carriages were not allowed upon them at hours when they were likely to
-be thronged with people. Throughout the Republic and for at least two
-centuries afterwards the streets were closed to all vehicles during
-the first ten hours of the day, with the exception of four classes
-only: market wagons, which brought produce into the city by night and
-were allowed to leave empty the next morning, transfer wagons
-(_plaustra_) conveying material for public buildings, the carriages
-used by the Vestals, _flāminēs_, and _rēx sacrōrum_ in their priestly
-functions, and the chariots driven in the _pompa circēnsis_ (§343) and
-in the triumphal processions. Similar regulations were in force in
-almost all the Italian towns. This made general the use within the
-walls of the _lectīca_ and its bearers (§151). Besides the litter in
-which the passenger reclined a sedan chair was common in which he sat
-erect. Both were covered and curtained. The _lectīca_ was sometimes
-used for short journeys, and in place of the six or eight bearers,
-mules were sometimes put between the shafts, one before and one
-behind, but not until late in the Empire. Such a litter was called a
-_basterna_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 177. CARPENTUM]
-
-§383. Carriages.--The monuments show us rude representations of
-several kinds of vehicles and the names of at least eight have come
-down to us, but we are not able positively to connect the figures and
-the names, and have, therefore, very general notions only of the form
-and construction of even the most common. Some seem to have been of
-ancient design and retained merely for use as state carriages in the
-processions that have been mentioned. Such were the _pīlentum_ and the
-_carpentum_, the former with four wheels, the latter with two, both
-covered, both drawn by two horses, both used by the Vestals and
-priests. The _carpentum_ is rarely spoken of as a traveling carriage,
-and its use for such a purpose was a mark of luxury. Livy makes the
-first Tarquin come from Etruria to Rome in one, and it is generally
-supposed that one is shown in an Etruscan painting reproduced here in
-Fig. 177. The _petōritum_ was also used in the triumphal processions,
-but only for the spoils of war. It was essentially a baggage wagon and
-was occupied by the servants in a traveler's train. The _carūca_ was a
-luxurious traveling van, of which we hear first in the late Empire. It
-was furnished with a bed on which the traveler reclined by day and
-slept by night.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 178. CISIUM]
-
-§384. The Reda and Cisium.--The usual traveling vehicles, however,
-were the _rēda_ and the _cisium_. The former was large and heavy,
-covered, had four wheels, and was drawn by two or four horses. It was
-regularly used by persons accompanied by their families or having
-baggage with them, and was kept for hire for this purpose. For rapid
-journeys, when a man had no traveling companions and little baggage,
-the two-wheeled and uncovered _cisium_ was the favorite vehicle. It
-was drawn by two horses, one between shafts and the other attached by
-traces; it is possible that three were sometimes used. The _cisium_
-had a single seat, broad enough to accommodate a driver also. It is
-very likely that the cart on a monument found near Trieves (Fig. 178)
-is a _cisium_, but the identification is not absolutely certain.
-Cicero speaks of these carts making fifty-six miles in ten hours,
-probably with one or more changes of horses. Other vehicles of the
-cart type that came into use during the Empire were the _essedum_ and
-the _covīnus_, but we do not know how they differed from the _cisium_.
-These carts had no springs, but the traveler took care to have plenty
-of cushions. It is worth noticing that none of the vehicles mentioned
-has a Latin name, all being Gallic with perhaps one exception
-(_pīlentum_). In like manner most of our own carriages have foreign
-names.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 179. ROAD CUT THROUGH HILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 180. BRIDGE OVER STREAM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 181. VIADUCT OVER MARSH]
-
-§385. The Roads.--The engineering skill of the Romans and the lavish
-outlay of money made their roads the best that the world has ever
-known. They were strictly military works, built for strategic
-purposes, intended to facilitate the despatching of supplies to the
-frontier and the massing of troops in the shortest possible time.
-Beginning with the first important acquisition of territory in Italy
-(the _via Appia_ was built in 312 B.C.) they kept pace with the
-expansion of the Republic and the Empire. In Italy they were built at
-the cost of the state, in the provinces the conquered communities bore
-the expense of construction and maintenance, but the work was done
-under the direction of Roman engineers and often by the legions
-between campaigns. They ran in straight lines between the towns they
-were to connect, with frequent crossroads and branch roads only less
-carefully constructed. No natural obstacles were permitted to change
-their course. The grade was always easy, hills being cut through (Fig.
-179), gorges and rivers crossed on arches of solid stone (Fig. 180),
-and valleys and marshes spanned by viaducts of the same material (Fig.
-181).
-
-§386. Their surface was perfectly smooth and carefully rounded off and
-there were gutters at the sides to carry off the rain and melted snow.
-Regard was had for the comfort of all classes of travelers. Milestones
-showed the distance from the starting point of the road and often that
-to important places in the opposite direction, as well as the names of
-the consuls or emperors under whom the roads were built (Fig. 182).
-The roadbed was wide enough to permit the meeting and passing of the
-largest wagons without trouble. For the pedestrian there was a
-footpath on either side with frequent stepping-stones so he might
-cross to the other side above the mud or dust of the wagon way, and
-seats for him to rest upon were often built by the milestones. The
-horseman found blocks of stone set here and there for his convenience
-in mounting and dismounting. Where springs were discovered wayside
-fountains for men and watering-troughs for cattle were constructed.
-Such roads often went a hundred years without repairs, and some
-portions of them have endured the traffic of centuries and are still
-in good condition to-day.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 182. MILESTONE]
-
- L • CAECILI • Q • F
- METEL • COS
- CXIX
- ROMA[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: Inscription on a milestone of the _via Salaria_. "Erected
-by the consul (117 B.C.) Lucius Caecilius Metellus, etc. (§39). One
-hundred and nineteen (miles) from Rome."]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 183. EMBANKMENT AND CROSS-SECTION]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 184. CONSTRUCTION OF ROAD]
-
-§387. Construction.--Our knowledge of the construction of the military
-roads is derived from a treatise of Vitruvius on pavements and from
-existing remains of the roads themselves. The Latin phrase for
-building a road (_mūnīre viam_) epitomizes the process exactly, for
-throughout its full length, whether carried above the level of the
-surrounding country (Fig. 183) or in a cut below it, the road was a
-solid wall averaging fifteen feet in width and perhaps three feet in
-height. The method followed will be easily understood from Fig. 184. A
-cut (_fossa_) was first made of the width of the intended road and of
-a depth sufficient to hold the filling which varied with the nature of
-the soil. The earth at the bottom of the cut (E) was leveled and made
-solid with heavy rammers (§213). Upon this was spread the _statūmen_
-(D), a foundation course of stones not too large to be held in the
-hand, the thickness of the layer varying with the porosity of the
-soil. Over this came the _rūdus_ (C), a nine-inch layer of coarse
-concrete or rubble (§210) made of broken stones and lime. Over this
-was laid the _nūcleus_ (B), a six-inch bedding of fine concrete made
-of broken potsherds and lime, in which was set the final course (A) of
-blocks of lava or of other hard stone furnished by the adjacent
-country. This last course (_dorsum_) made the roadway (_agger viae_)
-and was laid with the greatest care so as to leave no seams or
-fissures to admit water or to jar the wheels of vehicles. In the
-diagram the stones are represented with the lower surface flat, but
-they were commonly cut to a point or edge, as in Fig. 183, in order to
-be held more firmly by the _nūcleus_. The _agger_ was bounded on the
-sides by _umbōnēs_ (G,G), curbstones, behind which lay the footpaths
-(F,F), _sēmitae_ or _marginēs_. On a subsoil of rocky character the
-foundation course or even the first and second courses might be
-unnecessary. On the less traveled branch roads the _agger_ seems to
-have consisted of a thick course of gravel (_glārea_), well rounded
-and compacted, instead of the blocks of stone, and the crossroads may
-have been of still cheaper materials.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 185. PLAN OF INN]
-
-§388. The Inns.--There were numerous lodging houses and restaurants in
-all the cities and towns of Italy, but all of the meanest character.
-Respectable travelers avoided them scrupulously, either possessing
-stopping places of their own (_dēversōria_) on roads that they used
-frequently, or claiming entertainment from friends (§303) and
-_hospitēs_ (§184), whom they would be sure to have everywhere. Nothing
-but accident, stress of weather, or unusual haste could drive them to
-places of public entertainment (_tabernae dēversōriae_, _caupōnae_).
-The guests of such places were, therefore, of the lowest class, and
-innkeepers (_caupōnēs_) and inns bore the most unsavory reputations.
-Food and beds were furnished the travelers, and their cattle were
-accommodated under the same roof and in unpleasant proximity. The plan
-of an inn at Pompeii (Fig. 185) may be taken as a fair sample of all
-such houses. The entrance (_a_) is broad enough to admit wagons into
-the wagon-room (_f_), behind which is the stable (_k_). In one corner
-is a watering-trough (_l_), in another a _latrīna_ (_i_). On either
-side of the entrance is a wineroom (_b_, _d_), with the room of the
-proprietor (_c_) opening off one of them. The small rooms (_e_, _g_,
-_h_) are bedrooms, and others in the second story over the wagon-room
-were reached by the back stairway. The front stairway has an entrance
-of its own from the street and the rooms reached by it had probably no
-connection with the inn. Behind this stairway on the lower floor was a
-fireplace (_m_) with a water heater. An idea of the moderate prices
-charged in such places may be had from a bill which has come down to
-us in an inscription preserved in the museum at Naples: a pint of wine
-with bread, one cent; other food, two cents; hay for a mule, two
-cents. The corners of streets were the favorite sites for inns, and
-they had signs (the elephant, the eagle, etc.) like those of much
-later times.
-
-§389. Speed.--The lack of public conveyances running on regular
-schedules (§380) makes it impossible to tell the speed ordinarily made
-by travelers. It depended upon the total distance to be covered, the
-degree of comfort demanded by the traveler, the urgency of his
-business, and the facilities at his command. Cicero speaks of
-fifty-six miles in ten hours by cart (§384) as something unusual, but
-on such roads it ought to have been possible to go much faster, if
-fresh horses were provided at the proper distances, and if the
-traveler could stand the fatigue. The sending of letters gives the
-best standard of comparison. There was no public postal service, but
-every Roman of position had among his slaves special messengers
-(_tabellāriī_), whose business it was to deliver important letters for
-him. They covered from twenty-six to twenty-seven miles on foot in a
-day, and from forty to fifty in carts. We know that letters were sent
-from Rome to Brundisium, 370 Roman miles, in six days, and on to
-Athens in fifteen more. A letter from Sicily would reach Rome on the
-seventh day, from Africa on the twenty-first day, from Britain on the
-thirty-third day, and from Syria on the fiftieth day. In the time of
-Washington it was no unusual thing for a letter to take a month to go
-from the eastern to the southern states in winter.
-
-§390. Sending Letters.--For long distances, especially over seas,
-sending letters by special messengers was very expensive, and, except
-for the most urgent matters, recourse was had to traders and travelers
-going in the desired direction. Persons sending messengers or
-intending to travel themselves made it a point of honor to notify
-their friends in time for letters to be prepared and also carried
-letters for entire strangers, if requested to do so. There was great
-danger, of course, that letters sent in this way might fall into the
-wrong hands or be lost. It was customary, therefore, to send a copy of
-an important letter (_litterae eōdem exemplō_, _ūnō exemplō_), or at
-least an abstract of its contents, by another person and if possible
-by a different route. It was also customary to disguise the meaning by
-the use of fictitious names known to the correspondents only or by the
-employment of regular cypher codes. Suetonius tells us that Caesar
-simply substituted for each letter the one that stood three places
-lower in the alphabet: D for A, E for B, etc., but really elaborate
-and intricate systems were in common use.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 186. CODICILLI]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 187. BRONZE STILUS]
-
-§391. Writing the Letters.--The extensive correspondence carried on by
-every Roman of position (§379) made it impossible for him to write any
-but the most important of his letters or those to his dearest friends
-with his own hand. The place of the stenographer and writing machine
-of to-day was taken by slaves or freedmen, often highly educated
-(§154), who wrote at his dictation. Such slaves were called in general
-terms _librāriī_, more accurately _servī ab epistolīs_, _servī ā
-manū_, or _āmanuēnsēs_. Notes and short letters were written on
-tablets (_tabellae_, Fig. 24, §110) of firwood or ivory of various
-sizes, often fastened together in sets of two or more by wire hinges
-(_codicillī_, _pugillārēs_, Fig. 186). The inner faces were slightly
-hollowed out and the depression was nearly filled with wax, so as to
-leave merely a raised rim about the edges, much like the frame of an
-old-fashioned slate. Upon the wax the letters were traced with an
-ivory or metal tool (_stilus_, _graphium_) with one end pointed, like
-a pencil, for writing, and the other made broad and flat, like a paper
-cutter, for smoothing the wax (Fig. 187). With the flat end mistakes
-could be corrected or the whole letter erased and the tablets used
-again, often for the reply to the letter itself. For longer
-communications the Romans used a coarse paper (_papyrus_), the making
-of which will be described below. Upon it they wrote with pens made of
-split reeds and with a thick ink made of soot (lampblack) mixed with
-resinous gums. Paper, pens, and ink were so poor that the bulky and
-awkward tablets were used by preference for all but the longest
-letters. Parchment did not come into general use until the fourth or
-fifth century of our era.
-
-§392. Sealing and Opening the Letters.--For sealing the letter thread
-(_līnum_), wax (_cēra_), and a seal (_sīgnum_) were necessary. The
-seal (§255) not only secured the letter against improper inspection,
-but also attested the genuineness of those written by the _librariī_,
-as autograph signatures seem not to have been thought of. The tablets
-having been put together face to face with the writing on the inside,
-the thread was passed around them and through small holes bored
-through them, and was then securely tied. Upon the knot softened wax
-was dropped and to this the seal was applied. Letters written on
-sheets of paper (_schedae_) were rolled longitudinally and then
-secured in the same way. On the outside was written the name of the
-person addressed with perhaps the place where he was to be found if
-the letter was not sent by a special messenger. When the letter was
-opened care was taken not to break the seal, the cutting of the thread
-giving access to the contents. If the letter was preserved the seal
-was kept attached to it in order to attest its authenticity. Cicero
-describes the opening of a letter in the tenth paragraph of the Third
-Oration against Catiline.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 188. FRAGMENT OF PAPYRUS ROLL FROM HERCULANEUM]
-
-§393. Books.--Almost all the materials used by the ancients to receive
-writing were known to the Romans and used by them for one purpose or
-another, at one time or another. For the publication of works of
-literature, however, during the period when the great classics were
-produced, the only material was paper (_papyrus_), the only form the
-roll (_volūmen_). The book of modern form (_cōdex_), written on
-parchment (_membrānum_), played an important part in the preservation
-of the literature of Rome, but did not come into use for the purpose
-of publication until long after the canon of the classics had been
-completed and the great masters had passed away. The Romans adopted
-the papyrus roll from the Greeks; the Greeks had received it from the
-Egyptians. When the Egyptians first made use of it we do not know, but
-we have preserved to us Egyptian rolls that were written at least
-twenty-five hundred years before the Christian era. The oldest Roman
-books of this sort that have been preserved were found in Herculaneum,
-badly charred and broken. Those that have been deciphered contain no
-Latin author of any value. A specimen of the writing on one of these,
-a mere fragment by an unknown author, is shown in Fig. 188. At the
-time it was buried there were still to be seen rolls in the
-handwriting of the Gracchi, and autographs of Cicero, Vergil, and
-Horace must have been common enough. All these have since perished so
-far as we know.
-
-§394. Manufacture of Paper.--The papyrus reed had a jointed stem,
-triangular in shape, and reached a maximum height of perhaps fourteen
-feet with a thickness of four or five inches. The stem contained a
-pith of which the paper was made by a process substantially as
-follows: The stem was cut through at the joints, the hard rind
-removed, and the pith cut into thin sections or strips as evenly as
-possible. The first cut seems to have been made from one of the angles
-to the middle of the opposite side, and the others parallel with it to
-the right and left. The strips were then assorted according to width,
-and enough of them were arranged side by side as closely as possible
-upon a board to make their combined width almost equal to the length
-of the single strip. Across these was laid another layer at right
-angles, with perhaps a coating of glue or paste between them. The
-mat-like sheet that resulted was then soaked in water and pressed or
-hammered into a substance not unlike our paper, called by the Romans
-_charta_. After the sheets (_schēdae_) had been dried and bleached in
-the sun, they were rid by scraping of rough places and trimmed into
-uniform sizes, depending upon the length of the strips of pith. The
-fewer the strips that composed each sheet, or in other words the
-greater the width of each strip, the closer the texture of the
-_charta_ and the better its quality. It was possible, therefore, to
-grade the paper by its size, and the width of the sheet rather than
-its height was taken as the standard. The best quality seems to have
-been sold in sheets about ten inches wide, the poorest that could be
-used to write upon, about six. The height in each case was perhaps one
-inch to two inches greater. It has been calculated that a single
-papyrus plant would make about twenty sheets of the size proportioned
-to its height, and this number seems to have been made the commercial
-unit of measure (_scāpus_), by which the paper was sold in the market,
-a unit corresponding roughly to our quire.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 189. INSTRUMENTS USED IN WRITING]
-
-§395. Pens and Ink.--Only the upper surface of the sheet was commonly
-written upon, the one formed by the horizontal layer of strips, and
-these showing even after the process of manufacture served to guide
-the pen of the writer. In the case of books where it was important to
-keep the number of lines constant to the page, they were ruled with a
-circular piece of lead. The pen (_calamus_) was made of a reed brought
-to a point and cleft much as our quill pens are. For the black ink
-(_ātrāmentum_, §391) was occasionally substituted the liquid of the
-cuttlefish. Red ink was much used for headings, ornaments, and the
-like, and in pictures the inkstand is generally represented with two
-compartments (Fig. 189). The ink was more like paint than modern ink,
-and could be wiped off when fresh with a damp sponge and washed off
-even when it had become dry and hard. To wash sheets in order to use
-them a second time was a mark of poverty or niggardliness, but the
-reverse side of _schēdae_ that had served their purpose was often used
-for scratch paper, especially in the schools (§110).
-
-§396. Making the Roll.--A single sheet might serve for a letter or
-other brief document, but for literary purposes many sheets would be
-required. These were not fastened side by side in a back, as are the
-separate sheets in our books, or numbered and laid loosely together,
-as we arrange them in our letters and manuscripts, but after the
-writing was done they were glued together at the sides (not at the
-tops) into a long unwieldy strip, with the lines on each sheet running
-parallel with the length of the strip, and with the writing on each
-sheet forming a column perpendicular to the length of the strip. On
-each side of the sheet, therefore, a margin was left as the writing
-was done, and these margins overlapping and glued together made a
-thick blank space, a double thickness of paper, between every two
-sheets in the strip. Very broad margins, too, were left at the top and
-bottom, where the paper would suffer from use a great deal more than
-in our books. When the sheets had been securely fastened together in
-the proper order a thin slip of wood was glued to the left (outer)
-margin of the first sheet, and a second slip (_umbilīcus_) to the
-right (also outer) margin of the last sheet, much as a wall map is
-mounted to-day. When not in use the volume was kept tightly rolled
-about the _umbilīcus_, and hence received its name (_volūmen_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 190. CAPSA]
-
-§397. A roll intended for permanent preservation was finished with the
-greatest care. The top and bottom (_frontēs_) were trimmed perfectly
-smooth, polished with pumice-stone, and often painted black. The back
-of the roll was rubbed with cedar oil to defend it from moths and
-mice. To the ends of the _umbilīcus_ were added knobs (_cornua_),
-sometimes gilded or painted a bright color. The first sheet would be
-used for the dedication, if there was one, and on the back of it a few
-words were frequently written giving a clue to the contents of the
-roll; sometimes a portrait of the author graced this page. In many
-books the full title and the name of the author were written only at
-the end of the roll on the last sheet, but in any case to the top of
-this sheet was glued a strip of parchment (_titulus_) with the title
-and author's name upon it, which projected above the edge of the roll.
-For every roll a parchment cover was made, cylindrical in form, into
-which it was slipped from the top, the _titulus_ alone being visible.
-If a work was divided into several volumes (see below), the rolls were
-put together in a bundle (_fascis_) and kept in a wooden box (_capsa_,
-_scrīnium_) like a modern hat box. When the cover was removed the
-_titulī_ were visible and the roll desired could be taken without
-disturbing the others (Fig. 190). The rolls were kept sometimes in
-cupboards (_armāria_, §231), laid lengthwise on the shelves with the
-_titulī_ to the front, as shown in the figure in the next paragraph.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 191. READING A ROLL]
-
-§398. Size of the Rolls.--When a volume was consulted the roll was
-held in both hands and unrolled column by column with the right hand,
-while with the left the reader rolled up the part he was done with on
-the slip of wood fastened to the margin of the first sheet (Fig. 191).
-When he had finished reading he rolled it back upon the _umbilīcus_,
-usually holding it under the chin and turning the _cornua_ with both
-hands. In the case of a long roll this turning backward and forward
-took much time and patience and must have sadly soiled and damaged the
-roll itself. The early rolls were always long and heavy. There was
-theoretically no limit to the number of sheets that might be glued
-together, and consequently none to the size or length of the roll. It
-was made as long as was necessary to contain the given work. In
-ancient Egypt rolls were put together of more than fifty yards in
-length, and in early times rolls of approximate length were used in
-Greece and Rome. From the third century B.C., however, it had become
-customary to divide works of great length into two or more volumes,
-the division at first being purely arbitrary and made wherever it was
-convenient to end the roll, no matter how much the unity of thought
-was interrupted. A century later authors had begun to divide their
-works into convenient parts, each part having a unity of its own, such
-as the five "books" of Cicero's _Dē Fīnibus_, and to each of these
-parts or "books" was given a separate roll. An innovation so
-convenient and sensible quickly became the universal rule. It even
-worked backward, some ancient works being divided into books, which
-had not been so divided by their authors, e.g., Herodotus, Thucydides,
-and Naevius. About the same time, too, it became the custom to put the
-sheets upon the market already glued together, to the amount at least
-of the _scāpus_ (§394). It was, of course, much easier to glue two or
-three of these together, or to cut off the unused part of one, than to
-work with the separate sheets. The ready-made rolls, moreover, were
-put together in a most workmanlike manner. Even sheets of the same
-quality (§394) would vary slightly in toughness or finish, and the
-manufacturers of the roll were careful to put the very best sheets at
-the beginning, where the wear was the most severe, and to keep for the
-end the less perfect sheets, which might sometimes be cut off
-altogether.
-
-§399. Multiplication of Books.--The process of publishing the largest
-book at Rome differed in no important respect from that of writing the
-shortest letter. Every copy was made by itself, the hundredth or the
-thousandth taking just as much time and labor as the first had done.
-The author's copy would be distributed among a number of _librāriī_,
-his own, if he were a man of wealth, a Caesar or a Sallust, his
-patron's, if he were a poor man, a Terence or a Vergil. Each of the
-_librāriī_ would write and rewrite the portions assigned to him, until
-the required number of copies had been made. The sheets would then be
-arranged in the proper order and the rolls mounted as has been
-described. Finally the books had to be looked through to correct the
-errors that were sure to be made, a process much more tedious than the
-modern proofreading, because every copy had to be corrected
-separately, as no two copies would show precisely the same errors.
-Books made in this way were almost exclusively for gifts, though
-friends would exchange books with friends and a few might find their
-way into the market. Up to the last century of the Republic, however,
-there was no organized book trade, and no such thing as commercial
-publication. When a man wanted a book, instead of buying it at a
-bookstore he borrowed a copy from a friend and had his _librāriī_ make
-him as many more as he desired. In this way Atticus made for himself
-and Cicero copies of all the Greek and Latin books on which he could
-lay his hands, and distributed Cicero's own writings everywhere.
-
-§400. Commercial Publication.--The publication of books at Rome as a
-business began in the time of Cicero. There was no copyright law and
-no protection therefore for author or publisher. The author's
-pecuniary returns came in the form of gifts or grants from those whose
-favor he had won by his genius; the publisher depended, in the case of
-new books, upon meeting the demand before his rivals could market
-their editions, and, in the case of standard books, upon the accuracy,
-elegance, and cheapness of his copies. The process of commercial
-publication was essentially the same as that already described, except
-that larger numbers of _librāriī_ would be employed and the copy would
-be read to all at once to save them the trouble of handling the
-awkward roll and keeping the place as they wrote. The publisher would
-estimate as closely as possible the demand for any new work that he
-had secured, would put as large a number of scribes upon it as
-possible, and would take care that no copies should leave his
-establishment until his whole edition was ready. After the copies were
-once on sale they could be reproduced by anyone. The best houses took
-all possible pains to have their books free from errors, having
-competent correctors to read them copy by copy, but in spite of their
-efforts blunders were legion. Authors sometimes corrected with their
-own hands the copies intended for their friends. In the case of
-standard works purchasers often hired scholars of reputation to revise
-their copies for them, and copies of known excellence were borrowed or
-hired at high prices for the purpose of comparison.
-
-§401. Rapidity and Cost of Publication.--Cicero tells us of Roman
-senators who wrote fast enough to take evidence _verbātim_, and the
-trained scribes must have far surpassed them in speed. Martial tells
-us that his second book could be copied in an hour. It contains five
-hundred and forty verses, which would make the scribe equal to nine
-verses to the minute. It is evident that a small edition, no larger,
-for example, than twice or three times the number of the scribes,
-could be put upon the market more quickly than it could be furnished
-now. The cost of the books varied, of course, with their size and the
-style of their mounting. Martial's first book, containing eight
-hundred and twenty lines and covering twenty-nine pages in Teubner's
-text, sold at thirty cents, fifty cents, and one dollar; his _Xenia_,
-containing two hundred and seventy-four verses and covering fourteen
-pages in Teubner's text, sold at twenty cents, but cost the publisher
-less than ten. Such prices would hardly be considered excessive now.
-Much would depend upon the reputation of the author and the consequent
-demand, and high prices were put on certain books. Autograph
-copies--Gellius († about 180 A.D.) says that one by Vergil cost the
-owner $100--and copies whose correctness was vouched for by some
-recognized authority commanded extraordinary prices.
-
-§402. Libraries.--The gathering of books in large private collections
-began to be general only toward the end of the Republic. Cicero had
-considerable libraries not only in his house at Rome, but also at
-every one of his half-dozen country seats. Probably the bringing to
-Rome of whole libraries from the East and Greece by Lucullus and Sulla
-started the fashion of collecting books; at any rate collections were
-made by many persons who knew and cared nothing about the contents of
-the rolls, and every town house had its library (§206) lined with
-volumes. In these libraries were often displayed busts of great
-writers and statues of the Muses. Public libraries date from the time
-of Augustus. The first to be opened in Rome was founded by Asinius
-Pollio (†4 A.D.), and was housed in the _Ātrium Lībertātis_. Augustus
-himself founded two others, and the number was brought up to
-twenty-eight by his successors. The most magnificent of these was the
-_Bibliothēca Ulpia_, founded by Trajan. Smaller cities had their
-libraries, too, and even the little town of Comum boasted one founded
-by the younger Pliny and supported by an endowment that produced
-thirty thousand sesterces annually. The public baths often had
-libraries and reading-rooms attached (§365).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY
-
-
-§403. It is evident from what has been said that abundant means were
-necessary to support the state in which every Roman of position lived.
-It will be of interest to see how the great mass of the people also
-earned the scantier living with which they were forced to be content.
-For the sake of this inquiry it will be convenient, if not very
-accurate, to divide the people of Rome into the three great classes of
-nobles, knights, and commons, into which political history has
-distributed them. At the same time it must be remembered that there
-was no hard and fixed line drawn between any two of these classes; a
-noble might if he pleased associate himself with the knights, provided
-only that he possessed the required sum of $20,000, and any freeborn
-citizen might aspire to the highest offices of the state, however mean
-the circumstances of his birth, however poor in pocket or in talent he
-might be.
-
-§404. Careers of the Nobles.--The nobles inherited certain of the
-aristocratic notions of the old patriciate, which limited their
-business activities and had much to do with the corruption of public
-life in the last century of the Republic. Men in their position were
-held to be above all manner of work, with the hands or with the head,
-for the sake of sordid gain. Agriculture alone was free from debasing
-associations, as it has been in England within our own time, and
-statecraft and war were the only careers fit to engage their energies.
-Even as statesmen and generals, too, they served their fellow citizens
-without material reward, for no salaries were drawn by the senators,
-none were attached to the magistracies or to positions of military
-command. This theory had worked well enough in the time before the
-Punic wars, when every Roman was a farmer, when the farm produced all
-that he needed for his simple wants, when he left it only to serve as
-a soldier in his young manhood or as a senator in his old age, and
-returned to his fields, like Cincinnatus, when his services were no
-longer required by his country. Under the aristocracy that supplanted
-the pure democracy of the earlier time, it subverted every aim that it
-was intended to secure.
-
-§405. Agriculture.--The farm life that Cicero has described so
-eloquently and praised so enthusiastically in his _Catō Māior_ would
-have scarcely been recognized by Cato himself and had become a memory
-or a dream long before Cicero wrote. The farmer no longer tilled his
-fields, even with the help of his slaves. The yeoman class had
-practically disappeared from Italy. The small holdings had been
-absorbed in the vast estates of the wealthy landowners, and the aims
-and methods of farming had wholly changed. Something has been said of
-this already (§146 f.), and it will be sufficient here to recall the
-fact that grain was no longer raised for the market in Italy, simply
-because the market could be supplied more cheaply from over seas. The
-grape and the olive had become the chief sources of wealth, and for
-them Sallust and Horace complain that less and less space was being
-left by the parks and pleasure grounds (§145). Still, the making of
-wine and oil under the direction of a careful steward (§148) must have
-been very profitable in Italy and many of the nobles had plantations
-in the provinces as well, the revenues of which helped to maintain
-their state at Rome.
-
-§406. Political Office.--Politics must have been profitable for those
-only who played the game to the end. No salaries were attached to the
-offices, and the indirect gains from one of the lower would hardly pay
-the expenses necessary to secure the next in order. The gain came
-always through positions in the provinces. The quaestorship might be
-spent in one, the praetorship and the consulship were sure to be
-followed by a year abroad. To honest men the places gave the
-opportunity to learn of profitable investments, and a good governor
-was often selected by a community to look after its interests in the
-capital, and this meant an honorarium in the form of valuable presents
-from time to time. Cicero's justice and moderation as quaestor in
-Sicily earned him a rich reward when he came to prosecute Verres for
-plundering that same province, and when he was in charge of the grain
-supply during his aedileship. To corrupt officials the provinces were
-gold mines. Every sort of robbery and extortion was practiced, and the
-governor was expected to enrich not merely himself but also the
-_cohors_ (§118) that had accompanied him. Catullus bitterly complains
-of the selfishness of Memmius, who had kept for himself all the
-plunder of Bithynia. The story of Verres may be read in any history of
-Rome; it differs from that of the average governor only in the fate
-that overtook the offender.
-
-§407. The Law.--Closely connected with the political career then as
-now was that of the law, but Rome knew of no class of professional
-advocates practicing for fees and living upon their practice. And
-there were no conditions imposed for practicing in the courts, not
-even the good moral character which is insisted upon in Indiana.
-Anyone could bring suit against anyone else on any charge that he
-pleased, and it was no uncommon thing for a young politician to use
-this license for the purpose of gaining notoriety, even when he knew
-there were no grounds for the charges he brought. On the other hand
-the lawyer was forbidden to accept pay for his services. In olden
-times the client had of his right gone to his patron for legal advice
-(§179), and the lawyer of later times was theoretically at least at
-the service of all who applied to him. Men of the highest character
-made it a point of honor to put their technical knowledge freely at
-the disposal of their fellow citizens. At the same time the statutes
-against fees were easily evaded. Grateful clients could not be
-prevented from making valuable presents, and it was a very common
-thing for generous legacies to be left to successful advocates. Cicero
-had no other source of income, so far as we know, but while he was
-never a rich man, he owned a house on the Palatine (§221, note) and
-half a dozen country seats, lived well, and spent money lavishly on
-works of art (§227) that appealed to his tastes, and on books (§402).
-Corrupt judges (_praetōrēs_) could find other sources of income then
-as now, of course, but we hear more of this in relation to the jurors
-(_iudicēs_) than the judges, probably because with a province before
-him the _praetor_ did not think it fitting to stoop to petty
-bribetaking.
-
-§408. The Army.--The spoils of war went nominally into the treasury of
-the state. Practically they passed first through the hands of the
-commanding general, who kept what he pleased for himself, his staff
-(§118), and his soldiers and sent the rest to Rome. The opportunities
-were magnificent, and the Roman general understood how to use them
-all. Some of them were legitimate enough according to the usages of
-the time, the plunder of the towns and cities that were taken, the
-ransom exacted from those that were spared, the sale of captives as
-slaves (§134). Entirely illegitimate, of course, were the fortunes
-made by furnishing supplies to the army at extravagant prices or
-diverting these supplies to private uses. The reconstruction of the
-conquered territory brought in returns equally rich; it is safe to say
-that the Aedui paid Caesar well for the supremacy in central Gaul that
-he assured them after his defeat of the Helvetii. The civil wars that
-cost the best blood of Italy made the victors immensely rich. Besides
-the looting of the public treasury, the estates of men in the opposing
-party were confiscated and sold to the highest bidder. The proceeds
-went nominally to the treasury of the new government, but the proceeds
-were infinitesimal in comparison with the profits. After Sulla had
-established himself in Rome the names of friends and foes alike were
-put on the proscription lists, and if powerful influence was not
-exerted in their behalf they lost lives and fortunes. For the
-influence they had to pay dearly. One example may be cited. The estate
-of one Roscius of Ameria, valued at $300,000, was bid in for $100 by
-Lucius Chrysogonus, a freedman of Sulla, because no one dared bid
-against the creature of the dictator. The settling of the soldiers on
-grants of land made good business for the three commissioners who
-superintended the distribution of the land. The grants were always of
-farms owned and occupied by adherents of the beaten party, and the
-bribes came from both sides.
-
-§409. Careers of the Equites.--The name of knight had lost its
-original significance long before the time of Cicero. The equites had
-become the class of capitalists who found in financial transactions
-the excitement and the profit that the nobles found in politics and
-war. It was the immense scale of their operations that relieved them
-from the stigma that attached to working for gain, just as in modern
-times the wholesale dealer may have a social position entirely beyond
-the hopes of the small retailer. As a body the equites exerted
-considerable political influence, holding in fact the balance of power
-between the senatorial and the democratic parties. As a rule they
-exerted this influence only so far as was necessary to secure
-legislation favorable to them as a class, and to insure as governors
-for the provinces men that would not look too closely into their
-transactions there. For it was in the provinces that the knights as
-well as the nobles found their best opportunities. Their chief
-business was the farming of the revenues. For this purpose syndicates
-were formed, which paid into the public treasury a lump sum, fixed by
-the senate, and reimbursed themselves by collecting what they could
-from the province. The profits were beyond all reason, and the word
-publican became a synonym for sinner. Besides farming the revenues
-they "financed" the provinces and allied states, advancing money to
-meet the ordinary or extraordinary expenses. Sulla levied a
-contribution of 20,000 talents (about $20,000,000) on Asia. The money
-was advanced by a syndicate of Roman capitalists, and they had
-collected the amount six times over when Sulla interfered, for fear
-that there would be nothing left for him in case of further needs.
-More than one pretender was set upon a puppet throne in the East in
-order to secure the payment of sums previously loaned him by the
-capitalists. Their operations as individuals were only less extensive
-and profitable. The grain in the provinces, the wool, the products of
-mines and factories could be moved only with the money advanced by
-them. They ventured, too, to engage in commercial enterprises abroad
-that were barred against them at home, doing the buying and selling
-themselves, not merely supplying the means to others. They loaned
-money to individuals, too, though at Rome money lending was
-discreditable. The usual rate was twelve per cent, but Marcus Brutus
-was loaning money at forty-eight per cent in Cilicia, when Cicero went
-there as governor in 51 B.C., and expected Cicero to enforce his
-contracts for him.
-
-§410. The Soldiers.--The freeborn citizens of Rome below the nobles
-and the knights may be roughly divided into two classes, the soldiers
-and the proletariate. The civil wars had driven them from their farms
-or had unfitted them for the work of farming, and the pride of race or
-the competition of slave labor had closed against them the other
-avenues of industry, numerous as these must have been in the world's
-capital. The best of this class turned to the army. This had long
-since ceased to be composed of citizen-soldiers, called out to meet a
-special emergency for a single campaign, and disbanded at its close.
-It was what we should call a regular army, the soldiers enlisting for
-a term of twenty years, receiving stated pay and certain privileges
-after an honorable discharge. In time of peace, when there was peace,
-they were employed on public works (§385). The pay was small, perhaps
-forty or fifty dollars a year with rations in Caesar's time, but this
-was as much as a laborer could earn by the hardest kind of toil, and
-the soldier had the glory of war to set over against the stigma of
-work, and hopes of presents from his commander and the privilege of
-occasional pillage and plunder. After he had completed his time he
-might if he chose return to Rome, but many had formed connections in
-the communities where their posts were fixed and preferred to make
-their homes there on free grants of land, an important instrument in
-spreading Roman civilization.
-
-§411. The Proletariate.--In addition to the idle and the profligate
-attracted to Rome by the free corn and by the other allurements that
-bring a like element into our cities now, large numbers of the
-industrious and the frugal had been forced into the city by the loss
-of their property during the civil wars and the failure to find
-employment elsewhere. No exact estimate of the number of these
-unemployed people can be given, but it is known that before Caesar's
-time it had passed the mark of 300,000. Relief was occasionally given
-by the establishing of colonies on the frontiers--in this way Caesar
-put as many as 80,000 in the way of earning their living again, short
-as was his administration of affairs at Rome--but it was the least
-harmful element that was willing to emigrate and the dregs were left
-behind. Aside from beggary and petty crimes their only source of
-income was the sale of their votes, and this made them a real menace
-to the Republic. Under the Empire their political influence was lost
-and the state found it necessary to make distributions of money
-occasionally to relieve their want. Some of them played client to the
-upstart rich (§181), but the most were content to be fed by the state
-and amused by the constantly increasing shows and games (§322).
-
-§412. Professions and Trades.--The professions and trades, between
-which the Romains made no distinction, in the last years of the
-Republic were practically given over to the _lībertīnī_ (§175) and to
-foreigners. Of some of these something has been said already. Teachers
-were poorly paid (§121), and usually looked upon with contempt.
-Physicians were held in no higher esteem, but seem to have been well
-paid, if we may judge from those that were attached to the court. Two
-of these left a joint estate of $1,000,000, and another received from
-the Emperor Claudius a yearly stipend of $25,000. In knowledge and
-skill in both surgery and medicine they do not seem to have been much
-behind the practitioners of two centuries ago. Bankers united money
-changing with money loaning. The former was very necessary in a city
-into which came all the coins of the known world; the latter was never
-looked upon as entirely respectable for a Roman, but there can be no
-doubt that many a Roman of the highest respectability drew large
-profits from this business, carried on discreetly in the name of a
-freedman. The trades were early organized at Rome in guilds, but their
-only purpose seems to have been to hand down and perfect the technique
-of the crafts; at least there was no obstacle in the way of workmen
-not belonging to the guilds, and there were no such things known as
-patents or special privileges in the way of work. Eight of these
-guilds are older than history, those of the fullers, cobblers,
-carpenters, goldsmiths, coppersmiths, potters, dyers, and (oddly
-enough) the fluteblowers. Numerous others were formed as knowledge of
-the arts advanced or the division of labor proceeded. Special parts of
-the city seem to have been appropriated by special classes of workmen,
-as like businesses are apt to be carried on in the same neighborhood
-in our cities: Cicero speaks of a street of the Scythemakers.
-
-§413. Business and Commerce.--The commerce of Rome covered all lands
-and seas. Pliny tells us that the trade with India and China took from
-Rome $5,000,000 yearly. The wholesale trade was to a large extent in
-the hands of the capitalist class, the retail business was conducted
-by freedmen and foreigners. How large these businesses were we have no
-means of telling. The supplying of the food to the city must have
-given employment to thousands; the clothing trade has been mentioned
-already (§271). Building operations were carried on at an immense cost
-and on the largest scale. All the public buildings and many of the
-important private buildings were built by contract. There can be
-little doubt that the letting of the contracts for the public
-buildings was made very profitable for the officers who had it to do,
-but it must be admitted on the other hand that the work was well done.
-Crassus seems to have done a sort of salvage business. When buildings
-seemed certain to be destroyed by fire he would buy them with their
-contents at a nominal sum, and then fight the flames with gangs of
-slaves that he had trained for the purpose. The slave trade itself was
-very considerable and large fortunes were amassed in it (§139). The
-heavy work of ordinary laborers was performed almost entirely by
-slaves (§148), and it must be remembered that much work was then done
-by hand that is now done by machinery. The book business has been
-mentioned (§400). Even the place of the modern newspaper was taken by
-letters written as a business by persons who collected all the news,
-gossip, and scandal of the city, had it copied by slaves, and sent it
-to persons away from the city who did not like to trouble their
-friends (§379) and were willing to pay for intelligence.
-
-§414. The Civil Service.--The free persons employed in the offices of
-the various magistrates were of the lowest class, mostly _lībertīnī_.
-They were paid by the state, and while appointed nominally for a year
-only, they seem to have practically held their places during good
-behavior. This was largely due to the shortness of the term of the
-regular magistrates and the rarity of reëlection. Having no experience
-themselves in conducting their offices the magistrates would have all
-the greater need of thoroughly trained and experienced assistants. The
-highest class of these officials formed an _ōrdō_, the _scrībae_,
-whose name gives no adequate notion of the extent and importance of
-their duties. All that is now done by cabinet officers, secretaries,
-department heads, bureau chiefs, auditors, comptrollers, recorders,
-and accountants, down to the work of the ordinary clerks and copyists,
-was done by these "scribes." Below them came others almost equally
-necessary but not equally respected, the lictors, messengers, etc.
-These civil servants had special places at the theater and the circus.
-The positions seem to have been in great demand, as such places are
-now in France, for example. Horace is said to have been a department
-clerk.
-
-§415. The Roman's Day.--The way in which a Roman spent his day
-depended, of course, upon his position and business, and varied
-greatly with individuals and with the particular day. The ordinary
-routine of a man of the higher class, the man of whom we read most
-frequently in Roman literature, was something like this: The Roman
-rose at a very early hour, his day beginning before sunrise, because
-it ended so early. After a hurried breakfast (§302) he devoted such
-time as was necessary to his private business, looking over accounts,
-consulting with his managers, giving directions, etc. Cicero and Pliny
-found these early hours the best for their literary work. Horace tells
-of lawyers giving free advice at three in the morning. After his
-private business was despatched the Roman took his place in the
-_ātrium_ (§198) for the _salūtātiō_ (§182), when his clients came to
-pay their respects, perhaps to ask for the help or advice that he was
-bound to furnish them (§179). All this business of the early morning
-might have to be dispensed with, however, if the Roman was asked to a
-wedding (§79), or to be present at the naming of a child (§97), or to
-witness the coming of age (§128) of the son of a friend, for all these
-semi-public functions took place in the early morning. But after them
-or after the levee the Roman went to the forum attended by his clients
-and carried in his litter (§151) with his _nōmenclātor_ at his elbow.
-The business of the courts and of the senate began about the third
-hour, and might continue until the ninth or tenth, that of the senate
-was bound to stop at sunset. Except on extraordinary occasions all
-business was pretty sure to be over before eleven o'clock, and at this
-time the lunch was taken (§302).
-
-§416. Then came the midday siesta, so general that the streets were as
-deserted as at midnight, and one of the Roman writers fixes upon this
-as the proper time for a ghost story. Of course there were no sessions
-of the courts or meetings of the senate on the public holidays, and
-then the hours generally given to business might be spent at the
-theater or the circus or other games. As a matter of fact the Romans
-of the better class rather avoided these shows, unless they were
-officially connected with them, and many of them devoted the holidays
-to visiting their country estates. After the siesta, which lasted for
-an hour or more, the Roman was ready for his regular athletic exercise
-and bath, either in the Campus and the Tiber (§317) or in one of the
-public bathing establishments (§365). The bath proper (§367) was
-followed by the lounge (§377), perhaps a promenade in the court, which
-gave him a chance for a chat with a friend, or an opportunity to hear
-the latest news, to consult business associates, in short to talk over
-any of the things that men now discuss at their clubs. After this came
-the great event of the day, the dinner (§303), at his own house or at
-that of some friend, followed immediately by retirement for the night.
-Even on the days spent in the country this programme would not be
-materially changed, and the Roman took with him into the provinces the
-customs of his home life so far as possible.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 192. ANCIENT CALENDAR]
-
-§417. Hours of the Day.--The day itself was divided into twelve hours
-(_hōrae_), each being one-twelfth of the time between sunrise and
-sunset and varying therefore with the season of the year. The length
-of the day and hour at Rome in different times of the year is shown in
-the following table:
-
- Month Length Length | Month Length Length
- and Day of Day of Hour | and Day of Day of Hour
- --------------------------------+--------------------------------
- Dec. 23 8° 54' 44' 30" | June 25 15° 6' 1° 15' 30"
- Feb. 6 9° 50' 49' 10" | Aug. 10 14° 10' 1° 10' 50"
- March 23 12° 00' 1° 00' 00" | Sept. 25 12° 00' 1° 00' 00"
- May 9 14° 10' 1° 10' 50" | Nov. 9 9° 50' 49' 10"
-
-§418. Taking the days of June 25 and December 23 as respectively the
-longest and shortest of the year, the following table gives the
-conclusion of each hour for summer and winter:
-
- Time Summer Winter
- -----------------------------------------
- Sunrise 4° 27' 00" 7° 33' 00"
- 1st Hour 5° 42' 30" 8° 17' 30"
- 2d Hour 6° 58' 00" 9° 02' 00"
- 3d Hour 8° 13' 30" 9° 46' 30"
- 4th Hour 9° 29' 00" 10° 31' 00"
- 5th Hour 10° 44' 30" 11° 15' 30"
- 6th Hour 12° 00' 00" 12° 00' 00"
- 7th Hour 1° 15' 30" 12° 44' 30"
- 8th Hour 2° 31' 00" 1° 29' 00"
- 9th Hour 3° 46' 30" 2° 13' 30"
- 10th Hour 5° 02' 00" 2° 58' 00"
- 11th Hour 6° 17' 30" 3° 42' 30"
- 12th Hour 7° 33' 00" 4° 27' 00"
-
-In the same way the hours may be calculated for any given day, the
-length of the day and the hour of sunrise being known, but for all
-practical purposes the old couplet will serve:
-
- The English hour you may fix,
- If to the Latin you add six.
-
-When the Latin hour is above six it will be more convenient to
-subtract than to add.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 340-388; Voigt, 319-322, 396, 455; Göll,
-480-547; Guhl and Koner, 580-595, 857-863; Friedländer, III, 125-137;
-Ramsay, 479-482; Pauly-Wissowa, _cenotaphium_, _columbārium_; Smith,
-Harper, Rich, _columbārium_, _fūnus_, _sepulcrum_; Lübker,
-_Bestattung_, _sepulcrum_; Baumeister, 308-311, 604-609, 1520 f.;
-Mau-Kelsey, 399-428; Gusman, 44-54; Egbert, Latin Inscriptions,
-230-242; Lanciani, Ancient Rome, 64, 129 f.
-
-
-§419. Importance of Burial.--The Romans' view of the future life
-explains the importance they attached to the ceremonial burial of the
-dead. The soul, they thought, could find rest only when the body had
-been duly laid in the grave; until this was done it haunted the home,
-unhappy itself and bringing unhappiness to others. To perform the
-funeral offices (_iūsta facere_) was, therefore, a solemn religious
-duty, devolving upon the surviving members of the family (§28), and
-the Latin words show that these marks of respect were looked upon as
-the right of the dead. In the case of a body lost at sea, or for any
-other reason unrecovered, the ceremonies were just as piously
-performed, an empty tomb (_cenotaphium_) being erected sometimes in
-honor of the dead. And these same rites the Roman was bound to
-perform, if he came anywhere upon the unburied corpse of a citizen,
-because all were members of the greater family of the commonwealth. In
-this case the scattering of three handfuls of dust over the body was
-sufficient for ceremonial burial and the happiness of the troubled
-spirit, if for any reason the body could not actually be interred.
-
-§420. Interment and Cremation.--Burial was the way of disposing of the
-dead practiced most anciently by the Romans, and even after cremation
-came into very general use it was ceremonially necessary that some
-small part of the remains, usually the bone of a finger, should be
-buried in the earth. Burning was practiced before the time of the
-Twelve Tables, for it is mentioned together with burial in them, but
-we do not know how long before. Hygienic reasons had probably
-something to do with its general adoption, and this implies, of
-course, cities of considerable size. By the time of Augustus it was
-all but universal, but even in Rome the practice of burial was never
-entirely discontinued, for cremation was too costly for the very
-poorest classes, and some of the wealthiest and most aristocratic
-families held fast to the more ancient custom. The Cornelii, for
-example, always buried their dead until the dictator required his body
-to be burned for fear that his bones might be disinterred and
-dishonored by his enemies, as he had dishonored those of Marius.
-Children less than forty days old were always buried, and so, too,
-slaves whose funeral expenses were paid by their masters. After the
-introduction of Christianity burial came again to be the prevailing
-use, largely because of the increased expense of burning.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 193. TOMB OF PLANCUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 194. TOMB OF CESTIUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 195. STREET OF TOMBS AT POMPEII]
-
-§421. Places of Burial.--The most ancient place of burial, at least
-for the head of the house, was beneath the hearthstone in the _ātrium_
-of his house, later in the garden behind his house, but this had
-ceased to be the custom long before history begins, and the Twelve
-Tables forbade the burial or even the burning of the dead within the
-walls of the city. For the very poor, places of burial were provided
-in remote localities outside the walls, corresponding in some degree
-to the Potter's Field of modern cities. The well-to-do made their
-burial-places as conspicuous as their means would permit, with the
-hope that the inscriptions upon the monuments would keep alive the
-names and virtues of the dead, and with the idea, perhaps, that they
-still had some part in the busy life around them. To this end they
-lined the great roads on either side for miles out of the cities with
-rows of tombs of the most elaborate and costly architecture. In the
-vicinity of Rome the Appian way as the oldest (§385) showed the
-monuments of the noblest and most ancient families, but none of the
-roads lacked similar memorials. Many of these tombs were standing in
-the sixteenth century, a few still remain. The same custom was
-followed in the smaller towns, and an idea of the appearance of the
-monuments may be had from the so-called "Street of Tombs" in Pompeii
-(Fig. 195). There were other burial-places near the cities, of course,
-less conspicuous and less expensive, and on the farms and country
-estates like provision was made for persons of humbler station.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 196. EXTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII]
-
-§422. The Tombs.--The tombs, whether intended to receive the bodies or
-merely the ashes, or both, differed widely in size and construction
-with the different purposes for which they were erected. Some were for
-individuals only, but these in most cases were strictly public
-memorials as distinguished from actual tombs intended to receive the
-remains of the dead. The larger number of those that lined the roads
-were family tombs, ample in size for whole generations of descendants
-and retainers of the family, including guest-friends (§185), who had
-died away from their own homes, and freedmen (§175). There were also
-the burial-places of the _gentēs_ (§21), in which provision was made
-for all, even the humblest and poorest, who claimed connection with
-the _gēns_ and had had a place in its formal organization (§22).
-Others were erected on a large scale by speculators who sold at low
-prices space enough for an urn or two to persons too poor to erect
-tombs of their own and without any claim on a family or gentile
-burying-place. In imitation of these structures others were erected on
-the same plan by burial societies formed by persons of the artisan
-class, and others still by benevolent men, as we have seen baths
-(§373) and libraries (§402) erected and maintained for the public
-good. Something will be said of the tombs of all these kinds after the
-public burying-places have been described.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 197. SECTIONS OF TOMB SHOWN IN FIGURE 196]
-
-§423. The Potter's Field.--During the Republic the Esquiline Hill, or
-at least the eastern part of it, was the place to which was carted all
-the refuse of the city that the sewers would not carry away. Here,
-too, were the gravepits (_puticulī_) for the pauper class. They were
-merely holes in the ground, about twelve feet square, without lining
-of any kind. Into them were thrown the bodies of the friendless poor,
-and along with them and over them the carcasses of dead animals and
-the filth and scrapings of the streets. The pits were kept open,
-uncovered apparently even when filled, and the stench and the
-disease-breeding pollution made the hill absolutely uninhabitable.
-Under Augustus the danger to the health of the whole city became so
-great that the dumping grounds were moved to a greater distance, and
-the Esquiline, covered over pits and all with pure soil to the depth
-of twenty-five feet, was made a park, known as the _Hortī Maecēnātis_.
-
-§424. It is not to be understood, however, that the bodies of Roman
-citizens were ordinarily disposed of in this revolting way. Faithful
-freedmen were cared for by their patrons, the industrious poor made
-provision for themselves in coöperative societies mentioned above, and
-the proletariate class (§411) was in general saved from such a fate by
-gentile relations, by patrons (§181), or by the benevolence of
-individuals. Only in times of plague and pestilence, it is safe to
-say, were the bodies of known citizens cast into these pits, as under
-like circumstances bodies have been burned in heaps in our own cities.
-The uncounted thousands that peopled the Potter's Field of Rome were
-the riffraff from foreign lands, abandoned slaves (§156), the victims
-that perished in the arena (§362), outcasts of the criminal class, and
-the "unidentified" that are buried nowadays at public expense.
-Criminals put to death by authority were not buried at all; their
-carcasses were left to birds and beasts of prey at the place of
-execution near the Esquiline gate.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 198. INTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII]
-
-§425. Plan of Tombs and Grounds.--The utmost diversity prevails in the
-outward form and construction of the tombs, but those of the classical
-period seem to have been planned with the thought that the tomb was to
-be a home for the dead and that they were not altogether cut off from
-the living. The tomb, therefore, whether built for one person or for
-many, was ordinarily a building inclosing a room (_sepulcrum_), and
-this room was really the important thing. Attention has already been
-called (§189) to the fact that even the urns had in ancient times the
-shape of the house of one room. The floor of the _sepulcrum_ was quite
-commonly below the level of the surrounding grounds and was reached by
-a short flight of steps. Around the base of the walls ran a slightly
-elevated platform (_podium_, cf. §§337, 357) on which were placed the
-coffins of those who were buried, while the urns were placed either on
-the platform or in niches in the wall. An altar or shrine is often
-found, at which offerings were made to the _mānēs_ of the departed.
-Lamps are very common and so are other simple articles of furniture,
-and the walls, floors, and ceilings are decorated in the same style as
-those of houses (§220 f.). Things that the dead liked to have around
-them when living, especially things that they had used in their
-ordinary occupations, were placed in the tomb at the time of burial,
-or burned with them on the funeral pyre, and in general an effort was
-made to give an air of life to the chamber of rest. The interior of a
-tomb at Pompeii is shown in Fig. 198, and sections of another in Fig.
-197, §423.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 199. PLAN OF GROUNDS ABOUT TOMB]
-
-§426. The monument itself was always built upon a plot of ground as
-spacious as the means of the builders would permit, sometimes several
-acres in extent. In it provision was made for the comfort of surviving
-members of the family, who were bound to visit the resting-place of
-their dead on certain regularly recurring festivals (§438). If the
-grounds were small there would be at least a seat, perhaps a bench. On
-more extensive grounds there were places of shelter, arbors, or summer
-houses. Dining-rooms, too, in which were celebrated the anniversary
-feasts, and private _ūstrīnae_ (places for the burning of bodies) are
-frequently mentioned. Often the grounds were laid out as gardens or
-parks, with trees and flowers, wells, cisterns or fountains, and even
-a house, with other buildings perhaps, for the accommodation of the
-slaves or freedmen who were in charge. A plan of such a garden is
-shown in Fig. 199. In the middle of the garden is the _ārea_, the
-technical word for the plot of ground set aside for the tomb, with
-several buildings upon it, one of which is a storehouse or granary
-(_horreum_); around the tomb itself are beds of roses and violets,
-used in festivals (§438), and around them in turn are grapes trained
-on trellises. In the front is a terrace (_sōlārium_, cf. §207), and in
-the rear two pools (_piscīnae_) connected with the _ārea_ by a little
-canal, while at the back is a thicket of shrubbery (_harundinētum_).
-The purpose of the granary is not clear as no grain seems to have been
-raised on the lot, but it may have been left where it stood before the
-ground was consecrated. A tomb surrounded by grounds of some extent
-was called a _cēpotaphium_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 200. RUINS OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA]
-
-§427. Exterior of the Tombs.--An idea of the exterior appearance of
-monuments of the better sort may be had from Figs. 193-196. The forms
-are very many, those of the altar and temple are the most common,
-perhaps, but memorial arches and niches are often found, and at
-Pompeii the semicircular bench that was used for conversation out of
-doors occurs several times, covered and uncovered. Not all of the
-tombs have the sepulchral chamber, the remains being sometimes
-deposited in the earth beneath the monument. In such cases a tube or
-pipe of lead ran from the receptacle to the surface, through which
-offerings of wine and milk could be poured (§§429, 438). In Fig. 193,
-§420, is shown the round monument at Caieta of Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, one of Caesar's marshals (_lēgātī_) in Gaul, the
-inscription[1] on which recounts the positions he had filled and the
-work he had done. In Fig. 194, §420, is shown the pyramid erected at
-Rome in honor of Caius Cestius by his heirs, one of whom was Marcus
-Agrippa. According to the inscription on it the monument was completed
-in 330 days. The most imposing of all was the mausoleum of Hadrian
-(Fig. 205, §438) at Rome, now the castle of St. Angelo. A less
-elaborate exterior is that of the "tomb with the marble door" at
-Pompeii, given in Fig. 196, §422.
-
-[Footnote 1: Inscription on the tomb of Plancus: "Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, son, etc. (§39), consul, censor, twice imperator, member of
-the board of seven in charge of sacrificial feasts. He celebrated a
-triumph over the people of Raetia. From the spoils of war he erected a
-temple to Saturn. In Italy he assigned lands about Beneventum. In Gaul
-he planted colonies at Lugdunum and Raurica."]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 201. GROUND PLAN OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 202. SARCOPHAGUS OF SCIPIO]
-
-§428. The Columbaria.--From the family tombs were developed the
-immense structures mentioned in §422 intended to receive great numbers
-of urns. They began to be erected in the time of Augustus and seem to
-have been confined to Rome, where the high price of land made the
-purchase of private burial-grounds impossible for the poorer classes.
-An idea of their interior arrangements may be had from the ruins (Fig.
-200) of one erected on the Appian way for the freedmen of Livia, the
-wife of Augustus. From their resemblance to a dovecote or pigeon house
-they were called _columbāria_. They are usually partly underground,
-rectangular in form, with great numbers of the niches (also called
-_columbāria_) running in regular rows horizontally (_gradūs_) and
-vertically (_ōrdinēs_). In the larger _columbāria_ provision was made
-for as many as a thousand urns. Around the walls at the base was a
-_podium_, on which were placed the sarcophagi of those whose remains
-had not been burned, and sometimes chambers were excavated beneath the
-floor for the same purpose. In the _podium_ were also niches that no
-space might be lost. If the height of the building was great enough to
-warrant it, wooden galleries ran around the walls. Access to the room
-was given by a stairway in which were niches, too; light was furnished
-by small windows near the ceiling, and walls and floors were
-handsomely finished and decorated.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 203. AEDICULA IN COLUMBARIUM]
-
-§429. The niches were sometimes rectangular in form, but more commonly
-half round, as shown in Figs. 200 and 203. Some of the _columbāria_
-have the lower rows rectangular, those above arched. They contained
-ordinarily two urns (_ollae_, _ollae ossuāriae_) each, arranged side
-by side, that they might be visible from the front. Occasionally the
-niches were made deep enough for two sets of urns, those behind being
-elevated a little over those in front. Above or below each niche was
-fastened to the wall a piece of marble (_titulus_) on which was cut
-the name of the owner. If a person required for his family a group of
-four or six niches, it was customary to mark them off from the others
-by wall decorations to show that they made a unit; a very common way
-was to erect pillars at the sides so as to give the appearance of the
-front of a temple (Fig. 203). Such groups were called _aediculae_. The
-value of the places depended upon their position, those in the higher
-rows (_gradūs_) being less expensive than those near the floor, those
-under the stairway the least desirable of all. The urns themselves
-were of various materials (§437) and usually cemented to the bottom of
-the niches. The tops could be removed, but they, too, were sealed
-after the ashes had been placed in them, small openings being left
-through which offerings of milk and wine could be poured. On the urns
-or their tops were painted the names of the dead with sometimes the
-day and the month of death. The year is almost never found. Over the
-door of such a _columbārium_ on the outside was cut an inscription
-giving the names of the owners, the date of erection, and other
-particulars.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 204. CINERARY URNS]
-
-§430. Burial Societies.--Early in the Empire associations were formed
-for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their members,
-whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the purpose
-of building _columbāria_, or for both. These coöperative associations
-(_collegia fūnerāticia_) started originally among members of the same
-guild (§412) or among persons of the same occupation. They called
-themselves by many names, _cultōrēs_ of this deity or that, _collegia
-salūtāria_, _collegia iuvenum_, etc., but their objects and methods
-were practically the same. If the members had provided places for the
-disposal of their bodies after death they now provided for the
-necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a
-small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When
-a member died a stated sum was drawn for his funeral from the
-treasury, a committee saw that the rites were decently performed, and
-at the proper seasons (§438) the society made corporate offerings to
-the dead. If the purpose of the society was the building of a
-_columbārium_, the cost was first determined and the sum total divided
-into what we should call shares (_sortēs virīlēs_), each member taking
-as many as he could afford and paying their value into the treasury.
-Sometimes a benevolent person would contribute toward the expense of
-the undertaking, and then such a person would be made an honorary
-member of the society with the title of _patrōnus_ or _patrōna_. The
-erection of the building was intrusted to a number of _cūrātōrēs_,
-chosen by ballot, naturally the largest shareholders and most
-influential men. They let the contracts and superintended the
-construction, rendering account for all the money expended. The office
-of the curators was considered very honorable, especially as their
-names appeared on the inscription without the building, and they often
-showed their appreciation of the honor done them by providing at their
-own expense for the decoration of the interior, or by furnishing all
-or a part of the _titulī_, _ollae_, etc., or by erecting on the
-surrounding grounds places of shelter and dining-rooms for the use of
-the members, like those mentioned in §426.
-
-§431. After the completion of the building the _cūrātōrēs_ allotted
-the niches to the individual members. The niches were either numbered
-consecutively throughout or their position was fixed by the number of
-the _ōrdō_ and _gradus_ (§428) in which they were situated. Because
-they were not all equally desirable, as has been explained, the
-curators divided them into sections as fairly as possible and then
-assigned the sections (_locī_) by lot to the shareholders. If a man
-held several shares of stock he received a corresponding number of
-_locī_, though they might be in widely different parts of the
-building. The members were allowed freely to dispose of their holdings
-by exchange, sale, or gift, and many of the larger stockholders
-probably engaged in the enterprise for the sake of the profits to be
-made in this way. After the division was made the owners had their
-names cut upon the _titulī_, and might put up the columns to mark the
-_aediculae_, set up statues, etc., if they pleased. Some of the
-_titulī_ give besides the name of the owner the number and position of
-his _locī_ or _ollae_. Sometimes they record the purchase of _ollae_,
-giving the number bought and the name of the previous owner. Sometimes
-the names on the _ollae_ do not correspond with that over the niche,
-showing that the owner had sold a part only of his holdings, or that
-the purchaser had not taken the trouble to replace the _titulus_. The
-expenses of maintenance were probably paid from the weekly dues of the
-members, as were the funeral benefits.
-
- L • ABVCIVS • HERMES • IN • HOC
- ORDINE • AB • IMO • AD • SVMMVM
- COLVMBARIA • IX • OLLAE • XVIII
- SIBI • POSTERISQVE • SVIS[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: Titulus in Columbarium: "Lucius Abucius Hermes (has
-acquired) in this row, running from the ground to the top, nine niches
-with eighteen urns for (the ashes of) himself and his descendants."]
-
-§432. Funeral Ceremonies.--The detailed accounts of funeral ceremonies
-that have come down to us relate almost exclusively to those of
-persons of high position, and the information gleaned from other
-sources (§12) is so scattered that there is great danger of confusing
-usages of widely different times. It is quite certain, however, that
-very young children were buried at all times simply and quietly
-(_fūnus acerbum_), that no ceremonies at all attended the burial of
-slaves (§420) when conducted by their masters (nothing is known of the
-forms used by the burial societies mentioned above), and that citizens
-of the lowest class were laid to rest without public parade (_fūnus
-plēbēium_). It is also known that burials took place by night except
-during the last century of the Republic and the first two centuries of
-the Empire, and it is natural to suppose that, even in the case of
-persons of high position, there was ordinarily much less of pomp and
-parade than on occasions that the Roman writers thought it worth while
-to describe. This has been found true in the matter of wedding
-festivities (§79). It will be convenient to take in order the
-proceedings at the house, the funeral procession, and the ceremonies
-at the place of burial.
-
-§433. At the House.--When the Roman died at home surrounded by his
-family, it was the duty of his oldest son to bend over the body and
-call him by name, as if with the hope of recalling him to life. The
-formal performance of the act (_conclāmātiō_) he announced immediately
-with the words: _conclāmātum est_. The eyes of the dead were then
-closed, the body was washed with warm water and anointed, the limbs
-were straightened, and if the deceased had held a curule office a wax
-impression of his features was taken. The body was then dressed in the
-toga (§240) with all the insignia of rank that the dead had been
-entitled to wear in life, and was placed upon the funeral couch
-(_lectus fūnebris_) in the _ātrium_ (§198), with the feet to the door,
-to lie in state until the time of the funeral. The couch was
-surrounded with flowers, and incense was burned about it. Before the
-door of the house were set branches of pine or cypress as a warning
-that the house was polluted by death. The simple offices that have
-been described were performed in humble life by the relatives and
-servants, in other cases by professional undertakers (_libitīnāriī_),
-who also embalmed the body and superintended all the rest of the
-ceremonies. Reference is made occasionally to the kissing of the dying
-person as he breathed his last, as if this last breath was to be
-caught in the mouth of the living, and in very early and very late
-times it was undoubtedly the custom to put a small coin between the
-teeth of the dead with which to pay his passage across the Styx in
-Charon's boat. Neither of these formalities seems to have obtained
-generally in classical times.
-
-§434. The Funeral Procession.--The funeral procession of the ordinary
-citizen was simple enough. Notice was given to neighbors and friends,
-and surrounded by them and by the family, carried on the shoulders of
-the sons or other near relatives, with perhaps a band of musicians in
-the lead, the body was borne to the tomb. The procession of one of the
-mighty, on the other hand, was marshaled with all possible display and
-ostentation. It occurred as soon after death as the necessary
-preparations could be made, there being no fixed intervening time.
-Notice was given by a public crier in the ancient words of style:
-_Ollus Quiris lētō datus. Exsequiās, quibus est commodum, īre iam
-tempus est. Ollus ex aedibus effertur._[3] Questions of order and
-precedence were settled by one of the undertakers (_dēsīgnātor_). At
-the head went a band of musicians, followed at least occasionally by
-persons singing dirges in praise of the dead, and by bands of buffoons
-and jesters, who made merry with the bystanders and imitated even the
-dead himself. Then came the imposing part of the display. The wax
-masks of the dead man's ancestors had been taken from their place in
-the _ālae_ (§200) and assumed by actors in the dress appropriate to
-the time and station of the worthies they represented. It must have
-seemed as if the ancient dead had returned to earth to guide their
-descendant to his place among them. Servius tells us that six hundred
-_imāginēs_ were displayed at the funeral of the young Marcellus, the
-nephew of Augustus. Then followed the memorials of the great deeds of
-the deceased, if he had been a general, as in a triumphal procession,
-and then the dead himself, carried with face uncovered on a lofty
-couch. Then came the family, including freedmen (especially those made
-free by the testament of their master) and slaves, and then the
-friends, all in mourning garb (§§246, 254), and all freely giving
-expression to the emotion that we try to suppress on such occasions.
-Torch-bearers attended the train, even by day, as a remembrance of the
-older custom of burial by night.
-
-[Footnote 3: "This citizen has been surrendered to death. For those
-who find it convenient it is now time to attend the funeral. He is
-being brought from his house."]
-
-§435. The Funeral Oration.--The procession passed from the house
-directly to the place of interment, unless the deceased was a person
-of sufficient consequence to be honored by public authority with a
-funeral oration (_laudātiō_) in the forum. In this case the funeral
-coach was placed before the _rostra_, the men in the masks took their
-places on curule chairs (§225) around it, the general crowd was massed
-in a semicircle behind, and a son or other near relative delivered the
-address. It recited the virtues and achievements of the dead and
-recounted the history of the family to which he belonged. Like such
-addresses in more recent times it contained much that was false and
-more that was exaggerated. The honor of the _laudātiō_ was freely
-given in later times, especially to members of the imperial family,
-including women. Under the Republic it was less common and more highly
-prized, and so far as we know the only women so honored belonged to
-the _gēns Iūlia_. It will be remembered that it was Caesar's address
-on the occasion of the funeral of his aunt, the widow of Marius, that
-pointed him out to the opponents of Sulla as a future leader. When the
-address in the forum was not authorized, one was sometimes given more
-privately at the grave or at the house.
-
-§436. At the Tomb.--When the train reached the place of burial the
-proceedings varied according to the time, but all provided for the
-three things ceremonially necessary: the consecration of the
-resting-place, the casting of earth upon the remains, and the
-purification of all polluted by the death. In ancient times the body,
-if buried, was lowered into the grave either upon the couch on which
-it had been brought to the spot, or in a coffin of burnt clay or
-stone. If the body was to be burned a shallow grave was dug and filled
-with dry wood, upon which the couch and body were placed. The pile was
-then fired and when wood and body had been consumed, earth was heaped
-over the ashes into a mound (_tumulus_). Such a grave in which the
-body was burned was called _būstum_, and was consecrated as a regular
-_sepulcrum_ by the ceremonies mentioned below. In later times the
-body, if not to be burned, was placed in a sarcophagus (Fig. 203)
-already prepared in the tomb (§425). If the remains were to be burned
-they were taken to the _ūstrīna_ (§426), which was not regarded as a
-part of the _sepulcrum_, and placed upon the pile of wood (_rogus_).
-Spices and perfumes were thrown upon it, together with gifts (§425)
-and tokens from the persons present. The pyre was then lighted with a
-torch by a relative, who kept his face averted during the act. After
-the fire had burned out the embers were extinguished with water or
-wine and those present called a last farewell to the dead. The water
-of purification was then thrice sprinkled over those present, and all
-except the immediate family left the place. The ashes were then
-collected in a cloth to be dried, and the ceremonial bone (§420),
-called _os resectum_, was buried. A sacrifice of a pig was then made,
-by which the place of burial was made sacred ground, and food
-(_silicernium_) was eaten together by the mourners. They then returned
-to the house which was purified by an offering to the _Larēs_, and the
-funeral rites were over.
-
-§437. After Ceremonies.--With the day of the burial or burning of the
-remains began the Nine Days of Sorrow, solemnly observed by the
-immediate family. Some time during this period, when the ashes had had
-time to dry thoroughly, members of the family went privately to the
-_ūstrīna_, removed them from the cloth, placed them in an _olla_ (Fig.
-204) of earthenware, glass, alabaster, bronze, or other material, and
-with bare feet and loosened girdles carried them into the _sepulcrum_
-(§425). At the end of the nine days the _sacrificium novendiāle_ was
-offered to the dead and the _cēna novendiālis_ was celebrated at the
-house. On this day, too, the heirs formally entered upon their
-inheritance and the funeral games (§344) were originally given. The
-period of mourning, however, was not concluded on the ninth day. For
-husband or wife, ascendants, and grown descendants mourning was worn
-for ten months, the ancient year; for other adult relatives, eight
-months; for children between the ages of three and ten years, for as
-many months as they were years old.
-
-§438. Memorial Festivals.--The memory of the dead was kept alive by
-regularly recurring days of obligation of both public and private
-character. To the former belong the _parentālia_, or _diēs parentālēs_
-(§75), lasting from the 13th to the 21st of February, the final day
-being especially distinguished as the _fērālia_. To the latter belong
-the annual celebration of the birthday (or the burial-day) of the
-person commemorated, and the festivals of violets and roses
-(_violāria_, _rosāria_), about the end of March and May respectively,
-when violets and roses were distributed among the relatives and laid
-upon the graves or heaped over the urns. On all these occasions
-offerings were made in the temples to the gods and at the tombs to the
-_mānēs_ of the dead, and the lamps were lighted in the tombs (§425),
-and at the tombs the relatives feasted together and offered food to
-their dead (§426).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 205. HADRIAN'S TOMB]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-References are to Paragraphs. An asterisk denotes a cut.
-
-
-A
-
-ā manū, 391.
-
-abacus, reckoning board, 111*;
- panels in wall decorations, 220;
- sideboard, 227, 307*.
-
-ABBREVIATIONS in names, 41.
-
-ab epistolīs, 391.
-
-abolla, cloak, 249*.
-
-ab ovō ad māla, 308.
-
-ACTORS, slave, men only, 324.
-
-ad (malam) crucem, 174.
-
-ADDITIONAL names, 51.
-
-ADDRESS of letters, 392.
-
-adfīnēs, blood relations, 26.
-
-ADJUSTABLE tables, 227*.
-
-adoptiō, see ADOPTION.
-
-ADOPTION, two kinds, 29;
- of a fīlius familiās, 30;
- of a pater familiās, 30;
- name given adopted person, 52, 56.
-
-adrogātiō, see ADOPTION.
-
-adversitōrēs, 152.
-
-ADVERTISEMENTS of gladiators, 361*.
-
-aediculae, in columbāria, 429*.
-
-AFFECTION for nurses, 101;
- for pedagogues, 123.
-
-agger viae, 387.
-
-agitātōrēs, drivers of chariots, 341. See aurīgae.
-
-agnātī, related through males, 23.
-
-AGRICULTURE, honorable occupation, 404.
-
-ālae, in house, 191;
- later, 200.
-
-aliēnō iūrī subiectus, 17.
-
-alveus, in bath, 369*.
-
-amictus, outer garments, 240*-249*.
-
-AMPHITHEATER, meaning of word, 351;
- early at Rome, 352;
- at Pompeii, 353*, 354*, 355*;
- the coliseum, 356*, 357*, 358*.
-
-amphitheātrum, see AMPHITHEATER.
-
-amphorae, for wine, 297.
-
-amurca, bitter fluid of olives, 291.
-
-AMUSEMENTS, Chap. IX. See Table of Contents.
-
-andabatae, blindfold gladiators, 359.
-
-andrōn, formerly called faucēs, 192 note.
-
-Andronicus, 113.
-
-anteambulōnēs, outriders, 151.
-
-antecēna, appetizer, 308.
-
-ANTIQUITIES, public and private distinguished, 2;
- and history, 4;
- private defined, 1;
- in philology, 6, 7;
- recent interest, 8.
-
-apodytērium, 366;
- makeshift for, 367;
- usually unheated, 368;
- one heated, 378*;
- in thermae, 376*, 377*.
-
-APPIAN WAY, as burial-place, 421;
- construction, 385 f.
-
-APPRENTICESHIP in education, 117.
-
-arbiter bibendī, toast master, 313.
-
-ārca, strong box, 188, 201, 230*.
-
-Archias, name explained, 60.
-
-ārea, ground for tomb, 426.
-
-arēna, circus, 330*, 332;
- amphitheater (Pompeii), 354*, (Rome), 357*.
-
-ARITHMETIC, in the schools, 111*.
-
-armāria, cabinets, 231.
-
-ARMY, as a career, (for nobles), 408, (for commons), 410.
-
-ARRANGEMENT of hair, 263;
- of hair of bride, 78;
- of couches in dining-room, 304*.
-
-ATHENS, university of Rome, 116.
-
-ATHLETIC sports and games, 316*, 317*, 318*.
-
-ātriēnsis, butler, 149.
-
-ātrium, in primitive house, 188;
- meaning, 189;
- the developed ātrium, 196, 197, 198*;
- burial-place of Head of House, 421.
-
-Atticus, 155, 300, 310, 399.
-
-auctōrātī, volunteer gladiators, 347.
-
-aulaea, portières, 216.
-
-aurīgae, chariot drivers, (Figs. 138, 142), 341*, 342.
-
-
-B
-
-BAKERIES, 286*.
-
-BAKERS, as a guild, 286.
-
-BALL, played by children, 102*;
- by men, 318*.
-
-balneae, meaning, 372. See BATHS.
-
-balneāticum, bath fee, 373.
-
-balneum, meaning, 372. See BATHS.
-
-BANKING, as profession, 412.
-
-BANQUETS, 315.
-
-BARBER shops, 253.
-
-BARRIERS, in circus, 330*, 333*.
-
-basterna, litter drawn by mules, 382.
-
-BATH, in early times, 365;
- public and private, 365;
- essentials for, 366;
- rooms combined, 367;
- heating, 368;
- caldārium, 369;
- frīgidārium, 370;
- ūnctōrium, 370;
- private bathhouse, 371*;
- public baths, 372;
- time opened, 374;
- fees, 373;
- for women, 375;
- thermae, 376*, 377*.
-
-BATHHOUSE, in Caerwent, 371*;
- in Pompeii, 376*;
- in Rome, 377*.
-
-BATHROOMS, in residences, 203, 367, 371*.
-
-BEANS, considered heavy food, 275.
-
-BEARDS, fashions in, 254.
-
-BEEF, rarely used, 277.
-
-Benoist, his definition of Philology, 6.
-
-BETROTHALS, 70.
-
-BEVERAGES, 298.
-
-bibliothēca, 206, 402.
-
-BILLS of fare, 308, 309.
-
-BOOKS, ancient forms, 393;
- materials, 394, 395;
- making, 396;
- finish of, 397;
- size, 398;
- publishing, 399, 400;
- cost, 401;
- libraries, 402.
-
-"BOOKS," divisions of literary work, 398.
-
-BOXES, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 334;
- in amphitheater, 353.
-
-BOY, named, 97;
- home training, 104, 106;
- athletics, 107;
- education, see SCHOOL;
- coming of age, 125;
- given citizenship, 128.
-
-brācātae, wearing trousers, 239.
-
-BRAZIERS, 218*.
-
-BREAD, 286 f.;
- making, 287;
- kinds of, 288.
-
-"Bread and the Games of the Circus," 322.
-
-BREAKFAST, 302.
-
-BREAKING promise of marriage, 71.
-
-BRICKS, 212*.
-
-bulla, 99*.
-
-BURIAL-places and ceremonies, Chapter XII. See Table of Contents.
-
-BURIAL SOCIETIES, 430.
-
-BUSINESS rooms added to houses, 193;
- interests at Rome, 413.
-
-BUTTER, not a food, 281.
-
-
-C
-
-CABINETS, 231.
-
-calamus (scriptōrius), 395.
-
-calceātor, 150.
-
-calceī, 251*, 262;
- senātōriī, 251;
- patriciī, 251.
-
-caldārium, 366;
- near furnace, 368;
- furniture, 369;
- other uses of, 369;
- in plans, 371*, 376*, 378*.
-
-caligae, half-boots, 251.
-
-calx, in circus, 331*.
-
-camillus, 82*.
-
-campus Mārtius, 317.
-
-candēlābra, 229.
-
-CANDIDATES' dress, 235, 246.
-
-candidātī, 246.
-
-CANDLES, ill made, 229.
-
-CAP, of liberty, 175*, 252.
-
-CAPITALISTS, their field, 409, 413.
-
-capsa, 397*.
-
-capsārius, 370.
-
-Caracalla, hall in baths of, 365*.
-
-cāra cognātiō, feast of, 25.
-
-carcerēs, in circus, 330*, 333*.
-
-carnifex, term of abuse, 174.
-
-carpentum, traveling carriage, 383*.
-
-CARRIAGES, for travel, 383*.
-
-carūca, sleeping car, 383.
-
-casa Rōmulī, 214*.
-
-cathedra, easy chair, 226*.
-
-catillus, outer part of mill, 284*.
-
-Cato (234-149), treatment of slaves, 159;
- opinion of cabbage, 275;
- word for dinner, 312.
-
-causia, hat, 252*.
-
-cavea, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater (Pompeii), 353*, (Rome), 358*.
-
-cavum aedium, 196.
-
-CEILINGS, construction, 213.
-
-cellae, servōrum, 207;
- vīnāriae, 297*;
- oleāriae, 292*.
-
-cēna, in early times, 301;
- in the city, 303-311;
- hours, 303;
- importance in social life, 303;
- bills of fare, 308, 309;
- service, 310, 311;
- lībera, 362;
- nūptiālis, 85.
-
-cēna, "dinner proper," 308.
-
-cenotaphium, empty tomb, 419.
-
-centēnārius, winner of 100 races, 340.
-
-cēpotaphium, tomb with grounds, 426.
-
-cēra, for sealing letter, 392.
-
-cerasus, cherry, 274.
-
-CEREALS for food, 282.
-
-Cestius, tomb of, (420*), 427.
-
-CHAIRS, 225*, 226*.
-
-CHALKED FEET, 139.
-
-CHARIOT RACES, 330 f.;
- number of chariots, 333;
- racing syndicates, 339;
- teams, 340;
- drivers, 341.
-
-charta, paper, see papyrus.
-
-CHEESE, 281.
-
-CHESTS, 230*.
-
-CHILDHOOD, see CHILDREN;
- end of, 125.
-
-CHILDLESSNESS, a reproach, 28.
-
-CHILDREN, rights of, see potestās;
- property of, see pecūlium;
- civil position of, 69, 94;
- acknowledgment of, 95;
- exposure of, 96;
- maiming of, 96;
- games, etc., 102, 103;
- home training, 104;
- punishment of, 120*, 124;
- in the dining-room, 304;
- burial of young children, 420.
-
-Chrysogonus and Roscius, 408.
-
-CHURCH, like Roman house, 191.
-
-Cicero (106-43), number of his slaves, 155;
- names of his freedmen, 59;
- goodness to slaves, 158;
- his books, 399, 402;
- income, 407.
-
-CINERARY urns, 189*, 428, 437.
-
-ciniflōnēs, hairdressers, 150.
-
-CIRCUS at Rome, 328 f.;
- plan, 330*;
- arēna, 332*;
- carcerēs, 333*, 334*;
- spīna, mētae, 335*, 336*;
- seats, 337*;
- capacity, 338;
- races in, 339 f.
-
-circus Flāminius, 329.
-
-circus Maxentiī, 329;
- plan of, 330*;
- arēna, 332;
- obelisk in, 336;
- seating capacity, 338.
-
-circus Maximus, 328;
- missus in, 332;
- spīna in, 336;
- obelisk in 336*;
- seats in, 337, 338*;
- reconstruction, 338*.
-
-cisium, two-wheeled cart, 384*.
-
-CIVIL SERVICE, 414.
-
-clepsydra, water-clock, 232.
-
-clientēla, clientage, 177.
-
-CLIENTS, Chap. V. See Table of Contents.
-
-CLIMATE of Italy, 272.
-
-CLOCKS, 232.
-
-CLOTHING, Chap. VII. See Table of Contents;
- colors worn, 270;
- manufacture of, 271;
- cleaning, 271*.
-
-codicillī, set of writing tablets, 391*.
-
-coēmptiō, plebeian form of marriage, 63;
- implying manus, 66;
- ceremony of, 83.
-
-COFFINS, 425, 436.
-
-COGNATES, defined, 25;
- importance among plebeians, 65;
- degrees between, 25, 68.
-
-cognātī, see COGNATES.
-
-cognātiō, see COGNATES.
-
-cognōmen, before nōmen, 40;
- marking family, 48;
- age of, 49;
- nickname, 49;
- indication of lineage, 50;
- ex virtūte, 53;
- differing in same family, 55;
- as fourth element in name, 55.
-
-COLISEUM, date of, 352;
- plan, 356*;
- arēna, 357*;
- seats, 358*.
-
-collegia, fūnerāticia, iuvenum, salūtāria, 430.
-
-COLONIES, 411.
-
-COLORS, of articles of dress, 270;
- of racing syndicates, 339.
-
-columbāria, 428*-431*.
-
-COMIC OPERAS, 323.
-
-COMMERCE, 413.
-
-comissātiō, drinking bout, 312*, 313.
-
-COMMON PEOPLE, employments of, 410 f.
-
-compluvium, 188, 191, 196, 198.
-
-compōtātiō, drinking bout, 312*.
-
-conclāmātiō, cry of farewell, 433.
-
-CONCRETE, extensive use, 146;
- method of making, 211*;
- in roads, 387.
-
-conductor, manager of baths, 373.
-
-cōnfarreātiō, 61;
- religious aspect, 64;
- implying manus, 66;
- ceremony of, 81.
-
-CONFISCATION of property, 408.
-
-CONFUSION of names, 55.
-
-CONSENT necessary to marriage, 74.
-
-Constantius (Emperor 337-361 A.D.), 338.
-
-CONSTRUCTION of house, 210* f.;
- mill, 284*;
- roads, 387*.
-
-contubernia, unions of slaves, 138, 156.
-
-conventiō in manum, 35;
- cum conventiōne, 61;
- sine conventiōne, 62.
-
-convīvia, dinners, 312;
- convīvia tempestīva, 310.
-
-COOKS, hired in early times, 299.
-
-Cornelii, buried their dead, 420.
-
-corōnae convīvālēs, 313.
-
-CORRESPONDENCE, 391.
-
-COST, of baths, 373;
- books, 401;
- meals (inns), 388;
- slaves, 140;
- tables, 227;
- wines, 298.
-
-COTTON goods, 269.
-
-COUCHES, sofas or beds, 224*;
- dining, 304*.
-
-COVERINGS for the head, men, 252*;
- women, 263.
-
-covīnus, two-wheeled cart, 384.
-
-Crassus, in salvage business, 413.
-
-crātēr, mixing bowl, 314*.
-
-CREMATION, introduced at Rome, 420.
-
-crepundia, child's rattle, 98*.
-
-Crescens, famous driver, 342.
-
-CRIMSON or purple, 270.
-
-CRUCIFIXION of slaves, 173.
-
-cubicula, bedrooms, 205.
-
-cucullus, hood, 247, 248, 252.
-
-culīna, kitchen, 203*.
-
-cumerus, 82*.
-
-cuneī, in theater, 327;
- circus, 337.
-
-cūrātōrēs, of burial societies, 430.
-
-Curius and his dinner, 299.
-
-curriculum, lap in race, 331.
-
-CURTAIN in later theater, 327.
-
-CURULE chair, 225*.
-
-cyathus, ladle, 314*.
-
-CYPHER correspondence, 390.
-
-CYPRESS, as emblem of death, 433.
-
-
-D
-
-DAIRY products, 281.
-
-DANCERS, 153.
-
-dator lūdōrum, giver of games, 334.
-
-DAY, a Roman's, 415.
-
-dēclāmātiō, public speaking, 115.
-
-DECORATION of houses, 220 f.;
- walls, 220*;
- doors, 221*;
- floors, 221*;
- of tombs, 425*, 428*, 430*.
-
-decuriae, of slaves, 133.
-
-dēfrutum, grape jelly, 296.
-
-delphica (mēnsa), 227*.
-
-dēsīgnātor, funeral director, 434.
-
-dēstrictārium, in baths, 367, 376*.
-
-dēsultōrēs, circus riders, 343.
-
-DEVELOPMENT of the house, 188*.
-
-dextrārum iūnctiō, in marriage, 81*.
-
-DICE, gaming with, 321*.
-
-diēs, lūstricus, 97;
- parentālēs, 75, 438;
- religiōsī, 75.
-
-dimachaerī, gladiators with two swords, 359.
-
-DINING-ROOM, 204, 304*.
-
-DINNER, in the city, 303-311;
- early times, 301;
- hour, 310;
- bill of fare, 309;
- order of courses, 308;
- places of honor, 306.
-
-Diocletian (Emperor 284-305 A.D.) baths of, 378*.
-
-discus, throwing the, 316*.
-
-dispēnsātor, steward, 149.
-
-diurna cubicula, 205.
-
-DIVORCE, 72, 93.
-
-DOG, as pet, 103;
- in hallway, 195*.
-
-dōlia, for oil, 292*;
- for wine, 297.
-
-dominica potestās, 37.
-
-dominus gregis, head actor, 324.
-
-Domitian (Emperor 81-96 A.D.), 339.
-
-domus, 186;
- see HOUSE.
-
-DOORS, construction, 215* f.;
- names, 216.
-
-dormitōria, 205.
-
-dorsum, top course in road, 387.
-
-dōs, dowry, 72.
-
-DOWRY, 72.
-
-DRAMATIC performances, 323 f.
-
-DRESS, Chap. VII. See Table of Contents.
-
-DRINKING bouts, 312*.
-
-DRIVERS, chariot races, 341*.
-
-ducēnārius, horse of 200 victories, 340.
-
-DWARFS, kept for amusement, 153.
-
-
-E
-
-"EARLY DINNERS," 310.
-
-EARLY FORMS, of marriage, 61;
- of names, 38, 57, 58;
- of table customs, 299;
- of toga, 245;
- of theater, 325;
- of baths, 365;
- of gladiatorial shows, 345.
-
-EARLY HOURS at Rome, 79, 415.
-
-EARS of slaves bored, 139.
-
-EDUCATION, Chap. IV. See Table of Contents.
-
-ELM TREE, for grapes, 295;
- for switches, 167;
- "essence of elm," 168.
-
-ēditor mūnerum, giver of gladiatorial show, 362.
-
-ELOCUTION in schools, 114.
-
-EMANCIPATION, of a son, 18;
- of a slave, 175.
-
-endormis, bath robe, 249.
-
-ENGAGEMENTS, marriage, 71.
-
-EPIGRAPHIC sources, 10.
-
-epityrum, olive salad, 290.
-
-equitēs, career of, 409.
-
-ERRORS in manuscript books, 399.
-
-Esquiline Hill, as burial-place, 423.
-
-essedāriī, chariot fighters, 359;
- spelled assidāriī, 362.
-
-ESSENTIALS for the bath, 366;
- for burial, 436.
-
-EXAGGERATION in satire, 93.
-
-ex cathedrā, official utterance, 226.
-
-exedrae, reception halls, 207.
-
-expōnere, "expose," of children, 95.
-
-EXPOSURE of children, 32, 95;
- slaves, 157.
-
-exta, of the sacrifices, 277.
-
-EXTINCTION of the potestās, 34;
- of a family, 30.
- See ADOPTION.
-
-
-F
-
-f., abbreviation in names, 39, 57;
- for fugitīvus, 172.
-
-fābulae palliātae, 323.
-
-facēs, torches kept in doorways, 229.
-
-factiōnēs, racing syndicates, 339.
-
-familia, meanings, 17, 21;
- =stirps, 22;
- gladiātōria, 349;
- rūstica, 142, 145;
- urbāna, 149.
-
-FAMILY, Chap. I. See Table of Contents;
- defined, 17;
- splitting up of, 19;
- cult, 27.
-
-FANS, 266*.
-
-far, early sort of grain, 282.
-
-FARMING of revenues, 409.
-
-FARM slaves, see familia rūstica;
- work, 148.
-
-fasciae, wrappings of cloth, 239.
-
-fascinātiō, evil eye, 98, 99.
-
-fascis, a set of books, 397.
-
-FASTENINGS for doors, 216.
-
-FATHER, see pater familiās;
- as companion of his sons, 106.
-
-faucēs, in a house, 192, note.
-
-FEES, in schools, 109, 119;
- baths, 373.
-
-fēlīciter, in congratulations, 82.
-
-feminālia, wrappings for legs, 239.
-
-fenestrae, windows, 217*.
-
-fērālia, 438.
-
-Fescinnīnī versūs, 87.
-
-FESTIVALS, cāra cognātiō, 25;
- fērālia, 438;
- mātrōnālia, 91;
- līberālia, 127;
- rosāria, 438;
- Sāturnālia, 319;
- vīnālia rūstica, 296;
- violāria, 438.
-
-FESTIVITIES, wedding, 80, 85, 86, 89;
- coming of age, 127.
-
-FIREMEN, slaves as, 141.
-
-FISH, as food, 280.
-
-fistūca, heavy rammer, 213.
-
-flābellum, fan, 266*.
-
-flagrum, scourge, 167*.
-
-flammeum, bridal veil, 77*.
-
-Flāvium amphitheātrum, see COLISEUM.
-
-FLOORS, construction, 213.
-
-FLOWERS, at feasts, 313;
- at tombs, 438.
-
-fōcālia, wrappings for throat, 239.
-
-foculī, heating stoves, 218*.
-
-follēs, balls filled with air, 318*.
-
-FOOD, Chap. VIII. See Table of Contents.
-
-FORBIDDEN DEGREES of kinship, 25, 68.
-
-forēs, double doors, 195, 216.
-
-FORKS, not used, 299.
-
-forum, place of early shows, 351.
-
-FOUNDLINGS, fate of, 96.
-
-FOWLS, domestic, 279.
-
-FREEDMAN, name, 59;
- relation to patron, 175.
-
-frīgidārium, 366;
- other uses, 367;
- position, 368;
- furnishings, 370;
- shown on plans, 371*, 376*, 377*.
-
-fritillus, dice box, 321.
-
-frontēs, of papyrus rolls, 397.
-
-FRUITS, known to Romans, 274.
-
-frūmentum, grain, 282, and note.
-
-fugitīvī, 172.
-
-fullōnēs, as cleaners, 271*.
-
-FUNERAL games, 344, 345;
- ceremonies, Chap. XII. See Table of Contents.
-
-fūnus, acerbum, plēbēium, 432.
-
-furca, as punishment, 169.
-
-FURNACE for houses, 218;
- for baths, 368.
-
-FURNITURE, 222 f.;
- modern lacking, 223;
- couches, 224*;
- chairs, 225*;
- tables, 227*;
- lamps, 228*;
- chests and cabinets, 230*;
- other articles, 232.
-
-
-G
-
-Gāius, meaning, 44, 81;
- as a nomen, 55, 81;
- in the marriage ceremony, 81, 88.
-
-GAME, wild, for table, 279.
-
-GAMES, of children, 103, 320*;
- public and private, see AMUSEMENTS. Chap. IX;
- of ball for men, 318*;
- of chance, 319*, 320*, 321*;
- funeral, 344, 345.
-
-GARDEN, behind the peristyle, 202;
- produce, 275, 276.
-
-GARLANDS worn by slaves, 134;
- by bride and groom, 78;
- by women, 264;
- at feasts by men, 313.
-
-GEESE as pets, 103*.
-
-gēns, theory of, 22;
- marked by nōmen, 38;
- burial-places of, 422.
-
-gentīlēs, 22;
- at the confarreate ceremony, 81*.
-
-"GENTLEMEN'S DINNERS," 310 f.
-
-GIRL, named, 97;
- home training, 104, 105;
- married at early age, 67, 105;
- admitted to schools, 109.
-
-GLADIATORS, 344 f.;
- in Etruria and Campania, 344;
- first shows at Rome, 344;
- in theory private shows, 345;
- numbers exhibited, 346;
- whence obtained, 347;
- innocent and guilty, 348;
- training, 349;
- fashions and tactics, 359;
- armor, 360;
- the fight, 362;
- rewards, 363;
- bravos and bullies, 346.
-
-GLASS, for windows, 217;
- balls for hands, 266.
-
-gradūs, rows of seats, 337;
- of urns, 428.
-
-GRAMMAR schools, 112.
-
-grammaticus, of a teacher, 112.
-
-GRAPES, 293;
- where grown, 294;
- how grown, 295;
- jelly, 296.
-
-GREEK, place in schools, 112;
- nurses, 101;
- teachers, 115;
- taught to children, 101, 116, 123.
-
-GROUNDS, about tombs, 426*.
-
-GUARDIANS, of women, 19, 70;
- of children, 22.
-
-gustus, first course at dinner, 308.
-
-
-H
-
-Hadrian (Emperor 117-138 A.D.), tomb, 427, 438*.
-
-HAIR, arrangement, men, 254;
- women, 263;
- of a bride, 78.
-
-HANDBALL, 318.
-
-HANDKERCHIEFS, 266.
-
-HARD LABOR, as punishment, 170.
-
-hasta, sign of auction, 134.
-
-HATS, 252.
-
-HEAD of the House, see pater familiās.
-
-HEATING houses, 218;
- baths, 368*, 369.
-
-HINGES of doors, 215*.
-
-HISTORY, and antiquities, 4;
- not taught systematically in schools, 112.
-
-HOLIDAYS, numerous, 322;
- school, 122;
- avoided as wedding days, 75;
- spent in country, 416.
-
-HOME training, 104.
-
-HONEY, used for sugar, 281.
-
-hoplomachī, later name for "Samnites," 360, 344*.
-
-Horace, (65-8 B.C.), his slaves, 133.
-
-HORSES, in chariot races, 339, 340;
- in other shows, 343.
-
-Hortī Maecēnātis, 423.
-
-hospitēs, 183 f.
-
-hospitium, 184.
-
-HOURS, of the day, 417, 418;
- for meals, 301;
- for baths, 374;
- all semi-public functions, 415.
-
-HOUSE, dwelling, Chap. VI. See Table of Contents;
- =familia, see FAMILY;
- Head of House, see pater familiās;
- house slaves, 149.
-
-HOUSE of Pansa, 208*;
- of Sallust, court, 204*;
- of the poet, ruins, 199*.
-
-HOUSEHOLD, translation of familia, 17.
-
-HUMAN sacrifices, 344.
-
-HUT, of Romulus, 214*;
- early Romans, 189*.
-
-hymenaeus, marriage hymn, 86.
-
-
-I
-
-iānitor, chained to post, 150, 195.
-
-iantāculum, breakfast, 302.
-
-iānua, distinguished from ōstium, 216.
-
-ientāculum, breakfast, 302.
-
-imāginēs, kept in ālae, 200;
- in funeral processions, 434.
-
-imbricēs, tiles for roof, 214*.
-
-imperium paternum, 31.
-
-impluvium, 188, 191, 196*.
-
-INCOME, sources of, Chap. XI. See Table of Contents.
-
-INDUSTRIAL employment of slaves, 143.
-
-indūtus, clothing, 234.
-
-INK, INKSTANDS, etc., 395*.
-
-INNS, 388*.
-
-INSCRIPTIONS, importance of, 10;
- of a fugitīvus, 172;
- of Crescens, 342;
- gladiatorial show, 361;
- of Hylas, 362;
- milestone, 386;
- in columbāria, 431;
- of Plancus, 427, note, 420*.
-
-īnstita, flounce of stola, 260.
-
-INSURRECTIONS of slaves, 132.
-
-INTERMENT, see BURIAL.
-
-iūdicium domesticum, 32.
-
--ius, original in nōmen, 46;
- in other names, 55.
-
-iūs cōnūbiī, 64;
- ōsculī, 25;
- patrium, 31.
-
-iūstī līberī, rightful children, 69.
-
-
-J
-
-JACKSTONES, 103, 320*.
-
-JESTERS, 153.
-
-JEWELRY worn by men, 255;
- women, 267.
-
-JOINING hands in marriage ceremony, 74.
-
-Juvenal (about 67-127 A.D.), on the toga, 244;
- "bread and games," 322.
-
-
-K
-
-KITCHEN, 203.
-
-KNIGHTS, income of, 409.
-
-KNIVES and forks, 299.
-
-KNUCKLE-BONES, 320*.
-
-
-L
-
-l., abbreviation for lībertus, 59.
-
-lābrum, basin in bath, 369, 376, 377.
-
-lacerna, cloak, 247.
-
-lacōnicum, dry sweat bath, 367, 371*.
-
-laena, woolen cloak, 249.
-
-LAMPS, 228, 229*.
-
-LAND, travel by, 381.
-
-lanista, trainer of gladiators, 349.
-
-laqueatōrēs, gladiators with lassos, 359.
-
-larēs, compitālēs, gods of crossroads, 87;
- of the house, 199.
-
-LATER theater, 326 f.
-
-laterēs coctī, 212*;
- crūdī, 210.
-
-LATIN in schools, 113;
- best spoken by women, 92.
-
-lātrīna, toilet room, 203*.
-
-laudātiō funebris, funeral address, 435.
-
-LAW, practice of, 407.
-
-lectīca, and bearers, 151*;
- on journeys, 382.
-
-lectus, see COUCHES;
- adversus, 199.
-
-LEGAL status of children, 94;
- slaves, 156;
- women, 35, 36, 90.
-
-lēnōnēs, 139.
-
-LETTERS, writing of, 391;
- sending, 390;
- speed, 389;
- sealing and opening, 392;
- the address, 392.
-
-lībera cēna, feast for gladiators, 362.
-
-Līberālia, 127.
-
-lībertīnī, in business, 412 f.
-
-lībertus, opposed to lībertīnus, 175;
- relation to patron, 175.
-
-LIBERTY, cap of, 175*.
-
-libitīnāriī, undertakers, 433.
-
-LIBRARIES, 206, 402.
-
-librāriī, copyists, 391, 399, 401.
-
-līmen, threshold, 195, 215;
- superum, 215.
-
-LIMITATIONS of patria poteatās, 32, 33;
- of manus, 36;
- of dominica potestās, 156, 157.
-
-LINEN goods, 269.
-
-līnum, 392.
-
-LITERARY sources, 9.
-
-litterae, see LETTERS;
- eōdem exemplō, 390.
-
-Livia, columbārium of, 428*.
-
-LOAVES of bread, 288*.
-
-locus, cōnsulāris, 306;
- in columbārium, 431.
-
-lōrārius, executioner, 174.
-
-lucerna, lamp, 228*, 229*.
-
-lūdī, circēnsēs, 328 f.;
- scēnicī, 323 f.;
- gladiātōriī (schools), 349*, 350.
-
-lūdus, see SCHOOLS;
- lūdus Trōiae, 343.
-
-LUNCHEON, 302.
-
-lūnula, ornament, 98;
- for shoe, 251.
-
-
-M
-
-M. and M', in names, 41.
-
-m., for missus, of pardoned gladiator, 361.
-
-Maecenas, gardens of, 423.
-
-maeniāna, sections of seats, 337, 358.
-
-maeniānum, projecting second story, 233*.
-
-magister bibendī, master of revels, 313.
-
-maiestās patria, 31.
-
-mālum, Armeniacum, grānātum, Persicum, Pūnicum, 274.
-
-mamillāre, 257*.
-
-mangōnēs, 135.
-
-MANHOOD, when reached, 126.
-
-MANUFACTURE of clothing, 271.
-
-MANUMISSION of slaves, 175.
-
-manus, defined, 35;
- limited, 36;
- unpopular, 65, 66;
- when necessary, 66.
-
-Marcellus, theater of, 327*.
-
-MARRIAGE, Chap. III. See Table Of Contents;
- by capture, 78, 86, 88;
- hymn, 86;
- cry, 87;
- torch, 86, 89;
- religious duty, 28.
-
-Martial (43-101 A.D.) and the toga, 244;
- and cost of books, 401.
-
-MASTER, heir of his slaves, 164.
-
-MATERIALS for clothing, 269.
-
-MATCHED PAIRS of slaves, 140.
-
-mātrimōnium, motherhood, 64;
- iniūstum, 69.
-
-mātrīmus, with a living mother, 82.
-
-mātrōnālia, 91.
-
-MEALS, Chap. VIII. See Table of Contents.
-
-MEANINGS of names, 44.
-
-MEAT, early food of Italians, 273;
- various kinds, 277.
-
-MEMORIAL festivals, 438.
-
-mēnsa, table in general, 227;
- dining, 307.
-
-mēnsa prīma, first course, 308.
-
-mēnsa secunda, dessert, 308, 309, 311.
-
-MENU, of dinner, 309.
-
-merenda, irregular meal, 302.
-
-merīdiātiō, noonday rest, 302.
-
-mēta, of a grain mill, 284*.
-
-mētae, in a circus, 331*, 335.
-
-MILESTONES, 386*.
-
-MILL, for grain, 284*;
- for olives, 292*;
- as a punishment, 148, 171.
-
-missus, seven laps in a race, 331;
- "spared," of a gladiator, 361.
-
-MIXING BOWLS, 314*;
- three thousand of Pompeius, 326;
- mixing wine, 314.
-
-mola, mill, 284*, 285*.
-
-monopodium, table with one support, 227*.
-
-MONUMENTAL sources, 11.
-
-"Moritūrī tē salūtant," 362.
-
-MOSAICS, 221.
-
-MOTHER, as nurse, 100;
- as teacher, 104, 105.
-
-MOURNING, signs of, 246, 253;
- periods of, 437.
-
-mulleus, patrician shoe, 251.
-
-mulsa, water and honey, 298.
-
-mulsum, wine and honey, 298.
-
-mūnera, opposed to lūdī, 345;
- gladiātōria, Chap. IX. See Table of Contents.
-
-mūnīre viam, of road building, 387.
-
-murmillōnēs, class of gladiators, 360.
-
-mustāceum, wedding cake, 85.
-
-mustum, new wine, 296.
-
-MUTUAL obligations, of patron and freedman, 175;
- patrician patron and client, 179;
- later patron and client, 182;
- of hospitēs, 185.
-
-
-N
-
-NAME, Chap. II. See Table of Contents.
- See also praenōmen, nōmen, cognōmen.
-
-nārrātiō, narration, taught in schools, 115.
-
-NATURALIZED citizens, names of, 60.
-
-naumachiae, naval battles, 364.
-
-NETS, for the hair, 264.
-
-NEW clients, 181.
-
-NEWSPAPER, substitute for, 413.
-
-NICKNAMES, 54;
- See also cognōmen.
-
-NIGHT for burial, 432.
-
-NOBLES, debarred from business careers, 404;
- funerals of, 433 f.
-
-nodus Herculāneus, 77.
-
-nōmen, before and after cognōmen, 40;
- endings of, 46;
- sign of gēns, 21, 47;
- two or more in one name, 55;
- used as praenōmen, 55.
-
-nōmenclātor, 151, 415.
-
-nōminālia, 97.
-
-novendiāle, 437.
-
-nūbere, meaning, 77.
-
-nūcleus, in roads, 387.
-
-NUMERALS as praenōmina, 44;
- as names of women, 57.
-
-nūptiae iūstae, 67;
- iniūstae, 69.
-
-NURSERY stories, 100.
-
-NURSES, 100;
- Greek preferred, 101.
-
-NUTS, in wedding festivities, 87;
- for marbles, 103;
- grown in Italy, 274.
-
-
-O
-
-OBELISKS in the circuses, 336*.
-
-OCCUPATIONS of slaves, 143.
-
-oecī, rooms in house, 207.
-
-OLD and new clients, 176 f.
-
-oleum olīvum, olive oil, 291.
-
-OLIVE, uses, 289 f.;
- preserved, 290;
- oil, uses, 291;
- manufacture, 292.
-
-ollae, urns for ashes of dead, 428, 429, 430*, 431, 437.
-
-ollus quiris lētō datus, 434.
-
-ONION, unrefined, 275.
-
-oppidum, in circus, 330*.
-
-opus, caementīcium, 210, 211*;
- incertum, 212*;
- quadrātum, 210*;
- rēticulātum, 212*.
-
-Orange, theater at, 327*.
-
-ORANGE, not grown in Italy, 274.
-
-ōrdō, in columbārium, 428, 431;
- scrībārum, 414.
-
-ōrnāmenta, theatrical properties, 324.
-
-ōrnātor, valet, 150.
-
-ōrnātrīx, ladies' maid, 150, 265.
-
-os resectum, bone for burial, 436.
-
-ōstium, door, 195.
-
-ōva, in the circus, 336.
-
-OVEN, for bread, 287*.
-
-
-P
-
-p., for periit, of gladiators, 361.
-
-paedagōgus, 123*.
-
-paenula, cloak, 248*.
-
-palaestra, exercise ground, 367, 376*.
-
-palla, woman's robe, 261.
-
-palūdāmentum, general's cloak, 247.
-
-pālus, with prīmus or secundus, 363.
-
-papyrus, manufacture, 394;
- rolls, 396.
-
-PARASOL, 266*.
-
-parentālia, festival of, 438.
-
-pariēs, house wall, 210.
-
-pater and derivatives, 26.
-
-pater familiās, defined, 17;
- powers, see potestās;
- adopted into another family, 30.
-
-patria potestās, see potestās.
-
-patriciī, sons of fathers, 64.
-
-patrimōnium prōfundere, 33.
-
-patrīmus, with a living father, 82.
-
-patrōnus, derivation of word, 26;
- and lībertus, 175;
- patrician and client, 179;
- and client of later times, 182.
-
-PAUPERS, burial of, 423.
-
-PAVEMENT, construction, 387.
-
-pavīmentum, floor, 213.
-
-PAY of teachers, 121;
- of chariot drivers, 342;
- of soldiers, 410.
-
-pecūlium, defined, 33;
- of slaves, 162.
-
-pecūnia, meaning, 273.
-
-pedisequī, lackeys, 123, 150.
-
-PENS, 395.
-
-peregrīnus, foreigner, 69.
-
-PERFUMES at feasts, 313.
-
-PERISTYLE, 192, 202*;
- perhaps a kitchen garden originally, 197.
-
-pērō, shoe of untanned leather, 251.
-
-Persius (34-62 A.D.) as a schoolboy, 124.
-
-pessulī, bolts for doors, 216.
-
-petasus, hat, 252*.
-
-petōritum, baggage wagon, 383.
-
-PETS for children, 103.
-
-PHILOLOGY, defined, 6.
-
-PHYSICIANS, income and attainments, 412.
-
-pietās, affection, 73.
-
-pīlentum, state carriage, 383.
-
-pilleus, cap of liberty, 175*, 252.
-
-piscīna, plunge bath, 367, 370, 376*, 377*.
-
-pīstōrēs, millers and bakers, 283.
-
-PLACES, of honor at dinner, 305*;
- in the theater, 326;
- in the circus, 337;
- in the amphitheater (Pompeii), 355, (Rome), 358;
- where gladiators were shown, 356;
- of burial, 421.
-
-PLAN, of theater after Vitruvius, 327;
- circus of Maxentius, 330;
- of gladiatorial school at Pompeii, 349;
- of houses, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193;
- of house of Pansa, 208;
- of baths, 371, 376, 378;
- of inn, 388;
- of tombs and grounds, 425, 426.
-
-Plancus, tomb of, 420*, 427.
-
-Plautus (†184 B.C.) on puls, 283.
-
-PLAYTHINGS for children, 102*.
-
-PLEBEIANS, marriages of, 62;
- importance of cognates, 65;
- gain right of marriage, 64;
- old plebeians, 177;
- new, 178.
-
-plēbs, see PLEBEIANS.
-
-Pliny, the elder (†79 A.D.), 352.
-
-pōcula, goblets, 314*.
-
-podium, in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater, 357;
- in tombs, 425.
-
-POLITICS, as a career, 406.
-
-Pollio, Vedius, cruelty of, 158.
-
-POLYGAMY unknown at Rome, 61.
-
-pompa circēnsis, parade in circus, 343.
-
-Pompeii, importance of discoveries at, 11, 12;
- house plans, 187 f.;
- business rooms in private house, 194;
- small house at, 197*;
- house of poet, 199*;
- of Pansa, 208*;
- smaller theater at, 327*;
- lūdī gladiātōriī, 350*;
- amphitheater, 353*;
- thermae, 376*;
- street of tombs, 421*;
- tomb with marble door, 427*.
-
-pondera, stepping-stones, 233*.
-
-pontifex maximus, in marriage ceremony, 82.
-
-POOR, burial of, 428.
-
-por, for puer in names, 58.
-
-PORK, favorite meat, 278.
-
-PORRIDGE, 283, 286, 299.
-
-porta triumphālis in circus, 330;
- pompae, 330;
- Libitinēnsis, 354.
-
-POSITION of women, 90.
-
-POSTAL service, 389.
-
-postīcum, garden door, 216.
-
-potestās, patria, 31;
- limitations, 32, 73;
- extinguished, 34;
- suspension of, 34;
- dominica, 37.
-
-POTTER's FIELD at Rome, 423.
-
-praecīnctiō, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in coliseum, 358.
-
-praenōmen, first name, 41;
- number, 41;
- abbreviations, 41, 45;
- limited in certain families, 42;
- given to firstborn son, 43;
- meanings of, 44;
- two in one name, 55.
-
-prandium, luncheon, 302.
-
-PRICES, of baths, 373;
- books, 401;
- houses, 221, note;
- meals, 388;
- slaves, 140;
- tables, 227;
- wines, 298.
-
-PRIMITIVE house, 188.
-
-prīmus pālus, title of honor, 363.
-
-PRIVATE, antiquities, 2;
- slaves, 142 f.;
- bathhouse at Caerwent, 371*;
- games, 322;
- rooms in house, 203.
-
-PROCESSION, bridal, 86;
- in circus, 343;
- in the amphitheater, 362.
-
-prōcūrātor, steward, 149.
-
-PROFESSIONS in hands of freedmen and foreigners, 412;
- even of slaves, 143.
-
-PROLETARIATE, 411.
-
-prōlūsiō, sham fight, 362.
-
-prōmulsis, appetizer, 308.
-
-prōnuba, matron of honor, 81.
-
-PROVINCES, corruption in, 406, 409.
-
-PUBLIC, antiquities, 2;
- baths, 372 f., 376*, 377*;
- fountains, 233*;
- games, 322;
- opinion, in case of children, 32, 33;
- in case of slaves, 156.
-
-"PUBLICANS and sinners," 409.
-
-PUBLICATION of books, 400.
-
-puer, for servus, 58;
- written por, 58.
-
-pugillārēs, writing tablets in sets, 391*.
-
-puls, ancient national diet, 283.
-
-pultiphagōnidae, 299.
-
-PUNISHMENTS of schoolboys, 120*, 124;
- of slaves, 166 f.
-
-pūp(us), of unnamed child, 55.
-
-PURPLE or crimson, 270.
-
-puticulī, gravepits, 423.
-
-
-Q
-
-quadrāns, regular bath charge, 373.
-
-quadrīgae, in races, 340.
-
-
-R
-
-RACEHORSES, 339 f.
-
-RACES in circus, 339 f.;
- teams, 340;
- drivers, 341;
- syndicates, 339.
-
-RACING syndicates, 339.
-
-RAPE of the Sabines, 86, 87.
-
-READING, how taught, 110.
-
-rēda, carriage, 384.
-
-REFERENCE books, 13.
-
-RELATIONSHIPS, agnātī, 23;
- cognātī, 25;
- adfīnēs, 26.
-
-renūntiāre, break an engagement to marry, 71.
-
-repōtia, 85, 89.
-
-repudium renūntiāre, see renūntiāre.
-
-rētiāriī, gladiators with nets, 359, 360*.
-
-rēticula, nets for the hair, 264.
-
-REWARDS of aurīgae, 341;
- of gladiators, 363.
-
-rēx bibendī, lord of the feast, 313.
-
-RICE in modern wedding festivities, 87.
-
-RINGS, engagement, 71;
- men's, 255;
- women's, 267;
- worn on joint, 256.
-
-ROADS, 385*-387*.
-
-Romulus, legislation of, 32, 95;
- wall of, 210*;
- hut of, 214*.
-
-ROOF, of peristyle, 202*;
- construction of, 214*.
-
-rosāria, feast of roses, 438.
-
-rudēs, fencing swords, 349;
- with prīma or secunda, 363.
-
-rūdus, in roads, 387*.
-
-RUNAWAY slaves, 161, 172*.
-
-
-S
-
-sacra gentīlīcia, 22.
-
-sacrārium, private chapel, 207*.
-
-SADDLES, not used by Romans, 381.
-
-sagīna gladiātōria, training food, 349.
-
-sagum, military cloak, 247.
-
-SALADS, 276.
-
-SALES of captives, 134;
- of slaves, 139.
-
-SALTCELLAR of silver, 299;
- always on table, 307.
-
-salūtātiō, morning levee, 182.
-
-"Samnītēs," name for gladiators, 359, 360*;
- later called secūtōrēs or hoplomachī, 360.
-
-SANDALS, see SLIPPERS.
-
-sarcophagus 436*, 428.
-
-SAVINGS of slaves, 162-164.
-
-SCALES, in marriage ceremony, 83.
-
-scāpus, fixed quantity of paper, 394, 398.
-
-schēdae, sheets of paper, 395.
-
-SCHOOLS, Chap. IV. See Table of Contents.
-
-SCHOOLS for gladiators, 349*.
-
-scrībae, in civil service, 414;
- as copyists, see librāriī.
-
-scrīnium, case for books, 397*.
-
-SEALS, 255*, 392.
-
-SEATS, in theater, of classes, 326;
- arrangement, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater (Pompeii), 355, (Rome), 358.
-
-secunda mēnsa, 308, 309, 311.
-
-secūtōrēs, later name for "Samnītēs," 360.
-
-SEDAN CHAIRS, in travel, 382.
-
-sella curūlis, 225*.
-
-sēmitae, sidewalks, 387.
-
-sepulcrum, 425, 436.
-
-serae, bars, 216.
-
-Servius and Sergius, derivation, 41.
-
-Servius, grammarian (4th cent. A.D.), 434.
-
-SEVENTEEN, time of coming of age, 126.
-
-SHIPS, travel by, 380.
-
-SHOES, 251*, 262*.
-
-SHOWS of gladiators. See mūnera.
-
-SHUTTERS for windows, 217.
-
-SIDEWALKS, 233.
-
-SIGNS of mercy in amphitheater, 362.
-
-silicernium, funeral feast, 436.
-
-SILK goods, 269.
-
-sine missiōne, "to the death," 362.
-
-SIZE of books, 398.
-
-SLAVEHUNTERS, 161.
-
-SLAVERY and clientage, 180.
-
-SLAVES, Chap. V. See Table of Contents.
-
-SLEEPING rooms, 205.
-
-SLIPPERS, 250*, 262*.
-
-SMOKE to ripen wine, 297.
-
-sōlārium, place to take the sun, 207, 426;
- sun-dial, 232.
-
-SOLDIERS, career, 410.
-
-soleae, 250*, 262*;
- soleās poscere, "to take leave," 250.
-
-solium, chair, 226*;
- basin in bath, 369.
-
-sōlum, floor, 213.
-
-sordidātī, in mourning garb, 246.
-
-sortēs virīlis, a shareholder's part, 430.
-
-SOURCES of philological knowledge, literary, 9;
- epigraphic, 10;
- monumental, 11.
-
-Sp., abbreviation for Spurius, 41.
-
-sp., abbreviation for spectāvit populus, 363.
-
-Spartacus, 132, 172.
-
-spatium, lap in circus, 331.
-
-SPEED, in travel, 389;
- in writing, 401.
-
-spīna in circus, 331*, 336*.
-
-spīna alba, of wedding torch, 86.
-
-SPINNING wheel, 199.
-
-SPLITTING up of a house, 19.
-
-spondeō, technical word in contract, 71.
-
-spōnsa, of a girl betrothed, 71.
-
-spōnsālia, ceremony of betrothal, 70.
-
-SPORT, Roman idea of, 316.
-
-SPORTS of the campus, 317;
- of children, 102, 103.
-
-sportula, the clients' dole, 182.
-
-STAGE, early, 325;
- later, 326 f.;
- of Vitruvius, 327*.
-
-STAGING a play, 324.
-
-statūmen in roads, 387.
-
-STEPPING-STONES in streets, 233*.
-
-stilus, for writing, 391.
-
-stola, 259, 260*;
- mātrōnālis, 91.
-
-STOOLS, 225*.
-
-STOVE, for cooking, 203*;
- for heating, 218*.
-
-STREET, appearance, 233*;
- construction, 387;
- closed to vehicles, 382;
- of tombs at Pompeii, 421*.
-
-strigilēs, flesh scrapers, 367*, 370.
-
-strophium, girdle, 258.
-
-STUCCO, as finish for exterior wall, 212.
-
-STYLE of living, 299;
- of bathing, 367.
-
-Styx, passage of, 433.
-
-suāsōria, debates in schools, 115.
-
-sub hastā vēnīre, auction sale, 134.
-
-SUBJECTS taught in schools, Chap. IV.
-
-subligāculum, loin cloth, 235, 257.
-
-subūcula, under-tunic, 237.
-
-sūdāria, handkerchiefs, 266.
-
-Suetonius (about 75-160), 390.
-
-SUICIDE of captives and slaves, 140*, 161.
-
-suī iūris, independent, 17.
-
-Sulla and Sura, derivation, 55.
-
-SUPPLY of gladiators, 347;
- of slaves, 134;
- of horses for racing, 339.
-
-Sura, derivation, 55.
-
-susceptiō, acknowledgment of children, 95.
-
-SUSPENSION of potestās, 34.
-
-suspēnsūra, elevated floor of bath room, 368*.
-
-SWEAT bath, dry, 367;
- moist, 369.
-
-synthesis, dinner dress, 249.
-
-
-T
-
-tabellae, for writing, 110*, 391*.
-
-tabellāriī, letter carriers, 389.
-
-TABLE knives and forks unknown, 299.
-
-TABLES, cost, kinds, materials, 227*.
-
-tablīnum, in early house, 190;
- in later house, 201;
- meaning of word, 201.
-
-Tacitus (about 55-117) on the toga, 133.
-
-Talassiō, marriage cry, 87.
-
-tālī, knuckle-bones, 320*.
-
-TEACHERS, 121.
-
-tēcta, roofs, 214.
-
-tēgulae, tiles, 214*.
-
-tepidārium, purpose, 366;
- other uses, 367;
- position, 368;
- unusual size, 371*;
- several in one bath, 376*;
- in the large thermae, 377;
- with cold bath, 370.
-
-tessera gladiātōria, 363*;
- hospitālis, 185.
-
-THEATER, early, 325;
- later, 326;
- of Vitruvius, 327*;
- at Pompeii, 327*;
- at Orange, 327*;
- of Pompeius, 326.
-
-thermae, meaning, 372;
- plan of small, 376*;
- of large, 378*.
-
-THIRD FINGER for engagement ring, 71.
-
-"Thracians," gladiators, 360*, 361.
-
-"THUMBS down," signal for death, 362.
-
-Tiberius (Emperor, 14-37 A.D.), 274.
-
-tībiālia, wrappings for the legs, 239.
-
-TILES, for roofs, etc., 214*.
-
-tīrōcinium forī, 117;
- mīlitiae, 118.
-
-tīrōnēs, of untrained gladiators, 118.
-
-titulus, description of slave, 139;
- in columbāria, 429, 431*.
-
-TOAST-MASTER, 313.
-
-TOASTS, 314.
-
-TOGA, material and use, 240;
- appearance, 241*;
- in literature, 242*;
- on the monuments, 243*;
- cumbrous and uncomfortable, 244;
- earlier toga, 245*;
- kinds of, 246;
- see also the Latin word below.
-
-toga, see the English word above;
- candida, 246;
- lībera, 127;
- picta, 246;
- pulla, 246;
- pūra, 246;
- praetexta, 76, 125, 246;
- splendēns, 246;
- virīlis, 125.
-
-TOILET articles, 265*.
-
-tollere, acknowledge a child, 44, 95.
-
-TOMBS, 422 f.
-
-tōnsor, barber and barber-shop, 254.
-
-TORCHES, at funerals, 434;
- weddings, 86, 89.
-
-"To the lions," 364.
-
-TOWN-SLAVES, 159.
-
-trabea, cloak for men, 247.
-
-TRADES, 412.
-
-TRAINERS of gladiators, 349, 363.
-
-TRAVEL, Chap. X. See Table of Contents.
-
-TRAVELING cloak, 248.
-
-TREADING grapes for wine, 296*.
-
-TREATMENT of slaves, 158.
-
-trīclīnium, dining-room, 204, 304*;
- in court, 204*.
-
-trigōn, three handed ball, 318.
-
-TRIPLE name, 38;
- expanded, 39;
- shortened, 40.
-
-Tullus, meaning, 44.
-
-TUNIC, 236*.
-
-tunica, 236*;
- angustī clāvī, 238;
- lātī clāvī, 238;
- exterior (men's), 237;
- (women's), 259*;
- interior, 237, 258;
- manicāta, 237;
- tālāris, 239;
- rēcta, 76;
- rēgilla, 76.
-
-Tūscanicum ātrium, 196.
-
-tūtor, guardian, 19, 70.
-
-TWELVE TABLES (450 B.C.), in the schools, 111;
- mention both burial and burning of dead, 420.
-
-tyrotarīchus, a dish of cheese and salt fish, 280.
-
-
-U
-
-umbella, parasol, 266*.
-
-umbilīcus, of a papyrus roll, 397.
-
-umbōnēs, of a road, 387.
-
-umbrāculum, parasol, 266*.
-
-umbrae, unexpected guests, 304.
-
-ūnctōrium, use, 366;
- makeshift for, 367.
-
-UNLUCKY days, 75.
-
-URNS, for ashes of dead, see ollae.
-
-ūstrīna, place for private cremation, 426.
-
-ūsus, of marriage, definition, 62;
- ceremony of, 84.
-
-
-V
-
-v., for vīcit, of gladiators, 361.
-
-vappa, term of reproach, 297, note.
-
-Varro (116-28 B.C.), 253.
-
-VEGETABLES grown by Romans, 275.
-
-VEGETARIANS, early Romans, 299.
-
-VEHICLES, used for travel, 382 f.
-
-vēla, portières, 216;
- awnings, 358, 361.
-
-vēnātiōnēs, hunts in circus and amphitheater, 343, 364.
-
-ventrālia, wrappings for the body, 239.
-
-Venus, the high throw, 320.
-
-vernae, slaves born in the house, 138;
- of Atticus, 155.
-
-Verrēs, as a nōmen, 46;
- the governor of Sicily, 406.
-
-vesperna, evening meal in country, 302.
-
-Vestālēs, special seats in theater, 327;
- in amphitheater, 357;
- allowed carriages in the city, 382.
-
-vestibulum, space before the door, 194.
-
-via Appia, 385*, 387*.
-
-vicārius, a slave's slave, 164.
-
-vīlicus, overseer, 145, 148;
- cheats slaves, 160.
-
-VILLAS of the rich, 145, 379, 416.
-
-vīnālia rūstica, festival, 296.
-
-VINEGAR, 281, 297, note.
-
-VINEYARD, 295.
-
-vīnum, fermented wine, 297.
-
-violāria, feast of violets, 438.
-
-VITICULTURE, 293, 294.
-
-Vitruvius, architect of the first century, 187, 327, 366, 387.
-
-volūmen, papyrus roll, 396. See BOOKS.
-
-VULTURE, the lowest throw, 320.
-
-
-W
-
-WALL, of house, 210 f.;
- facing for, 212*;
- around arena, 354*, 357*.
-
-WATER, supply for houses, 219;
- for baths, 368;
- traveling by, 380.
-
-WAX masks, of the dead, 433.
-
-WEDDING, see MARRIAGE;
- day, 75;
- feast, 85;
- garments, 76;
- torch, 86, 89;
- procession, 86.
-
-Whitney (1827-1894), definition of Philology, 6.
-
-WINDOWS, 217*.
-
-WINE, in Italy, 293;
- districts, 294;
- making, 296*;
- vaults, 297*;
- jars, 297 (Fig. 116);
- drunk diluted, 298;
- cost, 298.
-
-WOMEN, names of, 57;
- position of, 90;
- education of, 92;
- dress of, 257 f.;
- at table, 302, 304*;
- at amphitheater, 353, 358;
- at baths, 375.
-
-WOOL for clothing, 269.
-
-WORDS of style in contracts, 70;
- at funerals, 434.
-
-WRITING, how taught, 110;
- of books, 398.
-
-
-Z
-
-zōna, girdle, 260*.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Private Life of the Romans, by
-Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Private Life of the Romans
-
-Author: Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40549]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Ron Swanson
-
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS
-
-
-BY HAROLD WHETSTONE JOHNSTON
-
-PROFESSOR OF LATIN IN THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY
-
-
-
-
-CHICAGO
-
-SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY
-
-1909
-
-
-
-
-BY THE SAME AUTHOR (_Scott, Foresman and Company_)
-
-SELECTED ORATIONS AND LETTERS OF CICERO
-
-LATIN MANUSCRIPTS
-
-THE METRICAL LICENSES OF VERGIL
-
-
-
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY
-
-
-
-
-ROBT. O. LAW CO., PRINTERS AND BINDERS, CHICAGO.
-
-TYPOGRAPHY BY MARSH, AITKEN & CURTIS COMPANY, CHICAGO.
-
-
-
-
-_CHARLES S. RANNELLS_
-
- _MEMOR_
-_ACTAE NON ALIO REGE PUERTIAE_
-
-_AMORIS CAUSA_
-
-_D D D_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-In preparing this book I have had in mind the needs of three classes
-of students.
-
-It is intended in the first place for seniors in high schools and
-freshmen in colleges, and is meant to give such an account of the
-Private Life of the Romans in the later Republic and earlier Empire as
-will enable them to understand the countless references to it in the
-Latin texts which they read in the class-room. It is hoped that the
-book contains all that they will need for this purpose and nothing
-that is beyond their comprehension.
-
-It is intended in the second place for more advanced college students
-who may be taking lectures on the subjects of which it treats. The
-work of both teacher and student will be made less irksome and more
-effective if the student is aided in the taking of notes by even so
-general a knowledge of the subject (previously announced to the class)
-as is here given. This I know from actual experience with my own
-classes.
-
-In the third place it is intended for readers and students of Roman
-history, who are engaged chiefly with important political and
-constitutional questions, and often feel the need of a simple and
-compact description of domestic life, to give more reality to the
-shadowy forms whose public careers they are following. Such students
-will find the Index especially useful.
-
-The book is written as far as possible in English: that is, no great
-knowledge of Latin is presumed on the part of the reader. I have tried
-not to crowd the text with Latin words, even when they are immediately
-explained, and those given will usually be found worth remembering.
-Quotations from Latin authors are very few, and the references to
-their works, fewer still, are made to well-known passages only.
-
-To every chapter are prefixed references to the standard secondary
-authorities in English and German. Primary sources are not indicated:
-they would be above the heads of the less advanced students, and to
-the more advanced the lecturer will prefer to indicate the sources on
-which his views are based. It is certain, however, that all these
-sources are indicated in the authorities named, and the teacher
-himself may occasionally find the references helpful.
-
-The illustrations are numerous and are intended to illustrate. Many
-others are referred to in the text, which limited space kept me from
-using, and I hope that Schreiber's Atlas, at least, if not
-Baumeister's Denkmaeler, may be within the reach of students in
-class-room or library.
-
-It goes without saying that there must be many errors in a book like
-this, although I have done my best to make it accurate. When these
-errors are due to relaxed attention or to ignorance, I shall be
-grateful to the person who will point them out. When they are due to
-mistaken judgment, the teacher will find in the references, I hope,
-sufficient authorities to convince his pupils that he is right and I
-am wrong.
-
-H. W. JOHNSTON.
-
-THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY,
-
-February, 1903.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.--Scope of the Book 1; Public and Private
- Antiquities 2; Antiquities and History 4; Antiquities and
- Philology 6; Sources 9; Reference Books 13; Systematic
- Treatises 14; Encyclopedic Works 15; Other Books 16
-
-I. THE FAMILY.--The Household 17; The Splitting Up of a House
- 19; Other Meanings of _Familia_ 21; _Agnati_ and
- _Cognati_ 23; _Adfines_ 26; The Family Cult 27; Adoption
- 30; The _Patria Potestas_ 31; Limitations 32; Extinction
- of the _Potestas_ 34; _Manus_ 35; _Dominica Potestas_ 37
-
-II. THE NAME.--The Triple Name 38; The _Praenomen_ 41; The
- _Nomen_ 46; The _Cognomen_ 48; Additional Names 51;
- Confusion of Names 55; Names of Women 57; Names of Slaves
- 58; Names of Freedmen 59; Naturalized Citizens 60
-
-III. MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN.--Early Forms of Marriage
- 61; _Ius Conubii_ 64; _Nuptiae Iustae_ 67; Betrothals
- 70; The Dowry 72; Essential Forms 73; The Wedding Day
- 75; The Wedding Garments 76; The Ceremony 79; The
- Wedding Feast 85; The Bridal Procession 86; The Position
- of Women 90
-
-IV. CHILDREN AND EDUCATION.--Legal Status 94; _Susceptio_ 95;
- _Dies Lustricus_ 97; The _Bulla_ 99; Nurses 100;
- Playthings 102; Pets and Games 103; Home Training 104;
- Schools 108; Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools 110;
- Grammar Schools 112; Schools of Rhetoric 115; Travel
- 116; Apprenticeship 117; Remarks on the Schools 119; The
- Teacher 121; Schooldays and Holidays 122; The
- _Paedagogus_ 123; Discipline 124; End of Childhood 125;
- The _Liberalia_ 127
-
-V. DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES.--Growth of Slavery
- 129; Numbers of Slaves 131; Sources of Supply 134; Sales
- of Slaves 139; Prices of Slaves 140; Public and Private
- Slaves 141; Private Slaves 142; Industrial Employment
- 143; The _Familia Rustica_ 145; Farm Slaves 146; The
- _Vilicus_ 148; The _Familia Urbana_ 149; Legal Status of
- Slaves 156; The Treatment of Slaves 158; Food and Dress
- 160; The _Peculium_ 162; Punishments 166; Manumission
- 175; The Clients 176; The Old Clients 177; Mutual
- Obligations 179; The New Clients 181; Duties and Rewards
- 182; The _Hospites_ 183; _Hospitium_ 184; Obligations of
- _Hospitium_ 185
-
-VI. THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE.--_Domus_ 186; The Development
- of the House 188; The _Vestibulum_ 194; The _Ostium_
- 195; The _Atrium_ 196; The Change in the _Atrium_ 197;
- The _Alae_ 200; The _Tablinum_ 201; The Peristyle 202;
- Private Rooms 203; The House of Pansa 208; The Walls
- 210; _Paries Caementicius_ 211; Wall Facings 212; Floors
- and Ceilings 213; Roofs 214; The Doors 215; The Windows
- 217; Heating 218; Water Supply 219; Decoration 220;
- Furniture 222; Principal Articles 223; The Couches 224;
- The Chairs 225; Tables 227; The Lamps 228; Chests and
- Cabinets 230; Other Articles 232; The Street 233
-
-VII. DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS.--_Indutus_: The _Subligaculum_
- 235; The Tunic 236; _Amictus_: The _Toga_ 240; Form and
- Arrangement 241; Kinds of Togas 246; The _Lacerna_ 247;
- The _Paenula_ 248; Other Wraps 249; Footgear: The
- _Soleae_ 250; The _Calcei_ 251; Coverings for the Head
- 252; The Hair and Beard 253; Jewelry 255; Dress of Women
- 257; The _Tunica Interior_ 258; The _Stola_ 259; The
- _Palla_ 261; Shoes and Slippers 262; Dressing of the Hair
- 263; Accessories 266; Jewelry 267; Dress of the Children
- and Slaves 268; Materials 269; Colors 270; Manufacture
- 271
-
-VIII. FOOD AND MEALS.--Natural Conditions 272; Fruits 274;
- Garden Produce 275; Meats 277; Fowl and Game 279; Fish
- 280; Cereals 282; Preparation of the Grain 283;
- Breadmaking 287; The Olive 289; Olive Oil 291; Grapes
- 293; Viticulture 294; Vineyards 295; Wine Making 296;
- Beverages 298; Style of Living 299; Hours for Meals 301;
- Breakfast and Luncheon 302; The Formal Meal 303; The
- Dining Couch 304; Places of Honor 305; Other Furniture
- 307; Courses 308; Bills of Fare 309; Serving the Dinner
- 310; The _Comissatio_ 312; The Banquets of the Rich 315
-
-IX. AMUSEMENTS; BATHS.--General 316; Sports of the Campus 317;
- Games of Ball 318; Games of Chance 319; Knuckle-bones
- 320; Dice 321; Public and Private Games 322; Dramatic
- Performances 323; Staging the Play 324; The Early Theater
- 325; The Later Theater 326; Roman Circuses 328; Plan of
- the Circus 330; The Arena 332; The Barriers 333; The
- _Spina_ and _Metae_ 335; The Seats 337; Furnishing the
- Races 339; The Teams 340; The Drivers 341; Famous
- _Aurigae_ 342; Other Shows of the Circus 343;
- Gladiatorial Combats 344; Popularity of the Combats 346;
- Sources of Supply 347; Schools for Gladiators 349; Places
- of Exhibition 351; Amphitheaters at Rome 352; The
- Amphitheater at Pompeii 353; The Coliseum 356; Styles of
- Fighting 359; Weapons and Armor 360; Announcement of the
- Shows 361; The Fight Itself 362; The Rewards 363; Other
- Shows in the Amphitheater 364; The Daily Bath 365;
- Essentials for the Bath 366; Heating the Bath 368; The
- _Caldarium_ 369; The _Frigidarium_ and _Unctorium_ 370; A
- Private Bathhouse 371; The Public Baths 372; Management
- 373; Hours Opened 374; Accommodations for Women 375;
- _Thermae_ 376; Baths of Diocletian 378
-
-X. TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS.--In General 379; By Water
- 380; By Land 381; The Vehicles 382; Carriages 383; The
- _Reda_ and _Cisium_ 384; The Roads 385; Construction
- 387; The Inns 388; Speed 389; Sending Letters 390;
- Writing the Letters 391; Sealing and Opening the Letters
- 392; Books 393; Manufacture of Paper 394; Pens and Ink
- 395; Making the Roll 396; Size of the Rolls 398;
- Multiplication of Books 399; Commercial Publication 400;
- Rapidity and Cost of Publication 401; Libraries 402
-
-XI. SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY.--In
- General 403; Careers of the Nobles 404; Agriculture 405;
- Political Office 406; The Law 407; The Army 408; Careers
- of the Equites 409; The Soldiers 410; The Proletariate
- 411; Professions and Trades 412; Business and Commerce
- 413; The Civil Service 414; The Roman's Day 415; Hours
- of the Day 417
-
-XII. BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES.--Importance of Burial
- 419; Interment and Cremation 420; Places of Burial 421;
- The Tombs 422; The Potter's Field 423; Plan of Tombs and
- Grounds 425; Exterior of the Tombs 427; The _Columbaria_
- 428; Burial Societies 430; Funeral Ceremonies 432; At
- the House 433; The Funeral Procession 434; The Funeral
- Oration 435; At the Tomb 436; After Ceremonies 437;
- Memorial Festivals 438
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-1. The topics that are discussed in this book have to do with the
-everyday life of the Roman people. Such things will be considered as
-the family, the Roman name, marriage and the position of women,
-children and education, slaves, clients, the house and its furniture,
-clothing, food and meals, amusements, travel and correspondence,
-funeral ceremonies and burial customs, etc. These things are of
-interest to us in the case of any ancient or foreign people; in the
-case of the Romans they are of especial importance, because they help
-to explain the powerful influence which that nation exerted over the
-old world, and make it easier to understand why that influence is
-still felt in some degree to-day.
-
-2. Public and Private Antiquities.--The subjects that have been named
-above belong to what is called Classical Antiquities, taking their
-place in the subdivision of Roman Antiquities as opposed to Greek
-Antiquities. They are grouped loosely together as Private Antiquities
-in opposition to what we call Public Antiquities. Under the latter
-head we consider the Roman as a citizen, and we examine the several
-classes of citizens, their obligations and their privileges; we study
-the form of their government, its officers and machinery, its
-legislative, judicial, and executive procedure, its revenues and
-expenditures, etc. It is evident that no hard and fast line can be
-drawn between the two branches of the subject: they cross each other
-at every turn. One scarcely knows, for example, under which head to
-put the religion of the Romans or their games in the circus.
-
-3. In the same way, the daily employment of a slave, his keep, his
-punishments, his rewards, are properly considered under the head of
-Private Antiquities. But the state undertook sometimes to regulate by
-law the number of slaves that a master might have, the state regulated
-the manumission of the slave and gave him certain rights as a
-freedman, and these matters belong to Public Antiquities. So, too, a
-man might or might not be eligible to certain state offices according
-to the particular ceremony used at the marriage of his parents. It
-will be found, therefore, that the study of Private Antiquities can
-not be completely separated from its complement, though in this book
-the dividing line will be crossed as seldom as possible.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: Students in secondary schools will find useful for
-preliminary reading the outline of the Roman Constitution in the
-Introduction to the author's "Selected Orations and Letters of
-Cicero." For more advanced students three books have lately appeared
-on this subject: Abbott's "Roman Political Institutions," Granrud's
-"Roman Constitutional History," and Greenidge's "Roman Public Life."]
-
-4. Antiquities and History.--It is just as impossible to draw the
-boundary line between the subjects of Antiquities and History. The
-older history, it is true, concerned itself little with the private
-life of the people, almost solely with the rise and fall of dynasties.
-It told us of kings and generals, of the wars they waged, the
-victories they won, and the conquests they made. Then, in course of
-time, institutions took the place of dynasties and parties the place
-of heroes, and history traced the growth of great political ideas:
-such masterpieces as Thirlwall's and Grote's histories of Greece are
-largely constitutional histories. But changes in international
-relations affect the private life of a people as surely, if not as
-speedily, as they affect the machinery of government. You can not
-bring into contact, friendly or unfriendly, two different
-civilizations without a change in the peoples concerned, without
-altering their occupations, their ways of living, their very ideas of
-life and its purposes. These changes react in turn upon the temper and
-character of a people, they affect its capacity for self-government
-and the government of others, and in the course of time they bring
-about the movements of which even the older history took notice. Hence
-our recent histories give more and more space to the life of the
-common people, to the very matters, that is, that were mentioned in
-the first paragraph as belonging to Private Antiquities. This may be
-seen in such titles as these: Green's "History of the English People,"
-McMaster's "History of the People of the United States."
-
-5. On the other hand it is equally true that a knowledge of political
-history is necessary for the study of Private Antiquities. We shall
-find the Romans giving up certain ways of living and habits of
-thinking that seemed to have become fixed and characteristic. These
-changes we could not explain at all, if political history did not
-inform us that just before they took place the Romans had come into
-contact with the widely different ideas and opposing civilizations of
-other nations. The most important event of this sort was the
-introduction of Greek culture after the Punic wars, and to this we
-shall have to refer again and again. It follows from all this that
-students who have had even the most elementary course in Roman history
-have already some knowledge of Private Antiquities, and that those who
-have not studied the history of Rome at all will find very helpful the
-reading of even the briefest of our school histories.
-
-6. Antiquities and Philology.--The subject of Classical Antiquities
-has always been regarded as a branch--"discipline" is the technical
-word--of Classical Philology since Friedrich August Wolf (1759-1824)
-made Philology a science. It is quite true that in the common
-acceptation of the word Philology is merely the science of language,
-but even here Antiquities has an important part to play. It is
-impossible to read understandingly an ode of Horace or an oration of
-Cicero, if one is ignorant of the social life and the political
-institutions of Rome. But Classical Philology is much more than the
-science of understanding and interpreting the classical languages. It
-claims for itself the investigation of Greek and Roman life in all its
-aspects, social, intellectual, and political, so far as it has become
-known to us from the surviving literary, epigraphic, and monumental
-records. Whitney puts it thus: Philology deals with human speech and
-with all that speech discloses as to the nature and history of man. If
-it is hard to remember these definitions one can hardly forget the
-epigram of Benoist: Philology is the geology of the intellectual
-world. Under this, the only scientific conception of Philology, the
-study of Antiquities takes at once a higher place. It becomes the end
-with linguistics the means, and this is the true relation between
-them.
-
-7. But it happens that the study of the languages in which the
-records of classical antiquity are preserved must first occupy the
-investigator, and that the study of language as mere language, its
-origin, its growth, its decay, is in itself very interesting and
-profitable. It happens, moreover, that the languages of Greece and
-Rome can not be studied apart from literatures of singular richness,
-beauty, and power, and the study of literature has always been one of
-the most attractive and absorbing to cultivated men. It is not hard to
-understand, therefore, why the study of Antiquities has not been more
-prominent in connection with philological training. It was the end to
-which only the few pressed on. It was reserved, at least in systematic
-form, for the trained scholar in the university. In the congested
-condition of the old curricula in our colleges it was crowded out by
-the more obvious, but not more essential or interesting, subjects of
-linguistics and literary criticism, or it was presented at best in the
-form of scrappy notes on the authors read in the classroom or in the
-dismembered alphabetical arrangement of a dictionary.
-
-8. Within the last few years, however, a change has been taking
-place, a change due to several causes. In the first place, the
-literary criticism which was once taught exclusively in connection
-with classical authors and which claimed so large a part of the time
-allotted to classical study has found a more appropriate place in the
-departments of English that were hardly known a generation ago. In the
-second place, the superior preparation in the classics now demanded
-for admission to our colleges has relieved their courses of much
-elementary linguistic drill that was formerly necessary. In the third
-place, the last half century has seen a greater advance in the
-knowledge of Antiquities than all the years before, and it is now
-possible to present in positive dogmatic form much that was recently
-mere guesswork and speculation. Finally, modern theories of education,
-which have narrowed the stream of classical instruction only to deepen
-its channel and quicken its current, have caused more stress to be
-laid upon the points of contact between the ancient and the modern
-world. The teacher of the classics has come to realize that the
-obligations of the present to the past are not to be so clearly
-presented and so vividly appreciated in connection with the formal
-study of art and literature as in the investigation of the great
-social, political, and religious problems which throughout all the
-ages have engaged the thought of cultivated men.
-
-9. Sources.--It has been already remarked (6) that Classical
-Philology draws its knowledge from three sources, the literary,
-epigraphic, and monumental remains of Greece and Rome. It is necessary
-that we should understand at the outset precisely what is meant by
-each of these. By literary sources we mean the writings of the Greeks
-and Romans, that is, the books which they published, that have come
-down to us. The form of these books, the way they were published and
-have been preserved, will be considered later. For the present it is
-sufficient to say that a mere fraction only of these writings has come
-down to our day, and that of these poor remnants we possess no
-originals but merely more or less imperfect copies. It is true,
-nevertheless, that these form as a whole the most important of our
-sources of information, largely because they have been most carefully
-studied and are best understood.
-
-10. By epigraphic sources we mean the words that were written,
-scratched, cut, or stamped on hard materials, such as metal, stone, or
-wood, without thought of literary finish. These vary from single words
-to records of very considerable extent, and are briefly called
-inscriptions. The student may get a good idea of the most ancient and
-curious by merely turning over a few pages of Ritschl's "Priscae
-Latinitatis Monumenta Epigraphica" or of Egbert's "Latin
-Inscriptions." Of one sort of great importance, the legends on coins
-and medals, many have found their way into American museums. With
-modern inscriptions on similar materials and for similar purposes
-every student is, of course, familiar.
-
-11. By monumental evidence we mean all the things actually made by
-the Greeks and Romans that have come down to us. These things are
-collectively very numerous and of very many kinds: coins, medals,
-pieces of jewelry, armor, pottery, statues, paintings, bridges,
-aqueducts, fortifications, ruins of cities, etc. It is impossible to
-enumerate them all. It is upon such remains as these that most of the
-inscriptions mentioned above are preserved. Of the most importance for
-the study of the private life of the Romans are the ruins of the city
-of Pompeii preserved to us by the protection of the ashes that buried
-it at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius in the year 79 A.D.
-
-12. It will be seen at once that the importance of these sources will
-vary with the nature of the subject we are studying and the fullness
-of their preservation. For example, we may read in a Roman poet a
-description of an ornament worn by a bride. A painting of a bride
-wearing such an ornament would make the description clearer, but any
-doubt that might remain would be removed if there should be found in
-the ruins of Pompeii a similar ornament with its character proved by
-an inscription upon it. In this case the three sources would have
-contributed to our knowledge. For other matters, especially intangible
-things, we may have to rely solely upon descriptions, that is, upon
-literary sources. But it may well happen that no Roman wrote a set
-description of the particular thing that we are studying, or if he did
-that his writings have been lost, so that we may be forced to build up
-our knowledge bit by bit, by putting together laboriously the scraps
-of information, mere hints perhaps, that we find scattered here and
-there in the works of different authors, and these perhaps of very
-different times. It is not hard to understand, therefore, that our
-knowledge of some things pertaining to Roman antiquities may be fairly
-complete, while of others we may have no knowledge at all. It may be
-worth remarking of literary sources that the more common and familiar
-a thing was to the ancients, the less likely is it that we shall find
-a description of it in ancient literature.
-
-13. Reference Books.--The collecting and arranging of the information
-gleaned from these sources has been the task of philologists from very
-early times, but so much has been added to our knowledge by recent
-discoveries that all but the latest books may be neglected by the
-student. A very full list of books treating of Roman Antiquities may
-be found in Hbner's "Bibliographie der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft," and a convenient list in Professor Kelsey's
-"Fifty Topics in Roman Antiquities with References," but the student
-should not fail to notice at the head of each chapter the lists of
-authorities to be consulted in the books specifically mentioned below.
-These have been arranged in two classes, systematic treatises and
-encyclopedic works, and the student who lacks time to consult all the
-references should select one at least of the better and larger works
-in each class for regular and methodical study.
-
-14. Systematic Treatises:
-
-Marquardt, Joachim, "Das Privatleben der Rmer," 2d edition by A. Mau.
-This is the seventh volume of the _Handbuch der rmischen Alterthmer_
-by Marquardt and Mommsen. It is the fullest and most authoritative of
-all the treatises on the subject and has a few illustrations.
-
-Voigt, Moritz, "Die Rmischen Privataltertmer," 2d edition. This is a
-part of the fourth volume of the _Handbuch der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft_ by Iwan von Mller. It is the latest work on
-the subject, especially rich in the citation of authorities.
-
-Guhl and Koner, "Leben der Griechen und Rmer," 6th edition by
-Engelmann. A standard and authoritative work enriched by copious
-illustrations. There is an English translation of an earlier edition
-which may be used by those who read no German.
-
-Becker, W. A., "Gallus oder rmische Scenen aus der Zeit Augusts," new
-edition by Hermann Gll. This is a standard authority in the form of a
-novel. The story is of no particular interest, but the notes and
-excursuses are of the first importance. There is an English
-translation of the first edition which may be used with caution by
-those who read no German.
-
-Friedlnder, L., "Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms in der
-Zeit von August bis zum Ausgang der Antonine," 6th edition. This is
-the great authority for the time it covers and will be found to
-include practically the history from the earliest times of all the
-matters of which it treats.
-
-Blmner, Hugo, "Technologie und Terminologie der Gewerbe und Knste
-bei Griechen und Rmern." The very best description of the arts and
-industries of ancient Greece and Rome.
-
-Ramsay, William, "A Manual of Roman Antiquities," 15th edition,
-revised and partly rewritten by Rodolfo Lanciani. This includes public
-as well as private antiquities, but the revision seems to have been
-but partial and the larger part of the book is hopelessly out of date.
-
-Wilkins, A. S., "Roman Antiquities," and Preston and Dodge, "The
-Private Life of the Romans." Two little books, of which the former is
-by a good scholar and is worth reading.
-
-15. Encyclopedic Works:
-
-Pauly-Wissowa, "Real-Encyclopdie der classischen
-Altertumswissenschaft." A monumental work, destined to be for many
-years the great authority upon the subject. Unfortunately it is
-appearing very slowly and has reached only the word _Demodoros_. There
-are a few illustrations.
-
-Smith, William, "A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities," revised
-edition by Wayte and Marindin. This is the very best work of the sort
-in English, the best possibly of similar size in any language.
-
-Baumeister, "Denkmler des klassischen Altertums." The most richly
-illustrated work on the subject, absolutely indispensable.
-
-"Harper's Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities." Largely
-from Smith, but with valuable additions.
-
-Rich, "Dictionary of Roman and Greek Antiquities." A convenient manual
-with many illustrations. Very good for ready reference.
-
-Schreiber, "Atlas of Classical Antiquities." A very copious collection
-of illustrations bearing on Greek and Roman life. The illustrations
-are accompanied by explanatory text.
-
-Seyffert-Nettleship, "Dictionary of Classical Antiquities." The
-illustrations are numerous and the book is of some value on the side
-of ancient art.
-
-Lbker, "Real-Lexicon des klassischen Altertums," 7th edition by Max
-Erler. The best brief handbook for those who read German. It is
-compact and accurate.
-
-16. Other Books.--Besides these, three books may be mentioned
-treating of the discoveries at Pompeii, the importance of which has
-been mentioned (11):
-
-Overbeck, J., "Pompeii," 4th edition by August Mau, the standard
-popular work upon the subject, richly supplied with illustrations.
-
-Mau, August, "Pompeii, its Life and Art," translated by Kelsey. This
-is the best account of the treasures of the buried city that has
-appeared in English, at once interesting and scholarly.
-
-Gusman, Pierre, "Pompeii, the City, its Life and Art," translated by
-Simmonds and Jourdain. The very best collection of illustrations, but
-not so trustworthy in letterpress.
-
-Finally the student should be warned not to neglect a book merely
-because it happens to be written in a language that he does not read
-fluently: the very part that he wants may happen to be easy to read,
-and many of these books contain illustrations that tell their own
-story independently of the letterpress that accompanies them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE FAMILY
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, pp. 1-6; Voigt, 307-311, 386-388; Gll, II.
-1-4, 61-65, 187; Pauly-Wissowa, under _adfinitas_, _agnatio_,
-_cognatio_; Smith, under _cognati_, _familia_, _patria potestas_;
-Seyffert, under _agnatio_, _cognatio_, _familia_, _manus_; Lbker,
-under _agnatio_, _cognatio_, _familia_, _manus_, _patria potestas_.
-
-Look up the word _familia_ in Harper's lexicon and notice carefully
-its range of meanings.
-
-See also Muirhead, "Roman Law," pp. 24-33, and the paragraph on the
-Quiritian Family in the article on Roman Law by the same writer in the
-"Encyclopaedia Britannica," Vol. XX.
-
-
-17. The Household.--If by our word family we usually understand a
-group of husband, wife, and children, we may acknowledge at once that
-it does not correspond exactly to any of the meanings of the Latin
-_familia_, varied as the dictionaries show these to be. Husband, wife,
-and children did not necessarily constitute an independent family
-among the Romans, and were not necessarily members even of the same
-family. Those persons made up the Roman _familia_, in the sense
-nearest to its English derivative, who were subject to the authority
-of the same Head of the House (_pater familias_). These persons might
-make a host in themselves: wife, unmarried daughters, sons real or
-adopted, married or unmarried, with their wives, sons, unmarried
-daughters, and even remoter descendants (always through males), yet
-they made but one _familia_ in the eyes of the Romans. The Head of
-such a family--"household" or "house" is the nearest English word--was
-always _sui iuris_ ("independent," "one's own master"), while the
-others were _alieno iuri subiecti_ ("dependent").
-
-18. The authority of the _pater familias_ over his wife was called
-_manus_, over his descendants _patria potestas_, over his chattels
-_dominica potestas_. So long as he lived and retained his citizenship,
-these powers could be terminated only by his own deliberate act. He
-could dispose of his property by gift or sale as freely as we do now.
-He might "emancipate" his sons, a very formal proceeding
-(_emancipatio_) by which they became each the Head of a new family,
-though they were childless themselves or unmarried or even mere
-children. He might also emancipate an unmarried daughter, who thus in
-her own self became an independent family. Or he might give her in
-marriage to another Roman citizen, an act by which she passed by early
-usage (61) into the family of which her husband was Head, if he was
-_sui iuris_, or of which he was a member, if he was still _alieno iuri
-subiectus_. It must be carefully noticed, on the other hand, that the
-marriage of a son did not make him a _pater familias_ or relieve him
-in any degree from the _patria potestas_: he and his wife and their
-children were subject to the same Head of the House as he had been
-before his marriage. On the other hand, the Head of the House could
-not number in his _familia_ his daughter's children: legitimate
-children always followed the father, while an illegitimate child was
-from the moment of birth in himself or herself an independent family.
-
-19. The Splitting Up of a House.--Emancipation was not very common
-and it usually happened that the household was dissolved only by the
-death of the Head. When this occurred, as many new households were
-formed as there were persons directly subject to his _potestas_ at the
-moment of his death: wife, sons, unmarried daughters, widowed
-daughters-in-law, and children of a deceased son. The children of a
-surviving son, it must be noticed, merely passed from the _potestas_
-of their grandfather to that of their father. A son under age or an
-unmarried daughter was put under the care of a guardian (_tutor_),
-selected from the same _gens_, very often an older brother, if there
-was one. The following diagram will make this clearer:
-
- 1Gaius (_pater familias_) = (died)2Gaia (_mater familias_)
- |
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- | | | | |
-3Faustus = 4Tullia (died)5Balbus = 6Licinia 7Publius 8Terentia |
- | | 9Marcus = 10Terentia Minor
- ----------- ------------ |
- | | | | ------------
-11Titus 12Tiberius 13Quintus 14Sextius | |
- 15Servius 16Decimus
-
-20. It is assumed that Gaius is a widower who has had five children,
-three sons and two daughters. Of the sons, Faustus and Balbus married
-and had each two children; Balbus then died. Of the daughters,
-Terentia Minor married Marcus and became the mother of two children.
-Publius and Terentia were unmarried at the death of Gaius, who had
-emancipated none of his children. It will be noticed:
-
-1. The living descendants of Gaius were ten (3, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13,
-14, 15, 16), his son Balbus being dead.
-
-2. Subject to his _potestas_ were nine (3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13,
-14).
-
-3. His daughter Terentia Minor (10) had passed out of his _potestas_
-by her marriage with Marcus (9), and her children (15, 16) alone out
-of all the descendants of Gaius had not been subject to him.
-
-4. At his death are formed six independent families, one consisting of
-four persons (3, 4, 11, 12), the others of one person each (6, 7, 8,
-13, 14).
-
-5. Titus and Tiberius (11, 12) have merely passed out of the
-_potestas_ of their grandfather Gaius to come under that of their
-father Faustus.
-
-21. Other Meanings of Familia.--The word _familia_ was also very
-commonly used in a slightly wider sense to include in addition to the
-persons named above (17) all the slaves and clients and all the
-property real and personal belonging to the _pater familias_, or
-acquired and used by the persons under his _potestas_. The word was
-also used of the slaves alone, and rarely of the property alone. In a
-still wider and more important sense the word was applied to a larger
-group of related persons, the _gens_, consisting of all the
-"households" (_familiae_ in the sense of 17) who derived their
-descent through males from a common ancestor. This remote ancestor,
-could his life have lasted through all the intervening centuries,
-would have been the _pater familias_ of all the persons included in
-the _gens_, and all would have been subject to his _potestas_.
-Membership in the _gens_ was proved by the possession of the _nomen_,
-the second of the three names that every citizen of the Republic
-regularly had (38).
-
-22. Theoretically this _gens_ had been in prehistoric times one of
-the _familiae_, "households," whose union for political purposes had
-formed the state. Theoretically its _pater familias_ had been one of
-the Heads of Houses who in the days of the Kings had formed the
-_patres_, or assembly of old men (_senatus_). The splitting up of this
-prehistoric household in the manner explained in 19, a process
-repeated generation after generation, was believed to account for the
-numerous _familiae_ who claimed connection with the great _gentes_ in
-later times. The _gens_ had an organization of which little is known.
-It passed resolutions binding upon its members; it furnished guardians
-for minor children, and curators for the insane and for spendthrifts.
-When a member died without leaving natural heirs, it succeeded to such
-property as he did not dispose of by will and administered it for the
-common good of all its members. These members were called _gentiles_,
-were bound to take part in the religious services of the _gens_
-(_sacra gentilicia_), had a claim to the common property, and might if
-they chose be laid to rest in the common burial ground.
-
-Finally, the word _familia_ was often applied to certain branches of a
-_gens_ whose members had the same _cognomen_ (48), the last of the
-three names mentioned in 21. For this use of _familia_ a more
-accurate word is _stirps_.
-
-23. Agnati.--It has been remarked (18) that the children of a
-daughter could not be included in the _familia_ of her father, and
-(21) that membership in the larger organization called the _gens_ was
-limited to those who could trace their descent through males. All
-persons who could in this way trace their descent through males to a
-common ancestor, in whose _potestas_ they would be were he alive, were
-called _agnati_, and this _agnatio_ was the closest tie of
-relationship known to the Romans. In the list of _agnati_ were
-included two classes of persons who would seem by the definition to be
-excluded. These were the wife, who passed by _manus_ into the family
-of her husband (18), becoming by law his agnate and the agnate of all
-his agnates, and the adopted son. On the other hand a son who had been
-emancipated (18) was excluded from _agnatio_ with his father and his
-father's agnates, and could have no agnates of his own until he
-married or was adopted into another _familia_. The following diagram
-will make this clearer:
-
- 1Gaius (_pater familias_) = 2Gaia (_mater familias_)
- |
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- | : | | | |
-3Faustus = 4Tullia : 5Balbus = 6Licinia 7Publius 8Terentia |
- | : [Emancipated]| [Emancipated] |
- ----------- : ------------ 9Marcus = 10Terentia Minor
- | | : | | |
-11Titus 12Tiberius : 13Quintus 14Sextius -------------
- : | |
- :[Servius adopted by Gaius] 15Servius 16Decimus
- :.........................[Emancipated]
-
-24. It is supposed that Gaius and Gaia have five children (Faustus,
-Balbus, Publius, Terentia, and Terentia Minor), and six grandsons
-(Titus and Tiberius the sons of Faustus, Quintus and Sextius the sons
-of Balbus, and Servius and Decimus the sons of Terentia Minor). Gaius
-has emancipated two of his sons, Balbus and Publius, and has adopted
-his grandson Servius, who had previously been emancipated by his
-father Marcus. There are four sets of _agnati_:
-
-1. Gaius, his wife, and those whose _pater familias_ he is, viz.:
-Faustus, Tullia the wife of Faustus, Terentia, Titus, Tiberius, and
-Servius, a son by adoption (1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 11, 12, 15).
-
-2. Balbus, his wife, and their two sons (5, 6, 13, and 14).
-
-3. Publius, who is himself a _pater familias_, but has no _agnati_ at
-all.
-
-4. Marcus, his wife Terentia Minor, and their child Decimus (9, 10,
-16). Notice that the other child, Servius (15), having been
-emancipated by Marcus is no longer agnate to his father, mother, or
-brother.
-
-25. Cognati, on the other hand, were what we call blood relations, no
-matter whether they traced their relationship through males or
-females, and regardless of what _potestas_ had been over them. The
-only barrier in the eyes of the law was loss of citizenship (18), and
-even this was not always regarded. Thus, in the table last given,
-Gaius, Faustus, Balbus, Publius, Terentia, Terentia Minor, Titus,
-Tiberius, Quintus, Sextius, Servius, and Decimus are all cognates with
-one another. So, too, is Gaia with all her descendants mentioned. So
-also are Tullia, Titus, and Tiberius; Licinia, Quintus, and Sextius;
-Marcus, Servius, and Decimus. But husband and wife (Gaius and Gaia,
-Faustus and Tullia, Balbus and Licinia, Marcus and Terentia Minor)
-were not cognates by virtue of their marriage, though that made them
-agnates. In fact public opinion discountenanced the marriage of
-cognates within the sixth (later the fourth) degree, and persons
-within this degree were said to have the _ius osculi_. The degree was
-calculated by counting from one of the interested parties through the
-common ancestor to the other and may be easily understood from the
-table given in Smith's "Dictionary of Antiquities" under _cognati_, or
-the one given here (Fig. 1). Cognates did not form an organic body in
-the state as did the agnates (22), but the 22d of February was set
-aside to commemorate the tie of blood (_cara cognatio_), and on this
-day presents were exchanged and family reunions probably held. It must
-be understood, however, that _cognatio_ gave no legal rights or claims
-under the Republic.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 1. TABLE OF RELATIONSHIP]
-
-26. Adfines.--Persons connected by marriage only were called
-_adfines_, as a wife with her husband's cognates and he with hers.
-There were no formal degrees of _adfinitas_, as there were of
-_cognatio_. Those adfines for whom distinctive names were in common
-use were: _gener_, son-in-law; _nurus_, daughter-in-law; _socer_,
-father-in-law; _socrus_, mother-in-law; _privignus_, _privigna_,
-step-son, step-daughter; _ritricus_, step-father; _noverca_,
-step-mother. If we compare these names with the awkward compounds that
-do duty for them in English, we shall have additional proof of the
-stress laid by the Romans on family ties: two women who married
-brothers were called _ianitrices_, a relationship for which we do not
-have even a compound. The names of blood relations tell the same
-story: a glance at the table of cognates will show how strong the
-Latin is here, how weak the English. We have "uncle," "aunt," and
-"cousin," but between _avunculus_ and _patruus_, _matertera_ and
-_amita_, _patruelis_ and _consobrinus_, we can distinguish only by
-descriptive phrases. For _atavus_ and _tritavus_ we have merely the
-indefinite "forefathers." In the same way the language testifies to
-the headship of the father. We speak of the "mother country" and
-"mother tongue," but to the Roman these were _patria_ and _sermo
-patrius_. As the _pater_ stood to the _filius_, so stood the
-_patronus_ to the _cliens_, the _patricii_ to the _plebeii_, the
-_patres_ (=senators) to the rest of the citizens, and _Iupiter_ (Jove
-the Father) to the other gods of Olympus.
-
-27. The Family Cult.--It has been said (23) that _agnatio_ was the
-closest tie known to the Romans. The importance they attached to the
-agnatic family is largely explained by their ideas of the future life.
-They believed that the souls of men had an existence apart from the
-body, but not in a separate spirit-land. They conceived of the soul as
-hovering around the place of burial and requiring for its peace and
-happiness that offerings of food and drink should be made to it
-regularly. Should these offerings be discontinued, the soul would
-cease to be happy itself, and might become perhaps a spirit of evil.
-The maintenance of these rites and ceremonies devolved naturally upon
-the descendants from generation to generation, whom the spirits in
-turn would guide and guard.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 2. LUCIUS JUNIUS BRUTUS]
-
-28. The Roman was bound, therefore, to perform these acts of
-affection and piety so long as he lived himself, and bound no less to
-provide for their performance after his death by perpetuating his race
-and the family cult. A curse was believed to rest upon the childless
-man. Marriage was, therefore, a solemn religious duty, entered into
-only with the approval of the gods ascertained by the auspices. In
-taking a wife to himself the Roman made her a partaker of his family
-mysteries, a service that brooked no divided allegiance. He therefore
-separated her entirely from her father's family, and was ready in turn
-to surrender his daughter without reserve to the husband with whom she
-was to minister at another altar. The _pater familias_ was the priest
-of the household, and those subject to his _potestas_ assisted in the
-prayers and offerings, the _sacra familiaria_.
-
-29. But it might be that a marriage was fruitless, or that the Head
-of the House saw his sons die before him. In this case he had to face
-the prospect of the extinction of his family, and his own descent to
-the grave with no posterity to make him blessed. One of two
-alternatives was open to him to avert such a calamity. He might give
-himself in adoption and pass into another family in which the
-perpetuation of the family cult seemed certain, or he might adopt a
-son and thus perpetuate his own. He usually followed the latter
-course, because it secured peace for the souls of his ancestors no
-less than for his own.
-
-30. Adoption.--The person adopted might be either a _pater familias_
-himself or, more usually, a _filius familias_. In the case of the
-latter the process was called _adoptio_ and was a somewhat complicated
-proceeding by which the natural parent conveyed his son to the other,
-the effect being to transfer the adopted person from one family to the
-other. The adoption of a _pater familias_ was a much more serious
-matter, for it involved the extinction of one family (29) in order to
-prevent the extinction of another. It was called _adrogatio_ and was
-an affair of state. It had to be sanctioned by the _pontifices_, the
-highest officers of religion, who had probably to make sure that the
-_adrogatus_ had brothers enough to attend to the interests of the
-ancestors whose cult he was renouncing. If the _pontifices_ gave their
-consent, it had still to be sanctioned by the _comitia curiata_, as
-the adrogation might deprive the _gens_ of its succession to the
-property of the childless man (22). If the _comitia_ gave consent,
-the _adrogatus_ sank from the position of Head of a House to that of a
-_filius familias_ in the household of his adoptive father. If he had
-wife and children, they passed with him into the new family, and so
-did all his property. Over him the adoptive father had _potestas_ as
-over a son of his own, and looked upon him as flesh of his flesh and
-bone of his bone. We can have at best only a feeble and inadequate
-notion of what adoption meant to the Romans.
-
-31. The Patria Potestas.--The authority of the _pater familias_ over
-his descendants was called usually the _patria potestas_, but also the
-_patria maiestas_, the _patrium ius_, and the _imperium paternum_. It
-was carried to a greater length by the Romans than by any other
-people, a length that seems to us excessive and cruel. As they
-understood it, the _pater familias_ had absolute power over his
-children and other agnatic descendants. He decided whether or not the
-newborn child should be reared; he punished what he regarded as
-misconduct with penalties as severe as banishment, slavery, and death;
-he alone could own and exchange property--all that his descendants
-earned or acquired in any way was his: according to the letter of the
-law they were little better than his chattels. If his right to one of
-them was disputed, he vindicated it by the same form of action that he
-used to maintain his right to a house or a horse; if one was stolen,
-he proceeded against the abductor by the ordinary action for theft; if
-for any reason he wished to transfer one of them to a third person, it
-was done by the same form of conveyance that he employed to transfer
-inanimate things. The jurists boasted that these powers were enjoyed
-by Roman citizens only.
-
-32. Limitations.--But however stern this authority was theoretically,
-it was greatly modified in practice, under the Republic by custom,
-under the Empire by law. King Romulus was said to have ordained that
-all sons should be reared and also all firstborn daughters;
-furthermore that no child should be put to death until its third year,
-unless it was grievously deformed. This at least secured life for the
-child, though the _pater familias_ still decided whether it should be
-admitted to his household, with the implied social and religious
-privileges, or be disowned and become an outcast. King Numa was said
-to have forbidden the sale into slavery of a son who had married with
-the consent of his father. But of much greater importance was the
-check put upon arbitrary and cruel punishments by custom. Custom, not
-law, obliged the _pater familias_ to call a council of relatives and
-friends (_iudicium domesticum_) when he contemplated inflicting severe
-punishment upon his children, and public opinion obliged him to abide
-by their verdict. Even in the comparatively few cases where tradition
-tells us that the death penalty was actually inflicted, we usually
-find that the father acted in the capacity of a magistrate happening
-to be in office when the offense was committed, or that the penalties
-of the ordinary law were merely anticipated, perhaps to avoid the
-disgrace of a public trial and execution.
-
-33. So, too, in regard to the ownership of property the conditions
-were not really so hard as the strict letter of the law makes them
-appear to us. It was customary for the Head of the House to assign to
-his children property, _peculia_ ("cattle of their own"), for them to
-manage for their own benefit. And more than this, although the _pater
-familias_ held legal title to all their acquisitions, yet practically
-all property was acquired for and belonged to the household as a
-whole, and he was in effect little more than a trustee to hold and
-administer it for the common benefit. This is shown by the fact that
-there was no graver offense against public morals, no fouler blot on
-private character, than to prove untrue to this trust, _patrimonium
-profundere_. Besides this, the long continuance of the _potestas_ is
-in itself a proof that its rigor was more apparent than real.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 3. PUBLIUS CORNELIUS SCIPIO AFRICANUS]
-
-34. Extinction of the Potestas.--The _patria potestas_ was
-extinguished in various ways:
-
-1. By the death of the _pater familias_, as has been explained in 19.
-
-2. By the emancipation of the son or daughter.
-
-3. By the loss of citizenship by either father or son.
-
-4. If the son became a _flamen dialis_ or the daughter a _virgo
-vestalis_.
-
-5. If either father or child was adopted by a third party.
-
-6. If the daughter passed by formal marriage into the power (_in
-manum_) of a husband, though this did not essentially change her
-dependent condition (35).
-
-7. If the son became a public magistrate. In this case the _potestas_
-was suspended during the period of office, but after it expired the
-father might hold the son accountable for his acts, public and
-private, while holding the magistracy.
-
-35. Manus.--The subject of marriage will be considered later; at this
-point it is only necessary to define the power over the wife possessed
-by the husband in its most extreme form, called by the Romans _manus_.
-By the oldest and most solemn form of marriage the wife was separated
-entirely from her father's family (28) and passed into her husband's
-power or "hand" (_conventio in manum_). This assumes, of course, that
-he was _sui iuris_; if he was not, then though nominally in his "hand"
-she was really subject as he was to his _pater familias_. Any property
-she had of her own, and to have had any she must have been independent
-before her marriage, passed to him as a matter of course. If she had
-none, her _pater familias_ furnished a dowry (_dos_), which shared the
-same fate. Whatever she acquired by her industry or otherwise while
-the marriage lasted also became her husband's. So far, therefore, as
-property rights were concerned the _manus_ differed in no respect from
-the _patria potestas_: the wife was _in loco filiae_, and on the
-husband's death took a daughter's share in his estate.
-
-36. In other respects _manus_ conferred more limited powers. The
-husband was required by law, not merely obliged by custom, to refer
-alleged misconduct of his wife to the _iudicium domesticum_, and this
-was composed in part of her cognates (25). He could put her away for
-certain grave offenses only; if he divorced her without good cause he
-was punished with the loss of all his property. He could not sell her
-at all. In short, public opinion and custom operated even more
-strongly for her protection than for that of her children. It must be
-noticed, therefore, that the chief distinction between _manus_ and
-_patria potestas_ lay in the fact that the former was a legal
-relationship based upon the consent of the weaker party, while the
-latter was a natural relationship antecedent to all law and choice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 4. LUCIUS CORNELIUS SULLA]
-
-37. Dominica Potestas.--The right of ownership in his property
-(_dominica potestas_) was absolute in the case of a _pater familias_
-and has been sufficiently explained in preceding paragraphs. This
-ownership included slaves as well as inanimate things, and slaves as
-well as inanimate things were mere chattels in the eyes of the law.
-The influence of custom and public opinion, so far as these tended to
-mitigating the horrors of their condition, will be discussed later. It
-will be sufficient to say here that there was nothing to which the
-slave could appeal from the judgment of his master. It was final and
-absolute.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE NAME
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 7-27; Voigt, 311, 316 f., 454; Pauly-Wissowa,
-under _cognomen_; Smith, Harper, and Lbker, under _nomen_.
-
-See also: Egbert, "Latin Inscriptions," Chapter IV; Cagnat, "Cours
-d'Epigraphie Latine," Chapter I; Hbner, "Rmische Epigraphik," pp.
-653-680 of Mller's _Handbuch_, Vol. I.
-
-
-38. The Triple Name.--Nothing is more familiar to the student of
-Latin than the fact that the Romans whose works he reads first have
-each a threefold name, Caius Julius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero,
-Publius Vergilius Maro. This was the system that prevailed in the best
-days of the Republic, but it was itself a development, starting with a
-more simple form in earlier times and ending in utter confusion under
-the Empire. The earliest legends of Rome show us single names,
-Romulus, Remus, Faustulus; but side by side with these we find also
-double names, Numa Pompilius, Ancus Marcius, Tullus Hostilius. It is
-possible that single names were the earliest fashion, but when we pass
-from legends to real history the oldest names that we find are double,
-the second being always in the genitive case, representing the father
-or the Head of the House: Marcus Marci, Caecilia Metelli. A little
-later these genitives were followed by the letter _f_ (for _filius_ or
-_filia_) or _uxor_, to denote the relationship. Later still, but very
-anciently nevertheless, we find the freeborn man in possession of the
-three names with which we are familiar, the _nomen_ to mark the clan
-(_gens_), the _cognomen_ to mark the family, and the _praenomen_ to
-mark the individual. The regular order of the three names is
-_praenomen_, _nomen_, _cognomen_, although in poetry the order is
-often changed to adapt the name to the meter.
-
-39. Great formality required even more than the three names. In
-official documents and in the state records it was usual to insert
-between a man's _nomen_ and _cognomen_ the _praenomina_ of his father,
-grandfather, and great-grandfather, and sometimes even the name of the
-tribe to which he belonged. So Cicero might write his name: M. Tullius
-M. f. M. n. M. pr. Cor. Cicero; that is, Marcus Tullius Cicero, son
-(_filius_) of Marcus, grandson (_nepos_) of Marcus, great-grandson
-(_pronepos_) of Marcus, of the tribe Cornelia. See another example in
-427.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 5. MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO]
-
-40. On the other hand even the triple name was too long for ordinary
-use. Children, slaves, and intimate friends addressed the citizen,
-master, and friend by his _praenomen_ only. Ordinary acquaintances
-used the _cognomen_ with the _praenomen_ prefixed for emphatic
-address. In earnest appeals we find the _nomen_ also used, with
-sometimes the _praenomen_ or the possessive _mi_ prefixed. When two
-only of the three names are thus used in familiar intercourse the
-order varies. If the _praenomen_ is one of the two, it always stands
-first, except in the poets for metrical reasons and in a few places in
-prose where the text is uncertain. If the _praenomen_ is omitted, the
-arrangement varies: the older writers and Cicero put the _cognomen_
-first, _Ahala Servilius_ (Cic. Milo, 3, 8: cf. _C. Servilius Ahala_,
-Cat. I., 1, 3). Caesar puts the nomen first; Horace, Livy, and Tacitus
-have both arrangements, while Pliny adheres to Caesar's usage. It will
-be convenient to consider the three names separately, and to discuss
-the names of men before considering those of the other members of the
-_familia_.
-
-41. The Praenomen.--The number of names used as _praenomina_ seems to
-us preposterously small as compared with our Christian names, to which
-they in some measure correspond. It was never much in excess of
-thirty, and in Sulla's time had dwindled to eighteen. The full list is
-given by the authorities named above, but the following are all that
-are often found in our school and college authors: _Aulus_ (_A_),
-_Decimus_ (_D_), _Gaius_ (_C_), _Gnaeus_ (_CN_), _Kaeso_ (_K_),
-_Lucius_ (_L_), _Manius_ (_M'_), _Marcus_ (_M_), _Publius_ (_P_),
-_Quintus_ (_Q_), _Servius_ (_SER_), _Sextus_ (_SEX_), _Spurius_
-(_SP_), _Tiberius_ (_TI_), and _Titus_ (_T_). The forms of these names
-were not absolutely fixed, and we find for _Gnaeus_ the forms
-_Gnaivos_ (early), _Naevos_, _Naeus_, and _Gneus_ (rare); so also for
-_Servius_ we find _Sergius_, the two forms going back to an ancient
-_Serguius_. The abbreviations also vary: for _Aulus_ we find regularly
-_A_, but also _AV_ and _AVL_; for _Sextus_ we find _SEXT_ and _S_ as
-well as _SEX_, and similar variations are found in the case of other
-names.
-
-42. But small as this list seems to us the natural conservatism of
-the Romans found in it a chance to display itself, and the great
-families repeated the names of their children from generation to
-generation in such a way as to make the identification of the
-individual very difficult in modern times. Thus the Aemilii contented
-themselves with seven of these _praenomina_, _Gaius_, _Gnaeus_,
-_Lucius_, _Manius_, _Marcus_, _Quintus_, and _Tiberius_, but used in
-addition one that is not found in any other gens, _Mamercus_ (_MAM_).
-The Claudii used six, _Gaius_, _Decimus_, _Lucius_, _Publius_,
-_Tiberius_, and _Quintus_, with the additional name _Appius_ (_APP_),
-of Sabine origin, which they brought to Rome. The Cornelii used seven,
-_Aulus_, _Gnaeus_, _Lucius_, _Marcus_, _Publius_, _Servius_, and
-_Tiberius_. A still smaller number sufficed for the Julian gens,
-_Gaius_, _Lucius_, and _Sextus_, with the name _Vopiscus_, which went
-out of use in very early times. And even these selections were subject
-to further limitations. Thus, of the _gens Claudia_ only one branch
-(_stirps_), known as the _Claudii Nerones_, used the names _Decimus_
-and _Tiberius_, and out of the seven names used in the _gens Cornelia_
-the branch of the Scipios (_Cornelii Scipiones_) used only _Gnaeus_,
-_Lucius_, and _Publius_. Even after a _praenomen_ had found a place in
-a given family, it might be deliberately discarded: thus, the Claudii
-gave up the name _Lucius_ and the Manlii the name _Marcus_ on account
-of the disgrace brought upon their families by men who bore these
-names; and the Antonii never used the name _Marcus_ after the downfall
-of the famous triumvir, Marcus Antonius.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 6. CAESAR]
-
-43. From the list of names usual in his family the father gave one to
-his son on the ninth day after his birth, the _dies lustricus_. It was
-a custom then, one that seems natural enough in our own times, for the
-father to give his own _praenomen_ to his firstborn son; Cicero's name
-(39) shows the name _Marcus_ four times repeated, and it is probable
-that he came from a long line of eldest sons. When these names were
-first given they must have been chosen with due regard to their
-etymological meanings and have had some relation to the circumstances
-attending the birth of the child: Livy in speaking of the mythical
-Silvius Aeneas gives us to understand that he received his first name
-because he was born in a forest (_silva_).
-
-44. So, _Lucius_ meant originally "born by day," _Manius_, "born in
-the morning"; _Quintus_, _Sextus_, _Decimus_, _Postumus_, etc.,
-indicated the succession in the family; _Tullus_ was connected with
-the verb _tollere_ in the sense of "acknowledge" (95), _Servius_ with
-_servare_, _Gaius_ with _gaudere_. Others are associated with the name
-of some divinity, as _Marcus_ and _Mamercus_ with Mars, and _Tiberius_
-with the river god Tiberis. But these meanings in the course of time
-were forgotten as completely as we have forgotten the meanings of our
-Christian names, and even the numerals were employed with no reference
-to their proper force: Cicero's only brother was called _Quintus_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 7. AUGUSTUS]
-
-45. The abbreviation of the _praenomen_ was not a matter of mere
-caprice, as is the writing of initials with us, but was an established
-custom, indicating perhaps Roman citizenship. The _praenomen_ was
-written out in full only when it was used by itself or when it
-belonged to a person in one of the lower classes of society. When
-Roman names are carried over into English, they should always be
-written out in full and pronounced accordingly. In the same way, when
-we read a Latin author and find a name abbreviated, the full name
-should always be pronounced if we read aloud or translate.
-
-46. The Nomen.--This, the all-important name, is called for greater
-precision the _nomen gentile_ and the _nomen gentilicium_. The child
-inherited it, as one inherits his surname now, and there was,
-therefore, no choice or selection about it. The _nomen_ ended
-originally in _-ius_, and this ending was sacredly preserved by the
-patrician families: the endings _-eius_, _-aius_, _-aeus_, and _-eus_
-are merely variations from it. Other endings point to a non-Latin
-origin of the gens. Those in _-acus_ (_Avidiacus_) are Gallic, those
-in _-na_ (_Caecina_) are Etruscan, those in _-enus_ or _-ienus_
-(_Salvidienus_) are Umbrian or Picene. Some others are formed from the
-name of the town from which the family sprang, either with the regular
-terminations _-anus_ and _-ensis_ (_Albanus_, _Norbanus_,
-_Aquiliensis_), or with the suffix _-ius_ (_Perusius_, _Parmensius_)
-in imitation of the older and more aristocratic use. Standing entirely
-apart is the _nomen_ of the notorious _Gaius Verres_, which looks like
-a _cognomen_ out of place (55).
-
-47. The _nomen_ belonged by custom to all connected with the gens, to
-the plebeian as well as the patrician branches, to men, women,
-clients, and freedmen without distinction. It was perhaps the natural
-desire to separate themselves from the more humble bearers of their
-_nomen_ that led patrician families to use a limited number of
-_praenomina_, avoiding those used by their clansmen of inferior social
-standing. At any rate it is noticeable that the plebeian families, as
-soon as political nobility and the busts in their halls gave them a
-standing above their fellows, showed the same exclusiveness in the
-selection of names for their children that the patricians had
-displayed before them (42).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 8. NERO]
-
-48. The Cognomen.--Besides the individual name and the name that
-marked his _gens_, the Roman had often a third name, called the
-_cognomen_, that served to indicate the family or branch of the _gens_
-to which he belonged. Almost all the great _gentes_ were thus divided,
-some of them into numerous branches. The Cornelian gens, for example,
-included the plebeian Dolabellae, Lentuli, Cethegi, and Cinnae, in
-addition to the patrician Scipiones, Maluginenses, Rufini, etc. The
-recognition of a group of clansmen as such a branch, or _stirps_, and
-as entitled to transmit a common _cognomen_ required the formal
-consent of the whole _gens_, and carried with it the loss of certain
-privileges as _gentiles_ to the members of the _stirps_.
-
-49. From the fact that in the official name (39) the _cognomen_
-followed the name of the tribe, it is generally believed that the
-oldest of these _cognomina_ did not go back beyond the time of the
-division of the people into tribes. It is also generally believed that
-the _cognomen_ was originally a nickname, bestowed on account of some
-personal peculiarity or characteristic, sometimes as a compliment,
-sometimes in derision. So, we find many pointing at physical traits,
-such as _Albus_, _Barbatus_, _Cincinnatus_, _Claudus_, _Longus_ (all
-originally adjectives), and the nouns _Naso_ and _Capito_ ("the man
-with a nose," "with a head"); others refer to the temperament, such as
-_Benignus_, _Blandus_, _Cato_, _Serenus_, _Severus_; others still
-denote origin, such as _Gallus_, _Ligus_, _Sabinus_, _Siculus_,
-_Tuscus_. These names, it must be remembered, descended from father to
-son, and would naturally lose their appropriateness as they passed
-along, until in the course of time their meanings were entirely lost
-sight of, as were those of the _praenomina_ (44).
-
-50. Under the Republic the patricians had almost without exception
-this third or family name; we are told of but one man, Caius Marcius,
-who lacked the distinction. With the plebeians the _cognomen_ was not
-so common, perhaps its possession was the exception. The great
-families of the Marii, Mummii, and Sertorii had none, although the
-plebeian branches of the Cornelian gens (48), the Tullian gens, and
-others, did. The _cognomen_ came, therefore, to be prized as an
-indication of ancient lineage, and individuals whose nobility was new
-were anxious to acquire it to transmit to their children. Hence many
-assumed _cognomina_ of their own selection. Some of these were
-conceded by public opinion as their due, as in the case of Cnaeus
-Pompeius, who took _Magnus_ as his _cognomen_. Others were derided by
-their contemporaries, as we deride the made-to-order coat of arms of
-some nineteenth century upstart. It is probable, however, that only
-nobles ventured to assume _cognomina_ under the Republic, though under
-the Empire their possession was hardly more than the badge of freedom.
-
-51. Additional Names.--Besides the three names already described, we
-find not infrequently, even in Republican times, a fourth or fifth.
-These were also called _cognomina_ by a loose extension of the word,
-until in the fourth century of our era the name _agnomina_ was given
-them by the grammarians. They may be conveniently considered under
-four heads:
-
-In the first place, the process that divided the gens into branches
-might be continued even further. That is, as the _gens_ became
-numerous enough to throw off a _stirps_, so the _stirps_ in process of
-time might throw off a branch of itself, for which there is no better
-name than the vague _familia_. This actually happened very frequently:
-the _gens Cornelia_, for example, threw off the _stirps_ of the
-_Scipiones_, and these in turn the family or "house" of the _Nasicae_.
-So we find the quadruple name _Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica_, in
-which the last name was probably given very much in the same way as
-the third had been given before the division took place.
-
-52. In the second place, when a man passed from one family to another
-by adoption (30) he regularly took the three names of his adoptive
-father and added his own _nomen gentile_ with the suffix _-anus_.
-Thus, Lucius Aemilius Paulus, the son of Lucius Aemilius Paulus
-Macedonicus (see 53 for the last name), was adopted by Publius
-Cornelius Scipio, and took as his new name _Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Aemilianus_. In the same way, when Caius Octavius Caepias was adopted
-by Caius Julius Caesar, he became _Gaius Iulius Caesar Octavianus_,
-and is hence variously styled Octavius and Octavianus in the
-histories.
-
-53. In the third place, an additional name, sometimes called
-_cognomen ex virtute_, was often given by acclamation to a great
-statesman or victorious general, and was put after his _cognomen_. A
-well known example is the name of Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus,
-the last name having been given him after his defeat of Hannibal. In
-the same way, his grandson by adoption, the Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Aemilianus mentioned above, received the same honorable name after he
-had destroyed Carthage, and was called _Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Africanus Aemilianus_. Such a name is Macedonicus given to Lucius
-Aemilius Paulus for his defeat of Persens, and the title Augustus
-given by the senate to Octavianus. It is not certainly known whether
-or not these names passed by inheritance to the descendants of those
-who originally earned them, but it is probable that the eldest son
-only was strictly entitled to take his father's title of honor.
-
-54. In the fourth place, the fact that a man had inherited a nickname
-from his ancestors in the form of a _cognomen_ (49) did not prevent
-his receiving another from some personal characteristic, especially as
-the inherited name had often no application, as we have seen, to its
-later possessor. To some ancient Publius Cornelius was given the
-nickname _Scipio_ (49), and in the course of time this was taken by
-all his descendants without thought of its appropriateness and became
-a _cognomen_; then to one of these descendants was given another
-nickname for personal reasons, _Nasica_, and in course of time it lost
-its individuality and became the name of a whole family (51); then in
-precisely the same way a member of this family became prominent enough
-to need a separate name and was called _Corculum_, his full name being
-_Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum_. It is evident that there
-is no reason why the expansion should not have continued indefinitely.
-Such names are Publius Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, Quintus Caecilius
-Metellus Celer, and Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio. It is
-also evident that we can not always distinguish between a mere
-nickname, one belonging strictly to this paragraph, and the additional
-_cognomen_ that marked the family off from the rest of the _stirps_ to
-which it belonged. It is perfectly possible that the name Spinther
-mentioned above has as good a right as Nasica to a place in the first
-division (51).
-
-55. Confusion of Names.--A system so elaborate as that we have
-described was almost sure to be misunderstood or misapplied, and in
-the later days of the Republic and under the Empire we find all law
-and order disregarded. The giving of the _praenomen_ to the child
-seems to have been delayed too long sometimes, and burial inscriptions
-are numerous which have in place of a first name the word _pupus_
-(_PVP_) "child," showing that the little one had died unnamed. One
-such inscription gives the age of the unnamed child as sixteen years.
-Then confusion was caused by the misuse of the _praenomen_. Sometimes
-two are found in one name, e.g., _Publius Aelius Alienus Archelaus
-Marcus_. Sometimes words ending like the _nomen_ in _-ius_ were used
-as _praenomina_: Cicero tells us that one _Numerius Quintius Rufus_
-owed his escape from death in a riot to his ambiguous first name. The
-familiar Gaius must have been a _nomen_ in very ancient times. Like
-irregularities occur in the use of the _nomen_. Two in a name were not
-uncommon, one being derived from the family of the mother perhaps;
-occasionally three or four are used, and fourteen are found in the
-name of one of the consuls of the year 169 A.D. Then by a change, the
-converse of that mentioned above, a word might go out of use as a
-_praenomen_ and become a _nomen_: Cicero's enemy _Lucius Sergius
-Catilina_ had for his gentile name _Sergius_, which had once been a
-first name (41). The _cognomen_ was similarly abused. It ceased to
-denote the family and came to distinguish members of the same family,
-as the _praenomina_ originally had done: thus the three sons of Marcus
-Annaeus Seneca, for example, were called _Marcus Annaeus Novatus_,
-_Lucius Annaeus Seneca_, and _Lucius Annaeus Mela_. So, too, a word
-used as a _cognomen_ in one name might be used as a fourth element in
-another: for example in the names _Lucius Cornelius Sulla_ and _Lucius
-Cornelius Lentulus Sura_ the third and fourth elements respectively
-are really the same, being merely shortened forms of _Surula_. Finally
-it may be remarked that the same name might be arranged differently at
-different times: in the consular lists we find the same man called
-_Lucius Lucretius Tricipitinus Flavus_ and _Lucius Lucretius Flavus
-Tricipitinus_.
-
-56. There is even greater variation in the names of persons who had
-passed from one family into another by adoption. Some took the
-additional name (52) from the _stirps_ instead of from the _gens_,
-that is, from the _cognomen_ instead of from the _nomen_. A son of
-Marcus Claudius Marcellus was adopted by a certain Publius Cornelius
-Lentulus and ought to have been called _Publius Cornelius Lentulus
-Claudianus_; he took instead the name _Publius Cornelius Lentulus
-Marcellinus_, and this name descended to his children. The confusion
-in this direction is well illustrated by the name of the famous Marcus
-Junius Brutus. A few years before Caesar fell by his hand, Brutus, as
-we usually call him, was adopted by his mother's brother, Quintus
-Servilius Caepio, and ought to have been called _Quintus Servilius
-Caepio Iunianus_. For some reason unknown to us he retained his own
-_cognomen_, and even his close friend Cicero seems scarcely to know
-what to call him. Sometimes he writes of him as _Quintus Caepio
-Brutus_, sometimes as _Marcus Brutus_, sometimes simply as _Brutus_.
-The great scholar of the first century, Asconius, calls him _Marcus
-Caepio_. Finally it may be noticed that late in the Empire we find a
-man struggling under the load of forty names.
-
-57. Names of Women.--No very satisfactory account of the names of
-women can be given, because it is impossible to discover any system in
-the choice and arrangement of those that have come down to us. It may
-be said in general that the threefold name was unknown in the best
-days of the Republic, and that _praenomina_ were rare and when used
-were not abbreviated. We find such _praenomina_ as _Paulla_ and
-_Vibia_ (the masculine forms of which early disappeared), _Gaia_,
-_Lucia_, and _Publia_, and it is probable that the daughter took these
-from her father. More common were the adjectives _Maxuma_ and _Minor_,
-and the numerals _Secunda_ and _Tertia_, but these unlike the
-corresponding names of men seem always to have denoted the place of
-the bearer among a group of sisters. It was more usual for the
-unmarried woman to be called by her father's _nomen_ in its feminine
-form, _Tullia_, _Cornelia_, with the addition of her father's
-_cognomen_ in the genitive case, _Caecilia Metelli_, followed later by
-the letter _f_ (=_filia_) to mark the relationship. Sometimes she used
-her mother's _nomen_ after her father's. The married woman, if she
-passed into her husband's hand (_manus_, 35) by the ancient patrician
-ceremony, originally took his _nomen_, just as an adopted son took the
-name of the family into which he passed, but it can not be shown that
-the rule was universally or even usually observed. Under the later
-forms of marriage she retained her maiden name. In the time of the
-Empire we find the threefold name for women in general use, with the
-same riotous confusion in selection and arrangement as prevailed in
-the case of the names of men at the same time.
-
-58. Names of Slaves.--Slaves had no more right to names of their own
-than they had to other property, but took such as their masters were
-pleased to give them, and even these did not descend to their
-children. In the simpler life of early times the slave was called
-_puer_, just as the word "boy" was once used in this country for
-slaves of any age. Until late in the Republic the slave was known only
-by this name corrupted to _por_ and affixed to the genitive of his
-master's first name: _Marcipor_ (=_Marci puer_), "Marcus's slave."
-When slaves became numerous this simple form no longer sufficed to
-distinguish them, and they received individual names. These were
-usually foreign names, often denoting the nationality of the slave,
-sometimes, in mockery perhaps, the high-sounding appellations of
-eastern potentates, such names as Afer, Eleutheros, Pharnaces. By this
-time, too, the word _servus_ had supplanted _puer_. We find,
-therefore, that toward the end of the Republic the full name of a
-slave consisted of his individual name followed by the _nomen_ and
-_praenomen_ (the order is important) of his master and the word
-_servus_: _Pharnaces Egnatii Publii servus_. When a slave passed from
-one master to another he took the _nomen_ of the new master and added
-to it the _cognomen_ of the old with the suffix _-anus_: when Anna the
-slave of Maecenas became the property of Livia, she was called _Anna
-Liviae serva Maecenatiana_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 9. TRAJAN]
-
-59. Names of Freedmen.--The freedman regularly kept the individual
-name which he had had as a slave, and was given the _nomen_ of his
-master with any _praenomen_ the latter assigned him. Thus, Andronicus,
-the slave of Marcus Livius Salinator, became when freed _Lucius Livius
-Andronicus_, the individual name coming last as a sort of _cognomen_.
-It happened naturally that the master's _praenomen_ was often given,
-especially to a favorite slave. The freedman of a woman took the name
-of her father, e.g., _Marcus Livius Augustae l Ismarus_; the letter
-_l_ stands for _libertus_, and was inserted in all formal documents.
-Of course the master might disregard the regular form and give the
-freedman any name he pleased. Thus, when Cicero manumitted his slaves
-Tiro and Dionysius he called the former in strict accord with custom
-_Marcus Tullius Tiro_, but to the latter he gave his own _praenomen_
-and the _nomen_ of his friend Titus Pomponius Atticus, the new name
-being _Marcus Pomponius Dionysius_. The individual names (Pharnaces,
-Dionysius, etc.) were dropped by the descendants of freedmen, who were
-anxious with good reason to hide all traces of their mean descent.
-
-60. Naturalized Citizens.--When a foreigner was given the right of
-citizenship, he took a new name, which was arranged on much the same
-principles as have been explained in the cases of freedmen. His
-original name was retained as a sort of _cognomen_, and before it were
-written the _praenomen_ that suited his fancy and the _nomen_ of the
-person, always a Roman citizen, to whom he owed his citizenship. The
-most familiar example is that of the Greek poet Archias, whom Cicero
-defended under the name of _Aulus Licinius Archias_ in the well-known
-oration. He had long been attached to the family of the Luculli and
-when he was made a citizen took as his _nomen_ that of his
-distinguished patron Lucius Licinius Lucullus; we do not know why he
-selected the first name Aulus. Another example is that of the Gaul
-mentioned by Caesar (B. G., I, 47), _Gaius Valerius Caburus_. He took
-his name from Caius Valerius Flaccus, the governor of Gaul at the time
-that he was given his citizenship. It is to this custom of taking the
-names of governors and generals that is due the frequent occurrence of
-the name Julius in Gaul, Pompeius in Spain, and Cornelius in Sicily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 28-80; Voigt, 318, 449; Gll, II, 5 f.;
-Friedlnder, I, 451 f.; Ramsay, 293 f., 477; Preston, 8 f.; Smith,
-_matrimonium_; Baumeister, 696 f.; Harper, _conubium_, _matrimonium_;
-Lbker, 364; Pauly-Wissowa, _coemptio_, _confarreatio_, _conubium_.
-
-
-61. Early Forms of Marriage.--Polygamy was never practiced at Rome,
-and we are told that for five centuries after the founding of the city
-divorce was entirely unknown. Up to the time of the Servian
-constitution (date uncertain) the patricians were the only citizens
-and intermarried only with patricians and with members of surrounding
-communities having like social standing. The only form of marriage
-known to them was the stately religious ceremonial called, as will be
-explained hereafter, _confarreatio_. With the direct consent of the
-gods, with the _pontifices_ celebrating the solemn rites, in the
-presence of the accredited representatives of his _gens_, the
-patrician took his wife from her father's family into his own (28),
-to be a _mater familias_, to rear him children who should conserve the
-family mysteries, perpetuate his ancient race, and extend the power of
-Rome. By this, the one legal marriage of the time, the wife passed _in
-manum viri_, and the husband acquired over her practically the same
-rights as he had over his own children (35, 36) and other dependent
-members of his family. Such a marriage was said to be _cum conventione
-uxoris in manum viri_ (35).
-
-62. During this period, too, the free non-citizens (177, 178), the
-plebeians, had been busy in marrying and giving in marriage. There is
-little doubt that their unions had been as sacred in their eyes, their
-family ties as strictly regarded and as pure, as those of the
-patricians, but these unions were unhallowed by the national gods and
-unrecognized by the civil law, simply because the plebeians were not
-yet citizens. Their form of marriage was called _usus_, and consisted
-essentially in the living together of the man and woman as husband and
-wife for a year, though there were, of course, conventional forms and
-observances, about which we know absolutely nothing. The plebeian
-husband might acquire the same rights over the person and property of
-his wife as the patrician, but the form of marriage did not in itself
-involve _manus_. The wife might remain a member of her father's family
-and retain such property as he allowed her (33) by merely absenting
-herself from her husband for the space of a _trinoctium_ each year. If
-she did this the marriage was _sine conventione in manum_, and the
-husband had no control over her property; if she did not, the marriage
-like that of the patricians was _cum conventione in manum_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 10. HADRIAN]
-
-63. At least as far back as the time of Servius goes another Roman
-form of marriage, also plebeian, though not so ancient as _usus_. It
-was called _coemptio_ and was a fictitious sale, by which the _pater
-familias_ of the woman, or her guardian (_tutor_) if she was _sui
-iuris_, transferred her to the man _matrimonii causa_. This form must
-have been a survival of the old custom of purchase and sale of wives,
-but we do not know when it was introduced among the Romans. It carried
-_manus_ with it as a matter of course and seems to have been regarded
-socially as better form than _usus_. The two existed for centuries
-side by side, but _coemptio_ survived _usus_ as a form of marriage
-_cum conventione in manum_.
-
-64. Ius Conubii.--While the Servian constitution made the plebeians
-citizens and thereby legalized their forms of marriage, it did not
-give them the right of intermarriage with the patricians. Many of the
-plebeian families were hardly less ancient than the patricians, many
-were rich and powerful, but it was not until 445 B.C. that marriages
-between the two orders were formally sanctioned by the civil law. The
-objection on the part of the patricians was largely a religious one:
-The gods of the state were patrician gods, the auspices could be taken
-by patricians only, the marriages of patricians only were sanctioned
-by heaven. Their orators protested that the unions of the plebeians
-were no better than promiscuous intercourse, they were not _iustae
-nuptiae_ (67); the plebeian wife was taken _in matrimonium_, she was
-at best an _uxor_, not a _mater familias_; her offspring were
-"mother's children," not _patricii_.
-
-65. Much of this was class exaggeration, but it is true that at this
-early date the _gens_ was not so highly valued by the plebeians as by
-the patricians, and that the plebeians assigned to cognates certain
-duties and privileges that devolved upon the patrician _gentiles_.
-With, the _ius conubii_ many of these points of difference
-disappeared. New conditions were fixed for _iustae nuptiae_;
-_coemptio_ by a sort of compromise became the usual form of marriage
-when one of the parties was a plebeian; and the stigma disappeared
-from the word _matrimonium_. On the other hand patrician women learned
-to understand the advantages of a marriage _sine conventione_ and
-marriage with _manus_ gradually became less frequent, the taking of
-the auspices before the ceremony came to be considered a mere form,
-and marriage began to lose its sacramental character, and with these
-changes came later the laxness in the marital relation and the freedom
-of divorce that seemed in the time of Augustus to threaten the very
-life of the commonwealth.
-
-66. It is probable that by the time of Cicero marriage with _manus_
-was uncommon, and consequently that _confarreatio_ and _coemptio_ had
-gone out of general use. To a limited extent, however, the former was
-retained until Christian times, because certain priestly offices
-(_flamines maiores_ and _reges sacrorum_) could be filled only by
-persons whose parents had been married by the confarreate ceremony,
-the one sacramental form, and who had themselves been married by the
-same form. But so great became the reluctance of women to submit to
-_manus_, that in order to fill even these few priestly offices it was
-found necessary under Tiberius to eliminate _manus_ from the
-confarreate ceremony.
-
-67. Nuptiae Iustae.--There were certain conditions that had to be
-satisfied before a legal marriage could be contracted even by
-citizens. It was required:
-
-1. That the consent of both parties should be given, or of the _pater
-familias_ if one or both were _in potestate_. Under Augustus it was
-provided that the _pater familias_ should not withhold his consent
-unless he could show valid reasons for doing so.
-
-2. That both parties should be _puberes_; there could be no marriage
-between children. Although no precise age was fixed by law, it is
-probable that fourteen and twelve were the lowest limit for the man
-and woman respectively.
-
-3. That both man and woman should be unmarried. Polygamy was never
-practiced at Rome.
-
-68. 4. That the parties should not be nearly related. The
-restrictions in this direction were fixed rather by public opinion
-than by law and varied greatly at different times, becoming gradually
-less severe. In general it may be said that marriage was absolutely
-forbidden between ascendants and descendants, between other cognates
-within the fourth degree (25), and the nearer _adfines_ (26). If the
-parties could satisfy these conditions they might be legally married,
-but distinctions were still made that affected the civil status of the
-children, although no doubt was cast upon their legitimacy or upon the
-moral character of their parents.
-
-69. If the husband and wife were both Roman citizens, their marriage
-was called _iustae nuptiae_, which we may translate "regular
-marriage," their children were _iusti liberi_ and were by birth _cives
-optimo iure_, "possessed of all civil rights."
-
-If but one of the parties was a Roman citizen and the other a member
-of a community having the _ius conubii_ but not the full _civitas_,
-the marriage was still called _iustae nuptiae_, but the children took
-the civil standing of the father. This means that if the father was a
-citizen and the mother a foreigner, the children were citizens; but if
-the father was a foreigner and the mother a citizen, the children were
-foreigners (_peregrini_) with the father.
-
-But if either of the parties was without the _ius conubii_, the
-marriage, though still legal, was called _nuptiae iniustae_ or
-_matrimonium iniustum_, "an irregular marriage," and the children,
-though legitimate, took the civil position of the parent of lower
-degree. We seem to have something analogous to this in the loss of
-social standing which usually follows the marriage of a person with
-one of distinctly inferior position.
-
-70. Betrothals.--Betrothal (_sponsalia_) as a preliminary to marriage
-was considered good form but was not legally necessary and carried
-with it no obligations that could be enforced by law. In the
-_sponsalia_ the maiden was promised to the man as his bride with
-"words of style," that is, in solemn form. The promise was made, not
-by the maiden herself, but by her _pater familias_, or by her _tutor_
-if she was not _in potestate_. In the same way, the promise was made
-to the man directly only in case he was _sui iuris_, otherwise to the
-Head of his House, who had asked for him the maiden in marriage. The
-"words of style" were probably something like this:
-
-"_Spondesne Gaiam, tuam filiam_ (or if she was a ward: _Gaiam, Lucii
-filiam_), _mihi_ (or _filio meo_) _uxorem dari?_"
-
-"_Di bene vortant! Spondeo._"
-
-"_Di bene vortant!_"
-
-71. At any rate the word _spondeo_ was technically used of the
-promise, and the maiden was henceforth _sponsa_. The person who made
-the promise had always the right to cancel it. This was usually done
-through an intermediary (_nuntius_), and hence the formal expression
-for breaking an engagement was _repudium renuntiare_, or simply
-_renuntiare_. While the contract was entirely one-sided, it should be
-noticed that a man was liable to _infamia_ if he formed two
-engagements at the same time, and that he could not recover any
-presents made with a view to a future marriage if he himself broke the
-engagement. Such presents were almost always made, and while we find
-that articles for personal use, the toilet, etc., were common, a ring
-was usually given. The ring was worn on the third finger of the left
-hand, because it was believed that a nerve ran directly from this
-finger to the heart. It was also usual for the _sponsa_ to make a
-present to her betrothed.
-
-72. The Dowry.--It was a point of honor with the Romans, as it is now
-with some European nations, for the bride to bring to her husband a
-dowry (_dos_). In the case of a girl _in potestate_ this would
-naturally be furnished by the Head of her House; in the case of one
-_sui iuris_ it was furnished from her own property, or if she had none
-was contributed by her relatives. It seems that if they were reluctant
-she might by process of law compel her ascendants at least to furnish
-it. In early times, when marriage _cum conventione_ prevailed, all the
-property brought by the bride became the property of her husband, or
-of his _pater familias_ (35), but in later times, when _manus_ was
-less common, and especially after divorce had become of frequent
-occurrence, a distinction was made. A part of the bride's possessions
-was reserved for her own exclusive use, and a part was made over to
-the groom under the technical name of _dos_. The relative proportions
-varied, of course, with circumstances.
-
-73. Essential Forms.--There were really no legal forms necessary for
-the solemnization of a marriage; there was no license to be procured
-from the civil authorities, the ceremonies simple or elaborate did not
-have to be performed by persons authorized by the state. The one thing
-necessary was the consent of both parties, if they were _sui iuris_,
-or of their _patres familias_, if they were _in potestate_. It has
-been already remarked (67, 1) that the _pater familias_ could refuse
-his consent for valid reasons only; on the other hand, he could
-command the consent of persons subject to him. It is probable that
-parental and filial affection (_pietas_) made this hardship less
-rigorous than it now seems to us (32, 33).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 11. ANTONINUS PIUS]
-
-74. But while this consent was the only condition for a legal
-marriage, it had to be shown by some act of personal union between the
-parties; that is, the marriage could not be entered into by letter or
-by the intervention of a third party. Such an overt act was the
-joining of hands (_dextrarum iunctio_) in the presence of witnesses,
-or the escorting of the bride to her husband's house, never omitted
-when the parties had any social standing, or in later times the
-signing of the marriage contract. It was never necessary to a valid
-marriage that the parties should live together as man and wife,
-though, as we have seen (62), this living together of itself
-constituted a legal marriage.
-
-75. The Wedding Day.--It will be noticed that superstition played an
-important part in the arrangements for a wedding two thousand years
-ago, as it does now. Especial pains had to be taken to secure a lucky
-day. The Kalends, Nones, and Ides of each month, and the day following
-each of them, were unlucky. So was all of May and the first half of
-June, on account of certain religious ceremonies observed in these
-months, the Argean offerings and the _Lemuria_ in May and the _dies
-religiosi_ connected with Vesta in June. Besides these the _dies
-parentales_, February 13-21, and the days when the entrance to the
-lower world was supposed to be open, August 24, October 5, and
-November 8, were carefully avoided. One-third of the year, therefore,
-was absolutely barred. The great holidays, too, and these were legion,
-were avoided, not because they were unlucky, but because on these days
-friends and relatives were sure to have other engagements. Women
-marrying for the second time chose these very holidays to make their
-weddings less conspicuous.
-
-76. The Wedding Garments.--On the eve of her wedding day the bride
-dedicated to the _Lares_ of her father's house her _bulla_ (99) and
-the _toga praetexta_, which married women did not wear, and also if
-she was not much over twelve years of age her childish playthings. For
-the sake of the omen she put on before going to sleep the _tunica
-recta_, or _regilla_, woven in one piece and falling to the feet. A
-very doubtful picture is shown in Rich under the word _rcta_. It
-seems to have derived its name from having been woven in the
-old-fashioned way at an upright loom. This same tunic was worn at the
-wedding.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 12. DRESSING THE BRIDE]
-
-77. On the morning of the wedding day the bride was dressed for the
-ceremony by her mother, and Roman poets show unusual tenderness as
-they describe her solicitude. There is a wall painting of such a
-scene, found at Pompeii and reproduced in Fig. 12. The chief article
-of dress was the _tunica regilla_ already mentioned, which was
-fastened around the waist with a band of wool tied in the knot of
-Hercules (_nodus Herculaneus_), probably because Hercules was the
-guardian of wedded life. This knot the husband only was privileged to
-untie. Over the tunic was worn the bridal veil, the flame-colored veil
-(_flammeum_), shown in Fig. 13. So important was the veil of the bride
-that _nubere_, "to veil one's self," is the regular word for "marry"
-when used of a woman.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 13. THE FLAMMEUM]
-
-78. Especial attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, but
-unfortunately we have no picture preserved to us to make its
-arrangement clear. We only know that it was divided into six locks by
-the point of a spear, probably a reminiscence of the ancient marriage
-by capture, and that these locks perhaps braided were kept in position
-by ribbons (_vittae_). The bride had also a wreath of flowers and
-sacred plants gathered by herself. The groom wore of course the toga
-and had a similar wreath of flowers on his head. He was accompanied to
-the home of the bride at the proper time by relatives, friends, and
-clients, who were bound to do him every honor on his wedding day.
-
-79. The Ceremony.--The house of the bride's father, where the
-ceremony was performed, was decked with flowers, boughs of trees,
-bands of wool, and tapestries. The guests arrived before the hour of
-sunrise, and even then the omens had been already taken. In the
-ancient confarreate ceremony these were taken by the public augur, but
-in later times, no matter what the ceremony, the haruspices merely
-consulted the entrails of a sheep which had been killed in sacrifice.
-When the marriage ceremonies are described it must be remembered that
-only the consent was necessary (73) with the act expressing the
-consent, and that all other forms and ceremonies were unessential and
-variable. Something depended upon the particular form used, but more
-upon the wealth and social position of the families interested. It is
-probable that most weddings were a good deal simpler than those
-described by our chief authorities.
-
-80. After the omens had been pronounced favorable the bride and groom
-appeared in the atrium, the chief room, and the wedding began. This
-consisted of two parts:
-
-1. The ceremony proper, varying according to the form used
-(_confarreatio_, _coemptio_, or _usus_), the essential part being the
-consent before witnesses.
-
-2. The festivities, including the feast at the bride's home, the
-taking of the bride with a show of force from her mother's arms, the
-escort to her new home (the essential part), and her reception there.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 14. A MARRIAGE SCENE]
-
-81. The confarreate ceremony began with the _dextrarum iunctio_. The
-bride and groom were brought together by the _pronuba_, a matron
-married to her first husband, and joined hands in the presence of ten
-witnesses representing the ten _gentes_ of the _curia_. These are
-shown on an ancient sarcophagus found at Naples (Fig. 14). Then
-followed the words of consent spoken by the bride: _Quando tu Gaius,
-ego Gaia_. The formula was unchanged, no matter what the names of the
-bride and groom, and goes back to a time when _Gaius_ was a _nomen_,
-not a _praenomen_ (55). It implied that the bride was actually
-entering the _gens_ of the groom (23, 28, 35), and was probably
-chosen for its lucky meaning (44). Even in marriages _sine
-conventione_ the old formula came to be used, its import having been
-lost in lapse of time. The bride and groom then took their places side
-by side at the left of the altar and facing it, sitting on stools
-covered with the pelt of the sheep slain for the sacrifice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 15. A CAMILLUS]
-
-82. A bloodless offering was then made to Jupiter by the _Pontifex
-Maximus_ and the _Flamen Dialis_, consisting of the cake of spelt
-(_farreum libum_) from which the _confarreatio_ got its name. With the
-offering to Jupiter a prayer was recited by the Flamen to Juno as the
-goddess of marriage, and to Tellus, Picumnus, and Pilumnus, deities of
-the country and its fruits. The utensils necessary for the offering
-were carried in a covered basket (_cumerus_) by a boy called
-_camillus_ (Fig. 15), whose parents must have both been living at the
-time (_patrimus et matrimus_). Then followed the congratulations, the
-guests using the word _feliciter_.
-
-83. The _coemptio_ began with the fictitious sale, carried out in the
-presence of no less than five witnesses. The purchase money
-represented by a single coin was laid in the scales held by a
-_libripens_. The scales, scaleholder, coin, and witnesses were all
-necessary for this kind of marriage. Then followed the _dextrarum
-iunctio_ and the words of consent, borrowed, as has been said, from
-the confarreate ceremony. Originally the groom had asked the bride:
-_An sibi mater familias esse vellet._ She assented, and put to him a
-similar question: _An sibi pater familias esse vellet._ To this he too
-gave the answer "Yes." A prayer was then recited and sometimes perhaps
-a sacrifice offered, after which came the congratulations as in the
-other and more elaborate ceremony.
-
-84. The third form, that is, the ceremonies preliminary to _usus_,
-probably admitted of more variation than either of the others, but no
-description has come down to us. We may be sure that the hands were
-clasped, the words of consent spoken, and congratulations offered, but
-we know of no special customs or usages. It was almost necessary for
-the three forms to get more or less alike in the course of time,
-though the cake of spelt could not be borrowed from the confarreate
-ceremony by either of the others, or the scales and their holder from
-the ceremony of _coemptio_.
-
-85. The Wedding Feast.--After the conclusion of the ceremony came the
-wedding feast (_cena nuptialis_) lasting until evening. There can be
-no doubt that this was regularly given at the house of the bride's
-father and that the few cases when we know that it was given at the
-groom's house were exceptional and due to special circumstances which
-might cause a similar change to-day. The feast seems to have concluded
-with the distribution among the guests of pieces of the wedding cake
-(_mustaceum_), which was made of meal steeped in must (296) and
-served on bay leaves. There came to be so much extravagance at these
-feasts and at the _repotia_ mentioned below (89) that under Augustus
-it was proposed to limit their cost by law to one thousand sesterces
-($50), a piece of sumptuary legislation as vain as such restrictions
-have usually proved to be.
-
-86. The Bridal Procession.--After the wedding feast the bride was
-formally taken to her husband's house. This ceremony was called
-_deductio_, and as it was essential to the validity of the marriage
-(74) it was never omitted. It was a public function, that is, any one
-might join the procession and take part in the merriment that
-distinguished it, and we are told that persons of rank did not scruple
-to wait in the street to see the bride. As evening approached the
-procession was formed before the house with torch bearers and flute
-players at its head. When all was ready the marriage hymn
-(_hymenaeus_) was sung and the groom took the bride with a show of
-force from the arms of her mother. The Romans saw in this custom a
-reminiscence of the rape of the Sabines, but it probably goes far back
-beyond the founding of Rome to the custom of marriage by capture that
-prevailed among many peoples. The bride then took her place in the
-procession attended by three boys, _patrimi et matrimi_ (82); two of
-these walked by her side, holding each a hand, while the other carried
-before her the wedding torch of white thorn (_spina alba_). Behind the
-bride were carried the distaff and spindle, emblems of domestic life.
-The _camillus_ with his _cumerus_ also walked in the procession.
-
-87. During the march were sung the _versus Fescennini_, abounding in
-coarse jests and personalities. The crowd also shouted the ancient
-marriage cry, the significance of which the Romans themselves did not
-understand. We find it in at least five forms, all variations of the
-name Talassius or Talassio, who was probably a Sabine divinity, though
-his functions are unknown. Livy derives it from the supposed name of a
-senator in the time of Romulus. The bride dropped on the way one of
-three coins which she carried as an offering to the _Lares
-compitales_; of the other two she gave one to the groom as an emblem
-of the dowry she brought him, and one to the _Lares_ of his house. The
-groom meanwhile scattered nuts through the crowd. This is explained by
-Catullus as a token of his having become a man and having put away
-childish things (103), but the nuts were rather a symbol of
-fruitfulness. The custom survives in the throwing of rice in modern
-times.
-
-88. When the procession reached the house, the bride wound the door
-posts with bands of wool, probably a symbol of her own work as
-mistress of the household, and anointed the door with oil and fat,
-emblems of plenty. She was then lifted carefully over the threshold,
-in order to avoid the chance of so bad an omen as a slip of the foot
-on entering the house for the first time. Others, however, see in the
-custom another survival of marriage by capture. She then pronounced
-again the words of consent: _Ubi tu Gaius, ego Gaia_, and the doors
-were closed against the general crowd; only the invited guests entered
-with the pair.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 16. THE MARRIAGE COUCH]
-
-89. The husband met the wife in the atrium and offered her fire and
-water in token of the life they were to live together and her part in
-the home. Upon the hearth was ready the wood for a fire, and this the
-bride kindled with the marriage torch which had been carried before
-her. The torch was afterwards thrown among the guests to be scrambled
-for as a lucky possession. A prayer was then recited by the bride and
-she was placed by the _pronuba_ on the _lectus genialis_ (Fig. 16),
-which always stood on the wedding night in the atrium. Here it
-afterwards remained as a piece of ornamental furniture only. On the
-next day was given in the new home the second wedding feast
-(_repotia_) to the friends and relatives, and at this feast the bride
-made her first offering to the gods as a _matrona_. A series of feasts
-followed, given in honor of the newly wedded pair by those in whose
-social circles they moved.
-
-90. The Position of Women.--With her marriage the Roman woman reached
-a position unattained by the women of any other nation in the ancient
-world. No other people held its women in so high respect; nowhere else
-did they exert so strong and beneficent an influence. In her own house
-the Roman matron was absolute mistress. She directed its economy and
-supervised the tasks of the household slaves but did no menial work
-herself. She was her children's nurse, and conducted their early
-training and education. Her daughters were fitted under their mother's
-eye to be mistresses of similar homes, and remained her closest
-companions until she herself had dressed them for the bridal and their
-husbands had torn them from her arms. She was her husband's helpmeet
-in business as well as in household affairs, and he often consulted
-her on affairs of state. She was not confined at home to a set of
-so-called women's apartments, as were her sisters in Greece; the whole
-house was hers. She received her husband's guests and sat at table
-with them. Even when subject to the _manus_ of her husband the
-restraint was so tempered by law and custom (36) that she could
-hardly have been chafed by the fetters which had been forged with her
-own consent (73).
-
-91. Out of the house the matron's dress (_stola matronalis_, 259)
-secured for her the most profound respect. Men made way for her in the
-street; she had a place at the public games, at the theaters, and at
-the great religious ceremonies of state. She could give testimony in
-the courts, and until late in the Republic might even appear as an
-advocate. Her birthday was sacredly observed and made a joyous
-occasion by the members of her household, and the people as a whole
-celebrated the _Matronalia_, the great festival on the first of March,
-and gave presents to their wives and mothers. Finally, if she came of
-a noble family, she might be honored, after she had passed away, with
-a public eulogy, delivered from the _rostra_ in the forum.
-
-92. It must be admitted that the education of women was not carried
-far at Rome, and that their accomplishments were few, and rather
-useful and homely than elegant. But the Roman women spoke the purest
-and best Latin known in the highest and most cultivated circles, and
-so far as accomplishments were concerned their husbands fared no
-better. Respectable women in Greece were allowed no education at all.
-
-93. It must be admitted, too, that a great change took place in the
-last years of the Republic. With the laxness of the family life, the
-freedom of divorce, and the inflow of wealth and extravagance, the
-purity and dignity of the Roman matron declined, as had before
-declined the manhood and the strength of her father and her husband.
-It must be remembered, however, that ancient writers did not dwell
-upon certain subjects that are favorites with our own. The simple joys
-of childhood and domestic life, home, the praises of sister, wife, and
-mother may not have been too sacred for the poet and the essayist of
-Rome, but the essayist and the poet did not make them their themes.
-The mother of Horace must have been a singularly gifted woman, but she
-is never mentioned by her son. The descriptions of domestic life,
-therefore, that have come down to us are either from Greek sources, or
-are selected from precisely those circles where fashion, profligacy,
-and impurity made easy the work of the satirist. It is, therefore,
-safe to say that the pictures painted for us in the verse of Catullus
-and Juvenal, for example, are not true of Roman women as a class in
-the times of which they write. The strong, pure woman of the early day
-must have had many to imitate her virtues in the darkest times of the
-Empire. There were mothers then, as well as in the times of the
-Gracchi; there were wives as noble as the wife of Marcus Brutus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-CHILDREN AND EDUCATION
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 80-134; Voigt, 322 f., 397 f., 455 f.; Gll,
-"Gallus," II, 65-113; Friedlnder, I, 456 f., III, 376 f.; Ramsay, 475
-f.; Smith, _ludus litterarius_; Harper, _education_; Baumeister, 237,
-1588 f.; Schreiber, Pl. 79, 82, 89, 90; Lbker, _Erziehung_.
-
-
-94. Legal Status.--The position of the children in the _familia_ has
-been already explained (31, 32). It has been shown that in the eyes
-of the law they were little better than the chattels of the Head of
-the House. It rested with him to grant them the right to live; all
-that they earned was his; they married at his bidding, and either
-remained under his _potestas_ or passed under another no less severe.
-It has also been suggested that custom (32) and _pietas_ (73) had
-made this condition less rigorous than it seems to us.
-
-95. Susceptio.--The power of the _pater familias_ was displayed
-immediately after the birth of the child. By invariable custom it was
-laid upon the ground at his feet. If he raised (_tollere_,
-_suscipere_) it in his arms, he acknowledged it as his own by the act
-(_susceptio_) and admitted it to all the rights and privileges that
-membership in a Roman family implied. If he refused to do so, the
-child became an outcast, without family, without the protection of the
-spirits of the dead (27), utterly friendless and forsaken. The
-disposal of the child did not ordinarily call for any act of downright
-murder, such as was contemplated in the case of Romulus and Remus and
-was afterwards forbidden by Romulus the King (32). The child was
-simply "exposed" (_exponere_), that is, taken by a slave from the
-house and left on the highway to live or to die. When we consider the
-slender chance for life that the newborn child has with even the
-tenderest care, the result of this exposure will not seem doubtful.
-
-96. But there was a chance for life, and the mother, powerless to
-interpose in her infant's behalf, often sent with it some trinkets or
-trifling articles of jewelry that would serve perhaps to identify it,
-if it should live. Even if the child was found in time by persons
-disposed to save its life, its fate might be worse than death. Slavery
-was the least of the evils to which it was exposed. Such foundlings
-often fell into the hands of those whose trade was beggary and who
-trained children for the same profession. In the time of the Empire,
-at least, they cruelly maimed and deformed their victims, in order to
-excite more readily the compassion of those to whom they appealed for
-alms. Such things are still done in southern Europe.
-
-97. Dies Lustricus.--The first eight days of the life of the
-acknowledged child were called _primordia_, and were the occasion of
-various religious ceremonies. During this time the child was called
-_pupus_ (55), although to weak and puny children the individual name
-might be given soon after birth. On the ninth day in the case of a
-boy, on the eighth in the case of a girl, the _praenomen_ (43) was
-given with due solemnity. A sacrifice was offered and the ceremony of
-purification was performed, which gave the day its name, _dies
-lustricus_, although it was also called the _dies nominum_ and
-_nominalia_. These ceremonies seem to have been private; that is, it
-can not be shown that there was any taking of the child to a
-_templum_, as there was among the Jews, or any enrollment of the name
-upon an official list. In the case of the boy the registering of the
-name on the list of citizens may have occurred at the time of putting
-on the _toga virilis_ (127).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 17. CREPUNDIA]
-
-98. The _dies lustricus_ was, however, a time of rejoicing and
-congratulation among the relatives and friends, and these together
-with the household slaves presented the child with little metal toys
-or ornaments in the form of flowers, miniature axes and swords, and
-especially figures shaped like a half-moon (_lunulae_), etc. These,
-called collectively _crepundia_, were strung together and worn around
-the neck and over the breast (Fig. 17). They served in the first place
-as playthings to keep the child amused, hence the name "rattles," from
-_crepo_. Besides, they were a protection against witchcraft or the
-evil eye (_fascinatio_), especially the _lunulae_. More than this,
-they were a means of identification in the case of lost or stolen
-children, and for this reason Terence calls them _monumenta_. Such
-were the trinkets sometimes left with an abandoned child (96), their
-value depending, of course, upon the material of which they were made.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 18. THE BULLA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 19. GIRL'S NECKLACE]
-
-99. The Bulla.--But of more significance than these was the _bulla
-aurea_, which the father hung around the child's neck on this day, if
-he had not done so at the time of the _susceptio_. It consisted of two
-concave pieces of gold, like a watch case (Fig. 18), fastened together
-by a wide spring of the same metal and containing an amulet as a
-protection against _fascinatio_. It was hung around the neck by a
-chain or cord and worn upon the breast. The _bulla_ came originally
-from Etruria,[1] and for a long time the children of patricians only
-were allowed to wear those of gold, the plebeians contenting
-themselves with an imitation made of leather, hung on a leathern
-thong. In the course of time the distinction ceased to be observed, as
-we have seen such distinctions die out in the use of names and in the
-marriage ceremonies, and by Cicero's time the _bulla aurea_ might be
-worn by the child of any freeborn citizen. The choice of material
-depended rather upon the wealth and generosity of the father than upon
-his social position. The girl wore her _bulla_ (Fig. 19) until the eve
-of her wedding day, laying it aside with other childish things, as we
-have seen (76); the boy wore his until he assumed the _toga virilis_,
-when it was dedicated to the _Lares_ of the house and carefully
-preserved. If the boy became a successful general and won the coveted
-honor of a triumph, he always wore his _bulla_ in the triumphal
-procession as a protection against envy.
-
-[Footnote 1: The influence of Etruria upon Rome faded before that of
-Greece (5), but from Etruria the Romans got the art of divination,
-certain forms of architecture, the insignia of royalty, and the games
-of the circus and the amphitheater.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 20. CHILD IN LITTER]
-
-100. Nurses.--The mother was the child's nurse (90) not only in the
-days of the Republic but even into the Empire, the Romans having
-heeded the teachings of nature in this respect longer than any other
-civilized nation of the old world. Of course it was not always
-possible then, as it is not always possible now, for the mother to
-nurse her children, and then her place was taken by a slave
-(_nutrix_), to whom the name _mater_ seems to have been given out of
-affection. In the ordinary care of the children, too, the mother was
-assisted, but only assisted, by slaves. Under the eye of the mother,
-slaves washed and dressed the child, told it stories, sang it
-lullabies, and rocked it to sleep on the arm or in a cradle. None of
-these nursery stories have come down to us, but Quintilian tells us
-that Aesop's fables resembled them. For a picture of a cradle see
-Smith under the words _cunae_ and _cunabula_; in Rich under _cunaria_
-is a picture of a nurse giving a baby its bath. The place of the
-modern baby carriage was taken by a litter (_lectica_), and a terra
-cotta figure has come down to us (Fig. 20) representing a child
-carried in such a litter by two men.
-
-101. After the Punic wars (5) it became customary for the well-to-do
-to select for the child's nurse a Greek slave, that the child might
-acquire the Greek language as naturally as its own. In Latin
-literature are many passages that testify to the affection felt for
-each other by nurse and child, an affection that lasted on into
-manhood and womanhood. It was a common thing for the young wife to
-take with her into her new home, as her adviser and confidant, the
-nurse who had watched over her in infancy. Faithfulness on the part of
-such slaves was also frequently repaid by manumission.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 21. JOINTED DOLL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 22. CHILDREN PLAYING BALL]
-
-102. Playthings.--But little is known of the playthings, pets, and
-games of Roman children, because as has been said (93) domestic life
-was not a favorite theme of Roman writers and no books were then
-written especially for the young. Still there are scattered references
-in literature from which we can learn something, and more is known
-from monumental sources (10). This evidence shows that playthings
-were numerous and of very many kinds. The _crepundia_ have been
-mentioned already (98), and these miniature tools and implements seem
-to have been very common. Dolls there were, too, and some of these
-have come down to us, though we can not always distinguish between
-statuettes and genuine playthings. Some were made of clay, others of
-wax, and even jointed arms and legs were not unknown (Fig. 21). Little
-wagons and carts were also common (Schreiber, LXXXII, 10), and Horace
-speaks of hitching mice to toys of this sort. There are numerous
-pictures and descriptions of children spinning tops, making them
-revolve by blows of a whiplash, as in Europe nowadays. Hoops also were
-a favorite plaything, driven with a stick and having pieces of metal
-fastened to them to warn people of their approach. Boys walked on
-stilts and played with balls (Fig. 22), too, but as men enjoyed this
-sport as well, it may be deferred until we reach the subject of
-amusements (318).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 23. BOY AND GOOSE]
-
-103. Pets and Games.--Pets were even more common then than now, and
-then as now the dog was easily first in the affections of children
-(Schreiber, LXXXII, 6). The cat, on the other hand, was hardly known
-until very late in the history of Greece and Rome. Birds were very
-commonly made pets, and besides the doves and pigeons which are
-familiar to us as well, we are told that ducks, crows, and quail were
-pets of children. So also were geese, odd as this seems to us, and the
-statue of a child struggling with a goose as large as himself is well
-known (Fig. 23). Monkeys were known, but could not have been common.
-Mice have been mentioned already. Games of many kinds were played by
-children, but we can only guess at the nature of most of them, as we
-have hardly any formal descriptions. There were games corresponding to
-our Odd or Even, Blindman's Buff, Hide and Seek, Jackstones (320),
-and Seesaw (Schreiber, LXXIX and LXXX). Pebbles and nuts were used in
-games something like our marbles, and there were board-games also. To
-these may be added for boys riding, swimming, and wrestling, although
-these were taken too seriously, perhaps, to be called games and
-belonged rather to their training for the duties of citizenship.
-
-104. Home Training.--The training of the children was conducted by
-the father and mother in person. More stress was laid upon the moral
-than upon the intellectual development: reverence for the gods,
-respect for the law, unquestioning and instant obedience to authority,
-truthfulness, and self-reliance were the most important lessons for
-the child to learn. Much of this came from the constant association of
-the children with their parents, which was the characteristic feature
-of the home training of the Romans as compared with that of other
-peoples of the time. The children sat at table with their elders or
-helped to serve the meals. Until the age of seven both boys and girls
-had their mother for their teacher. From her they learned to speak
-correctly their native tongue, and Latin rhetoricians tell us that the
-best Latin was spoken by the noble women of the great houses of Rome.
-The mother taught them the elements of reading and writing and as much
-of the simpler operations of arithmetic as children so young could
-learn.
-
-105. From about the age of seven the boy passed under the care of
-regular teachers, but the girl remained her mother's constant
-companion. Her schooling was necessarily cut short, because the Roman
-girl became a wife so young (67), and there were things to learn in
-the meantime that books do not teach. From her mother she learned to
-spin and weave and sew: even Augustus wore garments woven by his wife.
-By her mother she was initiated into all the mysteries of household
-economy and fitted to take her place as the mistress of a household of
-her own, to be a Roman _matrona_, the most dignified position to which
-a woman could aspire in the ancient world (90, 91).
-
-106. The boy, except during the hours of school, was equally his
-father's companion. If the father was a farmer, as all Romans were in
-earlier times, the boy helped in the fields and learned to plow and
-plant and reap. If the father was a man of high position and lived in
-the capital, the boy stood by him in his hall as he received his
-guests, learned to know their faces, names, and rank, and acquired a
-practical knowledge of politics and affairs of state. If the father
-was a senator, the boy, in the earlier days only it is true,
-accompanied him to the senate house to hear the debates and listen to
-the great orators of the time; and the son could always go with him to
-the forum when he was an advocate or concerned in a public trial.
-
-107. Then as every Roman was bred a soldier the father trained the
-son in the use of arms and in the various military exercises, as well
-as in the manly sports of riding, swimming, wrestling, and boxing. In
-these exercises strength and agility were kept in view, rather than
-the grace of movement and symmetrical development of form, on which
-the Greeks laid so much stress. On great occasions, too, when the
-cabinets in the atrium were opened and the wax busts of their
-ancestors displayed, the boy and girl of noble family were always
-present and learned the history of the family of which they were a
-part, and with it the history of Rome.
-
-108. Schools.--The actual instruction given to the children by the
-father would vary with his own education and at best be subject to all
-sorts of interruptions due to his private business or his public
-duties. We find that this embarrassment was appreciated in very early
-times, and that it was customary for a _pater familias_ who happened
-to have among his slaves one competent to give the needed instruction,
-to turn over to him the actual teaching of the children. It must be
-remembered that slaves taken in war were often much better educated
-than their Roman masters. Not all households, however, would include a
-competent teacher, and it would seem only natural for the fortunate
-owner of such a slave to receive into his house at fixed hours of the
-day the children of his friends and neighbors to be taught together
-with his own.
-
-109. For this privilege he might charge a fee for his own benefit, as
-we are told that Cato actually did, or he might allow the slave to
-retain as his _peculium_ (33) the little presents given him by his
-pupils in lieu of direct payment. The next step, one taken in times
-too early to be accurately fixed, was to select for the school a more
-convenient place than a private house, one that was central and easily
-accessible, and to receive as pupils all who could pay the modest fee
-that was demanded. To these schools girls as well as boys were
-admitted, but for the reason given in 105 the girls had little time
-for studying more than their mothers could teach them, and those who
-did carry their studies further came usually of families who preferred
-to educate their daughters in the privacy of their own homes and could
-afford to do so. The exceptions to this rule were so few, that from
-this point we may consider the education of boys alone.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 24. WAXED TABLETS AND STILUS]
-
-110. Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools.--In these elementary
-schools the only subjects taught were reading, writing, and
-arithmetic. In the first, great stress was laid upon the
-pronunciation: the sounds were easy enough but quantity was hard to
-master. The teacher pronounced first syllable by syllable, then the
-separate words, and finally the whole sentence, the pupils pronouncing
-after him at the tops of their voices. In the teaching of writing, wax
-tablets (Fig. 24) were employed, much as slates were a generation ago.
-The teacher first traced with a _stilus_ the letters that served as a
-copy, then he guided the pupil's hand with his own until the child had
-learned to form the letters independently. When some dexterity had
-been acquired, the pupil was taught to use the reed pen and write with
-ink upon papyrus. For practice, sheets were used that had had one side
-written upon already for more important purposes. If any books at all
-were used in these schools, the pupils must have made them for
-themselves by writing from the teacher's dictation.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 25. ABACUS]
-
-111. In arithmetic mental calculation was emphasized, but the pupil
-was taught to use his fingers in a very elaborate way that is not now
-thoroughly understood, and harder sums were worked out with the help
-of the reckoning board (_abacus_, Fig. 25). In addition to all this,
-attention was paid to the training of the memory, and the pupil was
-made to learn by heart all sorts of wise and pithy sayings and
-especially the Twelve Tables of the Law. These last became a regular
-fetich in the schools, and even when the language in which they were
-written had become obsolete pupils continued to learn and recite them.
-Cicero had learned them in his boyhood, but within his lifetime they
-were dropped from the schools.
-
-112. Grammar Schools.--Among the results of contact with other
-peoples that followed the Punic wars (5) was the extension of
-education at Rome beyond these elementary and strictly utilitarian
-subjects. The Greek language came to be generally learned (101) and
-Greek ideas of education were in some degree adopted. Schools were
-established in which the central thing was the study of the Greek
-poets, and these schools we may call Grammar Schools because the
-teacher was called _grammaticus_. Homer was long the universal
-text-book, and students were not only taught the language, but were
-instructed in the matters of geography, mythology, antiquities,
-history, and ethics suggested by the portions of the text which they
-read. The range of instruction and its value depended entirely upon
-the teacher, as does such instruction to-day, but it was at best
-fragmentary and disconnected. There was no systematic study of any of
-these subjects, not even of history, despite its interest and
-practical value to a world-ranging people like the Romans.
-
-113. The Latin language was soon made the subject of similar study,
-at first in separate schools. The lack of Latin poetry to work upon,
-for prose authors were not yet made text-books, led to the translation
-by a Greek slave, Livius Andronicus (3d century B.C.), of the Odyssey
-of Homer into Latin Saturnian verses. From this translation, rude as
-the surviving fragments show it to have been, dates the beginning of
-Latin literature, and it was not until this literature had furnished
-poets like Terence, Vergil, and Horace, that the rough Saturnians of
-Livius Andronicus disappeared from the schools.
-
-114. In these Grammar Schools, Greek as well as Latin, great stress
-seems to have been laid upon elocution, a thing less surprising when
-we consider the importance of oratory under the Republic. The teacher
-had the pupils pronounce after him first the words, then the clauses,
-and finally the complete sentences. The elements of rhetoric were
-taught in some of these schools, but technical instruction in the
-subject was not given until the establishment at a much later period
-of special schools of rhetoric. In the Grammar Schools were also
-taught music and geometry, and these made complete the ordinary
-education of boyhood.
-
-115. Schools of Rhetoric.--The Schools of Rhetoric were formed on
-Greek lines and conducted by Greek teachers. They were not a part of
-the regular system of education, but corresponded more nearly to our
-colleges, being frequented by persons beyond the age of boyhood and
-with rare exceptions, of the higher classes only. In these schools the
-study of prose authors was begun, but the main thing was the practice
-of composition. This was begun in its simplest form, the narrative
-(_narratio_), and continued step by step until the end in view was
-reached, the practice of public speaking (_declamatio_). One of the
-intermediate forms was the _suasoria_, in which the students took
-sides on some disputed point of history and supported their views by
-argument. A favorite exercise also was the writing of a speech to be
-put in the mouth of some person famous in legend or history. How
-effective these could be made is seen in the speeches inserted in
-their histories by Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus.
-
-116. Travel.--In the case of persons of the noblest and most wealthy
-families, or those whose talents in early manhood promised a brilliant
-future, the training of the schools was sure to be supplemented by a
-period of travel and residence abroad. Greece, Rhodes, and Asia Minor
-were the most frequently visited, whether the young Roman cared for
-the scenes of great historical events and the rich collections of
-works of literature and art, or merely enjoyed the natural charms and
-social splendors of the gay and luxurious capitals of the east. For
-the purposes of serious study Athens offered the greatest attractions
-and might almost have been called the university of Rome, in this
-respect standing to Italy much as Germany now stands to the United
-States. It must be remembered, however, that the Roman who studied in
-Athens was as familiar with Greek as with his native Latin and for
-this reason was much better prepared to profit by the lectures he
-heard than is the average American who now studies on the continent.
-
-117. Apprenticeship.--There were certain matters, a knowledge of
-which was essential to a successful public life, for training in which
-no provision was made by the Roman system of education. Such matters
-were jurisprudence, administration and diplomacy, and war. It was
-customary, therefore, for the young citizen to attach himself for a
-time to some older man, eminent in these lines or in some one of them,
-in order to gain an opportunity for observation and practical
-experience in the performance of duties that would sooner or later
-devolve upon him. So Cicero learned the civil law under Quintus Mucius
-Scaevola, the most eminent jurist of the time, and in later years the
-young Marcus Coelius Rufus in turn served the same voluntary
-apprenticeship (_tirocinium fori_) under Cicero. This arrangement was
-not only very advantageous to the young men but was considered very
-honorable for those under whom they studied.
-
-118. In the same way the governors of provinces and generals in the
-field were attended by a voluntary staff (_cohors_) of young men, whom
-they had invited to accompany them at state expense for personal or
-political reasons. These _tirones_ became familiar in this way
-(_tirocinium militiae_) with the practical side of administration and
-war, while at the same time they were relieved of many of the
-hardships and dangers suffered by those, less fortunate, who had to
-rise from the ranks. It was this staff of inexperienced young men who
-hid in their tents or went back to Rome when Caesar determined to meet
-Ariovistus in battle, although some of them, no doubt, made gallant
-soldiers and wise commanders afterward.
-
-119. Remarks on the Schools.--Having considered the possibilities in
-the way of education and training within the reach of the more favored
-few, we may now go back to the Elementary and Grammar Schools to get
-an idea of the actual school life of the ordinary Roman boy. While
-these were not public schools in our sense of the word, that is, while
-they were not supported or supervised by the state, and while
-attendance was not compulsory, it is nevertheless true that the
-elements at least of education, a knowledge of the three R's, were
-more generally diffused among the Romans than among any other people
-of the ancient world. The schools were distinctly democratic in this,
-that they were open to all classes, that the fees were little more
-than nominal, that so far as concerned discipline and the treatment of
-the pupils no distinction was made between the children of the
-humblest and of the most lordly families.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 26. A ROMAN SCHOOL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 27: CARICATURE OF A SCHOOL]
-
-120. The school was usually in a _pergula_, a shedlike attachment to
-a public building, roofed against the sun and rain, but open at the
-sides and furnished merely with rough benches without backs. The
-children were exposed, therefore, to all the distractions of the busy
-town life around them, and the people living near were in turn annoyed
-by the noisy recitations (110) and even noisier punishments. A
-picture of a schoolroom from a wall painting in Herculaneum is shown
-in Fig. 26 and an ancient caricature, by a schoolboy probably, in Fig.
-27.
-
-121. The Teacher.--The teacher was originally a slave, perhaps
-usually a freedman. The position was not an honorable one, though this
-depended upon the character of the teacher himself, and while the
-pupils feared the master they seem to have had little respect for him.
-The pay he received was a mere pittance, varying from three dollars a
-year for the elementary teacher (_litterator_, _magister litterarum_)
-to five or six times that sum for a _grammaticus_ (112). In addition
-to the fee, the pupils were expected to bring the master from time to
-time little presents, a custom persisting probably from the time when
-these presents were his only reward (109). The fees varied, however,
-with the qualifications of the master, and some whose reputations were
-established and whose schools were "fashionable" charged no fees at
-all, but left the amount to be paid (_honorarium_) to the generosity
-of their patrons.
-
-122. Schooldays and Holidays.--The schoolday began before sunrise, as
-did all the work at Rome on account of the heat in the middle of the
-day (cf. 79). The students brought candles by which to study until it
-became light, and the roof was soon black with the grime and smoke.
-The session lasted until time for the noonday luncheon and siesta
-(302), and was resumed in the afternoon. We do not know definitely
-that there was any fixed length for the school-year. We know that it
-regularly began on the 24th of March and that there were numerous
-holidays, notably the Saturnalia in December and the Quinquatria from
-the 19th to the 23rd of March. The great religious festivals, too,
-especially those celebrated with games, would naturally be observed by
-the schools, and apparently the market days (_nundinae_) were also
-holidays. It was until lately supposed that there was no school from
-the last of June until the first of November, but this view rested
-upon an incorrect interpretation of certain passages of Horace and
-Martial which are now otherwise explained. It is certain, however,
-that the children of wealthy parents would be absent from Rome during
-the hot season, and this would at least cut down the attendance in
-some of the schools and might perhaps close them altogether.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 28. PAEDAGOGUS]
-
-123. The Paedagogus.--The boy of good family was always attended by a
-trustworthy slave (_paedagogus_), who accompanied him to school,
-remained with him during the sessions, and saw him safely home again
-when school was out. If the boy had wealthy parents, he might have,
-besides, one or more slaves (_pedisequi_) to carry his satchel and
-tablets. The _paedagogus_ was usually an elderly man, selected for his
-good character and expected to keep the boy out of all harm, moral as
-well as physical. He was not a teacher, despite the meaning of the
-English derivative, except that after the learning of Greek became
-general a Greek slave was usually selected for the position in order
-that the boy might not forget what he had learned from his nurse
-(101). The scope of his regular duties is clearly shown by the Latin
-words used sometimes instead of _paedagogus_: _comes_, _custos_,
-_monitor_, and _rector_. He was addressed by his ward as _dominus_,
-and seems to have had the right to compel obedience by mild
-punishments (Fig. 28). His duties ceased when the boy assumed the toga
-of manhood, but the same warm affection often continued between them
-as between the woman and her nurse (101).
-
-124. Discipline.--The discipline seems to have been really Roman in
-its severity, if we may judge from the picture of a school above
-referred to (120) and by the grim references to the rod and ferule in
-Juvenal and Martial. Horace has given to his teacher, Orbilius, a
-deathless fame by the adjective _plagosus_. From Nepos we learn that
-then as now teachers might have appealed to the natural emulation
-between well-bred boys, and we know that prizes, too, were offered.
-Perhaps we may think the ferule well deserved when we read of the
-schoolboy's trick immortalized by Persius. The passage (III, 44 f.) is
-worth quoting in full:
-
- _Saepe oculos, memini, tangebam parvus olivo,_
- _Grandia si nollem morituri verba Catonis_
- _Discere et insano multum laudanda magistro!_[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: "Often, I remember, as a small boy I used to give my eyes
-a touch with oil, if I did not want to learn Cato's grand dying
-speech, sure to be rapturously applauded by my wrong-headed master."]
-
-125. End of Childhood.--There was no special ceremony to mark the
-passing of girlhood into womanhood, but for the boy the attainment of
-his majority was marked by the laying aside of the crimson-bordered
-_toga praetexta_ and the putting on of the pure white _toga virilis_.
-There was no fixed year, corresponding to the twenty-first with us, in
-which the _puer_ became _iuvenis_; something depended upon the
-physical and intellectual development of the boy himself, something
-upon the will or caprice of his _pater familias_, more perhaps upon
-the time in which he lived. We may say generally, however, that the
-_toga virilis_ was assumed between the fourteenth and seventeenth
-years, the later age belonging to the earlier time when citizenship
-carried with it more responsibility than under the Empire and demanded
-a greater maturity.
-
-126. For the classical period we may put the age required at sixteen,
-and if we add to this the _tirocinium_ (117), which followed the
-donning of the garb of manhood, we shall have the seventeen years
-after the expiration of which the citizen had been liable in ancient
-times to military duty. The day was even less precisely fixed. We
-should expect the birthday at the beginning of the seventeenth year,
-but it seems to have been the more usual, but by no means invariable,
-custom to select for the ceremony the feast of Liber which happened to
-come nearest to the seventeenth birthday. This feast was celebrated on
-the 17th of March and was called the _liberalia_. No more appropriate
-time could have been selected to suggest the freer life of manhood
-upon which the boy was now about to enter.
-
-127. The Liberalia.--The festivities of the great day began in the
-early morning, when the boy laid before the Lares of his house the
-_bulla_ (99) and _toga praetexta_, called together the _insignia
-pueritiae_. A sacrifice was then offered, and the _bulla_ was hung
-over the hearth, not to be taken down and worn again except on some
-occasion when the man who had worn it as a boy should be in danger of
-the envy of men and gods. The boy then dressed himself in the _tunica
-recta_ (76), having one or two crimson stripes if he was the son of a
-senator or a knight, and over this was carefully draped the _toga
-virilis_. This was also called in contrast to the gayer garb of
-boyhood the _toga pura_, and with reference to the freedom of manhood
-the _toga libera_.
-
-128. Then began the procession to the forum. The father had gathered
-his slaves and freedmen and clients, had been careful to notify his
-relatives and friends, and had used all his personal and political
-influence to make the escort of his son as numerous and imposing as
-possible. If the ceremony took place on the _liberalia_, the forum was
-sure to be crowded with similar processions of rejoicing friends. Here
-were extended the formal congratulations, and the name of one more
-citizen was added to the official list. An offering was then made in
-the temple of Liber on the Capitoline Hill, and the day ended with a
-feast at the father's house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 135-212; Gll, II, 114-212; Guhl and Koner,
-764-772; Friedlnder, I, 404 f.; Ramsay, 124 f.; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_clientes_; Smith, _servus_, _libertus_, _cliens_, _clientela_,
-_hospitium_; Harper, _servus_, _liberti_, _clientes_; Lbker, _servi_,
-_libertinus_, _hospitium_, _patronus_.
-
-
-129. Growth of Slavery.--So far as we may learn from history and
-legend, slavery was always known at Rome. In the early days of the
-Republic, however, the farm was the only place where slaves were
-employed. The fact that most of the Romans were farmers and that they
-and their free laborers were constantly called from the fields to
-fight the battles of their country led to a gradual increase in the
-number of slaves, until they were far more numerous than the free
-laborers who worked for hire. We can not tell when the custom became
-general of employing slaves in personal service and in industrial
-pursuits, but it was one of the grossest evils resulting from Rome's
-foreign conquests. In the last century of the Republic all manual
-labor, almost all trades, and certain of what we now call professions
-were in the hands of slaves. Not only were free laborers unable to
-compete with slaves, but every occupation in which slaves engaged was
-degraded in the eyes of freemen, until all labor was looked upon as
-dishonorable. The small farms were gradually absorbed in the vast
-estates of the rich, the sturdy yeomanry of Rome disappeared, and by
-the time of Augustus the freeborn citizens of Italy who were not
-soldiers were either slaveholders themselves or the idle proletariate
-of the cities.
-
-130. Ruinous as were the economic results of slavery, the moral
-effects were no less destructive. It is to slavery more than to
-anything else that is due the change in the character of the Romans in
-the first century of the Empire. With slaves swarming in their houses,
-ministering to their luxury, pandering to their appetites, directing
-their amusements, managing their business, and even educating their
-children, it is no wonder that the old Roman virtues of simplicity,
-frugality, and temperance declined and perished. And with the passing
-of Roman manhood into oriental effeminacy began the passing of Roman
-sway over the civilized world.
-
-131. Numbers of Slaves.--We have almost no testimony as to the number
-of slaves in Italy, none even as to the ratio of the free to the
-servile population. We have indirect evidence enough, however, to make
-good the statements in the preceding paragraphs. That slaves were few
-in early times is shown by their names (58): if it had been usual for
-a master to have more than one slave, such names as _Marcipor_, and
-Olipor would not have sufficed to distinguish them. An idea of the
-rapid increase after the Punic wars may be gained from the number of
-captives sold into slavery by successful generals. Scipio Aemilianus
-is said to have disposed in this way of 60,000 Carthaginians, Marius
-of 140,000 Cimbri, Aemilius Paulus of 150,000 Greeks, Pompeius and
-Caesar together of more than a million of Asiatics and Gauls.
-
-132. The very insurrections of the slaves, unsuccessful as they
-always were, also testify to their overwhelming numbers. Of the two in
-Sicily, the first lasted from 134 to 132 B.C., and the second from 102
-to 98; the last in spite of the fact that at the close of the first
-the consul Rupilius had crucified 20,000, whom he had taken alive, as
-a warning to others to submit in silence to their servitude. Spartacus
-defied the armies of Rome for two years, and in the decisive battle
-with Crassus (71 B.C.) left 60,000 dead upon the field. Cicero's
-orations against Catiline show clearly that it was the calling out of
-the hordes of slaves by the conspirators that was most dreaded in the
-city.
-
-133. Of the number under the Empire we may get some idea from more
-direct testimony. Horace tells us that ten slaves were as few as a
-gentleman in even moderate circumstances could afford to own. He
-himself had two in town and eight on his little Sabine farm, and he
-was a poor man and his father had been a slave. Tacitus tells us of a
-city prefect who had four hundred slaves in his mansion. Pliny says
-that one Caius Caecilius Claudius Isodorus left at his death over four
-thousand slaves. Athenaeus (170-230 A.D.) gives us to understand that
-individuals owned as many as ten thousand and twenty thousand. The
-fact that house slaves were commonly divided into "groups of ten"
-(_decuriae_) points in the same direction.
-
-134. Sources of Supply.--Under the Republic the largest number of
-slaves brought to Rome and offered there for sale were captives taken
-in war, and an idea of the magnitude of this source of supply has
-already been given (131). The captives were sold as soon as possible
-after they were taken, in order that the general might be relieved of
-the trouble and risk of feeding and guarding such large numbers of men
-in a hostile country. The sale was conducted by a quaestor, and the
-purchasers were the wholesale slave dealers that always followed an
-army along with other traders and peddlers. The spear (_hasta_), which
-was always the sign of a sale conducted under public authority, was
-set up in the ground to mark the place, and the captives had garlands
-on their heads as did the victims offered in sacrifice. Hence the
-expression _sub hasta_ and _sub corona venire_ came to have
-practically the same meaning.
-
-135. The wholesale dealers (_mangones_) assembled their purchases in
-convenient depots, and when sufficient numbers had been collected
-marched them to Rome, in chains and under guard, to be sold to local
-dealers or to private individuals. The slaves obtained in this way
-were usually men and likely to be physically sound and strong for the
-simple reason that they had been soldiers. On the other hand they were
-likely to prove intractable and ungovernable, and many preferred even
-suicide to servitude. It sometimes happened, of course, that the
-inhabitants of towns and whole districts were sold into slavery
-without distinction of age or sex.
-
-136. Under the Empire large numbers came to Rome as articles of
-ordinary commerce, and Rome became one of the great slave marts of the
-world. The slaves were brought from all the provinces of the Empire:
-blacks from Egypt; swift runners from Numidia; grammarians from
-Alexandria; from Cyrene those who made the best house servants; from
-Greece handsome boys and girls, and well-trained scribes, accountants,
-amanuenses, and even teachers; from Epirus and Illyria experienced
-shepherds; from Cappadocia the most patient and enduring laborers.
-
-137. Some of these were captives taken in the petty wars that Rome
-was always waging in defense of her boundaries, but these were
-numerically insignificant. Others had been slaves in the countries
-from which they came, and merely exchanged old masters for new when
-they were sent to Rome. Others still were the victims of slave
-hunters, who preyed on weak and defenseless peoples two thousand years
-ago much as they are said to do in Africa in our own time. These
-man-hunts were not prevented, though perhaps not openly countenanced,
-by the Roman governors.
-
-138. A less important source of supply was the natural increase in
-the slave population as men and women formed permanent connections
-with each other, called _contubernia_. This became of general
-importance only late in the Empire, because in earlier times,
-especially during the period of conquest, it was found cheaper to buy
-than to breed slaves. To the individual owner, however, the increase
-in his slaves in this way was a matter of as much interest as the
-increase of his flocks and herds. Such slaves would be more valuable
-at maturity, for they would be acclimated and less liable to disease,
-and besides would be trained from childhood in the performance of the
-very tasks for which they were destined. They would also have more
-love for their home and for their master's family, for his children
-were often their playmates. It was only natural, therefore, for slaves
-born in the _familia_ to have a claim upon their master's confidence
-and consideration that others lacked, and it is not surprising that
-they were proverbially pert and forward. They were called _vernae_ as
-long as they remained the property of their first master. The
-derivation of the word is not certain, but it is probable that it has
-the same origin as Vesta and means something like "born in the house."
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 29. SALE OF A SLAVE]
-
-139. Sales of Slaves.--Slave dealers usually offered their wares at
-public auction sales (Fig. 29). These were under the supervision of
-the aediles, who appointed the place and made rules and regulations to
-govern them. A tax was imposed on imported slaves and they were
-offered for sale with their feet whitened with chalk; those from the
-east had also their ears bored, a common sign of slavery among
-oriental peoples. As bids were asked for each slave he was made to
-mount a stone or platform, corresponding to the "block" familiar to
-the readers of our own history. From his neck hung a scroll
-(_titulus_), setting forth his character and serving as a warrant for
-the purchaser. If the slave had defects not made known in this warrant
-the vendor was bound to take him back within six months or make good
-the loss to the buyer. The chief items in the _titulus_ were the age
-and nationality of the slave, and his freedom from such common defects
-as chronic ill-health, especially epilepsy, and tendencies to
-thievery, running away, and suicide. In spite of the guarantee the
-purchaser took care to examine the slaves as closely as possible. For
-this reason they were commonly stripped, made to move around, handled
-freely by the purchaser, and even examined by physicians. If no
-warrant was given by the dealer, a cap (_pilleus_) was put on the
-slave's head at the time of the sale and the purchaser took all risks.
-The dealer might also offer the slaves at private sale, and this was
-the rule in the case of all of unusual value and especially of marked
-personal beauty. These were not exposed to the gaze of the crowd, but
-were offered to those only who were likely to purchase. Private sales
-and exchanges between citizens without the intervention of a regular
-dealer were as common as the sales of other property, and no stigma
-was attached to them. The trade of the _mangones_, on the other hand,
-was looked upon as utterly disreputable, but it was very lucrative and
-great fortunes were often made in it. Vilest of all the dealers were
-the _lenones_, who kept and sold slaves for immoral purposes only.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 30. THE GAUL AND HIS WIFE]
-
-140. Prices of Slaves.--The prices of slaves varied as did the prices
-of other commodities. Much depended upon the times, the supply and
-demand, the characteristics and accomplishments of the particular
-slave, and the requirements of the purchaser. Captives bought upon the
-battlefield rarely brought more than nominal prices, because the sale
-was in a measure forced (134), and because the dealer was sure to
-lose a large part of his purchase on the long march home through
-disease, fatigue, and especially suicide. There is a famous piece of
-statuary representing a hopeless Gaul killing his wife and then
-himself (Fig. 30). We are told that Lucullus once sold slaves in his
-camp at an average price of eighty cents each. In Rome male slaves
-varied in value from $100, paid for common laborers in the time of
-Horace, to $28,000 paid by Marcus Scaurus for an accomplished
-grammarian. Handsome boys, well trained and educated, sold for as much
-as $4,000. Very high prices were also paid for handsome and
-accomplished girls. The music girls in Plautus and Terence cost their
-lovers from $500 to $700, but girls of the lowest class sold for as
-little as $25. It seems strange to us that slaves were matched in size
-and color as carefully as horses are now, and that a well-matched pair
-of boys would bring a much larger sum when sold together than when
-sold separately.
-
-141. Public and Private Slaves.--Slaves were called _servi publici_
-and _servi privati_ according as they were owned by the state or by
-individuals. The condition of the former was considered the more
-desirable: they were not so likely to be sold, were not worked so
-hard, and were not exposed to the whims of a capricious master. They
-were employed to take care of the public buildings and as servants of
-the magistrates and priests. The quaestors and aediles had great
-numbers of them in their service, and they were drilled as a corps of
-firemen to serve at night under the _triumviri nocturni_. Others were
-employed as lictors, jailers, executioners, etc. The number of public
-slaves while considerable in itself was inconsiderable as compared
-with that of those in private service.
-
-142. Private Slaves.--Private slaves either were employed in the
-personal service of their master and his family or were kept for gain.
-The former, known as the _familia urbana_, will be described later.
-The latter may be classified according as they were kept for hire or
-employed in the business enterprises of their master. Of these last
-the most important as well as the oldest (129) class was that of the
-farm laborers (_familia rustica_). Of the others, engaged in all sorts
-of industries, it may be remarked that it was considered more
-honorable for a master to employ his slaves in enterprises of his own
-than to hire them out to others. At the same time slaves could always
-be hired for any desired purpose in Rome or any other city.
-
-143. Industrial Employment.--It must be remembered that there were
-practically no freeborn laborers left in the last century of the
-Republic (129), and that much work was then done by hand that is now
-done by machinery. In work of this sort were employed armies of slaves
-fit only for unskilled labor: porters for the transportation of
-materials and merchandise, stevedores for the lading and discharging
-of vessels, men who handled the spade, pickax, and crowbar, men of
-great physical strength but of little else to make them worth their
-keep. Above these came artisans, mechanics, and skilled workmen of
-every kind: smiths, carpenters, bricklayers, masons, seamen, etc. The
-merchants and shopkeepers required assistants, and so did the millers
-and bakers, the dealers in wool and leather, the keepers of lodging
-houses and restaurants, all who helped to supply the countless wants
-of a great city. Even the professions, as we should call them, were
-largely in the hands of slaves. Books were multiplied by slaves. The
-artists who carved wood and stone, designed furniture, laid mosaics,
-painted pictures, and decorated the walls and ceilings of public and
-private buildings were slaves. So were the musicians and the acrobats,
-actors and gladiators who amused the people at the public games. So
-too, as we have seen (121), were many of the teachers in the schools,
-and physicians were usually slaves.
-
-144. And slaves did not merely perform these various functions under
-the direction of their master or of the employer to whom he had hired
-them for the time. Many of them were themselves captains of industry.
-When a slave showed executive ability as well as technical knowledge,
-it was common enough for his master to furnish him with the necessary
-capital to carry on independently the business or profession which he
-understood. In this way slaves were often the managers of estates, of
-banks, of commercial enterprises, though these might take them far
-beyond the reach of their masters' observation, even into foreign
-countries. Sometimes such a slave was expected to pay the master
-annually a fixed sum out of the proceeds of the business; sometimes he
-was allowed to keep for himself a certain share of the profits;
-sometimes he was merely required to repay the sum advanced with
-interest from the time he had received it. In all cases, however, his
-industry and intelligence were stimulated by the hope of acquiring
-sufficient means from the venture to purchase his freedom and
-eventually make the business his own.
-
-145. The Familia Rustica.--Under this name are comprised the slaves
-that were employed upon the vast estates that long before the end of
-the Republic had supplanted the small farms of the earlier day. The
-very name points at this change, for it implies that the estate was no
-longer the only home of the master. He had become a landlord, living
-in the capital and visiting his lands only occasionally for pleasure
-or for business. The estates may, therefore, be divided into two
-classes: country seats for pleasure and farms or ranches for profit.
-The former were selected with great care, the purchaser having regard
-to their proximity to the city or other resorts of fashion, their
-healthfulness, and the natural beauty of their scenery. They were
-maintained upon the most extravagant scale. There were villas and
-pleasure grounds, parks, game preserves, fish ponds and artificial
-lakes, everything that ministered to open air luxury. Great numbers of
-slaves were required to keep these places in order, and many of them
-were slaves of the highest class: landscape gardeners, experts in the
-culture of fruits and flowers, experts even in the breeding and
-keeping of the birds, game, and fish, of which the Romans were
-inordinately fond. These had under them assistants and laborers of
-every sort, and all were subject to the authority of a superintendent
-or steward (_vilicus_), who had been put in charge of the estate by
-the master.
-
-146. Farm Slaves.--But the name _familia rustica_ is more
-characteristically used of the drudges upon the farms, because the
-slaves employed upon the country seats were more directly in the
-personal service of the master and can hardly be said to have been
-kept for profit. The raising of grain for the market had long ceased
-to be profitable, but various industries had taken its place upon the
-farms. Wine and oil had become the most important products of the
-soil, and vineyards and olive orchards were found wherever climate and
-other conditions were favorable. Cattle and swine were raised in
-countless numbers, the former more for draft purposes and the products
-of the dairy than for beef. Sheep were kept for the wool, and woolen
-garments were worn by the rich and poor alike. Cheese was made in
-large quantities, all the larger because butter was unknown. The
-keeping of bees was an important industry, because honey served, so
-far as it could, the purposes for which sugar is used in modern times.
-Besides these things that we are even now accustomed to associate with
-farming, there were others that are now looked upon as distinct and
-separate businesses. Of these the most important, perhaps, as it was
-undoubtedly the most laborious, was the quarrying of stone; another
-was the cutting of timber and working it up into rough lumber, and
-finally the preparing of sand for the use of the builder. This last
-was of much greater importance relatively then than now, on account of
-the extensive use of concrete at Rome.
-
-147. In some of these tasks intelligence and skill were required as
-they are to-day, but in many of them the most necessary qualifications
-were strength and endurance, as the slaves took the place of much of
-the machinery of modern times. This was especially true of the men
-employed in the quarries, who were usually of the rudest and most
-ungovernable class, and were worked in chains by day and housed in
-dungeons by night, as convicts have been housed and worked in much
-later times.
-
-148. The Vilicus.--The management of such an estate was also
-intrusted to a _vilicus_ (145), who was proverbially a hard
-taskmaster, simply because his hopes of freedom depended upon the
-amount of profits he could turn into his master's coffers at the end
-of the year. His task was no easy one. Besides planning for and
-overseeing the gangs of slaves already mentioned, he had under his
-charge another body of slaves only less numerous, employed in
-providing for the wants of the others. Everything necessary for the
-farm was produced or manufactured on the farm. Enough grain was raised
-for food, and this grain was ground in the farm mills and baked in the
-farm ovens by millers and bakers who were slaves on the farm. The task
-of turning the mill was usually given to a horse or mule, but slaves
-were often made to do the grinding as a punishment. Wool was carded,
-spun, and woven into cloth, and this cloth was made into clothes by
-the female slaves under the eye of the steward's consort, the
-_vilica_. Buildings were erected, and the tools and implements
-necessary for the work of the farm were made and repaired. These
-things required a number of carpenters, smiths, and masons, though
-they were not necessarily workmen of the highest class. It was the
-touchstone of a good _vilicus_ to keep his men always busy, and it is
-to be understood that the slaves were alternately plowmen and reapers,
-vinedressers and treaders of the grapes, perhaps even quarrymen and
-lumbermen, according to the season of the year and the place of their
-toiling.
-
-149. The Familia Urbana.--The number of slaves kept by the wealthy
-Roman in his city mansion was measured not by his needs, but by the
-demands of fashion and his means. In the early days a sort of butler
-(_atriensis_), or major domo, had relieved the master of his household
-cares, had done the buying, had kept the accounts, had seen that the
-house and furniture were in order, and had looked after the few
-servants who did the actual work. Even under the Republic all this was
-changed. Other slaves, the _procurator_ and _dispensator_, relieved
-the _atriensis_ of the purchasing of the supplies and the keeping of
-the accounts, and left to him merely the supervision of the house and
-its furniture. The duties of the slaves under him were, in the same
-way, distributed among a number many times greater. Every part of the
-house had its special staff of servants, often so numerous as to be
-distributed into _decuriae_ (133), with a separate superintendent for
-each division: one for the kitchen, another for the dining-rooms,
-another for the bedrooms, etc.
-
-150. The very entrance door had assigned to it its special slave
-(_ostiarius_ or _ianitor_), who was often chained to it like a
-watchdog, in order to keep him literally at his post. And the duties
-of the several sets were again divided and subdivided, each slave
-having some one office to perform, and only one. The names of the
-various functionaries of the kitchen, the dining-rooms, and the
-bedchambers are too numerous to mention, but an idea of the complexity
-of the service may be gained from the number of attendants that
-assisted the master and mistress with their toilets. The former had
-his _ornator_, _tonsor_, and _calceator_ (who cared for the feet); the
-latter her hairdressers (_ciniflones_ or _cinerarii_) and _ornatrix_;
-and besides these each had no less than three or four more to assist
-with the bath. The children, too, had each his or her own attendants,
-beginning with the _nutrix_, and continuing in the case of the boy
-with the _paedagogus_ and _pedisequi_ (123).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 31. LECTICA]
-
-151. When the master or mistress left the house a numerous retinue
-was deemed necessary. If they walked, slaves went before to clear the
-way (_anteambulones_), and pages and lackeys followed carrying wraps
-or the sunshade and fan of the mistress, and ready to perform any
-little service that might be necessary. The master was always
-accompanied out of the house by his _nomenclator_, who prompted him in
-case he had forgotten the name of any one who greeted him. If they did
-not walk, they were carried in litters (_lecticae_, Fig. 31),
-something like sedan chairs. The bearers were strong men, by
-preference Syrians or Cappadocians (136), all carefully matched in
-size (140) and dressed in gorgeous liveries. As each member of the
-household had his own litter and bearers, this one class of slaves
-made an important item in the family budget. And even when they rode
-in this way the same attendants accompanied them as when they walked.
-
-152. When the master dined at the house of a friend his slaves
-attended him as far as the door at least. Some remained with him to
-care for his sandals, and others (_adversitores_) returned at the
-appointed hour to see him home. A journey out of the city was a more
-serious matter and called for more pomp and display. In addition to
-the horses and mules that drew the carts of those who rode, there were
-mounted outriders and beasts of burden loaded with baggage and
-supplies. Numerous slaves followed on foot, and a band of gladiators
-not infrequently acted as escort and bodyguard. It is not too much to
-say that the ordinary train of a wealthy traveler included scores,
-perhaps hundreds, of slaves.
-
-153. Among the _familia urbana_ must be numbered also those who
-furnished amusement and entertainment for the master and his guests,
-especially during and after meals. There were musicians and readers,
-and for persons of less refined tastes, dancers, jesters, dwarfs, and
-even misshapen freaks. Under the Empire little children were kept for
-the same purpose.
-
-154. Lastly may be mentioned the slaves of the highest class, the
-confidential assistants of the master, the amanuenses who wrote his
-letters, the secretaries who kept his accounts, and the agents through
-whom he collected his income, audited the reports of his stewards and
-managers, made his investments, and transacted all sorts of business
-matters. The greater the luxury and extravagance of the house, the
-more the master would need these trained and experienced men to
-relieve him of cares which he detested, and by their fidelity and
-skill to make possible the gratification of his tastes and passions.
-
-155. Such a staff as has been described belonged, of course, to a
-wealthy and fashionable man. Persons with more good sense had only
-such slaves as could be profitably employed. Atticus, the friend of
-Cicero, a man of sufficient wealth and social position to defy the
-demands of fashion, kept in his service only _vernae_ (138), and had
-them so carefully trained that the meanest could read and write for
-him. Cicero, on the other hand, could not think it good form to have a
-slave do more than one kind of work, and Cicero was not to be
-considered a rich man.
-
-156. Legal Status of Slaves.--The power of the master over the slave,
-called _dominium_ (37), was absolute. He could assign him the most
-laborious and degrading tasks, punish him even unto death at his sole
-discretion, sell him, and kill him (or turn him out in the street to
-die) when age or illness had made him incapable of labor. Slaves were
-mere chattels in the eyes of the law, like oxen or horses. They could
-not hold property, they could not make contracts, they could testify
-in the courts only on the rack, they could not marry. The free person
-_in potestate_ was little better off legally (31), but there were two
-important differences between the son, for example, and the slave. The
-son was relieved of the _potestas_ on the death of the _pater
-familias_ (34), but the death of the master did not make the slave
-free. Again, the condition of the son was ameliorated by _pietas_
-(73) and public opinion (32, 33), but there was no _pietas_ for the
-slave and public opinion hardly operated in his behalf. It did enable
-him to hold as his own his scanty savings (162), and it gave a sort
-of sanction to the permanent unions of male and female slaves called
-_contubernium_, but in other respects it did little for his benefit.
-
-157. Under the Empire various laws were passed that seemed to
-recognize the slave as a person, not a thing: it was forbidden to sell
-him for the purpose of fighting with wild beasts in the amphitheater;
-it was provided that the slave should not be put to death by the
-master simply because he was too old or too ill to work, and that a
-slave "exposed" (95) should become free by the act; at last the
-master was forbidden to kill the slave at all without due process of
-law. As a matter of fact these laws were very generally disregarded,
-much as are our laws for the prevention of cruelty to animals, and it
-may be said that it was only the influence of Christianity that at
-last changed the condition of the slave for the better.
-
-158. The Treatment of Slaves.--There is nothing in the stern and
-selfish character of the Roman that would lead us to expect from him
-gentleness or mercy in the treatment of his slaves. At the same time
-he was too shrewd and sharp in all matters of business to forget that
-a slave was a piece of valuable property, and to run the risk of the
-loss or injury of that property by wanton cruelty. Much depended, of
-course, upon the character and temper of the individual owner, and
-Juvenal gives us to understand that the mistress was likely to be more
-spiteful and unreasonable than the master. But the case of Vedius
-Pollio, in the time of Augustus, who ordered a slave to be thrown
-alive into a pond as food for the fish because he had broken a goblet,
-may be balanced by that of Cicero, whose letters to his slave Tiro
-disclose real affection and tenderness of feeling. The passionate man
-nowadays may kill or maim the dog or horse, although it has a money
-value and he needs its services, and most of us know of worn-out
-horses turned out upon the common to die. But these things are
-exceptional, and if we consider the age in which the Roman lived and
-pass for a moment the matter of punishments, we may say that he was
-rather pitiless as a taskmaster than habitually cruel to his slaves.
-
-159. Of the daily life of the town slave we know but little except
-that his work was light and he was the envy of the drudge upon the
-farm. Of the treatment of the latter we get some knowledge from the
-writings of the elder Cato, who may be taken as a fair specimen of the
-rugged farmer of his time (234-149 B.C.). He held that slaves should
-always be at work except in the hours, few enough at best, allowed
-them for sleep, and he took pains to find plenty for his to do even on
-the public holidays. He advised farmers to sell immediately worn-out
-draft cattle, diseased sheep, broken implements, aged and feeble
-slaves, "and other useless things."
-
-160. Food and Dress.--Slaves were fed on coarse food, but when Cato
-tells us that in addition to the monthly allowance of grain (about a
-bushel) they were to have merely the fallen olives, or, failing these,
-a little salt fish and vinegar, we must remember that this was no less
-and no worse than the common food of the poorer Romans. Every
-schoolboy knows that grain was the only ration of the sturdy soldiers
-that won Caesar's battles for him. A slave was furnished a tunic every
-year, and a cloak and a pair of wooden shoes every two years. Worn-out
-clothes were returned to the _vilicus_ to be made up into patchwork
-quilts. We are told that this same _vilicus_ often cheated the slaves
-by stinting their allowance for his own benefit, and we can not doubt
-that he, a slave himself, was more likely to be brutal and cruel than
-the master would have been.
-
-161. But entirely apart from the grinding toil and the harshness and
-insolence of the master and the overseer, the mere restraint from
-liberty was torture enough in itself. There was little chance of
-escape by flight. The Greek slave might hope to cross the boundary of
-the little principality in which he served, to find freedom and refuge
-under the protection of an adjoining power. But Italy was not cut up
-into hostile communities, and should the slave by a miracle reach the
-Rubicon or the sea, no neighboring state would dare defend him or even
-hide him from his Roman master. If he attempted flight, he must live
-the life of an outlaw, with organized bands of slave hunters on his
-track, with a reward offered for his return, and unspeakable tortures
-awaiting him as a warning for others. It is no wonder, then, that vast
-numbers of slaves sought rest from their labors by a voluntary death
-(140). It must be remembered that many of them were men of good birth
-and high position in the countries from which they came, some of them
-even soldiers, taken on the field of battle with weapons in their
-hands.
-
-162. The Peculium.--We have seen that the free man _in potestate_
-could not legally hold property, that all that he acquired belonged
-strictly to his _pater familias_ (31). We have also seen that he was
-allowed to hold, manage and use property assigned to him by the _pater
-familias_, just as if it had been his own (33). The same thing was
-true in the case of a slave, and the property was called by the same
-name (_peculium_). His claim to it could not be maintained by law, but
-was confirmed by public opinion and by inviolable custom. If the
-master respected these, there were several ways in which an
-industrious and frugal slave could scrape together bit by bit a little
-fund of his own, depending in great measure, of course, upon the
-generosity of his master and his own position in the _familia_.
-
-163. If he belonged to the _familia rustica_, the opportunities were
-not so good, but by stinting himself he might save something from his
-monthly allowance of food (160), and he might, perhaps, do a little
-work for himself in the hours allowed for sleep and rest, tilling, for
-example, a few square yards of garden for his own benefit. If he were
-a city slave there were besides these chances the tips from his
-master's friends and guests, and perhaps a bribe for some little piece
-of knavery or a reward for its success. We have already seen that a
-slave teacher received presents from his pupils (121). It was no
-uncommon thing either, as has been said, for a shrewd master to teach
-a slave a trade and allow him to keep a portion of the increased
-earnings which his deftness and skill would bring. More rarely the
-master would furnish the capital and allow the slave to start in
-business and retain a portion of the profits (144).
-
-164. For the master the custom was undoubtedly profitable in the long
-run. It stimulated the slave's energy and made him more contented and
-cheerful. It also furnished a means of control more effective than the
-severest corporal punishment, and that without physical injury to the
-chattel. To the ambitious slave the _peculium_ gave at least a chance
-of freedom, for he hoped to save enough in time to buy himself from
-his master. Many, of course, preferred to use their earnings to
-purchase little comforts and luxuries nearer than distant liberty.
-Some upon whom a high price was set by their owners used their
-_peculium_ to buy for themselves cheaper slaves, whom they hired out
-to the employers of laborers already mentioned (143). In this way
-they hoped to increase their savings more rapidly. The slave's slave
-was called _vicarius_, and legally belonged to the owner of his
-master, but public opinion regarded him as a part of the
-slave-master's _peculium_. The slave had a life interest only in his
-savings, that is, they did not pass to his heirs on his death, for a
-slave could have no "heirs," and he could not dispose of them by will.
-If he died in slavery his property went to his master. Public slaves
-(141) were allowed as one of their greatest privileges to dispose of
-one-half of their property by will.
-
-165. At the best the accumulation of a sum large enough (140) to buy
-his liberty was pitifully slow and painful for the slave, all the more
-because the more energetic and industrious he was, the higher the
-price that would be set upon him. We can not help feeling a great
-respect for the man who at so great a price obtained his freedom. We
-can sympathize, too, with the poor fellows who had to take from their
-little hoards to make to the members of their masters' families the
-presents that were expected on such great occasions as the marriage of
-one of them, the naming of a child (98), or the birthday of the
-mistress (91).
-
-166. Punishments.--It is not the purpose of the following sections to
-catalogue the fiendish tortures sometimes inflicted upon slaves by
-their masters. They were not very common for the reason suggested in
-158, and were no more characteristic of the ordinary correction of
-slaves than lynching and whitecapping are characteristic of the
-administration of justice in Georgia and Indiana. Certain punishments,
-however, are so frequently mentioned in Latin literature, that a
-description of them is necessary in order that the passages in which
-they occur may be understood by the reader.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 32. FLAGELLUM]
-
-167. The most common punishment for neglect of duty or petty
-misconduct was a beating with a stick or flogging with a lash. If the
-picture of a Roman school already referred to (119) gives a correct
-idea of the punishments inflicted upon a schoolboy with the consent of
-his parents, we should expect that of a slave to be as severe as
-regard for his usefulness afterwards would permit. Hence we find that
-for the single rod or stick was often substituted a bundle of rods,
-usually elm (_ulmi_) corresponding to the birch of England and the
-hickory of America. For the lash or rawhide (_scutica_ or _lorum_) was
-often used a sort of cat-o'-nine-tails, made of cords or thongs of
-leather. When the offense was more serious, bits of bone were attached
-to this, and even metal buttons, to tear the flesh, and the instrument
-was called a _flagrum_ or _flagellum_ (Fig. 32). It could not have
-been less severe than the knout of Russia, and we may well believe
-that slaves died beneath its blows. To render the victim incapable of
-resistance he was sometimes drawn up to a beam by the arms, and
-weights were even attached to his feet, so that he could not so much
-as writhe under the torture.
-
-168. In the comedies are many references to these punishments, and
-the slaves make grim jests on the rods and the scourge, taunting each
-other with the beatings they have had or deserve to have. Sometimes
-the rods are parasites, who shave close the person to whom they attach
-themselves; sometimes they are pens, the back of the culprit being the
-copybook; sometimes they are catapults, dealing darts and death.
-Sometimes the victim is a bottomless abyss of rods; sometimes he has
-absorbed so much essence of elm that he is in danger of himself
-becoming a tree; sometimes he is an anvil; sometimes he is a solid
-melting under the blows; sometimes he is a garden well watered by
-blows. Sometimes an entertainment is being prepared scot-free for his
-back; and sometimes his back is a beautifully embroidered carpet.
-
-169. Another punishment for offenses of the same trivial nature
-resembled the stocks of old New England days. The offender was exposed
-to the derision of his fellows with his limbs so confined that he
-could make no motion at all, could not so much as brush a fly from his
-face. Variations of this form of punishment are seen in the _furca_
-and in the "making a quadruped out of a man." The latter must have
-been something like the "bucking and gagging" used as a punishment in
-the militia; the former was so common that _furcifer_ became a mere
-term of abuse. The culprit carried upon his shoulders a log of wood,
-shaped like a V, and had his arms stretched out before him with his
-hands fastened to the ends of the fork. This log he had to carry
-around in order that the other members of the _familia_ might see him
-and take warning. Sometimes to this punishment was added a lashing as
-he moved painfully along.
-
-170. Less painful and degrading for the moment, but far more dreaded
-by the slave, was a sentence to harder labor than he had been
-accustomed to perform. The final penalty for misconduct on the part of
-a city slave, for whom the rod had been spoiled in vain, was
-banishment to the farm, and to this might be added at a stroke the
-odious task of grinding at the mill (148), or the crushing toil of
-labor in the quarries. The last were the punishments of the better
-class of farm slaves, while the desperate and dangerous class of
-slaves who regularly worked in the quarries paid for their misdeeds
-under the scourge and in heavier shackles by day and fewer hours of
-rest by night. These may be compared to the galley slaves of later
-times. Those utterly incorrigible might be sold for gladiators.
-
-171. For actual crimes, not mere faults or offenses, the punishments
-were far more severe. Slaves were so numerous (131) and their various
-employments gave them such free access to the person of the master,
-that his property and very life were always at their mercy. It was
-indeed a just and gentle master that did not sometimes dream of a
-slave holding a dagger at his throat. There was nothing within the
-confines of Italy so much dreaded as an uprising of the slaves. It was
-simply this haunting fear that led to the inhuman tortures inflicted
-upon the slave guilty of an attempt upon the life of his master or of
-the destruction of his property. The Romans had not learned twenty
-centuries ago, as some of our own citizens have not yet learned, that
-crimes are not lessened by increasing the sufferings of the criminals.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 33. SLAVE'S COLLAR--_Servus sum dom(i)ni mei
-Scholastici v(iri) sp(ectabilis). Tene me ne fugiam de domo
-Pulverata._]
-
-172. The runaway slave was a criminal: he had stolen himself. He was
-also guilty of setting a bad example to his fellow slaves; and, worst
-of all, runaway slaves always became bandits (161) and they might
-find a Spartacus to lead them (132). There were, therefore, standing
-rewards for the capture of _fugitivi_, and there were men who made it
-their business to track them down and return them to their masters.
-The _fugitivus_ was brought back in shackles, and was sure to be
-flogged within an inch of his life and sent to the quarries for the
-rest of his miserable days. Besides this, he was branded on the
-forehead with the letter F, for _fugitivus_, and sometimes had a metal
-collar riveted about his neck. One such, still preserved at Rome, is
-shown in Fig. 33, and another has the inscription:
-
- FUGI. TENE ME. CUM REVOCAVERIS ME D. M.
- ZONINO, ACCIPIS SOLIDUM.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: I have run away. Catch me. If you take me back to my
-master Zoninus you'll be rewarded.]
-
-173. For an attempt upon the life of the master the penalty was death
-in its most agonizing form, by crucifixion. This was also the penalty
-for taking part in an insurrection, witness the twenty thousand
-crucified in Sicily (132) and the six thousand crosses that Pompeius
-erected along the road to Rome, each bearing the body of one of the
-survivors of the final battle in which Spartacus fell. And the
-punishment was inflicted not only upon the slave guilty of his
-master's life, but also upon the family of the slave, if he had wife
-(156) and children. If the guilty man could not be found, his
-punishment was made certain by the crucifixion of all the slaves of
-the murdered man. Tacitus tells us that in the reign of Nero four
-hundred slaves were executed for the murder of their master, Pedianus
-Secundus, by one of their number undetected.
-
-174. The cross stood to the slave as the horror of horrors. The very
-word (_crux_) was used among them as a curse, especially in the form
-_ad (malam) crucem_. The various minor punishments were inflicted at
-the order of the master or his representative by some fellow slave
-called for the time _carnifex_ or _lorarius_, though these words by no
-means imply that he was regularly or even commonly designated for the
-disagreeable duty. Still, the administration of punishment to a fellow
-slave was felt to be degrading, and the word _carnifex_ was apt to
-attach itself to such a person and finally came to be a standing term
-of abuse and taunt. It is applied to each other by quarreling slaves,
-apparently with no notion of its literal meaning, as many vulgar
-epithets are applied to-day. The actual execution of a death sentence
-was carried out by one of the _servi publici_ (141) at a fixed place
-of execution outside of the city walls.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 34. COIN, SHOWING THE PILLEUS]
-
-175. Manumission.--The slave might purchase his freedom from his
-master by means of his savings, as we have seen (164), or he might be
-set free as a reward for faithful service or some special act of
-devotion. In either case it was only necessary for the master to
-pronounce him free in the presence of witnesses, though a formal act
-of manumission often took place before a praetor. The new-made
-freedman set proudly on his head the cap of liberty (_pilleus_), often
-seen on Roman coins (Fig. 34). He was now called _libertus_ in
-reference to his master, _libertinus_ in reference to others; his
-master was no longer _dominus_, but _patronus_. The relation that now
-existed between them was one of mutual helpfulness. The patron
-assisted the freedman in business, often supplying the means with
-which he was to make a start in his new life. It the freedman died
-first, the patron paid the expenses of a decent funeral and had the
-body buried near the spot where his own ashes would be laid. He became
-the guardian of the freedman's children, or if no heirs were left, he
-himself inherited the property. The freedman was bound to show his
-patron marked deference and respect on all occasions, to attend him
-upon public occasions, to assist him in case of reverse of fortune,
-and in short to stand to him in the same relation as the client had
-stood to the patron in the brave days of old.
-
-176. The Clients.--The word _cliens_ (from _clueo_; therefore
-"hearer," "one who obeys") is used in Roman history of two very
-different classes of dependents, who are separated by a considerable
-interval of time and may be roughly distinguished as the Old Clients
-and the New. The former played an important part under the Kings, and
-especially in the struggles between the patricians and plebeians in
-the early days of the Republic, but had practically disappeared by the
-time of Cicero. The latter are first heard of after the Empire was
-well advanced, and never had any political significance. Between the
-two classes there is absolutely no connection, and the student must be
-careful to notice that the later is not a development of the earlier
-class.
-
-177. The Old Clients.--Clientage (_clientela_) goes back beyond the
-founding of Rome to the most ancient social institutions of the
-Italian communities. The _gentes_ who settled on the hills along the
-Tiber (22) had brought with them as a part of their _familiae_ (21)
-numerous free retainers, who seem to have farmed their lands, tended
-their flocks, and done them certain personal services in return for
-protection against cattle thieves, raiders, and open enemies. These
-retainers were regarded as inferior members of the _gens_ to which
-they had severally attached themselves, had a share in the increase of
-the flocks and herds (33, _peculia_), and were given the clan name
-(47), but they had no right of marriage with persons of the higher
-class and no voice in the government. They were the original _plebs_,
-while the _gentiles_ (22) were the _populus_ of Rome.
-
-178. Rome's policy of expansion soon brought within the city a third
-element, distinct from both _gentiles_ and _clientes_. Conquered
-communities, especially those dangerously near, were made to destroy
-their own strongholds (_oppida_) and move in mass to the city. Those
-who possessed already the gentile organization were allowed to become
-a part of the _populus_, or governing body, and these, too, brought
-their _clientes_ with them. Those who had no such organization either
-attached themselves to the _gentes_ as clients, or preferring personal
-independence settled here and there, in and about the city, to make a
-living as best they might. Some were possessed of means as large
-perhaps as those of the patricians; others were artisans and laborers,
-hewers of wood and drawers of water; but all alike were without
-political rights and occupied the lowest position in the new state.
-Their numbers increased rapidly with the expansion of Roman territory,
-and they soon outnumbered the patricians with their retainers, with
-whom, of course, as conquered people they could have no sympathies or
-social ties. To them also the name of _plebs_ was given, and the old
-_plebs_, the _clientes_, began to occupy an intermediate position in
-the state, though politically included with the plebeians. Many of
-them, owing perhaps to the dying out of ancient patrician families,
-gradually lost their dependent relation and became identified in
-interests with the newer element.
-
-179. Mutual Obligations.--The relation between the patrician patrons
-and the plebeian clients is not now thoroughly understood; the
-problems connected with it seem beyond solution. We know that it was
-hereditary and that the great houses boasted of the number of their
-clients and were eager to increase them from generation to generation.
-We know that it was regarded as something peculiarly sacred, that the
-client stood to the patron as little less than a son. Vergil tells us
-that a special punishment in the underworld awaited the patron who
-defrauded a client. We read, too, of instances of splendid loyalty to
-their patrons on the part of clients, a loyalty to which we can only
-compare in modern times that of Highlanders to the chief of their
-clan. But when we try to get an idea of the reciprocal duties and
-obligations we find little in our authorities that is definite (12,
-end). The patron furnished means of support for the client and his
-family (177), gave him the benefit of his advice and counsel, and
-assisted him in his transactions with third parties, representing him
-if necessary in the courts. On the other hand the client was bound to
-advance the interests of his patron in every possible way. He tilled
-his fields, herded his flocks, attended him in war, and assisted him
-in special emergencies with money.
-
-180. It is evident that the mutuality of this relation depended
-solely upon the predominant position of the patron in the state. So
-long as the patricians were the only full citizens, so long, that is,
-as the plebeians had no civil rights, the client might well afford to
-sacrifice his personal independence for the sake of the countenance
-and protection of one of the mighty. In the case of disputes over
-property, for example, the support of his patron would assure him
-justice even against a patrician, and might secure more than justice
-were his opponent a plebeian without another such advocate. It is
-evident, too, that the relation could not long endure after the
-equalization of the orders. For a generation or two the patron and the
-client might stand together against their old adversaries, but sooner
-or later the client would see that he was getting no equivalent for
-the service he rendered, and his children or his children's children
-would throw off the yoke. The introduction of slavery, on the other
-hand, helped to make the patron independent of the client, and while
-we can hardly tell whether its rapid growth (129) was the cause or
-the effect of declining clientage, it is nevertheless significant that
-the new relation of _patronus_ and _libertus_ (175) marks the
-disappearance of that of _patronus_ and _cliens_ in the old and better
-sense of the words.
-
-181. The New Clients.--The new clients need not detain us long. They
-came in with the upstart rich, who counted a long train of dependents
-as necessary to their state as a string of high-sounding names (50),
-or a mansion crowded with useless slaves (155). These dependents were
-simply obscure and needy men who toadied to the rich and great for the
-sake of the crumbs that fell from their tables. There might be among
-them men of perverted talents, philosophers or poets like Martial and
-Statius, but they were all at best a swarm of cringing, fawning,
-time-serving flatterers and parasites. It is important to understand
-that there was no personal tie between the new patron and the new
-client, no bond of hereditary association. No sacrifice was involved
-on either side. The client did not attach himself for life to one
-patron for better or for worse; he frequently paid his court to
-several at a time and changed his masters as often as he could hope
-for better things. The patron in like manner dismissed a client when
-he had tired of him.
-
-182. Duties and Rewards.--The service, however mean and degrading,
-was easy enough. The chief duty was the _salutatio_: the clients
-arrayed in the toga, the formal dress for all social functions,
-assembled early in the morning in the great man's hall to greet him
-when he first appeared. This might be all required of them for the
-day, and there might be time to hurry through the streets to another
-house to pay similar homage to another patron, perhaps to others
-still, for the rich slept late. On the other hand the patron might
-command their attendance in the house or by his litter (151), if he
-was going out, and keep them at his side the whole day long. Then
-there was no chance to wait upon the second patron, but every chance
-to be forgotten by him. And the rewards were no greater than the
-services. A few coins for a clever witticism or a fulsome compliment;
-a cast-off toga occasionally, for a shabby dress disgraced the levee;
-or an invitation to the dinner table if the patron was particularly
-gracious. One meal a day was always expected, and felt to be the due
-of the client. But sometimes the patron did not receive and the
-clients were sent empty away. Sometimes, too, after a day's attendance
-the hungry and tired train were dismissed with a gift of cold food
-distributed in little baskets (_sportulae_), a poor and sorry
-substitute for the good cheer they had hoped for. From these baskets
-the "dole," as we should call it now, came to be called _sportula_
-itself, and in the course of time an equivalent in money, fixed
-finally at about thirty cents, took the place of this. But it was
-something to be admitted to the familiar presence of the rich and
-fashionable, there was always the hope of a little legacy, if the
-flattery was adroit, and even the dole would enable one to live more
-easily than by work, especially if one could stand well with several
-patrons and draw the dole from each of them.
-
-183. The Hospites.--Finally we come to the _hospites_, though these
-in strictness ought not to be reckoned among the dependents. It is
-true that they were often dependent on others for protection and help,
-but it is also true that they were equally ready and able to extend
-like help and protection to others who had the right to claim
-assistance from them. It is important to observe that _hospitium_
-differed from clientship in this respect, that the parties to it were
-actually on the footing of absolute equality. Although at some
-particular time one might be dependent upon the other for food or
-shelter, at another time the relations might be reversed and the
-protector and the protected change places.
-
-184. _Hospitium_, in its technical sense, goes back to a time when
-there were no international relations, to the time when stranger and
-enemy were not merely synonymous words, but absolutely the same word.
-In this early stage of society, when distinct communities were
-numerous, every stranger was looked upon with suspicion, and the
-traveler in a state not his own found it difficult to get his wants
-supplied, even if his life was not actually in danger. Hence the
-custom arose for a man engaged in commerce or in any other occupation
-that might compel him to visit a foreign country to form previously a
-connection with a citizen of that country, who would be ready to
-receive him as a friend, to supply his needs, to vouch for his good
-intentions, and to act if necessary as his protector. Such a
-relationship, called _hospitium_, was always strictly reciprocal: if A
-agreed to entertain and protect B, when B visited A's country, then B
-was bound to entertain and protect A, if A visited B's country. The
-parties to an agreement of this sort were called _hospites_, and hence
-the word _hospes_ has a double signification, at one time denoting the
-entertainer, at another the guest.
-
-185. Obligations of Hospitium.--The obligations imposed by this
-covenant were of the most sacred character, and any failure to regard
-its provisions was sacrilege, bringing upon the offender the anger of
-_Iuppiter Hospitalis_. Either of the parties might cancel the bond,
-but only after a formal and public notice of his intentions. On the
-other hand the tie was hereditary, descending from father to son, so
-that persons might be _hospites_ who had never so much as seen each
-other, whose immediate ancestors even might have had no personal
-intercourse. As a means of identification the original parties
-exchanged tokens _tesserae hospitales_, (see Rich and Harper, s. v.),
-by which they or their descendants might recognize each other. These
-tokens were carefully preserved, and when a stranger claimed
-_hospitium_ his _tessera_ had to be produced and submitted for
-examination. If it was found to be genuine, he was entitled to all the
-privileges that the best-known guest-friend could expect. These seem
-to have been entertainment so long as he remained in his host's city,
-protection including legal assistance if necessary, nursing and
-medical attendance in case of illness, the means necessary for
-continuing his journey, and honorable burial if he died among
-strangers. It will be noticed that these are almost precisely the
-duties devolving upon members of our great benevolent societies at the
-present time when appealed to by a brother in distress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 213-250, 607-645; Gll, II, 213-417; Guhl and
-Koner, 556-580, 676-688, 705-725; Ramsay, 516-521; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_atrium_, _compluvium_; Smith, Harper, Rich, under _domus_, _murus_,
-_tegula_, and the other Latin words used in the text; Lbker, 507-509;
-Baumeister, 1365 f., 631, 927 f., 1373 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 239-348,
-361-373, 446-474; Overbeck, 244-376, 520-537; Gusman, 253-316.
-
-
-186. Domus.--The house with which we are concerned is the residence
-(_domus_) of the single household, as opposed to lodging houses or
-apartment houses (_insulae_) intended for the accommodation of several
-families, and the residence, moreover, of the well-to-do citizen, as
-opposed on the one hand to the mansion of the millionaire and on the
-other to the hovels of the very poor. At the same time it must be
-understood that the Roman house did not show as many distinct types as
-does the American house of the present time. The Roman was naturally
-conservative, he was particularly reluctant to introduce foreign
-ideas, and his house in all times and of all classes preserved certain
-main features essentially unchanged. The proportion of these might
-vary with the size and shape of the lot at the builder's disposal, the
-number of apartments added would depend upon the means and tastes of
-the owner, but the kernel, so to speak, is always the same, and this
-makes the general plan much less complex, the description much less
-confusing.
-
-187. Our sources of information are unusually abundant. Vitruvius, an
-architect and engineer of the time of Caesar and Augustus, has left a
-work on building, giving in detail his own principles of construction;
-the works of many of the Roman writers contain either set descriptions
-of parts of houses or at least numerous hints and allusions that are
-collectively very helpful; and finally the ground plans of many houses
-have been uncovered in Rome and elsewhere, and in Pompeii we have even
-the walls of some houses left standing. There are still, however,
-despite the fullness and authority of our sources, many things in
-regard to the arrangement and construction of the house that are
-uncertain and disputed (12, end).
-
-188. The Development of the House.--The primitive Roman house came
-from the Etruscans. It goes back to the simple farm life of early
-times, when all members of the household, father, mother, children,
-and dependents, lived in one large room together. In this room the
-meals were cooked, the table spread, all indoor work performed, the
-sacrifices offered to the Lares (27), and at night a space cleared in
-which to spread the hard beds or pallets. The primitive house had no
-chimney, the smoke escaping through a hole in the middle of the roof.
-Rain could enter where the smoke escaped, and from this fact the hole
-was called the _impluvium_; just beneath it in later times a basin
-(_compluvium_) was hollowed out in the floor to catch the water for
-domestic purposes. There were no windows, all natural light coming
-through the _impluvium_ or, in pleasant weather, through the open
-door. There was but one door, and the space opposite it seems to have
-been reserved as much as possible for the father and mother. Here was
-the hearth, where the mother prepared the meals, and near it stood the
-implements she used in spinning and weaving; here was the strong box
-(_arca_), in which the master kept his valuables, and here their couch
-was spread.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 35. CINERARY URN]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 36. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-189. The outward appearance of such a house is shown in the Etruscan
-cinerary urns (Fig. 35; see also Smith, I, 668; Schreiber, LIII, 5;
-Baumeister, Fig. 146) found in various places in Italy. The ground
-plan is a simple rectangle, as shown in Figure 36, without partitions.
-This may be regarded as historically and architecturally the kernel of
-the Roman house; it is found in all of which we have any knowledge.
-Its very name (_atrium_), denoting originally the whole house, was
-also preserved, as is shown in the names of certain very ancient
-buildings in Rome used for religious purposes, the _atrium Vestae_,
-the _atrium Libertatis_, etc., but afterwards applied to the
-characteristic single room. The name was once supposed to mean "the
-black (_ater_) room," but many scholars recognize in it the original
-Etruscan word for house.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 37. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-190. The first change in the primitive house came in the form of a
-shed or "lean-to" on the side of the _atrium_ opposite the door. It
-was probably intended at first for merely temporary purposes, being
-built of wooden boards (_tabulae_), and having an outside door and no
-connection with the _atrium_. It could not have been long, however,
-until the wall between was broken through, and this once done and its
-convenience demonstrated, the partition wall was entirely removed, and
-the second form of the Roman house resulted (Fig. 37). This
-improvement also persisted, and the _tablinum_ is found in all the
-houses from the humblest to the costliest of which we have any
-knowledge.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 38. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-191. The next change was made by widening the _atrium_, but in order
-that the roof might be more easily supported walls were erected along
-the lines of the old _atrium_ for about two-thirds of its depth. These
-may have been originally mere pillars, as nowadays in our cellars, not
-continuous walls. At any rate, the _atrium_ at the end next the
-_tablinum_ was given the full width between the outside walls, and the
-additional spaces, one on each side, were called _alae_. The
-appearance of such a house as seen from the entrance door must have
-been much like that of an Anglican or Roman Catholic church. The open
-space between the supporting walls corresponded to the nave, the two
-_alae_ to the transepts, while the bay-like _tablinum_ resembled the
-chancel. The space between the outside walls and those supporting the
-roof was cut off into rooms of various sizes, used for various
-purposes (Fig. 38). So far as we know they received light only from
-the _atrium_, for no windows are assigned to them by Roman writers,
-and none are found in the ruins, but it is hardly probable that in the
-country no holes were made for light and air, however considerations
-of privacy and security may have influenced builders in the towns.
-From this ancient house we find preserved in its successors all
-opposite the entrance door: the _atrium_ with its _alae_ and
-_tablinum_, the _impluvium_ and _compluvium_. These are the
-characteristic features of the Roman house, and must be so regarded in
-the description which follows of later developments under foreign
-influence.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 39. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-192. The Greeks seem to have furnished the idea next adopted by the
-Romans, a court at the rear of the _atrium_, open to the sky,
-surrounded by rooms, and set with flowers, trees, and shrubs. The open
-space had columns around it, and often a fountain in the middle (Fig.
-39). This court was called the _peristylum_ or _peristylium_.
-According to Vitruvius its breadth should have exceeded its depth by
-one-third, but we do not find these or any other proportions strictly
-observed in the houses that are known to us. Access to the
-_peristylium_ from the _atrium_ could be had through the _tablinum_,
-though this might be cut off from it by folding doors, and by a narrow
-passage[1] by its side. The latter would be naturally used by servants
-and by others who did not wish to pass through the master's room. Both
-passage and _tablinum_ might be closed on the side of the _atrium_ by
-portires. The arrangement of the various rooms around the court seems
-to have varied with the notions of the builder, and no one plan for
-them can be laid down. According to the means of the owner there were
-bedrooms, dining-rooms, libraries, drawing-rooms, kitchen, scullery,
-closets, private baths, together with the scanty accommodations
-necessary even for a large number of slaves. But no matter whether
-these rooms were many or few they all faced the court, receiving from
-it light and air, as did the rooms along the sides of the _atrium_.
-There was often a garden behind the court.
-
-[Footnote 1: This passage is called _fauces_ in the older books. Mau
-has shown that the _fauces_ was on the entrance side of the _atrium_.
-He calls the passage by the _tablinum_ the _andron_.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 40. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-193. The next change took place in the city and town house only,
-because it was due to conditions of town life that did not obtain in
-the country. In ancient as well as in modern times business was likely
-to spread from the center of the town into residence districts, and it
-often became desirable for the owner of a dwelling-house to adapt it
-to the new conditions. This was easily done in the case of the Roman
-house on account of the arrangement of the rooms. Attention has
-already been called to the fact that the rooms all opened to the
-interior of the house, that no windows were placed in the outer walls,
-and that the only door was in front. If the house faced a business
-street, it is evident that the owner could, without interfering with
-the privacy of his house or decreasing its light, build rooms in front
-of the _atrium_ for commercial purposes. He reserved, of course, a
-passageway to his own door, narrower or wider according to the
-circumstances. If the house occupied a corner, such rooms might be
-added on the side as well as in front (Fig. 40), and as they had no
-necessary connection with the interior they might be rented as
-living-rooms, as such rooms often are in our own cities. It is
-probable that rooms were first added in this way for business purposes
-by an owner who expected to carry on some enterprise of his own in
-them, but even men of good position and considerable means did not
-hesitate to add to their incomes by renting to others these
-disconnected parts of their houses. All the larger houses uncovered in
-Pompeii are arranged in this manner. One occupying a whole square and
-having rented rooms on three sides is described in 208. Such a
-detached house was called an _insula_.
-
-194. The Vestibulum.--Having traced the development of the house as a
-whole and described briefly its permanent and characteristic parts, we
-may now examine these more closely and at the same time call attention
-to other parts introduced at a later time. It will be convenient to
-begin with the front of the house. The city house was built even more
-generally than now on the street line. In the poorer houses the door
-opening into the _atrium_ was in the front wall, and was separated
-from the street only by the width of the threshold. In the better sort
-of houses, those described in the last section, the separation of the
-_atrium_ from the street by the row of stores gave opportunity for
-arranging a more imposing entrance. A part at least of this space was
-left as an open court, with a costly pavement running from the street
-to the door, adorned with shrubs and flowers, with statuary even, and
-trophies of war, if the owner was rich and a successful general. This
-courtyard was called the _vestibulum_. The derivation of the word is
-disputed, but it probably comes from _ve-_, "apart," "separate," and
-_stare_ (cf. _prostibulum_ from _prostare_), and means "a private
-standing place"; other explanations are suggested in the dictionaries.
-The important thing to notice is that it does not correspond at all to
-the part of a modern house called after it the vestibule. In this
-_vestibulum_ the clients gathered, before daybreak perhaps (182), to
-wait for admission to the _atrium_, and here the _sportula_ was doled
-out to them. Here, too, was arranged the wedding procession (86), and
-here was marshaled the train that escorted the boy to the forum the
-day that he put away childish things (128). Even in the poorer houses
-the same name was given to the little space between the door and the
-edge of the sidewalk.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 41. MOSAIC DOG]
-
-195. The Ostium.--The entrance to the house was called the _ostium_.
-This includes the doorway and the door itself, and the word is applied
-to either, though _fores_ and _ianua_ are the more precise words for
-the door. In the poorer houses (194) the _ostium_ was directly on the
-street, and there can be no doubt that it originally opened directly
-into the _atrium_; in other words, the ancient _atrium_ was separated
-from the street only by its own wall. The refinement of later times
-led to the introduction of a hall or passageway between the
-_vestibulum_ and the _atrium_, and the _ostium_ opened into this hall
-and gradually gave its name to it. The threshold (_limen_) was broad,
-the door being placed well back, and often had the word _salve_ worked
-on it in mosaic. Over the door were words of good omen, _Nihil intret
-mali_, for example, or a charm against fire. In the great houses where
-an _ostiarius_ or _ianitor_ (150) was kept on duty, his place was
-behind the door, and sometimes he had here a small room. A dog was
-often kept chained in the _ostium_, or in default of one a picture was
-painted on the wall or worked in mosaic on the floor (Fig. 41) with
-the warning beneath it: _Cave canem!_ The hallway was closed on the
-side of the _atrium_ with a curtain (_velum_). This hallway was not so
-long that through it persons in the _atrium_ could not see passers-by
-in the street.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 42. IMPLUVIUM IN TUSCAN ATRIUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 43. SECTION OF TUSCAN ATRIUM]
-
-196. The Atrium.--The _atrium_ (188) was the kernel of the Roman
-house, and to it was given the appropriate name _cavum aedium_. It is
-possible that this later name belonged strictly to the unroofed
-portion only, but the two words came to be used indiscriminately. The
-old view that the _cavum aedium_ was a middle court between the
-_atrium_ and the _peristylium_ is still held by a few scholars, but is
-not supported by the monumental evidence (187). The most conspicuous
-features of the _atrium_ were the _impluvium_ and the _compluvium_
-(188). The water collected in the latter was carried into cisterns;
-over the former a curtain could be drawn when the light was too
-intense, as over a photographer's skylight nowadays. We find that the
-two words were carelessly used for each other by Roman writers. So
-important was the _impluvium_ to the _atrium_, that the latter was
-named from the manner in which the former was constructed. Vitruvius
-tells us that there were four styles. The first was called the _atrium
-Tuscanicum_. In this the roof was formed by two pairs of beams
-crossing each other at right angles, the inclosed space being left
-uncovered and thus forming the _impluvium_ (Figs. 42, 43). The name
-(188) as well as the simple construction shows that this was the
-earliest form of the _atrium_, and it is evident that it could not be
-used for rooms of very large dimensions. The second was called the
-_atrium tetrastylon_. The beams were supported at their intersections
-by pillars or columns. The third, _atrium Corinthium_, differed from
-the second only in having more than four supporting pillars. It is
-probable that these two similar styles came in with the widening of
-the _atrium_ (191). The fourth was called the _atrium displuviatum_.
-In this the roof sloped toward the outer walls, as shown in the
-cinerary urn mentioned in 189, and the water was carried off by
-gutters on the outside, the _compluvium_ collecting only so much as
-actually fell into it from the heavens. We are told that there was
-another style of _atrium_, the _testudinatum_, which was covered all
-over and had neither _impluvium_ nor _compluvium_. We do not know how
-this was lighted; perhaps by windows in the alae.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 44. SMALL HOUSE AT POMPEII]
-
-197. The Change in the Atrium.--The _atrium_ as it was in the early
-days of the Republic has been described in 188. The simplicity and
-purity of the family life of that period lent a dignity to the
-one-room house that the vast palaces of the late Republic and Empire
-failed utterly to inherit. By Cicero's time the _atrium_ had ceased to
-be the center of domestic life; it had become a state apartment used
-only for display. We do not know the successive steps in the process
-of change. Probably the rooms along the sides (191) were first used
-as bedrooms, for the sake of greater privacy. The need of a detached
-room for the cooking must have been felt as soon as the _peristylium_
-was adopted (it may well be that the court was originally a kitchen
-garden), and then of a dining-room convenient to it. Then other rooms
-were added about this court and these were made sleeping-apartments
-for the sake of still greater privacy. Finally these rooms were needed
-for other purposes (192) and the sleeping-rooms were moved again,
-this time to an upper story. When this second story was added we do
-not know, but it presupposes the small and costly lots of a city. Even
-the most unpretentious houses in Pompeii have in them the remains of
-staircases (Fig. 44).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 45. ATRIUM IN HOUSE OF SALLUST IN POMPEII]
-
-198. The _atrium_ was now fitted up with all the splendor and
-magnificence that the owner's means would permit. The opening in the
-roof was enlarged to admit more light, and the supporting pillars
-(196) were made of marble or costly woods. Between these pillars and
-along the walls statues and other works of art were placed. The
-_compluvium_ became a marble basin, with a fountain in the center, and
-was often richly carved or adorned with figures in relief. The floors
-were mosaic, the walls painted in brilliant colors or paneled with
-marbles of many hues, and the ceilings were covered with ivory and
-gold. In such a hall (Fig. 45) the host greeted his guests (185), the
-patron received his clients (182), the husband welcomed his wife
-(89), and here his body lay in state when the pride of life was over.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 46. RUINS OF THE HOUSE OF THE POET IN POMPEII]
-
-199. Still some memorials of the older day were left in even the most
-imposing _atrium_. The altar to the Lares and Penates remained near
-the place where the hearth had been, though the regular sacrifices
-were made in a special chapel in the _peristylium_. In even the
-grandest houses the implements for spinning were kept in the place
-where the matron had once sat among her maidservants (86, 105), as
-Livy tells us in the story of Lucretia. The cabinets retained the
-masks of simpler and may be stronger men (107), and the marriage
-couch stood opposite the _ostium_ (hence its other name, _lectus
-adversus_), where it had been placed on the wedding night (89),
-though no one slept in the _atrium_. In the country much of the
-old-time use of the _atrium_ survived even Augustus, and the poor, of
-course, had never changed their style of living. What use was made of
-the small rooms along the sides of the _atrium_, after they had ceased
-to be bedchambers, we do not know; they served perhaps as conversation
-rooms, private parlors, and drawing-rooms.
-
-200. The Alae.--The manner in which the _alae_, or wings, were formed
-has been explained (191); they were simply the rectangular recesses
-left on the right and left of the _atrium_, when the smaller rooms on
-the sides were walled off. It must be remembered that they were
-entirely open to the _atrium_, and formed a part of it, perhaps
-originally furnishing additional light from windows in their outer
-walls. In them were kept the _imagines_, as the wax busts of those
-ancestors who had held curule offices were called, arranged in
-cabinets in such a way that, by the help of cords running from one to
-another and of inscriptions under each of them, their relation to each
-other could be made clear and their great deeds kept in mind. Even
-when Roman writers or those of modern times speak of the _imagines_ as
-in the _atrium_, it is the _alae_ that are intended.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 47. VIEW FROM THE ATRIUM]
-
-201. The Tablinum.--The probable origin of the _tablinum_, has been
-explained above (190), and its name has been derived from the
-material (_tabulae_, "planks") of the "lean-to," perhaps a summer
-kitchen, from which it developed. Others think that the room received
-its name from the fact that in it the master kept his account books
-(_tabulae_) as well as all his business and private papers. He kept
-here also the money chest or strong box (_arca_), which in the olden
-time had been chained to the floor of the _atrium_, and made the room
-in fact his office or study. By its position it commanded the whole
-house, as the rooms could be entered only from the _atrium_ or
-_peristylium_, and the _tablinum_ was right between them. The master
-could secure entire privacy by closing the folding doors which cut off
-the private court, or by pulling the curtains across the opening into
-the great hall. On the other hand, if the _tablinum_ was left open,
-the guest entering the _ostium_ must have had a charming vista,
-commanding at a glance all the public and semi-public parts of the
-house (Fig. 47). Even when the _tablinum_ was closed, there was free
-passage from the front of the house to the rear through the short
-corridor (192) by the side of the _tablinum_. It should be noticed
-that there was only one such passage, though the older authorities
-assert that there were two.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 48. THE PERISTYLE FROM HOUSE IN POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 49. ROOF OF PERISTYLE]
-
-202. The Peristyle.--The _peristylium_ or _peristylum_ was adopted,
-as we have seen (192), from the Greeks, but despite the way in which
-the Roman clung to the customs of his fathers it was not long in
-becoming the more important of the two main sections of the house. We
-must think of a spacious court (Fig. 48) open to the sky, but
-surrounded by a continuous row of buildings, or rather rooms, for the
-buildings soon became one, all facing it and having doors and latticed
-windows opening upon it. All these buildings had covered porches on
-the side next the court (Fig. 49), and these porches forming an
-unbroken colonnade on the four sides were strictly the peristyle,
-though the name came to be used of the whole section of the house,
-including court, colonnade, and surrounding rooms. The court was much
-more open to the sun than the _atrium_, and all sorts of rare and
-beautiful plants and flowers bloomed and flourished in it, protected
-by the walls from cold winds. Fountains and statuary adorned the
-middle part; the colonnade furnished cool or sunny promenades, no
-matter what the time of day or the season of the year. Loving the open
-air and the charms of nature as the Romans did, it is no wonder that
-they soon made the peristyle the center of their domestic life in all
-the houses of the better class, and reserved the _atrium_ for the more
-formal functions which their political and public position demanded
-(197). It must be remembered that there was often a garden behind the
-peristyle, and there was also very commonly a direct connection with
-the street.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 50. KITCHEN RANGE]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 51. LATRINA]
-
-203. Private Rooms.--The rooms surrounding the court varied so much
-with the means and tastes of the owners of the houses that we can
-hardly do more than give a list of those most frequently mentioned in
-literature. It is important to remember that in the town house all
-these rooms received their light by day from the court (193), while
-in the country there may well have been windows and doors in the
-exterior wall (191). First in importance comes the kitchen
-(_culina_), placed on the side of the court opposite the _tablinum_.
-It was supplied with an open fireplace for roasting and boiling, and
-with a stove (Fig. 50) not unlike the charcoal affairs still used in
-Europe. Near it was the bakery, if the mansion required one, supplied
-with an oven. Near it, too, was the bathhouse (_latrina_) with the
-necessary closet, in order that all might use the same connection with
-the sewer (Fig. 51). If the house had a stable, it was also put near
-the kitchen, as nowadays in Latin countries.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 52. DINING-ROOM IN COURT]
-
-204. The dining-room (_triclinium_) may be mentioned next. It was not
-necessarily in immediate juxtaposition to the kitchen, because the
-army of slaves (149) made its position of little importance so far as
-convenience was concerned. It was customary to have several triclinia
-for use at different seasons of the year, in order that the room might
-be warmed by the sun in winter, and in summer escape its rays.
-Vitruvius thought that its length should be twice its breadth, but the
-ruins show no fixed proportions. The Romans were so fond of the air
-and the sky that the court must have often served as a dining-room,
-and Horace has left us a charming picture of the master dining under
-an arbor attended by a single slave. Such an outdoor dining-room is
-found in the so-called House of Sallust at Pompeii (Fig. 52).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 53. BEDROOM]
-
-205. The sleeping-rooms (_cubicula_) were not considered so important
-by the Romans as by us, for the reason, probably, that they were used
-merely to sleep in and not for living-rooms as well. They were very
-small and the furniture was scant (Fig. 53) in even the best houses.
-Some of these seem to have had anterooms in connection with the
-_cubicula_, which were probably occupied by attendants (150), and in
-even the ordinary houses there was often a recess for the bed. Some of
-the bedrooms seem to have been used merely for the midday siesta
-(122), and these were naturally situated in the coolest part of the
-court; they were called _cubicula diurna_. The others were called by
-way of distinction _cubicula nocturna_ or _dormitoria_, and were
-placed so far as possible on the west side of the court in order that
-they might receive the morning sun. It should be remembered that in
-the best houses the bedrooms were preferably in the second story of
-the peristyle.
-
-206. A library (_bibliotheca_) had a place in the house of every
-Roman of education. Collections of books were large as well as
-numerous, and were made then as now by persons even who cared nothing
-about their contents. The books or rolls, which will be described
-later, were kept in cases or cabinets around the walls, and in one
-library discovered in Herculaneum an additional rectangular case
-occupied the middle of the room. It was customary to decorate the room
-with statues of Minerva and the Muses, and also with the busts and
-portraits of distinguished men. Vitruvius recommends an eastern aspect
-for the _bibliotheca_, probably to guard against dampness.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 54. CHAPEL IN HOUSE]
-
-207. Besides these rooms, which must have been found in all good
-houses, there were others of less importance, some of which were so
-rare that we scarcely know their uses. The _sacrarium_ was a private
-chapel (Fig. 54) in which the images of the gods were kept, acts of
-worship performed, and sacrifices offered. The Lar or tutelary
-divinity of the house seems, however, to have retained his ancient
-place in the _atrium_. The _oeci_ were halls or saloons, corresponding
-perhaps to our parlors and drawing-rooms, used occasionally, it may
-be, for banquet halls. The _exedrae_ were rooms supplied with
-permanent seats which seem to have been used for lectures and similar
-entertainments. The _solarium_ was a place to bask in the sun,
-sometimes a terrace, often the flat roof of the house, which was then
-covered with earth and laid out like a garden and made beautiful with
-flowers and shrubs. Besides these there were, of course, sculleries,
-pantries, and storerooms. The slaves had to have their quarters
-(_cellae servorum_), in which they were packed as closely as possible.
-Cellars under the houses seem to have been rare, though some have been
-found at Pompeii.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 55. HOUSE OF PANSA]
-
-208. The House of Pansa.--Finally we may describe a house that
-actually existed, taking as an illustration one that must have
-belonged to a wealthy and influential man, the so-called House of
-Pansa at Pompeii (Fig. 55; and see also Overbeck's _Pompeii_, p. 325;
-Harper, p. 549; Becker, II, p. 214; Smith, I, p. 681; Schreiber, LIII,
-16; the various plans are slightly different). The house occupied an
-entire square, facing a little east of south. Most of the rooms on the
-front and sides were rented out for shops or stores; in the rear was a
-garden. The rooms that did not belong to the house proper are shaded
-in the plan here given. The _vestibulum_, marked 1 in the plan, is the
-open space between two of the shops (193). Behind it is the _ostium_
-(1'), with a figure of a dog (195) in mosaic, opening into the
-_atrium_ (2, 2) with three rooms on each side, the _alae_ (2', 2')
-being in the regular place, the _compluvium_ (3) in the middle, the
-_tablinum_ (4) opposite the _ostium_, and the passage on the eastern
-side (5). The _atrium_ is of the _Tuscanicum_ style (196), and is
-paved with concrete; the _tablinum_ and the passage have mosaic
-floors. From these, steps lead down into the court, which is lower
-than the _atrium_, measures 65 by 50 feet, and is surrounded by a
-colonnade with sixteen pillars. There are two rooms on the side next
-the _atrium_, one of these (6) has been called the _bibliotheca_
-(206), because a manuscript was found in it, but its purpose is
-uncertain; the other (6') was possibly a dining-room. The court has
-two projections (7', 7') much like the _alae_, which have been called
-_exedrae_ (207); it will be noticed that one of these has the
-convenience of an exit (202) to the street. The rooms on the west and
-the small room on the east can not be definitely named. The large room
-on the east (T) is the main dining-room (204), the remains of the
-dining couches being marked on the plan. The kitchen is at the
-northwest corner (13), with the stable (14) next to it (203, end);
-off the kitchen is a paved yard (15) with a gateway into the street by
-which a cart could enter. East of the kitchen and yard is a narrow
-passage connecting the peristyle with the garden (202). East of this
-are two rooms, the larger of which (9) is one of the most imposing
-rooms of the house, 33 by 24 feet in size, with a large window guarded
-by a low balustrade, and opening into the garden. This was probably an
-_oecus_ (207). In the center of the court is a basin about two feet
-deep, the rim of which was once decorated with figures of water plants
-and fish. Along the whole north end of the house ran a long veranda
-(16, 16), overlooking the garden (11, 11) in which was a sort of
-summer house (12). The house had an upper story, but the stairs
-leading to it are in the rented rooms, suggesting that the upper floor
-was not occupied by Pansa's family.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 56. SECTION OF THE HOUSE OF PANSA IN POMPEII]
-
-209. Of the rooms facing the street it will be noticed that one,
-lightly shaded in the plan, is connected with the _atrium_; it was
-probably used for some business conducted by Pansa himself (193,
-end), possibly with a slave (144) or a freedman (175) in immediate
-charge of it. Of the others the suites on the east side (A, B) seem to
-have been rented out as living apartments. The others were shops and
-stores. The four connected rooms on the west, near the front, seem to
-have been a large bakery; the room marked C was the salesroom, with a
-large room opening off of it containing three stone mills, troughs for
-kneading the dough, a water tap with sink, and a recessed oven. The
-uses of the others are uncertain. The section plan (Fig. 56)
-represents the appearance of the house if all were cut away on one
-side of a line drawn from front to rear through the middle of the
-house. It is, of course, largely conjectural, but gives a clear idea
-of the general way in which the division walls and roof must have been
-arranged.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 57. WALL OF ROMULUS]
-
-210. The Walls.--The materials of which the wall (_paries_) was
-composed varied with the time, the place, and the cost of
-transportation. Stone and unburned bricks (_lateres crudi_) were the
-earliest materials used in Italy, as almost everywhere else, timber
-being employed for merely temporary structures, as in the addition
-(190) from which the _tablinum_ developed. For private houses in very
-early times and for public buildings in all times, walls of dressed
-stone (_opus quadratum_) were laid in regular courses, precisely as in
-modern times (Fig. 57). Over the wall was spread a coating of fine
-marble stucco for decorative purposes, which gave it a finish of
-dazzling white. For less pretentious houses, not for public buildings,
-the sun-dried bricks were largely used up to about the beginning of
-the first century B.C. These, too, were covered with the stucco, for
-protection against the weather as well as for decoration, but even the
-hard stucco has not preserved walls of this perishable material to our
-times. In classical times a new material had come into use, better
-than either brick or stone, cheaper, more durable, more easily worked
-and transported, which was employed almost exclusively for private
-houses, and very generally for public buildings. Walls constructed in
-the new way (_opus caementicium_) are variously called "rubble-work"
-or "concrete" in our books of reference, but neither term is quite
-descriptive; the _opus caementicium_ was not laid in courses, as is
-our rubble-work, while on the other hand larger stones were used in it
-than in the concrete of which walls for buildings are now constructed.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 58. METHOD OF CASTING CONCRETE WALLS]
-
-211. Paries Caementicius.--The materials varied with the place. At
-Rome lime and volcanic ashes (_lapis Puteolanus_) were used with
-pieces of stone as large or larger than the fist. Brickbats sometimes
-took the place of stone, and sand (146) that of the volcanic ashes;
-potsherds crushed fine were better than the sand. The harder the
-stones the better the concrete; the very best was made with pieces of
-lava, the material with which the roads were generally paved. The
-method of forming the concrete walls was the same as that of modern
-times, familiar to us all in the construction of sidewalks. It will be
-easily understood from the illustration (Fig. 58). Upright posts,
-about 5 by 6 inches thick, and from 10 to 15 feet in height, were
-fixed about 3 feet apart along the line of both faces of the intended
-wall. On the outside of these were nailed horizontally boards, 10 or
-12 inches wide, overlapping each other. Into the intermediate space
-the semi-fluid concrete was poured, receiving the imprint of posts and
-boards. When the concrete had hardened, the frame-work was removed and
-placed on top of it and the work continued until the wall had reached
-the required height. Walls made in this way varied in thickness from a
-seven-inch partition wall in an ordinary house to the eighteen-foot
-walls of the Pantheon of Agrippa. They were far more durable than
-stone walls, which might be removed stone by stone with little more
-labor than was required to put them together; the concrete wall was a
-single slab of stone throughout its whole extent, and large parts of
-it might be cut away without diminishing the strength of the rest in
-the slightest degree.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 59. WALL FACINGS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 60. BRICK FOR FACING WALL]
-
-212. Wall Facings.--Impervious to the weather though these walls
-were, they were usually faced with stone or kiln-burned brick
-(_lateres cocti_). The stone employed was usually the soft tufa, not
-nearly so well adapted to stand the weather as the concrete itself.
-The earliest fashion was to take bits of stone having one smooth face
-but of no regular size or shape and arrange them with the smooth faces
-against the frame-work as fast as the concrete was poured in; when the
-frame-work was removed the wall presented the appearance shown at A in
-Fig. 59. Such a wall was called _opus incertum_. In later times the
-tufa was used in small blocks having the smooth face square and of a
-uniform size. A wall so faced looked as if covered with a net (B in
-Fig. 59) and was therefore called _opus reticulatum_. A section at a
-corner is shown at C. In either case the exterior face of the wall was
-usually covered with a fine limestone or marble stucco, which gave a
-hard finish, smooth and white. The burned bricks were triangular in
-shape, but their arrangement and appearance can be more easily
-understood from the illustration (Fig. 60) than from any description
-that could be given here. It must be noticed that there were no walls
-made of _lateres cocti_ alone, even the thin partition walls having a
-core of concrete.
-
-213. Floors and Ceilings.--In the poorer houses the floor (_solum_)
-of the first story was made by smoothing the ground between the walls,
-covering it thickly with small pieces of stone, bricks, tile, and
-potsherds, and pounding all down solidly and smoothly with a heavy
-rammer (_fistuca_). Such a floor was called _pavimentum_, and the name
-came gradually to be used of floors of all kinds. In houses of a
-better sort the floor was made of stone slabs fitted smoothly
-together. The more pretentious houses had concrete floors, made as has
-been described. Floors of upper stories were sometimes made of wood,
-but concrete was used here, too, poured over a temporary flooring of
-wood. Such a floor was very heavy, and required strong walls to
-support it; examples are preserved of the thickness of eighteen inches
-and a span of twenty feet. A floor of this kind made a perfect ceiling
-for the room below, requiring only a finish of stucco. Other ceilings
-were made much as they are now, laths being nailed on the stringers or
-rafters and covered with mortar and stucco.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 61. HUT OF ROMULUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 62. TILE FOR ROOF]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 63. TILE ROOF]
-
-214. Roofs.--The construction of the roofs (_tecta_) differed very
-little from the modern method, as may be seen in the illustration
-shown in 196. They varied as much as ours do in shape, some being
-flat, others sloping in two directions, others in four. In the most
-ancient times the covering was a thatch of straw, as in the so-called
-hut of Romulus (_casa Romuli_) on the Palatine Hill preserved even
-under the Empire as a relic of the past (Fig. 61). Shingles followed
-the straw, only to give place in turn to tiles. These were at first
-flat, like our shingles, but were later made with a flange on each
-side (Fig. 62) in such a way that the lower part of one would slip
-into the upper part of the one below it on the roof. The tiles
-(_tegulae_) were laid side by side and the flanges covered by other
-tiles, called _imbrices_ (Fig. 63) inverted over them. Gutters also of
-tile ran along the eaves to conduct the water into cisterns, if it was
-needed for domestic purposes. The appearance of the completed roof is
-shown in Fig. 49, 202.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 64. DOOR OF ROMAN HOUSE]
-
-215. The Doors.--The Roman doorway, like our own, had four parts: the
-threshold (_limen_), the two jambs (_postes_), and the lintel (_limen
-superum_). The lintel was always of a single piece of stone and
-peculiarly massive. The doors were exactly like those of modern times,
-except in the matter of hinges, for while the Romans had hinges like
-ours they did not use them on their doors. The door-hinge was really a
-cylinder of hard wood, a little longer than the door and of a diameter
-a little greater than the thickness of the door, terminating above and
-below in pivots. These pivots turned in sockets made to receive them
-in the threshold and lintel. To this cylinder the door was mortised,
-their combined weight coming upon the lower pivot. The cut (Fig. 64)
-makes this clear, and reminds one of an old-fashioned homemade gate.
-The comedies are full of references to the creaking of these doors.
-
-216. The outer door of the house was properly called _ianua_, an
-inner door _ostium_, but the two words came to be used
-indiscriminately, and the latter was even applied to the whole
-entrance (195). Double doors were called _fores_, and the back door,
-usually opening into a garden (208), was called the _posticum_. The
-doors opened inwards and those in the outer wall were supplied with
-bolts (_pessuli_) and bars (_serae_). Locks and keys by which the
-doors could be fastened from without were not unknown, but were very
-heavy and clumsy. Finally it should be noticed that in the interiors
-of private houses doors were not nearly so common as now, the Romans
-preferring portires (_vela_, _aulaea_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 65. WINDOW]
-
-217. The Windows.--In the principal rooms of the house the windows
-opened on the court, as has been seen, and it may be set down as a
-rule that in rooms situated on the first floor and used for domestic
-purposes there were no windows opening on the street. In the upper
-floors there must have been windows on the street in such apartments
-as had no outlook on the court, as in those for example above the
-rented rooms in the House of Pansa (208). Country houses may also
-have had outside windows in the first story (203). All the windows
-(_fenestrae_) were small (Fig. 65), hardly larger than three feet by
-two. Some were provided with shutters, which were made to slide
-backward and forward in a frame-work on the outside of the wall. These
-shutters were sometimes in two parts moving in opposite directions,
-and when closed were said to be _iunctae_. Other windows were
-latticed, and others still were covered with a fine network to keep
-out mice and other objectionable animals. Glass was known to the
-Romans of the Empire but was too expensive for general use. Talc and
-other translucent materials were also employed in window frames as a
-protection against cold, but only in very rare instances.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 66. STOVE FOR HEATING]
-
-218. Heating.--Even in the mild climate of Italy the houses must
-often have been too cold for comfort. On merely chilly days the
-occupants probably contented themselves with moving into rooms warmed
-by the direct rays of the sun (204), or with wearing wraps or heavier
-clothing. In the more severe weather of actual winter they used
-charcoal stoves or braziers of the sort that is still used in the
-countries of southern Europe. They were merely metal boxes (Fig. 66)
-in which hot coals could be put, with legs to keep the floors from
-injury and handles by which they could be carried from room to room.
-They were called _foculi_. The wealthy had furnaces resembling ours
-under their houses, the heat being carried to the rooms by tile pipes;
-in some instances the partitions and floors seem to have been made of
-hollow tiles, through which the hot air circulated, warming the rooms
-without being admitted to them. These furnaces had chimneys, but
-furnaces were seldom used.
-
-219. Water Supply.--All the important towns of Italy had abundant
-supplies of water piped from hills and brought sometimes from a
-considerable distance. The Romans' aqueducts were among their most
-stupendous and most successful works of engineering. Mains were laid
-down the middle of the streets and from these the water was piped into
-the houses. There was often a tank in the upper part of the house,
-from which the water was distributed as it was needed. It was not
-usually carried into many of the rooms, but there was always a jet or
-fountain in the court (202), in the bathhouse, the garden, and the
-closet. The bathhouse had a separate heating apparatus of its own,
-which kept the room or rooms at the desired temperature and furnished
-hot water as required.
-
-220. Decoration.--The outside of the house was left severely plain,
-the walls being merely covered with stucco, as we have seen (212).
-The interior was decorated to suit the tastes and means of the owner,
-not even the poorer houses lacking charming effects in this direction.
-At first the stucco-finished walls were merely marked off into
-rectangular panels (_abaci_), which were painted deep, rich colors,
-reds and yellows predominating. Then in the middle of these panels
-simple center-pieces were painted and the whole surrounded with the
-most brilliant arabesques. Then came elaborate pictures, figures,
-interiors, landscapes, etc., of large size and most skillfully
-executed, all painted directly upon the wall, as in some of our public
-buildings to-day. Illustrations of these decorations may be found in
-Baumeister II, L, and LI, and in colors in Gusman IX-XI, Kelsey XI. A
-little later the walls began to be covered with panels of thin slabs
-of marble with a baseboard and cornice. Beautiful effects were
-produced by combining marbles of different tints, and the Romans
-ransacked the world for striking colors. Later still came raised
-figures of stucco work, enriched with gold and colors, and mosaic
-work, chiefly of minute pieces of colored glass which had a jewel-like
-effect.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 67. MOSAIC THRESHOLD]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 68. CARVED DOORWAY]
-
-221. The doors and doorways gave opportunities for treatment equally
-artistic. The doors were richly paneled and carved, or were plated
-with bronze, or made of solid bronze. The threshold was often of
-mosaic (see the example from Pompeii in Fig. 67). The _postes_ were
-sheathed with marble elaborately carved, as in the example from
-Pompeii, shown in Fig. 68. The floors were covered with marble tiles
-arranged in geometrical figures with contrasting colors, much as they
-are now in public buildings, or with mosaic pictures only less
-beautiful than those upon the walls. The most famous of these, "Darius
-at the Battle of Issus," is shown in black and white in all our
-reference books (best in Baumeister under _Mosaik_, Fig. 1000, and in
-colors in Overbeck after p. 612). It measures sixteen feet by eight,
-but despite its size has no less than one hundred and fifty separate
-pieces to each square inch. The ceilings were often barrel-vaulted and
-painted brilliant colors, or were divided into panels (_lacus_,
-_lacunae_), deeply sunk, by heavy intersecting beams of wood or
-marble, and then decorated in the most elaborate manner with raised
-stucco work, or gold or ivory, or with bronze plates heavily
-gilded.[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: The magnificence of some of the great houses, even in
-Republican times, may be inferred from the prices paid for them.
-Cicero paid about $140,000 for his; the consul Messala the same price
-for his; Clodius $600,000 for his, the most costly known to us. All
-these were on the Palatine Hill, where ground was costly, too.]
-
-222. Furniture.--Our knowledge of Roman furniture is largely
-indirect, because only such articles have come down to us as were made
-of stone or metal. Fortunately the secondary sources are abundant and
-good. Many articles are incidentally described in works of literature,
-many are shown in the wall paintings mentioned above (220), and some
-have been restored from casts taken in the hardened ashes of Pompeii
-and Herculaneum. In general we may say that the Romans had very few
-articles of furniture in their houses, and that they cared less for
-comfort, not to say luxurious ease, than they did for costly
-materials, fine workmanship, and artistic forms. The mansions on the
-Palatine were enriched with all the spoils of Greece and Asia, but it
-may be doubted whether there was a comfortable bed within the walls of
-Rome.
-
-223. Principal Articles.--Many of the most common and useful articles
-of modern furniture were entirely unknown to the Romans. No mirrors
-hung on their walls, they had no desks or writing tables, no dressers
-or chiffoniers, no glass-doored cabinets for the display of
-bric-a-brac, tableware, or books, no mantels, no hat-racks even. The
-principal articles found in even the best houses were couches or beds,
-chairs, tables, and lamps. If to these we add chests or cabinets, an
-occasional brazier (218), and still rarer water-clock, we shall have
-everything that can be called furniture except tableware and kitchen
-utensils. Still it must not be thought that their rooms presented a
-desolate or dreary appearance. When one considers the decorations
-(220, 221), the stately pomp of the _atrium_ (198), and the rare
-beauty of the peristyle (202), it is evident that a very few articles
-of real artistic excellence were more in keeping with them than would
-have been the litter and jumble that we now think necessary in our
-rooms.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 69. THE LECTUS]
-
-224. The Couches.--The couch (_lectus_, _lectulus_) was found
-everywhere in the Roman house, a sofa by day, a bed by night. In its
-simplest form it consisted of a frame of wood with straps across the
-top on which was laid a mattress. At one end there was an arm, as in
-the case of our sofas; sometimes there was an arm at each end, and a
-back besides. It was always provided with pillows and rugs or
-coverlets. The mattress was originally stuffed with straw, but this
-gave place to wool and even feathers. In some of the bedrooms of
-Pompeii the frame seems to have been lacking, the mattress being laid
-on a support built up from the floor (205). The couches used for beds
-seem to have been larger than those used as sofas, and they were so
-high that stools (Fig. 69) or even steps were necessary
-accompaniments. As a sofa the _lectus_ was used in the library for
-reading and writing, the student supporting himself on the left arm
-and holding the book or writing with the right hand. In the
-dining-room it had a permanent place, as will be described later. Its
-honorary position in the great hall has been already mentioned (199).
-It will be seen that the _lectus_ could be made highly ornamental. The
-legs and arms were carved or made of costly woods, or inlaid or plated
-with tortoise-shell or the precious metals. We even read of frames of
-solid silver. The coverings were often made of the finest fabrics,
-dyed the most brilliant colors and worked with figures of gold.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 70. THE SELLA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 71. CURULE CHAIRS]
-
-225. The Chairs.--The primitive form of seat (_sedile_) among the
-Romans as elsewhere was the stool or bench with four perpendicular
-legs and no back. The remarkable thing is that it did not give place
-to something better as soon as means permitted. The stool (_sella_)
-was the ordinary seat for one person (Fig. 70), used by men and women
-resting or working, and by children and slaves at their meals as well.
-The bench (_subsellium_) differed from the stool only in accommodating
-more than one person. It was used by senators in the _curia_, by the
-jurors in the courts, and by boys in the school (120), as well as in
-private houses. A special form of the _sella_ was the famous curule
-chair (_sella curulis_), having curved legs of ivory (Fig. 71). The
-curule chair folded up like our camp-stools for convenience of
-carriage and had straps across the top to support the cushion which
-formed the seat.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 72. THE SOLIUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 73. CATHEDRA]
-
-226. The first improvement upon the _sella_ was the _solium_, a
-stiff, straight, high-backed chair with solid arms, looking as if cut
-from a single block of wood (Fig. 72), and so high that a footstool
-was as necessary with it as with a bed (224). Poets represented gods
-and kings as seated in such a chair, and it was kept in the _atrium_
-for the use of the patron when he received his clients (182, 198).
-Lastly, we find the _cathedra_, a chair without arms, but with a
-curved back (Fig. 73) sometimes fixed at an easy angle (_cathedra
-supina_), the only approximation to a comfortable seat that the Romans
-knew. It was at first used by women only, being regarded as too
-luxurious for men, but finally came into general use. Its employment
-by teachers in the schools of rhetoric (115) gave rise to the
-expression _ex cathedra_, applied to authoritative utterances of every
-kind, and its use by bishops explains our word cathedral. Neither the
-_solium_ nor the _cathedra_ was upholstered, but with them both were
-used cushions and coverings as with the _lecti_, and they afforded
-like opportunities for skillful workmanship and lavish decoration.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 74. MENSA DELPHICA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 75. ADJUSTABLE TABLE]
-
-227. Tables.--The table (_mensa_) was the most important article of
-furniture in the Roman house whether we consider its manifold uses, or
-the prices often paid for certain kinds. They varied in form and
-construction as much as our own, many of which are copied directly
-from Roman models. All sorts of materials were used for their supports
-and tops, stone, wood, solid or veneered, the precious metals,
-probably in thin plates only. The most costly, so far as we know, were
-the round tables made from cross-sections of the citrus-tree, found in
-Africa. The wood was beautifully marked and single pieces could be had
-from three to four feet in diameter. For one of these Cicero paid
-$20,000, Asinius Pollio $44,000, King Juba $52,000, and the family of
-the Cethegi possessed one valued at $60,000. Special names were given
-to tables of certain forms. The _monopodium_ was a table or stand with
-but one support, used especially to hold a lamp or toilet articles.
-The _abacus_ was a table with a rectangular top having a raised rim
-and used for plate and dishes, in the place of the modern sideboard.
-The _delphica_ (sc. _mensa_) had three legs, as shown in Fig. 74.
-Tables were frequently made with adjustable legs, so that the height
-might be altered; the mechanism is clearly shown in the cut (Fig. 75).
-On the other hand the permanent tables in the _triclinia_ (204) were
-often built up from the floor of solid masonry or concrete, having
-tops of polished stone or mosaic. The table gave a better opportunity
-than even the couch or chair for artistic workmanship, especially in
-the matter of carving and inlaying the legs and top.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 76. VARIOUS FORMS OF LAMPS]
-
-228. The Lamps.--The Roman lamp (_lucerna_) was essentially simple
-enough, merely a vessel that would hold oil or melted grease with a
-few threads twisted loosely together for a wick and drawn out through
-a hole in the cover or top (Fig. 76). The light thus furnished must
-have been very uncertain and dim. There was no glass to keep the flame
-steady, much less was there a chimney or central draft. As works of
-art, however, they were exceedingly beautiful, those of the cheapest
-material being often of graceful form and proportions, while to those
-of costly material the skill of the artist in many cases must have
-given a value far above that of the rare stones or precious metals of
-which they were made.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 77. BASES FOR LAMPS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 78. CANDELABRA]
-
-229. Some of these lamps (cf. Fig. 76) were intended to be carried in
-the hand, as shown by the handles, others to be suspended from the
-ceiling by chains. Others still were kept on tables expressly made for
-them, as the _monopodia_ (227) commonly used in the bedrooms, or the
-tripods shown in Fig. 77. For lighting the public rooms there were,
-besides these, tall stands, like those of our piano lamps, examples of
-which may be seen in the last cut (Fig. 78). On some of these, several
-lamps perhaps were placed at a time. The name of these stands
-(_candelabra_) shows that they were originally intended to hold wax or
-tallow candles (_candelae_), and the fact that these candles were
-supplanted in the houses of the rich by the smoking and ill-smelling
-lamp is good proof that the Romans were not skilled in the art of
-making them. Finally it may be noticed that a supply of torches
-(_faces_) of dry, inflammable wood, often soaked in oil or smeared
-with pitch, was kept near the outer door for use upon the streets.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 79. STRONG BOX]
-
-230. Chests and Cabinets.--Every house was supplied with chests
-(_arcae_) of various sizes for the purpose of storing clothes and
-other articles not always in use, and for the safe keeping of papers,
-money, and jewelry. The material was usually wood, often bound with
-iron and ornamented with hinges and locks of bronze. The smaller
-_arcae_, used for jewel cases, were often made of silver or even gold.
-Of most importance, perhaps, was the strong box kept in the _tablinum_
-(201), in which the _pater familias_ stored his ready money. It was
-made as strong as possible so that it could not easily be opened by
-force, and was so large and heavy that it could not be carried away
-entire. As an additional precaution it was sometimes chained to the
-floor. This, too, was often richly carved and mounted, as is seen in
-the illustration from Pompeii (Fig. 79).
-
-231. The cabinets (_armaria_) were designed for similar purposes and
-made of similar materials. They were often divided into compartments
-and were always supplied with hinges and locks. Two of the most
-important uses of these cabinets have been mentioned already: in the
-library (206) for the preserving of books against mice and men, and
-in the _alae_ (200) for the keeping of the _imagines_, or death-masks
-of wax. It must be noticed that they lacked the convenient glass doors
-of the cabinets or cases that we use for books and similar things, but
-they were as well adapted to decorative purposes as the other articles
-of furniture that have been mentioned.
-
-232. Other Articles.--The heating stove, or brazier, has been already
-described (218). It was at best a poor substitute for the poorest
-modern stove. The place of our clock was taken in the court or garden
-by the sun-dial (_solarium_), such as is often seen nowadays in our
-parks, which measured the hours of the day by the shadow of a stick or
-pin. It was introduced into Rome from Greece in 268 B.C. About a
-century later the water-clock (_clepsydra_) was also borrowed from the
-Greeks, a more useful invention because it marked the hours of the
-night as well as of the day and could be used in the house. It
-consisted essentially of a vessel filled at a regular time with water,
-which was allowed to escape from it at a fixed rate, the changing
-level marking the hours on a scale. As the length of the Roman hours
-varied with the season of the year and the flow of the water with the
-temperature, the apparatus was far from accurate. Shakspere's striking
-of the clock in "Julius Caesar" (II, i, 192) is an anachronism. Of the
-other articles sometimes reckoned as furniture, the tableware and
-kitchen utensils, some account will be given elsewhere.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 80. A STREET IN POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 81. A PUBLIC FOUNTAIN]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 82. STEPPING-STONES]
-
-233. The Street.--It is evident from what has been said that a
-residence street in a Roman town must have been severely plain and
-monotonous in its appearance. The houses were all of practically the
-same style, they were finished alike in stucco (212), the windows
-were few and in the upper stories only, there were no lawns or
-gardens, there was nothing in short to lend variety or to please the
-eye, except perhaps the decorations of the _vestibula_ (194), or the
-occasional extension of one story over another (_maenianum_, Fig. 80),
-or a public fountain (Fig. 81). The street itself was paved, as will
-be explained hereafter, and was supplied with a footway on either side
-raised from twelve to eighteen inches above its surface. The
-inconvenience of such a height to persons crossing from one footway to
-the other was relieved by stepping-stones (_pondera_) of the same
-height firmly fixed at suitable distances from each other across the
-street. These stepping-stones were placed at convenient points on each
-street, not merely at the intersections of two or more streets. They
-were usually oval in shape, had flat tops, and measured about three
-feet by eighteen inches, the longer axis being parallel with the walk.
-The spaces between them were often cut into deep ruts by the wheels of
-vehicles, the distance between the ruts showing that the wheels were
-about three feet apart. The arrangement of the stepping-stones is
-shown clearly in Fig. 82, but it is hard to see how the draft-cattle
-managed to work their way between them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 475-606; Voigt, 329-335, 404-412; Gll, III,
-189-310; Guhl and Koner, 728-747; Ramsay, 504-512; Blmner, I,
-189-307; Smith, Harper, Rich, under _toga_, _tunica_, _stola_,
-_palla_, and the other Latin words in the text; Lbker, under
-_Kleidung_; Baumeister, 574 f., 1822-1846; Pauly-Wissowa, under
-_calcei_.
-
-
-234. From the earliest to the latest times the clothing of the Romans
-was very simple, consisting ordinarily of two or three articles only
-besides the covering of the feet. These articles varied in material,
-style, and name from age to age, it is true, but were practically
-unchanged during the Republic and the early Empire. The mild climate
-of Italy (218) and the hardening effect of the physical exercise of
-the young (107) made unnecessary the closely fitting garments to
-which we are accustomed, while contact with the Greeks on the south
-and perhaps the Etruscans on the north gave the Romans a taste for the
-beautiful that found expression in the graceful arrangement of their
-loosely flowing robes. The clothing of men and women differed much
-less than in modern times, but it will be convenient to describe their
-garments separately. Each article was assigned by Latin writers to one
-of two classes and called from the way it was put on _indutus_ or
-_amictus_. To the first class we may give the name of under garments,
-to the second outer garments, though these terms very inadequately
-represent the Latin words.
-
-235. The Subligaculum.--Next the person was worn the _subligaculum_,
-the loin-cloth familiar to us in pictures of ancient athletes and
-gladiators (see Fig. 151, 344, and the culprit in Fig. 26, 119), or
-perhaps the short drawers (trunks), worn nowadays by bathers or
-college athletes. We are told that in the earliest times this was the
-only under garment worn by the Romans, and that the family of the
-Cethegi adhered to this ancient practice throughout the Republic,
-wearing the toga immediately over it. This, too, was done by
-individuals who wished to pose as the champions of old-fashioned
-simplicity, as for example the younger Cato, and by candidates for
-public office. In the best times, however, the _subligaculum_ was worn
-under the tunic or replaced by it.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 83. THE TUNIC]
-
-236. The Tunic.--The tunic was also adopted in very early times and
-came to be the chief article of the kind covered by the word
-_indutus_. It was a plain woolen shirt, made in two pieces, back and
-front, sewed together at the sides, and resembled somewhat the modern
-sweater. It had very short sleeves, covering hardly half of the upper
-arm, as shown in Fig. 83. It was long enough to reach from the neck to
-the calf, but if the wearer wished for greater freedom for his limbs
-he could shorten it by merely pulling it through a girdle or belt worn
-around the waist. Tunics with sleeves reaching to the wrists (_tunicae
-manicatae_), and tunics falling to the ankles (_tunicae talares_) were
-not unknown in the late Republic, but were considered unmanly and
-effeminate.
-
-237. The tunic was worn in the house without any outer garment and
-probably without a girdle; in fact it came to be the distinctive
-house-dress as opposed to the toga, the dress for formal occasions
-only. It was also worn with nothing over it by the citizen while at
-work, but he never appeared in public without the toga over it, and
-even then, hidden by the toga though it was, good form required the
-wearing of the girdle with it. Two tunics were often worn (_tunica
-interior_, or _subucula_, and _tunica exterior_), and persons who
-suffered from the cold, as did Augustus for example, might wear a
-larger number still when the cold was very severe. The tunics intended
-for use in the winter were probably thicker and warmer than those worn
-in the summer, though both kinds were of wool.
-
-238. The tunic of the ordinary citizen was the natural color of the
-white wool of which it was made, without trimmings or ornaments of any
-kind. Knights and senators, on the other hand, had stripes of purple,
-narrow and wide respectively, running from the shoulder to the bottom
-of the tunic both behind and in front. These stripes were either woven
-in the garment or sewed upon it. From them the tunic of the knight was
-called _tunica angusti clavi_ (or _angusticlavia_), and that of the
-senator _lati clavi_ (or _laticlavia_). Some authorities think that
-the badge of the senatorial tunic was a single broad stripe running
-down the middle of the garment in front and behind, but unfortunately
-no picture has come down to us that absolutely decides the question.
-Under this official tunic the knight or senator wore usually a plain
-_tunica interior_. When in the house he left the outer tunic unbelted
-in order to display the stripes as conspicuously as possible.
-
-239. Besides the _subligaculum_ and the _tunica_ the Romans had no
-regular underwear. Those who were feeble through age or ill health
-sometimes wound strips of woolen cloth (_fasciae_) around the legs for
-the sake of additional warmth. These were called _feminalia_ or
-_tibialia_ according as they covered the upper or lower part of the
-leg. Such persons might also use similar wrappings for the body
-(_ventralia_) and even for the throat (_focalia_), but all these were
-looked upon as the badges of senility or decrepitude and formed no
-part of the regular costume of sound men. It must be especially
-noticed that the Romans had nothing corresponding to our trousers or
-even long drawers, the _braccae_ or _bracae_ being a Gallic article
-that was not used at Rome until the time of the latest emperors. The
-phrase _nationes bracatae_ in classical times was a contemptuous
-expression for the Gauls in particular and barbarians in general.
-
-240. The Toga.--Of the outer garments or wraps the most ancient and
-the most important was the _toga_ (cf. _tegere_). Whence the Romans
-got it we do not know, but it goes back to the very earliest time of
-which tradition tells, and was the characteristic garment of the
-Romans for more than a thousand years. It was a heavy, white, woolen
-robe, enveloping the whole figure, falling to the feet, cumbrous but
-graceful and dignified in appearance. All its associations suggested
-formality. The Roman of old tilled his fields clad only in the
-_subligaculum_; in the privacy of his home or at his work the Roman of
-every age wore the comfortable, blouse-like _tunica_; but in the
-forum, in the _comitia_, in the courts, at the public games,
-everywhere that social forms were observed he appeared and had to
-appear in the toga. In the toga he assumed the responsibilities of
-citizenship (127), in the toga he took his wife from her father's
-house to his (78), in the toga he received his clients also toga-clad
-(182), in the toga he discharged his duties as a magistrate, governed
-his province, celebrated his triumph, and in the toga he was wrapped
-when he lay for the last time in his hall (198). No foreign nation
-had a robe of the same material, color, and arrangement; no foreigner
-was allowed to wear it, though he lived in Italy or even in Rome
-itself; even the banished citizen left the toga with his civil rights
-behind him. Vergil merely gave expression to the national feeling when
-he wrote the proud verse (Aen. I, 282):
-
- Romanos, rerum dominos, gentemque togatam.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: The Romans, lords of deeds, the race that wears the
-toga.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 84. TIBERIUS IN THE TOGA]
-
-241. Form and Arrangement.--The general appearance of the toga is
-known to every schoolboy; of few ancient garments are pictures so
-common and in general so good (Becker, p. 203; Guhl and Koner, p. 729;
-Baumeister, p. 1823; Schreiber, LXXXV, 8-10; Harper, Rich, and Smith,
-s.v.). They are derived from numerous statues of men clad in it, which
-have come down to us from ancient times, and we have besides full and
-careful descriptions of its shape and of the manner of wearing it in
-the works of writers who had worn it themselves. As a matter of fact,
-however, it has been found impossible to reconcile the descriptions in
-literature with the representations in art (Fig. 84) and scholars are
-by no means agreed as to the precise cut of the toga or the way it was
-put on. It is certain, however, that in its earlier form it was
-simpler, less cumbrous, and more closely fitted to the figure than in
-later times, and that even as early as the classical period its
-arrangement was so complicated that the man of fashion could not array
-himself in it without assistance.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 85. BACK OF TOGA]
-
-242. Scholars who lay the greater stress on the literary authorities
-describe the cut and arrangement of the toga about as follows: It
-consisted of one piece of cloth of semicircular cut, about five yards
-long by four wide, a certain portion of which was pressed into long
-narrow plaits. This cloth was doubled lengthwise, not down the center
-but so that one fold was deeper than the other. It was then thrown
-over the left shoulder in such a manner that the end in front reached
-to the ground, and the part behind (Fig. 85) was in length about twice
-a man's height. This end was then brought around under the right arm
-and again thrown over the left shoulder so as to cover the whole of
-the right side from the armpit to the calf. The broad folds in which
-it hung over were thus gathered together on the left shoulder. The
-part which crossed the breast diagonally was known as the _sinus_, or
-bosom. It was deep enough to serve as a pocket for the reception of
-small articles. According to this description the toga was in one
-piece and had no seams.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 86. CUT OF TOGA]
-
-243. Those who attempt the reconstruction of the toga wholly or
-chiefly from works of art find it impossible to reproduce on the
-living form the drapery seen on the statues, with a toga of one piece
-of goods or of a semicircular pattern. An experimental form is shown
-in Fig. 86, and resembles that of a lamp shade cut in two and
-stretched out to its full extent. The dotted line _GC_ is the straight
-edge of the goods; the heavy lines show the shape of the toga after it
-had been cut out, and had had sewed upon it the ellipse-like piece
-marked _FRAcba_. The dotted line _GE_ is of a length equivalent to the
-height of a man at the shoulder, and the other measurements are to be
-calculated proportionately. When the toga is placed on the figure the
-point _E_ must be on the left shoulder, with the point _G_ touching
-the ground in front. The point _F_ comes at the back of the neck, and
-as the larger part of the garment is allowed to fall behind the figure
-the points _L_ and _M_ will fall on the calves of the legs behind, the
-point _a_ under the right elbow, and the point _b_ on the stomach. The
-material is carried behind the back and under the right arm and then
-thrown over the left shoulder again. The point _c_ will fall on _E_,
-and the portion _OPCa_ will hang down the back to the ground, as shown
-in Fig. 85, 242. The part _FRA_ is then pulled over the right
-shoulder to cover the right side of the chest and form the _sinus_,
-and the part running from the left shoulder to the ground in front is
-pulled up out of the way of the feet, worked under the diagonal folds
-and allowed to fall out a little to the front. The front should then
-present an appearance similar to that shown in the figure in 241. It
-will be found in practice, however, that much of the grace of the toga
-must have been due to the trained _vestiplicus_, who kept it properly
-creased when it was not in use and carefully arranged each fold after
-his master had put it on. We are not told of any pins or tapes to hold
-it in place, but are told that the part falling from the left shoulder
-to the ground behind kept all in position by its own weight, and that
-this weight was sometimes increased by lead sewed in the hem.
-
-244. It is evident that in this fashionable toga the limbs were
-completely fettered, and that all rapid, not to say violent, motion
-was absolutely impossible. In other words the toga of the
-ultrafashionable in the time of Cicero was fit only for the formal,
-stately, ceremonial life of the city. It is easy to see, therefore,
-how it had come to be the emblem of peace, being too cumbrous for use
-in war, and how Cicero could sneer at the young dandies of his time
-for wearing "sails not togas." We can also understand the eagerness
-with which the Roman welcomed a respite from civic and social duties.
-Juvenal sighed for the freedom of the country, where only the dead had
-to wear the toga. Martial praises the unconventionality of the
-provinces for the same reason. Pliny makes it one of the attractions
-of his villa that no guest need wear the toga there. Its cost, too,
-made it all the more burdensome for the poor, and the working classes
-could scarcely have worn it at all.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 87. THE EARLIER TOGA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 88. THE CINCTUS GABINUS]
-
-245. The earlier toga must have been simpler by far, but no certain
-representation of it has come down to us. The Dresden statue, often
-used to illustrate its arrangement (Smith, Fig. 7, p. 848_b_;
-Schreiber LXXXV, 8; Marquardt, Fig. 2, p. 558; Baumeister, Fig. 1921),
-is more than doubtful, the garment being probably a Greek mantle of
-some sort. An approximate idea of it may be gained perhaps from a
-statue in Florence of an Etruscan orator (Fig. 87), which corresponds
-very closely with the descriptions of it in literary sources. At any
-rate it was possible for men to fight in it by tying the trailing ends
-around the body and drawing the back folds over the head. This was
-called the _cinctus Gabinus_, and long after the toga had ceased to be
-worn in war this _cinctus_ was used in certain ceremonial observances.
-It is shown in Fig. 88, though the toga is one of later times.
-
-246. Kinds of Togas.--The toga of the ordinary citizen was, like the
-tunic (238), of the natural color of the white wool of which it was
-made, and varied in texture, of course, with the quality of the wool.
-It was called _toga pura_ (or _virilis_, _libera_ 127). A dazzling
-brilliancy could be given to the toga by a preparation of fuller's
-chalk, and one so treated was called _toga splendens_ or _candida_. In
-such a toga all persons running for office arrayed themselves, and
-from it they were called _candidati_. The curule magistrates, censors,
-and dictators wore the _toga praetexta_, differing from the ordinary
-toga only in having a purple border. It was also worn by boys (127)
-and by the chief officers of the free towns and colonies. The _toga
-picta_ was wholly of purple covered with embroidery of gold, and was
-worn by the victorious general in his triumphal procession and later
-by the Emperors. The _toga pulla_ was simply a dingy toga worn by
-persons in mourning or threatened with some calamity, usually a
-reverse of political fortune. Persons assuming it were called
-_sordidati_ and were said _mutare vestem_. This _vestis mutatio_ was a
-common form of public demonstration of sympathy with a fallen leader.
-In this case curule magistrates contented themselves with merely
-laying aside the _toga praetexta_ for the _toga pura_, and only the
-lower orders wore the _toga pulla_.
-
-247. The Lacerna.--In Cicero's time there was just coming into
-fashionable use a mantle called _lacerna_, which seems to have been
-first used by soldiers and the lower classes and then adopted by their
-betters on account of its convenience. These wore it at first over the
-toga as a protection against dust and sudden showers. It was a woolen
-mantle, short, light, open at the sides, without sleeves, but fastened
-with a brooch or buckle on the right shoulder. It was so easy and
-comfortable that it began to be worn not over the toga but instead of
-it, and so generally that Augustus issued an edict forbidding it to be
-used in public assemblages of citizens. Under the later Emperors,
-however, it came into fashion again, and was the common outer garment
-at the theaters. It was made of various colors, dark naturally for the
-lower classes, white for formal occasions, but also of brighter hues.
-It was sometimes supplied with a hood (_cucullus_), which the wearer
-could pull over the head as a protection or a disguise. No
-representation of the _lacerna_ in art has come down to us that can be
-positively identified; that in Rich s.v. is very doubtful. The
-military cloak, first called the _trabea_, then _paludamentum_ and
-_sagum_, was much like the _lacerna_, but made of heavier material.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 89. THE PAENULA]
-
-248. The Paenula.--Older than the _lacerna_ and used by all sorts and
-conditions of men was the _paenula_ (Fig. 89), a heavy coarse wrap of
-wool, leather, or fur, used merely for protection against rain or
-cold, and therefore never a substitute for the toga or made of fine
-materials or bright colors. It seems to have varied in length and
-fullness, but to have been a sleeveless wrap, made in one piece with a
-hole in the middle, through which the wearer thrust his head. It was,
-therefore, classed with the _vestimenta clausa_, or closed garments,
-and must have been much like the modern poncho. It was drawn on over
-the head, like a tunic or sweater, and covered the arms, leaving them
-much less freedom than the _lacerna_ did. In those of some length
-there was a slit in front running from the waist down, and this
-enabled the wearer to hitch the cloak up over one shoulder, leaving
-one arm comparatively free, but at the same time exposing it to the
-weather. It was worn over either tunic or toga according to
-circumstances, and was the ordinary traveling habit of citizens of the
-better class. It was also commonly worn by slaves, and seems to have
-been furnished regularly to soldiers stationed in places where the
-climate was severe. Like the _lacerna_ it was sometimes supplied with
-a hood.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 90. SOLDIER WEARING THE ABOLLA]
-
-249. Other Wraps.--Of other articles included under the general term
-_amictus_ we know little more than the names. The _synthesis_ was a
-dinner dress worn at table over the tunic by the ultrafashionable, and
-sometimes dignified by the special name of _vestis cenatoria_, or
-_cenatorium_ alone. It was not worn out of the house except on the
-Saturnalia, and was usually of some bright color. Its shape is
-unknown. The _laena_ and _abolla_ were very heavy woolen cloaks, the
-latter (Fig. 90) being a favorite with poor people who had to make one
-garment do duty for two or three. It was used especially by
-professional philosophers, who were proverbially careless about their
-dress. One is thought to be worn by the man on the extreme left, in
-the picture of a school shown in 119. The _endormis_ was something
-like the modern bath robe, used by men after violent gymnastic
-exercise to keep from taking cold, and hardly belongs under the head
-of dress.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 91. SOLEAE]
-
-250. Footgear: the Soleae.--It may be set down as a rule that freemen
-did not appear in public at Rome with bare feet, except as nowadays
-under the compulsion of the direst poverty. Two styles of footwear
-were in use, slippers or sandals (_soleae_) and shoes (_calcei_). The
-slipper consisted essentially of a sole of leather or matting attached
-to the foot in various ways (see the several styles in Fig. 91).
-Custom limited its use to the house and it went characteristically
-with the tunic (237), when that was not covered by an outer garment.
-Oddly enough, it seems to us, the slippers were not worn at meals.
-Host and guests wore them into the dining-room, but as soon as they
-had taken their places on the couches (224) slaves removed the
-slippers from their feet and cared for them until the meal was over
-(152). Hence the phrase _soleas poscere_ came to mean "to prepare to
-take leave." When a guest went out to dinner in a _lectica_ (151) he
-wore the _soleae_, but if he walked he wore the regular out-door shoes
-(_calcei_) and had his slippers carried by a slave.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 92. ROMAN SHOES]
-
-251. The Calcei.--Out of doors the _calceus_ was always worn,
-although it was much heavier and less comfortable than the _solea_.
-Good form forbade the toga to be worn without the _calcei_, and they
-were worn also with all the other garments included under the word
-_amictus_. The _calceus_ was essentially our shoe, made on a last of
-leather, covering the upper part of the foot as well as protecting the
-sole, fastened with laces or straps. The higher classes had shoes
-peculiar to their rank. The shoe for senators is best known to us
-(_calceus senatorius_), and is shown in Fig. 92; but we know only its
-shape, not its color. It had a thick sole, was open on the inside at
-the ankle, and was fastened by wide straps which ran from the juncture
-of the sole and the upper, were wrapped around the leg and tied above
-the instep. The _mulleus_ or _calceus patricius_ was worn originally
-by patricians only, but later by all curule magistrates. It was shaped
-like the senator's shoe, was red in color like the fish from which it
-was named, and had an ivory or silver ornament of crescent shape
-(_lunula_) fastened on the outside of the ankle. We know nothing of
-the shoe worn by the knights. Ordinary citizens wore shoes that opened
-in front and were fastened by a strap of leather running from one side
-of the shoe near the top. They did not come up so high on the leg as
-those of the senators and were probably of uncolored leather. The
-poorer classes naturally wore shoes of coarser material, often of
-untanned leather (_perones_), and laborers and soldiers had half-boots
-(_caligae_) of the stoutest possible make, or wore wooden shoes. No
-stockings were worn by the Romans, but persons with tender feet might
-wrap them with _fasciae_ (239) to keep the shoes and boots from
-chafing them.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 93. THE CAUSIA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 94. THE PETASUS]
-
-252. Coverings for the Head.--Men of the upper classes in Rome had
-ordinarily no covering for the head. When they went out in bad weather
-they protected themselves, of course, with the _lacerna_ and
-_paenula_, and these, as we have seen (247, 248), were provided with
-hoods (_cuculli_). If they were caught without wraps in a sudden
-shower they made shift as best they could by pulling the toga up over
-the head, cf. Fig. 88 in 245. Persons of lower standing, especially
-workmen who were out of doors all day, wore a conical felt cap called
-the _pilleus_, see the illustration in 175. It is probable that this
-was a survival of what had been in prehistoric times an essential part
-of the Roman dress, for it was preserved among the insignia of the
-oldest priesthoods, the Pontifices, Flamines, and Salii, and figured
-in the ceremony of manumission. Out of the city, that is, while
-traveling or while in the country, the upper classes, too, protected
-the head, especially against the sun, with a broad-brimmed felt hat of
-foreign origin, the _causia_ or _petasus_. They are shown in Figs. 93
-and 94. They were worn in the city also by the old and feeble, and in
-later times by all classes in the theaters. In the house, of course,
-the head was left uncovered.
-
-253. The Hair and Beard.--The Romans in early times wore long hair
-and full beards, as did all uncivilized peoples. Varro tells us that
-professional barbers came first to Rome in the year 300 B.C., but we
-know that the razor and shears were used by the Romans long before
-history begins. Pliny says that the younger Scipio (died 129 B.C.) was
-the first of the Romans to shave every day, and the story may be true.
-People of wealth and position had the hair and beard kept in order at
-home by their own slaves (150), and these slaves, if skillful
-barbers, brought high prices in the market. People of the middle class
-went to public barber shops, and made them gradually places of general
-resort for the idle and the gossiping. But in all periods the hair and
-beard were allowed to grow as a sign of sorrow, and were the regular
-accompaniments of the mourning garb already mentioned (246). The very
-poor, too, went usually unshaven and unshorn, simply because this was
-the cheap and easy fashion.
-
-254. Styles varied with the years of the persons concerned. The hair
-of children, boys and girls alike, was allowed to grow long and hang
-around the neck and shoulders. When the boy assumed the toga of
-manhood the long locks were cut off, sometimes with a good deal of
-formality, and under the Empire they were often made an offering to
-some deity. In the classical period young men seem to have worn close
-clipped beards; at least Cicero jeers at those who followed Catiline
-for wearing full beards, and on the other hand declares that their
-companions who could show no signs of beard on their faces were worse
-than effeminate. Men of maturity wore the hair cut short and the face
-shaved clean. Most of the portraits that have come down to us show
-beardless men until well into the second century of our era, but after
-the time of Hadrian (117-138 A.D.) the full beard became fashionable.
-Figs. 2 to 11, 28-74, are arranged chronologically and will serve to
-show the changes in styles.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 95. SEAL RINGS]
-
-255. Jewelry.--The ring was the only article of jewelry worn by a
-Roman citizen after he reached the age of manhood (99), and good
-taste limited him to a single ring. It was originally of iron, and
-though often set with a precious stone and made still more valuable by
-the artistic cutting of the stone, it was always worn more for use
-than ornament. The ring was in fact in almost all cases a seal ring,
-having some device upon it (Fig. 95) which the wearer imprinted in
-melted wax when he wished to acknowledge some document as his own, or
-to secure cabinets and coffers against prying curiosity. The iron ring
-was worn generally until late in the Empire, even after the gold ring
-had ceased to be the special privilege of the knights and had become
-merely the badge of freedom. Even the engagement ring (71) was
-usually of iron, the setting giving it its material value, although we
-are told that this particular ring was often the first article of gold
-that the young girl possessed.
-
-256. Of course there were not wanting men as ready to violate the
-canons of taste in the matter of rings as in the choice of their
-garments or the style of wearing the hair and beard. We need not be
-surprised, then, to read of one having sixteen rings, or of another
-having six for each finger. One of Martial's acquaintances had a ring
-so large that the poet advised him to wear it on his leg, and Juvenal
-tells us of an upstart who wore light rings in the summer and heavy
-rings in the winter. It is a more surprising fact that the ring was
-worn on the joint, not pressed down as far as possible on the finger,
-as we wear them now. If two were worn on the same finger they were
-worn on separate joints, not touching each other. This fashion must
-have seriously interfered with the movement of the finger.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 96. THE MAMILLARE]
-
-257. Dress of Women.--It has been remarked already (234) that the
-dress of men and women differed less in ancient than in modern times,
-and we shall find that in the classical period at least the principal
-articles worn were practically the same, however much they differed in
-name and probably in the fineness of their materials. At this period
-the dress of the matron consisted in general of three articles: the
-_tunica interior_, the _tunica exterior_ or _stola_, and the _palla_.
-Beneath the _tunica interior_ there was nothing like the modern
-corset-waist or corset, intended to modify the figure, but a band of
-soft leather (_mamillare_) was sometimes passed around the body under
-the breasts for a support (Fig. 96), and the _subligaculum_ (235) was
-also worn by women.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 97. THE STROPHIUM]
-
-258. The Tunica Interior.--The _tunica interior_ did not differ much
-in material or shape from the tunic for men already described (236).
-It fitted the figure more closely perhaps than the man's, was
-sometimes supplied with sleeves, and as it reached only to the knee
-did not require a belt to keep it from interfering with the free use
-of the limbs. A soft sash-like band of leather (_strophium_), however,
-was sometimes worn over it, close under the breasts, but merely to
-support them, and in this case we may suppose that the _mamillare_ was
-discarded. For this sash (Fig. 97) the more general terms _zona_ and
-_cingulum_ are sometimes used. This tunic was not usually worn alone,
-even in the house, except by young girls.
-
-259. The Stola.--Over the _tunica interior_ was worn the _tunica
-exterior_, or _stola_, the distinctive dress of the Roman matron
-(91). It differed in several respects from the tunic worn as a
-house-dress by men. It was open at both sides above the waist and
-fastened on the shoulders by brooches. It was much longer, reaching to
-the feet when ungirded and having in addition a wide border or flounce
-(_instita_) sewed to the lower hem. There was also a border around the
-neck, which seems to have been usually of purple. The _stola_ was
-sleeveless if the _tunica interior_ had sleeves, but if the tunic
-itself was sleeveless the _stola_ had them, so that the arm was always
-protected. These sleeves, however, whether in tunic or _stola_, were
-open on the front of the upper arm and only loosely clasped with
-brooches or buttons, often of great beauty and value.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 98. THE ZONA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 99. STATUE OF THE YOUNGER FAUSTINA]
-
-260. Owing to its great length the _stola_ was always worn with a
-girdle (_zona_) above the hips (Fig. 98), and through it the _stola_
-itself was pulled until the lower edge of the _instita_ barely cleared
-the floor. This gave the fullness about the waist seen in the statue
-of Faustina (Fig. 99), in which the cut of the sleeves can also be
-seen. The _zona_ was usually entirely hidden by the overhanging folds.
-The _stola_ was the distinctive dress of the matron, as has been said,
-and it is probable that the _instita_ was its distinguishing feature;
-that is, the _tunica exterior_ of the unmarried woman had no flounce
-or border, though it probably reached to the floor.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 100. STATUE FROM HERCULANEUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 101. STATUE OF LIVIA]
-
-261. The Palla.--The _palla_ was a shawl-like wrap for use out of
-doors. It was a rectangular piece of woolen goods, as simple as
-possible in its form, but worn in the most diverse fashions in
-different times. In the classical period it seems to have been wrapped
-around the figure, much as the toga was. One-third was thrown over the
-left shoulder from behind and allowed to fall to the feet. The rest
-was carried around the back and brought forward either over or under
-the right arm at the pleasure of the wearer. The end was then thrown
-back over the left shoulder after the style of the toga, as in the
-marble statue from Herculaneum shown in Fig. 100, or allowed to hang
-loosely over the left arm, as in the statue of Livia (Fig. 101). It
-was possible also to pull the _palla_ up over the head, and this
-method of using it is supposed by some scholars to be shown in the
-statue of Livia, while others see in the covering of the head some
-sort of a veil.
-
-262. Shoes and Slippers.--What has been said of the footgear of men
-(250, 251) applies also to that of women. Slippers (_soleae_) were
-worn in the house, differing from those of men only in being
-embellished as much as possible, sometimes even with pearls. An idea
-of their appearance may be had from the statue of Faustina (259).
-Shoes (_calcei_) were insisted upon for out-door use, and differed
-from those of men, as they chiefly differ from them now, in being made
-of finer and softer leather. They were often white, or gilded, or of
-bright colors, and those intended for winter wear had sometimes cork
-soles.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 102. STYLES OF DRESSING THE HAIR]
-
-263. Dressing of the Hair.--The Roman woman regularly wore no hat,
-but covered the head when necessary with the _stola_ or with a veil.
-Much attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, the fashions
-being as numerous and as inconstant as they are to-day. For young
-girls the favorite arrangement, perhaps, was to comb the hair back and
-gather it into a knot (_nodus_) on the back of the neck. For matrons
-it will be sufficient to call attention to the figures already given
-(77, 259, 261), and to show from statues five styles (Fig. 102) worn
-at different times under the Empire, all belonging to ladies of the
-court.
-
-264. For keeping the hair in position pins were used of ivory,
-silver, and gold, often mounted with jewels. Nets (_reticula_) and
-ribbons (_vittae_, _taeniae_, _fasciolae_) were also worn, but combs
-were not made a part of the head-dress. The Roman woman of fashion did
-not scruple to color her hair, the golden-red color of the Greek hair
-being especially admired, or to use false hair, which had become an
-article of commercial importance early in the Empire. Mention should
-also be made of the garlands (_coronae_) of flowers, or of flowers and
-foliage, and of the coronets of pearls and other precious stones that
-were used to supplement the natural or artificial beauty of the hair.
-These are illustrated in Fig. 102 above.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 103. TOILET ARTICLES]
-
-265. The woman's hairdresser was a female slave (150), and Juvenal
-tells us that she suffered cruelly from the impatience of her mistress
-(158), who found the long hairpins shown in the figure a convenient
-instrument of punishment, The _ornatrix_ was an adept in all the
-tricks of the toilet already mentioned, and besides used all sorts of
-unguents, oils, and tonics to make the hair soft and lustrous and to
-cause it to grow abundantly. In Fig. 103 are shown a number of common
-toilet articles: _a_, _b_, _c_, _h_, _i_, and _k_ are hairpins, _d_
-and _g_ are hand mirrors made of highly polished metal, _f_ is a comb,
-and _e_ a box for pomatum or powder.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 104. THE PARASOL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 105. FANS (See also Figure 73, 226)]
-
-266. Accessories.--The parasol (_umbraculum_, _umbella_) was commonly
-used by women at Rome at least as early as the close of the Republic,
-and was all the more necessary because they wore no hats or bonnets.
-The parasols were usually carried for them by attendants (151). From
-vase paintings we learn that they were much like our own in shape
-(Fig. 104, see also Smith and Harper, s.v.; Baumeister, p. 1684;
-Schreiber XCV, 9), and could be closed when not in use. The fan
-(_flabellum_) was used from the earliest times and was made in various
-ways (Fig. 105); sometimes of wings of birds, sometimes of thin sheets
-of wood attached to a handle, sometimes of peacock's feathers
-artistically arranged, sometimes of linen stretched over a frame.
-These fans were not used by the woman herself, being always handled by
-an attendant who was charged with the task of keeping her cool and
-untroubled by flies (see Fig. 73 in 226). Handkerchiefs (_sudaria_),
-the finest made of linen, were used by both sexes, but only for wiping
-the perspiration from the face or hands. For keeping the palms cool
-and dry ladies seem also to have used glass balls, or balls of amber,
-the latter, perhaps, for the fragrance also.
-
-267. Jewelry.--The Roman woman was passionately fond of jewelry, and
-incalculable sums were spent upon the adornment of her person. Rings,
-brooches, pins, jeweled buttons, and coronets have been mentioned
-already, and besides these bracelets, necklaces, and ear-rings or
-pendants were worn from the earliest times by all who could afford
-them. Not only were they made of costly materials, but their value was
-also enhanced by the artistic workmanship that was lavished upon them.
-Almost all the precious stones that are known to us were familiar to
-the Romans and were to be found in the jewel-casket (230) of the
-wealthy lady. The pearl, however, seems to have been in all times the
-favorite. No adequate description of these articles can be given here;
-no illustrations can do them justice. It will have to suffice that
-Suetonius says that Caesar paid six million sesterces (nearly
-$300,000) for a single pearl, which he gave to Servilia, the mother of
-Marcus Brutus, and that Lollia Paulina, the wife of the Emperor
-Caligula, possessed a single set of pearls and emeralds which is said
-by Pliny the elder to have been valued at forty million sesterces
-(nearly $2,000,000).
-
-268. Dress of Children and Slaves.--The picture from Herculaneum
-(119) shows that schoolboys wore the _subligaculum_ and _tunica_, and
-it is probable that no other articles of clothing were worn by either
-boys or girls of the poorer classes. Besides these, children of
-well-to-do parents wore the _toga praetexta_ (246), which the girl
-laid aside on the eve of her marriage (76) and the boy when he
-reached the age of manhood (127). Slaves were furnished a tunic,
-wooden shoes, and in stormy weather a cloak, probably the _paenula_
-(248). This must have been the ordinary garb of the poorer citizens
-of the working classes, for they would have had little use for the
-toga, at least in later times, and could hardly have afforded so
-expensive a garment.
-
-269. Materials.--Fabrics of wool, linen, cotton, and silk were used
-by the Romans. For clothes woolen goods were the first to be used, and
-naturally so, for the early inhabitants of Latium were shepherds, and
-woolen garments best suited the climate. Under the Republic wool was
-almost exclusively used for the garments of both men and women, as we
-have seen, though the _subligaculum_ was frequently, and the woman's
-tunic sometimes, made of linen. The best native wools came from
-Calabria and Apulia, that from near Tarentum being the best of all.
-Native wools did not suffice, however, to meet the great demand, and
-large quantities were imported. Linen goods were early manufactured in
-Italy, but were used chiefly for other purposes than clothing until in
-the Empire, and only in the third century of our era did men begin to
-make general use of them. The finest linen came from Egypt, and was as
-soft and transparent as silk. Little is positively known about the use
-of cotton, because the word _carbasus_, the genuine Indian name for
-it, was used by the Romans for linen goods also and when we meet the
-word we can not always be sure of the material meant. Silk, imported
-from China directly or indirectly, was first used for garments under
-Tiberius, and then only in a mixture of linen and silk (_vestes
-sericae_). These were forbidden for the use of men in his reign, but
-the law was powerless against the love of luxury. Garments of pure
-silk were first used in the third century.
-
-270. Colors.--White was the prevailing color of all articles of dress
-throughout the Republic, in most cases the natural color of the wool,
-as we have seen (246). The lower classes, however, selected for their
-garments shades that required cleansing less frequently, and found
-them, too, in the undyed wool. From Canusium came a brown wool with a
-tinge of red, from Baetica in Spain a light yellow, from Mutina a gray
-or a gray mixed with white, from Pollentia in Liguria the dark gray
-(_pulla_) used, as has been said (246), for public mourning. Other
-shades from red to deep black were furnished by foreign wools. Almost
-the only artificial color used for garments under the Republic was
-purple, which seems to have varied from what we call crimson, made
-from the native trumpet-shell (_bucinum_ or _murex_), to the true
-Tyrian purple. The former was brilliant and cheap, but liable to fade.
-Mixed with the dark _purpura_ in different proportions, it furnished a
-variety of permanent tints. One of the most popular of these tints,
-violet, made the wool cost some $20 a pound, while the genuine Tyrian
-cost at least ten times as much. Probably the stripes worn by the
-knights and senators on the tunics and togas were much nearer our
-crimson than purple. Under the Empire the garments worn by women were
-dyed in various colors, and so, too, perhaps, the fancier articles
-worn by men, such as the _lacerna_ (247) and the _synthesis_ (249).
-The _trabea_ of the augurs seems to have been striped with scarlet and
-purple, the _paludamentum_ of the general to have been at different
-times white, scarlet, and purple, and the robe of the _triumphator_
-purple.
-
-271. Manufacture.--In the old days the wool was spun at home by the
-maidservants working under the eye of the mistress (199), and woven
-into cloth on the family loom, and this was kept up throughout the
-Republic by some of the proudest families. Augustus wore these
-home-made garments. By the end of the Republic, however, this was no
-longer general, and while much of the native wool was worked up on the
-farms by the slaves directed by the _vilica_ (148), cloth of any
-desired quality could be bought in the open market. It was formerly
-supposed that the garments came from the loom ready to wear, but this
-is now known to have been incorrect. We have seen that the tunic was
-made of two separate pieces sewed together (236), that the toga had
-probably to be fitted as carefully as a modern coat (243), and that
-even the coarse _paenula_ (248) could not have been woven or knitted
-in one piece. But ready-made garments were on sale in the towns as
-early as the time of Cato, though perhaps of the cheaper qualities
-only, and in the Empire the trade reached large proportions. It is
-remarkable that with the vast numbers of slaves in the _familia
-urbana_ (149 f.) it never became usual to have soiled garments
-cleansed at home. All garments showing traces of use were sent by the
-well-to-do to the fullers (_fullones_) to be washed (Fig. 106),
-whitened (or re-dyed), and pressed. The fact that almost all were of
-woolen materials made skill and care all the more necessary.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 106. FULLERS AT WORK]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FOOD AND MEALS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 264-268, 300-340, 414-465; Voigt, 327-329,
-401-404; Gll, 311-454; Guhl and Koner, 747-759, 702-704; Friedlnder,
-III, 29-56; Ramsay, 490-501; Pauly-Wissowa, _cena_, _comissatio_;
-Smith, Harper, Rich, _cena_, _comissatio_, _olea_ (_oliva_), _vinum_;
-Baumeister, 845, 2086; Lbker, 724 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 256-260, 267-270.
-
-
-272. Natural Conditions.--Italy is blessed above all the other
-countries of central Europe with the natural conditions that go to
-make an abundant and varied supply of food. The soil is rich and
-composed of different elements in different parts of the country. The
-rainfall is abundant, and rivers and smaller streams are numerous. The
-line of greatest length runs nearly north and south, but the climate
-depends little upon latitude, being modified by surrounding bodies of
-water, by mountain ranges, and by prevailing winds. These agencies in
-connection with the varying elevation of the land itself produce such
-widely different conditions that somewhere within the confines of
-Italy almost all the grains and fruits of the temperate and subtropic
-zones find the soil and climate most favorable to their growth.
-
-273. The early inhabitants of the peninsula, the Italian peoples,
-seem to have left for the Romans the task of developing and improving
-these means of subsistence. Wild fruits, nuts, and flesh have always
-been the support of uncivilized peoples, and must have been so for the
-shepherds who laid the foundations of Rome. The very word _pecunia_
-(from _pecus_; cf. _peculium_, 162) shows that herds of domestic
-animals were the first source of Roman wealth. But other words show
-just as clearly that the cultivation of the soil was understood by the
-Romans in very early times: the names Fabius, Cicero, Piso, and Caepio
-are no less ancient than Porcius, Asinius, Vitellius, and Ovidius.[1]
-Cicero puts into the mouth of the elder Cato the statement that to the
-farmer the garden was a second meat supply, but long before Cato's
-time meat had ceased to be the chief article of food. Grain and grapes
-and olives furnished subsistence for all who did not live to eat.
-These gave the wine that maketh glad the heart of man, and oil to make
-his face to shine, and bread that strengtheneth man's heart. On these
-three abundant products of the soil the mass of the people of Italy
-lived of old as they still live to-day. Something will be said of each
-below, after less important products have been considered.
-
-[Footnote 1: The words are connected respectively with _faba_, a bean,
-_cicer_, a chick-pea, _pistor_, a miller, _caepe_, an onion, _porcus_,
-a pig, _asinus_, an ass, _vitellus_, a calf, and _ovis_, a sheep.]
-
-274. Fruits.--Besides the olive and the grape, the apple, pear, plum,
-and quince were either native to Italy or were introduced in
-prehistoric times. Careful attention had long been given to their
-cultivation, and by Cicero's time Italy was covered with orchards and
-all these fruits were abundant and cheap in their seasons, used by all
-sorts and conditions of men. By this time, too, had begun the
-introduction of new fruits from foreign lands and the improvement of
-native varieties. Great statesmen and generals gave their names to new
-and better sorts of apples and pears, and vied with each other in
-producing fruits out of season by hothouse culture (145). Every fresh
-extension of Roman territory brought new fruits and nuts into Italy.
-Among the last were the walnut, hazelnut, filbert, almond, and
-pistachio; the almond after Cato's time and the pistachio not until
-that of Tiberius. Among the fruits were the peach (_malum Persicum_),
-the apricot (_malum Armeniacum_), the pomegranate (_malum Punicum_ or
-_granatum_), the cherry (_cerasus_), brought by Lucullus from the town
-Cerasus in Pontus, and the lemon (_citrus_), not grown in Italy until
-the third century of our era. And besides the introduction of fruits
-for culture large quantities were imported for food, either dried or
-otherwise preserved. The orange, however, strange as it seems to us,
-was not grown by the Romans.
-
-275. Garden Produce.--The garden did not yield to the orchard in the
-abundance and variety of its contributions to the supply of food. We
-read of artichokes, asparagus, beans, beets, cabbages, carrots,
-chicory, cucumbers, garlic, lentils, melons, onions, peas, the poppy,
-pumpkins, radishes, and turnips, to mention those only whose names are
-familiar to us all. It will be noticed, however, that the vegetables
-most highly prized by us, perhaps, the potato and tomato, were not
-known to the Romans. Of those mentioned the oldest seem to have been
-the bean and the onion, as shown by the names Fabius and Caepio
-already mentioned (273), but the latter came gradually to be looked
-upon as unrefined and the former to be considered too heavy a food
-except for persons engaged in the hardest toil. Cato pronounced the
-cabbage the finest vegetable known, and the turnip figures in the
-well-known anecdote of Manius Curius (299).
-
-276. The Roman gardener gave great attention, too, to the raising of
-green stuffs that could be used for salads. Among these the sorts most
-often mentioned are the cress and lettuce, with which we are familiar,
-and the mallow, no longer used for food. Plants in great variety were
-cultivated for seasoning. The poppy was eaten with honey as a dessert,
-or was sprinkled over bread in the oven. Anise, cumin, fennel, mint,
-and mustard were raised everywhere. And besides these seasonings that
-were found in every kitchen garden, spices were imported in large
-quantities from the east, and the rich imported vegetables of larger
-sizes or finer quality than could be raised at home. Fresh vegetables
-like fresh fruits could not be brought in those days from great
-distances.
-
-277. Meats.--Besides the pork, beef, and mutton that we still use the
-Roman farmer had goatsflesh at his disposal, and all these meats were
-sold in the towns. Goatsflesh was considered the poorest of all, and
-was used by the lower classes only. Beef had been eaten by the Romans
-from the earliest times, but its use was a mark of luxury until very
-late in the Empire. Under the Republic the ordinary citizen ate beef
-only on great occasions when he had offered a steer or cow to the gods
-in sacrifice. The flesh then furnished a banquet for his family and
-friends, the heart, liver, and lungs (called collectively the _exta_)
-were the share of the priest, and the rest was consumed on the altar.
-Probably the great size of the carcass had something to do with the
-rarity of its use at a time when meat could be kept fresh only in the
-coldest weather; at any rate we must think of the Romans as using the
-cow for dairy purposes and the ox for draft rather than for food.
-
-278. Pork was widely used by rich and poor alike, and was considered
-the choicest of all domestic meats. The very language testifies to the
-important place it occupied in the economy of the larder, for no other
-animal has so many words to describe it in its different functions.
-Besides the general term _sus_ we find _porcus_, _porca_, _verres_,
-_aper_, _scrofa_, _maialis_, and _nefrens_. In the religious ceremony
-of the _suovetaurilia_ (_sus_ + _ovis_ + _taurus_) it will be noticed
-that the swine has the first place, coming before the sheep and the
-bull. The vocabulary describing the parts used for food is equally
-rich; there are words for no less than half a dozen kinds of sausages,
-for example, with pork as their basis. We read, too, of fifty
-different ways of cooking pork.
-
-279. Fowl and Game.--All the common domestic fowls, chickens, ducks,
-geese, and pigeons, were used by the Romans for food, and besides
-these the wealthy raised various sorts of wild fowl for the table, in
-the game preserves that have been mentioned (145). Among these were
-cranes, grouse, partridges, snipe, thrushes, and woodcock. In Cicero's
-time the peacock was most highly esteemed, having at the feast much
-the same place of honor as the turkey has with us, but costing as much
-as $10 each. Wild animals were also bred for food in similar
-preserves, the hare and the wild boar being the favorites. The latter
-was served whole upon the table as in feudal times. As a contrast in
-size may be mentioned the dormouse (_glis_), which was thought a great
-delicacy.
-
-280. Fish.--The rivers of Italy and the surrounding seas must have
-furnished always a great variety of fish, but in early times fish was
-not much used as food by the Romans. By the end of the Republic,
-however, tastes had changed, and no article of food brought higher
-prices than the rarer sorts of fresh fish. Salt fish was exceedingly
-cheap and was imported in many forms from almost all the Mediterranean
-ports. One dish especially, _tyrotarichus_, made of salt fish, eggs,
-and cheese, and therefore something like our codfish balls, is
-mentioned by Cicero in about the same way as we speak of hash. Fresh
-fish were all the more expensive because they could be transported
-only while alive. Hence the rich constructed fish ponds on their
-estates, a Marcus Licinius Crassus setting the example in 92 B.C., and
-both fresh-water and salt-water fish were raised for the table. The
-names of the favorite sorts mean little to us, but we find the mullet
-(_mullus_; see 251) and a kind of turbot (_rhombus_) bringing high
-prices, and oysters (_ostreae_) were as popular as they are now.
-
-281. Before passing to the more important matters of bread, wine, and
-oil, it may be well to mention a few articles that are still in
-general use. The Romans used freely the products of the dairy, milk,
-cream, curds, whey, and cheese. They drank the milk of sheep and goats
-as well as that of cows, and made cheese of the three kinds of milk.
-The cheese from ewes' milk was thought more digestible though less
-palatable than that made of cows' milk, while cheese from goats' milk
-was more palatable but less digestible. It is remarkable that they had
-no knowledge of butter except us a plaster for wounds. Honey took the
-place of sugar on the table and in cooking, for the Romans had only a
-botanical knowledge of the sugar cane. Salt was at first obtained by
-the evaporation of sea-water, but was afterwards mined. Its
-manufacture was a monopoly of the government, and care was taken
-always to keep the price low. It was used not only for seasoning, but
-also as a preservative agent. Vinegar was made from grape juice. In
-the list of articles of food unknown to the Romans we must put tea and
-coffee along with the orange, tomato, potato, butter, and sugar
-already mentioned.
-
-282. Cereals.--The word _frumentum_[2] was a general term applied to
-any of the many sorts of grain that were grown for food. Of those now
-in use barley, oats, rye, and wheat were known to the Romans, though
-rye was not cultivated and oats served only as feed for cattle. Barley
-was not much used, for it was thought to lack nutriment, and therefore
-to be unfit for laborers. In very ancient times another grain, spelt
-(_far_), had been grown extensively, but it had gradually gone out of
-use except for the sacrificial cake that had given its name to the
-confarreate ceremony of marriage (82). In classical times wheat was
-the staple grain grown for food, not differing much from that which we
-use to-day. It was usually planted in the fall, though on some soils
-it would mature as a spring wheat. After the farming land of Italy was
-diverted to other purposes (parks, pleasure grounds, game preserves:
-see 145, 146), wheat had to be imported from the provinces, first
-from Sicily, then from Africa and Egypt, the home supply being
-inadequate to the needs of the teeming population.
-
-[Footnote 2: The word _frumentum_ occurs fifty-five times in the
-"Gallic War," meaning any kind of grain that happened to be grown for
-food in the country in which Caesar was campaigning at the time. The
-word "corn" used to translate it in our school editions is the worst
-possible, because to the schoolboy the word "corn" means a particular
-kind of grain, and a kind at that which was unknown to the Romans. The
-general word "grain" is much better for translation purposes.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 107. POUNDING GRAIN]
-
-283. Preparation of the Grain.--In the earliest times the grain
-(_far_) had not been ground, but merely pounded in a mortar (Fig.
-107). The meal was then mixed with water and made into a sort of
-porridge (_puls_, whence our word "poultice"), which long remained the
-national dish, something like the oatmeal of Scotland. Plautus (died
-184 B.C.) jestingly refers to his countrymen as "pulse-eaters." The
-persons who crushed the grain were called _pinsitores_ or _pistores_,
-whence the cognomen Piso (273) is said to be derived, and in later
-times the bakers were also called _pistores_, because they ground the
-grain as well as baked the bread. In the ruins of bakeries we find
-mills as regularly as ovens. See the illustration in 285.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 108. SECTION OF MILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 109. A POMPEIAN MILL WITHOUT ITS FRAME-WORK]
-
-284. The grinding of the grain into regular flour was done in a mill
-(_mola_). This consisted of three parts, the lower millstone (_meta_),
-the upper (_catillus_), and the frame-work that surrounded and
-supported the latter and furnished the means to turn it upon the
-_meta_. All these parts are shown distinctly in the cut (Fig. 108; see
-also Rich, Harper, and Smith under _mola_; Guhl and Koner, p. 774;
-Schreiber LXVII; Baumeister, p. 933), and require little explanation.
-The _meta_ was, as the name suggests, a cone-shaped stone (_A_)
-resting on a bed of masonry (_B_) with a raised rim, between which and
-the lower edge of the _meta_ the flour was collected. In the upper
-part of the _meta_ a beam (_C_) was mortised, ending above in an iron
-pin or pivot (_D_) on which hung and turned the frame-work that
-supported the _catillus_. The _catillus_ (_E_) itself was shaped
-something like an hourglass, or two funnels joined at the neck. The
-upper funnel served as a hopper into which the grain was poured; the
-lower funnel fitted closely over the _meta_, the distance between them
-being regulated by the length of the pin, mentioned above, according
-to the fineness of the flour desired. The mill without frame-work is
-shown in Fig. 109.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 110. HORSE AND MILL]
-
-285. The frame-work was very strong and massive on account of the
-heavy weight that was suspended from it. The beams used for turning
-the mill were fitted into holes in the narrow part of the _catillus_
-as shown in the cut. The power required to do the grinding was
-furnished by horses or mules attached to the beams (Fig. 110), or by
-slaves pushing against them. This last method was often used as a
-punishment, as we have seen (170, 148). Of the same form but much
-smaller were the hand mills used by soldiers for grinding the
-_frumentum_ furnished them as rations. Under the Empire water mills
-were introduced, but they are hardly referred to in literature.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 111. BAKERY WITH MILLS]
-
-286. The transition from the ancient porridge (283) to bread baked
-in the modern fashion must have been through the medium of thin cakes
-baked in or over the fire. We do not know when bread baked in ovens
-came into use. Bakers (283) as representatives of a trade do not go
-back beyond 171 B.C., but long before this time, of course, the family
-bread had been made by the _mater familias_, or by a slave under her
-supervision. After public bakeries were once established it became
-less and less usual for bread to be made in private houses in the
-towns. Only the most pretentious of the city mansions had ovens
-attached, as shown by the ruins. In the country, on the other hand,
-the older custom was always retained (148). Under Trajan (98-118) it
-became the custom to distribute bread to the people daily, instead of
-grain once a month, and the bakers were organized into a guild
-(_corpus_, _collegium_), and as a corporation enjoyed certain
-privileges and immunities. In Fig. 111 are shown the ruins of a
-Pompeian bakery with several mills in connection with it.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 112. OVEN FOR BREAD]
-
-287. Breadmaking.--After the flour collected about the edge of the
-_meta_ (284) had been sifted, water and salt were added and the dough
-was kneaded in a trough by hand or by a simple machine shown in the
-cut in Schreiber LXVII. Yeast was added as nowadays and the bread was
-baked in an oven much like those still found in parts of Europe. One
-preserved in the ruins of Pompeii is shown in the cut (Fig. 112): at
-_a_ is the oven proper, in which a fire was built, the draft being
-furnished by the openings at _d_. The surrounding chamber, _b_, is
-intended to retain the heat after the fire (usually of charcoal) had
-been raked out into the ashpit, _e_, and the vents closed. The letter
-_f_ marks a receptacle for water, which seems to have been used for
-moistening the bread while baking. After the oven had been heated to
-the proper temperature and the fire raked out, the loaves were put in,
-the vents closed, and the bread left to bake.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 113. SALESROOM OF BAKERY]
-
-288. There were several qualities of bread, varying with the sort of
-grain, the setting of the millstones (284) and the fineness of the
-sieves (287). The very best, made of pure wheat-flour, was called
-_panis siligneus_; that made of coarse flour, of flour and bran, or of
-bran alone was called _panis plebeius_, _castrensis_, _sordidus_,
-_rusticus_, etc. The loaves were circular and rather flat--some have
-been found in the ruins of Pompeii--and had their surface marked off
-by lines drawn from the center into four or more parts. The wall
-painting (Fig. 113) of a salesroom of a bakery, also found in Pompeii,
-gives a good idea of the appearance of the bread. Various kinds of
-cakes and confections were also sold at these shops.
-
-289. The Olive.--Next in importance to the wheat came the olive. It
-was introduced into Italy from Greece, and from Italy has spread
-through all the Mediterranean countries; but in modern as well as in
-ancient times the best olives are those of Italy. The olive was an
-important article of food merely as a fruit, being eaten both fresh
-and preserved in various ways, but it found its significant place in
-the domestic economy of the Romans in the form of the olive oil with
-which we are familiar. It is the value of the oil that has caused the
-cultivation of the olive to become so general in southern Europe, and
-it is claimed that its use is constantly widening, extending
-especially northward, where wine and oil are said to be supplanting
-the native beer and butter. Many varieties were known to the Romans,
-requiring different climates and soils and adapted to different uses.
-In general it may be said that the larger berries were better suited
-for eating than for oil.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 114. PICKING OLIVES]
-
-290. The olive was eaten fresh as it ripened and was also preserved
-in various ways. The ripe olives were sprinkled with salt and left
-untouched for five days; the salt was then shaken off, and the olives
-dried in the sun. They were also preserved sweet without salt in
-boiled must (296). Half ripe olives were picked (Fig. 114) with their
-stems and covered over in jars with the best quality of oil; in this
-way they are said to have retained for more than a year the flavor of
-the fresh fruit. Green olives were preserved whole in strong brine,
-the form in which we know them now, or were beaten into a mass and
-preserved with spices and vinegar. The preparation _epityrum_ was made
-by taking the fruit in any of the three stages, removing the stones,
-chopping up the pulp, seasoning it with vinegar, coriander seeds,
-cumin, fennel, and mint, and covering the mixture in jars with oil
-enough to exclude the air. The result was a salad that was eaten with
-cheese.
-
-291. Olive Oil.--The oil was used for several purposes. It was
-employed most anciently to anoint the body after bathing, especially
-by athletes; it was used as a vehicle for perfumes, the Romans knowing
-nothing of distillation by means of alcohol; it was burned in lamps
-(228); it was an indispensable article of food. As a food it was
-employed as butter is now in cooking or as a relish or dressing in its
-natural state. The olive when subjected to pressure yields two fluids.
-The first to flow (_amurca_) is dark and bitter, having the
-consistency of water. It was largely used as a fertilizer, but not as
-a food. The second, which flows after greater pressure, is the oil
-(_oleum_, _oleum olivum_). The best oil was made from olives not fully
-ripe, but the largest quantity was yielded by the ripened fruit.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 115. OLIVE MILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 116. VAULT FOR STORING OIL]
-
-292. The olives were picked from the tree (Fig. 114), those that fell
-of their own accord being thought inferior (160), and were spread
-upon sloping platforms in order that a part of the _amurca_ might flow
-out by itself. Here the fruit remained until a slight fermentation
-took place. It was then subjected to the action of a machine (Fig.
-115) that bruised and pressed it. The oil that flowed out was caught
-in a jar and from it ladled into a receptacle (_labrum fictile_),
-where it was allowed to settle, the _amurca_ and other impurities
-falling to the bottom. The oil was then skimmed off into another like
-receptacle and again allowed to settle, the process being repeated (as
-often as thirty times if necessary) until all impurities had been left
-behind. The best oil was made by subjecting the berries at first to a
-gentle pressure only. The bruised pulp was then taken out, separated
-from the stones or pits, and pressed a second or even a third time,
-the quality becoming poorer each time. The oil was kept in jars which
-were glazed on the inside with wax or gum to prevent absorption, the
-covers were carefully secured and the jars stored away in vaults (Fig.
-116).
-
-293. Grapes.--Grapes were eaten fresh from the vines and were also
-dried in the sun and kept as raisins, but they owed their real
-importance in Italy as elsewhere to the wine made from them. The vine
-was not native to Italy, as until recently it was supposed to be, but
-was introduced, probably from Greece, long before history begins. The
-earliest name for Italy known to the Greeks was _Oenotria_, "the land
-of the vine-pole," and very ancient legends ascribe to Numa
-restrictions upon the use of wine. It is probable that up to the time
-of the Gracchi wine was rare and expensive. The quantity produced
-gradually increased as the cultivation of cereals declined (146), but
-the quality long remained inferior, all the choice wines being
-imported from Greece and the east. By Cicero's time, however,
-attention was being given to viticulture and to the scientific making
-of wines, and by the time of Augustus vintages were produced that vied
-with the best brought in from abroad. Pliny, writing about the middle
-of the first century of our era, says that of the eighty really choice
-wines then known to the Romans two-thirds were produced in Italy, and
-Arrian of about the same time says that Italian wines were famous as
-far away as India.
-
-294. Viticulture.--Grapes could be grown almost anywhere in Italy,
-but the best wines were made south of Rome within the confines of
-Latium and Campania. The cities of Praeneste, Velitrae, and Formiae
-were famous for the wines grown on the sunny slopes of the Alban
-hills. A little farther south, near Terracina, was the _ager
-Caecubus_, where was produced the Caecuban wine, pronounced by
-Augustus the noblest of all. Then comes Mt. Massicus with the _ager
-Falernus_ on its southern side, producing the Falernian wines, even
-more famous than the Caecuban. Upon and around Vesuvius, too, fine
-wines were grown, especially near Naples, Pompeii, Cumae, and
-Surrentum. Good wines but less noted than these were produced in the
-extreme south, near Beneventum, Aulon, and Tarentum. Of like quality
-were those grown east and north of Rome, near Spoletium, Caesena,
-Ravenna, Hadria, and Ancona. Those of the north and west, in Etruria
-and Gaul, were not so good.
-
-295. Vineyards.--The sunny side of a hill was the best place for a
-vineyard. The vines were supported by poles or trellises in the modern
-fashion, or were planted at the foot of trees up which they were
-allowed to climb. For this purpose the elm (_ulmus_) was preferred,
-because it flourished everywhere, could be closely trimmed without
-endangering its life, and had leaves that made good food for cattle
-when they were plucked off to admit the sunshine to the vines. Vergil
-speaks of "marrying the vine to the elm," and Horace calls the plane
-tree a bachelor (_platanus coelebs_), because its dense foliage made
-it unfit for the vineyard. Before the gathering of the grapes the
-chief work lay in keeping the ground clear; it was spaded over once
-each month through the year. One man could properly care for about
-four acres.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 117. MAKING WINE]
-
-296. Wine Making.--The making of the wine took place usually in
-September, the season varying with the soil and the climate. It was
-anticipated by a festival, the _vinalia rustica_, celebrated on the
-19th of August. Precisely what the festival meant the Romans
-themselves did not fully understand, perhaps, but it was probably
-intended to secure a favorable season for the gathering of the grapes.
-The general process of making the wine differed little from that
-familiar to us in Bible stories and still practiced in modern times.
-After the grapes were gathered they were first trodden with the bare
-feet (Fig. 117) and then pressed in the _prelum_ or _lorcular_. The
-juice as it came from the press was called _mustum_, "new," and was
-often drunk unfermented, as "sweet" cider is now. It could be kept
-sweet from vintage to vintage by being sealed in a jar smeared within
-and without with pitch and immersed for several weeks in cold water or
-buried in moist sand. It was also preserved by evaporation over a
-fire; when it was reduced one-half in this way it became a grape-jelly
-(_defrutum_) and was used as a basis for various beverages and for
-other purposes (290).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 118. WINE CELLAR]
-
-297. Fermented wine (_vinum_) was made by collecting the _mustum_ in
-huge vat-like jars (_dolia_, shown in Fig. 116), large enough to hide
-a man and containing a hundred gallons or more. These were covered
-with pitch within and without and partially buried in the ground in
-cellars or vaults (_vinariae cellae_), in which they remained
-permanently. After they were nearly filled with the _mustum_, they
-were left uncovered during the process of fermentation, which lasted
-under ordinary circumstances about nine days. They were then tightly
-sealed and opened only when the wine required attention[3] or was to
-be removed. The cheaper wines were used directly from the _dolia_, but
-the choicer kinds were drawn off after a year into smaller jars
-(_amphorae_), clarified and sometimes "doctored" in various ways, and
-finally stored in depositories often entirely distinct from the
-cellars (Fig. 118). A favorite place was a room in the upper story of
-the house, where the wine was artificially aged by the heat rising
-from the furnace or even by the smoke escaping from the fire. The
-_amphorae_ were sometimes marked with the name of the wine, and the
-names of the consuls for the year in which they were filled.
-
-[Footnote 3: Spoiled wine was used as vinegar (_acetum_), and vinegar
-that became insipid and tasteless was called _vappa_. This last word
-was used also as a term of reproach for shiftless and worthless men.]
-
-298. Beverages.--After water and milk, wine was the ordinary drink of
-the Romans of all classes. It must be distinctly understood, however,
-that they always mixed it with water and used more water than wine.
-Pliny mentions one sort of wine that would stand being mixed with
-eight times its own bulk of water. To drink wine unmixed was thought
-typical of barbarism, and among the Romans it was so drunk only by the
-dissipated at their wildest revels. Under the Empire the ordinary
-qualities of wine were cheap enough to be sold at three or four cents
-a quart (388); the choicer kinds were very costly, entirely beyond
-the reach, Horace gives us to understand, of a man in his
-circumstances. More rarely used than wine were other beverages that
-are mentioned in literature. A favorite drink was _mulsum_, made of
-four measures of wine and one of honey. A mixture of water and honey
-allowed to ferment together was called _mulsa_. Cider also was made by
-the Romans, and wines from mulberries and dates. They also made
-various cordials from aromatic plants, but it must be remembered
-(281) that they had no knowledge of tea or coffee.
-
-299. Style of Living.--The table supplies of a given people vary from
-age to age with the development of civilization and refinement, and in
-the same age with the means and tastes of classes and individuals. Of
-the Romans it may be said that during the early Republic, perhaps
-almost through the second century B.C., they cared little for the
-pleasures of the table. They lived frugally and ate sparingly. They
-were almost strictly vegetarians (273), much of their food was eaten
-cold, and the utmost simplicity characterized the cooking and the
-service of their meals. Everything was prepared by the _mater
-familias_ or by the maidservants under her supervision (90). The
-table was set in the _atrium_ (188), and the father, mother, and
-children sat around it on stools or benches (225), waiting upon each
-other and their guests (104). Dependents ate of the same food, but
-apart from the family. The dishes were of the plainest sort, of
-earthenware or even of wood, though a silver saltcellar was often the
-cherished ornament of the humblest board. Table knives and forks were
-unknown, the food being cut into convenient portions before it was
-served, and spoons being used to convey to the mouth what the fingers
-could not manage. During this period there was little to choose
-between the fare of the proudest patrician and the humblest client.
-The Samnite envoys found Manius Curius, the conqueror of Pyrrhus (275
-B.C.), eating his dinner of vegetables (275) from an earthen bowl. A
-century later the poet Plautus calls his countrymen a race of porridge
-eaters (_pultiphagonidae_, 283), and gives us to understand that in
-his time even the wealthiest Romans had in their households no
-specially trained cooks. When a dinner out of the ordinary was given,
-a professional cook was hired, who brought with him to the house of
-the host his utensils and helpers, just as a plumber or surgeon
-responds to a call nowadays.
-
-300. The last two centuries of the Republic saw all this changed. The
-conquest of Greece and the wars in Asia Minor gave the Romans a taste
-of eastern luxury, and altered their simple table customs, as other
-customs had been altered by like contact with the outside world (5,
-101, 112, 192). From this time the poor and the rich no longer fared
-alike. The former constrained by poverty lived frugally as of old:
-every schoolboy knows that the soldiers who won Caesar's battles for
-him lived on grain (282 and note), which they ground in their
-handmills and baked at their campfires. The very rich, on the other
-hand, aping the luxury of the Greeks but lacking their refinement,
-became gluttons instead of gourmands. They ransacked the world[4] for
-articles of food, preferring the rare and the costly to what was
-really palatable and delicate. They measured the feast by the
-quantities they could consume, reviving the sated appetite by piquant
-sauces and resorting to emetics to prolong the pleasures of the table
-and prevent the effects of over-indulgence. The separate dining-room
-(_triclinium_) was introduced, the great houses having two or more
-(204), and the _oeci_ (207) were pressed into service for banquet
-halls. The dining couch (224) took the place of the bench or stool,
-slaves served the food to the reclining guests, a dinner dress (249)
-was devised, and every _familia urbana_ (149) included a high-priced
-chef with a staff of trained assistants. Of course there were always
-wealthy men, Atticus, the friend of Cicero, for example (155), who
-clung to the simpler customs of the earlier days, but these could make
-little headway against the current of senseless dissipation and
-extravagance. Over against these must be set the fawning poor, who
-preferred the fleshpots of the rich patron (181, 182) to the bread
-of honest independence. Between the two extremes was a numerous middle
-class of the well-to-do, with whose ordinary meals we are more
-concerned than with the banquets of the very rich. These meals were
-the _ientaculum_, the _prandium_, and the _cena_.
-
-[Footnote 4: Gellius (2d century A.D.) gives a list from a satirical
-poem of Varro: Peacock from Samos, heath-cock from Phrygia, crane from
-Media, kid from Ambracia, young tunny-fish from Chalcedon, _murena_
-from Tartessus, cod (?) from Pessinus, oysters from Tarentum, scallop
-from Chios (?), sturgeon (?) from Rhodes, _scarus_ from Cilicia, nuts
-from Thasos, dates from Egypt, chestnuts (?) from Spain.]
-
-301. Hours for Meals.--Three meals a day was the regular number with
-the Romans as with us, though hygienists were found then, as they may
-be found nowadays, who believed two meals more healthful than three,
-and then as now high livers often indulged in an extra meal taken late
-at night. Custom fixed more or less rigorously the hours for meals,
-though these varied with the age, and to a less extent with the
-occupations and even with the inclinations of individuals. In early
-times in the city and in all periods in the country the chief meal
-(_cena_) was eaten in the middle of the day, preceded by a breakfast
-(_ientaculum_) in the early morning and followed in the evening by a
-supper (_vesperna_). In classical times the hours for meals in Rome
-were about as they are now in our large cities: that is, the _cena_
-was postponed until the work of the day was finished, thus crowding
-out the _vesperna_, and a luncheon (_prandium_) took the place of the
-old-fashioned "noon dinner." The evening dinner came to be more or
-less of a social function, guests being present and the food and
-service the best the house could afford, while the _ientaculum_ and
-_prandium_ were in comparison very simple and informal meals.
-
-302. Breakfast and Luncheon.--The breakfast (_ientaculum_ or
-_iantaculum_) was eaten immediately after rising, the hour varying, of
-course, with the occupation and condition of the individual. It
-consisted usually merely of bread, eaten dry or dipped in wine or
-sprinkled over with salt, though raisins, olives, and cheese were
-sometimes added. Workmen pressed for time seem to have taken their
-breakfast in their hands to eat as they went to the place of their
-labor, and schoolboys often stopped on their way to school (122) at a
-public bakery (286) to buy a sort of shortcake or pancake, on which
-they made a hurried breakfast. More rarely the breakfast became a
-regular meal, eggs being served in addition to the things just
-mentioned, and _mulsum_ (298) and milk drunk with them. It is likely
-that such a breakfast was taken at a later hour and by persons who
-dispensed with the noon meal. The luncheon (_prandium_) came about
-eleven o'clock. It, too, consisted usually of cold food: bread, salads
-(276), olives, cheese, fruits, nuts, and cold meats from the dinner
-of the day before. Occasionally, however, warm meat and vegetables
-were added, but the meal was never an elaborate one. It is sometimes
-spoken of as a morning meal, but in this case it must have followed at
-about the regular interval an extremely early breakfast, or it must
-itself have formed the breakfast, taken later than usual, when the
-_ientaculum_ for some reason had been omitted. After the _prandium_
-came the midday rest or siesta (_meridiatio_), when all work was laid
-aside until the eighth hour, except in the law courts and in the
-senate. In the summer, at least, everybody went to sleep, and even in
-the capital the streets were almost as deserted as at midnight. The
-_vesperna_, entirely unknown in city life, closed the day on the farm.
-It was an early supper which consisted largely of the leavings of the
-noonday dinner with the addition of such uncooked food as a farm would
-naturally supply. The word _merenda_ seems to have been applied in
-early times to this evening meal, then to refreshments taken at any
-time (cf. the English "lunch"), and finally to have gone out of use
-altogether.
-
-303. The Formal Meal.--The busy life of the city had early crowded
-the dinner out of its original place in the middle of the day and
-fixed it in the afternoon. The fashion soon spread to the towns and
-was carried by city people to their country estates (145), so that in
-classical times the late dinner (_cena_) was the regular thing for all
-persons of any social standing throughout the length and breadth of
-Italy. It was even more of a function than it is with us, because the
-Romans knew no other form of purely social intercourse. They had no
-receptions, balls, musicales, or theater parties, no other
-opportunities to entertain their friends or be entertained by them. It
-is safe to say, therefore, that when the Roman was in town he was
-every evening host or guest at a dinner as elaborate as his means or
-those of his friends permitted, unless, of course, urgent business
-claimed his attention or some unusual circumstances had withdrawn him
-temporarily from society. On the country estates the same custom
-prevailed, the guests coming from neighboring estates or being friends
-who stopped unexpectedly, perhaps, to claim entertainment for a night
-as they passed on a journey to or from the city (388). These dinners,
-formal as they were, are to be distinguished carefully from the
-extravagant banquets of the ostentatious rich. They were in themselves
-thoroughly wholesome, the expression of genuine hospitality. The
-guests were friends, the number was limited, the wife and children of
-the host were present, and social enjoyment was the end in view.
-Before the meal itself is described something must be said of the
-dining-room and its furniture.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 119. TABLE AND COUCHES]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 120. TABLE AND COUCHES]
-
-304. The Dining Couch.--The position of the dining-room
-(_triclinium_) in the Roman house has been described already (204),
-and it has been remarked (300) that in classical times the stool or
-bench had given place to the couch. This couch (_lectus tricliniaris_)
-was constructed much as the common _lecti_ were (224), except that it
-was made broader and lower, had an arm at one end only, was without a
-back, and sloped from the front to the rear. At the end where the arm
-was, a cushion or bolster was placed, and parallel with it two others
-were arranged in such a way as to divide the couch into three parts.
-Each part was for one person, and a single couch would, therefore,
-accommodate three persons. The dining-room received its name
-(_triclinium_) from the fact that it was planned to hold three of
-these couches ([Greek: _klinai_] in Greek), set on three sides of a
-table, the fourth side of which was open. The arrangement varied a
-little with the size of the room. In a large room the couches were set
-as in Fig. 119, but if economy of space was necessary they were placed
-as in Fig. 120, the latter being probably the more common arrangement
-of the two. Nine may be taken, therefore, as the ordinary number at a
-Roman dinner party. More would be invited only on unusual occasions,
-and then a larger room would be used where two or more tables could be
-arranged in the same way, each accommodating nine guests. In the case
-of members of the same family, especially if one was a child, or when
-the guests were very intimate friends, a fourth person might find room
-on a couch, but this was certainly unusual; probably when a guest
-unexpectedly presented himself some member of the family would
-surrender his place to him. Often the host reserved a place or places
-for friends that his guests might bring without notice. Such uninvited
-persons were called _umbrae_. When guests were present the wife sat on
-the edge of the couch (Fig. 121) instead of reclining, and children
-were usually accommodated on seats at the open side of the table.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 121. WOMAN SITTING ON DINING COUCH]
-
-305. Places of Honor.--The guest approached the couch from the rear
-and took his place upon it, lying on the left side, with his face to
-the table, and supported by his left elbow, which rested on the
-cushion or bolster mentioned above. The position of his body is
-indicated by the arrows in the cut above (Fig. 119). Each couch and
-each place on the couch had its own name according to its position
-with reference to the others. The couches were called respectively
-_lectus summus_, _lectus medius_, and _lectus imus_, and it will be
-noticed that persons reclining on the _lectus medius_ had the _lectus
-summus_ on the left and the _lectus imus_ on the right. Etiquette
-assigned the _lectus summus_ and the _lectus medius_ to guests, while
-the _lectus imus_ was reserved for the host, his wife, and one other
-member of his family. If the host alone represented the family, the
-two places beside him on the _lectus imus_ were given to the humblest
-of the guests.
-
-306. The places on each couch were named in the same way, (_locus_)
-_summus_, _medius_, and _imus_, denoted respectively by the figures
-_1_, _2_, and _3_ in the cut. The person who occupied the place
-numbered _1_ was said to be above (_super_, _supra_) the person to his
-right, while the person occupying the middle place (_2_) was above the
-person on his right and below (_infra_) the one on the left. The place
-of honor on the _lectus summus_ was that numbered _1_, and the
-corresponding place on the _lectus imus_ was taken by the host. The
-most distinguished guest, however, was given the place on the _lectus
-medius_ marked _3_, and this place was called by the special name
-_locus consularis_, because if a consul was present it was always
-assigned to him. It will be noticed that it was next the place of the
-host, and besides was especially convenient for a public official; if
-he found it necessary to receive or send a message during the dinner
-he could communicate with the messenger without so much as turning on
-his elbow.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 122. SIDEBOARD]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 123. SIDEBOARD]
-
-307. Other Furniture.--In comparison with the _lecti_ the rest of the
-furniture of the dining-room played an insignificant part. In fact the
-only other absolutely necessary article was the table (_mensa_),
-placed as shown in the figures above between the three couches in such
-a way that all were equally distant from it and free access to it was
-left on the fourth side. The space between the table and the couches
-might be so little that the guests could help themselves, or on the
-other hand so great that slaves could pass between to serve the food.
-The guests had no individual plates to be kept upon the table, so that
-it was used merely to receive the large dishes in which the food was
-served, and certain formal articles, such as the saltcellar (299) and
-the things necessary for the offering to the gods. The table,
-therefore, was never very large (one such would be almost lost in a
-modern dining-room), but it was often exceedingly beautiful and costly
-(227). Its beauties were not hidden either by any cloth or covering;
-the table-cloth, as we know it, did not come into use until about the
-end of the first century of our era. The cost and beauty of the
-dishes, too, were limited only by the means and taste of the owner.
-Besides the couches and the table, sideboards (_abaci_) were the only
-articles of furniture usually found in the _triclinium_. These varied
-from a simple shelf to tables of different forms and sizes and open
-cabinets, such as shown in Figs. 122 and 123 and in Schreiber LXVII,
-11. They were set out of the way against the walls and served as do
-ours to display plate and porcelain when not in use on the table.
-
-308. Courses.--In classical times even the simplest dinner was
-divided into three parts, the _gustus_ ("appetizer"), the _cena_
-("dinner proper"), and the _secunda mensa_[5] ("dessert"); the dinner
-was made elaborate by serving each of the parts in several courses.
-The _gustus_ consisted of those things only that were believed to
-excite the appetite or aid the digestion: oysters and other shell-fish
-fresh, sea-fish salted or pickled, certain vegetables that could be
-eaten uncooked, especially onions, and almost invariably lettuce and
-eggs, all with piquant sauces. With these appetizers _mulsum_ (298)
-was drunk, wine being thought too heavy for an empty stomach, and from
-the drink the _gustus_ was also called the _promulsis_; another and
-more significant name for it was _antecena_. Then followed the real
-dinner, the _cena_, consisting of the more substantial viands, fish,
-flesh, fowl, and vegetables. With this part of the meal wine was
-drunk, but in moderation, for it was thought to dull the sense of
-taste, and the real drinking began only when the _cena_ was over. The
-_cena_ almost always consisted of several courses (_mensa prima_,
-_altera_, _tertia_, etc.), three being thought neither niggardly nor
-extravagant; we are told that Augustus often dined on three courses
-and never went beyond six. The _secunda mensa_ closed the meal with
-all sorts of pastry, sweets, nuts, and fruits, fresh and preserved,
-with which wine was freely drunk. From the fact that eggs were eaten
-at the beginning of the meal and apples at the close came the
-proverbial expression, _ab ovo ad mala_.
-
-[Footnote 5: This is the most common form, but the plural also occurs,
-and the adjective may follow the noun.]
-
-309. Bills of Fare.--We have preserved to us in literature the bills
-of fare of a few meals, probably actually served, which may be taken
-as typical at least of the homely, the generous, and the sumptuous
-dinner. The simplest is given by Juvenal (died 2d century A.D.): for
-the _gustus_, asparagus and eggs; for the _cena_, young kid and
-chicken; for the _secunda mensa_, fruits. Two others are given by
-Martial (43-101 A.D.): the first has lettuce, onions, tunny-fish, and
-eggs cut in slices; sausages with porridge, fresh cauliflower, bacon,
-and beans; pears and chestnuts, and with the wine olives, parched
-peas, and lupines. The second has mallows, onions, mint, elecampane,
-anchovies with sliced eggs, and sow's udder in tunny sauce; the _cena_
-was served in a single course (_una mensa_), kid, chicken, cold ham,
-haricot beans, and young cabbage sprouts; fresh fruits, with wine, of
-course. The last we owe to Macrobius (died 5th century A.D.), who
-assigns it to a feast of the pontifices during the Republic, feasts
-that were proverbial for their splendor. The _antecena_ was served in
-two courses: first, sea-urchins, raw oysters, three kinds of
-sea-mussels, thrush on asparagus, a fat hen, panned oysters, and
-mussels; second, mussels again, shell-fish, sea-nettles, figpeckers,
-loin of goat, loin of pork, fricasseed chicken, figpeckers again, two
-kinds of sea-snails. The number of courses in which the _cena_ was
-served is not given: sow's udder, head of wild boar, panned fish,
-panned sow's udder, domestic ducks, wild ducks, hares, roast chicken,
-starch pudding, bread. No vegetables or dessert are mentioned by
-Macrobius, but we may take it for granted that they corresponded to
-the rest of the feast, and the wine that the pontifices drank was
-famed as the best.
-
-310. Serving the Dinner.--The dinner hour marked the close of the
-day's work, as has been said (301), and varied, therefore, with the
-season of the year and the social position of the family. In general
-it may be said to have been not before the ninth and rarely after the
-tenth hour (418). It lasted usually until bedtime, that is, for three
-or four hours at least, though the Romans went to bed early because
-they rose early (79, 122). Sometimes even the ordinary dinner lasted
-until midnight, but when a banquet was expected to be unusually
-protracted, it was the custom to begin earlier in order that there
-might be time after it for the needed repose. Such banquets, beginning
-before the ninth hour, were called _tempestiva convivia_, the word
-"early" in this connection carrying with it about the same reproach as
-our "late" suppers. At the ordinary family dinners the time was spent
-in conversation, though in some good houses (notably that of Atticus,
-cf. 155) a trained slave read aloud to the guests. At "gentlemen's
-dinners" other forms of entertainment were provided, music, dancing,
-juggling, etc., by professional performers (153).
-
-311. When the guests had been ushered into the dining-room the gods
-were solemnly invoked, a custom to which our "grace before meat"
-corresponds. Then they took their places on the couches (_accumbere_,
-_discumbere_) as these were assigned them (306), their sandals were
-removed (250), to be cared for by their own attendants (152), and
-water and towels were carried around for washing the hands. The meal
-then began, each course being placed upon the table on a waiter or
-tray (_ferculum_), from which the dishes were passed in regular order
-to the guests. As each course was finished the dishes were replaced on
-the _ferculum_ and removed, and water and towels were again passed to
-the guests, a custom all the more necessary because the fingers were
-used for forks (299). Between the chief parts of the meal, too, the
-table was cleared and carefully wiped with a cloth or soft sponge.
-Between the _cena_ proper and the _secunda mensa_ a longer pause was
-made and silence was preserved while wine, salt, and meal, perhaps
-also regular articles of food, were offered to the Lares. The dessert
-was then brought on in the same way as the other parts of the meal.
-The signal to leave the couches was given by calling for the sandals
-(250), and the guests immediately took their departure.
-
-312. The Comissatio.--Cicero tells us of Cato and his Sabine
-neighbors lingering over their dessert and wine until late at night,
-and makes them find the chief charm of the long evening in the
-conversation. For this reason Cato declares the Latin word _convivium_
-"a living together," a better word for such social intercourse than
-the one the Greeks used, _symposium_, "a drinking together." The
-younger men in the gayer circles of the capital inclined rather to the
-Greek view and followed the _cena_ proper with a drinking bout, or
-wine supper, called _comissatio_ or _compotatio_. This differed from
-the form that Cato approved not merely in the amount of wine consumed,
-in the lower tone, and in the questionable amusements, but also in the
-following of certain Greek customs unknown among the Romans until
-after the second Punic war and never adopted in the regular dinner
-parties that have been described. These were the use of perfumes and
-flowers at the feast, the selection of a Master of the Revels, and the
-method of drinking.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 124. END OF DRINKING BOUT]
-
-313. The perfumes and flowers were used not so much on account of the
-sweetness of their scent, much as the Romans enjoyed it, as because
-they believed that the scent prevented or at least retarded
-intoxication. This is shown by the fact that they did not use the
-unguents and the flowers throughout the whole meal, but waited to
-anoint the head with perfumes and crown it with flowers until the
-dessert and the wine were brought on. Various leaves and flowers were
-used for the garlands (_coronae convivales_) according to individual
-tastes, but the rose was the most popular and came to be generally
-associated with the _comissatio_. After the guests had assumed their
-crowns (and sometimes garlands were also worn around the neck), each
-threw the dice, usually calling as he did so upon his sweetheart or
-some deity to help his throw. The one whose throw was the highest
-(320) was forthwith declared the _rex_ (_magister_, _arbiter_)
-_bibendi_. Just what his duties and privileges were we are nowhere
-expressly told, but it can hardly be doubted that it was his province
-to determine the proportion of water to be added to the wine (298),
-to lay down the rules for the drinking (_leges insanae_, Horace calls
-them), to decide what each guest should do for the entertainment of
-his fellows, and to impose penalties and forfeits for the breaking of
-the rules.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 125. MIXING BOWL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 126. DRINKING CUPS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 127. CYATHUS]
-
-314. The wine was mixed under the direction of the _magister_ in a
-large bowl (_crater_), the proportions of the wine and water being
-apparently constant for the evening, and from the _crater_ (Fig. 125),
-placed on the table in view of all, the wine was ladled by the
-servants into the goblets (_pocula_, Fig. 126) of the guests. The
-ladle (_cyathus_, Fig. 127) held about one-twelfth of a pint, or more
-probably was graduated by twelfths. The method of drinking seems to
-have differed from that of the regular dinner chiefly in this: at the
-ordinary dinner each guest mixed his wine to suit his own taste and
-drank as little or as much as he pleased, while at the _comissatio_
-all had to drink alike, regardless of differences in taste and
-capacity. The wine seems to have been drunk chiefly in "healths," but
-an odd custom regulated the size of the bumpers. Any guest might
-propose the health of any person he pleased to name; immediately
-slaves ladled into each goblet as many _cyathi_ (twelfths of a pint)
-as there were letters in the given name, and the goblets had to be
-drained at a draft. The rest of the entertainment was undoubtedly wild
-enough (310); gambling seems to have been common, and Cicero speaks
-of more disgraceful practices in his speeches against Catiline.
-Sometimes the guests spent the evening roaming from house to house,
-playing host in turn, and making night hideous as they staggered
-through the streets with their crowns and garlands.
-
-315. The Banquets of the Rich.--Little need be said of the banquets
-of the wealthy nobles in the last century of the Republic and of the
-rich parvenus (181) who thronged the courts of the earlier Emperors.
-They were arranged on the same plan as the dinners we have described,
-differing from them only in the ostentatious display of furniture,
-plate, and food. So far as particulars have reached us, they were
-grotesque and revolting, judged by the canons of to-day, rather than
-magnificent. Couches made of silver, wine instead of water for the
-hands, twenty-two courses to a single cena, seven thousand birds
-served at another, a dish of livers of fish, tongues of flamingos,
-brains of peacocks and pheasants mixed up together, strike us as
-vulgarity run mad. The sums spent upon these feasts do not seem so
-fabulous now as they did then. Every season in our great capitals sees
-social functions that surpass the feasts of Lucullus in cost as far as
-they do in taste and refinement. As signs of the times, however, as
-indications of changed ideals, of degeneracy and decay, they deserved
-the notice that the Roman historians and satirists gave them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-AMUSEMENTS; BATHS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 269-296, 834-861; Staatsverwaltung, III,
-504-565; Gll, III, 455-480, 104-157; Guhl and Koner, 643-658,
-804-829, 609-618; Friedlnder, II, 295-637; Ramsay, 394-409;
-Pauly-Wissowa, _amphitheatrum_, _calx_, _circus_, _Bader_; Smith,
-Harper, Rich, _amphitheatrum_, _balneae_, _circus_, _gladiatores_,
-_theatrum_, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister, 694, 241-244,
-2089-2111; Lbker, 1073 f., 1199 f., 477 f., 1048 f., 185, 1213;
-Kelsey-Mau, 135-161, 180-220.
-
-
-316. After the games of childhood (102, 103) were passed the Roman
-seemed to lose all instinct for play. Of sport for sport's sake he
-knew nothing, he took part in no games for the sake of excelling in
-them. He played ball before his dinner for the good of the exercise,
-he practiced riding, fencing, wrestling, hurling the discus (Fig.
-128), and swimming for the strength and skill they gave him in arms,
-he played a few games of chance for the excitement the stakes
-afforded, but there was no "national game" for the young men, and
-there were no social amusements in which men and women took part
-together. The Roman made it hard and expensive, too, for others to
-amuse him. He cared nothing for the drama, little for spectacular
-shows, more for farces and variety performances, perhaps, but the one
-thing that really appealed to him was excitement, and this he found in
-gambling or in such amusements only as involved the risk of injury to
-life and limb, the sports of the circus and the amphitheater. We may
-describe first the games in which the Roman participated himself and
-then those at which he was a mere spectator. In the first class are
-field sports and games of hazard, in the second the public and private
-games (_ludi publici et privati_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 128. DISCUS THROWER]
-
-317. Sports of the Campus.--The Campus Martius included all the level
-ground lying between the Tiber and the Capitoline and Quirinal hills.
-The northwestern portion of this plain, bounded on two sides by the
-Tiber, which here sweeps abruptly to the west, kept clear of public
-and private buildings and often called simply the _Campus_, was for
-centuries the playground of Rome. Here the young men gathered to
-practice the athletic games mentioned above, naturally in the cooler
-parts of the day. Even men of graver years did not disdain a visit to
-the Campus after the _meridiatio_ (302), in preparation for the bath
-before dinner, instead of which the younger men preferred to take a
-cool plunge in the convenient river. The sports themselves were those
-that we are accustomed to group together as track and field athletics.
-They ran foot races, jumped, threw the discus (Fig. 128), practiced
-archery, and had wrestling and boxing matches. These sports were
-carried on then much as they are now, if we may judge by Vergil's
-description in the Fifth Aeneid, but an exception must be made of the
-games of ball. These seem to have been very dull and stupid as
-compared with ours. It must be remembered, however, that they were
-played more for the healthful exercise they furnished than for the joy
-of the playing, and by men of high position, too--Caesar, Maecenas,
-and even the Emperor Augustus.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 129. FOLLES]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 130. GAME OF BALL]
-
-318. Games of Ball.--Balls of different sizes are known to have been
-used in the different games, variously filled with hair, feathers, and
-air (_folles_, Fig. 129). Throwing and catching formed the basis of
-all the games, the bat being practically unknown. In the simplest game
-the player threw the ball as high as he could, and tried to catch it
-before it struck the ground. Variations of this were what we should
-call juggling, the player keeping two or more balls in the air (Fig.
-130), and throwing and catching by turns with another player. Another
-game must have resembled our handball, requiring a wall and smooth
-ground at its foot. The ball was struck with the open hand against the
-wall, allowed to fall back upon the ground and bound, and then struck
-back against the wall in the same manner. The aim of the player was to
-keep the ball going in this way longer than his opponent could.
-Private houses and the public baths often had "courts" especially
-prepared for this amusement. A third game was called _trigon_, and was
-played by three persons, stationed at the angles of an equilateral
-triangle. Two balls were used and the aim of the player was to throw
-the ball in his possession at the one of his opponents who would be
-the less likely to catch it. As two might throw at the third at the
-same moment, or as the thrower of one ball might have to receive the
-second ball at the very moment of throwing, both hands had to be used
-and a good degree of skill was necessary. Other games, all of throwing
-and catching, are mentioned here and there, but none is described with
-sufficient detail to be clearly understood.
-
-319. Games of Chance.--The Romans were passionately fond of games of
-chance, and gambling was so universally associated with such games
-that they were forbidden by law, even when no stakes were actually
-played for. A general indulgence seems to have been granted at the
-Saturnalia in December, and public opinion allowed old men to play at
-any time. The laws were hard to enforce, however, as such laws usually
-are, and large sums were won and lost not merely at general gambling
-resorts, but also at private houses. Games of chance, in fact, with
-high stakes, were one of the greatest attractions at the men's dinners
-that have been mentioned (314). The commonest form of gambling was
-our "heads or tails," coins being used as with us, the value depending
-on the means of the players. Another common form was our "odd or
-even," each player guessing in turn and in turn holding counters
-concealed in his outstretched hand for his opponent to guess. The
-stake was usually the contents of the hand though side bets were not
-unusual. In a variation of this game the players tried to guess the
-actual number of the counters held in the hand. Of more interest,
-however, were the games of knuckle-bones and dice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 131. GIRLS PLAYING WITH KNUCKLE-BONES]
-
-320. Knuckle-bones.--Knuckle-bones (_tali_) of sheep and goats, and
-imitations of them in ivory, bronze, and stone, were used as
-playthings by children and for gaming by men. Children played our
-"jackstones" with them, throwing five into the air at once and
-catching as many as possible on the back of the hand (Fig. 131). The
-length of the _tali_ was greater than their width and they had,
-therefore, four long sides and two ends. The ends were rounded off or
-pointed, so that the _tali_ could not stand on them. Of the four long
-sides two were broader than the others. Of the two broader sides one
-was concave, the other convex; while of the narrower sides one was
-flat and the other indented. As all the sides were of different shapes
-the _tali_ did not require marking as do our dice, but for convenience
-they were sometimes marked with the numbers 1, 3, 4, and 6, the
-numbers 2 and 5 being omitted. Four _tali_ were used at a time, either
-thrown into the air with the hand or thrown from a dice-box
-(_fritillus_), and the side on which the bone rested was counted, not
-that which came up. Thirty-five different throws were possible, of
-which each had a different name. Four aces were the lowest throw,
-called the Vulture, while the highest, called the Venus, was when all
-the _tali_ came up differently. It was this throw that designated the
-_magister bibendi_ (313).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 132. PLAYING DICE]
-
-321. Dice.--The Romans had also dice (_tesserae_) precisely like our
-own. They were made of ivory, stone, or some close-grained wood, and
-had the sides numbered from one to six. Three were used at a time,
-thrown from the _fritillus_, as were the knuckle-bones (Fig. 132), but
-the sides counted that came up. The highest throw was three sixes, the
-lowest three aces. In ordinary gaming the aim of the player seems to
-have been to throw a higher number than his opponent, but there were
-also games played with dice on boards with counters, that must have
-been something like our backgammon, uniting skill with chance. Little
-more of these is known than their names, but a board used for some
-such game is shown in 336 (Fig. 144). If one considers how much space
-is given in our newspapers to the game of baseball, and how impossible
-it would be for a person who had never seen a game to get a correct
-idea of one from the newspaper descriptions only, it will not seem
-strange that we know so little of Roman games.
-
-322. Public and Private Games.--With the historical development of
-the Public Games this book has no concern (2). It is sufficient to
-say that these free exhibitions, given first in honor of some god or
-gods at the cost of the state and extended and multiplied for
-political purposes until all religious significance was lost, had come
-by the end of the Republic to be the chief pleasure in life for the
-lower classes in Rome, so that Juvenal declares that the free bread
-(286) and the games of the circus were the people's sole desire. Not
-only were these games free, but when they were given all public
-business was stopped and all citizens were forced to take a holiday.
-These holidays became rapidly more and more numerous; by the end of
-the Republic sixty-six days were taken up by the games, and in the
-reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) no less than one hundred and
-thirty-five days out of the year were thus closed to business.[1]
-Besides these standing games, others were often given for
-extraordinary events, and funeral games were common when great men
-died. These last were not made legal holidays. For our purposes the
-distinction between public and private games is not important, and all
-may be classified according to the nature of the exhibitions as, _ludi
-scenici_, dramatic entertainments given in a theater, _ludi
-circenses_, chariot races and other exhibitions given in a circus, and
-_munera gladiatoria_, shows of gladiators usually given in an
-amphitheater.
-
-[Footnote 1: There are sixty holidays annually in Indiana, for
-example, and this is about the average for the United States.]
-
-323. Dramatic Performances.--The history of the development of the
-drama at Rome belongs, of course, to the history of Latin literature.
-In classical times dramatic performances consisted of comedies
-(_comoediae_), tragedies (_tragoediae_), farces (_mimi_), and
-pantomimes (_pantomimi_). The farces and pantomimes were used chiefly
-as interludes and afterpieces, though with the common people they were
-the most popular of all and outlived the others. Tragedy never had any
-real hold at Rome, and only the liveliest comedies gained favor on the
-stage. Of the comedies the only ones that have come down to us are
-those of Plautus and Terence, all adaptations from Greek originals,
-all depicting Greek life, and represented in Greek costumes (_fabulae
-palliatae_). They were a good deal more like our comic operas than our
-comedies, large parts being recited to the accompaniment of music and
-other parts sung while the actor danced. They were always presented in
-the daytime, as Roman theaters were provided with no means of
-lighting, in the early period after the noon meal (301), but by
-Cicero's time they had come to be given in the morning. The average
-comedy must have required about two hours for the acting, with
-allowance for the occasional music between the scenes. We read of a
-play being acted twice in a day, but this must have been very
-exceptional, as time had to be allowed for the other more popular
-shows given on the same occasion.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 133. SCENE FROM A COMEDY]
-
-324. Staging the Play.--The play, as well as the other sports, was
-under the supervision of the officials in charge of the games at which
-it was given. They contracted for the production of the play with some
-recognized manager (_dominus gregis_), who was usually an actor of
-acknowledged ability and had associated with him a troupe (_grex_) of
-others only inferior to himself. The actors were all slaves (143),
-and men took the parts of women. There was no limit fixed to the
-number of actors, but motives of economy would lead the _dominus_ to
-produce each play with the smallest number possible, and two or even
-more parts were often assigned to one actor. The characters in the
-comedies wore the ordinary Greek dress of daily life and the costumes
-(Fig. 133) were, therefore, not expensive. The only make-up required
-was paint for the face, especially for the actors who took women's
-parts, and the wigs that were used conventionally to represent
-different characters, gray for old men, black for young men, red for
-slaves, etc. These and the few properties (_ornamenta_) necessary were
-furnished by the _dominus_. It seems to have been customary also for
-him to feast the actors at his expense if their efforts to entertain
-were unusually successful.
-
-325. The Early Theater.--The theater itself deserved no such name
-until very late in the Republic. During the period when the best plays
-were being written (200-160 B.C.) almost nothing was done for the
-accommodation of the actors or the audience. The stage was merely a
-temporary platform, rather wide than deep, built at the foot of a hill
-or a grass-covered slope. There were almost none of the things that we
-are accustomed to associate with a stage, no curtains, no flies, no
-scenery that could be changed, not even a sounding-board to aid the
-actor's voice. There was no way either to represent the interior of a
-house, and the dramatist was limited, therefore, to such situations as
-might be supposed to take place upon a public street. This street the
-stage represented; at the back of it were shown the fronts of two or
-three houses with windows and doors that could be opened, and
-sometimes there was an alley or passageway between two of the houses.
-An altar stood on the stage, we are told, to remind the people of the
-religious origin of the games. No better provision was made for the
-audience than for the actors. The people took their places on the
-slope before the stage, some reclining on the grass, some standing,
-some perhaps sitting on stools they had brought from home. There was
-always din and confusion to try the actor's voice, pushing and
-crowding, disputing and quarreling, wailing of children, and in the
-very midst of the play the report of something livelier to be seen
-elsewhere might draw the whole audience away.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 134. EXTERIOR OF THEATER AT ORANGE]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 135. THEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 136. SECTION OF THEATER OF MARCELLUS (Restored)]
-
-326. The Later Theater.--Beginning about 145 B.C., however, efforts
-were made to improve upon this poor apology for a theater, in spite of
-the opposition of those who considered the plays ruinous to morals. In
-that year a wooden theater on Greek lines provided with seats was
-erected, but the senate caused it to be pulled down as soon as the
-games were over. It became a fixed custom, however, for such a
-temporary theater with special and separate seats for senators, and
-much later for the knights, to be erected as often as plays were given
-at public games, until in 55 B.C. Pompeius Magnus erected the first
-permanent theater at Rome. It was built of stone after the plans of
-one he had seen at Mytilene and seated at least seventeen thousand
-people; Pliny says forty thousand. This theater showed two noteworthy
-divergences from its Greek model. The Greek theaters were excavated
-out of the side of the hill, while the Roman theater was erected on
-level ground (that of Pompeius in the Campus Martius) and gave,
-therefore, a better opportunity for exterior magnificence. The Greek
-theater had a large circular space for choral performances immediately
-before the stage; in the Roman theater this space, called the
-orchestra then as now, was much smaller, and was assigned to the
-senators. The first fourteen rows of seats rising immediately behind
-them were reserved for the knights. The seats back of these were
-occupied indiscriminately by the people, on the principle apparently
-of first come first served. No other permanent theaters were erected
-at Rome until 13 B.C., when two were constructed. The smaller had room
-for eleven thousand spectators, the larger, erected in honor of
-Marcellus, the nephew of Augustus, for twenty thousand. These improved
-playhouses made possible spectacular elements in the performances that
-the rude scaffolding of early days had not permitted, and these
-spectacles proved the ruin of the legitimate drama. To make realistic
-the scenes representing the pillaging of a city, Pompeius is said to
-have furnished troops of cavalry and bodies of infantry, hundreds of
-mules laden with real spoils of war, and three thousand mixing bowls
-(314). In comparison with these three thousand mixing bowls, the
-avalanches, runaway locomotives, sawmills in full operation, and
-cathedral scenes of modern times seem poor indeed.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 137. PLAN OF THEATER]
-
-327. The general appearance of these theaters, the type of hundreds
-erected later throughout the Roman world, may be gathered from Fig.
-137, the plan of a theater on lines laid down by Vitruvius (187). GH
-is the front line of the stage (_proscaenium_); all behind it is the
-_scaena_, devoted to the actors, all before it is the _cavea_, devoted
-to the spectators. IKL in the rear mark the position of three doors,
-for example, those of the three houses mentioned above (325). The
-semicircular orchestra CMD is the part appropriated to the senators.
-The seats behind the orchestra, rising in concentric semicircles, are
-divided by five passageways into six portions (_cunei_), and in a
-similar way the seats above the semicircular passage (_praecinctio_)
-shown in the figure are divided by eleven passageways into twelve
-_cunei_. Access to the seats of the senators was afforded by
-passageways under the higher seats at the right and the left of the
-stage, one of which may be seen in Fig. 135, which represents a part
-of the smaller of the two theaters uncovered at Pompeii, built not far
-from 80 B.C. Over the vaulted passage will be noticed what must have
-been the best seats in the theater, corresponding in some degree to
-the boxes of modern times. These were reserved for the emperor, if he
-was present, for the officials who superintended the games and (on the
-other side) for the Vestals. Access to the higher seats was
-conveniently given by broad stairways constructed under the seats and
-running up to the passageways between the _cunei_. These are shown in
-Fig. 136, a theoretical restoration of the Marcellus theater mentioned
-above. Behind the highest seats were broad colonnades, affording
-shelter in case of rain, and above them were tall masts from which
-awnings (_vela_) were spread to protect the people from the sun. The
-appearance of the stage end may be gathered from Fig. 134, showing the
-remains of a Roman theater still existing at Orange,[2] in the south
-of France. It should be noticed that the stage was connected with the
-auditorium by the seats over the vaulted passages to the orchestra,
-and that the curtain was raised from the bottom, to hide the stage,
-not lowered from the top as ours is now. Vitruvius suggested that
-rooms and porticos be built behind the stage, like the colonnades that
-have been mentioned, to afford space for the actors and properties and
-shelter for the people in case of rain.
-
-[Footnote 2: This theater has been restored and used for reproductions
-of the Classical Drama. See the interesting account of it in the
-"Century Magazine" for June, 1895. It is supposed to have been erected
-in the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) and allowed to fall into
-ruins in the fourth century A.D.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 138. VICTORIOUS AURIGA]
-
-328. Roman Circuses.--The games of the circus were the oldest of the
-free exhibitions at Rome and always the most popular. The word
-_circus_ means simply a ring and the _ludi circenses_ were therefore
-any shows that might be given in a ring. We shall see below (343)
-that these shows were of several kinds, but the one most
-characteristic, the one that is always meant when no other is
-specifically named, is that of chariot races. For these races the
-first and really the only necessary condition is a large and level
-piece of ground. This was furnished by the valley between the Aventine
-and Palatine hills, and here in prehistoric times the first Roman race
-course was established. This remained _the_ circus, the one always
-meant when no descriptive term was added, though when others were
-built it was called sometimes by way of distinction the Circus
-Maximus. None of the others ever approached it in size, in
-magnificence, or in popularity.
-
-329. The second circus to be built at Rome was the _circus
-Flaminius_, founded in 221 B.C. by the same Caius Flaminius, who built
-the Flaminian road. It was located in the southern part of the Campus
-Martius (317), and like the Circus Maximus was exposed to the
-frequent overflows of the Tiber. Its position is fixed beyond
-question, but the actual remains are very scanty, so that little is
-known of its size or appearance. The third to be established was that
-of Caius (Caligula) and Nero, named from the two emperors who had to
-do with its construction, and erected, therefore, in the first century
-A.D. It lay at the foot of the Vatican hill, but we know little more
-of it than that it was the smallest of the three. These three were the
-only circuses within the city. In the immediate neighborhood, however,
-were three others. Five miles out on the _via Portuensis_ was the
-circus of the Arval Brethren. About three miles out on the Appian way
-was the Circus of Maxentius, erected in 309 A.D. This is the best
-preserved of all, and a plan of it is shown in the next paragraph. On
-the same road, some twelve miles from the city, in the old town of
-Bovillae, was a third, making six within easy reach of the people of
-Rome.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 139. PLAN OF THE CIRCUS OF MAXENTIUS]
-
-330. Plan of the Circus.--All of the Roman circuses known to us had
-the same general arrangement, which will be readily understood from
-the plan of the Circus of Maxentius shown in Fig. 139. The long and
-comparatively narrow stretch of ground which formed the race course
-proper (_arena_) is almost surrounded by the tiers of seats, running
-in two long parallel lines uniting in a semicircle at one end. In the
-middle of this semicircle is a gate, marked _F_ in the plan, by which
-the victor left the circus when the race was over. It was called,
-therefore, the _porta triumphalis_. Opposite this gate at the other
-end of the arena was the station for the chariots (_AA_ in the plan),
-called _carceres_, "barriers," flanked by two towers at the corners
-(_II_), and divided into two equal sections by another gate (_B_),
-called the _porta pompae_, by which processions entered the circus.
-There are also gates (_HH_) between the towers and the seats. The
-exterior appearance of the towers and barriers, called together the
-_oppidum_, is shown in Fig. 140.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 140. OPPIDUM OF A CIRCUS]
-
-331. The arena is divided for about two-thirds its length by a fence
-or wall (_MM_), called the _spina_, "backbone." At the end of this
-were fixed pillars (_LL_), called _metae_, marking the inner line of
-the course. Once around the _spina_ was a lap (_spatium_,
-_curriculum_), and the fixed number of laps, usually seven to a race,
-was called a _missus_. The last lap, however, had but one turn, that
-at the _meta prima_, the one nearest the _porta triumphalis_, the
-finish being a straightaway dash to the _calx_. This was a chalk line
-drawn on the arena far enough away from the second _meta_ to keep it
-from being obliterated by the hoofs of the horses as they made the
-turn, and far enough also from the _carceres_ to enable the driver to
-stop his team before dashing into them. The dotted line (_DN_) is the
-supposed location of the _calx_. It will be noticed that the important
-things about the developed circus are the _arena_, _carceres_,
-_spina_, _metae_, and the seats, all of which will be more
-particularly described.
-
-332. The Arena.--The arena is the level space surrounded by the seats
-and the barriers. The name was derived from the sand used to cover its
-surface to spare as much as possible the unshod feet of the horses. A
-glance at the plan will show that speed could not have been the
-important thing with the Romans that it is with us. The sand, the
-shortness of the stretches, and the sharp turns between them were all
-against great speed. The Roman found his excitement in the danger of
-the race. In every representation of the race course that has come
-down to us may be seen broken chariots, fallen horses, and drivers
-under wheels and hoofs. The distance was not a matter of close
-measurement either, but varied in the several circuses, the Circus
-Maximus being fully 300 feet longer than the Circus of Maxentius. All
-seem to have had constant, however, the number of laps, seven to the
-race, and this also goes to prove that the danger was the chief
-element in the popularity of the contests. The distance actually
-traversed in the Circus of Maxentius may be very closely estimated.
-The length of the _spina_ is about 950 feet. If we allow fifty feet
-for the turn at each _meta_, each lap makes a distance of 2,000 feet,
-and six laps, 12,000 feet. The seventh lap had but one turn in it, but
-the final stretch to the _calx_ made it perhaps 300 feet longer than
-one of the others, say 2,300 feet. This gives a total of 14,300 feet
-for the whole _missus_, or about 2.7 miles. Jordan calculates the
-_missus_ of the Circus Maximus at 8.4 kilometers, which would be about
-5.2 miles, but he seems to have taken the whole length of the arena
-into account, instead of that merely of the _spina_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 141. THE CARCERES]
-
-333. The Barriers.--The _carceres_ were the stations of the chariots
-and teams when ready for the races to begin. They were a series of
-vaulted chambers entirely separated from each other by solid walls,
-and closed behind by doors through which the chariots entered. The
-front of the chamber was formed by double doors, with the upper part
-made of grated bars, admitting the only light which it received. From
-this arrangement the name _carcer_ was derived. Each chamber was large
-enough to hold a chariot with its team, and as a team was composed
-sometimes of as many as seven horses the "prison" must have been
-nearly square. There was always a separate chamber for each chariot.
-Up to the time of Domitian the highest number of chariots was eight,
-but after his time as many as twelve sometimes entered the same race,
-and twelve _carceres_ had, therefore, to be provided, although four
-chariots was the usual number. Half of these chambers lay to the
-right, half to the left of the _porta pompae_. The appearance of a
-section of the _carceres_ is shown in Fig. 141.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 142. BOX OF THE DATOR LUDORUM]
-
-334. It will be noticed from the plan (330) that the _carceres_ were
-arranged in a curved line. This is supposed to have been drawn in such
-a way that every chariot, no matter which of the _carceres_ it
-happened to occupy, would have the same distance to travel in order to
-reach the beginning of the course proper at the nearer end of the
-_spina_. There was no advantage in position, therefore, at the start,
-and places were assigned by lot. In later times a starting line
-(_linea alba_) was drawn with chalk between the second _meta_ and the
-seats to the right, but the line of _carceres_ remained curved as of
-old. At the ends of the row of chambers, towers were built which seem
-to have been the stands for the musicians; over the _porta pompae_ was
-the box of the chief official of the games (_dator ludorum_), and
-between his box and the towers were seats for his friends and persons
-connected with the games. In Fig. 142 is shown a victor pausing before
-the box of the _dator_ to receive a prize before riding in triumph
-around the arena.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 143.]
-
-335. The Spina and Metae.--The _spina_ divided the race course into
-two parts, making a minimum distance to be run. Its length was about
-two-thirds that of the arena, but it started only the width of the
-track from the _porta triumphalis_, leaving entirely free a much
-larger space at the end near the _porta pompae_. It was perfectly
-straight, but did not run precisely parallel to the rows of seats; at
-the end B in the exaggerated diagram (Fig. 143) the distance BC is
-somewhat greater than the distance AB, in order to allow more room at
-the starting line (_linea alba_, 334), where the chariots would be
-side by side, than further along the course, where they would be
-strung out. The _metae_, so named from their shape (284), were
-pillars erected at the two ends of the _spina_ and architecturally a
-part of it, though there may have been a space between. In Republican
-times the _spina_ and the _metae_ must have been made of wood and
-movable, in order to give free space for the shows of wild beasts and
-the exhibitions of cavalry that were originally given in the circus.
-After the amphitheater was devised the circus came to be used for
-races exclusively and the _spina_ became permanent. It was built up,
-of most massive proportions, on foundations of indestructible concrete
-(210 f.) and was adorned with magnificent works of art that must have
-entirely concealed horses and chariots when they passed to the other
-side of the arena.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 144. BOARD-GAME SHOWING SPINA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 145. OBELISK ONCE IN CIRCUS MAXIMUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 146. A CANAL AS SPINA]
-
-336. A representation of a circus has been preserved to us in a
-board-game of some sort found at Bovillae (329), which gives an
-excellent idea of the _spina_, (Fig. 144). We know from various
-reliefs and mosaics that the _spina_ of the Circus Maximus was covered
-with a series of statues and ornamental structures, such as obelisks,
-small temples or shrines, columns surmounted by statues, altars,
-trophies, and fountains. Augustus was the first to erect an obelisk in
-the Circus Maximus; it was restored in 1589 A.D., and now stands in
-the Piazza del Popolo, measuring without the base about 78 feet in
-height. Constantius erected another (Fig. 145) in the same circus,
-which now stands before the Lateran church, measuring 105 feet. The
-obelisk of the Circus of Maxentius now stands in the Piazza Navona.
-Besides these purely ornamental features, every circus had at each end
-of its _spina_ a pedestal supporting seven large eggs (_ova_) of
-marble, one of which was taken down at the end of each lap, in order
-that the people might know just how many remained to be run. Another
-and very different idea for the _spina_ is shown in Fig. 146 from a
-mosaic at Lyons. This is a canal filled with water, with an obelisk in
-the middle. The _metae_ in their developed form are shown very clearly
-in this mosaic, three conical pillars of stone set on a semicircular
-plinth, all of the most massive construction.
-
-337. The Seats.--The seats around the arena in the Circus Maximus
-were originally of wood, but accidents owing to decay and losses by
-fire had led by the time of the Empire to reconstruction in marble
-except perhaps in the very highest rows. The seats in the other
-circuses seem to have been from the first of stone. At the foot of the
-tiers of seats was a marble platform (_podium_) which ran along both
-sides and the curved end, coextensive therefore with them. On this
-_podium_ were erected boxes for the use of the more important
-magistrates and officials of Rome, and here Augustus placed the seats
-of the senators and others of high rank. He also assigned seats
-throughout the whole _cavea_ to various classes and organizations,
-separating the women from the men, though up to his time they had sat
-together. Between the _podium_ and the track was a screen of open
-work, and when Caesar showed wild beasts in the circus he had a canal
-ten feet wide and ten feet deep dug next the _podium_ and filled with
-water as an additional protection. Access to the seats was given from
-the rear, numerous broad stairways running up to the _praecinctiones_
-(327), of which there were probably three in the Circus Maximus. The
-horizontal spaces between the _praecinctiones_ were called _maeniana_,
-and each of these was in turn divided by stairways into _cunei_
-(327), and the rows of seats in the _cunei_ were called _gradus_. The
-sittings in the row do not seem to have been marked off any more than
-they are now in the "bleachers" at our baseball grounds. When sittings
-were reserved for a number of persons they were described as so many
-feet in such a row (_gradus_) of such a section (_cuneus_) of such a
-circle (_maenianum_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 147. RESTORATION OF THE CIRCUS MAXIMUS]
-
-338. The number of sittings testifies to the popularity of the races.
-The little circus at Bovillae had seats for at least 8,000 people,
-according to Hlsen, that of Maxentius for about 23,000, while the
-Circus Maximus, accommodating 60,000 in the time of Augustus, was
-enlarged to a capacity of nearly 200,000 in the time of Constantius.
-The seats themselves were supported upon arches of massive masonry; an
-idea of their appearance from the outside may be had from the exterior
-view of the Coliseum in 356. Every third of these vaulted chambers
-under the seats seems to have been used for a staircase, the others
-for shops and booths and in the upper parts for rooms for the employs
-of the circus, who must have been very numerous. Galleries seem to
-have crowned the seats, as in the theaters (327), and balconies for
-the emperors were built in conspicuous places, the ruins not enabling
-their positions to be fixed precisely. An idea of the appearance of
-the seats from within the arena may be had from an attempted
-reconstruction of the Circus Maximus (Fig. 147), the details of which
-are quite uncertain.
-
-339. Furnishing the Races.--There must have been a time, of course,
-when the races in the circus were open to all who wished to show their
-horses or their skill in driving them, but by the end of the Republic
-no persons of repute took part in the games, and the teams and drivers
-were furnished by racing syndicates (_factiones_), who practically
-controlled the market so far as concerned trained horses and trained
-men. With these syndicates the giver of the games contracted for the
-number of races that he wanted (ten or twelve a day in Caesar's time,
-later twice the number, and even more on special occasions), and they
-furnished everything needed. These syndicates were named from the
-colors worn by their drivers. We hear at first of two only, the red
-(_russata_) and the white (_albata_); two more were added, the blue
-(_veneta_) in the time of Augustus probably, and the green (_prasina_)
-soon after, and finally Domitian added the purple and the gold. The
-greatest rivalry existed between these organizations. They spent
-immense sums of money on their horses, importing them from Greece,
-Spain, and Mauritania, and even larger sums, perhaps, upon the
-drivers. They maintained training stables on as large a scale as any
-of which modern times can boast; a mosaic found in one of these
-establishments in Algeria names among the attendants jockeys, grooms,
-stable-boys, saddlers, doctors, trainers, coaches, and messengers, and
-shows the horses covered with blankets in their stalls. This rivalry
-spread throughout the city; each _factio_ had its partisans, and vast
-sums of money were lost and won as each _missus_ was finished. All the
-tricks of the ring were skillfully practiced; horses were hocused,
-drivers hired from rival syndicates or bribed, and even poisoned, we
-are told, when they were proof against money.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 148. RACING CHARIOT AND TEAM]
-
-340. The Teams.--The chariot used in the races was low and light,
-closed in front, open behind, with long axles and low wheels to lessen
-the risk of turning over. The driver seems to have stood well forward
-in the car, there being no standing place behind the axle, as shown in
-the cut (Fig. 148). The teams consisted of two horses (_bigae_), three
-(_trigae_), four (_quadrigae_), and in later times six (_seiuges_) or
-even seven (_septeiuges_), but the four-horse team was the most common
-and may be taken as the type. Two of the horses were yoked together,
-one on each side of the tongue, the others were attached to the car
-merely by traces. Of the four the horse to the extreme left was the
-most important, because the _meta_ lay always on the left and the
-highest skill of the driver was shown in turning it as closely as
-possible. The failure of the horse nearest it to respond promptly to
-the rein or the word might mean the wreck of the car (by going too
-close) or the loss of the inside track (by going too wide), and in
-either case the loss of the race. Inscriptions sometimes give the
-names of all the horses of the team, sometimes only the horse on the
-left is mentioned. Before the races began lists of the horses and
-drivers in each were published for the guidance of those who wished to
-stake their money, and while no time was kept the records of horses
-and men were followed as eagerly as now. From the nature of the course
-(332) it is evident that strength and courage and above all lasting
-qualities were as essential as speed. The horses were almost always
-stallions (mares are very rarely mentioned), and were never raced
-under five years of age. Considering the length of the course and the
-great risk of accidents it is surprising how long the horses lasted.
-It was not unusual for a horse to win a hundred races (such a horse
-was called _centenarius_), and one Diocles, himself a famous driver,
-owned a horse that had won two hundred (_ducenarius_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 149. DRESS OF AN AURIGA]
-
-341. The Drivers.--The drivers (_agitatores_, _aurigae_) were slaves
-or freedmen, some of whom had won their freedom by their skill and
-daring in the course. Only in the most corrupt days of the Empire did
-citizens of any social position take actual part in the races. The
-dress of the driver is shown in Fig. 149; especially to be noticed are
-the close fitting cap, the short tunic (always of the color of his
-_factio_), laced around the body with leathern thongs, the straps of
-leather around the thighs, the shoulder pads, and the heavy leather
-protectors for the legs. Our football players wear like defensive
-armor. The reins were knotted together and passed around the driver's
-body. In his belt he carried a knife to cut the reins in case he
-should be thrown from the car, or to cut the traces if a horse should
-fall and become entangled in them. The races gave as many
-opportunities then as now for skillful driving, and required even more
-of strength and daring. What we should call "fouling" was encouraged.
-The driver might turn his team against another, might upset the car of
-a rival if he could; having gained the inside track he might drive out
-of the straight course to keep a swifter team from passing his. The
-rewards were proportionately great. The successful _auriga_, despised
-though his station, was the pet and pride of the race-mad crowd, and
-under the Empire at least he was courted and fted by high and low.
-The pay of successful drivers was extravagant, the rival syndicates
-bidding against each other for the services of the most popular. Rich
-presents, too, were given them when they won their races, not only by
-their _factiones_, but also by outsiders who had backed them and
-profited by their skill.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 150. INSCRIPTION IN HONOR OF CRESCENS]
-
-342. Famous Aurigae.--The names of some of these victors have come
-down to us in inscriptions (10) erected in their honor or to their
-memory by their friends. Among these may be mentioned Publius Aelius
-Gutta Calpurnianus (58) of the late Empire (1,127 victories), Caius
-Apuleius Diocles, a Spaniard (in twenty-four years 4,257 races, l,462
-victories, winning the sum of 35,863,120 sesterces, about $1,800,000),
-Flavius Scorpus (2,048 victories at the age of twenty-seven), Marcus
-Aurelius Liber (3,000 victories), Pompeius Muscosus (3,559 victories).
-To these may be added Crescens, an inscription[3] in honor of whom was
-found at Rome in 1878 and is shown in Fig. 150.
-
-[Footnote 3: "Crescens, a driver of the blue syndicate, of the Moorish
-nation, twenty-two years of age. He won his first victory as a driver
-of a four-horse chariot in the consulship of Lucius Vipstanius
-Messalla on the birthday of the deified Nerva in the twenty-fourth
-race with these horses: Circius, Acceptor, Delicatus, and Cotynus.
-From Messalla's consulship to the birthday of the deified Claudius in
-the consulship of Glabrio he was sent from the barriers six hundred
-and eighty-six times and was victorious forty-seven times. In races
-between chariots with one from each syndicate he won nineteen times,
-with two from each twenty-three times, with three from each five
-times. He held back purposely once, took first place at the start
-eight times, took it from others thirty-eight times. He won second
-place one hundred and thirty times, third place one hundred and eleven
-times. His winnings amounted to 1,558,346 sesterces (about $78,000)."]
-
-343. Other Shows of the Circus.--The circus was used less frequently
-for other exhibitions than chariot races. Of these may be mentioned
-the performances of the _desultores_, men who rode two horses and
-leaped from one to the other while going at full speed, and of trained
-horses who performed various tricks while standing on a sort of
-wheeled platform which gave a very unstable footing. There were also
-exhibitions of horsemanship by citizens of good standing, riding under
-leaders in squadrons, to show the evolutions of the cavalry. The
-_ludus Troiae_ was also performed by young men of the nobility, a game
-that Vergil has described in the Fifth Aeneid. More to the taste of
-the crowd were the hunts (_venationes_), when wild beasts were turned
-loose in the circus to slaughter each other or be slaughtered by men
-trained for the purpose. We read of panthers, bears, bulls, lions,
-elephants, hippopotami, and even crocodiles (in artificial lakes made
-in the arena) exhibited during the Republic. In the circus, too,
-combats of gladiators sometimes took place, but these were more
-frequently in the amphitheater. One of the most brilliant spectacles
-must have been the procession (_pompa circensis_) which formally
-opened some of the public games. It started from the capitol and wound
-its way down to the Circus Maximus, entering by the _porta pompae_
-(named from it, 330), and passed entirely around the arena. At the
-head in a car rode the presiding magistrate, wearing the garb of a
-triumphant general and attended by a slave who held a wreath of gold
-over his head. Next came a crowd of notables on horseback and on foot,
-then the chariots and horsemen who were to take part in the games.
-Then followed priests, arranged by their colleges, and bearers of
-incense and of the instruments used in sacrifices, and statues of
-deities on low cars drawn by mules, horses, or elephants, or else
-carried on litters (_fercula_) on the shoulders of men. Bands of
-musicians headed each division of the procession, a feeble
-reminiscence of which is seen in the parade through the streets that
-precedes the performance of the modern circus.
-
-344. Gladiatorial Combats.--Gladiatorial combats seem to have been
-known in Italy long before the founding of Rome. We hear of them first
-in Campania and Etruria. In Campania the wealthy and dissolute nobles,
-we are told, made slaves fight to the death at their banquets and
-revels for the entertainment of their guests. In Etruria the combats
-go back in all probability to the offering of human sacrifices at the
-burial of distinguished men in accordance with the ancient belief that
-blood is acceptable to the dead. The victims were captives taken in
-war, and it became the custom gradually to give them a chance for
-their lives by supplying them with weapons and allowing them to fight
-each other at the grave, the victor being spared at least for the
-time. The Romans were slow to adopt the custom, the first exhibition
-being given in the year 264 B.C., almost five centuries after the
-founding of the city. That they derived it from Etruria rather than
-Campania is shown by the fact that the exhibitions were at funeral
-games, the earliest at those of Brutus Pera in 264 B.C., Marcus
-Aemilius Lepidus in 216 B.C., Marcus Valerius Lavinus in 200 B.C., and
-Publius Licinius in 183 B.C.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 151. A "SAMNITE"]
-
-345. For the first one hundred years after their introduction the
-exhibitions were infrequent as the dates just given show, those
-mentioned being all of which we have any knowledge during the period,
-but after this time they were given more and more frequently and
-always on a larger scale. During the Republic, however, they remained
-in theory at least private games (_munera_), not public games
-(_ludi_); that is, they were not celebrated on fixed days recurring
-annually, and the givers of the exhibitions had to find a pretext for
-them in the death of relatives or friends, and to defray the expenses
-from their own pockets. In fact we know of but one instance in which
-actual magistrates (the consuls Publius and Manlius, 105 B.C.) gave
-such exhibitions, and we know too little of the attendant
-circumstances to warrant us in assuming that they acted in their
-official capacity. Even under the Empire the gladiators did not fight
-on the days of the regular public games. Augustus, however, provided
-funds for "extraordinary shows" under the direction of the praetors.
-Under Domitian the aediles-elect were put in charge of these
-exhibitions which were given regularly in December, the only instance
-known of fixed dates for the _munera gladiatoria_. All others of which
-we read are to be considered the freewill offerings to the people of
-emperors, magistrates, or private citizens.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 152. WEAPONS OF GLADIATORS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 153. WOUNDED GLADIATOR]
-
-346. Popularity of the Combats.--The Romans' love of excitement
-(316) made the exhibitions immediately and immensely popular. At the
-first exhibition mentioned above, that in honor of Brutus Pera, three
-pairs of gladiators only were shown, but in the three that followed
-the number of pairs rose in order to twenty-two, twenty-five, and
-sixty. By the time of Sulla politicians had found in the _munera_ the
-most effective means to win the favor of the people, and vied with one
-another in the frequency of the shows and the number of the
-combatants. Besides this, the same politicians made these shows a
-pretext for surrounding themselves with bands of bravos and bullies,
-all called gladiators whether destined for the arena or not, with
-which they started riots in the streets, broke up public meetings,
-overawed the courts and even directed or prevented the elections.
-Caesar's preparations for an exhibition when he was canvassing for the
-aedileship (65 B.C.) caused such general fear that the senate passed a
-law limiting the number of gladiators that a private citizen might
-employ, and he was allowed to exhibit only 320 pairs. The bands of
-Clodius and Milo made the city a slaughterhouse in 53 B.C., and order
-was not restored until late in the following year when Pompey as "sole
-consul" put an end to the battle of the bludgeons with the swords of
-his soldiers. During the Empire the number actually exhibited almost
-surpasses belief. Augustus gave eight _munera_, in which no less than
-ten thousand men fought, but these were distributed through the whole
-period of his reign. Trajan exhibited as many in four months only of
-the year 107 A.D., in celebration of his conquest of the Dacians. The
-first Gordian, emperor in 238 A.D., gave _munera_ monthly in the year
-of his aedileship, the number of pairs running from 150 to 500. These
-exhibitions did not cease until the fifteenth century of our era.
-
-347. Sources of Supply.--In the early Republic the gladiators were
-captives taken in war, naturally men practiced in the use of weapons
-(161), who thought death by the sword a happier fate than the slavery
-that awaited them (140). This always remained the chief source of
-supply, though it became inadequate as the demand increased. From the
-time of Sulla training-schools were established in which slaves with
-or without previous experience in war were fitted for the profession.
-These were naturally slaves of the most intractable and desperate
-character (170). From the time of Augustus criminals were sentenced
-to the arena (later "to the lions"), but only non-citizens, and these
-for the most heinous crimes, treason, murder, arson, and the like.
-Finally in the late Empire the arena became the last desperate resort
-of the dissipated and prodigal, and these volunteers were numerous
-enough to be given as a class the name _auctorati_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 154. HELMETS OF GLADIATORS]
-
-348. As the number of the exhibitions increased it became harder and
-harder to supply the gladiators demanded, for it must be remembered
-that there were exhibitions in many of the cities of the provinces and
-in the smaller towns of Italy as well as at Rome. The lines were,
-therefore, constantly crossed, and thousands died miserably in the
-arena whom only the most glaring injustice could number in the classes
-mentioned above. In Cicero's time provincial governors were accused of
-sending unoffending provincials to be slaughtered in Rome and of
-forcing Roman citizens, obscure and friendless, of course, to fight in
-the provincial shows. Later it was common enough to send to the arena
-men sentenced for the pettiest offenses, when the supply of real
-criminals had run short, and to trump up charges against the innocent
-for the same purpose. The persecution of the Christians was largely
-due to the demand for more gladiators. So, too, the distinction was
-lost between actual prisoners of war and peaceful non-combatants;
-after the fall of Jerusalem all Jews over seventeen years of age were
-condemned by Titus to work in the mines or fight in the arena. Wars on
-the border were waged for the sole purpose of taking men who could be
-made gladiators, and in default of men, children and women were
-sometimes made to fight.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 155. SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS AT POMPEII]
-
-349. Schools for Gladiators.--The training-schools for gladiators
-(_ludi gladiatorii_) have been mentioned already. Cicero during his
-consulship speaks of one at Rome, and there were others before his
-time at Capua and Praeneste. Some of these were set up by wealthy
-nobles for the purpose of preparing their own gladiators for _munera_
-which they expected to give; others were the property of regular
-dealers in gladiators, who kept and trained them for hire. The
-business was almost as disreputable as that of the _lenones_ (139).
-During the Empire training-schools were maintained at public expense
-and under the direction of state officials not only in Rome, where
-there were four at least of these schools, but also in other cities of
-Italy where exhibitions were frequently given, and even in the
-provinces. The purpose of all the schools, public and private alike,
-was the same, to make the men trained in them as effective fighting
-machines as possible. The gladiators were in charge of competent
-training masters (_lanistae_); they were subject to the strictest
-discipline; their diet was carefully looked after, a special food
-(_sagina gladiatoria_) being provided for them; regular gymnastic
-exercises were prescribed, and lessons given in the use of the various
-weapons by recognized experts (_magistri_, _doctores_). In their
-fencing bouts wooden swords (_rudes_) were used. The gladiators
-associated in a school were collectively called a _familia_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 156. PLAN OF SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS]
-
-350. These schools had also to serve as barracks for the gladiators
-between engagements, that is, practically as houses of detention. It
-was from the school of Lentulus at Capua that Spartacus had escaped,
-and the Romans needed no second lesson of the sort. The general
-arrangement of these barracks may be understood from the ruins of one
-uncovered at Pompeii, though in this case the buildings had been
-originally planned for another purpose, and the rearrangement may not
-be ideal in all respects. A central court, or exercise ground (Figs.
-155, 156) is surrounded by a wide colonnade, and this in turn by rows
-of buildings two stories in height, the general arrangement being not
-unlike that of the peristyle of a house (202). The dimensions of the
-court are nearly 120 by 150 feet. The buildings are cut up into rooms,
-nearly all small (about twelve feet square), disconnected and opening
-upon the court, those in the first story being reached from the
-colonnade, those in the second from a gallery to which ran several
-stairways. These small rooms are supposed to be the sleeping-rooms of
-the gladiators, each accommodating two persons. There are seventy-one
-of them (marked _7_ on the plan), affording room for 142 men. The uses
-of the larger rooms are purely conjectural. The entrance is supposed
-to have been at _3_, with a room, _15_, for the watchman or sentinel.
-At _9_ was an _exedra_, where the gladiators may have waited in full
-panoply for their turns in the exercise ground, _1_. The guard-room,
-_8_, is identified by the remains of stocks, in which the refractory
-were fastened for punishment or safe-keeping. They permitted the
-culprits to lie on their backs or sit in a very uncomfortable
-position. At _6_ was the armory or property room, if we may judge from
-articles found in it. Near it in the corner was a staircase leading to
-the gallery before the rooms of the second story. The large room,
-_16_, was the mess-room, with the kitchen, _12_, opening into it. The
-stairway, _13_, gives access to the rooms above kitchen and mess-room,
-possibly the apartments of the trainers and their helpers.
-
-351. Places of Exhibition.--During the Republic the combats of
-gladiators took place sometimes at the grave or in the circus, but
-regularly in the forum. None of these places was well adapted to the
-purpose, the grave the least of all. The circus had seats enough, but
-the _spina_ was in the way (335) and the arena too vast to give all
-the spectators a satisfactory view of a struggle that was confined
-practically to a single spot. In the forum, on the other hand, the
-seats could be arranged very conveniently; they would run parallel
-with the sides, would be curved around the corners, and would inclose
-only sufficient space to afford room for the combatants. The
-inconvenience here was due to the fact that the seats had to be
-erected before each performance and removed after it, a delay to
-business if they were constructed carefully and a menace to life if
-they were put up hastily. These considerations finally led the Romans,
-as they had led the Campanians half a century before, to provide
-permanent seats for the _munera_, arranged as they had been in the
-forum, but in a place where they would not interfere with public or
-private business. To these places for shows of gladiators came in the
-course of time to be exclusively applied the word _amphitheatrum_,
-which had been previously given in its correct general sense to any
-place, the circus for example, in which the seats ran all the way
-around, as opposed to the theater in which the rows of seats were
-broken by the stage.
-
-352. Amphitheaters at Rome.--Just when the first amphitheaters, in
-the special sense of the word, were erected at Rome can not be
-determined with certainty. The elder Pliny (died 79 A.D.) tells us
-that in the year 55 B.C. Caius Scribonius Curio built two wooden
-theaters back to back, the stages being, therefore, at opposite ends,
-and gave in them simultaneous theatrical performances in the morning.
-Then, while the spectators remained in their seats, the two theaters
-were turned by machinery and brought together face to face, the stages
-were removed, and in the space they had occupied shows of gladiators
-were given in the afternoon before the united crowds. This story is
-all too evidently invented to account for the perfected amphitheater
-of Pliny's time, which he must have interpreted to mean "a double
-theater." We are also told that Caesar erected a wooden amphitheater
-in 46 B.C., but we have no detailed description of it, and no reason
-to think that it was anything more than a temporary affair. In the
-year 29 B.C., however, an amphitheater was built by Statilius Taurus,
-partially at least of stone, that lasted until the great conflagration
-in the reign of Nero (64 A.D.). Nero himself had previously erected
-one of wood in the Campus. Finally, just before the end of the first
-century of our era, was completed the _amphitheatrum Flavium_, later
-known as the _colosseum_ or _coliseum_, which was large enough and
-durable enough to make forever unnecessary the erection of other
-similar structures in the city.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 157. EXTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 158. INTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 159. SECTION OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-353. The Amphitheater at Pompeii.--The essential features of an
-amphitheater may be most easily understood from the ruins of the one
-at Pompeii, erected about 75 B.C., almost half a century before the
-first permanent structure of the sort at Rome (352), and the earliest
-known to us from either literary or monumental sources. The exterior
-is shown in Fig. 157 (see also Overbeck, pp. 176-180; Mau-Kelsey, pp.
-206-212) and a section in Fig. 159. It will be seen at once that the
-arena and most of the seats lie in a great hollow excavated for the
-purpose, thus making sufficient for the exterior a low wall of hardly
-more than ten to thirteen feet in height. Even this wall was necessary
-on only two sides, as the amphitheater was built in the southeast
-corner of the city and its south and east sides were bounded by the
-city walls. The shape is elliptical, the major axis being 444 feet,
-the minor 342. The arena occupies the middle space. It was encircled
-by thirty-five rows of seats arranged in three divisions, the lowest
-(_infima_ or _ima cavea_) having five rows, the second (_media cavea_)
-twelve, and the highest (_summa cavea_) eighteen. A broad terrace ran
-around the amphitheater at the height of the topmost row of seats.
-Access to this terrace was given from without by the double stairway
-on the west, shown in Fig. 157, and by single stairways next the city
-walls on the east and south (_10_ in Fig. 160). Between the terrace
-and the top seats was a gallery, or row of boxes, each about four feet
-square, probably for women. Beneath the boxes persons could pass from
-the terrace to the seats. The amphitheater had seating capacity for
-about 20,000 people.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 160. PLAN OF ARENA IN AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-354. The arena is shown in Fig. 158, its plan in Fig. 160. It was an
-ellipse with axes of 228 and 121 feet. Around it ran a wall a little
-more than six feet high, on a level with the top of which were the
-lowest seats. For the protection of the spectators when wild animals
-were shown, a grating of iron bars was put up on the top of the arena
-wall. Access to the arena and to the seats of the _cavea ima_ and the
-_cavea media_ was given by the two underground passageways, _1_ and
-_2_ in Fig. 160, of which _2_ turns at right angles on account of the
-city wall on the south. From the arena ran also a third passage, _5_,
-low and narrow, leading to the _porta Libitinensis_, through which the
-bodies of the dead were dragged with ropes and hooks. Near the mouths
-of these passages were small chambers or dens, marked _4_, _4_, _6_,
-the purposes of which are not known. The floor of the arena was
-covered with sand, as in the circus (332), but in this case to soak
-up the blood as well as to give a firm footing to the gladiators.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 161. BISELLIUM]
-
-355. Of the part of this amphitheater set aside for the spectators
-the _cavea ima_ only was supported upon artificial foundations. All
-the other seats were constructed in sections as means were obtained
-for the purpose, the people in the meantime finding places for
-themselves on the sloping banks as in the early theaters (325). The
-_cavea ima_ was strictly not supplied with seats all the way around, a
-considerable section on the east and west sides being arranged with
-four low, broad ledges of stone, rising one above the other, on which
-the members of the city council could place the seats of honor
-(_bisellia_, Fig. 161) to which their rank entitled them. In the
-middle of the section on the east the lowest ledge is made of double
-width for some ten feet; this was the place set apart for the giver of
-the games and his friends. In the _cavea media_ and the _cavea summa_
-the seats were of stone resting on the bank of earth. It is probable
-that all the places in the lowest section were reserved for people of
-distinction, that seats in the middle section were sold to the
-well-to-do, and that admission was free to the less desirable seats of
-the highest section.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 162. EXTERIOR OF THE COLISEUM]
-
-356. The Coliseum.--The Flavian amphitheater (352) is the best known
-of all the buildings of ancient Rome, because to a larger extent than
-others it has survived to the present day. For our purpose it is not
-necessary to give its history or to describe its architecture; it will
-be sufficient to compare its essential parts with those of its modest
-prototype in Pompeii. The latter was built in the outskirts of the
-city, in a corner in fact of the city walls (353); the coliseum lay
-almost in the center of Rome, the most generally accessible of all the
-public buildings. The interior of the Pompeian structure was reached
-through two passages and by three stairways only, while eighty
-numbered entrances made it easy for the Roman multitudes to find their
-appropriate places in the coliseum. Much of the earlier amphitheater
-was underground; all of the corresponding parts of the coliseum were
-above the level of the street, the walls rising to a height of nearly
-160 feet. This gave opportunity for the same architectural
-magnificence that had distinguished the Roman theater from that of the
-Greeks (326). The general effect is shown in Fig. 162, an exterior
-view of the ruins as they exist to-day.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 163. INTERIOR OF COLISEUM]
-
-357. The interior is shown in Fig. 163. The form is an ellipse with
-axes of 620 and 513 feet, the building covering nearly six acres of
-ground. The arena is also an ellipse, its axes measuring 287 and 180
-feet. The width of the space appropriated for the spectators is,
-therefore, 166 feet all around the arena. It will be noticed, too,
-that subterranean chambers were constructed under the whole building,
-including the arena. These furnished room for the regiments of
-gladiators, the dens of wild beasts, the machinery for the
-transformation scenes that Gibbon has described in his twelfth
-chapter, and above all for the vast number of water and drainage pipes
-that made it possible to turn the arena into a lake at a moment's
-notice and as quickly to get rid of the water. The wall that
-surrounded the arena was fifteen feet high with the side faced with
-rollers and defended like the one at Pompeii with a grating or network
-of metal above it. The top of the wall was level with the floor of the
-lowest range of seats, called the _podium_ as in the circus (337),
-and this had room for two or at the most three rows of marble thrones.
-These were for the use of the emperor and the imperial family, the
-giver of the games, the magistrates, senators, Vestal virgins,
-ambassadors of foreign states, and other persons of consequence.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 164. SECTION OF COLISEUM]
-
-358. The arrangement of the seats with the method of reaching them is
-shown in the sectional plan, Fig. 164. The seats were arranged in
-three tiers (_maeniana_, 337) one above the other, separated by broad
-passageways and rising more steeply the farther they were from the
-arena, and were crowned by an open gallery. In the plan the _podium_
-is marked A. Twelve feet above it begins the first _maenianum_, B,
-with fourteen rows of seats reserved for members of the equestrian
-order. Then came a broad _praecinctio_ (327) and after it the second
-_maenianum_, C, intended for ordinary citizens. Back of this was a
-wall of considerable height and above it the third _maenianum_, D,
-supplied with rough wooden benches for the lowest classes, foreigners,
-slaves, and the like. The row of pillars along the front of this
-section made the distant view all the worse. Above this was an open
-gallery, E, in which women found an unwelcome place. No other seats
-were open to them unless they were of sufficient distinction to claim
-a place upon the _podium_. At the very top of the outside wall was a
-terrace, F, in which were fixed masts to support the awnings that gave
-protection against the sun. The seating capacity of the coliseum is
-said to have been 80,000, and it had standing room for 20,000 more.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 165. RETIARIUS AND SECUTOR]
-
-359. Styles of Fighting.--Gladiators fought usually in pairs, man
-against man, but sometimes in masses (_gregatim_, _catervatim_). In
-early times they were actually soldiers, captives taken in war (347),
-and fought naturally with the weapons and equipment to which they were
-accustomed. When the professionally trained gladiators came in, they
-were given the old names, and were called Samnites, Thracians, etc.,
-according to their arms and tactics. In much later times victories
-over distant peoples were celebrated with combats in which the weapons
-and methods of war of the conquered were shown to the people of Rome;
-thus, after the conquest of Britain _essedarii_ exhibited in the arena
-the tactics of chariot fighting which Caesar had described generations
-before in his Commentaries. It was natural enough, too, for the people
-to want to see different arms and different tactics tried against each
-other, and so the Samnite was matched against the Thracian, the heavy
-armed against the light armed. This became under the Empire the
-favorite style of combat. Finally when people had tired of the regular
-shows, novelties were introduced that seem to us grotesque; men fought
-blindfold (_andabatae_), armed with two swords (_dimachaeri_), with
-the lasso (_laqueatores_), with a heavy net (_retiarii_), and there
-were battles of dwarfs and of dwarfs with women. Of these the
-_retiarius_ became immensely popular. He carried a huge net in which
-he tried to entangle his opponent, always a _secutor_ (see below),
-despatching him with a dagger if the throw was successful. If
-unsuccessful he took to flight while preparing his net for another
-throw, of if he had lost his net tried to keep his opponent off with a
-heavy three-pronged spear (_fuscina_), his only weapon beside the
-dagger (Fig. 165).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 166. THRAEX]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 167. VOTIVE GALERUS]
-
-360. Weapons and Armor.--The armor and weapons used in these combats
-are known from pieces found in various places, some of which are shown
-in Fig. 152, 345, and from paintings and sculpture, but we are not
-always able to assign them to definite classes of gladiators. The
-oldest class was that of the Samnites (Fig. 151, 344). They had
-belts, thick sleeves on the right arm (_manica_), helmets with visors,
-shown in Fig. 154, 348, greaves on the left leg, short swords, and
-the long shield (_scutum_). Under the Empire the name Samnite was
-gradually lost and gladiators with equivalent equipment were called
-_hoplomachi_ (heavy armed), when matched against the lighter armed
-Thracians, and _secutores_, when they fought with the _retiarii_. The
-Thracians (Fig. 166) had much the same equipment as the Samnites, the
-mark of distinction being the small shield (_parma_) in place of the
-_scutum_ and, to make up the difference, greaves on both legs. They
-carried a curved sword. The Gauls were heavy armed, but we do not know
-how they were distinguished from the Samnites. In later times they
-were called _murmillones_, from an ornament on their helmets shaped
-like a fish (_mormyr_). The retiarii had no defensive armor except a
-leather protection for the shoulder, shown in Fig. 165. Of course the
-same man might appear by turns as Samnite, Thracian, etc., if he was
-skilled in the use of the various weapons; see the inscription in
-363.
-
-361. Announcement of the Shows.--The games were advertised in advance
-by means of notices painted on the walls of public and private houses,
-and even on the tombstones that lined the approaches to the towns and
-cities. Some are worded in very general terms, announcing merely the
-name of the giver of the games with the date:
-
- A . SVETTI . CERTI
- AEDILIS . FAMILIA . GLADIATORIA . PUGNAB . POMPEIS
- PR . K . JVNIAS . VENATIO . ET . VELA . ERUNT[4]
-
-[Footnote 4: "On the last day of May the gladiators of the Aedile
-Aulus Suettius Certus will fight at Pompeii. There will also be a hunt
-and the awnings will be used."]
-
-Others promise in addition to the awnings that the dust will be kept
-down in the arena by sprinkling. Sometimes when the troop was
-particularly good the names of the gladiators were announced in pairs
-as they would be matched together, with details as to their equipment,
-the school in which each had been trained, the number of his previous
-battles, etc. To such a notice on one of the walls in Pompeii some one
-added after the show the result of each combat. The following is a
-specimen only of this announcement:
-
- MVNUS . N... . IV . III
- PRID . IDUS . IDIBUS . MAIS
- T M O T
- _v._ PUGNAX . NER . III _v._ CYCNVS . IVL . VIII
- _p._ MVRRANVS . NER . III _m._ ATTICVS . IVL . XIV[5]
-
-[Footnote 5: "The games of N... from the 12th to the 15th of May. The
-Thracian Pugnax, of the gladiatorial school of Nero, who has fought
-three times will be matched against the _murmillo_ Murranus, of the
-same school and the same number of fights. The _hoplomachus_ Cycnus,
-from the school of Julius Caesar, who has fought eight times will be
-matched with the Thracian Atticus of the same school and of fourteen
-fights."]
-
-The letters in italics before the names of the gladiators were added
-after the exhibition by some interested spectator, and stand for
-_vicit_, _periit_, and _missus_ ("beaten, but spared"). Other
-announcements added to such particulars as those given above the
-statement that other pairs than those mentioned would fight each day,
-this being meant to excite the curiosity and interest of the people.
-
-362. The Fight Itself.--The day before the exhibition a banquet
-(_cena libera_) was given to the gladiators and they received visits
-from their friends and admirers. The games took place in the
-afternoon. After the _editor muneris_ had taken his place (355), the
-gladiators marched in procession around the arena, pausing before him
-to give the famous greeting: _morituri te salutant_. All then retired
-from the arena to return in pairs according to the published
-programme. The show began with a series of sham combats, the
-_prolusio_, with blunt weapons. When the people had had enough of this
-the trumpets gave the signal for the real exhibition to begin. Those
-reluctant to fight were driven into the arena with whips or hot iron
-bars. If one of the combatants was clearly overpowered without being
-actually killed, he might appeal for mercy by holding up his finger to
-the _editor_. It was customary to refer the plea to the people, who
-waved cloths or napkins to show that they wished it to be granted, or
-pointed their thumbs downward as a signal for death. The gladiator who
-was refused release (_missio_) received the death blow from his
-opponent without resistance. Combats where all must fight to the death
-were said to be _sine missione_, but these were forbidden by Augustus.
-The body of the dead man was dragged away through the _porta
-Libitinensis_, sand was sprinkled or raked over the blood, and the
-contests were continued until all had fought.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 168. TESSERA GLADIATORIA][6]
-
-[Footnote 6: _Lepidus Mummeiani s(ervus). Spectavit m(ense) Iunio, C.
-Sentio Consule._]
-
- D . M . ET . MEMORIAE
- AETERNAE . HYLATIS
- DYMACHAERO . SIVE
- ASSIDARIO . P . VII . RV . I
- ERMAIS . CONIVX
- CONIVGI . KARISSIMO
- P . C . ET . S . AS . D[7]
-
-[Footnote 7: Inscription on tomb of a gladiator. "To the Gods Manes
-and the lasting memory of Hylas, a dimachaerus or essedarius of seven
-victories and head trainer. His wife Ermais erected this monument to
-her beloved husband and dedicated it, reserving the usual rights."]
-
-363. The Rewards.--Before making his first public appearance the
-gladiator was technically called a _tiro_. After his first victory he
-received a token of wood or ivory (Fig. 168), which had upon it his
-name and that of his master or trainer, a date, and the letters SP,
-SPECT, SPECTAT, or SPECTAVIT, meaning perhaps _populus spectavit_.
-When after many victories he had proved himself to be the best of his
-class, or second best, in his _familia_, he received the title of
-_primus_, or _secundus_, _palus_. When he had won his freedom he was
-given a wooden sword (_rudis_). From this the titles _prima rudis_ and
-_secunda rudis_ seem to have been given to those who were afterwards
-employed as training masters (_doctores_, 349) in the schools. The
-rewards given to famous gladiators by their masters and backers took
-the form of valuable prizes and gifts of money. These may not have
-been so generous as those given to the _aurigae_ (341), but they were
-enough to enable them to live in luxury the rest of their lives. The
-class of men, however, who followed this profession probably found
-their most acceptable reward in the immediate and lasting notoriety
-that their strength and courage brought them. That they did not shrink
-from the _infamia_ that the profession entailed is shown by the fact
-that they did not try to hide their connection with the amphitheater.
-On the contrary, their gravestones record their classes and the number
-of their victories, and have often cut upon them their likenesses with
-the _rudis_ in their hands.
-
-364. Other Shows in the Amphitheater.--Of other games that were
-sometimes given in the amphitheaters something has been said in
-connection with the circus (343). The most important were the
-_venationes_, hunts of wild beasts. These were sometimes killed by men
-trained to hunt them, sometimes made to kill each other. As the
-amphitheater was primarily intended for the butchery of men, the
-_venationes_ given in it gradually but surely took the form of
-man-hunts. The victims were condemned criminals, some of them guilty
-of crimes that deserved death, some of them sentenced on trumped up
-charges, some of them (and among these were women and children)
-condemned "to the lions" for political or religious convictions.
-Sometimes they were supplied with weapons, sometimes they were exposed
-unarmed, even fettered or bound to stakes, sometimes the ingenuity of
-their executioners found additional torments for them by making them
-play the parts of the sufferers in the tragedies of mythology. The
-arena was well adapted, too, for the maneuvering of boats, when it had
-been flooded with water (357), and naval battles (_naumachiae_) were
-often fought within the coliseum as desperate and as bloody as some of
-those that have given a new turn to the history of the world. The
-earliest exhibitions of this sort were given in artificial lakes, also
-called _naumachiae_. The first of these was dug by Caesar, for a
-single exhibition, in 46 B.C. Augustus had a permanent basin
-constructed in 2 B.C., measuring 1,800 by 1,200 feet, and four others
-at least were built by later emperors.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 169. HALL IN THERMAE OF CARACALLA]
-
-365. The Daily Bath.--To the Roman of early times the bath had stood
-for health and decency only. He washed every day his arms and legs,
-for the ordinary costume left them exposed (239), his body once a
-week. He bathed at home, using a very primitive sort of wash-room,
-situated near the kitchen (203) in order that the water heated on the
-kitchen stove might be carried into it with the least possible
-inconvenience. By the last century of the Republic all this had
-changed, though the steps in the change can not now be followed. The
-bath had become a part of the daily life as momentous as the _cena_
-itself, which it regularly preceded. It was taken, too, by preference
-in one of the public bathing establishments which were by this time
-operated on a large scale in all parts of Rome and also in the smaller
-towns of Italy and even in the provinces. These offered all sorts of
-baths, plain, plunge, douche, with massage (Turkish), and besides in
-many cases features borrowed from the Greek gymnasia, exercise
-grounds, courts for various games, reading and conversation rooms,
-libraries, gymnastic apparatus, everything in fact that our athletic
-clubs now provide for their members. The accessories had become really
-of more importance than the bathing itself and justify the description
-of the bath under the head of amusements. In places where there were
-no public baths, or where they were at an inconvenient distance, the
-wealthy fitted up bathing places in their houses, but no matter how
-elaborate they were the private baths were merely a makeshift at best.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 170. TEPIDARIUM AT POMPEII]
-
-366. Essentials for the Bath.--The ruins of the public and private
-baths found all over the Roman world, together with a dissertation by
-Vitruvius, and countless allusions in literature, make very clear the
-general construction and arrangement of the bath, but show that the
-widest freedom was allowed in matters of detail. For the luxurious
-bath of classical times four things were thought necessary: a warm
-ante-room, a hot bath, a cold bath, and the rubbing and anointing with
-oil. All these might have been had in a single room, as all but the
-last are furnished in every modern bathroom, but as a matter of fact
-we find at least three rooms set apart for the bath in very modest
-private houses and often five or six, while in the public
-establishments this number may be multiplied several times. In the
-better equipped houses were provided: (1) A room for undressing and
-dressing (_apodyterium_), usually unheated, but furnished with benches
-and often with lockers for the clothes; (2) the warm ante-room
-(_tepidarium_), in which the bather waited long enough for the
-perspiration to start, in order to guard against the danger of passing
-too suddenly into the high temperature of the next room; (3) the hot
-room (_caldarium_) for the hot bath; (4) the cold room (_frigidarium_)
-for the cold bath; (5) the _unctorium_, the room for the rubbing and
-anointing with oil that finished the bath, from which the bather
-returned into the _apodyterium_ for his clothes.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 171. STRIGILES]
-
-367. In the more modest houses space was saved by using a room for
-several purposes. The separate _apodyterium_ might be dispensed with,
-the bather undressing and dressing in either the _frigidarium_ or
-_tepidarium_ according to the weather; or the _unctorium_ might be
-saved by using the _tepidarium_ for this purpose as well as for its
-own. In this way the suite of five rooms might be reduced to four or
-three. On the other hand, private houses had sometimes an additional
-hot room without water (_laconicum_), used for a sweat bath, and a
-public bathhouse would be almost sure to have an exercise ground
-(_palaestra_), with a pool at one side (_piscina_) for a cold plunge
-and a room adjacent (_destrictarium_) in which the sweat and dirt of
-exercise were scraped off with the _strigilis_ (Fig. 171) before and
-after the bath. It must not be supposed that all bathers went the
-round of all the rooms in the order given above, though that was
-common enough. Some would dispense with the hot bath altogether,
-taking instead a sweat in the _laconicum_, or failing that, in the
-_caldarium_, removing the perspiration with the strigil, following
-this with a cold bath (perhaps merely a shower or douche) in the
-_frigidarium_ and the rubbing with linen cloths and anointing with
-oil. Young men who deserted the campus and the Tiber (317) for the
-_palaestra_ and the bath would content themselves with removing the
-effects of their exercise with the scraper, taking a plunge in the
-open pool, and then a second scraping and the oil. Much would depend
-on the time and the tastes of individuals, and physicians laid down
-strict rules for their patients to follow.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 172. SUSPENSURA]
-
-368. Heating the Bath.--The arrangement of the rooms, were they many
-or few, depended upon the method of heating. This in early times must
-have been by stoves placed in the rooms as needed, but by the end of
-the Republic the furnace had come into use, heating the rooms as well
-as the water with a single fire. The hot air from the furnace was not
-conducted into the rooms directly, as it is with us, but was made to
-circulate under the floors and through spaces between the walls, the
-temperature of the room depending upon its proximity to the furnace.
-The _laconicum_, if there was one, was put directly over the furnace,
-next to it came the _caldarium_ and then the _tepidarium_, while the
-_frigidarium_ and the _apodyterium_ having no need of heat were at the
-greatest distance from the fire and without connection with it. If
-there were two sets of baths in the same building, as there sometimes
-were for the accommodation of both men and women at the same time, the
-two _caldaria_ were put on opposite sides of the furnace (see the plan
-in 376) and the other rooms were connected with them in the regular
-order, the two entrances being at the greatest distance apart. The
-method of conducting the air under the floors is shown in Fig. 172.
-There were really two floors, the first being even with the top of the
-firepot, the second (_suspensura_) with the top of the furnace.
-Between them was a space of about two feet into which the hot air
-passed. On the top of the furnace, just above the level, therefore, of
-the second floor, were two kettles for heating the water. One was
-placed well back, where the fire was not so hot, and contained water
-that was kept merely warm; the other was placed directly over the fire
-and the water in it, received from the former, was easily kept
-intensely hot. Near them was a third kettle containing cold water.
-From these three kettles the water was piped as needed to the various
-rooms. The arrangement will be easily understood after a study of the
-plans in 376, 378.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 173. SECTION OF CALDARIUM]
-
-369. The Caldarium.--The hot water bath was taken in the _caldarium_
-(_cella caldaria_), which served also as a sweat bath when there was
-no _laconicum_. It was a rectangular room and in the public baths was
-longer than wide (Vitruvius says the proportion should be 3:2) with
-one end rounded off like an apse or bay window. At the other end stood
-the large hot water tank (_alveus_), in which the bath was taken by a
-number of persons at a time. The _alveus_ (Fig. 173) was built up two
-steps from the floor of the room, its length equal to the width of the
-room and its breadth at the top not less than six feet. At the bottom
-it was not nearly so wide, the back sloping inward, so that the
-bathers could recline against it, and the front having a long broad
-step, for convenience of descent into it, upon which, too, the bathers
-sat. The water was received hot from the furnace, and was kept hot by
-a metal heater (_testudo_), opening into the _alveus_ and extending
-beneath the floor into the hot air chamber. Near the top of the tank
-was an overflow pipe, and in the bottom was an escape pipe which
-allowed the water to be emptied on the floor of the _caldarium_, to be
-used for scrubbing it. In the apse-like end of the room was a tank or
-large basin of metal (_labrum_, _solium_), which seems to have
-contained cool water for the douche. In private baths the room was
-usually rectangular and then the _labrum_ was placed in a corner. For
-the accommodation of those using the room for the sweat bath only,
-there were benches along the wall. The air in the _caldarium_ would,
-of course, be very moist, while that of the _laconicum_ would be
-perfectly dry, so that the effect would not be precisely the same.
-
-370. The Frigidarium and Unctorium.--The _frigidarium_ (_cella
-frigidaria_) contained merely the cold plunge bath, unless it was made
-to do duty for the _apodyterium_, when there would be lockers on the
-wall for the clothes (at least in a public bath) and benches for the
-slaves who watched them. Persons who found the bath too cold would
-resort instead to the open swimming pool in the _palaestra_, which
-would be warmed by the sun. In one of the public baths at Pompeii a
-cold bath seems to have been introduced into the _tepidarium_, for the
-benefit, probably, of invalids who found even the _palaestra_ too cool
-for comfort. The final process, that of scraping, rubbing, and oiling,
-was exceedingly important. The bather was often treated twice, before
-the warm bath and after the cold bath; the first might be omitted, but
-the second never. The special room, _unctorium_, was furnished with
-benches and couches. The scrapers and oils were brought by the
-bathers, usually carried along with the towels for the bath by a slave
-(_capsarius_). The bather might scrape (_destringere_) and oil
-(_deungere_) himself, or he might receive a regular massage at the
-hands of a trained slave. It is probable that in the large baths
-expert operators could be hired, but we have no direct testimony on
-the subject. When there was no special _unctorium_ the _tepidarium_ or
-_apodyterium_ was made to do instead.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 174. BATH AT CAERWENT]
-
-371. A Private Bathhouse.--In Fig. 174 is shown the plan of a private
-bath in Caerwent, Monmouthshire, England, the ruins of which were
-discovered in the year 1855. It dates from about the time of
-Constantine (306-333), and small though it is gives a clear notion of
-the arrangement of the rooms. The entrance _A_ leads into the
-_frigidarium B_, 10'6" x 6'6" in size, with a bath _C_, 10'6" x 3'3".
-Off this is the _apodyterium D_, 10'6" x 13'3", which has the
-apse-like end that the _caldarium_ ought to have. Next is the
-_tepidarium E_, 12' x 12', which contrary to all the rules is the
-largest instead of the smallest of the four main rooms. Then comes the
-_caldarium F_, 12' x 7'6", with its _alveus G_, 6' x 3' x 2', but with
-no sign of its _labrum_ left, perhaps because the basin was too small
-to require any special foundation. Finally comes the rare _laconicum
-H_, 8' x 4', built over one end of the furnace _I_, which was in the
-basement room _KK_. The hot air passed as indicated by the arrows,
-escaping through openings near the roof in the outside wall of the
-_apodyterium_. It should be noticed that there was no direct passage
-from the _caldarium_ to the _frigidarium_, no special entrance to the
-_laconicum_, and that the _tepidarium_ must have served as the
-_unctorium_. The dimensions of the bath as a whole are 31 x 34 feet.
-
-372. The Public Baths.--To the simpler bathhouse of the earlier times
-as well as to the bath itself was given the name _balneum_
-(_balineum_), used often in the plural, _balnea_, by the dactylic
-poets for metrical convenience. The more complex establishments of
-later times were called _balneae_, and to the very largest with
-features derived from the Greek gymnasia (365) the name _thermae_ was
-finally given. These words, however, were loosely used and often
-interchanged in practice. Public baths are first heard of after the
-second Punic war. They increased in number rapidly, 170 at least being
-operated in Rome in the year 33 B.C., and later there were more than
-800. With equal rapidity they spread through Italy and the provinces,
-all the towns and many villages even having at least one. They were
-public only in the sense of being open to all citizens who could pay
-the modest fee demanded for their use. Free baths there were none,
-except when some magistrate or public-spirited citizen or candidate
-for office arranged to relieve the people of the fees for a definite
-time by meeting the charges himself. So Agrippa in the year 33 B.C.
-kept open free of charge 170 establishments at Rome. The rich
-sometimes provided free baths for the people in their wills, but
-always for a limited time.
-
-373. Management.--The first public baths were opened by individuals
-for speculative purposes. Others were built by wealthy men as gifts to
-their native towns, as such men give hospitals and libraries now, the
-administration being lodged with the town authorities who kept the
-buildings in repair and the baths open with the fees collected. Others
-were built by the towns out of public funds, and others still as
-monuments by the later emperors. However started, the management was
-practically the same for all. They were leased for a definite time and
-for a fixed sum to a manager (_conductor_) who paid his expenses and
-made his profits out of the fees which he collected. The fee
-(_balneaticum_) was hardly more than nominal. The regular price at
-Rome for men seems to have been a _quadrans_, less than a cent, the
-bather furnishing his own towels, oil, etc., as we have seen (370).
-Women paid more, perhaps twice as much, while children up to a certain
-age, unknown to us, paid nothing. Prices varied, of course, in
-different places. It is likely that higher prices were charged in some
-baths than in others in the same city, either because they were more
-luxuriously equipped or to make them more exclusive and fashionable
-than the rest, but we have no positive knowledge that this was done.
-
-374. Hours Opened.--The bath was regularly taken between the
-_meridiatio_ and _cena_, the hour varying, therefore, within narrow
-limits in different seasons and for different classes (310). In
-general it may be said to have been taken about the eighth hour, and
-at this hour all the _conductores_ were bound by their contracts to
-have the baths open and all things in readiness. As a matter of fact
-many people preferred to bathe before the _prandium_ (302), and some
-at least of the baths in the larger places must have been open then.
-All were regularly kept open until sunset, but in the smaller towns,
-where public baths were fewer, it is probable that they were kept open
-later; at least the lamps found in large numbers in the Pompeian baths
-seem to point at evening hours. It may be taken for granted that the
-managers would keep the doors open as long as was profitable for them.
-
-375. Accommodations for Women.--Women of respectability bathed in the
-public baths, as they bathe in public places now, but with women only,
-enjoying the opportunity to meet their friends as much as did the men.
-In the large cities there were separate baths devoted to their
-exclusive use. In the larger towns separate rooms were set apart for
-them in the baths intended generally for men. Such a combination is
-shown in the next paragraph and the arrangement has been explained in
-368. In the very small places the bath was opened to men and women at
-different hours. Late in the Empire we read of men and women bathing
-together, but this was true of women only who had no claim to
-respectability at all.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 175. THERMAE AT POMPEII]
-
-376. Thermae.--In Fig. 175 is shown a plan of the so-called Stabian
-baths at Pompeii, which gives a correct idea of the smaller _thermae_
-and serves at the same time to illustrate the combination of baths for
-men and women under the same roof. In the plan the unnumbered rooms
-opening upon the surrounding streets were used for shops and stores
-independent of the baths, those opening within were for the use of the
-attendants or for purposes that can not now be determined. The main
-entrance (_1_), on the south, opened upon the _palaestra_ (_2_),
-surrounded on three sides by colonnades and on the west by a bowling
-alley (_3_), where large stone balls were found. Behind the bowling
-alley was the _piscina_ (_6_) open to the sun, with a room on either
-side (_5_, _7_) for douche baths and a _destrictarium_ (_4_) for the
-use of the athletes. There were two side entrances (_8_, _11_) at the
-northwest, with the porter's room (_12_) and manager's office (_10_)
-within convenient reach. The room (_9_) at the head of the bowling
-alley was for the use of the players and may be compared with the
-similar room for the use of the gladiators marked _9_ in Fig. 156
-(350). Behind the office was the _latrina_ (_14_).
-
-377. On the east are the baths proper, the men's to the south. There
-were two _apodyteria_ (_24_, _25_) for the men, each with a separate
-waiting-room for the slaves (_26_, _27_) with a door to the street.
-Then come in order the _frigidarium_ (_22_), the _tepidarium_ (_23_),
-and the _caldarium_ (_21_). The _tepidarium_, contrary to custom, had
-a cold bath as explained in 370. The main entrance to the women's
-bath was at the northeast (_17_), but there was also an entrance from
-the northwest through the long corridor (_15_), both opening into the
-_apodyterium_ (_16_). This contained in one corner a cold bath, there
-being no separate _frigidarium_ in the baths for women. Then come in
-the regular position the _tepidarium_ (_18_) and _caldarium_ (_19_).
-The furnace (_20_) was between the two _caldaria_, and the position of
-the three kettles (368) which furnished the water is clearly shown.
-It should be noticed that there was no _laconicum_. It is possible
-that one of the waiting-rooms for men (_24_) may have been used as an
-_unctorium_. The ruins show that the rooms were most artistically
-decorated and there can be no doubt that they were luxuriously
-furnished. The colonnades and the large waiting-rooms gave ample space
-for the lounge after the bath, which the Roman prized so highly.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 176. BATHS OF DIOCLETIAN]
-
-378. Baths of Diocletian.--The irregularity of plan and the waste of
-space in the Pompeian _thermae_ just described are due to the fact
-that it was rebuilt at various times with all sorts of alterations and
-additions. Nothing can be more symmetrical than the _thermae_ of the
-later emperors, as a type of which is shown in Fig. 176 the plan of
-the Baths of Diocletian, dedicated in 305 A.D. They lay on the east
-side of the city and were the largest and with the exception of those
-of Caracalla the most magnificent of the Roman baths. The plan shows
-the arrangement of the main rooms, all in the line of the minor axis
-of the building; the uncovered _piscina_ (1), the _apodyterium_ and
-_frigidarium_ (2), combined as in the women's baths at Pompeii, the
-_tepidarium_ (3), and the _caldarium_ (4) projecting beyond the other
-rooms for the sake of the sunshine. The uses of the surrounding halls
-and courts can not now be determined, but it is clear from the plan
-that nothing was omitted known to the luxury of the time. An idea of
-the magnificence of the central room may be had from Fig. 169 (365),
-showing the corresponding room in the Baths of Caracalla.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 469-474, 731-738, 799-833; Voigt, 359 f.; Gll,
-II, 418-462, III, 1-45; Guhl and Koner, 538-544, 766 f., 783 f.;
-Friedlnder, II, 36-291; Ramsay, 76-78, 512-516; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_carpentum_, _cisium_, _charta_, _Brief_, _Buch_, _Buchhandlung_,
-_Bibliotheken_; Smith, Harper, Rich, Lbker, _viae_, _tabulae_,
-_liber_, _bibliotheca_, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister,
-2079 f., 354, 361-364; Blmner, I, 308-327; Johnston, Latin
-Manuscripts, 13-21, 27-34, 36.
-
-
-379. For our knowledge of the means of traveling employed by the
-Romans we have to rely upon indirect sources (12), because if any
-volumes of travel were ever written they have not come down to us. We
-know, however, that while no distance was too great to be traversed,
-no hardships too severe to be surmounted, for the sake of fame or
-fortune, the Roman cared nothing for traveling in itself, for the mere
-pleasure, that is, of sight-seeing. This was partly due to his
-blindness to the charms of nature, more perhaps to his feeling that to
-be out of Rome was to be forgotten. He made once in his life the grand
-tour (116), he spent a year abroad in the train of some general or
-governor (118), but this done, only the most urgent private affairs
-or public duties could draw him from Italy. And Italy was to him only
-Rome and his country estates (145). These he visited when the hot
-months had closed the courts and adjourned the senate, roaming
-restlessly from one to another, impatient for his real life to begin
-again. Even when public or private business called him from Rome, he
-kept in touch with affairs by correspondence, expecting his friends to
-write him voluminous letters, ready himself to return the favor when
-positions should be reversed. So, too, the proconsul kept as near to
-Rome as the boundaries of his province would permit; almost all the
-uprisings in farther Gaul were due to Caesar's habit of hurrying off
-to Italy as soon as winter had put an end to active operations in the
-field.
-
-380. By Water.--The means of travel were the same as our ancestors
-used a century ago. By water the Roman used sailing vessels, rarely
-canal boats; by land vehicles drawn by horses or mules, for short
-distances sedan chairs or litters. There were, however, no
-transportation companies, no lines of boats or vehicles, that is,
-running between certain places and prepared to carry passengers at a
-fixed price on a regular schedule. The traveler by sea whose means did
-not permit him to buy or charter a vessel for his exclusive use had
-therefore to wait at the port until he found a boat going in the
-desired direction and then make such terms as he could for his
-passage. And there were other inconveniences. The boats were small,
-and this made them uncomfortable in rough weather; the lack of the
-compass caused them to follow the coast as much as possible, and this
-often increased the distance; in winter navigation was usually
-suspended. Traveling by water was, therefore, avoided as much as
-possible. Rather than sail to Athens from Ostia or Naples, for
-example, the traveler would go by land to Brundisium, by sea across to
-Dyrrachium, and continue the journey by land. Between Brundisium and
-Dyrrachium boats were constantly passing, and the only delay to be
-feared was that caused by bad weather. The short voyage, only 100
-miles, was usually made within twenty-four hours.
-
-381. By Land.--The Roman who traveled by land was distinctly better
-off than Americans of the time of the Revolution. His inns were not so
-good, it is true, but his vehicles and cattle were fully equal to
-theirs, and his roads were the best that have ever been built.
-Horseback riding was not a recognized mode of traveling (the Romans
-had no saddles), but there were vehicles with two wheels and with
-four, for one horse and for two or more, covered and uncovered. These
-were kept for hire near the gates of all important towns, but the
-price is not known. To save the trouble of loading and unloading the
-baggage it is probable that persons going great distances took their
-own vehicles and merely hired fresh horses from time to time. There
-were, however, no postroutes, and no places where horses were changed
-at the end of regular stages for ordinary travelers, though there were
-such arrangements for couriers and officers of the government,
-especially in the provinces. For short journeys and when haste was not
-necessary travelers would naturally use their own horses as well as
-their own carriages. Of the pomp that often accompanied such journeys
-something has been said in 152.
-
-382. The Vehicles.--The streets of Rome were so narrow (the widest
-not over twenty-five feet, the average about fourteen) that wagons and
-carriages were not allowed upon them at hours when they were likely to
-be thronged with people. Throughout the Republic and for at least two
-centuries afterwards the streets were closed to all vehicles during
-the first ten hours of the day, with the exception of four classes
-only: market wagons, which brought produce into the city by night and
-were allowed to leave empty the next morning, transfer wagons
-(_plaustra_) conveying material for public buildings, the carriages
-used by the Vestals, _flamines_, and _rex sacrorum_ in their priestly
-functions, and the chariots driven in the _pompa circensis_ (343) and
-in the triumphal processions. Similar regulations were in force in
-almost all the Italian towns. This made general the use within the
-walls of the _lectica_ and its bearers (151). Besides the litter in
-which the passenger reclined a sedan chair was common in which he sat
-erect. Both were covered and curtained. The _lectica_ was sometimes
-used for short journeys, and in place of the six or eight bearers,
-mules were sometimes put between the shafts, one before and one
-behind, but not until late in the Empire. Such a litter was called a
-_basterna_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 177. CARPENTUM]
-
-383. Carriages.--The monuments show us rude representations of
-several kinds of vehicles and the names of at least eight have come
-down to us, but we are not able positively to connect the figures and
-the names, and have, therefore, very general notions only of the form
-and construction of even the most common. Some seem to have been of
-ancient design and retained merely for use as state carriages in the
-processions that have been mentioned. Such were the _pilentum_ and the
-_carpentum_, the former with four wheels, the latter with two, both
-covered, both drawn by two horses, both used by the Vestals and
-priests. The _carpentum_ is rarely spoken of as a traveling carriage,
-and its use for such a purpose was a mark of luxury. Livy makes the
-first Tarquin come from Etruria to Rome in one, and it is generally
-supposed that one is shown in an Etruscan painting reproduced here in
-Fig. 177. The _petoritum_ was also used in the triumphal processions,
-but only for the spoils of war. It was essentially a baggage wagon and
-was occupied by the servants in a traveler's train. The _caruca_ was a
-luxurious traveling van, of which we hear first in the late Empire. It
-was furnished with a bed on which the traveler reclined by day and
-slept by night.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 178. CISIUM]
-
-384. The Reda and Cisium.--The usual traveling vehicles, however,
-were the _reda_ and the _cisium_. The former was large and heavy,
-covered, had four wheels, and was drawn by two or four horses. It was
-regularly used by persons accompanied by their families or having
-baggage with them, and was kept for hire for this purpose. For rapid
-journeys, when a man had no traveling companions and little baggage,
-the two-wheeled and uncovered _cisium_ was the favorite vehicle. It
-was drawn by two horses, one between shafts and the other attached by
-traces; it is possible that three were sometimes used. The _cisium_
-had a single seat, broad enough to accommodate a driver also. It is
-very likely that the cart on a monument found near Trieves (Fig. 178)
-is a _cisium_, but the identification is not absolutely certain.
-Cicero speaks of these carts making fifty-six miles in ten hours,
-probably with one or more changes of horses. Other vehicles of the
-cart type that came into use during the Empire were the _essedum_ and
-the _covinus_, but we do not know how they differed from the _cisium_.
-These carts had no springs, but the traveler took care to have plenty
-of cushions. It is worth noticing that none of the vehicles mentioned
-has a Latin name, all being Gallic with perhaps one exception
-(_pilentum_). In like manner most of our own carriages have foreign
-names.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 179. ROAD CUT THROUGH HILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 180. BRIDGE OVER STREAM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 181. VIADUCT OVER MARSH]
-
-385. The Roads.--The engineering skill of the Romans and the lavish
-outlay of money made their roads the best that the world has ever
-known. They were strictly military works, built for strategic
-purposes, intended to facilitate the despatching of supplies to the
-frontier and the massing of troops in the shortest possible time.
-Beginning with the first important acquisition of territory in Italy
-(the _via Appia_ was built in 312 B.C.) they kept pace with the
-expansion of the Republic and the Empire. In Italy they were built at
-the cost of the state, in the provinces the conquered communities bore
-the expense of construction and maintenance, but the work was done
-under the direction of Roman engineers and often by the legions
-between campaigns. They ran in straight lines between the towns they
-were to connect, with frequent crossroads and branch roads only less
-carefully constructed. No natural obstacles were permitted to change
-their course. The grade was always easy, hills being cut through (Fig.
-179), gorges and rivers crossed on arches of solid stone (Fig. 180),
-and valleys and marshes spanned by viaducts of the same material (Fig.
-181).
-
-386. Their surface was perfectly smooth and carefully rounded off and
-there were gutters at the sides to carry off the rain and melted snow.
-Regard was had for the comfort of all classes of travelers. Milestones
-showed the distance from the starting point of the road and often that
-to important places in the opposite direction, as well as the names of
-the consuls or emperors under whom the roads were built (Fig. 182).
-The roadbed was wide enough to permit the meeting and passing of the
-largest wagons without trouble. For the pedestrian there was a
-footpath on either side with frequent stepping-stones so he might
-cross to the other side above the mud or dust of the wagon way, and
-seats for him to rest upon were often built by the milestones. The
-horseman found blocks of stone set here and there for his convenience
-in mounting and dismounting. Where springs were discovered wayside
-fountains for men and watering-troughs for cattle were constructed.
-Such roads often went a hundred years without repairs, and some
-portions of them have endured the traffic of centuries and are still
-in good condition to-day.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 182. MILESTONE]
-
- L . CAECILI . Q . F
- METEL . COS
- CXIX
- ROMA[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: Inscription on a milestone of the _via Salaria_. "Erected
-by the consul (117 B.C.) Lucius Caecilius Metellus, etc. (39). One
-hundred and nineteen (miles) from Rome."]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 183. EMBANKMENT AND CROSS-SECTION]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 184. CONSTRUCTION OF ROAD]
-
-387. Construction.--Our knowledge of the construction of the military
-roads is derived from a treatise of Vitruvius on pavements and from
-existing remains of the roads themselves. The Latin phrase for
-building a road (_munire viam_) epitomizes the process exactly, for
-throughout its full length, whether carried above the level of the
-surrounding country (Fig. 183) or in a cut below it, the road was a
-solid wall averaging fifteen feet in width and perhaps three feet in
-height. The method followed will be easily understood from Fig. 184. A
-cut (_fossa_) was first made of the width of the intended road and of
-a depth sufficient to hold the filling which varied with the nature of
-the soil. The earth at the bottom of the cut (E) was leveled and made
-solid with heavy rammers (213). Upon this was spread the _statumen_
-(D), a foundation course of stones not too large to be held in the
-hand, the thickness of the layer varying with the porosity of the
-soil. Over this came the _rudus_ (C), a nine-inch layer of coarse
-concrete or rubble (210) made of broken stones and lime. Over this
-was laid the _nucleus_ (B), a six-inch bedding of fine concrete made
-of broken potsherds and lime, in which was set the final course (A) of
-blocks of lava or of other hard stone furnished by the adjacent
-country. This last course (_dorsum_) made the roadway (_agger viae_)
-and was laid with the greatest care so as to leave no seams or
-fissures to admit water or to jar the wheels of vehicles. In the
-diagram the stones are represented with the lower surface flat, but
-they were commonly cut to a point or edge, as in Fig. 183, in order to
-be held more firmly by the _nucleus_. The _agger_ was bounded on the
-sides by _umbones_ (G,G), curbstones, behind which lay the footpaths
-(F,F), _semitae_ or _margines_. On a subsoil of rocky character the
-foundation course or even the first and second courses might be
-unnecessary. On the less traveled branch roads the _agger_ seems to
-have consisted of a thick course of gravel (_glarea_), well rounded
-and compacted, instead of the blocks of stone, and the crossroads may
-have been of still cheaper materials.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 185. PLAN OF INN]
-
-388. The Inns.--There were numerous lodging houses and restaurants in
-all the cities and towns of Italy, but all of the meanest character.
-Respectable travelers avoided them scrupulously, either possessing
-stopping places of their own (_deversoria_) on roads that they used
-frequently, or claiming entertainment from friends (303) and
-_hospites_ (184), whom they would be sure to have everywhere. Nothing
-but accident, stress of weather, or unusual haste could drive them to
-places of public entertainment (_tabernae deversoriae_, _cauponae_).
-The guests of such places were, therefore, of the lowest class, and
-innkeepers (_caupones_) and inns bore the most unsavory reputations.
-Food and beds were furnished the travelers, and their cattle were
-accommodated under the same roof and in unpleasant proximity. The plan
-of an inn at Pompeii (Fig. 185) may be taken as a fair sample of all
-such houses. The entrance (_a_) is broad enough to admit wagons into
-the wagon-room (_f_), behind which is the stable (_k_). In one corner
-is a watering-trough (_l_), in another a _latrina_ (_i_). On either
-side of the entrance is a wineroom (_b_, _d_), with the room of the
-proprietor (_c_) opening off one of them. The small rooms (_e_, _g_,
-_h_) are bedrooms, and others in the second story over the wagon-room
-were reached by the back stairway. The front stairway has an entrance
-of its own from the street and the rooms reached by it had probably no
-connection with the inn. Behind this stairway on the lower floor was a
-fireplace (_m_) with a water heater. An idea of the moderate prices
-charged in such places may be had from a bill which has come down to
-us in an inscription preserved in the museum at Naples: a pint of wine
-with bread, one cent; other food, two cents; hay for a mule, two
-cents. The corners of streets were the favorite sites for inns, and
-they had signs (the elephant, the eagle, etc.) like those of much
-later times.
-
-389. Speed.--The lack of public conveyances running on regular
-schedules (380) makes it impossible to tell the speed ordinarily made
-by travelers. It depended upon the total distance to be covered, the
-degree of comfort demanded by the traveler, the urgency of his
-business, and the facilities at his command. Cicero speaks of
-fifty-six miles in ten hours by cart (384) as something unusual, but
-on such roads it ought to have been possible to go much faster, if
-fresh horses were provided at the proper distances, and if the
-traveler could stand the fatigue. The sending of letters gives the
-best standard of comparison. There was no public postal service, but
-every Roman of position had among his slaves special messengers
-(_tabellarii_), whose business it was to deliver important letters for
-him. They covered from twenty-six to twenty-seven miles on foot in a
-day, and from forty to fifty in carts. We know that letters were sent
-from Rome to Brundisium, 370 Roman miles, in six days, and on to
-Athens in fifteen more. A letter from Sicily would reach Rome on the
-seventh day, from Africa on the twenty-first day, from Britain on the
-thirty-third day, and from Syria on the fiftieth day. In the time of
-Washington it was no unusual thing for a letter to take a month to go
-from the eastern to the southern states in winter.
-
-390. Sending Letters.--For long distances, especially over seas,
-sending letters by special messengers was very expensive, and, except
-for the most urgent matters, recourse was had to traders and travelers
-going in the desired direction. Persons sending messengers or
-intending to travel themselves made it a point of honor to notify
-their friends in time for letters to be prepared and also carried
-letters for entire strangers, if requested to do so. There was great
-danger, of course, that letters sent in this way might fall into the
-wrong hands or be lost. It was customary, therefore, to send a copy of
-an important letter (_litterae eodem exemplo_, _uno exemplo_), or at
-least an abstract of its contents, by another person and if possible
-by a different route. It was also customary to disguise the meaning by
-the use of fictitious names known to the correspondents only or by the
-employment of regular cypher codes. Suetonius tells us that Caesar
-simply substituted for each letter the one that stood three places
-lower in the alphabet: D for A, E for B, etc., but really elaborate
-and intricate systems were in common use.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 186. CODICILLI]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 187. BRONZE STILUS]
-
-391. Writing the Letters.--The extensive correspondence carried on by
-every Roman of position (379) made it impossible for him to write any
-but the most important of his letters or those to his dearest friends
-with his own hand. The place of the stenographer and writing machine
-of to-day was taken by slaves or freedmen, often highly educated
-(154), who wrote at his dictation. Such slaves were called in general
-terms _librarii_, more accurately _servi ab epistolis_, _servi a
-manu_, or _amanuenses_. Notes and short letters were written on
-tablets (_tabellae_, Fig. 24, 110) of firwood or ivory of various
-sizes, often fastened together in sets of two or more by wire hinges
-(_codicilli_, _pugillares_, Fig. 186). The inner faces were slightly
-hollowed out and the depression was nearly filled with wax, so as to
-leave merely a raised rim about the edges, much like the frame of an
-old-fashioned slate. Upon the wax the letters were traced with an
-ivory or metal tool (_stilus_, _graphium_) with one end pointed, like
-a pencil, for writing, and the other made broad and flat, like a paper
-cutter, for smoothing the wax (Fig. 187). With the flat end mistakes
-could be corrected or the whole letter erased and the tablets used
-again, often for the reply to the letter itself. For longer
-communications the Romans used a coarse paper (_papyrus_), the making
-of which will be described below. Upon it they wrote with pens made of
-split reeds and with a thick ink made of soot (lampblack) mixed with
-resinous gums. Paper, pens, and ink were so poor that the bulky and
-awkward tablets were used by preference for all but the longest
-letters. Parchment did not come into general use until the fourth or
-fifth century of our era.
-
-392. Sealing and Opening the Letters.--For sealing the letter thread
-(_linum_), wax (_cera_), and a seal (_signum_) were necessary. The
-seal (255) not only secured the letter against improper inspection,
-but also attested the genuineness of those written by the _librarii_,
-as autograph signatures seem not to have been thought of. The tablets
-having been put together face to face with the writing on the inside,
-the thread was passed around them and through small holes bored
-through them, and was then securely tied. Upon the knot softened wax
-was dropped and to this the seal was applied. Letters written on
-sheets of paper (_schedae_) were rolled longitudinally and then
-secured in the same way. On the outside was written the name of the
-person addressed with perhaps the place where he was to be found if
-the letter was not sent by a special messenger. When the letter was
-opened care was taken not to break the seal, the cutting of the thread
-giving access to the contents. If the letter was preserved the seal
-was kept attached to it in order to attest its authenticity. Cicero
-describes the opening of a letter in the tenth paragraph of the Third
-Oration against Catiline.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 188. FRAGMENT OF PAPYRUS ROLL FROM HERCULANEUM]
-
-393. Books.--Almost all the materials used by the ancients to receive
-writing were known to the Romans and used by them for one purpose or
-another, at one time or another. For the publication of works of
-literature, however, during the period when the great classics were
-produced, the only material was paper (_papyrus_), the only form the
-roll (_volumen_). The book of modern form (_codex_), written on
-parchment (_membranum_), played an important part in the preservation
-of the literature of Rome, but did not come into use for the purpose
-of publication until long after the canon of the classics had been
-completed and the great masters had passed away. The Romans adopted
-the papyrus roll from the Greeks; the Greeks had received it from the
-Egyptians. When the Egyptians first made use of it we do not know, but
-we have preserved to us Egyptian rolls that were written at least
-twenty-five hundred years before the Christian era. The oldest Roman
-books of this sort that have been preserved were found in Herculaneum,
-badly charred and broken. Those that have been deciphered contain no
-Latin author of any value. A specimen of the writing on one of these,
-a mere fragment by an unknown author, is shown in Fig. 188. At the
-time it was buried there were still to be seen rolls in the
-handwriting of the Gracchi, and autographs of Cicero, Vergil, and
-Horace must have been common enough. All these have since perished so
-far as we know.
-
-394. Manufacture of Paper.--The papyrus reed had a jointed stem,
-triangular in shape, and reached a maximum height of perhaps fourteen
-feet with a thickness of four or five inches. The stem contained a
-pith of which the paper was made by a process substantially as
-follows: The stem was cut through at the joints, the hard rind
-removed, and the pith cut into thin sections or strips as evenly as
-possible. The first cut seems to have been made from one of the angles
-to the middle of the opposite side, and the others parallel with it to
-the right and left. The strips were then assorted according to width,
-and enough of them were arranged side by side as closely as possible
-upon a board to make their combined width almost equal to the length
-of the single strip. Across these was laid another layer at right
-angles, with perhaps a coating of glue or paste between them. The
-mat-like sheet that resulted was then soaked in water and pressed or
-hammered into a substance not unlike our paper, called by the Romans
-_charta_. After the sheets (_schedae_) had been dried and bleached in
-the sun, they were rid by scraping of rough places and trimmed into
-uniform sizes, depending upon the length of the strips of pith. The
-fewer the strips that composed each sheet, or in other words the
-greater the width of each strip, the closer the texture of the
-_charta_ and the better its quality. It was possible, therefore, to
-grade the paper by its size, and the width of the sheet rather than
-its height was taken as the standard. The best quality seems to have
-been sold in sheets about ten inches wide, the poorest that could be
-used to write upon, about six. The height in each case was perhaps one
-inch to two inches greater. It has been calculated that a single
-papyrus plant would make about twenty sheets of the size proportioned
-to its height, and this number seems to have been made the commercial
-unit of measure (_scapus_), by which the paper was sold in the market,
-a unit corresponding roughly to our quire.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 189. INSTRUMENTS USED IN WRITING]
-
-395. Pens and Ink.--Only the upper surface of the sheet was commonly
-written upon, the one formed by the horizontal layer of strips, and
-these showing even after the process of manufacture served to guide
-the pen of the writer. In the case of books where it was important to
-keep the number of lines constant to the page, they were ruled with a
-circular piece of lead. The pen (_calamus_) was made of a reed brought
-to a point and cleft much as our quill pens are. For the black ink
-(_atramentum_, 391) was occasionally substituted the liquid of the
-cuttlefish. Red ink was much used for headings, ornaments, and the
-like, and in pictures the inkstand is generally represented with two
-compartments (Fig. 189). The ink was more like paint than modern ink,
-and could be wiped off when fresh with a damp sponge and washed off
-even when it had become dry and hard. To wash sheets in order to use
-them a second time was a mark of poverty or niggardliness, but the
-reverse side of _schedae_ that had served their purpose was often used
-for scratch paper, especially in the schools (110).
-
-396. Making the Roll.--A single sheet might serve for a letter or
-other brief document, but for literary purposes many sheets would be
-required. These were not fastened side by side in a back, as are the
-separate sheets in our books, or numbered and laid loosely together,
-as we arrange them in our letters and manuscripts, but after the
-writing was done they were glued together at the sides (not at the
-tops) into a long unwieldy strip, with the lines on each sheet running
-parallel with the length of the strip, and with the writing on each
-sheet forming a column perpendicular to the length of the strip. On
-each side of the sheet, therefore, a margin was left as the writing
-was done, and these margins overlapping and glued together made a
-thick blank space, a double thickness of paper, between every two
-sheets in the strip. Very broad margins, too, were left at the top and
-bottom, where the paper would suffer from use a great deal more than
-in our books. When the sheets had been securely fastened together in
-the proper order a thin slip of wood was glued to the left (outer)
-margin of the first sheet, and a second slip (_umbilicus_) to the
-right (also outer) margin of the last sheet, much as a wall map is
-mounted to-day. When not in use the volume was kept tightly rolled
-about the _umbilicus_, and hence received its name (_volumen_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 190. CAPSA]
-
-397. A roll intended for permanent preservation was finished with the
-greatest care. The top and bottom (_frontes_) were trimmed perfectly
-smooth, polished with pumice-stone, and often painted black. The back
-of the roll was rubbed with cedar oil to defend it from moths and
-mice. To the ends of the _umbilicus_ were added knobs (_cornua_),
-sometimes gilded or painted a bright color. The first sheet would be
-used for the dedication, if there was one, and on the back of it a few
-words were frequently written giving a clue to the contents of the
-roll; sometimes a portrait of the author graced this page. In many
-books the full title and the name of the author were written only at
-the end of the roll on the last sheet, but in any case to the top of
-this sheet was glued a strip of parchment (_titulus_) with the title
-and author's name upon it, which projected above the edge of the roll.
-For every roll a parchment cover was made, cylindrical in form, into
-which it was slipped from the top, the _titulus_ alone being visible.
-If a work was divided into several volumes (see below), the rolls were
-put together in a bundle (_fascis_) and kept in a wooden box (_capsa_,
-_scrinium_) like a modern hat box. When the cover was removed the
-_tituli_ were visible and the roll desired could be taken without
-disturbing the others (Fig. 190). The rolls were kept sometimes in
-cupboards (_armaria_, 231), laid lengthwise on the shelves with the
-_tituli_ to the front, as shown in the figure in the next paragraph.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 191. READING A ROLL]
-
-398. Size of the Rolls.--When a volume was consulted the roll was
-held in both hands and unrolled column by column with the right hand,
-while with the left the reader rolled up the part he was done with on
-the slip of wood fastened to the margin of the first sheet (Fig. 191).
-When he had finished reading he rolled it back upon the _umbilicus_,
-usually holding it under the chin and turning the _cornua_ with both
-hands. In the case of a long roll this turning backward and forward
-took much time and patience and must have sadly soiled and damaged the
-roll itself. The early rolls were always long and heavy. There was
-theoretically no limit to the number of sheets that might be glued
-together, and consequently none to the size or length of the roll. It
-was made as long as was necessary to contain the given work. In
-ancient Egypt rolls were put together of more than fifty yards in
-length, and in early times rolls of approximate length were used in
-Greece and Rome. From the third century B.C., however, it had become
-customary to divide works of great length into two or more volumes,
-the division at first being purely arbitrary and made wherever it was
-convenient to end the roll, no matter how much the unity of thought
-was interrupted. A century later authors had begun to divide their
-works into convenient parts, each part having a unity of its own, such
-as the five "books" of Cicero's _De Finibus_, and to each of these
-parts or "books" was given a separate roll. An innovation so
-convenient and sensible quickly became the universal rule. It even
-worked backward, some ancient works being divided into books, which
-had not been so divided by their authors, e.g., Herodotus, Thucydides,
-and Naevius. About the same time, too, it became the custom to put the
-sheets upon the market already glued together, to the amount at least
-of the _scapus_ (394). It was, of course, much easier to glue two or
-three of these together, or to cut off the unused part of one, than to
-work with the separate sheets. The ready-made rolls, moreover, were
-put together in a most workmanlike manner. Even sheets of the same
-quality (394) would vary slightly in toughness or finish, and the
-manufacturers of the roll were careful to put the very best sheets at
-the beginning, where the wear was the most severe, and to keep for the
-end the less perfect sheets, which might sometimes be cut off
-altogether.
-
-399. Multiplication of Books.--The process of publishing the largest
-book at Rome differed in no important respect from that of writing the
-shortest letter. Every copy was made by itself, the hundredth or the
-thousandth taking just as much time and labor as the first had done.
-The author's copy would be distributed among a number of _librarii_,
-his own, if he were a man of wealth, a Caesar or a Sallust, his
-patron's, if he were a poor man, a Terence or a Vergil. Each of the
-_librarii_ would write and rewrite the portions assigned to him, until
-the required number of copies had been made. The sheets would then be
-arranged in the proper order and the rolls mounted as has been
-described. Finally the books had to be looked through to correct the
-errors that were sure to be made, a process much more tedious than the
-modern proofreading, because every copy had to be corrected
-separately, as no two copies would show precisely the same errors.
-Books made in this way were almost exclusively for gifts, though
-friends would exchange books with friends and a few might find their
-way into the market. Up to the last century of the Republic, however,
-there was no organized book trade, and no such thing as commercial
-publication. When a man wanted a book, instead of buying it at a
-bookstore he borrowed a copy from a friend and had his _librarii_ make
-him as many more as he desired. In this way Atticus made for himself
-and Cicero copies of all the Greek and Latin books on which he could
-lay his hands, and distributed Cicero's own writings everywhere.
-
-400. Commercial Publication.--The publication of books at Rome as a
-business began in the time of Cicero. There was no copyright law and
-no protection therefore for author or publisher. The author's
-pecuniary returns came in the form of gifts or grants from those whose
-favor he had won by his genius; the publisher depended, in the case of
-new books, upon meeting the demand before his rivals could market
-their editions, and, in the case of standard books, upon the accuracy,
-elegance, and cheapness of his copies. The process of commercial
-publication was essentially the same as that already described, except
-that larger numbers of _librarii_ would be employed and the copy would
-be read to all at once to save them the trouble of handling the
-awkward roll and keeping the place as they wrote. The publisher would
-estimate as closely as possible the demand for any new work that he
-had secured, would put as large a number of scribes upon it as
-possible, and would take care that no copies should leave his
-establishment until his whole edition was ready. After the copies were
-once on sale they could be reproduced by anyone. The best houses took
-all possible pains to have their books free from errors, having
-competent correctors to read them copy by copy, but in spite of their
-efforts blunders were legion. Authors sometimes corrected with their
-own hands the copies intended for their friends. In the case of
-standard works purchasers often hired scholars of reputation to revise
-their copies for them, and copies of known excellence were borrowed or
-hired at high prices for the purpose of comparison.
-
-401. Rapidity and Cost of Publication.--Cicero tells us of Roman
-senators who wrote fast enough to take evidence _verbatim_, and the
-trained scribes must have far surpassed them in speed. Martial tells
-us that his second book could be copied in an hour. It contains five
-hundred and forty verses, which would make the scribe equal to nine
-verses to the minute. It is evident that a small edition, no larger,
-for example, than twice or three times the number of the scribes,
-could be put upon the market more quickly than it could be furnished
-now. The cost of the books varied, of course, with their size and the
-style of their mounting. Martial's first book, containing eight
-hundred and twenty lines and covering twenty-nine pages in Teubner's
-text, sold at thirty cents, fifty cents, and one dollar; his _Xenia_,
-containing two hundred and seventy-four verses and covering fourteen
-pages in Teubner's text, sold at twenty cents, but cost the publisher
-less than ten. Such prices would hardly be considered excessive now.
-Much would depend upon the reputation of the author and the consequent
-demand, and high prices were put on certain books. Autograph
-copies--Gellius (died about 180 A.D.) says that one by Vergil cost the
-owner $100--and copies whose correctness was vouched for by some
-recognized authority commanded extraordinary prices.
-
-402. Libraries.--The gathering of books in large private collections
-began to be general only toward the end of the Republic. Cicero had
-considerable libraries not only in his house at Rome, but also at
-every one of his half-dozen country seats. Probably the bringing to
-Rome of whole libraries from the East and Greece by Lucullus and Sulla
-started the fashion of collecting books; at any rate collections were
-made by many persons who knew and cared nothing about the contents of
-the rolls, and every town house had its library (206) lined with
-volumes. In these libraries were often displayed busts of great
-writers and statues of the Muses. Public libraries date from the time
-of Augustus. The first to be opened in Rome was founded by Asinius
-Pollio (died 4 A.D.), and was housed in the _Atrium Libertatis_.
-Augustus himself founded two others, and the number was brought up to
-twenty-eight by his successors. The most magnificent of these was the
-_Bibliotheca Ulpia_, founded by Trajan. Smaller cities had their
-libraries, too, and even the little town of Comum boasted one founded
-by the younger Pliny and supported by an endowment that produced
-thirty thousand sesterces annually. The public baths often had
-libraries and reading-rooms attached (365).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY
-
-
-403. It is evident from what has been said that abundant means were
-necessary to support the state in which every Roman of position lived.
-It will be of interest to see how the great mass of the people also
-earned the scantier living with which they were forced to be content.
-For the sake of this inquiry it will be convenient, if not very
-accurate, to divide the people of Rome into the three great classes of
-nobles, knights, and commons, into which political history has
-distributed them. At the same time it must be remembered that there
-was no hard and fixed line drawn between any two of these classes; a
-noble might if he pleased associate himself with the knights, provided
-only that he possessed the required sum of $20,000, and any freeborn
-citizen might aspire to the highest offices of the state, however mean
-the circumstances of his birth, however poor in pocket or in talent he
-might be.
-
-404. Careers of the Nobles.--The nobles inherited certain of the
-aristocratic notions of the old patriciate, which limited their
-business activities and had much to do with the corruption of public
-life in the last century of the Republic. Men in their position were
-held to be above all manner of work, with the hands or with the head,
-for the sake of sordid gain. Agriculture alone was free from debasing
-associations, as it has been in England within our own time, and
-statecraft and war were the only careers fit to engage their energies.
-Even as statesmen and generals, too, they served their fellow citizens
-without material reward, for no salaries were drawn by the senators,
-none were attached to the magistracies or to positions of military
-command. This theory had worked well enough in the time before the
-Punic wars, when every Roman was a farmer, when the farm produced all
-that he needed for his simple wants, when he left it only to serve as
-a soldier in his young manhood or as a senator in his old age, and
-returned to his fields, like Cincinnatus, when his services were no
-longer required by his country. Under the aristocracy that supplanted
-the pure democracy of the earlier time, it subverted every aim that it
-was intended to secure.
-
-405. Agriculture.--The farm life that Cicero has described so
-eloquently and praised so enthusiastically in his _Cato Maior_ would
-have scarcely been recognized by Cato himself and had become a memory
-or a dream long before Cicero wrote. The farmer no longer tilled his
-fields, even with the help of his slaves. The yeoman class had
-practically disappeared from Italy. The small holdings had been
-absorbed in the vast estates of the wealthy landowners, and the aims
-and methods of farming had wholly changed. Something has been said of
-this already (146 f.), and it will be sufficient here to recall the
-fact that grain was no longer raised for the market in Italy, simply
-because the market could be supplied more cheaply from over seas. The
-grape and the olive had become the chief sources of wealth, and for
-them Sallust and Horace complain that less and less space was being
-left by the parks and pleasure grounds (145). Still, the making of
-wine and oil under the direction of a careful steward (148) must have
-been very profitable in Italy and many of the nobles had plantations
-in the provinces as well, the revenues of which helped to maintain
-their state at Rome.
-
-406. Political Office.--Politics must have been profitable for those
-only who played the game to the end. No salaries were attached to the
-offices, and the indirect gains from one of the lower would hardly pay
-the expenses necessary to secure the next in order. The gain came
-always through positions in the provinces. The quaestorship might be
-spent in one, the praetorship and the consulship were sure to be
-followed by a year abroad. To honest men the places gave the
-opportunity to learn of profitable investments, and a good governor
-was often selected by a community to look after its interests in the
-capital, and this meant an honorarium in the form of valuable presents
-from time to time. Cicero's justice and moderation as quaestor in
-Sicily earned him a rich reward when he came to prosecute Verres for
-plundering that same province, and when he was in charge of the grain
-supply during his aedileship. To corrupt officials the provinces were
-gold mines. Every sort of robbery and extortion was practiced, and the
-governor was expected to enrich not merely himself but also the
-_cohors_ (118) that had accompanied him. Catullus bitterly complains
-of the selfishness of Memmius, who had kept for himself all the
-plunder of Bithynia. The story of Verres may be read in any history of
-Rome; it differs from that of the average governor only in the fate
-that overtook the offender.
-
-407. The Law.--Closely connected with the political career then as
-now was that of the law, but Rome knew of no class of professional
-advocates practicing for fees and living upon their practice. And
-there were no conditions imposed for practicing in the courts, not
-even the good moral character which is insisted upon in Indiana.
-Anyone could bring suit against anyone else on any charge that he
-pleased, and it was no uncommon thing for a young politician to use
-this license for the purpose of gaining notoriety, even when he knew
-there were no grounds for the charges he brought. On the other hand
-the lawyer was forbidden to accept pay for his services. In olden
-times the client had of his right gone to his patron for legal advice
-(179), and the lawyer of later times was theoretically at least at
-the service of all who applied to him. Men of the highest character
-made it a point of honor to put their technical knowledge freely at
-the disposal of their fellow citizens. At the same time the statutes
-against fees were easily evaded. Grateful clients could not be
-prevented from making valuable presents, and it was a very common
-thing for generous legacies to be left to successful advocates. Cicero
-had no other source of income, so far as we know, but while he was
-never a rich man, he owned a house on the Palatine (221, note) and
-half a dozen country seats, lived well, and spent money lavishly on
-works of art (227) that appealed to his tastes, and on books (402).
-Corrupt judges (_praetores_) could find other sources of income then
-as now, of course, but we hear more of this in relation to the jurors
-(_iudices_) than the judges, probably because with a province before
-him the _praetor_ did not think it fitting to stoop to petty
-bribetaking.
-
-408. The Army.--The spoils of war went nominally into the treasury of
-the state. Practically they passed first through the hands of the
-commanding general, who kept what he pleased for himself, his staff
-(118), and his soldiers and sent the rest to Rome. The opportunities
-were magnificent, and the Roman general understood how to use them
-all. Some of them were legitimate enough according to the usages of
-the time, the plunder of the towns and cities that were taken, the
-ransom exacted from those that were spared, the sale of captives as
-slaves (134). Entirely illegitimate, of course, were the fortunes
-made by furnishing supplies to the army at extravagant prices or
-diverting these supplies to private uses. The reconstruction of the
-conquered territory brought in returns equally rich; it is safe to say
-that the Aedui paid Caesar well for the supremacy in central Gaul that
-he assured them after his defeat of the Helvetii. The civil wars that
-cost the best blood of Italy made the victors immensely rich. Besides
-the looting of the public treasury, the estates of men in the opposing
-party were confiscated and sold to the highest bidder. The proceeds
-went nominally to the treasury of the new government, but the proceeds
-were infinitesimal in comparison with the profits. After Sulla had
-established himself in Rome the names of friends and foes alike were
-put on the proscription lists, and if powerful influence was not
-exerted in their behalf they lost lives and fortunes. For the
-influence they had to pay dearly. One example may be cited. The estate
-of one Roscius of Ameria, valued at $300,000, was bid in for $100 by
-Lucius Chrysogonus, a freedman of Sulla, because no one dared bid
-against the creature of the dictator. The settling of the soldiers on
-grants of land made good business for the three commissioners who
-superintended the distribution of the land. The grants were always of
-farms owned and occupied by adherents of the beaten party, and the
-bribes came from both sides.
-
-409. Careers of the Equites.--The name of knight had lost its
-original significance long before the time of Cicero. The equites had
-become the class of capitalists who found in financial transactions
-the excitement and the profit that the nobles found in politics and
-war. It was the immense scale of their operations that relieved them
-from the stigma that attached to working for gain, just as in modern
-times the wholesale dealer may have a social position entirely beyond
-the hopes of the small retailer. As a body the equites exerted
-considerable political influence, holding in fact the balance of power
-between the senatorial and the democratic parties. As a rule they
-exerted this influence only so far as was necessary to secure
-legislation favorable to them as a class, and to insure as governors
-for the provinces men that would not look too closely into their
-transactions there. For it was in the provinces that the knights as
-well as the nobles found their best opportunities. Their chief
-business was the farming of the revenues. For this purpose syndicates
-were formed, which paid into the public treasury a lump sum, fixed by
-the senate, and reimbursed themselves by collecting what they could
-from the province. The profits were beyond all reason, and the word
-publican became a synonym for sinner. Besides farming the revenues
-they "financed" the provinces and allied states, advancing money to
-meet the ordinary or extraordinary expenses. Sulla levied a
-contribution of 20,000 talents (about $20,000,000) on Asia. The money
-was advanced by a syndicate of Roman capitalists, and they had
-collected the amount six times over when Sulla interfered, for fear
-that there would be nothing left for him in case of further needs.
-More than one pretender was set upon a puppet throne in the East in
-order to secure the payment of sums previously loaned him by the
-capitalists. Their operations as individuals were only less extensive
-and profitable. The grain in the provinces, the wool, the products of
-mines and factories could be moved only with the money advanced by
-them. They ventured, too, to engage in commercial enterprises abroad
-that were barred against them at home, doing the buying and selling
-themselves, not merely supplying the means to others. They loaned
-money to individuals, too, though at Rome money lending was
-discreditable. The usual rate was twelve per cent, but Marcus Brutus
-was loaning money at forty-eight per cent in Cilicia, when Cicero went
-there as governor in 51 B.C., and expected Cicero to enforce his
-contracts for him.
-
-410. The Soldiers.--The freeborn citizens of Rome below the nobles
-and the knights may be roughly divided into two classes, the soldiers
-and the proletariate. The civil wars had driven them from their farms
-or had unfitted them for the work of farming, and the pride of race or
-the competition of slave labor had closed against them the other
-avenues of industry, numerous as these must have been in the world's
-capital. The best of this class turned to the army. This had long
-since ceased to be composed of citizen-soldiers, called out to meet a
-special emergency for a single campaign, and disbanded at its close.
-It was what we should call a regular army, the soldiers enlisting for
-a term of twenty years, receiving stated pay and certain privileges
-after an honorable discharge. In time of peace, when there was peace,
-they were employed on public works (385). The pay was small, perhaps
-forty or fifty dollars a year with rations in Caesar's time, but this
-was as much as a laborer could earn by the hardest kind of toil, and
-the soldier had the glory of war to set over against the stigma of
-work, and hopes of presents from his commander and the privilege of
-occasional pillage and plunder. After he had completed his time he
-might if he chose return to Rome, but many had formed connections in
-the communities where their posts were fixed and preferred to make
-their homes there on free grants of land, an important instrument in
-spreading Roman civilization.
-
-411. The Proletariate.--In addition to the idle and the profligate
-attracted to Rome by the free corn and by the other allurements that
-bring a like element into our cities now, large numbers of the
-industrious and the frugal had been forced into the city by the loss
-of their property during the civil wars and the failure to find
-employment elsewhere. No exact estimate of the number of these
-unemployed people can be given, but it is known that before Caesar's
-time it had passed the mark of 300,000. Relief was occasionally given
-by the establishing of colonies on the frontiers--in this way Caesar
-put as many as 80,000 in the way of earning their living again, short
-as was his administration of affairs at Rome--but it was the least
-harmful element that was willing to emigrate and the dregs were left
-behind. Aside from beggary and petty crimes their only source of
-income was the sale of their votes, and this made them a real menace
-to the Republic. Under the Empire their political influence was lost
-and the state found it necessary to make distributions of money
-occasionally to relieve their want. Some of them played client to the
-upstart rich (181), but the most were content to be fed by the state
-and amused by the constantly increasing shows and games (322).
-
-412. Professions and Trades.--The professions and trades, between
-which the Romains made no distinction, in the last years of the
-Republic were practically given over to the _libertini_ (175) and to
-foreigners. Of some of these something has been said already. Teachers
-were poorly paid (121), and usually looked upon with contempt.
-Physicians were held in no higher esteem, but seem to have been well
-paid, if we may judge from those that were attached to the court. Two
-of these left a joint estate of $1,000,000, and another received from
-the Emperor Claudius a yearly stipend of $25,000. In knowledge and
-skill in both surgery and medicine they do not seem to have been much
-behind the practitioners of two centuries ago. Bankers united money
-changing with money loaning. The former was very necessary in a city
-into which came all the coins of the known world; the latter was never
-looked upon as entirely respectable for a Roman, but there can be no
-doubt that many a Roman of the highest respectability drew large
-profits from this business, carried on discreetly in the name of a
-freedman. The trades were early organized at Rome in guilds, but their
-only purpose seems to have been to hand down and perfect the technique
-of the crafts; at least there was no obstacle in the way of workmen
-not belonging to the guilds, and there were no such things known as
-patents or special privileges in the way of work. Eight of these
-guilds are older than history, those of the fullers, cobblers,
-carpenters, goldsmiths, coppersmiths, potters, dyers, and (oddly
-enough) the fluteblowers. Numerous others were formed as knowledge of
-the arts advanced or the division of labor proceeded. Special parts of
-the city seem to have been appropriated by special classes of workmen,
-as like businesses are apt to be carried on in the same neighborhood
-in our cities: Cicero speaks of a street of the Scythemakers.
-
-413. Business and Commerce.--The commerce of Rome covered all lands
-and seas. Pliny tells us that the trade with India and China took from
-Rome $5,000,000 yearly. The wholesale trade was to a large extent in
-the hands of the capitalist class, the retail business was conducted
-by freedmen and foreigners. How large these businesses were we have no
-means of telling. The supplying of the food to the city must have
-given employment to thousands; the clothing trade has been mentioned
-already (271). Building operations were carried on at an immense cost
-and on the largest scale. All the public buildings and many of the
-important private buildings were built by contract. There can be
-little doubt that the letting of the contracts for the public
-buildings was made very profitable for the officers who had it to do,
-but it must be admitted on the other hand that the work was well done.
-Crassus seems to have done a sort of salvage business. When buildings
-seemed certain to be destroyed by fire he would buy them with their
-contents at a nominal sum, and then fight the flames with gangs of
-slaves that he had trained for the purpose. The slave trade itself was
-very considerable and large fortunes were amassed in it (139). The
-heavy work of ordinary laborers was performed almost entirely by
-slaves (148), and it must be remembered that much work was then done
-by hand that is now done by machinery. The book business has been
-mentioned (400). Even the place of the modern newspaper was taken by
-letters written as a business by persons who collected all the news,
-gossip, and scandal of the city, had it copied by slaves, and sent it
-to persons away from the city who did not like to trouble their
-friends (379) and were willing to pay for intelligence.
-
-414. The Civil Service.--The free persons employed in the offices of
-the various magistrates were of the lowest class, mostly _libertini_.
-They were paid by the state, and while appointed nominally for a year
-only, they seem to have practically held their places during good
-behavior. This was largely due to the shortness of the term of the
-regular magistrates and the rarity of relection. Having no experience
-themselves in conducting their offices the magistrates would have all
-the greater need of thoroughly trained and experienced assistants. The
-highest class of these officials formed an _ordo_, the _scribae_,
-whose name gives no adequate notion of the extent and importance of
-their duties. All that is now done by cabinet officers, secretaries,
-department heads, bureau chiefs, auditors, comptrollers, recorders,
-and accountants, down to the work of the ordinary clerks and copyists,
-was done by these "scribes." Below them came others almost equally
-necessary but not equally respected, the lictors, messengers, etc.
-These civil servants had special places at the theater and the circus.
-The positions seem to have been in great demand, as such places are
-now in France, for example. Horace is said to have been a department
-clerk.
-
-415. The Roman's Day.--The way in which a Roman spent his day
-depended, of course, upon his position and business, and varied
-greatly with individuals and with the particular day. The ordinary
-routine of a man of the higher class, the man of whom we read most
-frequently in Roman literature, was something like this: The Roman
-rose at a very early hour, his day beginning before sunrise, because
-it ended so early. After a hurried breakfast (302) he devoted such
-time as was necessary to his private business, looking over accounts,
-consulting with his managers, giving directions, etc. Cicero and Pliny
-found these early hours the best for their literary work. Horace tells
-of lawyers giving free advice at three in the morning. After his
-private business was despatched the Roman took his place in the
-_atrium_ (198) for the _salutatio_ (182), when his clients came to
-pay their respects, perhaps to ask for the help or advice that he was
-bound to furnish them (179). All this business of the early morning
-might have to be dispensed with, however, if the Roman was asked to a
-wedding (79), or to be present at the naming of a child (97), or to
-witness the coming of age (128) of the son of a friend, for all these
-semi-public functions took place in the early morning. But after them
-or after the levee the Roman went to the forum attended by his clients
-and carried in his litter (151) with his _nomenclator_ at his elbow.
-The business of the courts and of the senate began about the third
-hour, and might continue until the ninth or tenth, that of the senate
-was bound to stop at sunset. Except on extraordinary occasions all
-business was pretty sure to be over before eleven o'clock, and at this
-time the lunch was taken (302).
-
-416. Then came the midday siesta, so general that the streets were as
-deserted as at midnight, and one of the Roman writers fixes upon this
-as the proper time for a ghost story. Of course there were no sessions
-of the courts or meetings of the senate on the public holidays, and
-then the hours generally given to business might be spent at the
-theater or the circus or other games. As a matter of fact the Romans
-of the better class rather avoided these shows, unless they were
-officially connected with them, and many of them devoted the holidays
-to visiting their country estates. After the siesta, which lasted for
-an hour or more, the Roman was ready for his regular athletic exercise
-and bath, either in the Campus and the Tiber (317) or in one of the
-public bathing establishments (365). The bath proper (367) was
-followed by the lounge (377), perhaps a promenade in the court, which
-gave him a chance for a chat with a friend, or an opportunity to hear
-the latest news, to consult business associates, in short to talk over
-any of the things that men now discuss at their clubs. After this came
-the great event of the day, the dinner (303), at his own house or at
-that of some friend, followed immediately by retirement for the night.
-Even on the days spent in the country this programme would not be
-materially changed, and the Roman took with him into the provinces the
-customs of his home life so far as possible.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 192. ANCIENT CALENDAR]
-
-417. Hours of the Day.--The day itself was divided into twelve hours
-(_horae_), each being one-twelfth of the time between sunrise and
-sunset and varying therefore with the season of the year. The length
-of the day and hour at Rome in different times of the year is shown in
-the following table:
-
- Month Length Length | Month Length Length
- and Day of Day of Hour | and Day of Day of Hour
- --------------------------------+--------------------------------
- Dec. 23 8 54' 44' 30" | June 25 15 6' 1 15' 30"
- Feb. 6 9 50' 49' 10" | Aug. 10 14 10' 1 10' 50"
- March 23 12 00' 1 00' 00" | Sept. 25 12 00' 1 00' 00"
- May 9 14 10' 1 10' 50" | Nov. 9 9 50' 49' 10"
-
-418. Taking the days of June 25 and December 23 as respectively the
-longest and shortest of the year, the following table gives the
-conclusion of each hour for summer and winter:
-
- Time Summer Winter
- -----------------------------------------
- Sunrise 4 27' 00" 7 33' 00"
- 1st Hour 5 42' 30" 8 17' 30"
- 2d Hour 6 58' 00" 9 02' 00"
- 3d Hour 8 13' 30" 9 46' 30"
- 4th Hour 9 29' 00" 10 31' 00"
- 5th Hour 10 44' 30" 11 15' 30"
- 6th Hour 12 00' 00" 12 00' 00"
- 7th Hour 1 15' 30" 12 44' 30"
- 8th Hour 2 31' 00" 1 29' 00"
- 9th Hour 3 46' 30" 2 13' 30"
- 10th Hour 5 02' 00" 2 58' 00"
- 11th Hour 6 17' 30" 3 42' 30"
- 12th Hour 7 33' 00" 4 27' 00"
-
-In the same way the hours may be calculated for any given day, the
-length of the day and the hour of sunrise being known, but for all
-practical purposes the old couplet will serve:
-
- The English hour you may fix,
- If to the Latin you add six.
-
-When the Latin hour is above six it will be more convenient to
-subtract than to add.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 340-388; Voigt, 319-322, 396, 455; Gll,
-480-547; Guhl and Koner, 580-595, 857-863; Friedlnder, III, 125-137;
-Ramsay, 479-482; Pauly-Wissowa, _cenotaphium_, _columbarium_; Smith,
-Harper, Rich, _columbarium_, _funus_, _sepulcrum_; Lbker,
-_Bestattung_, _sepulcrum_; Baumeister, 308-311, 604-609, 1520 f.;
-Mau-Kelsey, 399-428; Gusman, 44-54; Egbert, Latin Inscriptions,
-230-242; Lanciani, Ancient Rome, 64, 129 f.
-
-
-419. Importance of Burial.--The Romans' view of the future life
-explains the importance they attached to the ceremonial burial of the
-dead. The soul, they thought, could find rest only when the body had
-been duly laid in the grave; until this was done it haunted the home,
-unhappy itself and bringing unhappiness to others. To perform the
-funeral offices (_iusta facere_) was, therefore, a solemn religious
-duty, devolving upon the surviving members of the family (28), and
-the Latin words show that these marks of respect were looked upon as
-the right of the dead. In the case of a body lost at sea, or for any
-other reason unrecovered, the ceremonies were just as piously
-performed, an empty tomb (_cenotaphium_) being erected sometimes in
-honor of the dead. And these same rites the Roman was bound to
-perform, if he came anywhere upon the unburied corpse of a citizen,
-because all were members of the greater family of the commonwealth. In
-this case the scattering of three handfuls of dust over the body was
-sufficient for ceremonial burial and the happiness of the troubled
-spirit, if for any reason the body could not actually be interred.
-
-420. Interment and Cremation.--Burial was the way of disposing of the
-dead practiced most anciently by the Romans, and even after cremation
-came into very general use it was ceremonially necessary that some
-small part of the remains, usually the bone of a finger, should be
-buried in the earth. Burning was practiced before the time of the
-Twelve Tables, for it is mentioned together with burial in them, but
-we do not know how long before. Hygienic reasons had probably
-something to do with its general adoption, and this implies, of
-course, cities of considerable size. By the time of Augustus it was
-all but universal, but even in Rome the practice of burial was never
-entirely discontinued, for cremation was too costly for the very
-poorest classes, and some of the wealthiest and most aristocratic
-families held fast to the more ancient custom. The Cornelii, for
-example, always buried their dead until the dictator required his body
-to be burned for fear that his bones might be disinterred and
-dishonored by his enemies, as he had dishonored those of Marius.
-Children less than forty days old were always buried, and so, too,
-slaves whose funeral expenses were paid by their masters. After the
-introduction of Christianity burial came again to be the prevailing
-use, largely because of the increased expense of burning.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 193. TOMB OF PLANCUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 194. TOMB OF CESTIUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 195. STREET OF TOMBS AT POMPEII]
-
-421. Places of Burial.--The most ancient place of burial, at least
-for the head of the house, was beneath the hearthstone in the _atrium_
-of his house, later in the garden behind his house, but this had
-ceased to be the custom long before history begins, and the Twelve
-Tables forbade the burial or even the burning of the dead within the
-walls of the city. For the very poor, places of burial were provided
-in remote localities outside the walls, corresponding in some degree
-to the Potter's Field of modern cities. The well-to-do made their
-burial-places as conspicuous as their means would permit, with the
-hope that the inscriptions upon the monuments would keep alive the
-names and virtues of the dead, and with the idea, perhaps, that they
-still had some part in the busy life around them. To this end they
-lined the great roads on either side for miles out of the cities with
-rows of tombs of the most elaborate and costly architecture. In the
-vicinity of Rome the Appian way as the oldest (385) showed the
-monuments of the noblest and most ancient families, but none of the
-roads lacked similar memorials. Many of these tombs were standing in
-the sixteenth century, a few still remain. The same custom was
-followed in the smaller towns, and an idea of the appearance of the
-monuments may be had from the so-called "Street of Tombs" in Pompeii
-(Fig. 195). There were other burial-places near the cities, of course,
-less conspicuous and less expensive, and on the farms and country
-estates like provision was made for persons of humbler station.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 196. EXTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII]
-
-422. The Tombs.--The tombs, whether intended to receive the bodies or
-merely the ashes, or both, differed widely in size and construction
-with the different purposes for which they were erected. Some were for
-individuals only, but these in most cases were strictly public
-memorials as distinguished from actual tombs intended to receive the
-remains of the dead. The larger number of those that lined the roads
-were family tombs, ample in size for whole generations of descendants
-and retainers of the family, including guest-friends (185), who had
-died away from their own homes, and freedmen (175). There were also
-the burial-places of the _gentes_ (21), in which provision was made
-for all, even the humblest and poorest, who claimed connection with
-the _gens_ and had had a place in its formal organization (22).
-Others were erected on a large scale by speculators who sold at low
-prices space enough for an urn or two to persons too poor to erect
-tombs of their own and without any claim on a family or gentile
-burying-place. In imitation of these structures others were erected on
-the same plan by burial societies formed by persons of the artisan
-class, and others still by benevolent men, as we have seen baths
-(373) and libraries (402) erected and maintained for the public
-good. Something will be said of the tombs of all these kinds after the
-public burying-places have been described.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 197. SECTIONS OF TOMB SHOWN IN FIGURE 196]
-
-423. The Potter's Field.--During the Republic the Esquiline Hill, or
-at least the eastern part of it, was the place to which was carted all
-the refuse of the city that the sewers would not carry away. Here,
-too, were the gravepits (_puticuli_) for the pauper class. They were
-merely holes in the ground, about twelve feet square, without lining
-of any kind. Into them were thrown the bodies of the friendless poor,
-and along with them and over them the carcasses of dead animals and
-the filth and scrapings of the streets. The pits were kept open,
-uncovered apparently even when filled, and the stench and the
-disease-breeding pollution made the hill absolutely uninhabitable.
-Under Augustus the danger to the health of the whole city became so
-great that the dumping grounds were moved to a greater distance, and
-the Esquiline, covered over pits and all with pure soil to the depth
-of twenty-five feet, was made a park, known as the _Horti Maecenatis_.
-
-424. It is not to be understood, however, that the bodies of Roman
-citizens were ordinarily disposed of in this revolting way. Faithful
-freedmen were cared for by their patrons, the industrious poor made
-provision for themselves in coperative societies mentioned above, and
-the proletariate class (411) was in general saved from such a fate by
-gentile relations, by patrons (181), or by the benevolence of
-individuals. Only in times of plague and pestilence, it is safe to
-say, were the bodies of known citizens cast into these pits, as under
-like circumstances bodies have been burned in heaps in our own cities.
-The uncounted thousands that peopled the Potter's Field of Rome were
-the riffraff from foreign lands, abandoned slaves (156), the victims
-that perished in the arena (362), outcasts of the criminal class, and
-the "unidentified" that are buried nowadays at public expense.
-Criminals put to death by authority were not buried at all; their
-carcasses were left to birds and beasts of prey at the place of
-execution near the Esquiline gate.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 198. INTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII]
-
-425. Plan of Tombs and Grounds.--The utmost diversity prevails in the
-outward form and construction of the tombs, but those of the classical
-period seem to have been planned with the thought that the tomb was to
-be a home for the dead and that they were not altogether cut off from
-the living. The tomb, therefore, whether built for one person or for
-many, was ordinarily a building inclosing a room (_sepulcrum_), and
-this room was really the important thing. Attention has already been
-called (189) to the fact that even the urns had in ancient times the
-shape of the house of one room. The floor of the _sepulcrum_ was quite
-commonly below the level of the surrounding grounds and was reached by
-a short flight of steps. Around the base of the walls ran a slightly
-elevated platform (_podium_, cf. 337, 357) on which were placed the
-coffins of those who were buried, while the urns were placed either on
-the platform or in niches in the wall. An altar or shrine is often
-found, at which offerings were made to the _manes_ of the departed.
-Lamps are very common and so are other simple articles of furniture,
-and the walls, floors, and ceilings are decorated in the same style as
-those of houses (220 f.). Things that the dead liked to have around
-them when living, especially things that they had used in their
-ordinary occupations, were placed in the tomb at the time of burial,
-or burned with them on the funeral pyre, and in general an effort was
-made to give an air of life to the chamber of rest. The interior of a
-tomb at Pompeii is shown in Fig. 198, and sections of another in Fig.
-197, 423.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 199. PLAN OF GROUNDS ABOUT TOMB]
-
-426. The monument itself was always built upon a plot of ground as
-spacious as the means of the builders would permit, sometimes several
-acres in extent. In it provision was made for the comfort of surviving
-members of the family, who were bound to visit the resting-place of
-their dead on certain regularly recurring festivals (438). If the
-grounds were small there would be at least a seat, perhaps a bench. On
-more extensive grounds there were places of shelter, arbors, or summer
-houses. Dining-rooms, too, in which were celebrated the anniversary
-feasts, and private _ustrinae_ (places for the burning of bodies) are
-frequently mentioned. Often the grounds were laid out as gardens or
-parks, with trees and flowers, wells, cisterns or fountains, and even
-a house, with other buildings perhaps, for the accommodation of the
-slaves or freedmen who were in charge. A plan of such a garden is
-shown in Fig. 199. In the middle of the garden is the _area_, the
-technical word for the plot of ground set aside for the tomb, with
-several buildings upon it, one of which is a storehouse or granary
-(_horreum_); around the tomb itself are beds of roses and violets,
-used in festivals (438), and around them in turn are grapes trained
-on trellises. In the front is a terrace (_solarium_, cf. 207), and in
-the rear two pools (_piscinae_) connected with the _area_ by a little
-canal, while at the back is a thicket of shrubbery (_harundinetum_).
-The purpose of the granary is not clear as no grain seems to have been
-raised on the lot, but it may have been left where it stood before the
-ground was consecrated. A tomb surrounded by grounds of some extent
-was called a _cepotaphium_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 200. RUINS OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA]
-
-427. Exterior of the Tombs.--An idea of the exterior appearance of
-monuments of the better sort may be had from Figs. 193-196. The forms
-are very many, those of the altar and temple are the most common,
-perhaps, but memorial arches and niches are often found, and at
-Pompeii the semicircular bench that was used for conversation out of
-doors occurs several times, covered and uncovered. Not all of the
-tombs have the sepulchral chamber, the remains being sometimes
-deposited in the earth beneath the monument. In such cases a tube or
-pipe of lead ran from the receptacle to the surface, through which
-offerings of wine and milk could be poured (429, 438). In Fig. 193,
-420, is shown the round monument at Caieta of Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, one of Caesar's marshals (_legati_) in Gaul, the
-inscription[1] on which recounts the positions he had filled and the
-work he had done. In Fig. 194, 420, is shown the pyramid erected at
-Rome in honor of Caius Cestius by his heirs, one of whom was Marcus
-Agrippa. According to the inscription on it the monument was completed
-in 330 days. The most imposing of all was the mausoleum of Hadrian
-(Fig. 205, 438) at Rome, now the castle of St. Angelo. A less
-elaborate exterior is that of the "tomb with the marble door" at
-Pompeii, given in Fig. 196, 422.
-
-[Footnote 1: Inscription on the tomb of Plancus: "Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, son, etc. (39), consul, censor, twice imperator, member of
-the board of seven in charge of sacrificial feasts. He celebrated a
-triumph over the people of Raetia. From the spoils of war he erected a
-temple to Saturn. In Italy he assigned lands about Beneventum. In Gaul
-he planted colonies at Lugdunum and Raurica."]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 201. GROUND PLAN OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 202. SARCOPHAGUS OF SCIPIO]
-
-428. The Columbaria.--From the family tombs were developed the
-immense structures mentioned in 422 intended to receive great numbers
-of urns. They began to be erected in the time of Augustus and seem to
-have been confined to Rome, where the high price of land made the
-purchase of private burial-grounds impossible for the poorer classes.
-An idea of their interior arrangements may be had from the ruins (Fig.
-200) of one erected on the Appian way for the freedmen of Livia, the
-wife of Augustus. From their resemblance to a dovecote or pigeon house
-they were called _columbaria_. They are usually partly underground,
-rectangular in form, with great numbers of the niches (also called
-_columbaria_) running in regular rows horizontally (_gradus_) and
-vertically (_ordines_). In the larger _columbaria_ provision was made
-for as many as a thousand urns. Around the walls at the base was a
-_podium_, on which were placed the sarcophagi of those whose remains
-had not been burned, and sometimes chambers were excavated beneath the
-floor for the same purpose. In the _podium_ were also niches that no
-space might be lost. If the height of the building was great enough to
-warrant it, wooden galleries ran around the walls. Access to the room
-was given by a stairway in which were niches, too; light was furnished
-by small windows near the ceiling, and walls and floors were
-handsomely finished and decorated.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 203. AEDICULA IN COLUMBARIUM]
-
-429. The niches were sometimes rectangular in form, but more commonly
-half round, as shown in Figs. 200 and 203. Some of the _columbaria_
-have the lower rows rectangular, those above arched. They contained
-ordinarily two urns (_ollae_, _ollae ossuariae_) each, arranged side
-by side, that they might be visible from the front. Occasionally the
-niches were made deep enough for two sets of urns, those behind being
-elevated a little over those in front. Above or below each niche was
-fastened to the wall a piece of marble (_titulus_) on which was cut
-the name of the owner. If a person required for his family a group of
-four or six niches, it was customary to mark them off from the others
-by wall decorations to show that they made a unit; a very common way
-was to erect pillars at the sides so as to give the appearance of the
-front of a temple (Fig. 203). Such groups were called _aediculae_. The
-value of the places depended upon their position, those in the higher
-rows (_gradus_) being less expensive than those near the floor, those
-under the stairway the least desirable of all. The urns themselves
-were of various materials (437) and usually cemented to the bottom of
-the niches. The tops could be removed, but they, too, were sealed
-after the ashes had been placed in them, small openings being left
-through which offerings of milk and wine could be poured. On the urns
-or their tops were painted the names of the dead with sometimes the
-day and the month of death. The year is almost never found. Over the
-door of such a _columbarium_ on the outside was cut an inscription
-giving the names of the owners, the date of erection, and other
-particulars.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 204. CINERARY URNS]
-
-430. Burial Societies.--Early in the Empire associations were formed
-for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their members,
-whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the purpose
-of building _columbaria_, or for both. These coperative associations
-(_collegia funeraticia_) started originally among members of the same
-guild (412) or among persons of the same occupation. They called
-themselves by many names, _cultores_ of this deity or that, _collegia
-salutaria_, _collegia iuvenum_, etc., but their objects and methods
-were practically the same. If the members had provided places for the
-disposal of their bodies after death they now provided for the
-necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a
-small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When
-a member died a stated sum was drawn for his funeral from the
-treasury, a committee saw that the rites were decently performed, and
-at the proper seasons (438) the society made corporate offerings to
-the dead. If the purpose of the society was the building of a
-_columbarium_, the cost was first determined and the sum total divided
-into what we should call shares (_sortes viriles_), each member taking
-as many as he could afford and paying their value into the treasury.
-Sometimes a benevolent person would contribute toward the expense of
-the undertaking, and then such a person would be made an honorary
-member of the society with the title of _patronus_ or _patrona_. The
-erection of the building was intrusted to a number of _curatores_,
-chosen by ballot, naturally the largest shareholders and most
-influential men. They let the contracts and superintended the
-construction, rendering account for all the money expended. The office
-of the curators was considered very honorable, especially as their
-names appeared on the inscription without the building, and they often
-showed their appreciation of the honor done them by providing at their
-own expense for the decoration of the interior, or by furnishing all
-or a part of the _tituli_, _ollae_, etc., or by erecting on the
-surrounding grounds places of shelter and dining-rooms for the use of
-the members, like those mentioned in 426.
-
-431. After the completion of the building the _curatores_ allotted
-the niches to the individual members. The niches were either numbered
-consecutively throughout or their position was fixed by the number of
-the _ordo_ and _gradus_ (428) in which they were situated. Because
-they were not all equally desirable, as has been explained, the
-curators divided them into sections as fairly as possible and then
-assigned the sections (_loci_) by lot to the shareholders. If a man
-held several shares of stock he received a corresponding number of
-_loci_, though they might be in widely different parts of the
-building. The members were allowed freely to dispose of their holdings
-by exchange, sale, or gift, and many of the larger stockholders
-probably engaged in the enterprise for the sake of the profits to be
-made in this way. After the division was made the owners had their
-names cut upon the _tituli_, and might put up the columns to mark the
-_aediculae_, set up statues, etc., if they pleased. Some of the
-_tituli_ give besides the name of the owner the number and position of
-his _loci_ or _ollae_. Sometimes they record the purchase of _ollae_,
-giving the number bought and the name of the previous owner. Sometimes
-the names on the _ollae_ do not correspond with that over the niche,
-showing that the owner had sold a part only of his holdings, or that
-the purchaser had not taken the trouble to replace the _titulus_. The
-expenses of maintenance were probably paid from the weekly dues of the
-members, as were the funeral benefits.
-
- L . ABVCIVS . HERMES . IN . HOC
- ORDINE . AB . IMO . AD . SVMMVM
- COLVMBARIA . IX . OLLAE . XVIII
- SIBI . POSTERISQVE . SVIS[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: Titulus in Columbarium: "Lucius Abucius Hermes (has
-acquired) in this row, running from the ground to the top, nine niches
-with eighteen urns for (the ashes of) himself and his descendants."]
-
-432. Funeral Ceremonies.--The detailed accounts of funeral ceremonies
-that have come down to us relate almost exclusively to those of
-persons of high position, and the information gleaned from other
-sources (12) is so scattered that there is great danger of confusing
-usages of widely different times. It is quite certain, however, that
-very young children were buried at all times simply and quietly
-(_funus acerbum_), that no ceremonies at all attended the burial of
-slaves (420) when conducted by their masters (nothing is known of the
-forms used by the burial societies mentioned above), and that citizens
-of the lowest class were laid to rest without public parade (_funus
-plebeium_). It is also known that burials took place by night except
-during the last century of the Republic and the first two centuries of
-the Empire, and it is natural to suppose that, even in the case of
-persons of high position, there was ordinarily much less of pomp and
-parade than on occasions that the Roman writers thought it worth while
-to describe. This has been found true in the matter of wedding
-festivities (79). It will be convenient to take in order the
-proceedings at the house, the funeral procession, and the ceremonies
-at the place of burial.
-
-433. At the House.--When the Roman died at home surrounded by his
-family, it was the duty of his oldest son to bend over the body and
-call him by name, as if with the hope of recalling him to life. The
-formal performance of the act (_conclamatio_) he announced immediately
-with the words: _conclamatum est_. The eyes of the dead were then
-closed, the body was washed with warm water and anointed, the limbs
-were straightened, and if the deceased had held a curule office a wax
-impression of his features was taken. The body was then dressed in the
-toga (240) with all the insignia of rank that the dead had been
-entitled to wear in life, and was placed upon the funeral couch
-(_lectus funebris_) in the _atrium_ (198), with the feet to the door,
-to lie in state until the time of the funeral. The couch was
-surrounded with flowers, and incense was burned about it. Before the
-door of the house were set branches of pine or cypress as a warning
-that the house was polluted by death. The simple offices that have
-been described were performed in humble life by the relatives and
-servants, in other cases by professional undertakers (_libitinarii_),
-who also embalmed the body and superintended all the rest of the
-ceremonies. Reference is made occasionally to the kissing of the dying
-person as he breathed his last, as if this last breath was to be
-caught in the mouth of the living, and in very early and very late
-times it was undoubtedly the custom to put a small coin between the
-teeth of the dead with which to pay his passage across the Styx in
-Charon's boat. Neither of these formalities seems to have obtained
-generally in classical times.
-
-434. The Funeral Procession.--The funeral procession of the ordinary
-citizen was simple enough. Notice was given to neighbors and friends,
-and surrounded by them and by the family, carried on the shoulders of
-the sons or other near relatives, with perhaps a band of musicians in
-the lead, the body was borne to the tomb. The procession of one of the
-mighty, on the other hand, was marshaled with all possible display and
-ostentation. It occurred as soon after death as the necessary
-preparations could be made, there being no fixed intervening time.
-Notice was given by a public crier in the ancient words of style:
-_Ollus Quiris leto datus. Exsequias, quibus est commodum, ire iam
-tempus est. Ollus ex aedibus effertur._[3] Questions of order and
-precedence were settled by one of the undertakers (_designator_). At
-the head went a band of musicians, followed at least occasionally by
-persons singing dirges in praise of the dead, and by bands of buffoons
-and jesters, who made merry with the bystanders and imitated even the
-dead himself. Then came the imposing part of the display. The wax
-masks of the dead man's ancestors had been taken from their place in
-the _alae_ (200) and assumed by actors in the dress appropriate to
-the time and station of the worthies they represented. It must have
-seemed as if the ancient dead had returned to earth to guide their
-descendant to his place among them. Servius tells us that six hundred
-_imagines_ were displayed at the funeral of the young Marcellus, the
-nephew of Augustus. Then followed the memorials of the great deeds of
-the deceased, if he had been a general, as in a triumphal procession,
-and then the dead himself, carried with face uncovered on a lofty
-couch. Then came the family, including freedmen (especially those made
-free by the testament of their master) and slaves, and then the
-friends, all in mourning garb (246, 254), and all freely giving
-expression to the emotion that we try to suppress on such occasions.
-Torch-bearers attended the train, even by day, as a remembrance of the
-older custom of burial by night.
-
-[Footnote 3: "This citizen has been surrendered to death. For those
-who find it convenient it is now time to attend the funeral. He is
-being brought from his house."]
-
-435. The Funeral Oration.--The procession passed from the house
-directly to the place of interment, unless the deceased was a person
-of sufficient consequence to be honored by public authority with a
-funeral oration (_laudatio_) in the forum. In this case the funeral
-coach was placed before the _rostra_, the men in the masks took their
-places on curule chairs (225) around it, the general crowd was massed
-in a semicircle behind, and a son or other near relative delivered the
-address. It recited the virtues and achievements of the dead and
-recounted the history of the family to which he belonged. Like such
-addresses in more recent times it contained much that was false and
-more that was exaggerated. The honor of the _laudatio_ was freely
-given in later times, especially to members of the imperial family,
-including women. Under the Republic it was less common and more highly
-prized, and so far as we know the only women so honored belonged to
-the _gens Iulia_. It will be remembered that it was Caesar's address
-on the occasion of the funeral of his aunt, the widow of Marius, that
-pointed him out to the opponents of Sulla as a future leader. When the
-address in the forum was not authorized, one was sometimes given more
-privately at the grave or at the house.
-
-436. At the Tomb.--When the train reached the place of burial the
-proceedings varied according to the time, but all provided for the
-three things ceremonially necessary: the consecration of the
-resting-place, the casting of earth upon the remains, and the
-purification of all polluted by the death. In ancient times the body,
-if buried, was lowered into the grave either upon the couch on which
-it had been brought to the spot, or in a coffin of burnt clay or
-stone. If the body was to be burned a shallow grave was dug and filled
-with dry wood, upon which the couch and body were placed. The pile was
-then fired and when wood and body had been consumed, earth was heaped
-over the ashes into a mound (_tumulus_). Such a grave in which the
-body was burned was called _bustum_, and was consecrated as a regular
-_sepulcrum_ by the ceremonies mentioned below. In later times the
-body, if not to be burned, was placed in a sarcophagus (Fig. 203)
-already prepared in the tomb (425). If the remains were to be burned
-they were taken to the _ustrina_ (426), which was not regarded as a
-part of the _sepulcrum_, and placed upon the pile of wood (_rogus_).
-Spices and perfumes were thrown upon it, together with gifts (425)
-and tokens from the persons present. The pyre was then lighted with a
-torch by a relative, who kept his face averted during the act. After
-the fire had burned out the embers were extinguished with water or
-wine and those present called a last farewell to the dead. The water
-of purification was then thrice sprinkled over those present, and all
-except the immediate family left the place. The ashes were then
-collected in a cloth to be dried, and the ceremonial bone (420),
-called _os resectum_, was buried. A sacrifice of a pig was then made,
-by which the place of burial was made sacred ground, and food
-(_silicernium_) was eaten together by the mourners. They then returned
-to the house which was purified by an offering to the _Lares_, and the
-funeral rites were over.
-
-437. After Ceremonies.--With the day of the burial or burning of the
-remains began the Nine Days of Sorrow, solemnly observed by the
-immediate family. Some time during this period, when the ashes had had
-time to dry thoroughly, members of the family went privately to the
-_ustrina_, removed them from the cloth, placed them in an _olla_ (Fig.
-204) of earthenware, glass, alabaster, bronze, or other material, and
-with bare feet and loosened girdles carried them into the _sepulcrum_
-(425). At the end of the nine days the _sacrificium novendiale_ was
-offered to the dead and the _cena novendialis_ was celebrated at the
-house. On this day, too, the heirs formally entered upon their
-inheritance and the funeral games (344) were originally given. The
-period of mourning, however, was not concluded on the ninth day. For
-husband or wife, ascendants, and grown descendants mourning was worn
-for ten months, the ancient year; for other adult relatives, eight
-months; for children between the ages of three and ten years, for as
-many months as they were years old.
-
-438. Memorial Festivals.--The memory of the dead was kept alive by
-regularly recurring days of obligation of both public and private
-character. To the former belong the _parentalia_, or _dies parentales_
-(75), lasting from the 13th to the 21st of February, the final day
-being especially distinguished as the _feralia_. To the latter belong
-the annual celebration of the birthday (or the burial-day) of the
-person commemorated, and the festivals of violets and roses
-(_violaria_, _rosaria_), about the end of March and May respectively,
-when violets and roses were distributed among the relatives and laid
-upon the graves or heaped over the urns. On all these occasions
-offerings were made in the temples to the gods and at the tombs to the
-_manes_ of the dead, and the lamps were lighted in the tombs (425),
-and at the tombs the relatives feasted together and offered food to
-their dead (426).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 205. HADRIAN'S TOMB]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-References are to Paragraphs. An asterisk denotes a cut.
-
-
-A
-
-a manu, 391.
-
-abacus, reckoning board, 111*;
- panels in wall decorations, 220;
- sideboard, 227, 307*.
-
-ABBREVIATIONS in names, 41.
-
-ab epistolis, 391.
-
-abolla, cloak, 249*.
-
-ab ovo ad mala, 308.
-
-ACTORS, slave, men only, 324.
-
-ad (malam) crucem, 174.
-
-ADDITIONAL names, 51.
-
-ADDRESS of letters, 392.
-
-adfines, blood relations, 26.
-
-ADJUSTABLE tables, 227*.
-
-adoptio, see ADOPTION.
-
-ADOPTION, two kinds, 29;
- of a filius familias, 30;
- of a pater familias, 30;
- name given adopted person, 52, 56.
-
-adrogatio, see ADOPTION.
-
-adversitores, 152.
-
-ADVERTISEMENTS of gladiators, 361*.
-
-aediculae, in columbaria, 429*.
-
-AFFECTION for nurses, 101;
- for pedagogues, 123.
-
-agger viae, 387.
-
-agitatores, drivers of chariots, 341. See aurigae.
-
-agnati, related through males, 23.
-
-AGRICULTURE, honorable occupation, 404.
-
-alae, in house, 191;
- later, 200.
-
-alieno iuri subiectus, 17.
-
-alveus, in bath, 369*.
-
-amictus, outer garments, 240*-249*.
-
-AMPHITHEATER, meaning of word, 351;
- early at Rome, 352;
- at Pompeii, 353*, 354*, 355*;
- the coliseum, 356*, 357*, 358*.
-
-amphitheatrum, see AMPHITHEATER.
-
-amphorae, for wine, 297.
-
-amurca, bitter fluid of olives, 291.
-
-AMUSEMENTS, Chap. IX. See Table of Contents.
-
-andabatae, blindfold gladiators, 359.
-
-andron, formerly called fauces, 192 note.
-
-Andronicus, 113.
-
-anteambulones, outriders, 151.
-
-antecena, appetizer, 308.
-
-ANTIQUITIES, public and private distinguished, 2;
- and history, 4;
- private defined, 1;
- in philology, 6, 7;
- recent interest, 8.
-
-apodyterium, 366;
- makeshift for, 367;
- usually unheated, 368;
- one heated, 378*;
- in thermae, 376*, 377*.
-
-APPIAN WAY, as burial-place, 421;
- construction, 385 f.
-
-APPRENTICESHIP in education, 117.
-
-arbiter bibendi, toast master, 313.
-
-arca, strong box, 188, 201, 230*.
-
-Archias, name explained, 60.
-
-area, ground for tomb, 426.
-
-arena, circus, 330*, 332;
- amphitheater (Pompeii), 354*, (Rome), 357*.
-
-ARITHMETIC, in the schools, 111*.
-
-armaria, cabinets, 231.
-
-ARMY, as a career, (for nobles), 408, (for commons), 410.
-
-ARRANGEMENT of hair, 263;
- of hair of bride, 78;
- of couches in dining-room, 304*.
-
-ATHENS, university of Rome, 116.
-
-ATHLETIC sports and games, 316*, 317*, 318*.
-
-atriensis, butler, 149.
-
-atrium, in primitive house, 188;
- meaning, 189;
- the developed atrium, 196, 197, 198*;
- burial-place of Head of House, 421.
-
-Atticus, 155, 300, 310, 399.
-
-auctorati, volunteer gladiators, 347.
-
-aulaea, portires, 216.
-
-aurigae, chariot drivers, (Figs. 138, 142), 341*, 342.
-
-
-B
-
-BAKERIES, 286*.
-
-BAKERS, as a guild, 286.
-
-BALL, played by children, 102*;
- by men, 318*.
-
-balneae, meaning, 372. See BATHS.
-
-balneaticum, bath fee, 373.
-
-balneum, meaning, 372. See BATHS.
-
-BANKING, as profession, 412.
-
-BANQUETS, 315.
-
-BARBER shops, 253.
-
-BARRIERS, in circus, 330*, 333*.
-
-basterna, litter drawn by mules, 382.
-
-BATH, in early times, 365;
- public and private, 365;
- essentials for, 366;
- rooms combined, 367;
- heating, 368;
- caldarium, 369;
- frigidarium, 370;
- unctorium, 370;
- private bathhouse, 371*;
- public baths, 372;
- time opened, 374;
- fees, 373;
- for women, 375;
- thermae, 376*, 377*.
-
-BATHHOUSE, in Caerwent, 371*;
- in Pompeii, 376*;
- in Rome, 377*.
-
-BATHROOMS, in residences, 203, 367, 371*.
-
-BEANS, considered heavy food, 275.
-
-BEARDS, fashions in, 254.
-
-BEEF, rarely used, 277.
-
-Benoist, his definition of Philology, 6.
-
-BETROTHALS, 70.
-
-BEVERAGES, 298.
-
-bibliotheca, 206, 402.
-
-BILLS of fare, 308, 309.
-
-BOOKS, ancient forms, 393;
- materials, 394, 395;
- making, 396;
- finish of, 397;
- size, 398;
- publishing, 399, 400;
- cost, 401;
- libraries, 402.
-
-"BOOKS," divisions of literary work, 398.
-
-BOXES, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 334;
- in amphitheater, 353.
-
-BOY, named, 97;
- home training, 104, 106;
- athletics, 107;
- education, see SCHOOL;
- coming of age, 125;
- given citizenship, 128.
-
-bracatae, wearing trousers, 239.
-
-BRAZIERS, 218*.
-
-BREAD, 286 f.;
- making, 287;
- kinds of, 288.
-
-"Bread and the Games of the Circus," 322.
-
-BREAKFAST, 302.
-
-BREAKING promise of marriage, 71.
-
-BRICKS, 212*.
-
-bulla, 99*.
-
-BURIAL-places and ceremonies, Chapter XII. See Table of Contents.
-
-BURIAL SOCIETIES, 430.
-
-BUSINESS rooms added to houses, 193;
- interests at Rome, 413.
-
-BUTTER, not a food, 281.
-
-
-C
-
-CABINETS, 231.
-
-calamus (scriptorius), 395.
-
-calceator, 150.
-
-calcei, 251*, 262;
- senatorii, 251;
- patricii, 251.
-
-caldarium, 366;
- near furnace, 368;
- furniture, 369;
- other uses of, 369;
- in plans, 371*, 376*, 378*.
-
-caligae, half-boots, 251.
-
-calx, in circus, 331*.
-
-camillus, 82*.
-
-campus Martius, 317.
-
-candelabra, 229.
-
-CANDIDATES' dress, 235, 246.
-
-candidati, 246.
-
-CANDLES, ill made, 229.
-
-CAP, of liberty, 175*, 252.
-
-CAPITALISTS, their field, 409, 413.
-
-capsa, 397*.
-
-capsarius, 370.
-
-Caracalla, hall in baths of, 365*.
-
-cara cognatio, feast of, 25.
-
-carceres, in circus, 330*, 333*.
-
-carnifex, term of abuse, 174.
-
-carpentum, traveling carriage, 383*.
-
-CARRIAGES, for travel, 383*.
-
-caruca, sleeping car, 383.
-
-casa Romuli, 214*.
-
-cathedra, easy chair, 226*.
-
-catillus, outer part of mill, 284*.
-
-Cato (234-149), treatment of slaves, 159;
- opinion of cabbage, 275;
- word for dinner, 312.
-
-causia, hat, 252*.
-
-cavea, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater (Pompeii), 353*, (Rome), 358*.
-
-cavum aedium, 196.
-
-CEILINGS, construction, 213.
-
-cellae, servorum, 207;
- vinariae, 297*;
- oleariae, 292*.
-
-cena, in early times, 301;
- in the city, 303-311;
- hours, 303;
- importance in social life, 303;
- bills of fare, 308, 309;
- service, 310, 311;
- libera, 362;
- nuptialis, 85.
-
-cena, "dinner proper," 308.
-
-cenotaphium, empty tomb, 419.
-
-centenarius, winner of 100 races, 340.
-
-cepotaphium, tomb with grounds, 426.
-
-cera, for sealing letter, 392.
-
-cerasus, cherry, 274.
-
-CEREALS for food, 282.
-
-Cestius, tomb of, (420*), 427.
-
-CHAIRS, 225*, 226*.
-
-CHALKED FEET, 139.
-
-CHARIOT RACES, 330 f.;
- number of chariots, 333;
- racing syndicates, 339;
- teams, 340;
- drivers, 341.
-
-charta, paper, see papyrus.
-
-CHEESE, 281.
-
-CHESTS, 230*.
-
-CHILDHOOD, see CHILDREN;
- end of, 125.
-
-CHILDLESSNESS, a reproach, 28.
-
-CHILDREN, rights of, see potestas;
- property of, see peculium;
- civil position of, 69, 94;
- acknowledgment of, 95;
- exposure of, 96;
- maiming of, 96;
- games, etc., 102, 103;
- home training, 104;
- punishment of, 120*, 124;
- in the dining-room, 304;
- burial of young children, 420.
-
-Chrysogonus and Roscius, 408.
-
-CHURCH, like Roman house, 191.
-
-Cicero (106-43), number of his slaves, 155;
- names of his freedmen, 59;
- goodness to slaves, 158;
- his books, 399, 402;
- income, 407.
-
-CINERARY urns, 189*, 428, 437.
-
-ciniflones, hairdressers, 150.
-
-CIRCUS at Rome, 328 f.;
- plan, 330*;
- arena, 332*;
- carceres, 333*, 334*;
- spina, metae, 335*, 336*;
- seats, 337*;
- capacity, 338;
- races in, 339 f.
-
-circus Flaminius, 329.
-
-circus Maxentii, 329;
- plan of, 330*;
- arena, 332;
- obelisk in, 336;
- seating capacity, 338.
-
-circus Maximus, 328;
- missus in, 332;
- spina in, 336;
- obelisk in 336*;
- seats in, 337, 338*;
- reconstruction, 338*.
-
-cisium, two-wheeled cart, 384*.
-
-CIVIL SERVICE, 414.
-
-clepsydra, water-clock, 232.
-
-clientela, clientage, 177.
-
-CLIENTS, Chap. V. See Table of Contents.
-
-CLIMATE of Italy, 272.
-
-CLOCKS, 232.
-
-CLOTHING, Chap. VII. See Table of Contents;
- colors worn, 270;
- manufacture of, 271;
- cleaning, 271*.
-
-codicilli, set of writing tablets, 391*.
-
-coemptio, plebeian form of marriage, 63;
- implying manus, 66;
- ceremony of, 83.
-
-COFFINS, 425, 436.
-
-COGNATES, defined, 25;
- importance among plebeians, 65;
- degrees between, 25, 68.
-
-cognati, see COGNATES.
-
-cognatio, see COGNATES.
-
-cognomen, before nomen, 40;
- marking family, 48;
- age of, 49;
- nickname, 49;
- indication of lineage, 50;
- ex virtute, 53;
- differing in same family, 55;
- as fourth element in name, 55.
-
-COLISEUM, date of, 352;
- plan, 356*;
- arena, 357*;
- seats, 358*.
-
-collegia, funeraticia, iuvenum, salutaria, 430.
-
-COLONIES, 411.
-
-COLORS, of articles of dress, 270;
- of racing syndicates, 339.
-
-columbaria, 428*-431*.
-
-COMIC OPERAS, 323.
-
-COMMERCE, 413.
-
-comissatio, drinking bout, 312*, 313.
-
-COMMON PEOPLE, employments of, 410 f.
-
-compluvium, 188, 191, 196, 198.
-
-compotatio, drinking bout, 312*.
-
-conclamatio, cry of farewell, 433.
-
-CONCRETE, extensive use, 146;
- method of making, 211*;
- in roads, 387.
-
-conductor, manager of baths, 373.
-
-confarreatio, 61;
- religious aspect, 64;
- implying manus, 66;
- ceremony of, 81.
-
-CONFISCATION of property, 408.
-
-CONFUSION of names, 55.
-
-CONSENT necessary to marriage, 74.
-
-Constantius (Emperor 337-361 A.D.), 338.
-
-CONSTRUCTION of house, 210* f.;
- mill, 284*;
- roads, 387*.
-
-contubernia, unions of slaves, 138, 156.
-
-conventio in manum, 35;
- cum conventione, 61;
- sine conventione, 62.
-
-convivia, dinners, 312;
- convivia tempestiva, 310.
-
-COOKS, hired in early times, 299.
-
-Cornelii, buried their dead, 420.
-
-coronae convivales, 313.
-
-CORRESPONDENCE, 391.
-
-COST, of baths, 373;
- books, 401;
- meals (inns), 388;
- slaves, 140;
- tables, 227;
- wines, 298.
-
-COTTON goods, 269.
-
-COUCHES, sofas or beds, 224*;
- dining, 304*.
-
-COVERINGS for the head, men, 252*;
- women, 263.
-
-covinus, two-wheeled cart, 384.
-
-Crassus, in salvage business, 413.
-
-crater, mixing bowl, 314*.
-
-CREMATION, introduced at Rome, 420.
-
-crepundia, child's rattle, 98*.
-
-Crescens, famous driver, 342.
-
-CRIMSON or purple, 270.
-
-CRUCIFIXION of slaves, 173.
-
-cubicula, bedrooms, 205.
-
-cucullus, hood, 247, 248, 252.
-
-culina, kitchen, 203*.
-
-cumerus, 82*.
-
-cunei, in theater, 327;
- circus, 337.
-
-curatores, of burial societies, 430.
-
-Curius and his dinner, 299.
-
-curriculum, lap in race, 331.
-
-CURTAIN in later theater, 327.
-
-CURULE chair, 225*.
-
-cyathus, ladle, 314*.
-
-CYPHER correspondence, 390.
-
-CYPRESS, as emblem of death, 433.
-
-
-D
-
-DAIRY products, 281.
-
-DANCERS, 153.
-
-dator ludorum, giver of games, 334.
-
-DAY, a Roman's, 415.
-
-declamatio, public speaking, 115.
-
-DECORATION of houses, 220 f.;
- walls, 220*;
- doors, 221*;
- floors, 221*;
- of tombs, 425*, 428*, 430*.
-
-decuriae, of slaves, 133.
-
-defrutum, grape jelly, 296.
-
-delphica (mensa), 227*.
-
-designator, funeral director, 434.
-
-destrictarium, in baths, 367, 376*.
-
-desultores, circus riders, 343.
-
-DEVELOPMENT of the house, 188*.
-
-dextrarum iunctio, in marriage, 81*.
-
-DICE, gaming with, 321*.
-
-dies, lustricus, 97;
- parentales, 75, 438;
- religiosi, 75.
-
-dimachaeri, gladiators with two swords, 359.
-
-DINING-ROOM, 204, 304*.
-
-DINNER, in the city, 303-311;
- early times, 301;
- hour, 310;
- bill of fare, 309;
- order of courses, 308;
- places of honor, 306.
-
-Diocletian (Emperor 284-305 A.D.) baths of, 378*.
-
-discus, throwing the, 316*.
-
-dispensator, steward, 149.
-
-diurna cubicula, 205.
-
-DIVORCE, 72, 93.
-
-DOG, as pet, 103;
- in hallway, 195*.
-
-dolia, for oil, 292*;
- for wine, 297.
-
-dominica potestas, 37.
-
-dominus gregis, head actor, 324.
-
-Domitian (Emperor 81-96 A.D.), 339.
-
-domus, 186;
- see HOUSE.
-
-DOORS, construction, 215* f.;
- names, 216.
-
-dormitoria, 205.
-
-dorsum, top course in road, 387.
-
-dos, dowry, 72.
-
-DOWRY, 72.
-
-DRAMATIC performances, 323 f.
-
-DRESS, Chap. VII. See Table of Contents.
-
-DRINKING bouts, 312*.
-
-DRIVERS, chariot races, 341*.
-
-ducenarius, horse of 200 victories, 340.
-
-DWARFS, kept for amusement, 153.
-
-
-E
-
-"EARLY DINNERS," 310.
-
-EARLY FORMS, of marriage, 61;
- of names, 38, 57, 58;
- of table customs, 299;
- of toga, 245;
- of theater, 325;
- of baths, 365;
- of gladiatorial shows, 345.
-
-EARLY HOURS at Rome, 79, 415.
-
-EARS of slaves bored, 139.
-
-EDUCATION, Chap. IV. See Table of Contents.
-
-ELM TREE, for grapes, 295;
- for switches, 167;
- "essence of elm," 168.
-
-editor munerum, giver of gladiatorial show, 362.
-
-ELOCUTION in schools, 114.
-
-EMANCIPATION, of a son, 18;
- of a slave, 175.
-
-endormis, bath robe, 249.
-
-ENGAGEMENTS, marriage, 71.
-
-EPIGRAPHIC sources, 10.
-
-epityrum, olive salad, 290.
-
-equites, career of, 409.
-
-ERRORS in manuscript books, 399.
-
-Esquiline Hill, as burial-place, 423.
-
-essedarii, chariot fighters, 359;
- spelled assidarii, 362.
-
-ESSENTIALS for the bath, 366;
- for burial, 436.
-
-EXAGGERATION in satire, 93.
-
-ex cathedra, official utterance, 226.
-
-exedrae, reception halls, 207.
-
-exponere, "expose," of children, 95.
-
-EXPOSURE of children, 32, 95;
- slaves, 157.
-
-exta, of the sacrifices, 277.
-
-EXTINCTION of the potestas, 34;
- of a family, 30.
- See ADOPTION.
-
-
-F
-
-f., abbreviation in names, 39, 57;
- for fugitivus, 172.
-
-fabulae palliatae, 323.
-
-faces, torches kept in doorways, 229.
-
-factiones, racing syndicates, 339.
-
-familia, meanings, 17, 21;
- =stirps, 22;
- gladiatoria, 349;
- rustica, 142, 145;
- urbana, 149.
-
-FAMILY, Chap. I. See Table of Contents;
- defined, 17;
- splitting up of, 19;
- cult, 27.
-
-FANS, 266*.
-
-far, early sort of grain, 282.
-
-FARMING of revenues, 409.
-
-FARM slaves, see familia rustica;
- work, 148.
-
-fasciae, wrappings of cloth, 239.
-
-fascinatio, evil eye, 98, 99.
-
-fascis, a set of books, 397.
-
-FASTENINGS for doors, 216.
-
-FATHER, see pater familias;
- as companion of his sons, 106.
-
-fauces, in a house, 192, note.
-
-FEES, in schools, 109, 119;
- baths, 373.
-
-feliciter, in congratulations, 82.
-
-feminalia, wrappings for legs, 239.
-
-fenestrae, windows, 217*.
-
-feralia, 438.
-
-Fescinnini versus, 87.
-
-FESTIVALS, cara cognatio, 25;
- feralia, 438;
- matronalia, 91;
- liberalia, 127;
- rosaria, 438;
- Saturnalia, 319;
- vinalia rustica, 296;
- violaria, 438.
-
-FESTIVITIES, wedding, 80, 85, 86, 89;
- coming of age, 127.
-
-FIREMEN, slaves as, 141.
-
-FISH, as food, 280.
-
-fistuca, heavy rammer, 213.
-
-flabellum, fan, 266*.
-
-flagrum, scourge, 167*.
-
-flammeum, bridal veil, 77*.
-
-Flavium amphitheatrum, see COLISEUM.
-
-FLOORS, construction, 213.
-
-FLOWERS, at feasts, 313;
- at tombs, 438.
-
-focalia, wrappings for throat, 239.
-
-foculi, heating stoves, 218*.
-
-folles, balls filled with air, 318*.
-
-FOOD, Chap. VIII. See Table of Contents.
-
-FORBIDDEN DEGREES of kinship, 25, 68.
-
-fores, double doors, 195, 216.
-
-FORKS, not used, 299.
-
-forum, place of early shows, 351.
-
-FOUNDLINGS, fate of, 96.
-
-FOWLS, domestic, 279.
-
-FREEDMAN, name, 59;
- relation to patron, 175.
-
-frigidarium, 366;
- other uses, 367;
- position, 368;
- furnishings, 370;
- shown on plans, 371*, 376*, 377*.
-
-fritillus, dice box, 321.
-
-frontes, of papyrus rolls, 397.
-
-FRUITS, known to Romans, 274.
-
-frumentum, grain, 282, and note.
-
-fugitivi, 172.
-
-fullones, as cleaners, 271*.
-
-FUNERAL games, 344, 345;
- ceremonies, Chap. XII. See Table of Contents.
-
-funus, acerbum, plebeium, 432.
-
-furca, as punishment, 169.
-
-FURNACE for houses, 218;
- for baths, 368.
-
-FURNITURE, 222 f.;
- modern lacking, 223;
- couches, 224*;
- chairs, 225*;
- tables, 227*;
- lamps, 228*;
- chests and cabinets, 230*;
- other articles, 232.
-
-
-G
-
-Gaius, meaning, 44, 81;
- as a nomen, 55, 81;
- in the marriage ceremony, 81, 88.
-
-GAME, wild, for table, 279.
-
-GAMES, of children, 103, 320*;
- public and private, see AMUSEMENTS. Chap. IX;
- of ball for men, 318*;
- of chance, 319*, 320*, 321*;
- funeral, 344, 345.
-
-GARDEN, behind the peristyle, 202;
- produce, 275, 276.
-
-GARLANDS worn by slaves, 134;
- by bride and groom, 78;
- by women, 264;
- at feasts by men, 313.
-
-GEESE as pets, 103*.
-
-gens, theory of, 22;
- marked by nomen, 38;
- burial-places of, 422.
-
-gentiles, 22;
- at the confarreate ceremony, 81*.
-
-"GENTLEMEN'S DINNERS," 310 f.
-
-GIRL, named, 97;
- home training, 104, 105;
- married at early age, 67, 105;
- admitted to schools, 109.
-
-GLADIATORS, 344 f.;
- in Etruria and Campania, 344;
- first shows at Rome, 344;
- in theory private shows, 345;
- numbers exhibited, 346;
- whence obtained, 347;
- innocent and guilty, 348;
- training, 349;
- fashions and tactics, 359;
- armor, 360;
- the fight, 362;
- rewards, 363;
- bravos and bullies, 346.
-
-GLASS, for windows, 217;
- balls for hands, 266.
-
-gradus, rows of seats, 337;
- of urns, 428.
-
-GRAMMAR schools, 112.
-
-grammaticus, of a teacher, 112.
-
-GRAPES, 293;
- where grown, 294;
- how grown, 295;
- jelly, 296.
-
-GREEK, place in schools, 112;
- nurses, 101;
- teachers, 115;
- taught to children, 101, 116, 123.
-
-GROUNDS, about tombs, 426*.
-
-GUARDIANS, of women, 19, 70;
- of children, 22.
-
-gustus, first course at dinner, 308.
-
-
-H
-
-Hadrian (Emperor 117-138 A.D.), tomb, 427, 438*.
-
-HAIR, arrangement, men, 254;
- women, 263;
- of a bride, 78.
-
-HANDBALL, 318.
-
-HANDKERCHIEFS, 266.
-
-HARD LABOR, as punishment, 170.
-
-hasta, sign of auction, 134.
-
-HATS, 252.
-
-HEAD of the House, see pater familias.
-
-HEATING houses, 218;
- baths, 368*, 369.
-
-HINGES of doors, 215*.
-
-HISTORY, and antiquities, 4;
- not taught systematically in schools, 112.
-
-HOLIDAYS, numerous, 322;
- school, 122;
- avoided as wedding days, 75;
- spent in country, 416.
-
-HOME training, 104.
-
-HONEY, used for sugar, 281.
-
-hoplomachi, later name for "Samnites," 360, 344*.
-
-Horace, (65-8 B.C.), his slaves, 133.
-
-HORSES, in chariot races, 339, 340;
- in other shows, 343.
-
-Horti Maecenatis, 423.
-
-hospites, 183 f.
-
-hospitium, 184.
-
-HOURS, of the day, 417, 418;
- for meals, 301;
- for baths, 374;
- all semi-public functions, 415.
-
-HOUSE, dwelling, Chap. VI. See Table of Contents;
- =familia, see FAMILY;
- Head of House, see pater familias;
- house slaves, 149.
-
-HOUSE of Pansa, 208*;
- of Sallust, court, 204*;
- of the poet, ruins, 199*.
-
-HOUSEHOLD, translation of familia, 17.
-
-HUMAN sacrifices, 344.
-
-HUT, of Romulus, 214*;
- early Romans, 189*.
-
-hymenaeus, marriage hymn, 86.
-
-
-I
-
-ianitor, chained to post, 150, 195.
-
-iantaculum, breakfast, 302.
-
-ianua, distinguished from ostium, 216.
-
-ientaculum, breakfast, 302.
-
-imagines, kept in alae, 200;
- in funeral processions, 434.
-
-imbrices, tiles for roof, 214*.
-
-imperium paternum, 31.
-
-impluvium, 188, 191, 196*.
-
-INCOME, sources of, Chap. XI. See Table of Contents.
-
-INDUSTRIAL employment of slaves, 143.
-
-indutus, clothing, 234.
-
-INK, INKSTANDS, etc., 395*.
-
-INNS, 388*.
-
-INSCRIPTIONS, importance of, 10;
- of a fugitivus, 172;
- of Crescens, 342;
- gladiatorial show, 361;
- of Hylas, 362;
- milestone, 386;
- in columbaria, 431;
- of Plancus, 427, note, 420*.
-
-instita, flounce of stola, 260.
-
-INSURRECTIONS of slaves, 132.
-
-INTERMENT, see BURIAL.
-
-iudicium domesticum, 32.
-
--ius, original in nomen, 46;
- in other names, 55.
-
-ius conubii, 64;
- osculi, 25;
- patrium, 31.
-
-iusti liberi, rightful children, 69.
-
-
-J
-
-JACKSTONES, 103, 320*.
-
-JESTERS, 153.
-
-JEWELRY worn by men, 255;
- women, 267.
-
-JOINING hands in marriage ceremony, 74.
-
-Juvenal (about 67-127 A.D.), on the toga, 244;
- "bread and games," 322.
-
-
-K
-
-KITCHEN, 203.
-
-KNIGHTS, income of, 409.
-
-KNIVES and forks, 299.
-
-KNUCKLE-BONES, 320*.
-
-
-L
-
-l., abbreviation for libertus, 59.
-
-labrum, basin in bath, 369, 376, 377.
-
-lacerna, cloak, 247.
-
-laconicum, dry sweat bath, 367, 371*.
-
-laena, woolen cloak, 249.
-
-LAMPS, 228, 229*.
-
-LAND, travel by, 381.
-
-lanista, trainer of gladiators, 349.
-
-laqueatores, gladiators with lassos, 359.
-
-lares, compitales, gods of crossroads, 87;
- of the house, 199.
-
-LATER theater, 326 f.
-
-lateres cocti, 212*;
- crudi, 210.
-
-LATIN in schools, 113;
- best spoken by women, 92.
-
-latrina, toilet room, 203*.
-
-laudatio funebris, funeral address, 435.
-
-LAW, practice of, 407.
-
-lectica, and bearers, 151*;
- on journeys, 382.
-
-lectus, see COUCHES;
- adversus, 199.
-
-LEGAL status of children, 94;
- slaves, 156;
- women, 35, 36, 90.
-
-lenones, 139.
-
-LETTERS, writing of, 391;
- sending, 390;
- speed, 389;
- sealing and opening, 392;
- the address, 392.
-
-libera cena, feast for gladiators, 362.
-
-Liberalia, 127.
-
-libertini, in business, 412 f.
-
-libertus, opposed to libertinus, 175;
- relation to patron, 175.
-
-LIBERTY, cap of, 175*.
-
-libitinarii, undertakers, 433.
-
-LIBRARIES, 206, 402.
-
-librarii, copyists, 391, 399, 401.
-
-limen, threshold, 195, 215;
- superum, 215.
-
-LIMITATIONS of patria poteatas, 32, 33;
- of manus, 36;
- of dominica potestas, 156, 157.
-
-LINEN goods, 269.
-
-linum, 392.
-
-LITERARY sources, 9.
-
-litterae, see LETTERS;
- eodem exemplo, 390.
-
-Livia, columbarium of, 428*.
-
-LOAVES of bread, 288*.
-
-locus, consularis, 306;
- in columbarium, 431.
-
-lorarius, executioner, 174.
-
-lucerna, lamp, 228*, 229*.
-
-ludi, circenses, 328 f.;
- scenici, 323 f.;
- gladiatorii (schools), 349*, 350.
-
-ludus, see SCHOOLS;
- ludus Troiae, 343.
-
-LUNCHEON, 302.
-
-lunula, ornament, 98;
- for shoe, 251.
-
-
-M
-
-M. and M', in names, 41.
-
-m., for missus, of pardoned gladiator, 361.
-
-Maecenas, gardens of, 423.
-
-maeniana, sections of seats, 337, 358.
-
-maenianum, projecting second story, 233*.
-
-magister bibendi, master of revels, 313.
-
-maiestas patria, 31.
-
-malum, Armeniacum, granatum, Persicum, Punicum, 274.
-
-mamillare, 257*.
-
-mangones, 135.
-
-MANHOOD, when reached, 126.
-
-MANUFACTURE of clothing, 271.
-
-MANUMISSION of slaves, 175.
-
-manus, defined, 35;
- limited, 36;
- unpopular, 65, 66;
- when necessary, 66.
-
-Marcellus, theater of, 327*.
-
-MARRIAGE, Chap. III. See Table Of Contents;
- by capture, 78, 86, 88;
- hymn, 86;
- cry, 87;
- torch, 86, 89;
- religious duty, 28.
-
-Martial (43-101 A.D.) and the toga, 244;
- and cost of books, 401.
-
-MASTER, heir of his slaves, 164.
-
-MATERIALS for clothing, 269.
-
-MATCHED PAIRS of slaves, 140.
-
-matrimonium, motherhood, 64;
- iniustum, 69.
-
-matrimus, with a living mother, 82.
-
-matronalia, 91.
-
-MEALS, Chap. VIII. See Table of Contents.
-
-MEANINGS of names, 44.
-
-MEAT, early food of Italians, 273;
- various kinds, 277.
-
-MEMORIAL festivals, 438.
-
-mensa, table in general, 227;
- dining, 307.
-
-mensa prima, first course, 308.
-
-mensa secunda, dessert, 308, 309, 311.
-
-MENU, of dinner, 309.
-
-merenda, irregular meal, 302.
-
-meridiatio, noonday rest, 302.
-
-meta, of a grain mill, 284*.
-
-metae, in a circus, 331*, 335.
-
-MILESTONES, 386*.
-
-MILL, for grain, 284*;
- for olives, 292*;
- as a punishment, 148, 171.
-
-missus, seven laps in a race, 331;
- "spared," of a gladiator, 361.
-
-MIXING BOWLS, 314*;
- three thousand of Pompeius, 326;
- mixing wine, 314.
-
-mola, mill, 284*, 285*.
-
-monopodium, table with one support, 227*.
-
-MONUMENTAL sources, 11.
-
-"Morituri te salutant," 362.
-
-MOSAICS, 221.
-
-MOTHER, as nurse, 100;
- as teacher, 104, 105.
-
-MOURNING, signs of, 246, 253;
- periods of, 437.
-
-mulleus, patrician shoe, 251.
-
-mulsa, water and honey, 298.
-
-mulsum, wine and honey, 298.
-
-munera, opposed to ludi, 345;
- gladiatoria, Chap. IX. See Table of Contents.
-
-munire viam, of road building, 387.
-
-murmillones, class of gladiators, 360.
-
-mustaceum, wedding cake, 85.
-
-mustum, new wine, 296.
-
-MUTUAL obligations, of patron and freedman, 175;
- patrician patron and client, 179;
- later patron and client, 182;
- of hospites, 185.
-
-
-N
-
-NAME, Chap. II. See Table of Contents.
- See also praenomen, nomen, cognomen.
-
-narratio, narration, taught in schools, 115.
-
-NATURALIZED citizens, names of, 60.
-
-naumachiae, naval battles, 364.
-
-NETS, for the hair, 264.
-
-NEW clients, 181.
-
-NEWSPAPER, substitute for, 413.
-
-NICKNAMES, 54;
- See also cognomen.
-
-NIGHT for burial, 432.
-
-NOBLES, debarred from business careers, 404;
- funerals of, 433 f.
-
-nodus Herculaneus, 77.
-
-nomen, before and after cognomen, 40;
- endings of, 46;
- sign of gens, 21, 47;
- two or more in one name, 55;
- used as praenomen, 55.
-
-nomenclator, 151, 415.
-
-nominalia, 97.
-
-novendiale, 437.
-
-nubere, meaning, 77.
-
-nucleus, in roads, 387.
-
-NUMERALS as praenomina, 44;
- as names of women, 57.
-
-nuptiae iustae, 67;
- iniustae, 69.
-
-NURSERY stories, 100.
-
-NURSES, 100;
- Greek preferred, 101.
-
-NUTS, in wedding festivities, 87;
- for marbles, 103;
- grown in Italy, 274.
-
-
-O
-
-OBELISKS in the circuses, 336*.
-
-OCCUPATIONS of slaves, 143.
-
-oeci, rooms in house, 207.
-
-OLD and new clients, 176 f.
-
-oleum olivum, olive oil, 291.
-
-OLIVE, uses, 289 f.;
- preserved, 290;
- oil, uses, 291;
- manufacture, 292.
-
-ollae, urns for ashes of dead, 428, 429, 430*, 431, 437.
-
-ollus quiris leto datus, 434.
-
-ONION, unrefined, 275.
-
-oppidum, in circus, 330*.
-
-opus, caementicium, 210, 211*;
- incertum, 212*;
- quadratum, 210*;
- reticulatum, 212*.
-
-Orange, theater at, 327*.
-
-ORANGE, not grown in Italy, 274.
-
-ordo, in columbarium, 428, 431;
- scribarum, 414.
-
-ornamenta, theatrical properties, 324.
-
-ornator, valet, 150.
-
-ornatrix, ladies' maid, 150, 265.
-
-os resectum, bone for burial, 436.
-
-ostium, door, 195.
-
-ova, in the circus, 336.
-
-OVEN, for bread, 287*.
-
-
-P
-
-p., for periit, of gladiators, 361.
-
-paedagogus, 123*.
-
-paenula, cloak, 248*.
-
-palaestra, exercise ground, 367, 376*.
-
-palla, woman's robe, 261.
-
-paludamentum, general's cloak, 247.
-
-palus, with primus or secundus, 363.
-
-papyrus, manufacture, 394;
- rolls, 396.
-
-PARASOL, 266*.
-
-parentalia, festival of, 438.
-
-paries, house wall, 210.
-
-pater and derivatives, 26.
-
-pater familias, defined, 17;
- powers, see potestas;
- adopted into another family, 30.
-
-patria potestas, see potestas.
-
-patricii, sons of fathers, 64.
-
-patrimonium profundere, 33.
-
-patrimus, with a living father, 82.
-
-patronus, derivation of word, 26;
- and libertus, 175;
- patrician and client, 179;
- and client of later times, 182.
-
-PAUPERS, burial of, 423.
-
-PAVEMENT, construction, 387.
-
-pavimentum, floor, 213.
-
-PAY of teachers, 121;
- of chariot drivers, 342;
- of soldiers, 410.
-
-peculium, defined, 33;
- of slaves, 162.
-
-pecunia, meaning, 273.
-
-pedisequi, lackeys, 123, 150.
-
-PENS, 395.
-
-peregrinus, foreigner, 69.
-
-PERFUMES at feasts, 313.
-
-PERISTYLE, 192, 202*;
- perhaps a kitchen garden originally, 197.
-
-pero, shoe of untanned leather, 251.
-
-Persius (34-62 A.D.) as a schoolboy, 124.
-
-pessuli, bolts for doors, 216.
-
-petasus, hat, 252*.
-
-petoritum, baggage wagon, 383.
-
-PETS for children, 103.
-
-PHILOLOGY, defined, 6.
-
-PHYSICIANS, income and attainments, 412.
-
-pietas, affection, 73.
-
-pilentum, state carriage, 383.
-
-pilleus, cap of liberty, 175*, 252.
-
-piscina, plunge bath, 367, 370, 376*, 377*.
-
-pistores, millers and bakers, 283.
-
-PLACES, of honor at dinner, 305*;
- in the theater, 326;
- in the circus, 337;
- in the amphitheater (Pompeii), 355, (Rome), 358;
- where gladiators were shown, 356;
- of burial, 421.
-
-PLAN, of theater after Vitruvius, 327;
- circus of Maxentius, 330;
- of gladiatorial school at Pompeii, 349;
- of houses, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193;
- of house of Pansa, 208;
- of baths, 371, 376, 378;
- of inn, 388;
- of tombs and grounds, 425, 426.
-
-Plancus, tomb of, 420*, 427.
-
-Plautus (died 184 B.C.) on puls, 283.
-
-PLAYTHINGS for children, 102*.
-
-PLEBEIANS, marriages of, 62;
- importance of cognates, 65;
- gain right of marriage, 64;
- old plebeians, 177;
- new, 178.
-
-plebs, see PLEBEIANS.
-
-Pliny, the elder (died 79 A.D.), 352.
-
-pocula, goblets, 314*.
-
-podium, in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater, 357;
- in tombs, 425.
-
-POLITICS, as a career, 406.
-
-Pollio, Vedius, cruelty of, 158.
-
-POLYGAMY unknown at Rome, 61.
-
-pompa circensis, parade in circus, 343.
-
-Pompeii, importance of discoveries at, 11, 12;
- house plans, 187 f.;
- business rooms in private house, 194;
- small house at, 197*;
- house of poet, 199*;
- of Pansa, 208*;
- smaller theater at, 327*;
- ludi gladiatorii, 350*;
- amphitheater, 353*;
- thermae, 376*;
- street of tombs, 421*;
- tomb with marble door, 427*.
-
-pondera, stepping-stones, 233*.
-
-pontifex maximus, in marriage ceremony, 82.
-
-POOR, burial of, 428.
-
-por, for puer in names, 58.
-
-PORK, favorite meat, 278.
-
-PORRIDGE, 283, 286, 299.
-
-porta triumphalis in circus, 330;
- pompae, 330;
- Libitinensis, 354.
-
-POSITION of women, 90.
-
-POSTAL service, 389.
-
-posticum, garden door, 216.
-
-potestas, patria, 31;
- limitations, 32, 73;
- extinguished, 34;
- suspension of, 34;
- dominica, 37.
-
-POTTER's FIELD at Rome, 423.
-
-praecinctio, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in coliseum, 358.
-
-praenomen, first name, 41;
- number, 41;
- abbreviations, 41, 45;
- limited in certain families, 42;
- given to firstborn son, 43;
- meanings of, 44;
- two in one name, 55.
-
-prandium, luncheon, 302.
-
-PRICES, of baths, 373;
- books, 401;
- houses, 221, note;
- meals, 388;
- slaves, 140;
- tables, 227;
- wines, 298.
-
-PRIMITIVE house, 188.
-
-primus palus, title of honor, 363.
-
-PRIVATE, antiquities, 2;
- slaves, 142 f.;
- bathhouse at Caerwent, 371*;
- games, 322;
- rooms in house, 203.
-
-PROCESSION, bridal, 86;
- in circus, 343;
- in the amphitheater, 362.
-
-procurator, steward, 149.
-
-PROFESSIONS in hands of freedmen and foreigners, 412;
- even of slaves, 143.
-
-PROLETARIATE, 411.
-
-prolusio, sham fight, 362.
-
-promulsis, appetizer, 308.
-
-pronuba, matron of honor, 81.
-
-PROVINCES, corruption in, 406, 409.
-
-PUBLIC, antiquities, 2;
- baths, 372 f., 376*, 377*;
- fountains, 233*;
- games, 322;
- opinion, in case of children, 32, 33;
- in case of slaves, 156.
-
-"PUBLICANS and sinners," 409.
-
-PUBLICATION of books, 400.
-
-puer, for servus, 58;
- written por, 58.
-
-pugillares, writing tablets in sets, 391*.
-
-puls, ancient national diet, 283.
-
-pultiphagonidae, 299.
-
-PUNISHMENTS of schoolboys, 120*, 124;
- of slaves, 166 f.
-
-pup(us), of unnamed child, 55.
-
-PURPLE or crimson, 270.
-
-puticuli, gravepits, 423.
-
-
-Q
-
-quadrans, regular bath charge, 373.
-
-quadrigae, in races, 340.
-
-
-R
-
-RACEHORSES, 339 f.
-
-RACES in circus, 339 f.;
- teams, 340;
- drivers, 341;
- syndicates, 339.
-
-RACING syndicates, 339.
-
-RAPE of the Sabines, 86, 87.
-
-READING, how taught, 110.
-
-reda, carriage, 384.
-
-REFERENCE books, 13.
-
-RELATIONSHIPS, agnati, 23;
- cognati, 25;
- adfines, 26.
-
-renuntiare, break an engagement to marry, 71.
-
-repotia, 85, 89.
-
-repudium renuntiare, see renuntiare.
-
-retiarii, gladiators with nets, 359, 360*.
-
-reticula, nets for the hair, 264.
-
-REWARDS of aurigae, 341;
- of gladiators, 363.
-
-rex bibendi, lord of the feast, 313.
-
-RICE in modern wedding festivities, 87.
-
-RINGS, engagement, 71;
- men's, 255;
- women's, 267;
- worn on joint, 256.
-
-ROADS, 385*-387*.
-
-Romulus, legislation of, 32, 95;
- wall of, 210*;
- hut of, 214*.
-
-ROOF, of peristyle, 202*;
- construction of, 214*.
-
-rosaria, feast of roses, 438.
-
-rudes, fencing swords, 349;
- with prima or secunda, 363.
-
-rudus, in roads, 387*.
-
-RUNAWAY slaves, 161, 172*.
-
-
-S
-
-sacra gentilicia, 22.
-
-sacrarium, private chapel, 207*.
-
-SADDLES, not used by Romans, 381.
-
-sagina gladiatoria, training food, 349.
-
-sagum, military cloak, 247.
-
-SALADS, 276.
-
-SALES of captives, 134;
- of slaves, 139.
-
-SALTCELLAR of silver, 299;
- always on table, 307.
-
-salutatio, morning levee, 182.
-
-"Samnites," name for gladiators, 359, 360*;
- later called secutores or hoplomachi, 360.
-
-SANDALS, see SLIPPERS.
-
-sarcophagus 436*, 428.
-
-SAVINGS of slaves, 162-164.
-
-SCALES, in marriage ceremony, 83.
-
-scapus, fixed quantity of paper, 394, 398.
-
-schedae, sheets of paper, 395.
-
-SCHOOLS, Chap. IV. See Table of Contents.
-
-SCHOOLS for gladiators, 349*.
-
-scribae, in civil service, 414;
- as copyists, see librarii.
-
-scrinium, case for books, 397*.
-
-SEALS, 255*, 392.
-
-SEATS, in theater, of classes, 326;
- arrangement, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater (Pompeii), 355, (Rome), 358.
-
-secunda mensa, 308, 309, 311.
-
-secutores, later name for "Samnites," 360.
-
-SEDAN CHAIRS, in travel, 382.
-
-sella curulis, 225*.
-
-semitae, sidewalks, 387.
-
-sepulcrum, 425, 436.
-
-serae, bars, 216.
-
-Servius and Sergius, derivation, 41.
-
-Servius, grammarian (4th cent. A.D.), 434.
-
-SEVENTEEN, time of coming of age, 126.
-
-SHIPS, travel by, 380.
-
-SHOES, 251*, 262*.
-
-SHOWS of gladiators. See munera.
-
-SHUTTERS for windows, 217.
-
-SIDEWALKS, 233.
-
-SIGNS of mercy in amphitheater, 362.
-
-silicernium, funeral feast, 436.
-
-SILK goods, 269.
-
-sine missione, "to the death," 362.
-
-SIZE of books, 398.
-
-SLAVEHUNTERS, 161.
-
-SLAVERY and clientage, 180.
-
-SLAVES, Chap. V. See Table of Contents.
-
-SLEEPING rooms, 205.
-
-SLIPPERS, 250*, 262*.
-
-SMOKE to ripen wine, 297.
-
-solarium, place to take the sun, 207, 426;
- sun-dial, 232.
-
-SOLDIERS, career, 410.
-
-soleae, 250*, 262*;
- soleas poscere, "to take leave," 250.
-
-solium, chair, 226*;
- basin in bath, 369.
-
-solum, floor, 213.
-
-sordidati, in mourning garb, 246.
-
-sortes virilis, a shareholder's part, 430.
-
-SOURCES of philological knowledge, literary, 9;
- epigraphic, 10;
- monumental, 11.
-
-Sp., abbreviation for Spurius, 41.
-
-sp., abbreviation for spectavit populus, 363.
-
-Spartacus, 132, 172.
-
-spatium, lap in circus, 331.
-
-SPEED, in travel, 389;
- in writing, 401.
-
-spina in circus, 331*, 336*.
-
-spina alba, of wedding torch, 86.
-
-SPINNING wheel, 199.
-
-SPLITTING up of a house, 19.
-
-spondeo, technical word in contract, 71.
-
-sponsa, of a girl betrothed, 71.
-
-sponsalia, ceremony of betrothal, 70.
-
-SPORT, Roman idea of, 316.
-
-SPORTS of the campus, 317;
- of children, 102, 103.
-
-sportula, the clients' dole, 182.
-
-STAGE, early, 325;
- later, 326 f.;
- of Vitruvius, 327*.
-
-STAGING a play, 324.
-
-statumen in roads, 387.
-
-STEPPING-STONES in streets, 233*.
-
-stilus, for writing, 391.
-
-stola, 259, 260*;
- matronalis, 91.
-
-STOOLS, 225*.
-
-STOVE, for cooking, 203*;
- for heating, 218*.
-
-STREET, appearance, 233*;
- construction, 387;
- closed to vehicles, 382;
- of tombs at Pompeii, 421*.
-
-strigiles, flesh scrapers, 367*, 370.
-
-strophium, girdle, 258.
-
-STUCCO, as finish for exterior wall, 212.
-
-STYLE of living, 299;
- of bathing, 367.
-
-Styx, passage of, 433.
-
-suasoria, debates in schools, 115.
-
-sub hasta venire, auction sale, 134.
-
-SUBJECTS taught in schools, Chap. IV.
-
-subligaculum, loin cloth, 235, 257.
-
-subucula, under-tunic, 237.
-
-sudaria, handkerchiefs, 266.
-
-Suetonius (about 75-160), 390.
-
-SUICIDE of captives and slaves, 140*, 161.
-
-sui iuris, independent, 17.
-
-Sulla and Sura, derivation, 55.
-
-SUPPLY of gladiators, 347;
- of slaves, 134;
- of horses for racing, 339.
-
-Sura, derivation, 55.
-
-susceptio, acknowledgment of children, 95.
-
-SUSPENSION of potestas, 34.
-
-suspensura, elevated floor of bath room, 368*.
-
-SWEAT bath, dry, 367;
- moist, 369.
-
-synthesis, dinner dress, 249.
-
-
-T
-
-tabellae, for writing, 110*, 391*.
-
-tabellarii, letter carriers, 389.
-
-TABLE knives and forks unknown, 299.
-
-TABLES, cost, kinds, materials, 227*.
-
-tablinum, in early house, 190;
- in later house, 201;
- meaning of word, 201.
-
-Tacitus (about 55-117) on the toga, 133.
-
-Talassio, marriage cry, 87.
-
-tali, knuckle-bones, 320*.
-
-TEACHERS, 121.
-
-tecta, roofs, 214.
-
-tegulae, tiles, 214*.
-
-tepidarium, purpose, 366;
- other uses, 367;
- position, 368;
- unusual size, 371*;
- several in one bath, 376*;
- in the large thermae, 377;
- with cold bath, 370.
-
-tessera gladiatoria, 363*;
- hospitalis, 185.
-
-THEATER, early, 325;
- later, 326;
- of Vitruvius, 327*;
- at Pompeii, 327*;
- at Orange, 327*;
- of Pompeius, 326.
-
-thermae, meaning, 372;
- plan of small, 376*;
- of large, 378*.
-
-THIRD FINGER for engagement ring, 71.
-
-"Thracians," gladiators, 360*, 361.
-
-"THUMBS down," signal for death, 362.
-
-Tiberius (Emperor, 14-37 A.D.), 274.
-
-tibialia, wrappings for the legs, 239.
-
-TILES, for roofs, etc., 214*.
-
-tirocinium fori, 117;
- militiae, 118.
-
-tirones, of untrained gladiators, 118.
-
-titulus, description of slave, 139;
- in columbaria, 429, 431*.
-
-TOAST-MASTER, 313.
-
-TOASTS, 314.
-
-TOGA, material and use, 240;
- appearance, 241*;
- in literature, 242*;
- on the monuments, 243*;
- cumbrous and uncomfortable, 244;
- earlier toga, 245*;
- kinds of, 246;
- see also the Latin word below.
-
-toga, see the English word above;
- candida, 246;
- libera, 127;
- picta, 246;
- pulla, 246;
- pura, 246;
- praetexta, 76, 125, 246;
- splendens, 246;
- virilis, 125.
-
-TOILET articles, 265*.
-
-tollere, acknowledge a child, 44, 95.
-
-TOMBS, 422 f.
-
-tonsor, barber and barber-shop, 254.
-
-TORCHES, at funerals, 434;
- weddings, 86, 89.
-
-"To the lions," 364.
-
-TOWN-SLAVES, 159.
-
-trabea, cloak for men, 247.
-
-TRADES, 412.
-
-TRAINERS of gladiators, 349, 363.
-
-TRAVEL, Chap. X. See Table of Contents.
-
-TRAVELING cloak, 248.
-
-TREADING grapes for wine, 296*.
-
-TREATMENT of slaves, 158.
-
-triclinium, dining-room, 204, 304*;
- in court, 204*.
-
-trigon, three handed ball, 318.
-
-TRIPLE name, 38;
- expanded, 39;
- shortened, 40.
-
-Tullus, meaning, 44.
-
-TUNIC, 236*.
-
-tunica, 236*;
- angusti clavi, 238;
- lati clavi, 238;
- exterior (men's), 237;
- (women's), 259*;
- interior, 237, 258;
- manicata, 237;
- talaris, 239;
- recta, 76;
- regilla, 76.
-
-Tuscanicum atrium, 196.
-
-tutor, guardian, 19, 70.
-
-TWELVE TABLES (450 B.C.), in the schools, 111;
- mention both burial and burning of dead, 420.
-
-tyrotarichus, a dish of cheese and salt fish, 280.
-
-
-U
-
-umbella, parasol, 266*.
-
-umbilicus, of a papyrus roll, 397.
-
-umbones, of a road, 387.
-
-umbraculum, parasol, 266*.
-
-umbrae, unexpected guests, 304.
-
-unctorium, use, 366;
- makeshift for, 367.
-
-UNLUCKY days, 75.
-
-URNS, for ashes of dead, see ollae.
-
-ustrina, place for private cremation, 426.
-
-usus, of marriage, definition, 62;
- ceremony of, 84.
-
-
-V
-
-v., for vicit, of gladiators, 361.
-
-vappa, term of reproach, 297, note.
-
-Varro (116-28 B.C.), 253.
-
-VEGETABLES grown by Romans, 275.
-
-VEGETARIANS, early Romans, 299.
-
-VEHICLES, used for travel, 382 f.
-
-vela, portires, 216;
- awnings, 358, 361.
-
-venationes, hunts in circus and amphitheater, 343, 364.
-
-ventralia, wrappings for the body, 239.
-
-Venus, the high throw, 320.
-
-vernae, slaves born in the house, 138;
- of Atticus, 155.
-
-Verres, as a nomen, 46;
- the governor of Sicily, 406.
-
-vesperna, evening meal in country, 302.
-
-Vestales, special seats in theater, 327;
- in amphitheater, 357;
- allowed carriages in the city, 382.
-
-vestibulum, space before the door, 194.
-
-via Appia, 385*, 387*.
-
-vicarius, a slave's slave, 164.
-
-vilicus, overseer, 145, 148;
- cheats slaves, 160.
-
-VILLAS of the rich, 145, 379, 416.
-
-vinalia rustica, festival, 296.
-
-VINEGAR, 281, 297, note.
-
-VINEYARD, 295.
-
-vinum, fermented wine, 297.
-
-violaria, feast of violets, 438.
-
-VITICULTURE, 293, 294.
-
-Vitruvius, architect of the first century, 187, 327, 366, 387.
-
-volumen, papyrus roll, 396. See BOOKS.
-
-VULTURE, the lowest throw, 320.
-
-
-W
-
-WALL, of house, 210 f.;
- facing for, 212*;
- around arena, 354*, 357*.
-
-WATER, supply for houses, 219;
- for baths, 368;
- traveling by, 380.
-
-WAX masks, of the dead, 433.
-
-WEDDING, see MARRIAGE;
- day, 75;
- feast, 85;
- garments, 76;
- torch, 86, 89;
- procession, 86.
-
-Whitney (1827-1894), definition of Philology, 6.
-
-WINDOWS, 217*.
-
-WINE, in Italy, 293;
- districts, 294;
- making, 296*;
- vaults, 297*;
- jars, 297 (Fig. 116);
- drunk diluted, 298;
- cost, 298.
-
-WOMEN, names of, 57;
- position of, 90;
- education of, 92;
- dress of, 257 f.;
- at table, 302, 304*;
- at amphitheater, 353, 358;
- at baths, 375.
-
-WOOL for clothing, 269.
-
-WORDS of style in contracts, 70;
- at funerals, 434.
-
-WRITING, how taught, 110;
- of books, 398.
-
-
-Z
-
-zona, girdle, 260*.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Private Life of the Romans, by
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-<title>The Project Gutenberg e-Book of The Private Life of the
-Romans, by Harold Whetstone Johnston</title>
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Private Life of the Romans, by
-Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Private Life of the Romans
-
-Author: Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40549]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Ron Swanson
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<h4>THE</h4>
-<h1>PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS</h1>
-<br>
-<br>
-<center>BY</center>
-<h2>HAROLD WHETSTONE JOHNSTON</h2>
-
-<center>PROFESSOR OF LATIN IN THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY</center>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<center><small>CHICAGO<br>
-SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY</small><br>
-1909</center>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<center>BY THE SAME AUTHOR<br>
-(<i>Scott, Foresman and Company</i>)<br>
-S<small>ELECTED</small> O<small>RATIONS AND</small>
-L<small>ETTERS OF</small> C<small>ICERO</small><br>
-L<small>ATIN</small> M<small>ANUSCRIPTS</small><br>
-T<small>HE</small> M<small>ETRICAL</small>
-L<small>ICENSES OF</small> V<small>ERGIL</small></center>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<center><small>COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY<br>
-SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY</small></center>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<center><small><small>ROBT. O. LAW CO., PRINTERS AND BINDERS, CHICAGO.<br>
-TYPOGRAPHY BY<br>
-MARSH, AITKEN &amp; CURTIS COMPANY, CHICAGO.</small></small></center>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<center><i><big>CHARLES S. RANNELLS</big><br>
-<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;MEMOR<br>
-ACTAE NON ALIO REGE PUERTIAE<br>
-<br>
-<big>AMORIS CAUSA</big><br>
-<br>
-D&nbsp;D&nbsp;D</i></center>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>PREFACE</h3>
-<br>
-
-<p>In preparing this book I have had in mind the needs of three classes
-of students.</p>
-
-<p>It is intended in the first place for seniors in high schools and
-freshmen in colleges, and is meant to give such an account of the
-Private Life of the Romans in the later Republic and earlier Empire as
-will enable them to understand the countless references to it in the
-Latin texts which they read in the class-room. It is hoped that the
-book contains all that they will need for this purpose and nothing
-that is beyond their comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>It is intended in the second place for more advanced college students
-who may be taking lectures on the subjects of which it treats. The
-work of both teacher and student will be made less irksome and more
-effective if the student is aided in the taking of notes by even so
-general a knowledge of the subject (previously announced to the class)
-as is here given. This I know from actual experience with my own
-classes.</p>
-
-<p>In the third place it is intended for readers and students of Roman
-history, who are engaged chiefly with important political and
-constitutional questions, and often feel the need of a simple and
-compact description of domestic life, to give more reality to the
-shadowy forms whose public careers they are following. Such students
-will find the Index especially useful.</p>
-
-<p>The book is written as far as possible in English: that is, no great
-knowledge of Latin is presumed on the part of the reader. I have tried
-not to crowd the text with Latin words, even when they are immediately
-explained, and those given will usually be found worth remembering.
-Quotations from Latin authors are very few, and the references to
-their works, fewer still, are made to well-known passages only.</p>
-
-<p>To every chapter are prefixed references to the standard secondary
-authorities in English and German. Primary sources are not indicated:
-they would be above the heads of the less advanced students, and to
-the more advanced the lecturer will prefer to indicate the sources on
-which his views are based. It is certain, however, that all these
-sources are indicated in the authorities named, and the teacher
-himself may occasionally find the references helpful.</p>
-
-<p>The illustrations are numerous and are intended to illustrate. Many
-others are referred to in the text, which limited space kept me from
-using, and I hope that Schreiber's Atlas, at least, if not
-Baumeister's Denkmaeler, may be within the reach of students in
-class-room or library.</p>
-
-<p>It goes without saying that there must be many errors in a book like
-this, although I have done my best to make it accurate. When these
-errors are due to relaxed attention or to ignorance, I shall be
-grateful to the person who will point them out. When they are due to
-mistaken judgment, the teacher will find in the references, I hope,
-sufficient authorities to convince his pupils that he is right and I
-am wrong.</p>
-
-<div align="right">H. W. J<small>OHNSTON</small>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;T<small>HE</small> I<small>NDIANA</small> U<small>NIVERSITY</small>,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;February, 1903.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="contents"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h3>
-<br>
-<p><a href="#introduction">I<small>NTRODUCTION</small></a>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Scope of the Book <a href="#sect1">§1</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public and Private Antiquities <a href="#sect2">§2</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Antiquities and History <a href="#sect4">§4</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Antiquities and Philology <a href="#sect6">§6</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sources <a href="#sect9">§9</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Reference Books <a href="#sect13">§13</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Systematic Treatises <a href="#sect14">§14</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Encyclopedic Works <a href="#sect15">§15</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Books <a href="#sect16">§16</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap1">I.</a> T<small>HE</small> F<small>AMILY</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Household <a href="#sect17">§17</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Splitting Up of a House <a href="#sect19">§19</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Meanings of <i>Familia</i> <a href="#sect21">§21</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Agnātī</i> and <i>Cognātī</i> <a href="#sect23">§23</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Adfīnēs</i> <a href="#sect26">§26</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Family Cult <a href="#sect27">§27</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Adoption <a href="#sect30">§30</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Patria Potestās</i> <a href="#sect31">§31</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Limitations <a href="#sect32">§32</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Extinction of the <i>Potestās</i> <a href="#sect34">§34</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Manus</i> <a href="#sect35">§35</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Dominica Potestās</i> <a href="#sect37">§37</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap2">II.</a> T<small>HE</small> N<small>AME</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Triple Name <a href="#sect38">§38</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Praenōmen</i> <a href="#sect41">§41</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Nōmen</i> <a href="#sect46">§46</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Cognōmen</i> <a href="#sect48">§48</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Additional Names <a href="#sect51">§51</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Confusion of Names <a href="#sect55">§55</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Names of Women <a href="#sect57">§57</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Names of Slaves <a href="#sect58">§58</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Names of Freedmen <a href="#sect59">§59</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Naturalized Citizens <a href="#sect60">§60</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap3">III.</a> M<small>ARRIAGE AND THE</small> P<small>OSITION
-OF</small> W<small>OMEN</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Early Forms of Marriage <a href="#sect61">§61</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Iūs Cōnūbiī</i> <a href="#sect64">§64</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Nūptiae Iūstae</i> <a href="#sect67">§67</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Betrothals <a href="#sect70">§70</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Dowry <a href="#sect72">§72</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Essential Forms <a href="#sect73">§73</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Wedding Day <a href="#sect75">§75</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Wedding Garments <a href="#sect76">§76</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Ceremony <a href="#sect79">§79</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Wedding Feast <a href="#sect85">§85</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Bridal Procession <a href="#sect86">§86</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Position of Women <a href="#sect90">§90</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap4">IV.</a> C<small>HILDREN AND</small> E<small>DUCATION</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legal Status <a href="#sect94">§94</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Susceptiō</i> <a href="#sect95">§95</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Diēs Lūstricus</i> <a href="#sect97">§97</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Bulla</i> <a href="#sect99">§99</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nurses <a href="#sect100">§100</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Playthings <a href="#sect102">§102</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pets and Games <a href="#sect103">§103</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Home Training <a href="#sect104">§104</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Schools <a href="#sect108">§108</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools <a href="#sect110">§110</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grammar Schools <a href="#sect112">§112</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Schools of Rhetoric <a href="#sect115">§115</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Travel <a href="#sect116">§116</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Apprenticeship <a href="#sect117">§117</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Remarks on the Schools <a href="#sect119">§119</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Teacher <a href="#sect121">§121</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Schooldays and Holidays <a href="#sect122">§122</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Paedagōgus</i> <a href="#sect123">§123</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Discipline <a href="#sect124">§124</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;End of Childhood <a href="#sect125">§125</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Līberalia</i> <a href="#sect127">§127</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap5">V.</a> D<small>EPENDENTS</small>: S<small>LAVES AND</small> C<small>LIENTS</small>. H<small>OSPITES</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Growth of Slavery <a href="#sect129">§129</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Numbers of Slaves <a href="#sect131">§131</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sources of Supply <a href="#sect134">§134</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sales of Slaves <a href="#sect139">§139</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Prices of Slaves <a href="#sect140">§140</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public and Private Slaves <a href="#sect141">§141</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Private Slaves <a href="#sect142">§142</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Industrial Employment <a href="#sect143">§143</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Familia Rūstica</i> <a href="#sect145">§145</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Farm Slaves <a href="#sect146">§146</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Vīlīcus</i> <a href="#sect148">§148</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Familia Urbāna</i> <a href="#sect149">§149</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legal Status of Slaves <a href="#sect156">§156</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Treatment of Slaves <a href="#sect158">§158</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Food and Dress <a href="#sect160">§160</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Pecūlium</i> <a href="#sect162">§162</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Punishments <a href="#sect166">§166</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Manumission <a href="#sect175">§175</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Clients <a href="#sect176">§176</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Old Clients <a href="#sect177">§177</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mutual Obligations <a href="#sect179">§179</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The New Clients <a href="#sect181">§181</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Duties and Rewards <a href="#sect182">§182</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Hospitēs</i> <a href="#sect183">§183</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Hospitium</i> <a href="#sect184">§184</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obligations of <i>Hospitium</i> <a href="#sect185">§185</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap6">VI.</a> T<small>HE</small> H<small>OUSE AND</small>
-I<small>TS</small> F<small>URNITURE</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Domus</i> <a href="#sect186">§186</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Development of the House <a href="#sect188">§188</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Vestibulum</i> <a href="#sect194">§194</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Ōstium</i> <a href="#sect195">§195</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Ātrium</i> <a href="#sect196">§196</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Change in the <i>Ātrium</i> <a href="#sect197">§197</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Ālae</i> <a href="#sect200">§200</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Tablīnum</i> <a href="#sect201">§201</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Peristyle <a href="#sect202">§202</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Private Rooms <a href="#sect203">§203</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The House of Pansa <a href="#sect208">§208</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Walls <a href="#sect210">§210</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Pariēs Caementīcius</i> <a href="#sect211">§211</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Wall Facings <a href="#sect212">§212</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Floors and Ceilings <a href="#sect213">§213</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Roofs <a href="#sect214">§214</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Doors <a href="#sect215">§215</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Windows <a href="#sect217">§217</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Heating <a href="#sect218">§218</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Water Supply <a href="#sect219">§219</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Decoration <a href="#sect220">§220</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Furniture <a href="#sect222">§222</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Principal Articles <a href="#sect223">§223</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Couches <a href="#sect224">§224</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Chairs <a href="#sect225">§225</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tables <a href="#sect227">§227</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Lamps <a href="#sect228">§228</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Chests and Cabinets <a href="#sect230">§230</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Articles <a href="#sect232">§232</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Street <a href="#sect233">§233</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap7">VII.</a> D<small>RESS AND</small> P<small>ERSONAL</small> O<small>RNAMENTS</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Indūtus:</i> The <i>Subligaculum</i> <a href="#sect235">§235</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Tunic <a href="#sect236">§236</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Amictus:</i> The <i>Toga</i> <a href="#sect240">§240</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Form and Arrangement <a href="#sect241">§241</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Kinds of Togas <a href="#sect246">§246</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Lacerna</i> <a href="#sect247">§247</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Paenula</i> <a href="#sect248">§248</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Wraps <a href="#sect249">§249</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footgear: The <i>Soleae</i> <a href="#sect250">§250</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Calceī</i> <a href="#sect251">§251</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Coverings for the Head <a href="#sect252">§252</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Hair and Beard <a href="#sect253">§253</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Jewelry <a href="#sect255">§255</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dress of Women <a href="#sect257">§257</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Tunica Interior</i> <a href="#sect258">§258</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Stola</i> <a href="#sect259">§259</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Palla</i> <a href="#sect261">§261</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shoes and Slippers <a href="#sect262">§262</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dressing of the Hair <a href="#sect263">§263</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Accessories <a href="#sect266">§266</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Jewelry <a href="#sect267">§267</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dress of the Children and Slaves <a href="#sect268">§268</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Materials <a href="#sect269">§269</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Colors <a href="#sect270">§270</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Manufacture <a href="#sect271">§271</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap8">VIII.</a> F<small>OOD AND</small> M<small>EALS</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Natural Conditions <a href="#sect272">§272</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fruits <a href="#sect274">§274</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Garden Produce <a href="#sect275">§275</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Meats <a href="#sect277">§277</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fowl and Game <a href="#sect279">§279</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fish <a href="#sect280">§280</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cereals <a href="#sect282">§282</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Preparation of the Grain <a href="#sect283">§283</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Breadmaking <a href="#sect287">§287</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Olive <a href="#sect289">§289</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Olive Oil <a href="#sect291">§291</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grapes <a href="#sect293">§293</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Viticulture <a href="#sect294">§294</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Vineyards <a href="#sect295">§295</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Wine Making <a href="#sect296">§296</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beverages <a href="#sect298">§298</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Style of Living <a href="#sect299">§299</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hours for Meals <a href="#sect301">§301</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Breakfast and Luncheon <a href="#sect302">§302</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Formal Meal <a href="#sect303">§303</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Dining Couch <a href="#sect304">§304</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Places of Honor <a href="#sect305">§305</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Furniture <a href="#sect307">§307</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courses <a href="#sect308">§308</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bills of Fare <a href="#sect309">§309</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Serving the Dinner <a href="#sect310">§310</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Comissātiō</i> <a href="#sect312">§312</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Banquets of the Rich <a href="#sect315">§315</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap9">IX.</a> A<small>MUSEMENTS</small>; B<small>ATHS</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;General <a href="#sect316">§316</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sports of the Campus <a href="#sect317">§317</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Games of Ball <a href="#sect318">§318</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Games of Chance <a href="#sect319">§319</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Knuckle-bones <a href="#sect320">§320</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dice <a href="#sect321">§321</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public and Private Games <a href="#sect322">§322</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dramatic Performances <a href="#sect323">§323</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Staging the Play <a href="#sect324">§324</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Early Theater <a href="#sect325">§325</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Later Theater <a href="#sect326">§326</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Roman Circuses <a href="#sect328">§328</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Plan of the Circus <a href="#sect330">§330</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Arena <a href="#sect332">§332</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Barriers <a href="#sect333">§333</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Spīna</i> and <i>Mētae</i> <a href="#sect335">§335</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Seats <a href="#sect337">§337</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Furnishing the Races <a href="#sect339">§339</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Teams <a href="#sect340">§340</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Drivers <a href="#sect341">§341</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Famous <i>Aurīgae</i> <a href="#sect342">§342</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Shows of the Circus <a href="#sect343">§343</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gladiatorial Combats <a href="#sect344">§344</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Popularity of the Combats <a href="#sect346">§346</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sources of Supply <a href="#sect347">§347</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Schools for Gladiators <a href="#sect349">§349</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Places of Exhibition <a href="#sect351">§351</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Amphitheaters at Rome <a href="#sect352">§352</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Amphitheater at Pompeii <a href="#sect353">§353</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Coliseum <a href="#sect356">§356</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Styles of Fighting <a href="#sect359">§359</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Weapons and Armor <a href="#sect360">§360</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Announcement of the Shows <a href="#sect361">§361</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Fight Itself <a href="#sect362">§362</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Rewards <a href="#sect363">§363</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Shows in the Amphitheater <a href="#sect364">§364</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Daily Bath <a href="#sect365">§365</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Essentials for the Bath <a href="#sect366">§366</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Heating the Bath <a href="#sect368">§368</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Caldārium</i> <a href="#sect369">§369</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Frīgidārium</i> and <i>Ūnctōrium</i> <a href="#sect370">§370</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A Private Bathhouse <a href="#sect371">§371</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Public Baths <a href="#sect372">§372</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Management <a href="#sect373">§373</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hours Opened <a href="#sect374">§374</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Accommodations for Women <a href="#sect375">§375</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Thermae</i> <a href="#sect376">§376</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Baths of Diocletian <a href="#sect378">§378</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap10">X.</a> T<small>RAVEL AND</small> C<small>ORRESPONDENCE</small>. B<small>OOKS</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In General <a href="#sect379">§379</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By Water <a href="#sect380">§380</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By Land <a href="#sect381">§381</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Vehicles <a href="#sect382">§382</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Carriages <a href="#sect383">§383</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Rēda</i> and <i>Cisium</i> <a href="#sect384">§384</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Roads <a href="#sect385">§385</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Construction <a href="#sect387">§387</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Inns <a href="#sect388">§388</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speed <a href="#sect389">§389</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sending Letters <a href="#sect390">§390</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Writing the Letters <a href="#sect391">§391</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sealing and Opening the Letters <a href="#sect392">§392</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Books <a href="#sect393">§393</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Manufacture of Paper <a href="#sect394">§394</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pens and Ink <a href="#sect395">§395</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Making the Roll <a href="#sect396">§396</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Size of the Rolls <a href="#sect398">§398</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Multiplication of Books <a href="#sect399">§399</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Commercial Publication <a href="#sect400">§400</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Rapidity and Cost of Publication <a href="#sect401">§401</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Libraries <a href="#sect402">§402</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap11">XI.</a> S<small>OURCES OF</small> I<small>NCOME AND</small>
-M<small>EANS OF</small> L<small>IVING</small>. T<small>HE</small>
-R<small>OMAN'S</small> D<small>AY</small>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In General <a href="#sect403">§403</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Careers of the Nobles <a href="#sect404">§404</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Agriculture <a href="#sect405">§405</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Political Office <a href="#sect406">§406</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Law <a href="#sect407">§407</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Army <a href="#sect408">§408</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Careers of the Equites <a href="#sect409">§409</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Soldiers <a href="#sect410">§410</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Proletariate <a href="#sect411">§411</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Professions and Trades <a href="#sect412">§412</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Business and Commerce <a href="#sect413">§413</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Civil Service <a href="#sect414">§414</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Roman's Day <a href="#sect415">§415</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hours of the Day <a href="#sect417">§417</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#chap12">XII.</a> BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Importance of Burial <a href="#sect419">§419</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Interment and Cremation <a href="#sect420">§420</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Places of Burial <a href="#sect421">§421</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Tombs <a href="#sect422">§422</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Potter's Field <a href="#sect423">§423</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Plan of Tombs and Grounds <a href="#sect425">§425</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exterior of the Tombs <a href="#sect427">§427</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>Columbāria</i> <a href="#sect428">§428</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Burial Societies <a href="#sect430">§430</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Funeral Ceremonies <a href="#sect432">§432</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At the House <a href="#sect433">§433</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Funeral Procession <a href="#sect434">§434</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Funeral Oration <a href="#sect435">§435</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At the Tomb <a href="#sect436">§436</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;After Ceremonies <a href="#sect437">§437</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Memorial Festivals <a href="#sect438">§438</a></p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h2>THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS</h2>
-<br><hr align="center" width="100"><a name="introduction"></a>
-<br>
-<h3>INTRODUCTION</h3>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect1"><b>1</b></a></span>
-The topics that are discussed in this book have to do with the
-everyday life of the Roman people. Such things will be considered as
-the family, the Roman name, marriage and the position of women,
-children and education, slaves, clients, the house and its furniture,
-clothing, food and meals, amusements, travel and correspondence,
-funeral ceremonies and burial customs, etc. These things are of
-interest to us in the case of any ancient or foreign people; in the
-case of the Romans they are of especial importance, because they help
-to explain the powerful influence which that nation exerted over the
-old world, and make it easier to understand why that influence is
-still felt in some degree to-day.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect2"><b>2</b></a></span>
-<b>Public and Private Antiquities.</b>&mdash;The subjects that have been named
-above belong to what is called Classical Antiquities, taking their
-place in the subdivision of Roman Antiquities as opposed to Greek
-Antiquities. They are grouped loosely together as Private Antiquities
-in opposition to what we call Public Antiquities. Under the latter
-head we consider the Roman as a citizen, and we examine the several
-classes of citizens, their obligations and their privileges; we study
-the form of their government, its officers and machinery, its
-legislative, judicial, and executive procedure, its revenues and
-expenditures, etc. It is evident that no hard and fast line can be
-drawn between the two branches of the subject: they cross each other
-at every turn. One scarcely knows, for example, under which head to
-put the religion of the Romans or their games in the circus.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect3"><b>3</b></a></span>
-In the same way, the daily employment of a slave, his keep, his
-punishments, his rewards, are properly considered under the head of
-Private Antiquities. But the state undertook sometimes to regulate by
-law the number of slaves that a master might have, the state regulated
-the manumission of the slave and gave him certain rights as a
-freedman, and these matters belong to Public Antiquities. So, too, a
-man might or might not be eligible to certain state offices according
-to the particular ceremony used at the marriage of his parents. It
-will be found, therefore, that the study of Private Antiquities can
-not be completely separated from its complement, though in this book
-the dividing line will be crossed as seldom as possible.<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small></p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> Students in secondary schools will find useful for
-preliminary reading the outline of the Roman Constitution in the
-Introduction to the author's "Selected Orations and Letters of
-Cicero." For more advanced students three books have lately appeared
-on this subject: Abbott's "Roman Political Institutions," Granrud's
-"Roman Constitutional History," and Greenidge's "Roman Public Life."</small></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect4"><b>4</b></a></span>
-<b>Antiquities and History.</b>&mdash;It is just as impossible to draw the
-boundary line between the subjects of Antiquities and History. The
-older history, it is true, concerned itself little with the private
-life of the people, almost solely with the rise and fall of dynasties.
-It told us of kings and generals, of the wars they waged, the
-victories they won, and the conquests they made. Then, in course of
-time, institutions took the place of dynasties and parties the place
-of heroes, and history traced the growth of great political ideas:
-such masterpieces as Thirlwall's and Grote's histories of Greece are
-largely constitutional histories. But changes in international
-relations affect the private life of a people as surely, if not as
-speedily, as they affect the machinery of government. You can not
-bring into contact, friendly or unfriendly, two different
-civilizations without a change in the peoples concerned, without
-altering their occupations, their ways of living, their very ideas of
-life and its purposes. These changes react in turn upon the temper and
-character of a people, they affect its capacity for self-government
-and the government of others, and in the course of time they bring
-about the movements of which even the older history took notice. Hence
-our recent histories give more and more space to the life of the
-common people, to the very matters, that is, that were mentioned in
-the first paragraph as belonging to Private Antiquities. This may be
-seen in such titles as these: Green's "History of the English People,"
-McMaster's "History of the People of the United States."</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect5"><b>5</b></a></span>
-On the other hand it is equally true that a knowledge of political
-history is necessary for the study of Private Antiquities. We shall
-find the Romans giving up certain ways of living and habits of
-thinking that seemed to have become fixed and characteristic. These
-changes we could not explain at all, if political history did not
-inform us that just before they took place the Romans had come into
-contact with the widely different ideas and opposing civilizations of
-other nations. The most important event of this sort was the
-introduction of Greek culture after the Punic wars, and to this we
-shall have to refer again and again. It follows from all this that
-students who have had even the most elementary course in Roman history
-have already some knowledge of Private Antiquities, and that those who
-have not studied the history of Rome at all will find very helpful the
-reading of even the briefest of our school histories.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect6"><b>6</b></a></span>
-<b>Antiquities and Philology.</b>&mdash;The subject of Classical Antiquities
-has always been regarded as a branch&mdash;"discipline" is the technical
-word&mdash;of Classical Philology since Friedrich August Wolf (1759-1824)
-made Philology a science. It is quite true that in the common
-acceptation of the word Philology is merely the science of language,
-but even here Antiquities has an important part to play. It is
-impossible to read understandingly an ode of Horace or an oration of
-Cicero, if one is ignorant of the social life and the political
-institutions of Rome. But Classical Philology is much more than the
-science of understanding and interpreting the classical languages. It
-claims for itself the investigation of Greek and Roman life in all its
-aspects, social, intellectual, and political, so far as it has become
-known to us from the surviving literary, epigraphic, and monumental
-records. Whitney puts it thus: Philology deals with human speech and
-with all that speech discloses as to the nature and history of man. If
-it is hard to remember these definitions one can hardly forget the
-epigram of Benoist: Philology is the geology of the intellectual
-world. Under this, the only scientific conception of Philology, the
-study of Antiquities takes at once a higher place. It becomes the end
-with linguistics the means, and this is the true relation between
-them.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect7"><b>7</b></a></span>
-But it happens that the study of the languages in which the
-records of classical antiquity are preserved must first occupy the
-investigator, and that the study of language as mere language, its
-origin, its growth, its decay, is in itself very interesting and
-profitable. It happens, moreover, that the languages of Greece and
-Rome can not be studied apart from literatures of singular richness,
-beauty, and power, and the study of literature has always been one of
-the most attractive and absorbing to cultivated men. It is not hard to
-understand, therefore, why the study of Antiquities has not been more
-prominent in connection with philological training. It was the end to
-which only the few pressed on. It was reserved, at least in systematic
-form, for the trained scholar in the university. In the congested
-condition of the old curricula in our colleges it was crowded out by
-the more obvious, but not more essential or interesting, subjects of
-linguistics and literary criticism, or it was presented at best in the
-form of scrappy notes on the authors read in the classroom or in the
-dismembered alphabetical arrangement of a dictionary.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect8"><b>8</b></a></span>
-Within the last few years, however, a change has been taking
-place, a change due to several causes. In the first place, the
-literary criticism which was once taught exclusively in connection
-with classical authors and which claimed so large a part of the time
-allotted to classical study has found a more appropriate place in the
-departments of English that were hardly known a generation ago. In the
-second place, the superior preparation in the classics now demanded
-for admission to our colleges has relieved their courses of much
-elementary linguistic drill that was formerly necessary. In the third
-place, the last half century has seen a greater advance in the
-knowledge of Antiquities than all the years before, and it is now
-possible to present in positive dogmatic form much that was recently
-mere guesswork and speculation. Finally, modern theories of education,
-which have narrowed the stream of classical instruction only to deepen
-its channel and quicken its current, have caused more stress to be
-laid upon the points of contact between the ancient and the modern
-world. The teacher of the classics has come to realize that the
-obligations of the present to the past are not to be so clearly
-presented and so vividly appreciated in connection with the formal
-study of art and literature as in the investigation of the great
-social, political, and religious problems which throughout all the
-ages have engaged the thought of cultivated men.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect9"><b>9</b></a></span>
-<b>Sources.</b>&mdash;It has been already remarked (<a href="#sect6">§6</a>) that Classical
-Philology draws its knowledge from three sources, the literary,
-epigraphic, and monumental remains of Greece and Rome. It is necessary
-that we should understand at the outset precisely what is meant by
-each of these. By literary sources we mean the writings of the Greeks
-and Romans, that is, the books which they published, that have come
-down to us. The form of these books, the way they were published and
-have been preserved, will be considered later. For the present it is
-sufficient to say that a mere fraction only of these writings has come
-down to our day, and that of these poor remnants we possess no
-originals but merely more or less imperfect copies. It is true,
-nevertheless, that these form as a whole the most important of our
-sources of information, largely because they have been most carefully
-studied and are best understood.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect10"><b>10</b></a></span>
-By epigraphic sources we mean the words that were written,
-scratched, cut, or stamped on hard materials, such as metal, stone, or
-wood, without thought of literary finish. These vary from single words
-to records of very considerable extent, and are briefly called
-inscriptions. The student may get a good idea of the most ancient and
-curious by merely turning over a few pages of Ritschl's "Priscae
-Latinitatis Monumenta Epigraphica" or of Egbert's "Latin
-Inscriptions." Of one sort of great importance, the legends on coins
-and medals, many have found their way into American museums. With
-modern inscriptions on similar materials and for similar purposes
-every student is, of course, familiar.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect11"><b>11</b></a></span>
-By monumental evidence we mean all the things actually made by
-the Greeks and Romans that have come down to us. These things are
-collectively very numerous and of very many kinds: coins, medals,
-pieces of jewelry, armor, pottery, statues, paintings, bridges,
-aqueducts, fortifications, ruins of cities, etc. It is impossible to
-enumerate them all. It is upon such remains as these that most of the
-inscriptions mentioned above are preserved. Of the most importance for
-the study of the private life of the Romans are the ruins of the city
-of Pompeii preserved to us by the protection of the ashes that buried
-it at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius in the year 79 <small>A.D.</small></p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect12"><b>12</b></a></span>
-It will be seen at once that the importance of these sources will
-vary with the nature of the subject we are studying and the fullness
-of their preservation. For example, we may read in a Roman poet a
-description of an ornament worn by a bride. A painting of a bride
-wearing such an ornament would make the description clearer, but any
-doubt that might remain would be removed if there should be found in
-the ruins of Pompeii a similar ornament with its character proved by
-an inscription upon it. In this case the three sources would have
-contributed to our knowledge. For other matters, especially intangible
-things, we may have to rely solely upon descriptions, that is, upon
-literary sources. But it may well happen that no Roman wrote a set
-description of the particular thing that we are studying, or if he did
-that his writings have been lost, so that we may be forced to build up
-our knowledge bit by bit, by putting together laboriously the scraps
-of information, mere hints perhaps, that we find scattered here and
-there in the works of different authors, and these perhaps of very
-different times. It is not hard to understand, therefore, that our
-knowledge of some things pertaining to Roman antiquities may be fairly
-complete, while of others we may have no knowledge at all. It may be
-worth remarking of literary sources that the more common and familiar
-a thing was to the ancients, the less likely is it that we shall find
-a description of it in ancient literature.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect13"><b>13</b></a></span>
-<b>Reference Books.</b>&mdash;The collecting and arranging of the information
-gleaned from these sources has been the task of philologists from very
-early times, but so much has been added to our knowledge by recent
-discoveries that all but the latest books may be neglected by the
-student. A very full list of books treating of Roman Antiquities may
-be found in Hübner's "Bibliographie der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft," and a convenient list in Professor Kelsey's
-"Fifty Topics in Roman Antiquities with References," but the student
-should not fail to notice at the head of each chapter the lists of
-authorities to be consulted in the books specifically mentioned below.
-These have been arranged in two classes, systematic treatises and
-encyclopedic works, and the student who lacks time to consult all the
-references should select one at least of the better and larger works
-in each class for regular and methodical study.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect14"><b>14</b></a></span>
-Systematic Treatises:</p>
-
-<p>Marquardt, Joachim, "Das Privatleben der Römer," 2d edition by A. Mau.
-This is the seventh volume of the <i>Handbuch der römischen Alterthümer</i>
-by Marquardt and Mommsen. It is the fullest and most authoritative of
-all the treatises on the subject and has a few illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>Voigt, Moritz, "Die Römischen Privataltertümer," 2d edition. This is a
-part of the fourth volume of the <i>Handbuch der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft</i> by Iwan von Müller. It is the latest work on
-the subject, especially rich in the citation of authorities.</p>
-
-<p>Guhl and Koner, "Leben der Griechen und Römer," 6th edition by
-Engelmann. A standard and authoritative work enriched by copious
-illustrations. There is an English translation of an earlier edition
-which may be used by those who read no German.</p>
-
-<p>Becker, W. A., "Gallus oder römische Scenen aus der Zeit Augusts," new
-edition by Hermann Göll. This is a standard authority in the form of a
-novel. The story is of no particular interest, but the notes and
-excursuses are of the first importance. There is an English
-translation of the first edition which may be used with caution by
-those who read no German.</p>
-
-<p>Friedländer, L., "Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms in der
-Zeit von August bis zum Ausgang der Antonine," 6th edition. This is
-the great authority for the time it covers and will be found to
-include practically the history from the earliest times of all the
-matters of which it treats.</p>
-
-<p>Blümner, Hugo, "Technologie und Terminologie der Gewerbe und Künste
-bei Griechen und Römern." The very best description of the arts and
-industries of ancient Greece and Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Ramsay, William, "A Manual of Roman Antiquities," 15th edition,
-revised and partly rewritten by Rodolfo Lanciani. This includes public
-as well as private antiquities, but the revision seems to have been
-but partial and the larger part of the book is hopelessly out of date.</p>
-
-<p>Wilkins, A. S., "Roman Antiquities," and Preston and Dodge, "The
-Private Life of the Romans." Two little books, of which the former is
-by a good scholar and is worth reading.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect15"><b>15</b></a></span>
-Encyclopedic Works:</p>
-
-<p>Pauly-Wissowa, "Real-Encyclopädie der classischen
-Altertumswissenschaft." A monumental work, destined to be for many
-years the great authority upon the subject. Unfortunately it is
-appearing very slowly and has reached only the word <i>Demodoros</i>. There
-are a few illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>Smith, William, "A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities," revised
-edition by Wayte and Marindin. This is the very best work of the sort
-in English, the best possibly of similar size in any language.</p>
-
-<p>Baumeister, "Denkmäler des klassischen Altertums." The most richly
-illustrated work on the subject, absolutely indispensable.</p>
-
-<p>"Harper's Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities." Largely
-from Smith, but with valuable additions.</p>
-
-<p>Rich, "Dictionary of Roman and Greek Antiquities." A convenient manual
-with many illustrations. Very good for ready reference.</p>
-
-<p>Schreiber, "Atlas of Classical Antiquities." A very copious collection
-of illustrations bearing on Greek and Roman life. The illustrations
-are accompanied by explanatory text.</p>
-
-<p>Seyffert-Nettleship, "Dictionary of Classical Antiquities." The
-illustrations are numerous and the book is of some value on the side
-of ancient art.</p>
-
-<p>Lübker, "Real-Lexicon des klassischen Altertums," 7th edition by Max
-Erler. The best brief handbook for those who read German. It is
-compact and accurate.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect16"><b>16</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Books.</b>&mdash;Besides these, three books may be mentioned
-treating of the discoveries at Pompeii, the importance of which has
-been mentioned (<a href="#sect11">§11</a>):</p>
-
-<p>Overbeck, J., "Pompeii," 4th edition by August Mau, the standard
-popular work upon the subject, richly supplied with illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>Mau, August, "Pompeii, its Life and Art," translated by Kelsey. This
-is the best account of the treasures of the buried city that has
-appeared in English, at once interesting and scholarly.</p>
-
-<p>Gusman, Pierre, "Pompeii, the City, its Life and Art," translated by
-Simmonds and Jourdain. The very best collection of illustrations, but
-not so trustworthy in letterpress.</p>
-
-<p>Finally the student should be warned not to neglect a book merely
-because it happens to be written in a language that he does not read
-fluently: the very part that he wants may happen to be easy to read,
-and many of these books contain illustrations that tell their own
-story independently of the letterpress that accompanies them.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap1"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<h4>THE FAMILY</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, pp. 1-6; Voigt, 307-311, 386-388; Göll, II.
-1-4, 61-65, 187; Pauly-Wissowa, under <i>adfīnitās</i>, <i>agnātiō</i>,
-<i>cognātiō;</i> Smith, under <i>cognātī</i>, <i>familia</i>, <i>patria potestās;</i>
-Seyffert, under <i>agnātiō</i>, <i>cognātiō</i>, <i>familia</i>, <i>manus;</i> Lübker,
-under <i>agnātiō</i>, <i>cognātiō</i>, <i>familia</i>, <i>manus</i>, <i>patria potestās</i>.</small></blockquote>
-
-<blockquote><small>Look up the word <i>familia</i> in Harper's lexicon and notice carefully
-its range of meanings.</small></blockquote>
-
-<blockquote><small>See also Muirhead, "Roman Law," pp. 24-33, and the paragraph on the
-Quiritian Family in the article on Roman Law by the same writer in the
-"Encyclopaedia Britannica," Vol. XX.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect17"><b>17</b></a></span>
-<b>The Household.</b>&mdash;If by our word family we usually understand a
-group of husband, wife, and children, we may acknowledge at once that
-it does not correspond exactly to any of the meanings of the Latin
-<i>familia</i>, varied as the dictionaries show these to be. Husband, wife,
-and children did not necessarily constitute an independent family
-among the Romans, and were not necessarily members even of the same
-family. Those persons made up the Roman <i>familia</i>, in the sense
-nearest to its English derivative, who were subject to the authority
-of the same Head of the House (<i>pater familiās</i>). These persons might
-make a host in themselves: wife, unmarried daughters, sons real or
-adopted, married or unmarried, with their wives, sons, unmarried
-daughters, and even remoter descendants (always through males), yet
-they made but one <i>familia</i> in the eyes of the Romans. The Head of
-such a family&mdash;"household" or "house" is the nearest English word&mdash;was
-always <i>suī iūris</i> ("independent," "one's own master"), while the
-others were <i>aliēnō iūrī subiectī</i> ("dependent").</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect18"><b>18</b></a></span>
-The authority of the <i>pater familiās</i> over his wife was called
-<i>manus</i>, over his descendants <i>patria potestās</i>, over his chattels
-<i>dominica potestās</i>. So long as he lived and retained his citizenship,
-these powers could be terminated only by his own deliberate act. He
-could dispose of his property by gift or sale as freely as we do now.
-He might "emancipate" his sons, a very formal proceeding
-(<i>ēmancipātiō</i>) by which they became each the Head of a new family,
-though they were childless themselves or unmarried or even mere
-children. He might also emancipate an unmarried daughter, who thus in
-her own self became an independent family. Or he might give her in
-marriage to another Roman citizen, an act by which she passed by early
-usage (<a href="#sect61">§61</a>) into the family of which her husband was Head, if he was
-<i>suī iūris</i>, or of which he was a member, if he was still <i>aliēnō iūrī
-subiectus</i>. It must be carefully noticed, on the other hand, that the
-marriage of a son did not make him a <i>pater familiās</i> or relieve him
-in any degree from the <i>patria potestās:</i> he and his wife and their
-children were subject to the same Head of the House as he had been
-before his marriage. On the other hand, the Head of the House could
-not number in his <i>familia</i> his daughter's children: legitimate
-children always followed the father, while an illegitimate child was
-from the moment of birth in himself or herself an independent family.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect19"><b>19</b></a></span>
-<b>The Splitting Up of a House.</b>&mdash;Emancipation was not very common
-and it usually happened that the household was dissolved only by the
-death of the Head. When this occurred, as many new households were
-formed as there were persons directly subject to his <i>potestās</i> at the
-moment of his death: wife, sons, unmarried daughters, widowed
-daughters-in-law, and children of a deceased son. The children of a
-surviving son, it must be noticed, merely passed from the <i>potestās</i>
-of their grandfather to that of their father. A son under age or an
-unmarried daughter was put under the care of a guardian (<i>tūtor</i>),
-selected from the same <i>gēns</i>, very often an older brother, if there
-was one. The following diagram will make this clearer:</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary="image1">
- <tr>
- <td width="654">
- <img src="images/image1.jpg" alt="Family diagram 1">
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect20"><b>20</b></a></span>
-It is assumed that Gaius is a widower who has had five children,
-three sons and two daughters. Of the sons, Faustus and Balbus married
-and had each two children; Balbus then died. Of the daughters,
-Terentia Minor married Marcus and became the mother of two children.
-Publius and Terentia were unmarried at the death of Gaius, who had
-emancipated none of his children. It will be noticed:</p>
-
-<p>1. The living descendants of Gaius were ten (3, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13,
-14, 15, 16), his son Balbus being dead.</p>
-
-<p>2. Subject to his <i>potestās</i> were nine (3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13,
-14).</p>
-
-<p>3. His daughter Terentia Minor (10) had passed out of his <i>potestās</i>
-by her marriage with Marcus (9), and her children (15, 16) alone out
-of all the descendants of Gaius had not been subject to him.</p>
-
-<p>4. At his death are formed six independent families, one consisting of
-four persons (3, 4, 11, 12), the others of one person each (6, 7, 8,
-13, 14).</p>
-
-<p>5. Titus and Tiberius (11, 12) have merely passed out of the
-<i>potestās</i> of their grandfather Gaius to come under that of their
-father Faustus.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect21"><b>21</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Meanings of Familia.</b>&mdash;The word <i>familia</i> was also very
-commonly used in a slightly wider sense to include in addition to the
-persons named above (<a href="#sect17">§17</a>) all the slaves and clients and all the
-property real and personal belonging to the <i>pater familiās</i>, or
-acquired and used by the persons under his <i>potestās</i>. The word was
-also used of the slaves alone, and rarely of the property alone. In a
-still wider and more important sense the word was applied to a larger
-group of related persons, the <i>gēns</i>, consisting of all the
-"households" (<i>familiae</i> in the sense of <a href="#sect17">§17</a>) who derived their
-descent through males from a common ancestor. This remote ancestor,
-could his life have lasted through all the intervening centuries,
-would have been the <i>pater familiās</i> of all the persons included in
-the <i>gēns</i>, and all would have been subject to his <i>potestās</i>.
-Membership in the <i>gēns</i> was proved by the possession of the <i>nōmen</i>,
-the second of the three names that every citizen of the Republic
-regularly had (<a href="#sect38">§38</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect22"><b>22</b></a></span>
-Theoretically this <i>gēns</i> had been in prehistoric times one of
-the <i>familiae</i>, "households," whose union for political purposes had
-formed the state. Theoretically its <i>pater familiās</i> had been one of
-the Heads of Houses who in the days of the Kings had formed the
-<i>patrēs</i>, or assembly of old men (<i>senātus</i>). The splitting up of this
-prehistoric household in the manner explained in <a href="#sect19">§19</a>, a process
-repeated generation after generation, was believed to account for the
-numerous <i>familiae</i> who claimed connection with the great <i>gentēs</i> in
-later times. The <i>gēns</i> had an organization of which little is known.
-It passed resolutions binding upon its members; it furnished guardians
-for minor children, and curators for the insane and for spendthrifts.
-When a member died without leaving natural heirs, it succeeded to such
-property as he did not dispose of by will and administered it for the
-common good of all its members. These members were called <i>gentīlēs</i>,
-were bound to take part in the religious services of the <i>gēns</i>
-(<i>sacra gentīlīcia</i>), had a claim to the common property, and might if
-they chose be laid to rest in the common burial ground.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, the word <i>familia</i> was often applied to certain branches of a
-<i>gēns</i> whose members had the same <i>cognōmen</i> (<a href="#sect48">§48</a>), the last of the
-three names mentioned in <a href="#sect21">§21</a>. For this use of <i>familia</i> a more
-accurate word is <i>stirps</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect23"><b>23</b></a></span>
-<b>Agnati.</b>&mdash;It has been remarked (<a href="#sect18">§18</a>) that the children of a
-daughter could not be included in the <i>familia</i> of her father, and
-(<a href="#sect21">§21</a>) that membership in the larger organization called the <i>gēns</i> was
-limited to those who could trace their descent through males. All
-persons who could in this way trace their descent through males to a
-common ancestor, in whose <i>potestās</i> they would be were he alive, were
-called <i>agnātī</i>, and this <i>agnātiō</i> was the closest tie of
-relationship known to the Romans. In the list of <i>agnātī</i> were
-included two classes of persons who would seem by the definition to be
-excluded. These were the wife, who passed by <i>manus</i> into the family
-of her husband (<a href="#sect18">§18</a>), becoming by law his agnate and the agnate of all
-his agnates, and the adopted son. On the other hand a son who had been
-emancipated (<a href="#sect18">§18</a>) was excluded from <i>agnātiō</i> with his father and his
-father's agnates, and could have no agnates of his own until he
-married or was adopted into another <i>familia</i>. The following diagram
-will make this clearer:</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary="image2">
- <tr>
- <td width="654">
- <img src="images/image2.jpg" alt="Family diagram 2">
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect24"><b>24</b></a></span>
-It is supposed that Gaius and Gaia have five children (Faustus,
-Balbus, Publius, Terentia, and Terentia Minor), and six grandsons
-(Titus and Tiberius the sons of Faustus, Quintus and Sextius the sons
-of Balbus, and Servius and Decimus the sons of Terentia Minor). Gaius
-has emancipated two of his sons, Balbus and Publius, and has adopted
-his grandson Servius, who had previously been emancipated by his
-father Marcus. There are four sets of <i>agnātī:</i></p>
-
-<p>1. Gaius, his wife, and those whose <i>pater familiās</i> he is, viz.:
-Faustus, Tullia the wife of Faustus, Terentia, Titus, Tiberius, and
-Servius, a son by adoption (1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 11, 12, 15).</p>
-
-<p>2. Balbus, his wife, and their two sons (5, 6, 13, and 14).</p>
-
-<p>3. Publius, who is himself a <i>pater familiās</i>, but has no <i>agnātī</i> at
-all.</p>
-
-<p>4. Marcus, his wife Terentia Minor, and their child Decimus (9, 10,
-16). Notice that the other child, Servius (15), having been
-emancipated by Marcus is no longer agnate to his father, mother, or
-brother.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect25"><b>25</b></a></span>
-<b>Cognati,</b> on the other hand, were what we call blood relations, no
-matter whether they traced their relationship through males or
-females, and regardless of what <i>potestās</i> had been over them. The
-only barrier in the eyes of the law was loss of citizenship (<a href="#sect18">§18</a>), and
-even this was not always regarded. Thus, in the table last given,
-Gaius, Faustus, Balbus, Publius, Terentia, Terentia Minor, Titus,
-Tiberius, Quintus, Sextius, Servius, and Decimus are all cognates with
-one another. So, too, is Gaia with all her descendants mentioned. So
-also are Tullia, Titus, and Tiberius; Licinia, Quintus, and Sextius;
-Marcus, Servius, and Decimus. But husband and wife (Gaius and Gaia,
-Faustus and Tullia, Balbus and Licinia, Marcus and Terentia Minor)
-were not cognates by virtue of their marriage, though that made them
-agnates. In fact public opinion discountenanced the marriage of
-cognates within the sixth (later the fourth) degree, and persons
-within this degree were said to have the <i>iūs ōsculī</i>. The degree was
-calculated by counting from one of the interested parties through the
-common ancestor to the other and may be easily understood from the
-table given in Smith's "Dictionary of Antiquities" under <i>cognātī</i>, or
-the one given here (Fig. 1). Cognates did not form an organic body in
-the state as did the agnates (<a href="#sect22">§22</a>), but the 22d of February was set
-aside to commemorate the tie of blood (<i>cāra cognātiō</i>), and on this
-day presents were exchanged and family reunions probably held. It must
-be understood, however, that <i>cognātiō</i> gave no legal rights or claims
-under the Republic.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure1">
- <tr>
- <td width="772">
- <img src="images/figure001.jpg" alt="FIGURE 1. TABLE OF RELATIONSHIP">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="772" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 1.
- T<small>ABLE OF</small> R<small>ELATIONSHIP</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect26"><b>26</b></a></span>
-<b>Adfines.</b>&mdash;Persons connected by marriage only were called
-<i>adfīnēs</i>, as a wife with her husband's cognates and he with hers.
-There were no formal degrees of <i>adfīnitās</i>, as there were of
-<i>cognātiō</i>. Those adfīnēs for whom distinctive names were in common
-use were: <i>gener</i>, son-in-law; <i>nurus</i>, daughter-in-law; <i>socer</i>,
-father-in-law; <i>socrus</i>, mother-in-law; <i>prīvignus</i>, <i>prīvigna</i>,
-step-son, step-daughter; <i>ritricus</i>, step-father; <i>noverca</i>,
-step-mother. If we compare these names with the awkward compounds that
-do duty for them in English, we shall have additional proof of the
-stress laid by the Romans on family ties: two women who married
-brothers were called <i>iānītrīcēs</i>, a relationship for which we do not
-have even a compound. The names of blood relations tell the same
-story: a glance at the table of cognates will show how strong the
-Latin is here, how weak the English. We have "uncle," "aunt," and
-"cousin," but between <i>avunculus</i> and <i>patruus</i>, <i>mātertera</i> and
-<i>amita</i>, <i>patruēlis</i> and <i>cōnsōbrīnus</i>, we can distinguish only by
-descriptive phrases. For <i>atavus</i> and <i>tritavus</i> we have merely the
-indefinite "forefathers." In the same way the language testifies to
-the headship of the father. We speak of the "mother country" and
-"mother tongue," but to the Roman these were <i>patria</i> and <i>sermō
-patrius</i>. As the <i>pater</i> stood to the <i>fīlius</i>, so stood the
-<i>patrōnus</i> to the <i>cliēns</i>, the <i>patriciī</i> to the <i>plēbēiī</i>, the
-<i>patrēs</i> (=senators) to the rest of the citizens, and <i>Iūpiter</i> (Jove
-the Father) to the other gods of Olympus.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect27"><b>27</b></a></span>
-<b>The Family Cult.</b>&mdash;It has been said (<a href="#sect23">§23</a>) that <i>agnātiō</i> was the
-closest tie known to the Romans. The importance they attached to the
-agnatic family is largely explained by their ideas of the future life.
-They believed that the souls of men had an existence apart from the
-body, but not in a separate spirit-land. They conceived of the soul as
-hovering around the place of burial and requiring for its peace and
-happiness that offerings of food and drink should be made to it
-regularly. Should these offerings be discontinued, the soul would
-cease to be happy itself, and might become perhaps a spirit of evil.
-The maintenance of these rites and ceremonies devolved naturally upon
-the descendants from generation to generation, whom the spirits in
-turn would guide and guard.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure2">
- <tr>
- <td width="262">
- <img src="images/figure002.jpg" alt="FIGURE 2. LUCIUS JUNIUS BRUTUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="262" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 2.
- L<small>UCIUS</small>
- J<small>UNIUS</small> B<small>RUTUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect28"><b>28</b></a></span>
-The Roman was bound, therefore, to perform these acts of
-affection and piety so long as he lived himself, and bound no less to
-provide for their performance after his death by perpetuating his race
-and the family cult. A curse was believed to rest upon the childless
-man. Marriage was, therefore, a solemn religious duty, entered into
-only with the approval of the gods ascertained by the auspices. In
-taking a wife to himself the Roman made her a partaker of his family
-mysteries, a service that brooked no divided allegiance. He therefore
-separated her entirely from her father's family, and was ready in turn
-to surrender his daughter without reserve to the husband with whom she
-was to minister at another altar. The <i>pater familiās</i> was the priest
-of the household, and those subject to his <i>potestās</i> assisted in the
-prayers and offerings, the <i>sacra familiāria</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect29"><b>29</b></a></span>
-But it might be that a marriage was fruitless, or that the Head
-of the House saw his sons die before him. In this case he had to face
-the prospect of the extinction of his family, and his own descent to
-the grave with no posterity to make him blessed. One of two
-alternatives was open to him to avert such a calamity. He might give
-himself in adoption and pass into another family in which the
-perpetuation of the family cult seemed certain, or he might adopt a
-son and thus perpetuate his own. He usually followed the latter
-course, because it secured peace for the souls of his ancestors no
-less than for his own.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect30"><b>30</b></a></span>
-<b>Adoption.</b>&mdash;The person adopted might be either a <i>pater familiās</i>
-himself or, more usually, a <i>fīlius familiās</i>. In the case of the
-latter the process was called <i>adoptiō</i> and was a somewhat complicated
-proceeding by which the natural parent conveyed his son to the other,
-the effect being to transfer the adopted person from one family to the
-other. The adoption of a <i>pater familiās</i> was a much more serious
-matter, for it involved the extinction of one family (<a href="#sect29">§29</a>) in order to
-prevent the extinction of another. It was called <i>adrogātiō</i> and was
-an affair of state. It had to be sanctioned by the <i>pontificēs</i>, the
-highest officers of religion, who had probably to make sure that the
-<i>adrogātus</i> had brothers enough to attend to the interests of the
-ancestors whose cult he was renouncing. If the <i>pontificēs</i> gave their
-consent, it had still to be sanctioned by the <i>comitia curiata</i>, as
-the adrogation might deprive the <i>gēns</i> of its succession to the
-property of the childless man (<a href="#sect22">§22</a>). If the <i>comitia</i> gave consent,
-the <i>adrogātus</i> sank from the position of Head of a House to that of a
-<i>fīlius familiās</i> in the household of his adoptive father. If he had
-wife and children, they passed with him into the new family, and so
-did all his property. Over him the adoptive father had <i>potestās</i> as
-over a son of his own, and looked upon him as flesh of his flesh and
-bone of his bone. We can have at best only a feeble and inadequate
-notion of what adoption meant to the Romans.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect31"><b>31</b></a></span>
-<b>The Patria Potestas.</b>&mdash;The authority of the <i>pater familiās</i> over
-his descendants was called usually the <i>patria potestās</i>, but also the
-<i>patria maiestās</i>, the <i>patrium iūs</i>, and the <i>imperium paternum</i>. It
-was carried to a greater length by the Romans than by any other
-people, a length that seems to us excessive and cruel. As they
-understood it, the <i>pater familiās</i> had absolute power over his
-children and other agnatic descendants. He decided whether or not the
-newborn child should be reared; he punished what he regarded as
-misconduct with penalties as severe as banishment, slavery, and death;
-he alone could own and exchange property&mdash;all that his descendants
-earned or acquired in any way was his: according to the letter of the
-law they were little better than his chattels. If his right to one of
-them was disputed, he vindicated it by the same form of action that he
-used to maintain his right to a house or a horse; if one was stolen,
-he proceeded against the abductor by the ordinary action for theft; if
-for any reason he wished to transfer one of them to a third person, it
-was done by the same form of conveyance that he employed to transfer
-inanimate things. The jurists boasted that these powers were enjoyed
-by Roman citizens only.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure3">
- <tr>
- <td width="229">
- <img src="images/figure003.jpg" alt="FIGURE 3. PUBLIUS CORNELIUS SCIPIO AFRICANUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="229" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 3.
- P<small>UBLIUS</small> C<small>ORNELIUS</small>
- S<small>CIPIO</small> A<small>FRICANUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect32"><b>32</b></a></span>
-<b>Limitations.</b>&mdash;But however stern this authority was theoretically,
-it was greatly modified in practice, under the Republic by custom,
-under the Empire by law. King Romulus was said to have ordained that
-all sons should be reared and also all firstborn daughters;
-furthermore that no child should be put to death until its third year,
-unless it was grievously deformed. This at least secured life for the
-child, though the <i>pater familiās</i> still decided whether it should be
-admitted to his household, with the implied social and religious
-privileges, or be disowned and become an outcast. King Numa was said
-to have forbidden the sale into slavery of a son who had married with
-the consent of his father. But of much greater importance was the
-check put upon arbitrary and cruel punishments by custom. Custom, not
-law, obliged the <i>pater familiās</i> to call a council of relatives and
-friends (<i>iūdicium domesticum</i>) when he contemplated inflicting severe
-punishment upon his children, and public opinion obliged him to abide
-by their verdict. Even in the comparatively few cases where tradition
-tells us that the death penalty was actually inflicted, we usually
-find that the father acted in the capacity of a magistrate happening
-to be in office when the offense was committed, or that the penalties
-of the ordinary law were merely anticipated, perhaps to avoid the
-disgrace of a public trial and execution.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect33"><b>33</b></a></span>
-So, too, in regard to the ownership of property the conditions
-were not really so hard as the strict letter of the law makes them
-appear to us. It was customary for the Head of the House to assign to
-his children property, <i>pecūlia</i> ("cattle of their own"), for them to
-manage for their own benefit. And more than this, although the <i>pater
-familiās</i> held legal title to all their acquisitions, yet practically
-all property was acquired for and belonged to the household as a
-whole, and he was in effect little more than a trustee to hold and
-administer it for the common benefit. This is shown by the fact that
-there was no graver offense against public morals, no fouler blot on
-private character, than to prove untrue to this trust, <i>patrimōnium
-prōfundere</i>. Besides this, the long continuance of the <i>potestās</i> is
-in itself a proof that its rigor was more apparent than real.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect34"><b>34</b></a></span>
-<b>Extinction of the Potestas.</b>&mdash;The <i>patria potestās</i> was
-extinguished in various ways:</p>
-
-<p>1. By the death of the <i>pater familiās</i>, as has been explained in <a href="#sect19">§19</a>.</p>
-
-<p>2. By the emancipation of the son or daughter.</p>
-
-<p>3. By the loss of citizenship by either father or son.</p>
-
-<p>4. If the son became a <i>flāmen diālis</i> or the daughter a <i>virgō
-vestālis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>5. If either father or child was adopted by a third party.</p>
-
-<p>6. If the daughter passed by formal marriage into the power (<i>in
-manum</i>) of a husband, though this did not essentially change her
-dependent condition (<a href="#sect35">§35</a>).</p>
-
-<p>7. If the son became a public magistrate. In this case the <i>potestās</i>
-was suspended during the period of office, but after it expired the
-father might hold the son accountable for his acts, public and
-private, while holding the magistracy.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure4">
- <tr>
- <td width="282">
- <img src="images/figure004.jpg" alt="FIGURE 4. LUCIUS CORNELIUS SULLA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="282" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 4.
- L<small>UCIUS</small> C<small>ORNELIUS</small>
- S<small>ULLA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect35"><b>35</b></a></span>
-<b>Manus.</b>&mdash;The subject of marriage will be considered later; at this
-point it is only necessary to define the power over the wife possessed
-by the husband in its most extreme form, called by the Romans <i>manus</i>.
-By the oldest and most solemn form of marriage the wife was separated
-entirely from her father's family (<a href="#sect28">§28</a>) and passed into her husband's
-power or "hand" (<i>conventiō in manum</i>). This assumes, of course, that
-he was <i>suī iūris;</i> if he was not, then though nominally in his "hand"
-she was really subject as he was to his <i>pater familiās</i>. Any property
-she had of her own, and to have had any she must have been independent
-before her marriage, passed to him as a matter of course. If she had
-none, her <i>pater familiās</i> furnished a dowry (<i>dōs</i>), which shared the
-same fate. Whatever she acquired by her industry or otherwise while
-the marriage lasted also became her husband's. So far, therefore, as
-property rights were concerned the <i>manus</i> differed in no respect from
-the <i>patria potestās:</i> the wife was <i>in locō fīliae</i>, and on the
-husband's death took a daughter's share in his estate.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect36"><b>36</b></a></span>
-In other respects <i>manus</i> conferred more limited powers. The
-husband was required by law, not merely obliged by custom, to refer
-alleged misconduct of his wife to the <i>iūdicium domesticum</i>, and this
-was composed in part of her cognates (<a href="#sect25">§25</a>). He could put her away for
-certain grave offenses only; if he divorced her without good cause he
-was punished with the loss of all his property. He could not sell her
-at all. In short, public opinion and custom operated even more
-strongly for her protection than for that of her children. It must be
-noticed, therefore, that the chief distinction between <i>manus</i> and
-<i>patria potestās</i> lay in the fact that the former was a legal
-relationship based upon the consent of the weaker party, while the
-latter was a natural relationship antecedent to all law and choice.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect37"><b>37</b></a></span>
-<b>Dominica Potestas.</b>&mdash;The right of ownership in his property
-(<i>dominica potestās</i>) was absolute in the case of a <i>pater familiās</i>
-and has been sufficiently explained in preceding paragraphs. This
-ownership included slaves as well as inanimate things, and slaves as
-well as inanimate things were mere chattels in the eyes of the law.
-The influence of custom and public opinion, so far as these tended to
-mitigating the horrors of their condition, will be discussed later. It
-will be sufficient to say here that there was nothing to which the
-slave could appeal from the judgment of his master. It was final and
-absolute.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap2"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<h4>THE NAME</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 7-27; Voigt, 311, 316 f., 454; Pauly-Wissowa,
-under <i>cognōmen;</i> Smith, Harper, and Lübker, under <i>nōmen</i>.</small></blockquote>
-
-<blockquote><small>See also: Egbert, "Latin Inscriptions," Chapter IV; Cagnat, "Cours
-d'Epigraphie Latine," Chapter I; Hübner, "Römische Epigraphik," pp.
-653-680 of Müller's <i>Handbuch</i>, Vol. I.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect38"><b>38</b></a></span>
-<b>The Triple Name.</b>&mdash;Nothing is more familiar to the student of
-Latin than the fact that the Romans whose works he reads first have
-each a threefold name, Caius Julius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero,
-Publius Vergilius Maro. This was the system that prevailed in the best
-days of the Republic, but it was itself a development, starting with a
-more simple form in earlier times and ending in utter confusion under
-the Empire. The earliest legends of Rome show us single names,
-Romulus, Remus, Faustulus; but side by side with these we find also
-double names, Numa Pompilius, Ancus Marcius, Tullus Hostilius. It is
-possible that single names were the earliest fashion, but when we pass
-from legends to real history the oldest names that we find are double,
-the second being always in the genitive case, representing the father
-or the Head of the House: Marcus Marci, Caecilia Metelli. A little
-later these genitives were followed by the letter <i>f</i> (for <i>fīlius</i> or
-<i>fīlia</i>) or <i>uxor</i>, to denote the relationship. Later still, but very
-anciently nevertheless, we find the freeborn man in possession of the
-three names with which we are familiar, the <i>nōmen</i> to mark the clan
-(<i>gēns</i>), the <i>cognōmen</i> to mark the family, and the <i>praenōmen</i> to
-mark the individual. The regular order of the three names is
-<i>praenōmen</i>, <i>nōmen</i>, <i>cognōmen</i>, although in poetry the order is
-often changed to adapt the name to the meter.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure5">
- <tr>
- <td width="369">
- <img src="images/figure005.jpg" alt="FIGURE 5. MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="369" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 5.
- M<small>ARCUS</small> T<small>ULLIUS</small>
- C<small>ICERO</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect39"><b>39</b></a></span>
-Great formality required even more than the three names. In
-official documents and in the state records it was usual to insert
-between a man's <i>nōmen</i> and <i>cognōmen</i> the <i>praenōmina</i> of his father,
-grandfather, and great-grandfather, and sometimes even the name of the
-tribe to which he belonged. So Cicero might write his name: M. Tullius
-M. f. M. n. M. pr. Cor. Cicero; that is, Marcus Tullius Cicero, son
-(<i>fīlius</i>) of Marcus, grandson (<i>nepōs</i>) of Marcus, great-grandson
-(<i>pronepōs</i>) of Marcus, of the tribe Cornelia. See another example in
-<a href="#sect427">§427</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect40"><b>40</b></a></span>
-On the other hand even the triple name was too long for ordinary
-use. Children, slaves, and intimate friends addressed the citizen,
-master, and friend by his <i>praenōmen</i> only. Ordinary acquaintances
-used the <i>cognōmen</i> with the <i>praenōmen</i> prefixed for emphatic
-address. In earnest appeals we find the <i>nōmen</i> also used, with
-sometimes the <i>praenōmen</i> or the possessive <i>mī</i> prefixed. When two
-only of the three names are thus used in familiar intercourse the
-order varies. If the <i>praenōmen</i> is one of the two, it always stands
-first, except in the poets for metrical reasons and in a few places in
-prose where the text is uncertain. If the <i>praenōmen</i> is omitted, the
-arrangement varies: the older writers and Cicero put the <i>cognōmen</i>
-first, <i>Ahāla Servilius</i> (Cic. Milo, 3, 8: cf. <i>C. Servilius Ahāla</i>,
-Cat. I., 1, 3). Caesar puts the nōmen first; Horace, Livy, and Tacitus
-have both arrangements, while Pliny adheres to Caesar's usage. It will
-be convenient to consider the three names separately, and to discuss
-the names of men before considering those of the other members of the
-<i>familia</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect41"><b>41</b></a></span>
-<b>The Praenomen.</b>&mdash;The number of names used as <i>praenōmina</i> seems to
-us preposterously small as compared with our Christian names, to which
-they in some measure correspond. It was never much in excess of
-thirty, and in Sulla's time had dwindled to eighteen. The full list is
-given by the authorities named above, but the following are all that
-are often found in our school and college authors: <i>Aulus</i> (<i>A</i>),
-<i>Decimus</i> (<i>D</i>), <i>Gāius</i> (<i>C</i>), <i>Gnaeus</i> (<i>CN</i>), <i>Kaesō</i> (<i>K</i>),
-<i>Lūcius</i> (<i>L</i>), <i>Mānius</i> (<i>M'</i>), <i>Mārcus</i> (<i>M</i>), <i>Pūblius</i> (<i>P</i>),
-<i>Quīntus</i> (<i>Q</i>), <i>Servius</i> (<i>SER</i>), <i>Sextus</i> (<i>SEX</i>), <i>Spurius</i> (<i>SP</i>),
-<i>Tiberius</i> (<i>TI</i>), and <i>Titus</i> (<i>T</i>). The forms of these names were
-not absolutely fixed, and we find for <i>Gnaeus</i> the forms <i>Gnaivos</i>
-(early), <i>Naevos</i>, <i>Naeus</i>, and <i>Gnēus</i> (rare); so also for <i>Servius</i>
-we find <i>Sergius</i>, the two forms going back to an ancient <i>Serguius</i>.
-The abbreviations also vary: for <i>Aulus</i> we find regularly <i>A</i>, but
-also <i>AV</i> and <i>AVL;</i> for <i>Sextus</i> we find <i>SEXT</i> and <i>S</i> as well as
-<i>SEX</i>, and similar variations are found in the case of other names.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure6">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure006.jpg" alt="FIGURE 6. CAESAR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 6.
- C<small>AESAR</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect42"><b>42</b></a></span>
-But small as this list seems to us the natural conservatism of
-the Romans found in it a chance to display itself, and the great
-families repeated the names of their children from generation to
-generation in such a way as to make the identification of the
-individual very difficult in modern times. Thus the Aemilii contented
-themselves with seven of these <i>praenōmina</i>, <i>Gāius</i>, <i>Gnaeus</i>,
-<i>Lūcius</i>, <i>Mānius</i>, <i>Mārcus</i>, <i>Quīntus</i>, and <i>Tiberius</i>, but used in
-addition one that is not found in any other gens, <i>Māmercus</i> (<i>MAM</i>).
-The Claudii used six, <i>Gāius</i>, <i>Decimus</i>, <i>Lūcius</i>, <i>Pūblius</i>,
-<i>Tiberius</i>, and <i>Quīntus</i>, with the additional name <i>Appius</i> (<i>APP</i>),
-of Sabine origin, which they brought to Rome. The Cornelii used seven,
-<i>Aulus</i>, <i>Gnaeus</i>, <i>Lūcius</i>, <i>Mārcus</i>, <i>Pūblius</i>, <i>Servius</i>, and
-<i>Tiberius</i>. A still smaller number sufficed for the Julian gens,
-<i>Gāius</i>, <i>Lūcius</i>, and <i>Sextus</i>, with the name <i>Vopiscus</i>, which went
-out of use in very early times. And even these selections were subject
-to further limitations. Thus, of the <i>gēns Claudia</i> only one branch
-(<i>stirps</i>), known as the <i>Claudiī Nerōnēs</i>, used the names <i>Decimus</i>
-and <i>Tiberius</i>, and out of the seven names used in the <i>gēns Cornēlia</i>
-the branch of the Scipios (<i>Cornēliī Scīpiōnēs</i>) used only <i>Gnaeus</i>,
-<i>Lūcius</i>, and <i>Pūblius</i>. Even after a <i>praenōmen</i> had found a place in
-a given family, it might be deliberately discarded: thus, the Claudii
-gave up the name <i>Lūcius</i> and the Manlii the name <i>Mārcus</i> on account
-of the disgrace brought upon their families by men who bore these
-names; and the Antonii never used the name <i>Mārcus</i> after the downfall
-of the famous triumvir, Marcus Antonius.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect43"><b>43</b></a></span>
-From the list of names usual in his family the father gave one to
-his son on the ninth day after his birth, the <i>diēs lūstricus</i>. It was
-a custom then, one that seems natural enough in our own times, for the
-father to give his own <i>praenōmen</i> to his firstborn son; Cicero's name
-(<a href="#sect39">§39</a>) shows the name <i>Mārcus</i> four times repeated, and it is probable
-that he came from a long line of eldest sons. When these names were
-first given they must have been chosen with due regard to their
-etymological meanings and have had some relation to the circumstances
-attending the birth of the child: Livy in speaking of the mythical
-Silvius Aeneas gives us to understand that he received his first name
-because he was born in a forest (<i>silva</i>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure7">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure007.jpg" alt="FIGURE 7. AUGUSTUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 7.
- A<small>UGUSTUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect44"><b>44</b></a></span>
-So, <i>Lūcius</i> meant originally "born by day," <i>Mānius</i>, "born in
-the morning"; <i>Quīntus</i>, <i>Sextus</i>, <i>Decimus</i>, <i>Postumus</i>, etc.,
-indicated the succession in the family; <i>Tullus</i> was connected with
-the verb <i>tollere</i> in the sense of "acknowledge" (<a href="#sect95">§95</a>), <i>Servius</i> with
-<i>servāre</i>, <i>Gāius</i> with <i>gaudēre</i>. Others are associated with the name
-of some divinity, as <i>Mārcus</i> and <i>Māmercus</i> with Mars, and <i>Tiberius</i>
-with the river god Tiberis. But these meanings in the course of time
-were forgotten as completely as we have forgotten the meanings of our
-Christian names, and even the numerals were employed with no reference
-to their proper force: Cicero's only brother was called <i>Quīntus</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect45"><b>45</b></a></span>
-The abbreviation of the <i>praenōmen</i> was not a matter of mere
-caprice, as is the writing of initials with us, but was an established
-custom, indicating perhaps Roman citizenship. The <i>praenōmen</i> was
-written out in full only when it was used by itself or when it
-belonged to a person in one of the lower classes of society. When
-Roman names are carried over into English, they should always be
-written out in full and pronounced accordingly. In the same way, when
-we read a Latin author and find a name abbreviated, the full name
-should always be pronounced if we read aloud or translate.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect46"><b>46</b></a></span>
-<b>The Nomen.</b>&mdash;This, the all-important name, is called for greater
-precision the <i>nōmen gentīle</i> and the <i>nōmen gentīlicium</i>. The child
-inherited it, as one inherits his surname now, and there was,
-therefore, no choice or selection about it. The <i>nōmen</i> ended
-originally in <i>-ius</i>, and this ending was sacredly preserved by the
-patrician families: the endings <i>-eius</i>, <i>-aius</i>, <i>-aeus</i>, and <i>-eus</i>
-are merely variations from it. Other endings point to a non-Latin
-origin of the gens. Those in <i>-ācus</i> (<i>Avidiācus</i>) are Gallic, those
-in <i>-na</i> (<i>Caecīna</i>) are Etruscan, those in <i>-ēnus</i> or <i>-iēnus</i>
-(<i>Salvidiēnus</i>) are Umbrian or Picene. Some others are formed from the
-name of the town from which the family sprang, either with the regular
-terminations <i>-ānus</i> and <i>-ēnsis</i> (<i>Albānus</i>, <i>Norbānus</i>,
-<i>Aquiliēnsis</i>), or with the suffix <i>-ius</i> (<i>Perusius</i>, <i>Parmēnsius</i>)
-in imitation of the older and more aristocratic use. Standing entirely
-apart is the <i>nōmen</i> of the notorious <i>Gāius Verrēs</i>, which looks like
-a <i>cognōmen</i> out of place (<a href="#sect55">§55</a>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure8">
- <tr>
- <td width="258">
- <img src="images/figure008.jpg" alt="FIGURE 8. NERO">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="258" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 8.
- N<small>ERO</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect47"><b>47</b></a></span>
-The <i>nōmen</i> belonged by custom to all connected with the gens, to
-the plebeian as well as the patrician branches, to men, women,
-clients, and freedmen without distinction. It was perhaps the natural
-desire to separate themselves from the more humble bearers of their
-<i>nōmen</i> that led patrician families to use a limited number of
-<i>praenōmina</i>, avoiding those used by their clansmen of inferior social
-standing. At any rate it is noticeable that the plebeian families, as
-soon as political nobility and the busts in their halls gave them a
-standing above their fellows, showed the same exclusiveness in the
-selection of names for their children that the patricians had
-displayed before them (<a href="#sect42">§42</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect48"><b>48</b></a></span>
-<b>The Cognomen.</b>&mdash;Besides the individual name and the name that
-marked his <i>gēns</i>, the Roman had often a third name, called the
-<i>cognōmen</i>, that served to indicate the family or branch of the <i>gēns</i>
-to which he belonged. Almost all the great <i>gentēs</i> were thus divided,
-some of them into numerous branches. The Cornelian gens, for example,
-included the plebeian Dolabellae, Lentuli, Cethegi, and Cinnae, in
-addition to the patrician Scipiones, Maluginenses, Rufini, etc. The
-recognition of a group of clansmen as such a branch, or <i>stirps</i>, and
-as entitled to transmit a common <i>cognōmen</i> required the formal
-consent of the whole <i>gēns</i>, and carried with it the loss of certain
-privileges as <i>gentīlēs</i> to the members of the <i>stirps</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect49"><b>49</b></a></span>
-From the fact that in the official name (<a href="#sect39">§39</a>) the <i>cognōmen</i>
-followed the name of the tribe, it is generally believed that the
-oldest of these <i>cognōmina</i> did not go back beyond the time of the
-division of the people into tribes. It is also generally believed that
-the <i>cognōmen</i> was originally a nickname, bestowed on account of some
-personal peculiarity or characteristic, sometimes as a compliment,
-sometimes in derision. So, we find many pointing at physical traits,
-such as <i>Albus</i>, <i>Barbātus</i>, <i>Cincinnātus</i>, <i>Claudus</i>, <i>Longus</i> (all
-originally adjectives), and the nouns <i>Nāsō</i> and <i>Capitō</i> ("the man
-with a nose," "with a head"); others refer to the temperament, such as
-<i>Benignus</i>, <i>Blandus</i>, <i>Catō</i>, <i>Serēnus</i>, <i>Sevērus;</i> others still
-denote origin, such as <i>Gallus</i>, <i>Ligus</i>, <i>Sabīnus</i>, <i>Siculus</i>,
-<i>Tuscus</i>. These names, it must be remembered, descended from father to
-son, and would naturally lose their appropriateness as they passed
-along, until in the course of time their meanings were entirely lost
-sight of, as were those of the <i>praenōmina</i> (<a href="#sect44">§44</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect50"><b>50</b></a></span>
-Under the Republic the patricians had almost without exception
-this third or family name; we are told of but one man, Caius Marcius,
-who lacked the distinction. With the plebeians the <i>cognōmen</i> was not
-so common, perhaps its possession was the exception. The great
-families of the Marii, Mummii, and Sertorii had none, although the
-plebeian branches of the Cornelian gens (<a href="#sect48">§48</a>), the Tullian gens, and
-others, did. The <i>cognōmen</i> came, therefore, to be prized as an
-indication of ancient lineage, and individuals whose nobility was new
-were anxious to acquire it to transmit to their children. Hence many
-assumed <i>cognōmina</i> of their own selection. Some of these were
-conceded by public opinion as their due, as in the case of Cnaeus
-Pompeius, who took <i>Magnus</i> as his <i>cognōmen</i>. Others were derided by
-their contemporaries, as we deride the made-to-order coat of arms of
-some nineteenth century upstart. It is probable, however, that only
-nobles ventured to assume <i>cognōmina</i> under the Republic, though under
-the Empire their possession was hardly more than the badge of freedom.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect51"><b>51</b></a></span>
-<b>Additional Names.</b>&mdash;Besides the three names already described, we
-find not infrequently, even in Republican times, a fourth or fifth.
-These were also called <i>cognōmina</i> by a loose extension of the word,
-until in the fourth century of our era the name <i>agnōmina</i> was given
-them by the grammarians. They may be conveniently considered under
-four heads:</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, the process that divided the gens into branches
-might be continued even further. That is, as the <i>gēns</i> became
-numerous enough to throw off a <i>stirps</i>, so the <i>stirps</i> in process of
-time might throw off a branch of itself, for which there is no better
-name than the vague <i>familia</i>. This actually happened very frequently:
-the <i>gēns Cornēlia</i>, for example, threw off the <i>stirps</i> of the
-<i>Scīpiōnēs</i>, and these in turn the family or "house" of the <i>Nāsīcae</i>.
-So we find the quadruple name <i>Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō Nāsīca</i>, in
-which the last name was probably given very much in the same way as
-the third had been given before the division took place.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect52"><b>52</b></a></span>
-In the second place, when a man passed from one family to another
-by adoption (<a href="#sect30">§30</a>) he regularly took the three names of his adoptive
-father and added his own <i>nōmen gentīle</i> with the suffix <i>-ānus</i>.
-Thus, Lucius Aemilius Paulus, the son of Lucius Aemilius Paulus
-Macedonicus (see <a href="#sect53">§53</a> for the last name), was adopted by Publius
-Cornelius Scipio, and took as his new name <i>Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō
-Aemiliānus</i>. In the same way, when Caius Octavius Caepias was adopted
-by Caius Julius Caesar, he became <i>Gāius Iūlius Caesar Octāviānus</i>,
-and is hence variously styled Octavius and Octavianus in the
-histories.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect53"><b>53</b></a></span>In the third place, an additional name, sometimes called
-<i>cognōmen ex virtūte</i>, was often given by acclamation to a great
-statesman or victorious general, and was put after his <i>cognōmen</i>. A
-well known example is the name of Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus,
-the last name having been given him after his defeat of Hannibal. In
-the same way, his grandson by adoption, the Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Aemilianus mentioned above, received the same honorable name after he
-had destroyed Carthage, and was called <i>Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō
-Africānus Aemiliānus</i>. Such a name is Macedonicus given to Lucius
-Aemilius Paulus for his defeat of Persens, and the title Augustus
-given by the senate to Octavianus. It is not certainly known whether
-or not these names passed by inheritance to the descendants of those
-who originally earned them, but it is probable that the eldest son
-only was strictly entitled to take his father's title of honor.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect54"><b>54</b></a></span>In the fourth place, the fact that a man had inherited a nickname
-from his ancestors in the form of a <i>cognōmen</i> (<a href="#sect49">§49</a>) did not prevent
-his receiving another from some personal characteristic, especially as
-the inherited name had often no application, as we have seen, to its
-later possessor. To some ancient Publius Cornelius was given the
-nickname <i>Scīpiō</i> (<a href="#sect49">§49</a>), and in the course of time this was taken by
-all his descendants without thought of its appropriateness and became
-a <i>cognōmen;</i> then to one of these descendants was given another
-nickname for personal reasons, <i>Nāsīca</i>, and in course of time it lost
-its individuality and became the name of a whole family (<a href="#sect51">§51</a>); then in
-precisely the same way a member of this family became prominent enough
-to need a separate name and was called <i>Corculum</i>, his full name being
-<i>Pūblius Cornēlius Scīpiō Nāsīca Corculum</i>. It is evident that there
-is no reason why the expansion should not have continued indefinitely.
-Such names are Publius Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, Quintus Caecilius
-Metellus Celer, and Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio. It is
-also evident that we can not always distinguish between a mere
-nickname, one belonging strictly to this paragraph, and the additional
-<i>cognōmen</i> that marked the family off from the rest of the <i>stirps</i> to
-which it belonged. It is perfectly possible that the name Spinther
-mentioned above has as good a right as Nasica to a place in the first
-division (<a href="#sect51">§51</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect55"><b>55</b></a></span>
-<b>Confusion of Names.</b>&mdash;A system so elaborate as that we have
-described was almost sure to be misunderstood or misapplied, and in
-the later days of the Republic and under the Empire we find all law
-and order disregarded. The giving of the <i>praenōmen</i> to the child
-seems to have been delayed too long sometimes, and burial inscriptions
-are numerous which have in place of a first name the word <i>pūpus</i>
-(<i>PVP</i>) "child," showing that the little one had died unnamed. One
-such inscription gives the age of the unnamed child as sixteen years.
-Then confusion was caused by the misuse of the <i>praenōmen</i>. Sometimes
-two are found in one name, e.g., <i>Pūblius Aelius Aliēnus Archelāus
-Mārcus</i>. Sometimes words ending like the <i>nōmen</i> in <i>-ius</i> were used
-as <i>praenōmina:</i> Cicero tells us that one <i>Numerius Quīntius Rūfus</i>
-owed his escape from death in a riot to his ambiguous first name. The
-familiar Gāius must have been a <i>nōmen</i> in very ancient times. Like
-irregularities occur in the use of the <i>nōmen</i>. Two in a name were not
-uncommon, one being derived from the family of the mother perhaps;
-occasionally three or four are used, and fourteen are found in the
-name of one of the consuls of the year 169 <small>A.D.</small> Then by a change, the
-converse of that mentioned above, a word might go out of use as a
-<i>praenōmen</i> and become a <i>nōmen:</i> Cicero's enemy <i>Lūcius Sergius
-Catilīna</i> had for his gentile name <i>Sergius</i>, which had once been a
-first name (<a href="#sect41">§41</a>). The <i>cognōmen</i> was similarly abused. It ceased to
-denote the family and came to distinguish members of the same family,
-as the <i>praenōmina</i> originally had done: thus the three sons of Marcus
-Annaeus Seneca, for example, were called <i>Mārcus Annaeus Novātus</i>,
-<i>Lūcius Annaeus Seneca</i>, and <i>Lūcius Annaeus Mela</i>. So, too, a word
-used as a <i>cognōmen</i> in one name might be used as a fourth element in
-another: for example in the names <i>Lūcius Cornēlius Sulla</i> and <i>Lūcius
-Cornēlius Lentulus Sura</i> the third and fourth elements respectively
-are really the same, being merely shortened forms of <i>Surula</i>. Finally
-it may be remarked that the same name might be arranged differently at
-different times: in the consular lists we find the same man called
-<i>Lūcius Lūcrētius Tricipitīnus Flāvus</i> and <i>Lūcius Lūcrētius Flāvus
-Tricipitīnus</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect56"><b>56</b></a></span>
-There is even greater variation in the names of persons who had
-passed from one family into another by adoption. Some took the
-additional name (<a href="#sect52">§52</a>) from the <i>stirps</i> instead of from the <i>gēns</i>,
-that is, from the <i>cognōmen</i> instead of from the <i>nōmen</i>. A son of
-Marcus Claudius Marcellus was adopted by a certain Publius Cornelius
-Lentulus and ought to have been called <i>Pūblius Cornēlius Lentulus
-Claudiānus;</i> he took instead the name <i>Pūblius Cornēlius Lentulus
-Marcellīnus</i>, and this name descended to his children. The confusion
-in this direction is well illustrated by the name of the famous Marcus
-Junius Brutus. A few years before Caesar fell by his hand, Brutus, as
-we usually call him, was adopted by his mother's brother, Quintus
-Servilius Caepio, and ought to have been called <i>Quīntus Servīlius
-Caepiō Iūniānus</i>. For some reason unknown to us he retained his own
-<i>cognōmen</i>, and even his close friend Cicero seems scarcely to know
-what to call him. Sometimes he writes of him as <i>Quīntus Caepiō
-Brūtus</i>, sometimes as <i>Mārcus Brūtus</i>, sometimes simply as <i>Brūtus</i>.
-The great scholar of the first century, Asconius, calls him <i>Mārcus
-Caepiō</i>. Finally it may be noticed that late in the Empire we find a
-man struggling under the load of forty names.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect57"><b>57</b></a></span>
-<b>Names of Women.</b>&mdash;No very satisfactory account of the names of
-women can be given, because it is impossible to discover any system in
-the choice and arrangement of those that have come down to us. It may
-be said in general that the threefold name was unknown in the best
-days of the Republic, and that <i>praenōmina</i> were rare and when used
-were not abbreviated. We find such <i>praenōmina</i> as <i>Paulla</i> and
-<i>Vibia</i> (the masculine forms of which early disappeared), <i>Gāia</i>,
-<i>Lūcia</i>, and <i>Pūblia</i>, and it is probable that the daughter took these
-from her father. More common were the adjectives <i>Maxuma</i> and <i>Minor</i>,
-and the numerals <i>Secunda</i> and <i>Tertia</i>, but these unlike the
-corresponding names of men seem always to have denoted the place of
-the bearer among a group of sisters. It was more usual for the
-unmarried woman to be called by her father's <i>nōmen</i> in its feminine
-form, <i>Tullia</i>, <i>Cornēlia</i>, with the addition of her father's
-<i>cognōmen</i> in the genitive case, <i>Caecilia Metellī</i>, followed later by
-the letter <i>f</i> (=<i>filia</i>) to mark the relationship. Sometimes she used
-her mother's <i>nōmen</i> after her father's. The married woman, if she
-passed into her husband's hand (<i>manus</i>, <a href="#sect35">§35</a>) by the ancient patrician
-ceremony, originally took his <i>nōmen</i>, just as an adopted son took the
-name of the family into which he passed, but it can not be shown that
-the rule was universally or even usually observed. Under the later
-forms of marriage she retained her maiden name. In the time of the
-Empire we find the threefold name for women in general use, with the
-same riotous confusion in selection and arrangement as prevailed in
-the case of the names of men at the same time.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure9">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure009.jpg" alt="FIGURE 9. TRAJAN">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 9.
- T<small>RAJAN</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect58"><b>58</b></a></span>
-<b>Names of Slaves.</b>&mdash;Slaves had no more right to names of their own
-than they had to other property, but took such as their masters were
-pleased to give them, and even these did not descend to their
-children. In the simpler life of early times the slave was called
-<i>puer</i>, just as the word "boy" was once used in this country for
-slaves of any age. Until late in the Republic the slave was known only
-by this name corrupted to <i>por</i> and affixed to the genitive of his
-master's first name: <i>Mārcipor</i> (=<i>Mārcī puer</i>), "Marcus's slave."
-When slaves became numerous this simple form no longer sufficed to
-distinguish them, and they received individual names. These were
-usually foreign names, often denoting the nationality of the slave,
-sometimes, in mockery perhaps, the high-sounding appellations of
-eastern potentates, such names as Afer, Eleutheros, Pharnaces. By this
-time, too, the word <i>servus</i> had supplanted <i>puer</i>. We find,
-therefore, that toward the end of the Republic the full name of a
-slave consisted of his individual name followed by the <i>nōmen</i> and
-<i>praenōmen</i> (the order is important) of his master and the word
-<i>servus:</i> <i>Pharnacēs Egnātiī Pūbliī servus</i>. When a slave passed from
-one master to another he took the <i>nōmen</i> of the new master and added
-to it the <i>cognōmen</i> of the old with the suffix <i>-ānus:</i> when Anna the
-slave of Maecenas became the property of Livia, she was called <i>Anna
-Līviae serva Maecēnātiāna</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect59"><b>59</b></a></span>
-<b>Names of Freedmen.</b>&mdash;The freedman regularly kept the individual
-name which he had had as a slave, and was given the <i>nōmen</i> of his
-master with any <i>praenōmen</i> the latter assigned him. Thus, Andronicus,
-the slave of Marcus Livius Salinator, became when freed <i>Lūcius Līvius
-Andronīcus</i>, the individual name coming last as a sort of <i>cognōmen</i>.
-It happened naturally that the master's <i>praenōmen</i> was often given,
-especially to a favorite slave. The freedman of a woman took the name
-of her father, e.g., <i>Mārcus Līvius Augustae l Ismarus;</i> the letter
-<i>l</i> stands for <i>lībertus</i>, and was inserted in all formal documents.
-Of course the master might disregard the regular form and give the
-freedman any name he pleased. Thus, when Cicero manumitted his slaves
-Tiro and Dionysius he called the former in strict accord with custom
-<i>Mārcus Tullius Tīrō</i>, but to the latter he gave his own <i>praenōmen</i>
-and the <i>nōmen</i> of his friend Titus Pomponius Atticus, the new name
-being <i>Mārcus Pomponius Dionysius</i>. The individual names (Pharnaces,
-Dionysius, etc.) were dropped by the descendants of freedmen, who were
-anxious with good reason to hide all traces of their mean descent.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect60"><b>60</b></a></span>
-<b>Naturalized Citizens.</b>&mdash;When a foreigner was given the right of
-citizenship, he took a new name, which was arranged on much the same
-principles as have been explained in the cases of freedmen. His
-original name was retained as a sort of <i>cognōmen</i>, and before it were
-written the <i>praenōmen</i> that suited his fancy and the <i>nōmen</i> of the
-person, always a Roman citizen, to whom he owed his citizenship. The
-most familiar example is that of the Greek poet Archias, whom Cicero
-defended under the name of <i>Aulus Licinius Archiās</i> in the well-known
-oration. He had long been attached to the family of the Luculli and
-when he was made a citizen took as his <i>nōmen</i> that of his
-distinguished patron Lucius Licinius Lucullus; we do not know why he
-selected the first name Aulus. Another example is that of the Gaul
-mentioned by Caesar (B. G., I, 47), <i>Gāius Valerius Cabūrus</i>. He took
-his name from Caius Valerius Flaccus, the governor of Gaul at the time
-that he was given his citizenship. It is to this custom of taking the
-names of governors and generals that is due the frequent occurrence of
-the name Julius in Gaul, Pompeius in Spain, and Cornelius in Sicily.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap3"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<h4>MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 28-80; Voigt, 318, 449; Göll, II, 5 f.;
-Friedländer, I, 451 f.; Ramsay, 293 f., 477; Preston, 8 f.; Smith,
-<i>mātrimōnium;</i> Baumeister, 696 f.; Harper, <i>cōnūbium</i>, <i>mātrimōnium;</i>
-Lübker, 364; Pauly-Wissowa, <i>coēmptiō</i>, <i>cōnfarreātiō</i>, <i>cōnūbium</i>.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect61"><b>61</b></a></span>
-<b>Early Forms of Marriage.</b>&mdash;Polygamy was never practiced at Rome,
-and we are told that for five centuries after the founding of the city
-divorce was entirely unknown. Up to the time of the Servian
-constitution (date uncertain) the patricians were the only citizens
-and intermarried only with patricians and with members of surrounding
-communities having like social standing. The only form of marriage
-known to them was the stately religious ceremonial called, as will be
-explained hereafter, <i>cōnfarreātiō</i>. With the direct consent of the
-gods, with the <i>pontificēs</i> celebrating the solemn rites, in the
-presence of the accredited representatives of his <i>gēns</i>, the
-patrician took his wife from her father's family into his own (<a href="#sect28">§28</a>),
-to be a <i>māter familiās</i>, to rear him children who should conserve the
-family mysteries, perpetuate his ancient race, and extend the power of
-Rome. By this, the one legal marriage of the time, the wife passed <i>in
-manum virī</i>, and the husband acquired over her practically the same
-rights as he had over his own children (<a href="#sect35">§§35</a>, <a href="#sect36">36</a>) and other dependent
-members of his family. Such a marriage was said to be <i>cum conventiōne
-uxōris in manum virī</i> (<a href="#sect35">§35</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect62"><b>62</b></a></span>
-During this period, too, the free non-citizens (<a href="#sect177">§§177</a>, <a href="#sect178">178</a>), the
-plebeians, had been busy in marrying and giving in marriage. There is
-little doubt that their unions had been as sacred in their eyes, their
-family ties as strictly regarded and as pure, as those of the
-patricians, but these unions were unhallowed by the national gods and
-unrecognized by the civil law, simply because the plebeians were not
-yet citizens. Their form of marriage was called <i>ūsus</i>, and consisted
-essentially in the living together of the man and woman as husband and
-wife for a year, though there were, of course, conventional forms and
-observances, about which we know absolutely nothing. The plebeian
-husband might acquire the same rights over the person and property of
-his wife as the patrician, but the form of marriage did not in itself
-involve <i>manus</i>. The wife might remain a member of her father's family
-and retain such property as he allowed her (<a href="#sect33">§33</a>) by merely absenting
-herself from her husband for the space of a <i>trinoctium</i> each year. If
-she did this the marriage was <i>sine conventiōne in manum</i>, and the
-husband had no control over her property; if she did not, the marriage
-like that of the patricians was <i>cum conventiōne in manum</i>.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure10">
- <tr>
- <td width="243">
- <img src="images/figure010.jpg" alt="FIGURE 10. HADRIAN">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="243" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 10.
- H<small>ADRIAN</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect63"><b>63</b></a></span>
-At least as far back as the time of Servius goes another Roman
-form of marriage, also plebeian, though not so ancient as <i>ūsus</i>. It
-was called <i>coēmptiō</i> and was a fictitious sale, by which the <i>pater
-familiās</i> of the woman, or her guardian (<i>tūtor</i>) if she was <i>suī
-iūris</i>, transferred her to the man <i>mātrimōniī causā</i>. This form must
-have been a survival of the old custom of purchase and sale of wives,
-but we do not know when it was introduced among the Romans. It carried
-<i>manus</i> with it as a matter of course and seems to have been regarded
-socially as better form than <i>ūsus</i>. The two existed for centuries
-side by side, but <i>coēmptiō</i> survived <i>ūsus</i> as a form of marriage
-<i>cum conventiōne in manum</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect64"><b>64</b></a></span>
-<b>Ius Conubii.</b>&mdash;While the Servian constitution made the plebeians
-citizens and thereby legalized their forms of marriage, it did not
-give them the right of intermarriage with the patricians. Many of the
-plebeian families were hardly less ancient than the patricians, many
-were rich and powerful, but it was not until 445 <small>B.C.</small> that marriages
-between the two orders were formally sanctioned by the civil law. The
-objection on the part of the patricians was largely a religious one:
-The gods of the state were patrician gods, the auspices could be taken
-by patricians only, the marriages of patricians only were sanctioned
-by heaven. Their orators protested that the unions of the plebeians
-were no better than promiscuous intercourse, they were not <i>iūstae
-nūptiae</i> (<a href="#sect67">§67</a>); the plebeian wife was taken <i>in mātrimōnium</i>, she was
-at best an <i>uxor</i>, not a <i>māter familiās;</i> her offspring were
-"mother's children," not <i>patriciī</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect65"><b>65</b></a></span>
-Much of this was class exaggeration, but it is true that at this
-early date the <i>gēns</i> was not so highly valued by the plebeians as by
-the patricians, and that the plebeians assigned to cognates certain
-duties and privileges that devolved upon the patrician <i>gentīlēs</i>.
-With, the <i>iūs cōnūbiī</i> many of these points of difference
-disappeared. New conditions were fixed for <i>iūstae nūptiae;</i>
-<i>coēmptiō</i> by a sort of compromise became the usual form of marriage
-when one of the parties was a plebeian; and the stigma disappeared
-from the word <i>mātrimōnium</i>. On the other hand patrician women learned
-to understand the advantages of a marriage <i>sine conventiōne</i> and
-marriage with <i>manus</i> gradually became less frequent, the taking of
-the auspices before the ceremony came to be considered a mere form,
-and marriage began to lose its sacramental character, and with these
-changes came later the laxness in the marital relation and the freedom
-of divorce that seemed in the time of Augustus to threaten the very
-life of the commonwealth.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect66"><b>66</b></a></span>
-It is probable that by the time of Cicero marriage with <i>manus</i>
-was uncommon, and consequently that <i>cōnfarreātiō</i> and <i>coēmptiō</i> had
-gone out of general use. To a limited extent, however, the former was
-retained until Christian times, because certain priestly offices
-(<i>flāminēs maiōrēs</i> and <i>rēgēs sacrōrum</i>) could be filled only by
-persons whose parents had been married by the confarreate ceremony,
-the one sacramental form, and who had themselves been married by the
-same form. But so great became the reluctance of women to submit to
-<i>manus</i>, that in order to fill even these few priestly offices it was
-found necessary under Tiberius to eliminate <i>manus</i> from the
-confarreate ceremony.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect67"><b>67</b></a></span>
-<b>Nuptiae Iustae.</b>&mdash;There were certain conditions that had to be
-satisfied before a legal marriage could be contracted even by
-citizens. It was required:</p>
-
-<p>1. That the consent of both parties should be given, or of the <i>pater
-familiās</i> if one or both were <i>in potestāte</i>. Under Augustus it was
-provided that the <i>pater familiās</i> should not withhold his consent
-unless he could show valid reasons for doing so.</p>
-
-<p>2. That both parties should be <i>pūberēs;</i> there could be no marriage
-between children. Although no precise age was fixed by law, it is
-probable that fourteen and twelve were the lowest limit for the man
-and woman respectively.</p>
-
-<p>3. That both man and woman should be unmarried. Polygamy was never
-practiced at Rome.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect68"><b>68</b></a></span>
-4. That the parties should not be nearly related. The
-restrictions in this direction were fixed rather by public opinion
-than by law and varied greatly at different times, becoming gradually
-less severe. In general it may be said that marriage was absolutely
-forbidden between ascendants and descendants, between other cognates
-within the fourth degree (<a href="#sect25">§25</a>), and the nearer <i>adfīnēs</i> (<a href="#sect26">§26</a>). If the
-parties could satisfy these conditions they might be legally married,
-but distinctions were still made that affected the civil status of the
-children, although no doubt was cast upon their legitimacy or upon the
-moral character of their parents.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect69"><b>69</b></a></span>
-If the husband and wife were both Roman citizens, their marriage
-was called <i>iūstae nūptiae</i>, which we may translate "regular
-marriage," their children were <i>iūstī līberī</i> and were by birth <i>cīvēs
-optimō iūre</i>, "possessed of all civil rights."</p>
-
-<p>If but one of the parties was a Roman citizen and the other a member
-of a community having the <i>iūs cōnūbiī</i> but not the full <i>cīvitās</i>,
-the marriage was still called <i>iūstae nūptiae</i>, but the children took
-the civil standing of the father. This means that if the father was a
-citizen and the mother a foreigner, the children were citizens; but if
-the father was a foreigner and the mother a citizen, the children were
-foreigners (<i>peregrīnī</i>) with the father.</p>
-
-<p>But if either of the parties was without the <i>iūs cōnūbiī</i>, the
-marriage, though still legal, was called <i>nūptiae iniūstae</i> or
-<i>mātrimōnium iniūstum</i>, "an irregular marriage," and the children,
-though legitimate, took the civil position of the parent of lower
-degree. We seem to have something analogous to this in the loss of
-social standing which usually follows the marriage of a person with
-one of distinctly inferior position.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect70"><b>70</b></a></span>
-<b>Betrothals.</b>&mdash;Betrothal (<i>spōnsālia</i>) as a preliminary to marriage
-was considered good form but was not legally necessary and carried
-with it no obligations that could be enforced by law. In the
-<i>spōnsālia</i> the maiden was promised to the man as his bride with
-"words of style," that is, in solemn form. The promise was made, not
-by the maiden herself, but by her <i>pater familiās</i>, or by her <i>tūtor</i>
-if she was not <i>in potestāte</i>. In the same way, the promise was made
-to the man directly only in case he was <i>suī iūris</i>, otherwise to the
-Head of his House, who had asked for him the maiden in marriage. The
-"words of style" were probably something like this:</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Spondēsne Gāiam, tuam fīliam</i> (or if she was a ward: <i>Gāiam, Lūciī
-fīliam</i>), <i>mihi</i> (or <i>fīliō meō</i>) <i>uxōrem darī?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Dī bene vortant! Spondeō.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Dī bene vortant!</i>"</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect71"><b>71</b></a></span>
-At any rate the word <i>spondeō</i> was technically used of the
-promise, and the maiden was henceforth <i>spōnsa</i>. The person who made
-the promise had always the right to cancel it. This was usually done
-through an intermediary (<i>nūntius</i>), and hence the formal expression
-for breaking an engagement was <i>repudium renūntiāre</i>, or simply
-<i>renūntiāre</i>. While the contract was entirely one-sided, it should be
-noticed that a man was liable to <i>īnfāmia</i> if he formed two
-engagements at the same time, and that he could not recover any
-presents made with a view to a future marriage if he himself broke the
-engagement. Such presents were almost always made, and while we find
-that articles for personal use, the toilet, etc., were common, a ring
-was usually given. The ring was worn on the third finger of the left
-hand, because it was believed that a nerve ran directly from this
-finger to the heart. It was also usual for the <i>spōnsa</i> to make a
-present to her betrothed.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect72"><b>72</b></a></span>
-<b>The Dowry.</b>&mdash;It was a point of honor with the Romans, as it is now
-with some European nations, for the bride to bring to her husband a
-dowry (<i>dōs</i>). In the case of a girl <i>in potestāte</i> this would
-naturally be furnished by the Head of her House; in the case of one
-<i>suī iūris</i> it was furnished from her own property, or if she had none
-was contributed by her relatives. It seems that if they were reluctant
-she might by process of law compel her ascendants at least to furnish
-it. In early times, when marriage <i>cum conventiōne</i> prevailed, all the
-property brought by the bride became the property of her husband, or
-of his <i>pater familiās</i> (<a href="#sect35">§35</a>), but in later times, when <i>manus</i> was
-less common, and especially after divorce had become of frequent
-occurrence, a distinction was made. A part of the bride's possessions
-was reserved for her own exclusive use, and a part was made over to
-the groom under the technical name of <i>dōs</i>. The relative proportions
-varied, of course, with circumstances.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect73"><b>73</b></a></span>
-<b>Essential Forms.</b>&mdash;There were really no legal forms necessary for
-the solemnization of a marriage; there was no license to be procured
-from the civil authorities, the ceremonies simple or elaborate did not
-have to be performed by persons authorized by the state. The one thing
-necessary was the consent of both parties, if they were <i>suī iūris</i>,
-or of their <i>patrēs familiās</i>, if they were <i>in potestāte</i>. It has
-been already remarked (<a href="#sect67">§67, 1</a>) that the <i>pater familiās</i> could refuse
-his consent for valid reasons only; on the other hand, he could
-command the consent of persons subject to him. It is probable that
-parental and filial affection (<i>pietās</i>) made this hardship less
-rigorous than it now seems to us (<a href="#sect32">§§32</a>, <a href="#sect33">33</a>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure11">
- <tr>
- <td width="229">
- <img src="images/figure011.jpg" alt="FIGURE 11. ANTONINUS PIUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="229" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 11.
- A<small>NTONINUS</small> P<small>IUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect74"><b>74</b></a></span>
-But while this consent was the only condition for a legal
-marriage, it had to be shown by some act of personal union between the
-parties; that is, the marriage could not be entered into by letter or
-by the intervention of a third party. Such an overt act was the
-joining of hands (<i>dextrārum iūnctiō</i>) in the presence of witnesses,
-or the escorting of the bride to her husband's house, never omitted
-when the parties had any social standing, or in later times the
-signing of the marriage contract. It was never necessary to a valid
-marriage that the parties should live together as man and wife,
-though, as we have seen (<a href="#sect62">§62</a>), this living together of itself
-constituted a legal marriage.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect75"><b>75</b></a></span>
-<b>The Wedding Day.</b>&mdash;It will be noticed that superstition played an
-important part in the arrangements for a wedding two thousand years
-ago, as it does now. Especial pains had to be taken to secure a lucky
-day. The Kalends, Nones, and Ides of each month, and the day following
-each of them, were unlucky. So was all of May and the first half of
-June, on account of certain religious ceremonies observed in these
-months, the Argean offerings and the <i>Lemūria</i> in May and the <i>diēs
-religiōsī</i> connected with Vesta in June. Besides these the <i>diēs
-parentālēs</i>, February 13-21, and the days when the entrance to the
-lower world was supposed to be open, August 24, October 5, and
-November 8, were carefully avoided. One-third of the year, therefore,
-was absolutely barred. The great holidays, too, and these were legion,
-were avoided, not because they were unlucky, but because on these days
-friends and relatives were sure to have other engagements. Women
-marrying for the second time chose these very holidays to make their
-weddings less conspicuous.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect76"><b>76</b></a></span>
-<b>The Wedding Garments.</b>&mdash;On the eve of her wedding day the bride
-dedicated to the <i>Larēs</i> of her father's house her <i>bulla</i> (<a href="#sect99">§99</a>) and
-the <i>toga praetexta</i>, which married women did not wear, and also if
-she was not much over twelve years of age her childish playthings. For
-the sake of the omen she put on before going to sleep the <i>tunica
-rēcta</i>, or <i>rēgilla</i>, woven in one piece and falling to the feet. A
-very doubtful picture is shown in Rich under the word <i>rëcta</i>. It
-seems to have derived its name from having been woven in the
-old-fashioned way at an upright loom. This same tunic was worn at the
-wedding.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure12">
- <tr>
- <td width="646">
- <img src="images/figure012.jpg" alt="FIGURE 12. DRESSING THE BRIDE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="646" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 12.
- D<small>RESSING THE</small> B<small>RIDE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure13">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure013.jpg" alt="FIGURE 13. THE FLAMMEUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 13.
- T<small>HE</small> F<small>LAMMEUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect77"><b>77</b></a></span>
-On the morning of the wedding day the bride was dressed for the
-ceremony by her mother, and Roman poets show unusual tenderness as
-they describe her solicitude. There is a wall painting of such a
-scene, found at Pompeii and reproduced in Fig. 12. The chief article
-of dress was the <i>tunica rēgilla</i> already mentioned, which was
-fastened around the waist with a band of wool tied in the knot of
-Hercules (<i>nodus Herculāneus</i>), probably because Hercules was the
-guardian of wedded life. This knot the husband only was privileged to
-untie. Over the tunic was worn the bridal veil, the flame-colored veil
-(<i>flammeum</i>), shown in Fig. 13. So important was the veil of the bride
-that <i>nūbere</i>, "to veil one's self," is the regular word for "marry"
-when used of a woman.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect78"><b>78</b></a></span>
-Especial attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, but
-unfortunately we have no picture preserved to us to make its
-arrangement clear. We only know that it was divided into six locks by
-the point of a spear, probably a reminiscence of the ancient marriage
-by capture, and that these locks perhaps braided were kept in position
-by ribbons (<i>vittae</i>). The bride had also a wreath of flowers and
-sacred plants gathered by herself. The groom wore of course the toga
-and had a similar wreath of flowers on his head. He was accompanied to
-the home of the bride at the proper time by relatives, friends, and
-clients, who were bound to do him every honor on his wedding day.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect79"><b>79</b></a></span>
-<b>The Ceremony.</b>&mdash;The house of the bride's father, where the
-ceremony was performed, was decked with flowers, boughs of trees,
-bands of wool, and tapestries. The guests arrived before the hour of
-sunrise, and even then the omens had been already taken. In the
-ancient confarreate ceremony these were taken by the public augur, but
-in later times, no matter what the ceremony, the haruspices merely
-consulted the entrails of a sheep which had been killed in sacrifice.
-When the marriage ceremonies are described it must be remembered that
-only the consent was necessary (<a href="#sect73">§73</a>) with the act expressing the
-consent, and that all other forms and ceremonies were unessential and
-variable. Something depended upon the particular form used, but more
-upon the wealth and social position of the families interested. It is
-probable that most weddings were a good deal simpler than those
-described by our chief authorities.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect80"><b>80</b></a></span>
-After the omens had been pronounced favorable the bride and groom
-appeared in the atrium, the chief room, and the wedding began. This
-consisted of two parts:</p>
-
-<p>1. The ceremony proper, varying according to the form used
-(<i>cōnfarreātiō</i>, <i>coēmptiō</i>, or <i>ūsus</i>), the essential part being the
-consent before witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>2. The festivities, including the feast at the bride's home, the
-taking of the bride with a show of force from her mother's arms, the
-escort to her new home (the essential part), and her reception there.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure14">
- <tr>
- <td width="796">
- <img src="images/figure014.jpg" alt="FIGURE 14. A MARRIAGE SCENE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="796" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 14.
- A M<small>ARRIAGE</small> S<small>CENE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect81"><b>81</b></a></span>
-The confarreate ceremony began with the <i>dextrārum iūnctiō</i>. The
-bride and groom were brought together by the <i>prōnuba</i>, a matron
-married to her first husband, and joined hands in the presence of ten
-witnesses representing the ten <i>gentēs</i> of the <i>cūria</i>. These are
-shown on an ancient sarcophagus found at Naples (Fig. 14). Then
-followed the words of consent spoken by the bride: <i>Quandō tū Gāius,
-ego Gāia</i>. The formula was unchanged, no matter what the names of the
-bride and groom, and goes back to a time when <i>Gāius</i> was a <i>nōmen</i>,
-not a <i>praenōmen</i> (<a href="#sect55">§55</a>). It implied that the bride was actually
-entering the <i>gēns</i> of the groom (<a href="#sect23">§§23</a>, <a href="#sect28">28</a>, <a href="#sect35">35</a>), and was probably
-chosen for its lucky meaning (<a href="#sect44">§44</a>). Even in marriages <i>sine
-conventiōne</i> the old formula came to be used, its import having been
-lost in lapse of time. The bride and groom then took their places side
-by side at the left of the altar and facing it, sitting on stools
-covered with the pelt of the sheep slain for the sacrifice.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure15">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure015.jpg" alt="FIGURE 15. A CAMILLUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 15.
- A C<small>AMILLUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect82"><b>82</b></a></span>
-A bloodless offering was then made to Jupiter by the <i>Pontifex
-Maximus</i> and the <i>Flāmen Diālis</i>, consisting of the cake of spelt
-(<i>farreum lībum</i>) from which the <i>cōnfarreātiō</i> got its name. With the
-offering to Jupiter a prayer was recited by the Flamen to Juno as the
-goddess of marriage, and to Tellus, Picumnus, and Pilumnus, deities of
-the country and its fruits. The utensils necessary for the offering
-were carried in a covered basket (<i>cumerus</i>) by a boy called
-<i>camillus</i> (Fig. 15), whose parents must have both been living at the
-time (<i>patrīmus et mātrīmus</i>). Then followed the congratulations, the
-guests using the word <i>fēlīciter</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect83"><b>83</b></a></span>
-The <i>coēmptiō</i> began with the fictitious sale, carried out in the
-presence of no less than five witnesses. The purchase money
-represented by a single coin was laid in the scales held by a
-<i>lībripēns</i>. The scales, scaleholder, coin, and witnesses were all
-necessary for this kind of marriage. Then followed the <i>dextrārum
-iūnctiō</i> and the words of consent, borrowed, as has been said, from
-the confarreate ceremony. Originally the groom had asked the bride:
-<i>An sibi māter familiās esse vellet.</i> She assented, and put to him a
-similar question: <i>An sibi pater familiās esse vellet.</i> To this he too
-gave the answer "Yes." A prayer was then recited and sometimes perhaps
-a sacrifice offered, after which came the congratulations as in the
-other and more elaborate ceremony.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect84"><b>84</b></a></span>
-The third form, that is, the ceremonies preliminary to <i>ūsus</i>,
-probably admitted of more variation than either of the others, but no
-description has come down to us. We may be sure that the hands were
-clasped, the words of consent spoken, and congratulations offered, but
-we know of no special customs or usages. It was almost necessary for
-the three forms to get more or less alike in the course of time,
-though the cake of spelt could not be borrowed from the confarreate
-ceremony by either of the others, or the scales and their holder from
-the ceremony of <i>coēmptiō</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect85"><b>85</b></a></span>
-<b>The Wedding Feast.</b>&mdash;After the conclusion of the ceremony came the
-wedding feast (<i>cēna nūptiālis</i>) lasting until evening. There can be
-no doubt that this was regularly given at the house of the bride's
-father and that the few cases when we know that it was given at the
-groom's house were exceptional and due to special circumstances which
-might cause a similar change to-day. The feast seems to have concluded
-with the distribution among the guests of pieces of the wedding cake
-(<i>mustāceum</i>), which was made of meal steeped in must (<a href="#sect296">§296</a>) and
-served on bay leaves. There came to be so much extravagance at these
-feasts and at the <i>repōtia</i> mentioned below (<a href="#sect89">§89</a>) that under Augustus
-it was proposed to limit their cost by law to one thousand sesterces
-($50), a piece of sumptuary legislation as vain as such restrictions
-have usually proved to be.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect86"><b>86</b></a></span>
-<b>The Bridal Procession.</b>&mdash;After the wedding feast the bride was
-formally taken to her husband's house. This ceremony was called
-<i>dēductiō</i>, and as it was essential to the validity of the marriage
-(<a href="#sect74">§74</a>) it was never omitted. It was a public function, that is, any one
-might join the procession and take part in the merriment that
-distinguished it, and we are told that persons of rank did not scruple
-to wait in the street to see the bride. As evening approached the
-procession was formed before the house with torch bearers and flute
-players at its head. When all was ready the marriage hymn
-(<i>hymenaeus</i>) was sung and the groom took the bride with a show of
-force from the arms of her mother. The Romans saw in this custom a
-reminiscence of the rape of the Sabines, but it probably goes far back
-beyond the founding of Rome to the custom of marriage by capture that
-prevailed among many peoples. The bride then took her place in the
-procession attended by three boys, <i>patrīmī et mātrīmī</i> (<a href="#sect82">§82</a>); two of
-these walked by her side, holding each a hand, while the other carried
-before her the wedding torch of white thorn (<i>spīna alba</i>). Behind the
-bride were carried the distaff and spindle, emblems of domestic life.
-The <i>camillus</i> with his <i>cumerus</i> also walked in the procession.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect87"><b>87</b></a></span>
-During the march were sung the <i>versūs Fescennīnī</i>, abounding in
-coarse jests and personalities. The crowd also shouted the ancient
-marriage cry, the significance of which the Romans themselves did not
-understand. We find it in at least five forms, all variations of the
-name Talassius or Talassio, who was probably a Sabine divinity, though
-his functions are unknown. Livy derives it from the supposed name of a
-senator in the time of Romulus. The bride dropped on the way one of
-three coins which she carried as an offering to the <i>Larēs
-compitālēs;</i> of the other two she gave one to the groom as an emblem
-of the dowry she brought him, and one to the <i>Larēs</i> of his house. The
-groom meanwhile scattered nuts through the crowd. This is explained by
-Catullus as a token of his having become a man and having put away
-childish things (<a href="#sect103">§103</a>), but the nuts were rather a symbol of
-fruitfulness. The custom survives in the throwing of rice in modern
-times.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect88"><b>88</b></a></span>
-When the procession reached the house, the bride wound the door
-posts with bands of wool, probably a symbol of her own work as
-mistress of the household, and anointed the door with oil and fat,
-emblems of plenty. She was then lifted carefully over the threshold,
-in order to avoid the chance of so bad an omen as a slip of the foot
-on entering the house for the first time. Others, however, see in the
-custom another survival of marriage by capture. She then pronounced
-again the words of consent: <i>Ubi tū Gāius, ego Gāia</i>, and the doors
-were closed against the general crowd; only the invited guests entered
-with the pair.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure16">
- <tr>
- <td width="652">
- <img src="images/figure016.jpg" alt="FIGURE 16. THE MARRIAGE COUCH">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="652" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 16.
- T<small>HE</small> M<small>ARRIAGE</small>
- C<small>OUCH</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect89"><b>89</b></a></span>
-The husband met the wife in the atrium and offered her fire and
-water in token of the life they were to live together and her part in
-the home. Upon the hearth was ready the wood for a fire, and this the
-bride kindled with the marriage torch which had been carried before
-her. The torch was afterwards thrown among the guests to be scrambled
-for as a lucky possession. A prayer was then recited by the bride and
-she was placed by the <i>prōnuba</i> on the <i>lectus geniālis</i> (Fig. 16),
-which always stood on the wedding night in the atrium. Here it
-afterwards remained as a piece of ornamental furniture only. On the
-next day was given in the new home the second wedding feast
-(<i>repōtia</i>) to the friends and relatives, and at this feast the bride
-made her first offering to the gods as a <i>mātrōna</i>. A series of feasts
-followed, given in honor of the newly wedded pair by those in whose
-social circles they moved.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect90"><b>90</b></a></span>
-<b>The Position of Women.</b>&mdash;With her marriage the Roman woman reached
-a position unattained by the women of any other nation in the ancient
-world. No other people held its women in so high respect; nowhere else
-did they exert so strong and beneficent an influence. In her own house
-the Roman matron was absolute mistress. She directed its economy and
-supervised the tasks of the household slaves but did no menial work
-herself. She was her children's nurse, and conducted their early
-training and education. Her daughters were fitted under their mother's
-eye to be mistresses of similar homes, and remained her closest
-companions until she herself had dressed them for the bridal and their
-husbands had torn them from her arms. She was her husband's helpmeet
-in business as well as in household affairs, and he often consulted
-her on affairs of state. She was not confined at home to a set of
-so-called women's apartments, as were her sisters in Greece; the whole
-house was hers. She received her husband's guests and sat at table
-with them. Even when subject to the <i>manus</i> of her husband the
-restraint was so tempered by law and custom (<a href="#sect36">§36</a>) that she could
-hardly have been chafed by the fetters which had been forged with her
-own consent (<a href="#sect73">§73</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect91"><b>91</b></a></span>
-Out of the house the matron's dress (<i>stola mātrōnālis</i>, <a href="#sect259">§259</a>)
-secured for her the most profound respect. Men made way for her in the
-street; she had a place at the public games, at the theaters, and at
-the great religious ceremonies of state. She could give testimony in
-the courts, and until late in the Republic might even appear as an
-advocate. Her birthday was sacredly observed and made a joyous
-occasion by the members of her household, and the people as a whole
-celebrated the <i>Mātrōnālia</i>, the great festival on the first of March,
-and gave presents to their wives and mothers. Finally, if she came of
-a noble family, she might be honored, after she had passed away, with
-a public eulogy, delivered from the <i>rostra</i> in the forum.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect92"><b>92</b></a></span>
-It must be admitted that the education of women was not carried
-far at Rome, and that their accomplishments were few, and rather
-useful and homely than elegant. But the Roman women spoke the purest
-and best Latin known in the highest and most cultivated circles, and
-so far as accomplishments were concerned their husbands fared no
-better. Respectable women in Greece were allowed no education at all.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect93"><b>93</b></a></span>
-It must be admitted, too, that a great change took place in the
-last years of the Republic. With the laxness of the family life, the
-freedom of divorce, and the inflow of wealth and extravagance, the
-purity and dignity of the Roman matron declined, as had before
-declined the manhood and the strength of her father and her husband.
-It must be remembered, however, that ancient writers did not dwell
-upon certain subjects that are favorites with our own. The simple joys
-of childhood and domestic life, home, the praises of sister, wife, and
-mother may not have been too sacred for the poet and the essayist of
-Rome, but the essayist and the poet did not make them their themes.
-The mother of Horace must have been a singularly gifted woman, but she
-is never mentioned by her son. The descriptions of domestic life,
-therefore, that have come down to us are either from Greek sources, or
-are selected from precisely those circles where fashion, profligacy,
-and impurity made easy the work of the satirist. It is, therefore,
-safe to say that the pictures painted for us in the verse of Catullus
-and Juvenal, for example, are not true of Roman women as a class in
-the times of which they write. The strong, pure woman of the early day
-must have had many to imitate her virtues in the darkest times of the
-Empire. There were mothers then, as well as in the times of the
-Gracchi; there were wives as noble as the wife of Marcus Brutus.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap4"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-<h4>CHILDREN AND EDUCATION</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 80-134; Voigt, 322 f., 397 f., 455 f.; Göll,
-"Gallus," II, 65-113; Friedländer, I, 456 f., III, 376 f.; Ramsay, 475
-f.; Smith, <i>lūdus litterārius;</i> Harper, <i>education;</i> Baumeister, 237,
-1588 f.; Schreiber, Pl. 79, 82, 89, 90; Lübker, <i>Erziehung</i>.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect94"><b>94</b></a></span>
-<b>Legal Status.</b>&mdash;The position of the children in the <i>familia</i> has
-been already explained (<a href="#sect31">§§31</a>, <a href="#sect32">32</a>). It has been shown that in the eyes
-of the law they were little better than the chattels of the Head of
-the House. It rested with him to grant them the right to live; all
-that they earned was his; they married at his bidding, and either
-remained under his <i>potestās</i> or passed under another no less severe.
-It has also been suggested that custom (<a href="#sect32">§32</a>) and <i>pietās</i> (<a href="#sect73">§73</a>) had
-made this condition less rigorous than it seems to us.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect95"><b>95</b></a></span>
-<b>Susceptio.</b>&mdash;The power of the <i>pater familiās</i> was displayed
-immediately after the birth of the child. By invariable custom it was
-laid upon the ground at his feet. If he raised (<i>tollere</i>,
-<i>suscipere</i>) it in his arms, he acknowledged it as his own by the act
-(<i>susceptiō</i>) and admitted it to all the rights and privileges that
-membership in a Roman family implied. If he refused to do so, the
-child became an outcast, without family, without the protection of the
-spirits of the dead (<a href="#sect27">§27</a>), utterly friendless and forsaken. The
-disposal of the child did not ordinarily call for any act of downright
-murder, such as was contemplated in the case of Romulus and Remus and
-was afterwards forbidden by Romulus the King (<a href="#sect32">§32</a>). The child was
-simply "exposed" (<i>expōnere</i>), that is, taken by a slave from the
-house and left on the highway to live or to die. When we consider the
-slender chance for life that the newborn child has with even the
-tenderest care, the result of this exposure will not seem doubtful.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect96"><b>96</b></a></span>
-But there was a chance for life, and the mother, powerless to
-interpose in her infant's behalf, often sent with it some trinkets or
-trifling articles of jewelry that would serve perhaps to identify it,
-if it should live. Even if the child was found in time by persons
-disposed to save its life, its fate might be worse than death. Slavery
-was the least of the evils to which it was exposed. Such foundlings
-often fell into the hands of those whose trade was beggary and who
-trained children for the same profession. In the time of the Empire,
-at least, they cruelly maimed and deformed their victims, in order to
-excite more readily the compassion of those to whom they appealed for
-alms. Such things are still done in southern Europe.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect97"><b>97</b></a></span>
-<b>Dies Lustricus.</b>&mdash;The first eight days of the life of the
-acknowledged child were called <i>prīmordia</i>, and were the occasion of
-various religious ceremonies. During this time the child was called
-<i>pūpus</i> (<a href="#sect55">§55</a>), although to weak and puny children the individual name
-might be given soon after birth. On the ninth day in the case of a
-boy, on the eighth in the case of a girl, the <i>praenōmen</i> (<a href="#sect43">§43</a>) was
-given with due solemnity. A sacrifice was offered and the ceremony of
-purification was performed, which gave the day its name, <i>diēs
-lūstricus</i>, although it was also called the <i>diēs nōminum</i> and
-<i>nōminālia</i>. These ceremonies seem to have been private; that is, it
-can not be shown that there was any taking of the child to a
-<i>templum</i>, as there was among the Jews, or any enrollment of the name
-upon an official list. In the case of the boy the registering of the
-name on the list of citizens may have occurred at the time of putting
-on the <i>toga virīlis</i> (<a href="#sect127">§127</a>).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure17">
- <tr>
- <td width="616">
- <img src="images/figure017.jpg" alt="FIGURE 17. CREPUNDIA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="616" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 17.
- C<small>REPUNDIA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect98"><b>98</b></a></span>
-The <i>diēs lūstricus</i> was, however, a time of rejoicing and
-congratulation among the relatives and friends, and these together
-with the household slaves presented the child with little metal toys
-or ornaments in the form of flowers, miniature axes and swords, and
-especially figures shaped like a half-moon (<i>lūnulae</i>), etc. These,
-called collectively <i>crepundia</i>, were strung together and worn around
-the neck and over the breast (Fig. 17). They served in the first place
-as playthings to keep the child amused, hence the name "rattles," from
-<i>crepō</i>. Besides, they were a protection against witchcraft or the
-evil eye (<i>fascinātiō</i>), especially the <i>lūnulae</i>. More than this,
-they were a means of identification in the case of lost or stolen
-children, and for this reason Terence calls them <i>monumenta</i>. Such
-were the trinkets sometimes left with an abandoned child (<a href="#sect96">§96</a>), their
-value depending, of course, upon the material of which they were made.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures18and19">
- <tr>
- <td width="181">
- <img src="images/figure018.jpg" alt="FIGURE 18. THE BULLA">
- </td>
- <td width="398">
- <img src="images/figure019.jpg" alt="FIGURE 19. GIRL'S NECKLACE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="181" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 18.
- T<small>HE</small> B<small>ULLA</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="398" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 19.
- G<small>IRL'S</small> N<small>ECKLACE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect99"><b>99</b></a></span>
-<b>The Bulla.</b>&mdash;But of more significance than these was the <i>bulla
-aurea</i>, which the father hung around the child's neck on this day, if
-he had not done so at the time of the <i>susceptiō</i>. It consisted of two
-concave pieces of gold, like a watch case (Fig. 18), fastened together
-by a wide spring of the same metal and containing an amulet as a
-protection against <i>fascinātiō</i>. It was hung around the neck by a
-chain or cord and worn upon the breast. The <i>bulla</i> came originally
-from Etruria,<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small> and for a long time the children of patricians only
-were allowed to wear those of gold, the plebeians contenting
-themselves with an imitation made of leather, hung on a leathern
-thong. In the course of time the distinction ceased to be observed, as
-we have seen such distinctions die out in the use of names and in the
-marriage ceremonies, and by Cicero's time the <i>bulla aurea</i> might be
-worn by the child of any freeborn citizen. The choice of material
-depended rather upon the wealth and generosity of the father than upon
-his social position. The girl wore her <i>bulla</i> (Fig. 19) until the eve
-of her wedding day, laying it aside with other childish things, as we
-have seen (<a href="#sect76">§76</a>); the boy wore his until he assumed the <i>toga virīlis</i>,
-when it was dedicated to the <i>Larēs</i> of the house and carefully
-preserved. If the boy became a successful general and won the coveted
-honor of a triumph, he always wore his <i>bulla</i> in the triumphal
-procession as a protection against envy.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> The influence of Etruria upon Rome faded before that of
-Greece (<a href="#sect5">§5</a>), but from Etruria the Romans got the art of divination,
-certain forms of architecture, the insignia of royalty, and the games
-of the circus and the amphitheater.</small></blockquote>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure20">
- <tr>
- <td width="259">
- <img src="images/figure020.jpg" alt="FIGURE 20. CHILD IN LITTER">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="259" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 20.
- C<small>HILD IN</small> L<small>ITTER</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect100"><b>100</b></a></span>
-<b>Nurses.</b>&mdash;The mother was the child's nurse (<a href="#sect90">§90</a>) not only in the
-days of the Republic but even into the Empire, the Romans having
-heeded the teachings of nature in this respect longer than any other
-civilized nation of the old world. Of course it was not always
-possible then, as it is not always possible now, for the mother to
-nurse her children, and then her place was taken by a slave
-(<i>nūtrīx</i>), to whom the name <i>māter</i> seems to have been given out of
-affection. In the ordinary care of the children, too, the mother was
-assisted, but only assisted, by slaves. Under the eye of the mother,
-slaves washed and dressed the child, told it stories, sang it
-lullabies, and rocked it to sleep on the arm or in a cradle. None of
-these nursery stories have come down to us, but Quintilian tells us
-that Aesop's fables resembled them. For a picture of a cradle see
-Smith under the words <i>cūnae</i> and <i>cūnābula;</i> in Rich under <i>cūnāria</i>
-is a picture of a nurse giving a baby its bath. The place of the
-modern baby carriage was taken by a litter (<i>lectīca</i>), and a terra
-cotta figure has come down to us (Fig. 20) representing a child
-carried in such a litter by two men.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect101"><b>101</b></a></span>
-After the Punic wars (<a href="#sect5">§5</a>) it became customary for the well-to-do
-to select for the child's nurse a Greek slave, that the child might
-acquire the Greek language as naturally as its own. In Latin
-literature are many passages that testify to the affection felt for
-each other by nurse and child, an affection that lasted on into
-manhood and womanhood. It was a common thing for the young wife to
-take with her into her new home, as her adviser and confidant, the
-nurse who had watched over her in infancy. Faithfulness on the part of
-such slaves was also frequently repaid by manumission.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure21">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure021.jpg" alt="FIGURE 21. JOINTED DOLL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 21.
- J<small>OINTED</small> D<small>OLL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect102"><b>102</b></a></span>
-<b>Playthings.</b>&mdash;But little is known of the playthings, pets, and
-games of Roman children, because as has been said (<a href="#sect93">§93</a>) domestic life
-was not a favorite theme of Roman writers and no books were then
-written especially for the young. Still there are scattered references
-in literature from which we can learn something, and more is known
-from monumental sources (<a href="#sect10">§10</a>). This evidence shows that playthings
-were numerous and of very many kinds. The <i>crepundia</i> have been
-mentioned already (<a href="#sect98">§98</a>), and these miniature tools and implements seem
-to have been very common. Dolls there were, too, and some of these
-have come down to us, though we can not always distinguish between
-statuettes and genuine playthings. Some were made of clay, others of
-wax, and even jointed arms and legs were not unknown (Fig. 21). Little
-wagons and carts were also common (Schreiber, LXXXII, 10), and Horace
-speaks of hitching mice to toys of this sort. There are numerous
-pictures and descriptions of children spinning tops, making them
-revolve by blows of a whiplash, as in Europe nowadays. Hoops also were
-a favorite plaything, driven with a stick and having pieces of metal
-fastened to them to warn people of their approach. Boys walked on
-stilts and played with balls (Fig. 22), too, but as men enjoyed this
-sport as well, it may be deferred until we reach the subject of
-amusements (<a href="#sect318">§318</a>).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure22">
- <tr>
- <td width="615">
- <img src="images/figure022.jpg" alt="FIGURE 22. CHILDREN PLAYING BALL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="615" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 22.
- C<small>HILDREN</small> P<small>LAYING</small>
- B<small>ALL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure23">
- <tr>
- <td width="406">
- <img src="images/figure023.jpg" alt="FIGURE 23. BOY AND GOOSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="406" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 23.
- B<small>OY AND</small> G<small>OOSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect103"><b>103</b></a></span>
-<b>Pets and Games.</b>&mdash;Pets were even more common then than now, and
-then as now the dog was easily first in the affections of children
-(Schreiber, LXXXII, 6). The cat, on the other hand, was hardly known
-until very late in the history of Greece and Rome. Birds were very
-commonly made pets, and besides the doves and pigeons which are
-familiar to us as well, we are told that ducks, crows, and quail were
-pets of children. So also were geese, odd as this seems to us, and the
-statue of a child struggling with a goose as large as himself is well
-known (Fig. 23). Monkeys were known, but could not have been common.
-Mice have been mentioned already. Games of many kinds were played by
-children, but we can only guess at the nature of most of them, as we
-have hardly any formal descriptions. There were games corresponding to
-our Odd or Even, Blindman's Buff, Hide and Seek, Jackstones (<a href="#sect320">§320</a>),
-and Seesaw (Schreiber, LXXIX and LXXX). Pebbles and nuts were used in
-games something like our marbles, and there were board-games also. To
-these may be added for boys riding, swimming, and wrestling, although
-these were taken too seriously, perhaps, to be called games and
-belonged rather to their training for the duties of citizenship.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect104"><b>104</b></a></span>
-<b>Home Training.</b>&mdash;The training of the children was conducted by
-the father and mother in person. More stress was laid upon the moral
-than upon the intellectual development: reverence for the gods,
-respect for the law, unquestioning and instant obedience to authority,
-truthfulness, and self-reliance were the most important lessons for
-the child to learn. Much of this came from the constant association of
-the children with their parents, which was the characteristic feature
-of the home training of the Romans as compared with that of other
-peoples of the time. The children sat at table with their elders or
-helped to serve the meals. Until the age of seven both boys and girls
-had their mother for their teacher. From her they learned to speak
-correctly their native tongue, and Latin rhetoricians tell us that the
-best Latin was spoken by the noble women of the great houses of Rome.
-The mother taught them the elements of reading and writing and as much
-of the simpler operations of arithmetic as children so young could
-learn.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect105"><b>105</b></a></span>
-From about the age of seven the boy passed under the care of
-regular teachers, but the girl remained her mother's constant
-companion. Her schooling was necessarily cut short, because the Roman
-girl became a wife so young (<a href="#sect67">§67</a>), and there were things to learn in
-the meantime that books do not teach. From her mother she learned to
-spin and weave and sew: even Augustus wore garments woven by his wife.
-By her mother she was initiated into all the mysteries of household
-economy and fitted to take her place as the mistress of a household of
-her own, to be a Roman <i>mātrōna</i>, the most dignified position to which
-a woman could aspire in the ancient world (<a href="#sect90">§§90</a>, <a href="#sect91">91</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect106"><b>106</b></a></span>
-The boy, except during the hours of school, was equally his
-father's companion. If the father was a farmer, as all Romans were in
-earlier times, the boy helped in the fields and learned to plow and
-plant and reap. If the father was a man of high position and lived in
-the capital, the boy stood by him in his hall as he received his
-guests, learned to know their faces, names, and rank, and acquired a
-practical knowledge of politics and affairs of state. If the father
-was a senator, the boy, in the earlier days only it is true,
-accompanied him to the senate house to hear the debates and listen to
-the great orators of the time; and the son could always go with him to
-the forum when he was an advocate or concerned in a public trial.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect107"><b>107</b></a></span>
-Then as every Roman was bred a soldier the father trained the
-son in the use of arms and in the various military exercises, as well
-as in the manly sports of riding, swimming, wrestling, and boxing. In
-these exercises strength and agility were kept in view, rather than
-the grace of movement and symmetrical development of form, on which
-the Greeks laid so much stress. On great occasions, too, when the
-cabinets in the atrium were opened and the wax busts of their
-ancestors displayed, the boy and girl of noble family were always
-present and learned the history of the family of which they were a
-part, and with it the history of Rome.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect108"><b>108</b></a></span>
-<b>Schools.</b>&mdash;The actual instruction given to the children by the
-father would vary with his own education and at best be subject to all
-sorts of interruptions due to his private business or his public
-duties. We find that this embarrassment was appreciated in very early
-times, and that it was customary for a <i>pater familiās</i> who happened
-to have among his slaves one competent to give the needed instruction,
-to turn over to him the actual teaching of the children. It must be
-remembered that slaves taken in war were often much better educated
-than their Roman masters. Not all households, however, would include a
-competent teacher, and it would seem only natural for the fortunate
-owner of such a slave to receive into his house at fixed hours of the
-day the children of his friends and neighbors to be taught together
-with his own.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect109"><b>109</b></a></span>
-For this privilege he might charge a fee for his own benefit, as
-we are told that Cato actually did, or he might allow the slave to
-retain as his <i>pecūlium</i> (<a href="#sect33">§33</a>) the little presents given him by his
-pupils in lieu of direct payment. The next step, one taken in times
-too early to be accurately fixed, was to select for the school a more
-convenient place than a private house, one that was central and easily
-accessible, and to receive as pupils all who could pay the modest fee
-that was demanded. To these schools girls as well as boys were
-admitted, but for the reason given in <a href="#sect105">§105</a> the girls had little time
-for studying more than their mothers could teach them, and those who
-did carry their studies further came usually of families who preferred
-to educate their daughters in the privacy of their own homes and could
-afford to do so. The exceptions to this rule were so few, that from
-this point we may consider the education of boys alone.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure24">
- <tr>
- <td width="355">
- <img src="images/figure024.jpg" alt="FIGURE 24. WAXED TABLETS AND STILUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="355" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 24.
- W<small>AXED</small> T<small>ABLETS AND</small>
- S<small>TILUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect110"><b>110</b></a></span>
-<b>Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools.</b>&mdash;In these elementary
-schools the only subjects taught were reading, writing, and
-arithmetic. In the first, great stress was laid upon the
-pronunciation: the sounds were easy enough but quantity was hard to
-master. The teacher pronounced first syllable by syllable, then the
-separate words, and finally the whole sentence, the pupils pronouncing
-after him at the tops of their voices. In the teaching of writing, wax
-tablets (Fig. 24) were employed, much as slates were a generation ago.
-The teacher first traced with a <i>stilus</i> the letters that served as a
-copy, then he guided the pupil's hand with his own until the child had
-learned to form the letters independently. When some dexterity had
-been acquired, the pupil was taught to use the reed pen and write with
-ink upon papyrus. For practice, sheets were used that had had one side
-written upon already for more important purposes. If any books at all
-were used in these schools, the pupils must have made them for
-themselves by writing from the teacher's dictation.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure25">
- <tr>
- <td width="426">
- <img src="images/figure025.jpg" alt="FIGURE 25. ABACUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="426" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 25.
- A<small>BACUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect111"><b>111</b></a></span>
-In arithmetic mental calculation was emphasized, but the pupil
-was taught to use his fingers in a very elaborate way that is not now
-thoroughly understood, and harder sums were worked out with the help
-of the reckoning board (<i>abacus</i>, Fig. 25). In addition to all this,
-attention was paid to the training of the memory, and the pupil was
-made to learn by heart all sorts of wise and pithy sayings and
-especially the Twelve Tables of the Law. These last became a regular
-fetich in the schools, and even when the language in which they were
-written had become obsolete pupils continued to learn and recite them.
-Cicero had learned them in his boyhood, but within his lifetime they
-were dropped from the schools.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect112"><b>112</b></a></span>
-<b>Grammar Schools.</b>&mdash;Among the results of contact with other
-peoples that followed the Punic wars (<a href="#sect5">§5</a>) was the extension of
-education at Rome beyond these elementary and strictly utilitarian
-subjects. The Greek language came to be generally learned (<a href="#sect101">§101</a>) and
-Greek ideas of education were in some degree adopted. Schools were
-established in which the central thing was the study of the Greek
-poets, and these schools we may call Grammar Schools because the
-teacher was called <i>grammaticus</i>. Homer was long the universal
-text-book, and students were not only taught the language, but were
-instructed in the matters of geography, mythology, antiquities,
-history, and ethics suggested by the portions of the text which they
-read. The range of instruction and its value depended entirely upon
-the teacher, as does such instruction to-day, but it was at best
-fragmentary and disconnected. There was no systematic study of any of
-these subjects, not even of history, despite its interest and
-practical value to a world-ranging people like the Romans.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect113"><b>113</b></a></span>
-The Latin language was soon made the subject of similar study,
-at first in separate schools. The lack of Latin poetry to work upon,
-for prose authors were not yet made text-books, led to the translation
-by a Greek slave, Livius Andronicus (3d century <small>B.C.</small>), of the Odyssey
-of Homer into Latin Saturnian verses. From this translation, rude as
-the surviving fragments show it to have been, dates the beginning of
-Latin literature, and it was not until this literature had furnished
-poets like Terence, Vergil, and Horace, that the rough Saturnians of
-Livius Andronicus disappeared from the schools.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect114"><b>114</b></a></span>
-In these Grammar Schools, Greek as well as Latin, great stress
-seems to have been laid upon elocution, a thing less surprising when
-we consider the importance of oratory under the Republic. The teacher
-had the pupils pronounce after him first the words, then the clauses,
-and finally the complete sentences. The elements of rhetoric were
-taught in some of these schools, but technical instruction in the
-subject was not given until the establishment at a much later period
-of special schools of rhetoric. In the Grammar Schools were also
-taught music and geometry, and these made complete the ordinary
-education of boyhood.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect115"><b>115</b></a></span>
-<b>Schools of Rhetoric.</b>&mdash;The Schools of Rhetoric were formed on
-Greek lines and conducted by Greek teachers. They were not a part of
-the regular system of education, but corresponded more nearly to our
-colleges, being frequented by persons beyond the age of boyhood and
-with rare exceptions, of the higher classes only. In these schools the
-study of prose authors was begun, but the main thing was the practice
-of composition. This was begun in its simplest form, the narrative
-(<i>nārrātiō</i>), and continued step by step until the end in view was
-reached, the practice of public speaking (<i>dēclāmātiō</i>). One of the
-intermediate forms was the <i>suāsōria</i>, in which the students took
-sides on some disputed point of history and supported their views by
-argument. A favorite exercise also was the writing of a speech to be
-put in the mouth of some person famous in legend or history. How
-effective these could be made is seen in the speeches inserted in
-their histories by Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect116"><b>116</b></a></span>
-<b>Travel.</b>&mdash;In the case of persons of the noblest and most wealthy
-families, or those whose talents in early manhood promised a brilliant
-future, the training of the schools was sure to be supplemented by a
-period of travel and residence abroad. Greece, Rhodes, and Asia Minor
-were the most frequently visited, whether the young Roman cared for
-the scenes of great historical events and the rich collections of
-works of literature and art, or merely enjoyed the natural charms and
-social splendors of the gay and luxurious capitals of the east. For
-the purposes of serious study Athens offered the greatest attractions
-and might almost have been called the university of Rome, in this
-respect standing to Italy much as Germany now stands to the United
-States. It must be remembered, however, that the Roman who studied in
-Athens was as familiar with Greek as with his native Latin and for
-this reason was much better prepared to profit by the lectures he
-heard than is the average American who now studies on the continent.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect117"><b>117</b></a></span>
-<b>Apprenticeship.</b>&mdash;There were certain matters, a knowledge of
-which was essential to a successful public life, for training in which
-no provision was made by the Roman system of education. Such matters
-were jurisprudence, administration and diplomacy, and war. It was
-customary, therefore, for the young citizen to attach himself for a
-time to some older man, eminent in these lines or in some one of them,
-in order to gain an opportunity for observation and practical
-experience in the performance of duties that would sooner or later
-devolve upon him. So Cicero learned the civil law under Quintus Mucius
-Scaevola, the most eminent jurist of the time, and in later years the
-young Marcus Coelius Rufus in turn served the same voluntary
-apprenticeship (<i>tīrōcinium forī</i>) under Cicero. This arrangement was
-not only very advantageous to the young men but was considered very
-honorable for those under whom they studied.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect118"><b>118</b></a></span>
-In the same way the governors of provinces and generals in the
-field were attended by a voluntary staff (<i>cohors</i>) of young men, whom
-they had invited to accompany them at state expense for personal or
-political reasons. These <i>tīrōnēs</i> became familiar in this way
-(<i>tīrōcinium mīlitiae</i>) with the practical side of administration and
-war, while at the same time they were relieved of many of the
-hardships and dangers suffered by those, less fortunate, who had to
-rise from the ranks. It was this staff of inexperienced young men who
-hid in their tents or went back to Rome when Caesar determined to meet
-Ariovistus in battle, although some of them, no doubt, made gallant
-soldiers and wise commanders afterward.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect119"><b>119</b></a></span>
-<b>Remarks on the Schools.</b>&mdash;Having considered the possibilities in
-the way of education and training within the reach of the more favored
-few, we may now go back to the Elementary and Grammar Schools to get
-an idea of the actual school life of the ordinary Roman boy. While
-these were not public schools in our sense of the word, that is, while
-they were not supported or supervised by the state, and while
-attendance was not compulsory, it is nevertheless true that the
-elements at least of education, a knowledge of the three R's, were
-more generally diffused among the Romans than among any other people
-of the ancient world. The schools were distinctly democratic in this,
-that they were open to all classes, that the fees were little more
-than nominal, that so far as concerned discipline and the treatment of
-the pupils no distinction was made between the children of the
-humblest and of the most lordly families.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure26">
- <tr>
- <td width="666">
- <img src="images/figure026.jpg" alt="FIGURE 26. A ROMAN SCHOOL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="666" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 26.
- A R<small>OMAN</small> S<small>CHOOL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure27">
- <tr>
- <td width="400">
- <img src="images/figure027.jpg" alt="FIGURE 27. CARICATURE OF A SCHOOL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="400" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 27.
- C<small>ARICATURE OF A</small> S<small>CHOOL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect120"><b>120</b></a></span>
-The school was usually in a <i>pergula</i>, a shedlike attachment to
-a public building, roofed against the sun and rain, but open at the
-sides and furnished merely with rough benches without backs. The
-children were exposed, therefore, to all the distractions of the busy
-town life around them, and the people living near were in turn annoyed
-by the noisy recitations (<a href="#sect110">§110</a>) and even noisier punishments. A
-picture of a schoolroom from a wall painting in Herculaneum is shown
-in Fig. 26 and an ancient caricature, by a schoolboy probably, in Fig.
-27.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect121"><b>121</b></a></span>
-<b>The Teacher.</b>&mdash;The teacher was originally a slave, perhaps
-usually a freedman. The position was not an honorable one, though this
-depended upon the character of the teacher himself, and while the
-pupils feared the master they seem to have had little respect for him.
-The pay he received was a mere pittance, varying from three dollars a
-year for the elementary teacher (<i>litterātor</i>, <i>magister litterārum</i>)
-to five or six times that sum for a <i>grammaticus</i> (<a href="#sect112">§112</a>). In addition
-to the fee, the pupils were expected to bring the master from time to
-time little presents, a custom persisting probably from the time when
-these presents were his only reward (<a href="#sect109">§109</a>). The fees varied, however,
-with the qualifications of the master, and some whose reputations were
-established and whose schools were "fashionable" charged no fees at
-all, but left the amount to be paid (<i>honōrārium</i>) to the generosity
-of their patrons.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect122"><b>122</b></a></span>
-<b>Schooldays and Holidays.</b>&mdash;The schoolday began before sunrise, as
-did all the work at Rome on account of the heat in the middle of the
-day (cf. <a href="#sect79">§79</a>). The students brought candles by which to study until it
-became light, and the roof was soon black with the grime and smoke.
-The session lasted until time for the noonday luncheon and siesta
-(<a href="#sect302">§302</a>), and was resumed in the afternoon. We do not know definitely
-that there was any fixed length for the school-year. We know that it
-regularly began on the 24th of March and that there were numerous
-holidays, notably the Saturnalia in December and the Quinquatria from
-the 19th to the 23rd of March. The great religious festivals, too,
-especially those celebrated with games, would naturally be observed by
-the schools, and apparently the market days (<i>nūndinae</i>) were also
-holidays. It was until lately supposed that there was no school from
-the last of June until the first of November, but this view rested
-upon an incorrect interpretation of certain passages of Horace and
-Martial which are now otherwise explained. It is certain, however,
-that the children of wealthy parents would be absent from Rome during
-the hot season, and this would at least cut down the attendance in
-some of the schools and might perhaps close them altogether.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure28">
- <tr>
- <td width="392">
- <img src="images/figure028.jpg" alt="FIGURE 28. PAEDAGOGUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="392" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 28.
- P<small>AEDAGOGUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect123"><b>123</b></a></span>
-<b>The Paedagogus.</b>&mdash;The boy of good family was always attended by a
-trustworthy slave (<i>paedagōgus</i>), who accompanied him to school,
-remained with him during the sessions, and saw him safely home again
-when school was out. If the boy had wealthy parents, he might have,
-besides, one or more slaves (<i>pedisequī</i>) to carry his satchel and
-tablets. The <i>paedagōgus</i> was usually an elderly man, selected for his
-good character and expected to keep the boy out of all harm, moral as
-well as physical. He was not a teacher, despite the meaning of the
-English derivative, except that after the learning of Greek became
-general a Greek slave was usually selected for the position in order
-that the boy might not forget what he had learned from his nurse
-(<a href="#sect101">§101</a>). The scope of his regular duties is clearly shown by the Latin
-words used sometimes instead of <i>paedagōgus:</i> <i>comes</i>, <i>custōs</i>,
-<i>monitor</i>, and <i>rēctor</i>. He was addressed by his ward as <i>dominus</i>,
-and seems to have had the right to compel obedience by mild
-punishments (Fig. 28). His duties ceased when the boy assumed the toga
-of manhood, but the same warm affection often continued between them
-as between the woman and her nurse (<a href="#sect101">§101</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect124"><b>124</b></a></span>
-<b>Discipline.</b>&mdash;The discipline seems to have been really Roman in
-its severity, if we may judge from the picture of a school above
-referred to (<a href="#sect120">§120</a>) and by the grim references to the rod and ferule in
-Juvenal and Martial. Horace has given to his teacher, Orbilius, a
-deathless fame by the adjective <i>plāgōsus</i>. From Nepos we learn that
-then as now teachers might have appealed to the natural emulation
-between well-bred boys, and we know that prizes, too, were offered.
-Perhaps we may think the ferule well deserved when we read of the
-schoolboy's trick immortalized by Persius. The passage (III, 44 f.) is
-worth quoting in full:</p>
-<table align="center" summary="quote1">
- <tr><td><i>Saepe oculōs, meminī, tangēbam parvus olīvō,<br>
- Grandia sī nōllem moritūrī verba Cātōnis<br>
- Discere et īnsānō multum laudanda magistrō!</i><small><small><sup>2</sup></small></small></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>2</sup></small> "Often, I remember, as a small boy I used to give my eyes
-a touch with oil, if I did not want to learn Cato's grand dying
-speech, sure to be rapturously applauded by my wrong-headed master."</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect125"><b>125</b></a></span>
-<b>End of Childhood.</b>&mdash;There was no special ceremony to mark the
-passing of girlhood into womanhood, but for the boy the attainment of
-his majority was marked by the laying aside of the crimson-bordered
-<i>toga praetexta</i> and the putting on of the pure white <i>toga virīlis</i>.
-There was no fixed year, corresponding to the twenty-first with us, in
-which the <i>puer</i> became <i>iuvenis;</i> something depended upon the
-physical and intellectual development of the boy himself, something
-upon the will or caprice of his <i>pater familiās</i>, more perhaps upon
-the time in which he lived. We may say generally, however, that the
-<i>toga virīlis</i> was assumed between the fourteenth and seventeenth
-years, the later age belonging to the earlier time when citizenship
-carried with it more responsibility than under the Empire and demanded
-a greater maturity.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect126"><b>126</b></a></span>
-For the classical period we may put the age required at sixteen,
-and if we add to this the <i>tīrōcinium</i> (<a href="#sect117">§117</a>), which followed the
-donning of the garb of manhood, we shall have the seventeen years
-after the expiration of which the citizen had been liable in ancient
-times to military duty. The day was even less precisely fixed. We
-should expect the birthday at the beginning of the seventeenth year,
-but it seems to have been the more usual, but by no means invariable,
-custom to select for the ceremony the feast of Liber which happened to
-come nearest to the seventeenth birthday. This feast was celebrated on
-the 17th of March and was called the <i>līberālia</i>. No more appropriate
-time could have been selected to suggest the freer life of manhood
-upon which the boy was now about to enter.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect127"><b>127</b></a></span>
-<b>The Liberalia.</b>&mdash;The festivities of the great day began in the
-early morning, when the boy laid before the Lares of his house the
-<i>bulla</i> (<a href="#sect99">§99</a>) and <i>toga praetexta</i>, called together the <i>īnsignia
-pueritiae</i>. A sacrifice was then offered, and the <i>bulla</i> was hung
-over the hearth, not to be taken down and worn again except on some
-occasion when the man who had worn it as a boy should be in danger of
-the envy of men and gods. The boy then dressed himself in the <i>tunica
-rēcta</i> (<a href="#sect76">§76</a>), having one or two crimson stripes if he was the son of a
-senator or a knight, and over this was carefully draped the <i>toga
-virīlis</i>. This was also called in contrast to the gayer garb of
-boyhood the <i>toga pūra</i>, and with reference to the freedom of manhood
-the <i>toga lībera</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect128"><b>128</b></a></span>
-Then began the procession to the forum. The father had gathered
-his slaves and freedmen and clients, had been careful to notify his
-relatives and friends, and had used all his personal and political
-influence to make the escort of his son as numerous and imposing as
-possible. If the ceremony took place on the <i>līberālia</i>, the forum was
-sure to be crowded with similar processions of rejoicing friends. Here
-were extended the formal congratulations, and the name of one more
-citizen was added to the official list. An offering was then made in
-the temple of Liber on the Capitoline Hill, and the day ended with a
-feast at the father's house.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap5"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-<h4>DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 135-212; Göll, II, 114-212; Guhl and Koner,
-764-772; Friedländer, I, 404 f.; Ramsay, 124 f.; Pauly-Wissowa,
-<i>clientēs;</i> Smith, <i>servus</i>, <i>lībertus</i>, <i>cliēns</i>, <i>clientēla</i>,
-<i>hospitium;</i> Harper, <i>servus</i>, <i>lībertī</i>, <i>clientēs;</i> Lübker, <i>servī</i>,
-<i>lībertīnus</i>, <i>hospitium</i>, <i>patrōnus</i>.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect129"><b>129</b></a></span>
-<b>Growth of Slavery.</b>&mdash;So far as we may learn from history and
-legend, slavery was always known at Rome. In the early days of the
-Republic, however, the farm was the only place where slaves were
-employed. The fact that most of the Romans were farmers and that they
-and their free laborers were constantly called from the fields to
-fight the battles of their country led to a gradual increase in the
-number of slaves, until they were far more numerous than the free
-laborers who worked for hire. We can not tell when the custom became
-general of employing slaves in personal service and in industrial
-pursuits, but it was one of the grossest evils resulting from Rome's
-foreign conquests. In the last century of the Republic all manual
-labor, almost all trades, and certain of what we now call professions
-were in the hands of slaves. Not only were free laborers unable to
-compete with slaves, but every occupation in which slaves engaged was
-degraded in the eyes of freemen, until all labor was looked upon as
-dishonorable. The small farms were gradually absorbed in the vast
-estates of the rich, the sturdy yeomanry of Rome disappeared, and by
-the time of Augustus the freeborn citizens of Italy who were not
-soldiers were either slaveholders themselves or the idle proletariate
-of the cities.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect130"><b>130</b></a></span>
-Ruinous as were the economic results of slavery, the moral
-effects were no less destructive. It is to slavery more than to
-anything else that is due the change in the character of the Romans in
-the first century of the Empire. With slaves swarming in their houses,
-ministering to their luxury, pandering to their appetites, directing
-their amusements, managing their business, and even educating their
-children, it is no wonder that the old Roman virtues of simplicity,
-frugality, and temperance declined and perished. And with the passing
-of Roman manhood into oriental effeminacy began the passing of Roman
-sway over the civilized world.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect131"><b>131</b></a></span>
-<b>Numbers of Slaves.</b>&mdash;We have almost no testimony as to the number
-of slaves in Italy, none even as to the ratio of the free to the
-servile population. We have indirect evidence enough, however, to make
-good the statements in the preceding paragraphs. That slaves were few
-in early times is shown by their names (<a href="#sect58">§58</a>): if it had been usual for
-a master to have more than one slave, such names as <i>Mārcipor</i>, and
-Ōlipor would not have sufficed to distinguish them. An idea of the
-rapid increase after the Punic wars may be gained from the number of
-captives sold into slavery by successful generals. Scipio Aemilianus
-is said to have disposed in this way of 60,000 Carthaginians, Marius
-of 140,000 Cimbri, Aemilius Paulus of 150,000 Greeks, Pompeius and
-Caesar together of more than a million of Asiatics and Gauls.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect132"><b>132</b></a></span>
-The very insurrections of the slaves, unsuccessful as they
-always were, also testify to their overwhelming numbers. Of the two in
-Sicily, the first lasted from 134 to 132 <small>B.C.</small>, and the second from 102
-to 98; the last in spite of the fact that at the close of the first
-the consul Rupilius had crucified 20,000, whom he had taken alive, as
-a warning to others to submit in silence to their servitude. Spartacus
-defied the armies of Rome for two years, and in the decisive battle
-with Crassus (71 <small>B.C.</small>) left 60,000 dead upon the field. Cicero's
-orations against Catiline show clearly that it was the calling out of
-the hordes of slaves by the conspirators that was most dreaded in the
-city.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect133"><b>133</b></a></span>
-Of the number under the Empire we may get some idea from more
-direct testimony. Horace tells us that ten slaves were as few as a
-gentleman in even moderate circumstances could afford to own. He
-himself had two in town and eight on his little Sabine farm, and he
-was a poor man and his father had been a slave. Tacitus tells us of a
-city prefect who had four hundred slaves in his mansion. Pliny says
-that one Caius Caecilius Claudius Isodorus left at his death over four
-thousand slaves. Athenaeus (170-230 <small>A.D.</small>) gives us to understand that
-individuals owned as many as ten thousand and twenty thousand. The
-fact that house slaves were commonly divided into "groups of ten"
-(<i>decuriae</i>) points in the same direction.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect134"><b>134</b></a></span>
-<b>Sources of Supply.</b>&mdash;Under the Republic the largest number of
-slaves brought to Rome and offered there for sale were captives taken
-in war, and an idea of the magnitude of this source of supply has
-already been given (<a href="#sect131">§131</a>). The captives were sold as soon as possible
-after they were taken, in order that the general might be relieved of
-the trouble and risk of feeding and guarding such large numbers of men
-in a hostile country. The sale was conducted by a quaestor, and the
-purchasers were the wholesale slave dealers that always followed an
-army along with other traders and peddlers. The spear (<i>hasta</i>), which
-was always the sign of a sale conducted under public authority, was
-set up in the ground to mark the place, and the captives had garlands
-on their heads as did the victims offered in sacrifice. Hence the
-expression <i>sub hastā</i> and <i>sub corōnā vēnīre</i> came to have
-practically the same meaning.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect135"><b>135</b></a></span>
-The wholesale dealers (<i>mangōnēs</i>) assembled their purchases in
-convenient depots, and when sufficient numbers had been collected
-marched them to Rome, in chains and under guard, to be sold to local
-dealers or to private individuals. The slaves obtained in this way
-were usually men and likely to be physically sound and strong for the
-simple reason that they had been soldiers. On the other hand they were
-likely to prove intractable and ungovernable, and many preferred even
-suicide to servitude. It sometimes happened, of course, that the
-inhabitants of towns and whole districts were sold into slavery
-without distinction of age or sex.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect136"><b>136</b></a></span>
-Under the Empire large numbers came to Rome as articles of
-ordinary commerce, and Rome became one of the great slave marts of the
-world. The slaves were brought from all the provinces of the Empire:
-blacks from Egypt; swift runners from Numidia; grammarians from
-Alexandria; from Cyrene those who made the best house servants; from
-Greece handsome boys and girls, and well-trained scribes, accountants,
-amanuenses, and even teachers; from Epirus and Illyria experienced
-shepherds; from Cappadocia the most patient and enduring laborers.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect137"><b>137</b></a></span>
-Some of these were captives taken in the petty wars that Rome
-was always waging in defense of her boundaries, but these were
-numerically insignificant. Others had been slaves in the countries
-from which they came, and merely exchanged old masters for new when
-they were sent to Rome. Others still were the victims of slave
-hunters, who preyed on weak and defenseless peoples two thousand years
-ago much as they are said to do in Africa in our own time. These
-man-hunts were not prevented, though perhaps not openly countenanced,
-by the Roman governors.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect138"><b>138</b></a></span>
-A less important source of supply was the natural increase in
-the slave population as men and women formed permanent connections
-with each other, called <i>contubernia</i>. This became of general
-importance only late in the Empire, because in earlier times,
-especially during the period of conquest, it was found cheaper to buy
-than to breed slaves. To the individual owner, however, the increase
-in his slaves in this way was a matter of as much interest as the
-increase of his flocks and herds. Such slaves would be more valuable
-at maturity, for they would be acclimated and less liable to disease,
-and besides would be trained from childhood in the performance of the
-very tasks for which they were destined. They would also have more
-love for their home and for their master's family, for his children
-were often their playmates. It was only natural, therefore, for slaves
-born in the <i>familia</i> to have a claim upon their master's confidence
-and consideration that others lacked, and it is not surprising that
-they were proverbially pert and forward. They were called <i>vernae</i> as
-long as they remained the property of their first master. The
-derivation of the word is not certain, but it is probable that it has
-the same origin as Vesta and means something like "born in the house."</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure29">
- <tr>
- <td width="415">
- <img src="images/figure029.jpg" alt="FIGURE 29. SALE OF A SLAVE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="415" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 29.
- S<small>ALE OF A</small> S<small>LAVE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect139"><b>139</b></a></span>
-<b>Sales of Slaves.</b>&mdash;Slave dealers usually offered their wares at
-public auction sales (Fig. 29). These were under the supervision of
-the aediles, who appointed the place and made rules and regulations to
-govern them. A tax was imposed on imported slaves and they were
-offered for sale with their feet whitened with chalk; those from the
-east had also their ears bored, a common sign of slavery among
-oriental peoples. As bids were asked for each slave he was made to
-mount a stone or platform, corresponding to the "block" familiar to
-the readers of our own history. From his neck hung a scroll
-(<i>titulus</i>), setting forth his character and serving as a warrant for
-the purchaser. If the slave had defects not made known in this warrant
-the vendor was bound to take him back within six months or make good
-the loss to the buyer. The chief items in the <i>titulus</i> were the age
-and nationality of the slave, and his freedom from such common defects
-as chronic ill-health, especially epilepsy, and tendencies to
-thievery, running away, and suicide. In spite of the guarantee the
-purchaser took care to examine the slaves as closely as possible. For
-this reason they were commonly stripped, made to move around, handled
-freely by the purchaser, and even examined by physicians. If no
-warrant was given by the dealer, a cap (<i>pilleus</i>) was put on the
-slave's head at the time of the sale and the purchaser took all risks.
-The dealer might also offer the slaves at private sale, and this was
-the rule in the case of all of unusual value and especially of marked
-personal beauty. These were not exposed to the gaze of the crowd, but
-were offered to those only who were likely to purchase. Private sales
-and exchanges between citizens without the intervention of a regular
-dealer were as common as the sales of other property, and no stigma
-was attached to them. The trade of the <i>mangōnēs</i>, on the other hand,
-was looked upon as utterly disreputable, but it was very lucrative and
-great fortunes were often made in it. Vilest of all the dealers were
-the <i>lēnōnēs</i>, who kept and sold slaves for immoral purposes only.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure30">
- <tr>
- <td width="411">
- <img src="images/figure030.jpg" alt="FIGURE 30. THE GAUL AND HIS WIFE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="411" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 30.
- T<small>HE</small> G<small>AUL AND</small>
- H<small>IS</small> W<small>IFE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect140"><b>140</b></a></span>
-<b>Prices of Slaves.</b>&mdash;The prices of slaves varied as did the prices
-of other commodities. Much depended upon the times, the supply and
-demand, the characteristics and accomplishments of the particular
-slave, and the requirements of the purchaser. Captives bought upon the
-battlefield rarely brought more than nominal prices, because the sale
-was in a measure forced (<a href="#sect134">§134</a>), and because the dealer was sure to
-lose a large part of his purchase on the long march home through
-disease, fatigue, and especially suicide. There is a famous piece of
-statuary representing a hopeless Gaul killing his wife and then
-himself (Fig. 30). We are told that Lucullus once sold slaves in his
-camp at an average price of eighty cents each. In Rome male slaves
-varied in value from $100, paid for common laborers in the time of
-Horace, to $28,000 paid by Marcus Scaurus for an accomplished
-grammarian. Handsome boys, well trained and educated, sold for as much
-as $4,000. Very high prices were also paid for handsome and
-accomplished girls. The music girls in Plautus and Terence cost their
-lovers from $500 to $700, but girls of the lowest class sold for as
-little as $25. It seems strange to us that slaves were matched in size
-and color as carefully as horses are now, and that a well-matched pair
-of boys would bring a much larger sum when sold together than when
-sold separately.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect141"><b>141</b></a></span>
-<b>Public and Private Slaves.</b>&mdash;Slaves were called <i>servī pūblicī</i>
-and <i>servī prīvātī</i> according as they were owned by the state or by
-individuals. The condition of the former was considered the more
-desirable: they were not so likely to be sold, were not worked so
-hard, and were not exposed to the whims of a capricious master. They
-were employed to take care of the public buildings and as servants of
-the magistrates and priests. The quaestors and aediles had great
-numbers of them in their service, and they were drilled as a corps of
-firemen to serve at night under the <i>triumvirī nocturnī</i>. Others were
-employed as lictors, jailers, executioners, etc. The number of public
-slaves while considerable in itself was inconsiderable as compared
-with that of those in private service.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect142"><b>142</b></a></span>
-<b>Private Slaves.</b>&mdash;Private slaves either were employed in the
-personal service of their master and his family or were kept for gain.
-The former, known as the <i>familia urbāna</i>, will be described later.
-The latter may be classified according as they were kept for hire or
-employed in the business enterprises of their master. Of these last
-the most important as well as the oldest (<a href="#sect129">§129</a>) class was that of the
-farm laborers (<i>familia rūstica</i>). Of the others, engaged in all sorts
-of industries, it may be remarked that it was considered more
-honorable for a master to employ his slaves in enterprises of his own
-than to hire them out to others. At the same time slaves could always
-be hired for any desired purpose in Rome or any other city.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect143"><b>143</b></a></span>
-<b>Industrial Employment.</b>&mdash;It must be remembered that there were
-practically no freeborn laborers left in the last century of the
-Republic (<a href="#sect129">§129</a>), and that much work was then done by hand that is now
-done by machinery. In work of this sort were employed armies of slaves
-fit only for unskilled labor: porters for the transportation of
-materials and merchandise, stevedores for the lading and discharging
-of vessels, men who handled the spade, pickax, and crowbar, men of
-great physical strength but of little else to make them worth their
-keep. Above these came artisans, mechanics, and skilled workmen of
-every kind: smiths, carpenters, bricklayers, masons, seamen, etc. The
-merchants and shopkeepers required assistants, and so did the millers
-and bakers, the dealers in wool and leather, the keepers of lodging
-houses and restaurants, all who helped to supply the countless wants
-of a great city. Even the professions, as we should call them, were
-largely in the hands of slaves. Books were multiplied by slaves. The
-artists who carved wood and stone, designed furniture, laid mosaics,
-painted pictures, and decorated the walls and ceilings of public and
-private buildings were slaves. So were the musicians and the acrobats,
-actors and gladiators who amused the people at the public games. So
-too, as we have seen (<a href="#sect121">§121</a>), were many of the teachers in the schools,
-and physicians were usually slaves.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect144"><b>144</b></a></span>
-And slaves did not merely perform these various functions under
-the direction of their master or of the employer to whom he had hired
-them for the time. Many of them were themselves captains of industry.
-When a slave showed executive ability as well as technical knowledge,
-it was common enough for his master to furnish him with the necessary
-capital to carry on independently the business or profession which he
-understood. In this way slaves were often the managers of estates, of
-banks, of commercial enterprises, though these might take them far
-beyond the reach of their masters' observation, even into foreign
-countries. Sometimes such a slave was expected to pay the master
-annually a fixed sum out of the proceeds of the business; sometimes he
-was allowed to keep for himself a certain share of the profits;
-sometimes he was merely required to repay the sum advanced with
-interest from the time he had received it. In all cases, however, his
-industry and intelligence were stimulated by the hope of acquiring
-sufficient means from the venture to purchase his freedom and
-eventually make the business his own.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect145"><b>145</b></a></span>
-<b>The Familia Rustica.</b>&mdash;Under this name are comprised the slaves
-that were employed upon the vast estates that long before the end of
-the Republic had supplanted the small farms of the earlier day. The
-very name points at this change, for it implies that the estate was no
-longer the only home of the master. He had become a landlord, living
-in the capital and visiting his lands only occasionally for pleasure
-or for business. The estates may, therefore, be divided into two
-classes: country seats for pleasure and farms or ranches for profit.
-The former were selected with great care, the purchaser having regard
-to their proximity to the city or other resorts of fashion, their
-healthfulness, and the natural beauty of their scenery. They were
-maintained upon the most extravagant scale. There were villas and
-pleasure grounds, parks, game preserves, fish ponds and artificial
-lakes, everything that ministered to open air luxury. Great numbers of
-slaves were required to keep these places in order, and many of them
-were slaves of the highest class: landscape gardeners, experts in the
-culture of fruits and flowers, experts even in the breeding and
-keeping of the birds, game, and fish, of which the Romans were
-inordinately fond. These had under them assistants and laborers of
-every sort, and all were subject to the authority of a superintendent
-or steward (<i>vīlicus</i>), who had been put in charge of the estate by
-the master.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect146"><b>146</b></a></span>
-<b>Farm Slaves.</b>&mdash;But the name <i>familia rūstica</i> is more
-characteristically used of the drudges upon the farms, because the
-slaves employed upon the country seats were more directly in the
-personal service of the master and can hardly be said to have been
-kept for profit. The raising of grain for the market had long ceased
-to be profitable, but various industries had taken its place upon the
-farms. Wine and oil had become the most important products of the
-soil, and vineyards and olive orchards were found wherever climate and
-other conditions were favorable. Cattle and swine were raised in
-countless numbers, the former more for draft purposes and the products
-of the dairy than for beef. Sheep were kept for the wool, and woolen
-garments were worn by the rich and poor alike. Cheese was made in
-large quantities, all the larger because butter was unknown. The
-keeping of bees was an important industry, because honey served, so
-far as it could, the purposes for which sugar is used in modern times.
-Besides these things that we are even now accustomed to associate with
-farming, there were others that are now looked upon as distinct and
-separate businesses. Of these the most important, perhaps, as it was
-undoubtedly the most laborious, was the quarrying of stone; another
-was the cutting of timber and working it up into rough lumber, and
-finally the preparing of sand for the use of the builder. This last
-was of much greater importance relatively then than now, on account of
-the extensive use of concrete at Rome.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect147"><b>147</b></a></span>
-In some of these tasks intelligence and skill were required as
-they are to-day, but in many of them the most necessary qualifications
-were strength and endurance, as the slaves took the place of much of
-the machinery of modern times. This was especially true of the men
-employed in the quarries, who were usually of the rudest and most
-ungovernable class, and were worked in chains by day and housed in
-dungeons by night, as convicts have been housed and worked in much
-later times.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect148"><b>148</b></a></span>
-<b>The Vilicus.</b>&mdash;The management of such an estate was also
-intrusted to a <i>vīlicus</i> (<a href="#sect145">§145</a>), who was proverbially a hard
-taskmaster, simply because his hopes of freedom depended upon the
-amount of profits he could turn into his master's coffers at the end
-of the year. His task was no easy one. Besides planning for and
-overseeing the gangs of slaves already mentioned, he had under his
-charge another body of slaves only less numerous, employed in
-providing for the wants of the others. Everything necessary for the
-farm was produced or manufactured on the farm. Enough grain was raised
-for food, and this grain was ground in the farm mills and baked in the
-farm ovens by millers and bakers who were slaves on the farm. The task
-of turning the mill was usually given to a horse or mule, but slaves
-were often made to do the grinding as a punishment. Wool was carded,
-spun, and woven into cloth, and this cloth was made into clothes by
-the female slaves under the eye of the steward's consort, the
-<i>vīlica</i>. Buildings were erected, and the tools and implements
-necessary for the work of the farm were made and repaired. These
-things required a number of carpenters, smiths, and masons, though
-they were not necessarily workmen of the highest class. It was the
-touchstone of a good <i>vīlicus</i> to keep his men always busy, and it is
-to be understood that the slaves were alternately plowmen and reapers,
-vinedressers and treaders of the grapes, perhaps even quarrymen and
-lumbermen, according to the season of the year and the place of their
-toiling.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect149"><b>149</b></a></span>
-<b>The Familia Urbana.</b>&mdash;The number of slaves kept by the wealthy
-Roman in his city mansion was measured not by his needs, but by the
-demands of fashion and his means. In the early days a sort of butler
-(<i>ātriēnsis</i>), or major domo, had relieved the master of his household
-cares, had done the buying, had kept the accounts, had seen that the
-house and furniture were in order, and had looked after the few
-servants who did the actual work. Even under the Republic all this was
-changed. Other slaves, the <i>prōcūrātor</i> and <i>dispēnsātor</i>, relieved
-the <i>ātriēnsis</i> of the purchasing of the supplies and the keeping of
-the accounts, and left to him merely the supervision of the house and
-its furniture. The duties of the slaves under him were, in the same
-way, distributed among a number many times greater. Every part of the
-house had its special staff of servants, often so numerous as to be
-distributed into <i>decuriae</i> (<a href="#sect133">§133</a>), with a separate superintendent for
-each division: one for the kitchen, another for the dining-rooms,
-another for the bedrooms, etc.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect150"><b>150</b></a></span>
-The very entrance door had assigned to it its special slave
-(<i>ōstiārius</i> or <i>iānitor</i>), who was often chained to it like a
-watchdog, in order to keep him literally at his post. And the duties
-of the several sets were again divided and subdivided, each slave
-having some one office to perform, and only one. The names of the
-various functionaries of the kitchen, the dining-rooms, and the
-bedchambers are too numerous to mention, but an idea of the complexity
-of the service may be gained from the number of attendants that
-assisted the master and mistress with their toilets. The former had
-his <i>ōrnātor</i>, <i>tōnsor</i>, and <i>calceātor</i> (who cared for the feet); the
-latter her hairdressers (<i>ciniflōnēs</i> or <i>cinerāriī</i>) and <i>ōrnātrīx;</i>
-and besides these each had no less than three or four more to assist
-with the bath. The children, too, had each his or her own attendants,
-beginning with the <i>nūtrix</i>, and continuing in the case of the boy
-with the <i>paedagōgus</i> and <i>pedisequī</i> (<a href="#sect123">§123</a>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure31">
- <tr>
- <td width="297">
- <img src="images/figure031.jpg" alt="FIGURE 31. LECTICA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="297" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 31.
- L<small>ECTICA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect151"><b>151</b></a></span>
-When the master or mistress left the house a numerous retinue
-was deemed necessary. If they walked, slaves went before to clear the
-way (<i>anteambulōnēs</i>), and pages and lackeys followed carrying wraps
-or the sunshade and fan of the mistress, and ready to perform any
-little service that might be necessary. The master was always
-accompanied out of the house by his <i>nōmenclātor</i>, who prompted him in
-case he had forgotten the name of any one who greeted him. If they did
-not walk, they were carried in litters (<i>lectīcae</i>, Fig. 31),
-something like sedan chairs. The bearers were strong men, by
-preference Syrians or Cappadocians (<a href="#sect136">§136</a>), all carefully matched in
-size (<a href="#sect140">§140</a>) and dressed in gorgeous liveries. As each member of the
-household had his own litter and bearers, this one class of slaves
-made an important item in the family budget. And even when they rode
-in this way the same attendants accompanied them as when they walked.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect152"><b>152</b></a></span>
-When the master dined at the house of a friend his slaves
-attended him as far as the door at least. Some remained with him to
-care for his sandals, and others (<i>adversitōrēs</i>) returned at the
-appointed hour to see him home. A journey out of the city was a more
-serious matter and called for more pomp and display. In addition to
-the horses and mules that drew the carts of those who rode, there were
-mounted outriders and beasts of burden loaded with baggage and
-supplies. Numerous slaves followed on foot, and a band of gladiators
-not infrequently acted as escort and bodyguard. It is not too much to
-say that the ordinary train of a wealthy traveler included scores,
-perhaps hundreds, of slaves.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect153"><b>153</b></a></span>
-Among the <i>familia urbāna</i> must be numbered also those who
-furnished amusement and entertainment for the master and his guests,
-especially during and after meals. There were musicians and readers,
-and for persons of less refined tastes, dancers, jesters, dwarfs, and
-even misshapen freaks. Under the Empire little children were kept for
-the same purpose.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect154"><b>154</b></a></span>
-Lastly may be mentioned the slaves of the highest class, the
-confidential assistants of the master, the amanuenses who wrote his
-letters, the secretaries who kept his accounts, and the agents through
-whom he collected his income, audited the reports of his stewards and
-managers, made his investments, and transacted all sorts of business
-matters. The greater the luxury and extravagance of the house, the
-more the master would need these trained and experienced men to
-relieve him of cares which he detested, and by their fidelity and
-skill to make possible the gratification of his tastes and passions.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect155"><b>155</b></a></span>
-Such a staff as has been described belonged, of course, to a
-wealthy and fashionable man. Persons with more good sense had only
-such slaves as could be profitably employed. Atticus, the friend of
-Cicero, a man of sufficient wealth and social position to defy the
-demands of fashion, kept in his service only <i>vernae</i> (<a href="#sect138">§138</a>), and had
-them so carefully trained that the meanest could read and write for
-him. Cicero, on the other hand, could not think it good form to have a
-slave do more than one kind of work, and Cicero was not to be
-considered a rich man.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect156"><b>156</b></a></span>
-<b>Legal Status of Slaves.</b>&mdash;The power of the master over the slave,
-called <i>dominium</i> (<a href="#sect37">§37</a>), was absolute. He could assign him the most
-laborious and degrading tasks, punish him even unto death at his sole
-discretion, sell him, and kill him (or turn him out in the street to
-die) when age or illness had made him incapable of labor. Slaves were
-mere chattels in the eyes of the law, like oxen or horses. They could
-not hold property, they could not make contracts, they could testify
-in the courts only on the rack, they could not marry. The free person
-<i>in potestāte</i> was little better off legally (<a href="#sect31">§31</a>), but there were two
-important differences between the son, for example, and the slave. The
-son was relieved of the <i>potestās</i> on the death of the <i>pater
-familiās</i> (<a href="#sect34">§34</a>), but the death of the master did not make the slave
-free. Again, the condition of the son was ameliorated by <i>pietās</i>
-(<a href="#sect73">§73</a>) and public opinion (<a href="#sect32">§§32</a>, <a href="#sect33">33</a>), but there was no <i>pietās</i> for the
-slave and public opinion hardly operated in his behalf. It did enable
-him to hold as his own his scanty savings (<a href="#sect162">§162</a>), and it gave a sort
-of sanction to the permanent unions of male and female slaves called
-<i>contubernium</i>, but in other respects it did little for his benefit.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect157"><b>157</b></a></span>
-Under the Empire various laws were passed that seemed to
-recognize the slave as a person, not a thing: it was forbidden to sell
-him for the purpose of fighting with wild beasts in the amphitheater;
-it was provided that the slave should not be put to death by the
-master simply because he was too old or too ill to work, and that a
-slave "exposed" (<a href="#sect95">§95</a>) should become free by the act; at last the
-master was forbidden to kill the slave at all without due process of
-law. As a matter of fact these laws were very generally disregarded,
-much as are our laws for the prevention of cruelty to animals, and it
-may be said that it was only the influence of Christianity that at
-last changed the condition of the slave for the better.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect158"><b>158</b></a></span>
-<b>The Treatment of Slaves.</b>&mdash;There is nothing in the stern and
-selfish character of the Roman that would lead us to expect from him
-gentleness or mercy in the treatment of his slaves. At the same time
-he was too shrewd and sharp in all matters of business to forget that
-a slave was a piece of valuable property, and to run the risk of the
-loss or injury of that property by wanton cruelty. Much depended, of
-course, upon the character and temper of the individual owner, and
-Juvenal gives us to understand that the mistress was likely to be more
-spiteful and unreasonable than the master. But the case of Vedius
-Pollio, in the time of Augustus, who ordered a slave to be thrown
-alive into a pond as food for the fish because he had broken a goblet,
-may be balanced by that of Cicero, whose letters to his slave Tiro
-disclose real affection and tenderness of feeling. The passionate man
-nowadays may kill or maim the dog or horse, although it has a money
-value and he needs its services, and most of us know of worn-out
-horses turned out upon the common to die. But these things are
-exceptional, and if we consider the age in which the Roman lived and
-pass for a moment the matter of punishments, we may say that he was
-rather pitiless as a taskmaster than habitually cruel to his slaves.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect159"><b>159</b></a></span>
-Of the daily life of the town slave we know but little except
-that his work was light and he was the envy of the drudge upon the
-farm. Of the treatment of the latter we get some knowledge from the
-writings of the elder Cato, who may be taken as a fair specimen of the
-rugged farmer of his time (234-149 <small>B.C.</small>). He held that slaves should
-always be at work except in the hours, few enough at best, allowed
-them for sleep, and he took pains to find plenty for his to do even on
-the public holidays. He advised farmers to sell immediately worn-out
-draft cattle, diseased sheep, broken implements, aged and feeble
-slaves, "and other useless things."</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect160"><b>160</b></a></span>
-<b>Food and Dress.</b>&mdash;Slaves were fed on coarse food, but when Cato
-tells us that in addition to the monthly allowance of grain (about a
-bushel) they were to have merely the fallen olives, or, failing these,
-a little salt fish and vinegar, we must remember that this was no less
-and no worse than the common food of the poorer Romans. Every
-schoolboy knows that grain was the only ration of the sturdy soldiers
-that won Caesar's battles for him. A slave was furnished a tunic every
-year, and a cloak and a pair of wooden shoes every two years. Worn-out
-clothes were returned to the <i>vīlicus</i> to be made up into patchwork
-quilts. We are told that this same <i>vīlicus</i> often cheated the slaves
-by stinting their allowance for his own benefit, and we can not doubt
-that he, a slave himself, was more likely to be brutal and cruel than
-the master would have been.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect161"><b>161</b></a></span>
-But entirely apart from the grinding toil and the harshness and
-insolence of the master and the overseer, the mere restraint from
-liberty was torture enough in itself. There was little chance of
-escape by flight. The Greek slave might hope to cross the boundary of
-the little principality in which he served, to find freedom and refuge
-under the protection of an adjoining power. But Italy was not cut up
-into hostile communities, and should the slave by a miracle reach the
-Rubicon or the sea, no neighboring state would dare defend him or even
-hide him from his Roman master. If he attempted flight, he must live
-the life of an outlaw, with organized bands of slave hunters on his
-track, with a reward offered for his return, and unspeakable tortures
-awaiting him as a warning for others. It is no wonder, then, that vast
-numbers of slaves sought rest from their labors by a voluntary death
-(<a href="#sect140">§140</a>). It must be remembered that many of them were men of good birth
-and high position in the countries from which they came, some of them
-even soldiers, taken on the field of battle with weapons in their
-hands.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect162"><b>162</b></a></span>
-<b>The Peculium.</b>&mdash;We have seen that the free man <i>in potestāte</i>
-could not legally hold property, that all that he acquired belonged
-strictly to his <i>pater familiās</i> (<a href="#sect31">§31</a>). We have also seen that he was
-allowed to hold, manage and use property assigned to him by the <i>pater
-familiās</i>, just as if it had been his own (<a href="#sect33">§33</a>). The same thing was
-true in the case of a slave, and the property was called by the same
-name (<i>pecūlium</i>). His claim to it could not be maintained by law, but
-was confirmed by public opinion and by inviolable custom. If the
-master respected these, there were several ways in which an
-industrious and frugal slave could scrape together bit by bit a little
-fund of his own, depending in great measure, of course, upon the
-generosity of his master and his own position in the <i>familia</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect163"><b>163</b></a></span>
-If he belonged to the <i>familia rūstica</i>, the opportunities were
-not so good, but by stinting himself he might save something from his
-monthly allowance of food (<a href="#sect160">§160</a>), and he might, perhaps, do a little
-work for himself in the hours allowed for sleep and rest, tilling, for
-example, a few square yards of garden for his own benefit. If he were
-a city slave there were besides these chances the tips from his
-master's friends and guests, and perhaps a bribe for some little piece
-of knavery or a reward for its success. We have already seen that a
-slave teacher received presents from his pupils (<a href="#sect121">§121</a>). It was no
-uncommon thing either, as has been said, for a shrewd master to teach
-a slave a trade and allow him to keep a portion of the increased
-earnings which his deftness and skill would bring. More rarely the
-master would furnish the capital and allow the slave to start in
-business and retain a portion of the profits (<a href="#sect144">§144</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect164"><b>164</b></a></span>
-For the master the custom was undoubtedly profitable in the long
-run. It stimulated the slave's energy and made him more contented and
-cheerful. It also furnished a means of control more effective than the
-severest corporal punishment, and that without physical injury to the
-chattel. To the ambitious slave the <i>pecūlium</i> gave at least a chance
-of freedom, for he hoped to save enough in time to buy himself from
-his master. Many, of course, preferred to use their earnings to
-purchase little comforts and luxuries nearer than distant liberty.
-Some upon whom a high price was set by their owners used their
-<i>pecūlium</i> to buy for themselves cheaper slaves, whom they hired out
-to the employers of laborers already mentioned (<a href="#sect143">§143</a>). In this way
-they hoped to increase their savings more rapidly. The slave's slave
-was called <i>vicārius</i>, and legally belonged to the owner of his
-master, but public opinion regarded him as a part of the
-slave-master's <i>pecūlium</i>. The slave had a life interest only in his
-savings, that is, they did not pass to his heirs on his death, for a
-slave could have no "heirs," and he could not dispose of them by will.
-If he died in slavery his property went to his master. Public slaves
-(<a href="#sect141">§141</a>) were allowed as one of their greatest privileges to dispose of
-one-half of their property by will.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect165"><b>165</b></a></span>
-At the best the accumulation of a sum large enough (<a href="#sect140">§140</a>) to buy
-his liberty was pitifully slow and painful for the slave, all the more
-because the more energetic and industrious he was, the higher the
-price that would be set upon him. We can not help feeling a great
-respect for the man who at so great a price obtained his freedom. We
-can sympathize, too, with the poor fellows who had to take from their
-little hoards to make to the members of their masters' families the
-presents that were expected on such great occasions as the marriage of
-one of them, the naming of a child (<a href="#sect98">§98</a>), or the birthday of the
-mistress (<a href="#sect91">§91</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect166"><b>166</b></a></span>
-<b>Punishments.</b>&mdash;It is not the purpose of the following sections to
-catalogue the fiendish tortures sometimes inflicted upon slaves by
-their masters. They were not very common for the reason suggested in
-<a href="#sect158">§158</a>, and were no more characteristic of the ordinary correction of
-slaves than lynching and whitecapping are characteristic of the
-administration of justice in Georgia and Indiana. Certain punishments,
-however, are so frequently mentioned in Latin literature, that a
-description of them is necessary in order that the passages in which
-they occur may be understood by the reader.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure32">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure032.jpg" alt="FIGURE 32. FLAGELLUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 32.
- F<small>LAGELLUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect167"><b>167</b></a></span>
-The most common punishment for neglect of duty or petty
-misconduct was a beating with a stick or flogging with a lash. If the
-picture of a Roman school already referred to (<a href="#sect119">§119</a>) gives a correct
-idea of the punishments inflicted upon a schoolboy with the consent of
-his parents, we should expect that of a slave to be as severe as
-regard for his usefulness afterwards would permit. Hence we find that
-for the single rod or stick was often substituted a bundle of rods,
-usually elm (<i>ulmī</i>) corresponding to the birch of England and the
-hickory of America. For the lash or rawhide (<i>scutica</i> or <i>lōrum</i>) was
-often used a sort of cat-o'-nine-tails, made of cords or thongs of
-leather. When the offense was more serious, bits of bone were attached
-to this, and even metal buttons, to tear the flesh, and the instrument
-was called a <i>flagrum</i> or <i>flagellum</i> (Fig. 32). It could not have
-been less severe than the knout of Russia, and we may well believe
-that slaves died beneath its blows. To render the victim incapable of
-resistance he was sometimes drawn up to a beam by the arms, and
-weights were even attached to his feet, so that he could not so much
-as writhe under the torture.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect168"><b>168</b></a></span>
-In the comedies are many references to these punishments, and
-the slaves make grim jests on the rods and the scourge, taunting each
-other with the beatings they have had or deserve to have. Sometimes
-the rods are parasites, who shave close the person to whom they attach
-themselves; sometimes they are pens, the back of the culprit being the
-copybook; sometimes they are catapults, dealing darts and death.
-Sometimes the victim is a bottomless abyss of rods; sometimes he has
-absorbed so much essence of elm that he is in danger of himself
-becoming a tree; sometimes he is an anvil; sometimes he is a solid
-melting under the blows; sometimes he is a garden well watered by
-blows. Sometimes an entertainment is being prepared scot-free for his
-back; and sometimes his back is a beautifully embroidered carpet.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect169"><b>169</b></a></span>
-Another punishment for offenses of the same trivial nature
-resembled the stocks of old New England days. The offender was exposed
-to the derision of his fellows with his limbs so confined that he
-could make no motion at all, could not so much as brush a fly from his
-face. Variations of this form of punishment are seen in the <i>furca</i>
-and in the "making a quadruped out of a man." The latter must have
-been something like the "bucking and gagging" used as a punishment in
-the militia; the former was so common that <i>furcifer</i> became a mere
-term of abuse. The culprit carried upon his shoulders a log of wood,
-shaped like a V, and had his arms stretched out before him with his
-hands fastened to the ends of the fork. This log he had to carry
-around in order that the other members of the <i>familia</i> might see him
-and take warning. Sometimes to this punishment was added a lashing as
-he moved painfully along.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect170"><b>170</b></a></span>
-Less painful and degrading for the moment, but far more dreaded
-by the slave, was a sentence to harder labor than he had been
-accustomed to perform. The final penalty for misconduct on the part of
-a city slave, for whom the rod had been spoiled in vain, was
-banishment to the farm, and to this might be added at a stroke the
-odious task of grinding at the mill (<a href="#sect148">§148</a>), or the crushing toil of
-labor in the quarries. The last were the punishments of the better
-class of farm slaves, while the desperate and dangerous class of
-slaves who regularly worked in the quarries paid for their misdeeds
-under the scourge and in heavier shackles by day and fewer hours of
-rest by night. These may be compared to the galley slaves of later
-times. Those utterly incorrigible might be sold for gladiators.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect171"><b>171</b></a></span>
-For actual crimes, not mere faults or offenses, the punishments
-were far more severe. Slaves were so numerous (<a href="#sect131">§131</a>) and their various
-employments gave them such free access to the person of the master,
-that his property and very life were always at their mercy. It was
-indeed a just and gentle master that did not sometimes dream of a
-slave holding a dagger at his throat. There was nothing within the
-confines of Italy so much dreaded as an uprising of the slaves. It was
-simply this haunting fear that led to the inhuman tortures inflicted
-upon the slave guilty of an attempt upon the life of his master or of
-the destruction of his property. The Romans had not learned twenty
-centuries ago, as some of our own citizens have not yet learned, that
-crimes are not lessened by increasing the sufferings of the criminals.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure33">
- <tr>
- <td width="654">
- <img src="images/figure033.jpg" alt="FIGURE 33. SLAVE'S COLLAR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="654" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 33.
- S<small>LAVE'S</small> C<small>OLLAR</small><br>
- <i>Servus sum dom(i)ni mei
- Scholastici v(iri) sp(ectabilis).
- Tene me ne fugiam de domo Pulverata.</i></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect172"><b>172</b></a></span>
-The runaway slave was a criminal: he had stolen himself. He was
-also guilty of setting a bad example to his fellow slaves; and, worst
-of all, runaway slaves always became bandits (<a href="#sect161">§161</a>) and they might
-find a Spartacus to lead them (<a href="#sect132">§132</a>). There were, therefore, standing
-rewards for the capture of <i>fugitīvī</i>, and there were men who made it
-their business to track them down and return them to their masters.
-The <i>fugitīvus</i> was brought back in shackles, and was sure to be
-flogged within an inch of his life and sent to the quarries for the
-rest of his miserable days. Besides this, he was branded on the
-forehead with the letter F, for <i>fugitīvus</i>, and sometimes had a metal
-collar riveted about his neck. One such, still preserved at Rome, is
-shown in Fig. 33, and another has the inscription:</p>
-
-<center>FUGI. TENE ME. CUM REVOCAVERIS ME D. M.<br>
-ZONINO, ACCIPIS SOLIDUM.<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small></center>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> I have run away. Catch me. If you take me back to my
-master Zoninus you'll be rewarded.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect173"><b>173</b></a></span>
-For an attempt upon the life of the master the penalty was death
-in its most agonizing form, by crucifixion. This was also the penalty
-for taking part in an insurrection, witness the twenty thousand
-crucified in Sicily (<a href="#sect132">§132</a>) and the six thousand crosses that Pompeius
-erected along the road to Rome, each bearing the body of one of the
-survivors of the final battle in which Spartacus fell. And the
-punishment was inflicted not only upon the slave guilty of his
-master's life, but also upon the family of the slave, if he had wife
-(<a href="#sect156">§156</a>) and children. If the guilty man could not be found, his
-punishment was made certain by the crucifixion of all the slaves of
-the murdered man. Tacitus tells us that in the reign of Nero four
-hundred slaves were executed for the murder of their master, Pedianus
-Secundus, by one of their number undetected.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect174"><b>174</b></a></span>
-The cross stood to the slave as the horror of horrors. The very
-word (<i>crux</i>) was used among them as a curse, especially in the form
-<i>ad</i> (<i>malam</i>) <i>crucem</i>. The various minor punishments were inflicted
-at the order of the master or his representative by some fellow slave
-called for the time <i>carnifex</i> or <i>lōrārius</i>, though these words by no
-means imply that he was regularly or even commonly designated for the
-disagreeable duty. Still, the administration of punishment to a fellow
-slave was felt to be degrading, and the word <i>carnifex</i> was apt to
-attach itself to such a person and finally came to be a standing term
-of abuse and taunt. It is applied to each other by quarreling slaves,
-apparently with no notion of its literal meaning, as many vulgar
-epithets are applied to-day. The actual execution of a death sentence
-was carried out by one of the <i>servī pūblicī</i> (<a href="#sect141">§141</a>) at a fixed place
-of execution outside of the city walls.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure34">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure034.jpg" alt="FIGURE 34. COIN, SHOWING THE PILLEUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 34.
- C<small>OIN</small>, S<small>HOWING THE</small>
- P<small>ILLEUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect175"><b>175</b></a></span>
-<b>Manumission.</b>&mdash;The slave might purchase his freedom from his
-master by means of his savings, as we have seen (<a href="#sect164">§164</a>), or he might be
-set free as a reward for faithful service or some special act of
-devotion. In either case it was only necessary for the master to
-pronounce him free in the presence of witnesses, though a formal act
-of manumission often took place before a praetor. The new-made
-freedman set proudly on his head the cap of liberty (<i>pilleus</i>), often
-seen on Roman coins (Fig. 34). He was now called <i>lībertus</i> in
-reference to his master, <i>lībertīnus</i> in reference to others; his
-master was no longer <i>dominus</i>, but <i>patrōnus</i>. The relation that now
-existed between them was one of mutual helpfulness. The patron
-assisted the freedman in business, often supplying the means with which he
-was to make a start in his new life. It the freedman died first, the
-patron paid the expenses of a decent funeral and had the body buried
-near the spot where his own ashes would be laid. He became the
-guardian of the freedman's children, or if no heirs were left, he
-himself inherited the property. The freedman was bound to show his
-patron marked deference and respect on all occasions, to attend him
-upon public occasions, to assist him in case of reverse of fortune,
-and in short to stand to him in the same relation as the client had
-stood to the patron in the brave days of old.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect176"><b>176</b></a></span>
-<b>The Clients.</b>&mdash;The word <i>cliēns</i> (from <i>clueō;</i> therefore
-"hearer," "one who obeys") is used in Roman history of two very
-different classes of dependents, who are separated by a considerable
-interval of time and may be roughly distinguished as the Old Clients
-and the New. The former played an important part under the Kings, and
-especially in the struggles between the patricians and plebeians in
-the early days of the Republic, but had practically disappeared by the
-time of Cicero. The latter are first heard of after the Empire was
-well advanced, and never had any political significance. Between the
-two classes there is absolutely no connection, and the student must be
-careful to notice that the later is not a development of the earlier
-class.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect177"><b>177</b></a></span>
-<b>The Old Clients.</b>&mdash;Clientage (<i>clientēla</i>) goes back beyond the
-founding of Rome to the most ancient social institutions of the
-Italian communities. The <i>gentēs</i> who settled on the hills along the
-Tiber (<a href="#sect22">§22</a>) had brought with them as a part of their <i>familiae</i> (<a href="#sect21">§21</a>)
-numerous free retainers, who seem to have farmed their lands, tended
-their flocks, and done them certain personal services in return for
-protection against cattle thieves, raiders, and open enemies. These
-retainers were regarded as inferior members of the <i>gēns</i> to which
-they had severally attached themselves, had a share in the increase of
-the flocks and herds (<a href="#sect33">§33</a>, <i>pecūlia</i>), and were given the clan name
-(<a href="#sect47">§47</a>), but they had no right of marriage with persons of the higher
-class and no voice in the government. They were the original <i>plēbs</i>,
-while the <i>gentīlēs</i> (<a href="#sect22">§22</a>) were the <i>populus</i> of Rome.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect178"><b>178</b></a></span>
-Rome's policy of expansion soon brought within the city a third
-element, distinct from both <i>gentīlēs</i> and <i>clientēs</i>. Conquered
-communities, especially those dangerously near, were made to destroy
-their own strongholds (<i>oppida</i>) and move in mass to the city. Those
-who possessed already the gentile organization were allowed to become
-a part of the <i>populus</i>, or governing body, and these, too, brought
-their <i>clientēs</i> with them. Those who had no such organization either
-attached themselves to the <i>gentēs</i> as clients, or preferring personal
-independence settled here and there, in and about the city, to make a
-living as best they might. Some were possessed of means as large
-perhaps as those of the patricians; others were artisans and laborers,
-hewers of wood and drawers of water; but all alike were without
-political rights and occupied the lowest position in the new state.
-Their numbers increased rapidly with the expansion of Roman territory,
-and they soon outnumbered the patricians with their retainers, with
-whom, of course, as conquered people they could have no sympathies or
-social ties. To them also the name of <i>plēbs</i> was given, and the old
-<i>plēbs</i>, the <i>clientēs</i>, began to occupy an intermediate position in
-the state, though politically included with the plebeians. Many of
-them, owing perhaps to the dying out of ancient patrician families,
-gradually lost their dependent relation and became identified in
-interests with the newer element.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect179"><b>179</b></a></span>
-<b>Mutual Obligations.</b>&mdash;The relation between the patrician patrons
-and the plebeian clients is not now thoroughly understood; the
-problems connected with it seem beyond solution. We know that it was
-hereditary and that the great houses boasted of the number of their
-clients and were eager to increase them from generation to generation.
-We know that it was regarded as something peculiarly sacred, that the
-client stood to the patron as little less than a son. Vergil tells us
-that a special punishment in the underworld awaited the patron who
-defrauded a client. We read, too, of instances of splendid loyalty to
-their patrons on the part of clients, a loyalty to which we can only
-compare in modern times that of Highlanders to the chief of their
-clan. But when we try to get an idea of the reciprocal duties and
-obligations we find little in our authorities that is definite (<a href="#sect12">§12, end</a>).
-The patron furnished means of support for the client and his
-family (<a href="#sect177">§177</a>), gave him the benefit of his advice and counsel, and
-assisted him in his transactions with third parties, representing him
-if necessary in the courts. On the other hand the client was bound to
-advance the interests of his patron in every possible way. He tilled
-his fields, herded his flocks, attended him in war, and assisted him
-in special emergencies with money.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect180"><b>180</b></a></span>
-It is evident that the mutuality of this relation depended
-solely upon the predominant position of the patron in the state. So
-long as the patricians were the only full citizens, so long, that is,
-as the plebeians had no civil rights, the client might well afford to
-sacrifice his personal independence for the sake of the countenance
-and protection of one of the mighty. In the case of disputes over
-property, for example, the support of his patron would assure him
-justice even against a patrician, and might secure more than justice
-were his opponent a plebeian without another such advocate. It is
-evident, too, that the relation could not long endure after the
-equalization of the orders. For a generation or two the patron and the
-client might stand together against their old adversaries, but sooner
-or later the client would see that he was getting no equivalent for
-the service he rendered, and his children or his children's children
-would throw off the yoke. The introduction of slavery, on the other
-hand, helped to make the patron independent of the client, and while
-we can hardly tell whether its rapid growth (<a href="#sect129">§129</a>) was the cause or
-the effect of declining clientage, it is nevertheless significant that
-the new relation of <i>patrōnus</i> and <i>lībertus</i> (<a href="#sect175">§175</a>) marks the
-disappearance of that of <i>patrōnus</i> and <i>cliēns</i> in the old and better
-sense of the words.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect181"><b>181</b></a></span>
-<b>The New Clients.</b>&mdash;The new clients need not detain us long. They
-came in with the upstart rich, who counted a long train of dependents
-as necessary to their state as a string of high-sounding names (<a href="#sect50">§50</a>),
-or a mansion crowded with useless slaves (<a href="#sect155">§155</a>). These dependents were
-simply obscure and needy men who toadied to the rich and great for the
-sake of the crumbs that fell from their tables. There might be among
-them men of perverted talents, philosophers or poets like Martial and
-Statius, but they were all at best a swarm of cringing, fawning,
-time-serving flatterers and parasites. It is important to understand
-that there was no personal tie between the new patron and the new
-client, no bond of hereditary association. No sacrifice was involved
-on either side. The client did not attach himself for life to one
-patron for better or for worse; he frequently paid his court to
-several at a time and changed his masters as often as he could hope
-for better things. The patron in like manner dismissed a client when
-he had tired of him.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect182"><b>182</b></a></span>
-<b>Duties and Rewards.</b>&mdash;The service, however mean and degrading,
-was easy enough. The chief duty was the <i>salūtātiō:</i> the clients
-arrayed in the toga, the formal dress for all social functions,
-assembled early in the morning in the great man's hall to greet him
-when he first appeared. This might be all required of them for the
-day, and there might be time to hurry through the streets to another
-house to pay similar homage to another patron, perhaps to others
-still, for the rich slept late. On the other hand the patron might
-command their attendance in the house or by his litter (<a href="#sect151">§151</a>), if he
-was going out, and keep them at his side the whole day long. Then
-there was no chance to wait upon the second patron, but every chance
-to be forgotten by him. And the rewards were no greater than the
-services. A few coins for a clever witticism or a fulsome compliment;
-a cast-off toga occasionally, for a shabby dress disgraced the levee;
-or an invitation to the dinner table if the patron was particularly
-gracious. One meal a day was always expected, and felt to be the due
-of the client. But sometimes the patron did not receive and the
-clients were sent empty away. Sometimes, too, after a day's attendance
-the hungry and tired train were dismissed with a gift of cold food
-distributed in little baskets (<i>sportulae</i>), a poor and sorry
-substitute for the good cheer they had hoped for. From these baskets
-the "dole," as we should call it now, came to be called <i>sportula</i>
-itself, and in the course of time an equivalent in money, fixed
-finally at about thirty cents, took the place of this. But it was
-something to be admitted to the familiar presence of the rich and
-fashionable, there was always the hope of a little legacy, if the
-flattery was adroit, and even the dole would enable one to live more
-easily than by work, especially if one could stand well with several
-patrons and draw the dole from each of them.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect183"><b>183</b></a></span>
-<b>The Hospites.</b>&mdash;Finally we come to the <i>hospitēs</i>, though these
-in strictness ought not to be reckoned among the dependents. It is
-true that they were often dependent on others for protection and help,
-but it is also true that they were equally ready and able to extend
-like help and protection to others who had the right to claim
-assistance from them. It is important to observe that <i>hospitium</i>
-differed from clientship in this respect, that the parties to it were
-actually on the footing of absolute equality. Although at some
-particular time one might be dependent upon the other for food or
-shelter, at another time the relations might be reversed and the
-protector and the protected change places.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect184"><b>184</b></a></span>
-<i>Hospitium</i>, in its technical sense, goes back to a time when
-there were no international relations, to the time when stranger and
-enemy were not merely synonymous words, but absolutely the same word.
-In this early stage of society, when distinct communities were
-numerous, every stranger was looked upon with suspicion, and the
-traveler in a state not his own found it difficult to get his wants
-supplied, even if his life was not actually in danger. Hence the
-custom arose for a man engaged in commerce or in any other occupation
-that might compel him to visit a foreign country to form previously a
-connection with a citizen of that country, who would be ready to
-receive him as a friend, to supply his needs, to vouch for his good
-intentions, and to act if necessary as his protector. Such a
-relationship, called <i>hospitium</i>, was always strictly reciprocal: if A
-agreed to entertain and protect B, when B visited A's country, then B
-was bound to entertain and protect A, if A visited B's country. The
-parties to an agreement of this sort were called <i>hospitēs</i>, and hence
-the word <i>hospes</i> has a double signification, at one time denoting the
-entertainer, at another the guest.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect185"><b>185</b></a></span>
-<b>Obligations of Hospitium.</b>&mdash;The obligations imposed by this
-covenant were of the most sacred character, and any failure to regard
-its provisions was sacrilege, bringing upon the offender the anger of
-<i>Iuppiter Hospitālis</i>. Either of the parties might cancel the bond,
-but only after a formal and public notice of his intentions. On the
-other hand the tie was hereditary, descending from father to son, so
-that persons might be <i>hospitēs</i> who had never so much as seen each
-other, whose immediate ancestors even might have had no personal
-intercourse. As a means of identification the original parties
-exchanged tokens <i>tesserae hospitālēs</i>, (see Rich and Harper, s. v.),
-by which they or their descendants might recognize each other. These
-tokens were carefully preserved, and when a stranger claimed
-<i>hospitium</i> his <i>tessera</i> had to be produced and submitted for
-examination. If it was found to be genuine, he was entitled to all the
-privileges that the best-known guest-friend could expect. These seem
-to have been entertainment so long as he remained in his host's city,
-protection including legal assistance if necessary, nursing and
-medical attendance in case of illness, the means necessary for
-continuing his journey, and honorable burial if he died among
-strangers. It will be noticed that these are almost precisely the
-duties devolving upon members of our great benevolent societies at the
-present time when appealed to by a brother in distress.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap6"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-<h4>THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 213-250, 607-645; Göll, II, 213-417; Guhl and
-Koner, 556-580, 676-688, 705-725; Ramsay, 516-521; Pauly-Wissowa,
-<i>ātrium</i>, <i>compluvium;</i> Smith, Harper, Rich, under <i>domus</i>, <i>mūrus</i>,
-<i>tegula</i>, and the other Latin words used in the text; Lübker, 507-509;
-Baumeister, 1365 f., 631, 927 f., 1373 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 239-348,
-361-373, 446-474; Overbeck, 244-376, 520-537; Gusman, 253-316.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect186"><b>186</b></a></span>
-<b>Domus.</b>&mdash;The house with which we are concerned is the residence
-(<i>domus</i>) of the single household, as opposed to lodging houses or
-apartment houses (<i>īnsulae</i>) intended for the accommodation of several
-families, and the residence, moreover, of the well-to-do citizen, as
-opposed on the one hand to the mansion of the millionaire and on the
-other to the hovels of the very poor. At the same time it must be
-understood that the Roman house did not show as many distinct types as
-does the American house of the present time. The Roman was naturally
-conservative, he was particularly reluctant to introduce foreign
-ideas, and his house in all times and of all classes preserved certain
-main features essentially unchanged. The proportion of these might
-vary with the size and shape of the lot at the builder's disposal, the
-number of apartments added would depend upon the means and tastes of
-the owner, but the kernel, so to speak, is always the same, and this
-makes the general plan much less complex, the description much less
-confusing.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect187"><b>187</b></a></span>
-Our sources of information are unusually abundant. Vitruvius, an
-architect and engineer of the time of Caesar and Augustus, has left a
-work on building, giving in detail his own principles of construction;
-the works of many of the Roman writers contain either set descriptions
-of parts of houses or at least numerous hints and allusions that are
-collectively very helpful; and finally the ground plans of many houses
-have been uncovered in Rome and elsewhere, and in Pompeii we have even
-the walls of some houses left standing. There are still, however,
-despite the fullness and authority of our sources, many things in
-regard to the arrangement and construction of the house that are
-uncertain and disputed (<a href="#sect12">§12, end</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect188"><b>188</b></a></span>
-<b>The Development of the House.</b>&mdash;The primitive Roman house came
-from the Etruscans. It goes back to the simple farm life of early
-times, when all members of the household, father, mother, children,
-and dependents, lived in one large room together. In this room the
-meals were cooked, the table spread, all indoor work performed, the
-sacrifices offered to the Lares (<a href="#sect27">§27</a>), and at night a space cleared in
-which to spread the hard beds or pallets. The primitive house had no
-chimney, the smoke escaping through a hole in the middle of the roof.
-Rain could enter where the smoke escaped, and from this fact the hole
-was called the <i>impluvium;</i> just beneath it in later times a basin
-(<i>compluvium</i>) was hollowed out in the floor to catch the water for
-domestic purposes. There were no windows, all natural light coming
-through the <i>impluvium</i> or, in pleasant weather, through the open
-door. There was but one door, and the space opposite it seems to have
-been reserved as much as possible for the father and mother. Here was
-the hearth, where the mother prepared the meals, and near it stood the
-implements she used in spinning and weaving; here was the strong box
-(<i>ārca</i>), in which the master kept his valuables, and here their couch
-was spread.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures35to38">
- <tr>
- <td width="279">
- <img src="images/figure035.jpg" alt="FIGURE 35. CINERARY URN">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 35.
- C<small>INERARY</small> U<small>RN</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure036.jpg" alt="FIGURE 36. PLAN OF HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 36.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure037.jpg" alt="FIGURE 37. PLAN OF HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 37.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure038.jpg" alt="FIGURE 38. PLAN OF HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 38.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect189"><b>189</b></a></span>
-The outward appearance of such a house is shown in the Etruscan
-cinerary urns (Fig. 35; see also Smith, I, 668; Schreiber, LIII, 5;
-Baumeister, Fig. 146) found in various places in Italy. The ground
-plan is a simple rectangle, as shown in Figure 36, without partitions.
-This may be regarded as historically and architecturally the kernel of
-the Roman house; it is found in all of which we have any knowledge.
-Its very name (<i>ātrium</i>), denoting originally the whole house, was
-also preserved, as is shown in the names of certain very ancient
-buildings in Rome used for religious purposes, the <i>ātrium Vestae</i>,
-the <i>ātrium Lībertātis</i>, etc., but afterwards applied to the
-characteristic single room. The name was once supposed to mean "the
-black (<i>āter</i>) room," but many scholars recognize in it the original
-Etruscan word for house.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect190"><b>190</b></a></span>
-The first change in the primitive house came in the form of a
-shed or "lean-to" on the side of the <i>ātrium</i> opposite the door. It
-was probably intended at first for merely temporary purposes, being
-built of wooden boards (<i>tabulae</i>), and having an outside door and no
-connection with the <i>ātrium</i>. It could not have been long, however,
-until the wall between was broken through, and this once done and its
-convenience demonstrated, the partition wall was entirely removed, and
-the second form of the Roman house resulted (Fig. 37). This
-improvement also persisted, and the <i>tablīnum</i> is found in all the
-houses from the humblest to the costliest of which we have any
-knowledge.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect191"><b>191</b></a></span>
-The next change was made by widening the <i>ātrium</i>, but in order
-that the roof might be more easily supported walls were erected along
-the lines of the old <i>ātrium</i> for about two-thirds of its depth. These
-may have been originally mere pillars, as nowadays in our cellars, not
-continuous walls. At any rate, the <i>ātrium</i> at the end next the
-<i>tablīnum</i> was given the full width between the outside walls, and the
-additional spaces, one on each side, were called <i>ālae</i>. The
-appearance of such a house as seen from the entrance door must have
-been much like that of an Anglican or Roman Catholic church. The open
-space between the supporting walls corresponded to the nave, the two
-<i>ālae</i> to the transepts, while the bay-like <i>tablīnum</i> resembled the
-chancel. The space between the outside walls and those supporting the
-roof was cut off into rooms of various sizes, used for various
-purposes (Fig. 38). So far as we know they received light only from
-the <i>ātrium</i>, for no windows are assigned to them by Roman writers,
-and none are found in the ruins, but it is hardly probable that in the
-country no holes were made for light and air, however considerations
-of privacy and security may have influenced builders in the towns.
-From this ancient house we find preserved in its successors all
-opposite the entrance door: the <i>ātrium</i> with its <i>ālae</i> and <i>tablīnum</i>,
-the <i>impluvium</i> and <i>compluvium</i>. These are the characteristic
-features of the Roman house, and must be so regarded in the
-description which follows of later developments under foreign
-influence.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure39">
- <tr>
- <td width="456">
- <img src="images/figure039.jpg" alt="FIGURE 39. PLAN OF HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="456" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 39.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect192"><b>192</b></a></span>
-The Greeks seem to have furnished the idea next adopted by the
-Romans, a court at the rear of the <i>ātrium</i>, open to the sky,
-surrounded by rooms, and set with flowers, trees, and shrubs. The open
-space had columns around it, and often a fountain in the middle (Fig.
-39). This court was called the <i>peristylum</i> or <i>peristylium</i>.
-According to Vitruvius its breadth should have exceeded its depth by
-one-third, but we do not find these or any other proportions strictly
-observed in the houses that are known to us. Access to the
-<i>peristylium</i> from the <i>ātrium</i> could be had through the <i>tablīnum</i>,
-though this might be cut off from it by folding doors, and by a narrow
-passage<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small> by its side. The latter would be naturally used by servants
-and by others who did not wish to pass through the master's room. Both
-passage and <i>tablīnum</i> might be closed on the side of the <i>ātrium</i> by
-portières. The arrangement of the various rooms around the court seems
-to have varied with the notions of the builder, and no one plan for
-them can be laid down. According to the means of the owner there were
-bedrooms, dining-rooms, libraries, drawing-rooms, kitchen, scullery,
-closets, private baths, together with the scanty accommodations
-necessary even for a large number of slaves. But no matter whether
-these rooms were many or few they all faced the court, receiving from
-it light and air, as did the rooms along the sides of the <i>ātrium</i>.
-There was often a garden behind the court.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> This passage is called <i>faucēs</i> in the older books. Mau
-has shown that the <i>faucēs</i> was on the entrance side of the <i>ātrium</i>.
-He calls the passage by the <i>tablīnum</i> the <i>andrōn</i>.</small></blockquote>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure40">
- <tr>
- <td width="566">
- <img src="images/figure040.jpg" alt="FIGURE 40. PLAN OF HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="566" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 40.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect193"><b>193</b></a></span>
-The next change took place in the city and town house only,
-because it was due to conditions of town life that did not obtain in
-the country. In ancient as well as in modern times business was likely
-to spread from the center of the town into residence districts, and it
-often became desirable for the owner of a dwelling-house to adapt it
-to the new conditions. This was easily done in the case of the Roman
-house on account of the arrangement of the rooms. Attention has
-already been called to the fact that the rooms all opened to the
-interior of the house, that no windows were placed in the outer walls,
-and that the only door was in front. If the house faced a business
-street, it is evident that the owner could, without interfering with
-the privacy of his house or decreasing its light, build rooms in front
-of the <i>ātrium</i> for commercial purposes. He reserved, of course, a
-passageway to his own door, narrower or wider according to the
-circumstances. If the house occupied a corner, such rooms might be
-added on the side as well as in front (Fig. 40), and as they had no
-necessary connection with the interior they might be rented as
-living-rooms, as such rooms often are in our own cities. It is
-probable that rooms were first added in this way for business purposes
-by an owner who expected to carry on some enterprise of his own in
-them, but even men of good position and considerable means did not
-hesitate to add to their incomes by renting to others these
-disconnected parts of their houses. All the larger houses uncovered in
-Pompeii are arranged in this manner. One occupying a whole square and
-having rented rooms on three sides is described in <a href="#sect208">§208</a>. Such a
-detached house was called an <i>īnsula</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect194"><b>194</b></a></span>
-<b>The Vestibulum.</b>&mdash;Having traced the development of the house as a
-whole and described briefly its permanent and characteristic parts, we
-may now examine these more closely and at the same time call attention
-to other parts introduced at a later time. It will be convenient to
-begin with the front of the house. The city house was built even more
-generally than now on the street line. In the poorer houses the door
-opening into the <i>ātrium</i> was in the front wall, and was separated
-from the street only by the width of the threshold. In the better sort
-of houses, those described in the last section, the separation of the
-<i>ātrium</i> from the street by the row of stores gave opportunity for
-arranging a more imposing entrance. A part at least of this space was
-left as an open court, with a costly pavement running from the street
-to the door, adorned with shrubs and flowers, with statuary even, and
-trophies of war, if the owner was rich and a successful general. This
-courtyard was called the <i>vestibulum</i>. The derivation of the word is
-disputed, but it probably comes from <i>ve-</i>, "apart," "separate," and
-<i>stāre</i> (cf. <i>prōstibulum</i> from <i>prōstāre</i>), and means "a private
-standing place"; other explanations are suggested in the dictionaries.
-The important thing to notice is that it does not correspond at all to
-the part of a modern house called after it the vestibule. In this
-<i>vestibulum</i> the clients gathered, before daybreak perhaps (<a href="#sect182">§182</a>), to
-wait for admission to the <i>ātrium</i>, and here the <i>sportula</i> was doled
-out to them. Here, too, was arranged the wedding procession (<a href="#sect86">§86</a>), and
-here was marshaled the train that escorted the boy to the forum the
-day that he put away childish things (<a href="#sect128">§128</a>). Even in the poorer houses
-the same name was given to the little space between the door and the
-edge of the sidewalk.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures41to43">
- <tr>
- <td width="370" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure041.jpg" alt="FIGURE 41. MOSAIC DOG">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="370" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 41.
- M<small>OSAIC</small> D<small>OG</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="370" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure042.jpg" alt="FIGURE 42. IMPLUVIUM IN TUSCAN ATRIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="370" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 42.
- I<small>MPLUVIUM IN</small> T<small>USCAN</small>
- A<small>TRIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="370">
- <img src="images/figure043.jpg" alt="FIGURE 43. SECTION OF TUSCAN ATRIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="370" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 43.
- S<small>ECTION OF</small> T<small>USCAN</small>
- A<small>TRIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect195"><b>195</b></a></span>
-<b>The Ostium.</b>&mdash;The entrance to the house was called the <i>ōstium</i>.
-This includes the doorway and the door itself, and the word is applied
-to either, though <i>forēs</i> and <i>iānua</i> are the more precise words for
-the door. In the poorer houses (<a href="#sect194">§194</a>) the <i>ōstium</i> was directly on the
-street, and there can be no doubt that it originally opened directly
-into the <i>ātrium;</i> in other words, the ancient <i>ātrium</i> was separated
-from the street only by its own wall. The refinement of later times
-led to the introduction of a hall or passageway between the
-<i>vestibulum</i> and the <i>ātrium</i>, and the <i>ōstium</i> opened into this hall
-and gradually gave its name to it. The threshold (<i>līmen</i>) was broad,
-the door being placed well back, and often had the word <i>salvē</i> worked
-on it in mosaic. Over the door were words of good omen, <i>Nihil intret
-malī</i>, for example, or a charm against fire. In the great houses where
-an <i>ōstiārius</i> or <i>iānitor</i> (<a href="#sect150">§150</a>) was kept on duty, his place was
-behind the door, and sometimes he had here a small room. A dog was
-often kept chained in the <i>ōstium</i>, or in default of one a picture was
-painted on the wall or worked in mosaic on the floor (Fig. 41) with
-the warning beneath it: <i>Cavē canem!</i> The hallway was closed on the
-side of the <i>ātrium</i> with a curtain (<i>vēlum</i>). This hallway was not so
-long that through it persons in the <i>ātrium</i> could not see passers-by
-in the street.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect196"><b>196</b></a></span>
-<b>The Atrium.</b>&mdash;The <i>ātrium</i> (<a href="#sect188">§188</a>) was the kernel of the Roman
-house, and to it was given the appropriate name <i>cavum aedium</i>. It is
-possible that this later name belonged strictly to the unroofed
-portion only, but the two words came to be used indiscriminately. The
-old view that the <i>cavum aedium</i> was a middle court between the
-<i>ātrium</i> and the <i>peristylium</i> is still held by a few scholars, but is
-not supported by the monumental evidence (<a href="#sect187">§187</a>). The most conspicuous
-features of the <i>ātrium</i> were the <i>impluvium</i> and the <i>compluvium</i>
-(<a href="#sect188">§188</a>). The water collected in the latter was carried into cisterns;
-over the former a curtain could be drawn when the light was too
-intense, as over a photographer's skylight nowadays. We find that the
-two words were carelessly used for each other by Roman writers. So
-important was the <i>impluvium</i> to the <i>ātrium</i>, that the latter was
-named from the manner in which the former was constructed. Vitruvius
-tells us that there were four styles. The first was called the <i>ātrium
-Tūscanicum</i>. In this the roof was formed by two pairs of beams
-crossing each other at right angles, the inclosed space being left
-uncovered and thus forming the <i>impluvium</i> (Figs. 42, 43). The name
-(<a href="#sect188">§188</a>) as well as the simple construction shows that this was the
-earliest form of the <i>ātrium</i>, and it is evident that it could not be
-used for rooms of very large dimensions. The second was called the
-<i>ātrium tetrastylon</i>. The beams were supported at their intersections
-by pillars or columns. The third, <i>ātrium Corinthium</i>, differed from
-the second only in having more than four supporting pillars. It is
-probable that these two similar styles came in with the widening of
-the <i>ātrium</i> (<a href="#sect191">§191</a>). The fourth was called the <i>ātrium displuviātum</i>.
-In this the roof sloped toward the outer walls, as shown in the
-cinerary urn mentioned in <a href="#sect189">§189</a>, and the water was carried off by
-gutters on the outside, the <i>compluvium</i> collecting only so much as
-actually fell into it from the heavens. We are told that there was
-another style of <i>ātrium</i>, the <i>testūdinātum</i>, which was covered all
-over and had neither <i>impluvium</i> nor <i>compluvium</i>. We do not know how
-this was lighted; perhaps by windows in the ālae.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure44">
- <tr>
- <td width="271">
- <img src="images/figure044.jpg" alt="FIGURE 44. SMALL HOUSE AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="271" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 44.
- S<small>MALL</small> H<small>OUSE AT</small>
- P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect197"><b>197</b></a></span>
-<b>The Change in the Atrium.</b>&mdash;The <i>ātrium</i> as it was in the early
-days of the Republic has been described in <a href="#sect188">§188</a>. The simplicity and
-purity of the family life of that period lent a dignity to the
-one-room house that the vast palaces of the late Republic and Empire
-failed utterly to inherit. By Cicero's time the <i>ātrium</i> had ceased to
-be the center of domestic life; it had become a state apartment used
-only for display. We do not know the successive steps in the process
-of change. Probably the rooms along the sides (<a href="#sect191">§191</a>) were first used
-as bedrooms, for the sake of greater privacy. The need of a detached
-room for the cooking must have been felt as soon as the <i>peristylium</i>
-was adopted (it may well be that the court was originally a kitchen
-garden), and then of a dining-room convenient to it. Then other rooms
-were added about this court and these were made sleeping-apartments
-for the sake of still greater privacy. Finally these rooms were needed
-for other purposes (<a href="#sect192">§192</a>) and the sleeping-rooms were moved again,
-this time to an upper story. When this second story was added we do
-not know, but it presupposes the small and costly lots of a city. Even
-the most unpretentious houses in Pompeii have in them the remains of
-staircases (Fig. 44).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure45">
- <tr>
- <td width="645">
- <img src="images/figure045.jpg" alt="FIGURE 45. ATRIUM IN HOUSE OF SALLUST IN POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="645" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 45.
- A<small>TRIUM IN</small> H<small>OUSE OF</small>
- S<small>ALLUST IN</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect198"><b>198</b></a></span>
-The <i>ātrium</i> was now fitted up with all the splendor and
-magnificence that the owner's means would permit. The opening in the
-roof was enlarged to admit more light, and the supporting pillars
-(<a href="#sect196">§196</a>) were made of marble or costly woods. Between these pillars and
-along the walls statues and other works of art were placed. The
-<i>compluvium</i> became a marble basin, with a fountain in the center, and
-was often richly carved or adorned with figures in relief. The floors
-were mosaic, the walls painted in brilliant colors or paneled with
-marbles of many hues, and the ceilings were covered with ivory and
-gold. In such a hall (Fig. 45) the host greeted his guests (<a href="#sect185">§185</a>), the
-patron received his clients (<a href="#sect182">§182</a>), the husband welcomed his wife
-(<a href="#sect89">§89</a>), and here his body lay in state when the pride of life was over.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure46">
- <tr>
- <td width="401">
- <img src="images/figure046.jpg" alt="FIGURE 46. RUINS OF THE HOUSE OF THE POET IN POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="401" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 46.
- R<small>UINS OF THE</small> H<small>OUSE OF
- THE</small> P<small>OET IN</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect199"><b>199</b></a></span>
-Still some memorials of the older day were left in even the most
-imposing <i>ātrium</i>. The altar to the Lares and Penates remained near
-the place where the hearth had been, though the regular sacrifices
-were made in a special chapel in the <i>peristylium</i>. In even the
-grandest houses the implements for spinning were kept in the place
-where the matron had once sat among her maidservants (<a href="#sect86">§§86</a>, <a href="#sect105">105</a>), as
-Livy tells us in the story of Lucretia. The cabinets retained the
-masks of simpler and may be stronger men (<a href="#sect107">§107</a>), and the marriage
-couch stood opposite the <i>ōstium</i> (hence its other name, <i>lectus
-adversus</i>), where it had been placed on the wedding night (<a href="#sect89">§89</a>),
-though no one slept in the <i>ātrium</i>. In the country much of the
-old-time use of the <i>ātrium</i> survived even Augustus, and the poor, of
-course, had never changed their style of living. What use was made of
-the small rooms along the sides of the <i>ātrium</i>, after they had ceased
-to be bedchambers, we do not know; they served perhaps as conversation
-rooms, private parlors, and drawing-rooms.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect200"><b>200</b></a></span>
-<b>The Alae.</b>&mdash;The manner in which the <i>ālae</i>, or wings, were formed
-has been explained (<a href="#sect191">§191</a>); they were simply the rectangular recesses
-left on the right and left of the <i>ātrium</i>, when the smaller rooms on
-the sides were walled off. It must be remembered that they were
-entirely open to the <i>ātrium</i>, and formed a part of it, perhaps
-originally furnishing additional light from windows in their outer
-walls. In them were kept the <i>imāginēs</i>, as the wax busts of those
-ancestors who had held curule offices were called, arranged in
-cabinets in such a way that, by the help of cords running from one to
-another and of inscriptions under each of them, their relation to each
-other could be made clear and their great deeds kept in mind. Even
-when Roman writers or those of modern times speak of the <i>imāginēs</i> as
-in the <i>ātrium</i>, it is the <i>ālae</i> that are intended.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure47">
- <tr>
- <td width="647">
- <img src="images/figure047.jpg" alt="FIGURE 47. VIEW FROM THE ATRIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="647" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 47.
- V<small>IEW FROM THE</small> A<small>TRIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect201"><b>201</b></a></span>
-<b>The Tablinum.</b>&mdash;The probable origin of the <i>tablīnum</i>, has been
-explained above (<a href="#sect190">§190</a>), and its name has been derived from the
-material (<i>tabulae</i>, "planks") of the "lean-to," perhaps a summer
-kitchen, from which it developed. Others think that the room received
-its name from the fact that in it the master kept his account books
-(<i>tabulae</i>) as well as all his business and private papers. He kept
-here also the money chest or strong box (<i>ārca</i>), which in the olden
-time had been chained to the floor of the <i>ātrium</i>, and made the room
-in fact his office or study. By its position it commanded the whole
-house, as the rooms could be entered only from the <i>ātrium</i> or
-<i>peristylium</i>, and the <i>tablīnum</i> was right between them. The master
-could secure entire privacy by closing the folding doors which cut off
-the private court, or by pulling the curtains across the opening into
-the great hall. On the other hand, if the <i>tablīnum</i> was left open,
-the guest entering the <i>ōstium</i> must have had a charming vista,
-commanding at a glance all the public and semi-public parts of the
-house (Fig. 47). Even when the <i>tablīnum</i> was closed, there was free
-passage from the front of the house to the rear through the short
-corridor (<a href="#sect192">§192</a>) by the side of the <i>tablīnum</i>. It should be noticed
-that there was only one such passage, though the older authorities
-assert that there were two.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure48">
- <tr>
- <td width="640">
- <img src="images/figure048.jpg" alt="FIGURE 48. THE PERISTYLE FROM HOUSE IN POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="640" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 48.
- T<small>HE</small> P<small>ERISTYLE FROM</small>
- H<small>OUSE IN</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure49">
- <tr>
- <td width="363">
- <img src="images/figure049.jpg" alt="FIGURE 49. ROOF OF PERISTYLE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="363" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 49.
- R<small>OOF OF</small> P<small>ERISTYLE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect202"><b>202</b></a></span>
-<b>The Peristyle.</b>&mdash;The <i>peristylium</i> or <i>peristylum</i> was adopted,
-as we have seen (<a href="#sect192">§192</a>), from the Greeks, but despite the way in which
-the Roman clung to the customs of his fathers it was not long in
-becoming the more important of the two main sections of the house. We
-must think of a spacious court (Fig. 48) open to the sky, but
-surrounded by a continuous row of buildings, or rather rooms, for the
-buildings soon became one, all facing it and having doors and latticed
-windows opening upon it. All these buildings had covered porches on
-the side next the court (Fig. 49), and these porches forming an
-unbroken colonnade on the four sides were strictly the peristyle,
-though the name came to be used of the whole section of the house,
-including court, colonnade, and surrounding rooms. The court was much
-more open to the sun than the <i>ātrium</i>, and all sorts of rare and
-beautiful plants and flowers bloomed and flourished in it, protected
-by the walls from cold winds. Fountains and statuary adorned the
-middle part; the colonnade furnished cool or sunny promenades, no
-matter what the time of day or the season of the year. Loving the open
-air and the charms of nature as the Romans did, it is no wonder that
-they soon made the peristyle the center of their domestic life in all
-the houses of the better class, and reserved the <i>ātrium</i> for the more
-formal functions which their political and public position demanded
-(<a href="#sect197">§197</a>). It must be remembered that there was often a garden behind the
-peristyle, and there was also very commonly a direct connection with
-the street.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect203"><b>203</b></a></span>
-<b>Private Rooms.</b>&mdash;The rooms surrounding the court varied so much
-with the means and tastes of the owners of the houses that we can
-hardly do more than give a list of those most frequently mentioned in
-literature. It is important to remember that in the town house all
-these rooms received their light by day from the court (<a href="#sect193">§193</a>), while
-in the country there may well have been windows and doors in the
-exterior wall (<a href="#sect191">§191</a>). First in importance comes the kitchen
-(<i>culīna</i>), placed on the side of the court opposite the <i>tablīnum</i>.
-It was supplied with an open fireplace for roasting and boiling, and
-with a stove (Fig. 50) not unlike the charcoal affairs still used in
-Europe. Near it was the bakery, if the mansion required one, supplied
-with an oven. Near it, too, was the bathhouse (<i>lātrīna</i>) with the
-necessary closet, in order that all might use the same connection with
-the sewer (Fig. 51). If the house had a stable, it was also put near
-the kitchen, as nowadays in Latin countries.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures50and51">
- <tr>
- <td width="265">
- <img src="images/figure050.jpg" alt="FIGURE 50. KITCHEN RANGE">
- </td>
- <td width="264">
- <img src="images/figure051.jpg" alt="FIGURE 51. LATRINA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="265" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 50.
- K<small>ITCHEN</small> R<small>ANGE</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="264" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 51.
- L<small>ATRINA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect204"><b>204</b></a></span>
-The dining-room (<i>trīclīnium</i>) may be mentioned next. It was not
-necessarily in immediate juxtaposition to the kitchen, because the
-army of slaves (<a href="#sect149">§149</a>) made its position of little importance so far as
-convenience was concerned. It was customary to have several trīclīnia
-for use at different seasons of the year, in order that the room might
-be warmed by the sun in winter, and in summer escape its rays.
-Vitruvius thought that its length should be twice its breadth, but the
-ruins show no fixed proportions. The Romans were so fond of the air
-and the sky that the court must have often served as a dining-room,
-and Horace has left us a charming picture of the master dining under
-an arbor attended by a single slave. Such an outdoor dining-room is
-found in the so-called House of Sallust at Pompeii (Fig. 52).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure52">
- <tr>
- <td width="452">
- <img src="images/figure052.jpg" alt="FIGURE 52. DINING-ROOM IN COURT">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="452" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 52.
- D<small>INING-ROOM IN</small> C<small>OURT</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure53">
- <tr>
- <td width="267">
- <img src="images/figure053.jpg" alt="FIGURE 53. BEDROOM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="267" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 53.
- B<small>EDROOM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect205"><b>205</b></a></span>
-The sleeping-rooms (<i>cubicula</i>) were not considered so important
-by the Romans as by us, for the reason, probably, that they were used
-merely to sleep in and not for living-rooms as well. They were very
-small and the furniture was scant (Fig. 53) in even the best houses.
-Some of these seem to have had anterooms in connection with the
-<i>cubicula</i>, which were probably occupied by attendants (<a href="#sect150">§150</a>), and in
-even the ordinary houses there was often a recess for the bed. Some of
-the bedrooms seem to have been used merely for the midday siesta
-(<a href="#sect122">§122</a>), and these were naturally situated in the coolest part of the
-court; they were called <i>cubicula diurna</i>. The others were called by
-way of distinction <i>cubicula nocturna</i> or <i>dormitōria</i>, and were
-placed so far as possible on the west side of the court in order that
-they might receive the morning sun. It should be remembered that in
-the best houses the bedrooms were preferably in the second story of
-the peristyle.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect206"><b>206</b></a></span>
-A library (<i>bibliothēca</i>) had a place in the house of every
-Roman of education. Collections of books were large as well as
-numerous, and were made then as now by persons even who cared nothing
-about their contents. The books or rolls, which will be described
-later, were kept in cases or cabinets around the walls, and in one
-library discovered in Herculaneum an additional rectangular case
-occupied the middle of the room. It was customary to decorate the room
-with statues of Minerva and the Muses, and also with the busts and
-portraits of distinguished men. Vitruvius recommends an eastern aspect
-for the <i>bibliothēca</i>, probably to guard against dampness.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure54">
- <tr>
- <td width="452" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure054.jpg" alt="FIGURE 54. CHAPEL IN HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="452" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 54.
- C<small>HAPEL IN</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect207"><b>207</b></a></span>
-Besides these rooms, which must have been found in all good
-houses, there were others of less importance, some of which were so
-rare that we scarcely know their uses. The <i>sacrārium</i> was a private
-chapel (Fig. 54) in which the images of the gods were kept, acts of
-worship performed, and sacrifices offered. The Lar or tutelary
-divinity of the house seems, however, to have retained his ancient
-place in the <i>ātrium</i>. The <i>oecī</i> were halls or saloons, corresponding
-perhaps to our parlors and drawing-rooms, used occasionally, it may
-be, for banquet halls. The <i>exedrae</i> were rooms supplied with
-permanent seats which seem to have been used for lectures and similar
-entertainments. The <i>sōlārium</i> was a place to bask in the sun,
-sometimes a terrace, often the flat roof of the house, which was then
-covered with earth and laid out like a garden and made beautiful with
-flowers and shrubs. Besides these there were, of course, sculleries,
-pantries, and storerooms. The slaves had to have their quarters
-(<i>cellae servōrum</i>), in which they were packed as closely as possible.
-Cellars under the houses seem to have been rare, though some have been
-found at Pompeii.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure55">
- <tr>
- <td width="677">
- <img src="images/figure055.jpg" alt="FIGURE 55. HOUSE OF PANSA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="677" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 55.
- H<small>OUSE OF</small> P<small>ANSA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect208"><b>208</b></a></span>
-<b>The House of Pansa.</b>&mdash;Finally we may describe a house that
-actually existed, taking as an illustration one that must have
-belonged to a wealthy and influential man, the so-called House of
-Pansa at Pompeii (Fig. 55; and see also Overbeck's <i>Pompeii</i>, p. 325;
-Harper, p. 549; Becker, II, p. 214; Smith, I, p. 681; Schreiber, LIII,
-16; the various plans are slightly different). The house occupied an
-entire square, facing a little east of south. Most of the rooms on the
-front and sides were rented out for shops or stores; in the rear was a
-garden. The rooms that did not belong to the house proper are shaded
-in the plan here given. The <i>vestibulum</i>, marked 1 in the plan, is the
-open space between two of the shops (<a href="#sect193">§193</a>). Behind it is the <i>ōstium</i>
-(1'), with a figure of a dog (<a href="#sect195">§195</a>) in mosaic, opening into the
-<i>ātrium</i> (2, 2) with three rooms on each side, the <i>ālae</i> (2', 2')
-being in the regular place, the <i>compluvium</i> (3) in the middle, the
-<i>tablīnum</i> (4) opposite the <i>ōstium</i>, and the passage on the eastern
-side (5). The <i>ātrium</i> is of the <i>Tūscanicum</i> style (<a href="#sect196">§196</a>), and is
-paved with concrete; the <i>tablīnum</i> and the passage have mosaic
-floors. From these, steps lead down into the court, which is lower
-than the <i>ātrium</i>, measures 65 by 50 feet, and is surrounded by a
-colonnade with sixteen pillars. There are two rooms on the side next
-the <i>ātrium</i>, one of these (6) has been called the <i>bibliothēca</i>
-(<a href="#sect206">§206</a>), because a manuscript was found in it, but its purpose is
-uncertain; the other (6') was possibly a dining-room. The court has
-two projections (7', 7') much like the <i>ālae</i>, which have been called
-<i>exedrae</i> (<a href="#sect207">§207</a>); it will be noticed that one of these has the
-convenience of an exit (<a href="#sect202">§202</a>) to the street. The rooms on the west and
-the small room on the east can not be definitely named. The large room
-on the east (T) is the main dining-room (<a href="#sect204">§204</a>), the remains of the
-dining couches being marked on the plan. The kitchen is at the
-northwest corner (13), with the stable (14) next to it (<a href="#sect203">§203, end</a>);
-off the kitchen is a paved yard (15) with a gateway into the street by
-which a cart could enter. East of the kitchen and yard is a narrow
-passage connecting the peristyle with the garden (<a href="#sect202">§202</a>). East of this
-are two rooms, the larger of which (9) is one of the most imposing
-rooms of the house, 33 by 24 feet in size, with a large window guarded
-by a low balustrade, and opening into the garden. This was probably an
-<i>oecus</i> (<a href="#sect207">§207</a>). In the center of the court is a basin about two feet
-deep, the rim of which was once decorated with figures of water plants
-and fish. Along the whole north end of the house ran a long veranda
-(16, 16), overlooking the garden (11, 11) in which was a sort of
-summer house (12). The house had an upper story, but the stairs
-leading to it are in the rented rooms, suggesting that the upper floor
-was not occupied by Pansa's family.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure56">
- <tr>
- <td width="793">
- <img src="images/figure056.jpg" alt="FIGURE 56. SECTION OF THE HOUSE OF PANSA IN POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="793" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 56.
- S<small>ECTION OF THE</small> H<small>OUSE
- OF</small> P<small>ANSA IN</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect209"><b>209</b></a></span>
-Of the rooms facing the street it will be noticed that one,
-lightly shaded in the plan, is connected with the <i>ātrium;</i> it was
-probably used for some business conducted by Pansa himself (<a href="#sect193">§193,
-end</a>), possibly with a slave (<a href="#sect144">§144</a>) or a freedman (<a href="#sect175">§175</a>) in immediate
-charge of it. Of the others the suites on the east side (A, B) seem to
-have been rented out as living apartments. The others were shops and
-stores. The four connected rooms on the west, near the front, seem to
-have been a large bakery; the room marked C was the salesroom, with a
-large room opening off of it containing three stone mills, troughs for
-kneading the dough, a water tap with sink, and a recessed oven. The
-uses of the others are uncertain. The section plan (Fig. 56)
-represents the appearance of the house if all were cut away on one
-side of a line drawn from front to rear through the middle of the
-house. It is, of course, largely conjectural, but gives a clear idea
-of the general way in which the division walls and roof must have been
-arranged.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure57">
- <tr>
- <td width="384">
- <img src="images/figure057.jpg" alt="FIGURE 57. WALL OF ROMULUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="384" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 57.
- W<small>ALL OF</small> R<small>OMULUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect210"><b>210</b></a></span>
-<b>The Walls.</b>&mdash;The materials of which the wall (<i>pariēs</i>) was
-composed varied with the time, the place, and the cost of
-transportation. Stone and unburned bricks (<i>laterēs crūdī</i>) were the
-earliest materials used in Italy, as almost everywhere else, timber
-being employed for merely temporary structures, as in the addition
-(<a href="#sect190">§190</a>) from which the <i>tablīnum</i> developed. For private houses in very
-early times and for public buildings in all times, walls of dressed
-stone (<i>opus quadrātum</i>) were laid in regular courses, precisely as in
-modern times (Fig. 57). Over the wall was spread a coating of fine
-marble stucco for decorative purposes, which gave it a finish of
-dazzling white. For less pretentious houses, not for public buildings,
-the sun-dried bricks were largely used up to about the beginning of
-the first century <small>B.C.</small> These, too, were covered with the stucco, for
-protection against the weather as well as for decoration, but even the
-hard stucco has not preserved walls of this perishable material to our
-times. In classical times a new material had come into use, better
-than either brick or stone, cheaper, more durable, more easily worked
-and transported, which was employed almost exclusively for private
-houses, and very generally for public buildings. Walls constructed in
-the new way (<i>opus caementīcium</i>) are variously called "rubble-work"
-or "concrete" in our books of reference, but neither term is quite
-descriptive; the <i>opus caementīcium</i> was not laid in courses, as is
-our rubble-work, while on the other hand larger stones were used in it
-than in the concrete of which walls for buildings are now constructed.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure58">
- <tr>
- <td width="361">
- <img src="images/figure058.jpg" alt="FIGURE 58. METHOD OF CASTING CONCRETE WALLS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="361" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 58.
- M<small>ETHOD OF</small> C<small>ASTING</small>
- C<small>ONCRETE</small> W<small>ALLS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect211"><b>211</b></a></span>
-<b>Paries Caementicius.</b>&mdash;The materials varied with the place. At
-Rome lime and volcanic ashes (<i>lapis Puteolānus</i>) were used with
-pieces of stone as large or larger than the fist. Brickbats sometimes
-took the place of stone, and sand (<a href="#sect146">§146</a>) that of the volcanic ashes;
-potsherds crushed fine were better than the sand. The harder the
-stones the better the concrete; the very best was made with pieces of
-lava, the material with which the roads were generally paved. The
-method of forming the concrete walls was the same as that of modern
-times, familiar to us all in the construction of sidewalks. It will be
-easily understood from the illustration (Fig. 58). Upright posts,
-about 5 by 6 inches thick, and from 10 to 15 feet in height, were
-fixed about 3 feet apart along the line of both faces of the intended
-wall. On the outside of these were nailed horizontally boards, 10 or
-12 inches wide, overlapping each other. Into the intermediate space
-the semi-fluid concrete was poured, receiving the imprint of posts and
-boards. When the concrete had hardened, the frame-work was removed and
-placed on top of it and the work continued until the wall had reached
-the required height. Walls made in this way varied in thickness from a
-seven-inch partition wall in an ordinary house to the eighteen-foot
-walls of the Pantheon of Agrippa. They were far more durable than
-stone walls, which might be removed stone by stone with little more
-labor than was required to put them together; the concrete wall was a
-single slab of stone throughout its whole extent, and large parts of
-it might be cut away without diminishing the strength of the rest in
-the slightest degree.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures59and60">
- <tr>
- <td width="354" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure059.jpg" alt="FIGURE 59. WALL FACINGS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="354" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 59.
- W<small>ALL</small> F<small>ACINGS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="354">
- <img src="images/figure060.jpg" alt="FIGURE 60. BRICK FOR FACING WALL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="354" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 60.
- B<small>RICK FOR</small> F<small>ACING</small> W<small>ALL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect212"><b>212</b></a></span>
-<b>Wall Facings.</b>&mdash;Impervious to the weather though these walls
-were, they were usually faced with stone or kiln-burned brick
-(<i>laterēs coctī</i>). The stone employed was usually the soft tufa, not
-nearly so well adapted to stand the weather as the concrete itself.
-The earliest fashion was to take bits of stone having one smooth face
-but of no regular size or shape and arrange them with the smooth faces
-against the frame-work as fast as the concrete was poured in; when the
-frame-work was removed the wall presented the appearance shown at A in
-Fig. 59. Such a wall was called <i>opus incertum</i>. In later times the
-tufa was used in small blocks having the smooth face square and of a
-uniform size. A wall so faced looked as if covered with a net (B in
-Fig. 59) and was therefore called <i>opus rēticulātum</i>. A section at a
-corner is shown at C. In either case the exterior face of the wall was
-usually covered with a fine limestone or marble stucco, which gave a
-hard finish, smooth and white. The burned bricks were triangular in
-shape, but their arrangement and appearance can be more easily
-understood from the illustration (Fig. 60) than from any description
-that could be given here. It must be noticed that there were no walls
-made of <i>laterēs coctī</i> alone, even the thin partition walls having a
-core of concrete.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect213"><b>213</b></a></span>
-<b>Floors and Ceilings.</b>&mdash;In the poorer houses the floor (<i>sōlum</i>)
-of the first story was made by smoothing the ground between the walls,
-covering it thickly with small pieces of stone, bricks, tile, and
-potsherds, and pounding all down solidly and smoothly with a heavy
-rammer (<i>fistūca</i>). Such a floor was called <i>pavīmentum</i>, and the name
-came gradually to be used of floors of all kinds. In houses of a
-better sort the floor was made of stone slabs fitted smoothly
-together. The more pretentious houses had concrete floors, made as has
-been described. Floors of upper stories were sometimes made of wood,
-but concrete was used here, too, poured over a temporary flooring of
-wood. Such a floor was very heavy, and required strong walls to
-support it; examples are preserved of the thickness of eighteen inches
-and a span of twenty feet. A floor of this kind made a perfect ceiling
-for the room below, requiring only a finish of stucco. Other ceilings
-were made much as they are now, laths being nailed on the stringers or
-rafters and covered with mortar and stucco.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures61and62">
- <tr>
- <td width="281">
- <img src="images/figure061.jpg" alt="FIGURE 61. HUT OF ROMULUS">
- </td>
- <td width="323">
- <img src="images/figure062.jpg" alt="FIGURE 62. TILE FOR ROOF">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="281" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 61.
- H<small>UT OF</small> R<small>OMULUS</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="323" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 62.
- T<small>ILE FOR</small> R<small>OOF</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure63">
- <tr>
- <td width="354">
- <img src="images/figure063.jpg" alt="FIGURE 63. TILE ROOF">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="354" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 63.
- T<small>ILE</small> R<small>OOF</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect214"><b>214</b></a></span>
-<b>Roofs.</b>&mdash;The construction of the roofs (<i>tēcta</i>) differed very
-little from the modern method, as may be seen in the illustration
-shown in <a href="#sect196">§196</a>. They varied as much as ours do in shape, some being
-flat, others sloping in two directions, others in four. In the most
-ancient times the covering was a thatch of straw, as in the so-called
-hut of Romulus (<i>casa Rōmulī</i>) on the Palatine Hill preserved even
-under the Empire as a relic of the past (Fig. 61). Shingles followed
-the straw, only to give place in turn to tiles. These were at first
-flat, like our shingles, but were later made with a flange on each
-side (Fig. 62) in such a way that the lower part of one would slip
-into the upper part of the one below it on the roof. The tiles
-(<i>tēgulae</i>) were laid side by side and the flanges covered by other
-tiles, called <i>imbricēs</i> (Fig. 63) inverted over them. Gutters also of
-tile ran along the eaves to conduct the water into cisterns, if it was
-needed for domestic purposes. The appearance of the completed roof is
-shown in Fig. 49, <a href="#sect202">§202</a>.</p>
-<table align="left" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure64">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure064.jpg" alt="FIGURE 64. DOOR OF ROMAN HOUSE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 64.
- D<small>OOR OF</small> R<small>OMAN</small> H<small>OUSE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect215"><b>215</b></a></span>
-<b>The Doors.</b>&mdash;The Roman doorway, like our own, had four parts: the
-threshold (<i>līmen</i>), the two jambs (<i>postēs</i>), and the lintel (<i>līmen
-superum</i>). The lintel was always of a single piece of stone and
-peculiarly massive. The doors were exactly like those of modern times,
-except in the matter of hinges, for while the Romans had hinges like
-ours they did not use them on their doors. The door-hinge was really a
-cylinder of hard wood, a little longer than the door and of a diameter
-a little greater than the thickness of the door, terminating above and
-below in pivots. These pivots turned in sockets made to receive them
-in the threshold and lintel. To this cylinder the door was mortised,
-their combined weight coming upon the lower pivot. The cut (Fig. 64)
-makes this clear, and reminds one of an old-fashioned homemade gate.
-The comedies are full of references to the creaking of these doors.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect216"><b>216</b></a></span>
-The outer door of the house was properly called <i>iānua</i>, an
-inner door <i>ōstium</i>, but the two words came to be used
-indiscriminately, and the latter was even applied to the whole
-entrance (<a href="#sect195">§195</a>). Double doors were called <i>forēs</i>, and the back door,
-usually opening into a garden (<a href="#sect208">§208</a>), was called the <i>postīcum</i>. The
-doors opened inwards and those in the outer wall were supplied with
-bolts (<i>pessulī</i>) and bars (<i>serae</i>). Locks and keys by which the doors
-could be fastened from without were not unknown, but were very heavy
-and clumsy. Finally it should be noticed that in the interiors of
-private houses doors were not nearly so common as now, the Romans
-preferring portières (<i>vēla</i>, <i>aulaea</i>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure65">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure065.jpg" alt="FIGURE 65. WINDOW">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 65.
- W<small>INDOW</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect217"><b>217</b></a></span>
-<b>The Windows.</b>&mdash;In the principal rooms of the house the windows
-opened on the court, as has been seen, and it may be set down as a
-rule that in rooms situated on the first floor and used for domestic
-purposes there were no windows opening on the street. In the upper
-floors there must have been windows on the street in such apartments
-as had no outlook on the court, as in those for example above the
-rented rooms in the House of Pansa (<a href="#sect208">§208</a>). Country houses may also
-have had outside windows in the first story (<a href="#sect203">§203</a>). All the windows
-(<i>fenestrae</i>) were small (Fig. 65), hardly larger than three feet by
-two. Some were provided with shutters, which were made to slide
-backward and forward in a frame-work on the outside of the wall. These
-shutters were sometimes in two parts moving in opposite directions,
-and when closed were said to be <i>iūnctae</i>. Other windows were
-latticed, and others still were covered with a fine network to keep
-out mice and other objectionable animals. Glass was known to the
-Romans of the Empire but was too expensive for general use. Talc and
-other translucent materials were also employed in window frames as a
-protection against cold, but only in very rare instances.</p>
-<table align="left" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure66">
- <tr>
- <td width="249">
- <img src="images/figure066.jpg" alt="FIGURE 66. STOVE FOR HEATING">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="249" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 66.
- S<small>TOVE FOR</small> H<small>EATING</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect218"><b>218</b></a></span>
-<b>Heating.</b>&mdash;Even in the mild climate of Italy the houses must
-often have been too cold for comfort. On merely chilly days the
-occupants probably contented themselves with moving into rooms warmed
-by the direct rays of the sun (<a href="#sect204">§204</a>), or with wearing wraps or heavier
-clothing. In the more severe weather of actual winter they used
-charcoal stoves or braziers of the sort that is still used in the
-countries of southern Europe. They were merely metal boxes (Fig. 66)
-in which hot coals could be put, with legs to keep the floors from
-injury and handles by which they could be carried from room to room.
-They were called <i>foculī</i>. The wealthy had furnaces resembling ours
-under their houses, the heat being carried to the rooms by tile pipes;
-in some instances the partitions and floors seem to have been made of
-hollow tiles, through which the hot air circulated, warming the rooms
-without being admitted to them. These furnaces had chimneys, but
-furnaces were seldom used.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect219"><b>219</b></a></span>
-<b>Water Supply.</b>&mdash;All the important towns of Italy had abundant
-supplies of water piped from hills and brought sometimes from a
-considerable distance. The Romans' aqueducts were among their most
-stupendous and most successful works of engineering. Mains were laid
-down the middle of the streets and from these the water was piped into
-the houses. There was often a tank in the upper part of the house,
-from which the water was distributed as it was needed. It was not
-usually carried into many of the rooms, but there was always a jet or
-fountain in the court (<a href="#sect202">§202</a>), in the bathhouse, the garden, and the
-closet. The bathhouse had a separate heating apparatus of its own,
-which kept the room or rooms at the desired temperature and furnished
-hot water as required.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect220"><b>220</b></a></span>
-<b>Decoration.</b>&mdash;The outside of the house was left severely plain,
-the walls being merely covered with stucco, as we have seen (<a href="#sect212">§212</a>).
-The interior was decorated to suit the tastes and means of the owner,
-not even the poorer houses lacking charming effects in this direction.
-At first the stucco-finished walls were merely marked off into
-rectangular panels (<i>abacī</i>), which were painted deep, rich colors,
-reds and yellows predominating. Then in the middle of these panels
-simple center-pieces were painted and the whole surrounded with the
-most brilliant arabesques. Then came elaborate pictures, figures,
-interiors, landscapes, etc., of large size and most skillfully
-executed, all painted directly upon the wall, as in some of our public
-buildings to-day. Illustrations of these decorations may be found in
-Baumeister II, L, and LI, and in colors in Gusman IX-XI, Kelsey XI. A
-little later the walls began to be covered with panels of thin slabs
-of marble with a baseboard and cornice. Beautiful effects were
-produced by combining marbles of different tints, and the Romans
-ransacked the world for striking colors. Later still came raised
-figures of stucco work, enriched with gold and colors, and mosaic
-work, chiefly of minute pieces of colored glass which had a jewel-like
-effect.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure67">
- <tr>
- <td width="642">
- <img src="images/figure067.jpg" alt="FIGURE 67. MOSAIC THRESHOLD">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="642" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 67.
- M<small>OSAIC</small> T<small>HRESHOLD</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure68">
- <tr>
- <td width="655">
- <img src="images/figure068.jpg" alt="FIGURE 68. CARVED DOORWAY">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="655" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 68.
- C<small>ARVED</small> D<small>OORWAY</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect221"><b>221</b></a></span>
-The doors and doorways gave opportunities for treatment equally
-artistic. The doors were richly paneled and carved, or were plated
-with bronze, or made of solid bronze. The threshold was often of
-mosaic (see the example from Pompeii in Fig. 67). The <i>postēs</i> were
-sheathed with marble elaborately carved, as in the example from
-Pompeii, shown in Fig. 68. The floors were covered with marble tiles
-arranged in geometrical figures with contrasting colors, much as they
-are now in public buildings, or with mosaic pictures only less
-beautiful than those upon the walls. The most famous of these, "Darius
-at the Battle of Issus," is shown in black and white in all our
-reference books (best in Baumeister under <i>Mosaik</i>, Fig. 1000, and in
-colors in Overbeck after p. 612). It measures sixteen feet by eight,
-but despite its size has no less than one hundred and fifty separate
-pieces to each square inch. The ceilings were often barrel-vaulted and
-painted brilliant colors, or were divided into panels (<i>lacūs</i>,
-<i>lacūnae</i>), deeply sunk, by heavy intersecting beams of wood or
-marble, and then decorated in the most elaborate manner with raised
-stucco work, or gold or ivory, or with bronze plates heavily
-gilded.<small><small><sup>2</sup></small></small></p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>2</sup></small> The magnificence of some of the great houses, even in
-Republican times, may be inferred from the prices paid for them.
-Cicero paid about $140,000 for his; the consul Messala the same price
-for his; Clodius $600,000 for his, the most costly known to us. All
-these were on the Palatine Hill, where ground was costly, too.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect222"><b>222</b></a></span>
-<b>Furniture.</b>&mdash;Our knowledge of Roman furniture is largely
-indirect, because only such articles have come down to us as were made
-of stone or metal. Fortunately the secondary sources are abundant and
-good. Many articles are incidentally described in works of literature,
-many are shown in the wall paintings mentioned above (<a href="#sect220">§220</a>), and some
-have been restored from casts taken in the hardened ashes of Pompeii
-and Herculaneum. In general we may say that the Romans had very few
-articles of furniture in their houses, and that they cared less for
-comfort, not to say luxurious ease, than they did for costly
-materials, fine workmanship, and artistic forms. The mansions on the
-Palatine were enriched with all the spoils of Greece and Asia, but it
-may be doubted whether there was a comfortable bed within the walls of
-Rome.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect223"><b>223</b></a></span>
-<b>Principal Articles.</b>&mdash;Many of the most common and useful articles
-of modern furniture were entirely unknown to the Romans. No mirrors
-hung on their walls, they had no desks or writing tables, no dressers
-or chiffoniers, no glass-doored cabinets for the display of
-bric-a-brac, tableware, or books, no mantels, no hat-racks even. The
-principal articles found in even the best houses were couches or beds,
-chairs, tables, and lamps. If to these we add chests or cabinets, an
-occasional brazier (<a href="#sect218">§218</a>), and still rarer water-clock, we shall have
-everything that can be called furniture except tableware and kitchen
-utensils. Still it must not be thought that their rooms presented a
-desolate or dreary appearance. When one considers the decorations
-(<a href="#sect220">§§220</a>, <a href="#sect221">221</a>), the stately pomp of the <i>ātrium</i> (<a href="#sect198">§198</a>), and the rare
-beauty of the peristyle (<a href="#sect202">§202</a>), it is evident that a very few articles
-of real artistic excellence were more in keeping with them than would
-have been the litter and jumble that we now think necessary in our
-rooms.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect224"><b>224</b></a></span>
-<b>The Couches.</b>&mdash;The couch (<i>lectus</i>, <i>lectulus</i>) was found
-everywhere in the Roman house, a sofa by day, a bed by night. In its
-simplest form it consisted of a frame of wood with straps across the
-top on which was laid a mattress. At one end there was an arm, as in
-the case of our sofas; sometimes there was an arm at each end, and a
-back besides. It was always provided with pillows and rugs or
-coverlets. The mattress was originally stuffed with straw, but this
-gave place to wool and even feathers. In some of the bedrooms of
-Pompeii the frame seems to have been lacking, the mattress being laid
-on a support built up from the floor (<a href="#sect205">§205</a>). The couches used for beds
-seem to have been larger than those used as sofas, and they were so
-high that stools (Fig. 69) or even steps were necessary
-accompaniments. As a sofa the <i>lectus</i> was used in the library for
-reading and writing, the student supporting himself on the left arm
-and holding the book or writing with the right hand. In the
-dining-room it had a permanent place, as will be described later. Its
-honorary position in the great hall has been already mentioned (<a href="#sect199">§199</a>).
-It will be seen that the <i>lectus</i> could be made highly ornamental. The
-legs and arms were carved or made of costly woods, or inlaid or plated
-with tortoise-shell or the precious metals. We even read of frames of
-solid silver. The coverings were often made of the finest fabrics,
-dyed the most brilliant colors and worked with figures of gold.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures69and70">
- <tr>
- <td width="272">
- <img src="images/figure069.jpg" alt="FIGURE 69. THE LECTUS">
- </td>
- <td width="167">
- <img src="images/figure070.jpg" alt="FIGURE 70. THE SELLA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="272" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 69.
- T<small>HE</small> L<small>ECTUS</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="167" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 70.
- T<small>HE</small> S<small>ELLA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect225"><b>225</b></a></span>
-<b>The Chairs.</b>&mdash;The primitive form of seat (<i>sedīle</i>) among the
-Romans as elsewhere was the stool or bench with four perpendicular
-legs and no back. The remarkable thing is that it did not give place
-to something better as soon as means permitted. The stool (<i>sella</i>)
-was the ordinary seat for one person (Fig. 70), used by men and women
-resting or working, and by children and slaves at their meals as well.
-The bench (<i>subsellium</i>) differed from the stool only in accommodating
-more than one person. It was used by senators in the <i>cūria</i>, by the
-jurors in the courts, and by boys in the school (<a href="#sect120">§120</a>), as well as in
-private houses. A special form of the <i>sella</i> was the famous curule
-chair (<i>sella curūlis</i>), having curved legs of ivory (Fig. 71). The
-curule chair folded up like our camp-stools for convenience of
-carriage and had straps across the top to support the cushion which
-formed the seat.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures71and72">
- <tr>
- <td width="299">
- <img src="images/figure071.jpg" alt="FIGURE 71. CURULE CHAIRS">
- </td>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure072.jpg" alt="FIGURE 72. THE SOLIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="299" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 71.
- C<small>URULE</small> C<small>HAIRS</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 72.
- T<small>HE</small> S<small>OLIUM</small></small>
- </td>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure73">
- <tr>
- <td width="279">
- <img src="images/figure073.jpg" alt="FIGURE 73. CATHEDRA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="279" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 73.
- C<small>ATHEDRA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect226"><b>226</b></a></span>
-The first improvement upon the <i>sella</i> was the <i>solium</i>, a
-stiff, straight, high-backed chair with solid arms, looking as if cut
-from a single block of wood (Fig. 72), and so high that a footstool
-was as necessary with it as with a bed (<a href="#sect224">§224</a>). Poets represented gods
-and kings as seated in such a chair, and it was kept in the <i>ātrium</i>
-for the use of the patron when he received his clients (<a href="#sect182">§§182</a>, <a href="#sect198">198</a>).
-Lastly, we find the <i>cathedra</i>, a chair without arms, but with a
-curved back (Fig. 73) sometimes fixed at an easy angle (<i>cathedra
-supīna</i>), the only approximation to a comfortable seat that the Romans
-knew. It was at first used by women only, being regarded as too
-luxurious for men, but finally came into general use. Its employment
-by teachers in the schools of rhetoric (<a href="#sect115">§115</a>) gave rise to the
-expression <i>ex cathedrā</i>, applied to authoritative utterances of every
-kind, and its use by bishops explains our word cathedral. Neither the
-<i>solium</i> nor the <i>cathedra</i> was upholstered, but with them both were
-used cushions and coverings as with the <i>lectī</i>, and they afforded
-like opportunities for skillful workmanship and lavish decoration.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect227"><b>227</b></a></span>
-<b>Tables.</b>&mdash;The table (<i>mēnsa</i>) was the most important article of
-furniture in the Roman house whether we consider its manifold uses, or
-the prices often paid for certain kinds. They varied in form and
-construction as much as our own, many of which are copied directly
-from Roman models. All sorts of materials were used for their supports
-and tops, stone, wood, solid or veneered, the precious metals,
-probably in thin plates only. The most costly, so far as we know, were
-the round tables made from cross-sections of the citrus-tree, found in
-Africa. The wood was beautifully marked and single pieces could be had
-from three to four feet in diameter. For one of these Cicero paid
-$20,000, Asinius Pollio $44,000, King Juba $52,000, and the family of
-the Cethegi possessed one valued at $60,000. Special names were given
-to tables of certain forms. The <i>monopodium</i> was a table or stand with
-but one support, used especially to hold a lamp or toilet articles.
-The <i>abacus</i> was a table with a rectangular top having a raised rim
-and used for plate and dishes, in the place of the modern sideboard.
-The <i>delphica</i> (sc. <i>mēnsa</i>) had three legs, as shown in Fig. 74.
-Tables were frequently made with adjustable legs, so that the height
-might be altered; the mechanism is clearly shown in the cut (Fig. 75).
-On the other hand the permanent tables in the <i>trīclīnia</i> (<a href="#sect204">§204</a>) were
-often built up from the floor of solid masonry or concrete, having
-tops of polished stone or mosaic. The table gave a better opportunity
-than even the couch or chair for artistic workmanship, especially in
-the matter of carving and inlaying the legs and top.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures74and75">
- <tr>
- <td width="257">
- <img src="images/figure074.jpg" alt="FIGURE 74. MENSA DELPHICA">
- </td>
- <td width="212">
- <img src="images/figure075.jpg" alt="FIGURE 75. ADJUSTABLE TABLE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="257" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 74.
- M<small>ENSA</small> D<small>ELPHICA</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="212" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 75.
- A<small>DJUSTABLE</small> T<small>ABLE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect228"><b>228</b></a></span>
-<b>The Lamps.</b>&mdash;The Roman lamp (<i>lucerna</i>) was essentially simple
-enough, merely a vessel that would hold oil or melted grease with a
-few threads twisted loosely together for a wick and drawn out through
-a hole in the cover or top (Fig. 76). The light thus furnished must
-have been very uncertain and dim. There was no glass to keep the flame
-steady, much less was there a chimney or central draft. As works of
-art, however, they were exceedingly beautiful, those of the cheapest
-material being often of graceful form and proportions, while to those
-of costly material the skill of the artist in many cases must have
-given a value far above that of the rare stones or precious metals of
-which they were made.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure76">
- <tr>
- <td width="646">
- <img src="images/figure076.jpg" alt="FIGURE 76. VARIOUS FORMS OF LAMPS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="646" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 76.
- V<small>ARIOUS</small> F<small>ORMS OF</small> L<small>AMPS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure77">
- <tr>
- <td width="659">
- <img src="images/figure077.jpg" alt="FIGURE 77. BASES FOR LAMPS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="659" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 77.
- B<small>ASES FOR</small> L<small>AMPS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect229"><b>229</b></a></span>
-Some of these lamps (cf. Fig. 76) were intended to be carried in
-the hand, as shown by the handles, others to be suspended from the
-ceiling by chains. Others still were kept on tables expressly made for
-them, as the <i>monopodia</i> (<a href="#sect227">§227</a>) commonly used in the bedrooms, or the
-tripods shown in Fig. 77. For lighting the public rooms there were,
-besides these, tall stands, like those of our piano lamps, examples of
-which may be seen in the last cut (Fig. 78). On some of these, several
-lamps perhaps were placed at a time. The name of these stands
-(<i>candēlābra</i>) shows that they were originally intended to hold wax or
-tallow candles (<i>candēlae</i>), and the fact that these candles were
-supplanted in the houses of the rich by the smoking and ill-smelling
-lamp is good proof that the Romans were not skilled in the art of
-making them. Finally it may be noticed that a supply of torches
-(<i>facēs</i>) of dry, inflammable wood, often soaked in oil or smeared
-with pitch, was kept near the outer door for use upon the streets.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures78and79">
- <tr>
- <td width="407">
- <img src="images/figure078.jpg" alt="FIGURE 78. CANDELABRA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="407" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 78.
- C<small>ANDELABRA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="407" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure079.jpg" alt="FIGURE 79. STRONG BOX">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="407" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 79.
- S<small>TRONG</small> B<small>OX</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect230"><b>230</b></a></span>
-<b>Chests and Cabinets.</b>&mdash;Every house was supplied with chests
-(<i>ārcae</i>) of various sizes for the purpose of storing clothes and
-other articles not always in use, and for the safe keeping of papers,
-money, and jewelry. The material was usually wood, often bound with
-iron and ornamented with hinges and locks of bronze. The smaller
-<i>ārcae</i>, used for jewel cases, were often made of silver or even gold.
-Of most importance, perhaps, was the strong box kept in the <i>tablīnum</i>
-(<a href="#sect201">§201</a>), in which the <i>pater familiās</i> stored his ready money. It was
-made as strong as possible so that it could not easily be opened by
-force, and was so large and heavy that it could not be carried away
-entire. As an additional precaution it was sometimes chained to the
-floor. This, too, was often richly carved and mounted, as is seen in
-the illustration from Pompeii (Fig. 79).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect231"><b>231</b></a></span>
-The cabinets (<i>armāria</i>) were designed for similar purposes and
-made of similar materials. They were often divided into compartments
-and were always supplied with hinges and locks. Two of the most
-important uses of these cabinets have been mentioned already: in the
-library (<a href="#sect206">§206</a>) for the preserving of books against mice and men, and
-in the <i>ālae</i> (<a href="#sect200">§200</a>) for the keeping of the <i>imāginēs</i>, or death-masks
-of wax. It must be noticed that they lacked the convenient glass doors
-of the cabinets or cases that we use for books and similar things, but
-they were as well adapted to decorative purposes as the other articles
-of furniture that have been mentioned.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect232"><b>232</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Articles.</b>&mdash;The heating stove, or brazier, has been already
-described (<a href="#sect218">§218</a>). It was at best a poor substitute for the poorest
-modern stove. The place of our clock was taken in the court or garden
-by the sun-dial (<i>sōlārium</i>), such as is often seen nowadays in our
-parks, which measured the hours of the day by the shadow of a stick or
-pin. It was introduced into Rome from Greece in 268 <small>B.C.</small> About a
-century later the water-clock (<i>clepsydra</i>) was also borrowed from the
-Greeks, a more useful invention because it marked the hours of the
-night as well as of the day and could be used in the house. It
-consisted essentially of a vessel filled at a regular time with water,
-which was allowed to escape from it at a fixed rate, the changing
-level marking the hours on a scale. As the length of the Roman hours
-varied with the season of the year and the flow of the water with the
-temperature, the apparatus was far from accurate. Shakspere's striking
-of the clock in "Julius Caesar" (II, i, 192) is an anachronism. Of the
-other articles sometimes reckoned as furniture, the tableware and
-kitchen utensils, some account will be given elsewhere.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure80">
- <tr>
- <td width="623">
- <img src="images/figure080.jpg" alt="FIGURE 80. A STREET IN POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="623" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 80.
- A S<small>TREET IN</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure81">
- <tr>
- <td width="398">
- <img src="images/figure081.jpg" alt="FIGURE 81. A PUBLIC FOUNTAIN">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="398" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 81.
- A P<small>UBLIC</small> F<small>OUNTAIN</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="398" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure082.jpg" alt="FIGURE 82. STEPPING-STONES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="398" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 82.
- S<small>TEPPING-STONES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect233"><b>233</b></a></span>
-<b>The Street.</b>&mdash;It is evident from what has been said that a
-residence street in a Roman town must have been severely plain and
-monotonous in its appearance. The houses were all of practically the
-same style, they were finished alike in stucco (<a href="#sect212">§212</a>), the windows
-were few and in the upper stories only, there were no lawns or
-gardens, there was nothing in short to lend variety or to please the
-eye, except perhaps the decorations of the <i>vestibula</i> (<a href="#sect194">§194</a>), or the
-occasional extension of one story over another (<i>maeniānum</i>, Fig. 80),
-or a public fountain (Fig. 81). The street itself was paved, as will
-be explained hereafter, and was supplied with a footway on either side
-raised from twelve to eighteen inches above its surface. The
-inconvenience of such a height to persons crossing from one footway to
-the other was relieved by stepping-stones (<i>pondera</i>) of the same
-height firmly fixed at suitable distances from each other across the
-street. These stepping-stones were placed at convenient points on each
-street, not merely at the intersections of two or more streets. They
-were usually oval in shape, had flat tops, and measured about three
-feet by eighteen inches, the longer axis being parallel with the walk.
-The spaces between them were often cut into deep ruts by the wheels of
-vehicles, the distance between the ruts showing that the wheels were
-about three feet apart. The arrangement of the stepping-stones is
-shown clearly in Fig. 82, but it is hard to see how the draft-cattle
-managed to work their way between them.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap7"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
-
-<h4>DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 475-606; Voigt, 329-335, 404-412; Göll, III,
-189-310; Guhl and Koner, 728-747; Ramsay, 504-512; Blümner, I,
-189-307; Smith, Harper, Rich, under <i>toga</i>, <i>tunica</i>, <i>stola</i>,
-<i>palla</i>, and the other Latin words in the text; Lübker, under
-<i>Kleidung;</i> Baumeister, 574 f., 1822-1846; Pauly-Wissowa, under
-<i>calceī</i>.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect234"><b>234</b></a></span>
-From the earliest to the latest times the clothing of the Romans
-was very simple, consisting ordinarily of two or three articles only
-besides the covering of the feet. These articles varied in material,
-style, and name from age to age, it is true, but were practically
-unchanged during the Republic and the early Empire. The mild climate
-of Italy (<a href="#sect218">§218</a>) and the hardening effect of the physical exercise of
-the young (<a href="#sect107">§107</a>) made unnecessary the closely fitting garments to
-which we are accustomed, while contact with the Greeks on the south
-and perhaps the Etruscans on the north gave the Romans a taste for the
-beautiful that found expression in the graceful arrangement of their
-loosely flowing robes. The clothing of men and women differed much
-less than in modern times, but it will be convenient to describe their
-garments separately. Each article was assigned by Latin writers to one
-of two classes and called from the way it was put on <i>indūtus</i> or
-<i>amictus</i>. To the first class we may give the name of under garments,
-to the second outer garments, though these terms very inadequately
-represent the Latin words.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect235"><b>235</b></a></span>
-<b>The Subligaculum.</b>&mdash;Next the person was worn the <i>subligāculum</i>,
-the loin-cloth familiar to us in pictures of ancient athletes and
-gladiators (see Fig. 151, <a href="#sect344">§344</a>, and the culprit in Fig. 26, <a href="#sect119">§119</a>), or
-perhaps the short drawers (trunks), worn nowadays by bathers or
-college athletes. We are told that in the earliest times this was the
-only under garment worn by the Romans, and that the family of the
-Cethegi adhered to this ancient practice throughout the Republic,
-wearing the toga immediately over it. This, too, was done by
-individuals who wished to pose as the champions of old-fashioned
-simplicity, as for example the younger Cato, and by candidates for
-public office. In the best times, however, the <i>subligāculum</i> was worn
-under the tunic or replaced by it.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure83">
- <tr>
- <td width="158">
- <img src="images/figure083.jpg" alt="FIGURE 83. THE TUNIC">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="158" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 83.
- T<small>HE</small> T<small>UNIC</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect236"><b>236</b></a></span>
-<b>The Tunic.</b>&mdash;The tunic was also adopted in very early times and
-came to be the chief article of the kind covered by the word
-<i>indūtus</i>. It was a plain woolen shirt, made in two pieces, back and
-front, sewed together at the sides, and resembled somewhat the modern
-sweater. It had very short sleeves, covering hardly half of the upper
-arm, as shown in Fig. 83. It was long enough to reach from the neck to
-the calf, but if the wearer wished for greater freedom for his limbs
-he could shorten it by merely pulling it through a girdle or belt worn
-around the waist. Tunics with sleeves reaching to the wrists (<i>tunicae
-manicātae</i>), and tunics falling to the ankles (<i>tunicae tālārēs</i>) were
-not unknown in the late Republic, but were considered unmanly and
-effeminate.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect237"><b>237</b></a></span>
-The tunic was worn in the house without any outer garment and
-probably without a girdle; in fact it came to be the distinctive
-house-dress as opposed to the toga, the dress for formal occasions
-only. It was also worn with nothing over it by the citizen while at
-work, but he never appeared in public without the toga over it, and
-even then, hidden by the toga though it was, good form required the
-wearing of the girdle with it. Two tunics were often worn (<i>tunica
-interior</i>, or <i>subūcula</i>, and <i>tunica exterior</i>), and persons who
-suffered from the cold, as did Augustus for example, might wear a
-larger number still when the cold was very severe. The tunics intended
-for use in the winter were probably thicker and warmer than those worn
-in the summer, though both kinds were of wool.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect238"><b>238</b></a></span>
-The tunic of the ordinary citizen was the natural color of the
-white wool of which it was made, without trimmings or ornaments of any
-kind. Knights and senators, on the other hand, had stripes of purple,
-narrow and wide respectively, running from the shoulder to the bottom
-of the tunic both behind and in front. These stripes were either woven
-in the garment or sewed upon it. From them the tunic of the knight was
-called <i>tunica angustī clāvī</i> (or <i>angusticlāvia</i>), and that of the
-senator <i>lātī clāvī</i> (or <i>lāticlāvia</i>). Some authorities think that
-the badge of the senatorial tunic was a single broad stripe running
-down the middle of the garment in front and behind, but unfortunately
-no picture has come down to us that absolutely decides the question.
-Under this official tunic the knight or senator wore usually a plain
-<i>tunica interior</i>. When in the house he left the outer tunic unbelted
-in order to display the stripes as conspicuously as possible.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect239"><b>239</b></a></span>
-Besides the <i>subligāculum</i> and the <i>tunica</i> the Romans had no
-regular underwear. Those who were feeble through age or ill health
-sometimes wound strips of woolen cloth (<i>fasciae</i>) around the legs for
-the sake of additional warmth. These were called <i>feminālia</i> or
-<i>tībiālia</i> according as they covered the upper or lower part of the
-leg. Such persons might also use similar wrappings for the body
-(<i>ventrālia</i>) and even for the throat (<i>fōcālia</i>), but all these were
-looked upon as the badges of senility or decrepitude and formed no
-part of the regular costume of sound men. It must be especially
-noticed that the Romans had nothing corresponding to our trousers or
-even long drawers, the <i>braccae</i> or <i>brācae</i> being a Gallic article
-that was not used at Rome until the time of the latest emperors. The
-phrase <i>nātiōnēs brācātae</i> in classical times was a contemptuous
-expression for the Gauls in particular and barbarians in general.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect240"><b>240</b></a></span>
-<b>The Toga.</b>&mdash;Of the outer garments or wraps the most ancient and
-the most important was the <i>toga</i> (cf. <i>tegere</i>). Whence the Romans
-got it we do not know, but it goes back to the very earliest time of
-which tradition tells, and was the characteristic garment of the
-Romans for more than a thousand years. It was a heavy, white, woolen
-robe, enveloping the whole figure, falling to the feet, cumbrous but
-graceful and dignified in appearance. All its associations suggested
-formality. The Roman of old tilled his fields clad only in the
-<i>subligāculum;</i> in the privacy of his home or at his work the Roman of
-every age wore the comfortable, blouse-like <i>tunica;</i> but in the
-forum, in the <i>comitia</i>, in the courts, at the public games,
-everywhere that social forms were observed he appeared and had to
-appear in the toga. In the toga he assumed the responsibilities of
-citizenship (<a href="#sect127">§127</a>), in the toga he took his wife from her father's
-house to his (<a href="#sect78">§78</a>), in the toga he received his clients also toga-clad
-(<a href="#sect182">§182</a>), in the toga he discharged his duties as a magistrate, governed
-his province, celebrated his triumph, and in the toga he was wrapped
-when he lay for the last time in his hall (<a href="#sect198">§198</a>). No foreign nation
-had a robe of the same material, color, and arrangement; no foreigner
-was allowed to wear it, though he lived in Italy or even in Rome
-itself; even the banished citizen left the toga with his civil rights
-behind him. Vergil merely gave expression to the national feeling when
-he wrote the proud verse (Aen. I, 282):</p>
-
-<center>Rōmānōs, rērum dominōs, gentemque togātam.<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small></center>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> The Romans, lords of deeds, the race that wears the
-toga.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect241"><b>241</b></a></span>
-<b>Form and Arrangement.</b>&mdash;The general appearance of the toga is
-known to every schoolboy; of few ancient garments are pictures so
-common and in general so good (Becker, p. 203; Guhl and Koner, p. 729;
-Baumeister, p. 1823; Schreiber, LXXXV, 8-10; Harper, Rich, and Smith,
-s.v.). They are derived from numerous statues of men clad in it, which
-have come down to us from ancient times, and we have besides full and
-careful descriptions of its shape and of the manner of wearing it in
-the works of writers who had worn it themselves. As a matter of fact,
-however, it has been found impossible to reconcile the descriptions in
-literature with the representations in art (Fig. 84) and scholars are
-by no means agreed as to the precise cut of the toga or the way it was
-put on. It is certain, however, that in its earlier form it was
-simpler, less cumbrous, and more closely fitted to the figure than in
-later times, and that even as early as the classical period its
-arrangement was so complicated that the man of fashion could not array
-himself in it without assistance.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures84and85">
- <tr>
- <td width="293">
- <img src="images/figure084.jpg" alt="FIGURE 84. TIBERIUS IN THE TOGA">
- </td>
- <td width="187">
- <img src="images/figure085.jpg" alt="FIGURE 85. BACK OF TOGA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="293" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 84.
- T<small>IBERIUS IN THE</small> T<small>OGA</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="187" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 85.
- B<small>ACK OF</small> T<small>OGA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect242"><b>242</b></a></span>
-Scholars who lay the greater stress on the literary authorities
-describe the cut and arrangement of the toga about as follows: It
-consisted of one piece of cloth of semicircular cut, about five yards
-long by four wide, a certain portion of which was pressed into long
-narrow plaits. This cloth was doubled lengthwise, not down the center
-but so that one fold was deeper than the other. It was then thrown
-over the left shoulder in such a manner that the end in front reached
-to the ground, and the part behind (Fig. 85) was in length about twice
-a man's height. This end was then brought around under the right arm
-and again thrown over the left shoulder so as to cover the whole of
-the right side from the armpit to the calf. The broad folds in which
-it hung over were thus gathered together on the left shoulder. The
-part which crossed the breast diagonally was known as the <i>sinus</i>, or
-bosom. It was deep enough to serve as a pocket for the reception of
-small articles. According to this description the toga was in one
-piece and had no seams.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure86">
- <tr>
- <td width="381">
- <img src="images/figure086.jpg" alt="FIGURE 86. CUT OF TOGA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="381" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 86.
- C<small>UT OF</small> T<small>OGA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect243"><b>243</b></a></span>
-Those who attempt the reconstruction of the toga wholly or
-chiefly from works of art find it impossible to reproduce on the
-living form the drapery seen on the statues, with a toga of one piece
-of goods or of a semicircular pattern. An experimental form is shown
-in Fig. 86, and resembles that of a lamp shade cut in two and
-stretched out to its full extent. The dotted line <i>GC</i> is the straight
-edge of the goods; the heavy lines show the shape of the toga after it
-had been cut out, and had had sewed upon it the ellipse-like piece
-marked <i>FRAcba</i>. The dotted line <i>GE</i> is of a length equivalent to the
-height of a man at the shoulder, and the other measurements are to be
-calculated proportionately. When the toga is placed on the figure the
-point <i>E</i> must be on the left shoulder, with the point <i>G</i> touching
-the ground in front. The point <i>F</i> comes at the back of the neck, and
-as the larger part of the garment is allowed to fall behind the figure
-the points <i>L</i> and <i>M</i> will fall on the calves of the legs behind, the
-point <i>a</i> under the right elbow, and the point <i>b</i> on the stomach. The
-material is carried behind the back and under the right arm and then
-thrown over the left shoulder again. The point <i>c</i> will fall on <i>E</i>,
-and the portion <i>OPCa</i> will hang down the back to the ground, as shown
-in Fig. 85, <a href="#sect242">§242</a>. The part <i>FRA</i> is then pulled over the right
-shoulder to cover the right side of the chest and form the <i>sinus</i>,
-and the part running from the left shoulder to the ground in front is
-pulled up out of the way of the feet, worked under the diagonal folds
-and allowed to fall out a little to the front. The front should then
-present an appearance similar to that shown in the figure in <a href="#sect241">§241</a>. It
-will be found in practice, however, that much of the grace of the toga
-must have been due to the trained <i>vestiplicus</i>, who kept it properly
-creased when it was not in use and carefully arranged each fold after
-his master had put it on. We are not told of any pins or tapes to hold
-it in place, but are told that the part falling from the left shoulder
-to the ground behind kept all in position by its own weight, and that
-this weight was sometimes increased by lead sewed in the hem.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect244"><b>244</b></a></span>
-It is evident that in this fashionable toga the limbs were
-completely fettered, and that all rapid, not to say violent, motion
-was absolutely impossible. In other words the toga of the
-ultrafashionable in the time of Cicero was fit only for the formal,
-stately, ceremonial life of the city. It is easy to see, therefore,
-how it had come to be the emblem of peace, being too cumbrous for use
-in war, and how Cicero could sneer at the young dandies of his time
-for wearing "sails not togas." We can also understand the eagerness
-with which the Roman welcomed a respite from civic and social duties.
-Juvenal sighed for the freedom of the country, where only the dead had
-to wear the toga. Martial praises the unconventionality of the
-provinces for the same reason. Pliny makes it one of the attractions
-of his villa that no guest need wear the toga there. Its cost, too,
-made it all the more burdensome for the poor, and the working classes
-could scarcely have worn it at all.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures87and88">
- <tr>
- <td width="234">
- <img src="images/figure087.jpg" alt="FIGURE 87. THE EARLIER TOGA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="234" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 87.
- T<small>HE</small> E<small>ARLIER</small> T<small>OGA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="234" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure088.jpg" alt="FIGURE 88. THE CINCTUS GABINUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="234" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 88.
- T<small>HE</small> C<small>INCTUS</small> G<small>ABINUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect245"><b>245</b></a></span>
-The earlier toga must have been simpler by far, but no certain
-representation of it has come down to us. The Dresden statue, often
-used to illustrate its arrangement (Smith, Fig. 7, p. 848<i>b</i>;
-Schreiber LXXXV, 8; Marquardt, Fig. 2, p. 558; Baumeister, Fig. 1921),
-is more than doubtful, the garment being probably a Greek mantle of
-some sort. An approximate idea of it may be gained perhaps from a
-statue in Florence of an Etruscan orator (Fig. 87), which corresponds
-very closely with the descriptions of it in literary sources. At any
-rate it was possible for men to fight in it by tying the trailing ends
-around the body and drawing the back folds over the head. This was
-called the <i>cinctus Gabīnus</i>, and long after the toga had ceased to be
-worn in war this <i>cinctus</i> was used in certain ceremonial observances.
-It is shown in Fig. 88, though the toga is one of later times.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect246"><b>246</b></a></span>
-<b>Kinds of Togas.</b>&mdash;The toga of the ordinary citizen was, like the
-tunic (<a href="#sect238">§238</a>), of the natural color of the white wool of which it was
-made, and varied in texture, of course, with the quality of the wool.
-It was called <i>toga pūra</i> (or <i>virīlis</i>, <i>lībera</i> <a href="#sect127">§127</a>). A dazzling
-brilliancy could be given to the toga by a preparation of fuller's
-chalk, and one so treated was called <i>toga splendēns</i> or <i>candida</i>. In
-such a toga all persons running for office arrayed themselves, and
-from it they were called <i>candidātī</i>. The curule magistrates, censors,
-and dictators wore the <i>toga praetexta</i>, differing from the ordinary
-toga only in having a purple border. It was also worn by boys (<a href="#sect127">§127</a>)
-and by the chief officers of the free towns and colonies. The <i>toga
-picta</i> was wholly of purple covered with embroidery of gold, and was
-worn by the victorious general in his triumphal procession and later
-by the Emperors. The <i>toga pulla</i> was simply a dingy toga worn by
-persons in mourning or threatened with some calamity, usually a
-reverse of political fortune. Persons assuming it were called
-<i>sordidātī</i> and were said <i>mūtāre vestem</i>. This <i>vestis mūtātiō</i> was a
-common form of public demonstration of sympathy with a fallen leader.
-In this case curule magistrates contented themselves with merely
-laying aside the <i>toga praetexta</i> for the <i>toga pūra</i>, and only the
-lower orders wore the <i>toga pulla</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect247"><b>247</b></a></span>
-<b>The Lacerna.</b>&mdash;In Cicero's time there was just coming into
-fashionable use a mantle called <i>lacerna</i>, which seems to have been
-first used by soldiers and the lower classes and then adopted by their
-betters on account of its convenience. These wore it at first over the
-toga as a protection against dust and sudden showers. It was a woolen
-mantle, short, light, open at the sides, without sleeves, but fastened
-with a brooch or buckle on the right shoulder. It was so easy and
-comfortable that it began to be worn not over the toga but instead of
-it, and so generally that Augustus issued an edict forbidding it to be
-used in public assemblages of citizens. Under the later Emperors,
-however, it came into fashion again, and was the common outer garment
-at the theaters. It was made of various colors, dark naturally for the
-lower classes, white for formal occasions, but also of brighter hues.
-It was sometimes supplied with a hood (<i>cucullus</i>), which the wearer
-could pull over the head as a protection or a disguise. No
-representation of the <i>lacerna</i> in art has come down to us that can be
-positively identified; that in Rich s.v. is very doubtful. The
-military cloak, first called the <i>trabea</i>, then <i>palūdāmentum</i> and
-<i>sagum</i>, was much like the <i>lacerna</i>, but made of heavier material.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures89to91">
- <tr>
- <td width="358" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure089.jpg" alt="FIGURE 89. THE PAENULA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="358" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 89.
- T<small>HE</small> P<small>AENULA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="358" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure090.jpg" alt="FIGURE 90. SOLDIER WEARING THE ABOLLA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="358" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 90.
- S<small>OLDIER</small> W<small>EARING THE</small> A<small>BOLLA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="358">
- <img src="images/figure091.jpg" alt="FIGURE 91. SOLEAE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="358" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 91.
- S<small>OLEAE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect248"><b>248</b></a></span>
-<b>The Paenula.</b>&mdash;Older than the <i>lacerna</i> and used by all sorts and
-conditions of men was the <i>paenula</i> (Fig. 89), a heavy coarse wrap of
-wool, leather, or fur, used merely for protection against rain or
-cold, and therefore never a substitute for the toga or made of fine
-materials or bright colors. It seems to have varied in length and
-fullness, but to have been a sleeveless wrap, made in one piece with a
-hole in the middle, through which the wearer thrust his head. It was,
-therefore, classed with the <i>vestīmenta clausa</i>, or closed garments,
-and must have been much like the modern poncho. It was drawn on over
-the head, like a tunic or sweater, and covered the arms, leaving them
-much less freedom than the <i>lacerna</i> did. In those of some length
-there was a slit in front running from the waist down, and this
-enabled the wearer to hitch the cloak up over one shoulder, leaving
-one arm comparatively free, but at the same time exposing it to the
-weather. It was worn over either tunic or toga according to
-circumstances, and was the ordinary traveling habit of citizens of the
-better class. It was also commonly worn by slaves, and seems to have
-been furnished regularly to soldiers stationed in places where the
-climate was severe. Like the <i>lacerna</i> it was sometimes supplied with
-a hood.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect249"><b>249</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Wraps.</b>&mdash;Of other articles included under the general term
-<i>amictus</i> we know little more than the names. The <i>synthesis</i> was a
-dinner dress worn at table over the tunic by the ultrafashionable, and
-sometimes dignified by the special name of <i>vestis cēnātōria</i>, or
-<i>cēnātōrium</i> alone. It was not worn out of the house except on the
-Saturnalia, and was usually of some bright color. Its shape is
-unknown. The <i>laena</i> and <i>abolla</i> were very heavy woolen cloaks, the
-latter (Fig. 90) being a favorite with poor people who had to make one
-garment do duty for two or three. It was used especially by
-professional philosophers, who were proverbially careless about their
-dress. One is thought to be worn by the man on the extreme left, in
-the picture of a school shown in <a href="#sect119">§119</a>. The <i>endormis</i> was something
-like the modern bath robe, used by men after violent gymnastic
-exercise to keep from taking cold, and hardly belongs under the head
-of dress.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect250"><b>250</b></a></span>
-<b>Footgear: the Soleae.</b>&mdash;It may be set down as a rule that freemen
-did not appear in public at Rome with bare feet, except as nowadays
-under the compulsion of the direst poverty. Two styles of footwear
-were in use, slippers or sandals (<i>soleae</i>) and shoes (<i>calceī</i>). The
-slipper consisted essentially of a sole of leather or matting attached
-to the foot in various ways (see the several styles in Fig. 91).
-Custom limited its use to the house and it went characteristically
-with the tunic (<a href="#sect237">§237</a>), when that was not covered by an outer garment.
-Oddly enough, it seems to us, the slippers were not worn at meals.
-Host and guests wore them into the dining-room, but as soon as they
-had taken their places on the couches (<a href="#sect224">§224</a>) slaves removed the
-slippers from their feet and cared for them until the meal was over
-(<a href="#sect152">§152</a>). Hence the phrase <i>soleās poscere</i> came to mean "to prepare to
-take leave." When a guest went out to dinner in a <i>lectīca</i> (<a href="#sect151">§151</a>) he
-wore the <i>soleae</i>, but if he walked he wore the regular out-door shoes
-(<i>calceī</i>) and had his slippers carried by a slave.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure92">
- <tr>
- <td width="566">
- <img src="images/figure092.jpg" alt="FIGURE 92. ROMAN SHOES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="566" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 92.
- R<small>OMAN</small> S<small>HOES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect251"><b>251</b></a></span>
-<b>The Calcei.</b>&mdash;Out of doors the <i>calceus</i> was always worn,
-although it was much heavier and less comfortable than the <i>solea</i>.
-Good form forbade the toga to be worn without the <i>calceī</i>, and they
-were worn also with all the other garments included under the word
-<i>amictus</i>. The <i>calceus</i> was essentially our shoe, made on a last of
-leather, covering the upper part of the foot as well as protecting the
-sole, fastened with laces or straps. The higher classes had shoes
-peculiar to their rank. The shoe for senators is best known to us
-(<i>calceus senātōrius</i>), and is shown in Fig. 92; but we know only its
-shape, not its color. It had a thick sole, was open on the inside at
-the ankle, and was fastened by wide straps which ran from the juncture
-of the sole and the upper, were wrapped around the leg and tied above
-the instep. The <i>mulleus</i> or <i>calceus patricius</i> was worn originally
-by patricians only, but later by all curule magistrates. It was shaped
-like the senator's shoe, was red in color like the fish from which it
-was named, and had an ivory or silver ornament of crescent shape
-(<i>lūnula</i>) fastened on the outside of the ankle. We know nothing of
-the shoe worn by the knights. Ordinary citizens wore shoes that opened
-in front and were fastened by a strap of leather running from one side
-of the shoe near the top. They did not come up so high on the leg as
-those of the senators and were probably of uncolored leather. The
-poorer classes naturally wore shoes of coarser material, often of
-untanned leather (<i>pērōnēs</i>), and laborers and soldiers had half-boots
-(<i>caligae</i>) of the stoutest possible make, or wore wooden shoes. No
-stockings were worn by the Romans, but persons with tender feet might
-wrap them with <i>fasciae</i> (<a href="#sect239">§239</a>) to keep the shoes and boots from
-chafing them.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures93and94">
- <tr>
- <td width="244" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure093.jpg" alt="FIGURE 93. THE CAUSIA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="244" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 93.
- T<small>HE</small> C<small>AUSIA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="244">
- <img src="images/figure094.jpg" alt="FIGURE 94. THE PETASUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="244" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 94.
- T<small>HE</small> P<small>ETASUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect252"><b>252</b></a></span>
-<b>Coverings for the Head.</b>&mdash;Men of the upper classes in Rome had
-ordinarily no covering for the head. When they went out in bad weather
-they protected themselves, of course, with the <i>lacerna</i> and
-<i>paenula</i>, and these, as we have seen (<a href="#sect247">§§247</a>, <a href="#sect248">248</a>), were provided with
-hoods (<i>cucullī</i>). If they were caught without wraps in a sudden
-shower they made shift as best they could by pulling the toga up over
-the head, cf. Fig. 88 in <a href="#sect245">§245</a>. Persons of lower standing, especially
-workmen who were out of doors all day, wore a conical felt cap called
-the <i>pilleus</i>, see the illustration in <a href="#sect175">§175</a>. It is probable that this
-was a survival of what had been in prehistoric times an essential part
-of the Roman dress, for it was preserved among the insignia of the
-oldest priesthoods, the Pontifices, Flamines, and Salii, and figured
-in the ceremony of manumission. Out of the city, that is, while
-traveling or while in the country, the upper classes, too, protected
-the head, especially against the sun, with a broad-brimmed felt hat of
-foreign origin, the <i>causia</i> or <i>petasus</i>. They are shown in Figs. 93
-and 94. They were worn in the city also by the old and feeble, and in
-later times by all classes in the theaters. In the house, of course,
-the head was left uncovered.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect253"><b>253</b></a></span>
-<b>The Hair and Beard.</b>&mdash;The Romans in early times wore long hair
-and full beards, as did all uncivilized peoples. Varro tells us that
-professional barbers came first to Rome in the year 300 <small>B.C.</small>, but we
-know that the razor and shears were used by the Romans long before
-history begins. Pliny says that the younger Scipio (†129 <small>B.C.</small>) was the
-first of the Romans to shave every day, and the story may be true.
-People of wealth and position had the hair and beard kept in order at
-home by their own slaves (<a href="#sect150">§150</a>), and these slaves, if skillful
-barbers, brought high prices in the market. People of the middle class
-went to public barber shops, and made them gradually places of general
-resort for the idle and the gossiping. But in all periods the hair and
-beard were allowed to grow as a sign of sorrow, and were the regular
-accompaniments of the mourning garb already mentioned (<a href="#sect246">§246</a>). The very
-poor, too, went usually unshaven and unshorn, simply because this was
-the cheap and easy fashion.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect254"><b>254</b></a></span>
-Styles varied with the years of the persons concerned. The hair
-of children, boys and girls alike, was allowed to grow long and hang
-around the neck and shoulders. When the boy assumed the toga of
-manhood the long locks were cut off, sometimes with a good deal of
-formality, and under the Empire they were often made an offering to
-some deity. In the classical period young men seem to have worn close
-clipped beards; at least Cicero jeers at those who followed Catiline
-for wearing full beards, and on the other hand declares that their
-companions who could show no signs of beard on their faces were worse
-than effeminate. Men of maturity wore the hair cut short and the face
-shaved clean. Most of the portraits that have come down to us show
-beardless men until well into the second century of our era, but after
-the time of Hadrian (117-138 <small>A.D.</small>) the full beard became fashionable.
-Figs. 2 to 11, <a href="#sect28">§§28</a>-<a href="#sect74">74</a>, are arranged chronologically and will serve to
-show the changes in styles.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure95">
- <tr>
- <td width="378">
- <img src="images/figure095.jpg" alt="FIGURE 95. SEAL RINGS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="378" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 95.
- S<small>EAL</small> R<small>INGS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect255"><b>255</b></a></span>
-<b>Jewelry.</b>&mdash;The ring was the only article of jewelry worn by a
-Roman citizen after he reached the age of manhood (<a href="#sect99">§99</a>), and good
-taste limited him to a single ring. It was originally of iron, and
-though often set with a precious stone and made still more valuable by
-the artistic cutting of the stone, it was always worn more for use
-than ornament. The ring was in fact in almost all cases a seal ring,
-having some device upon it (Fig. 95) which the wearer imprinted in
-melted wax when he wished to acknowledge some document as his own, or
-to secure cabinets and coffers against prying curiosity. The iron ring
-was worn generally until late in the Empire, even after the gold ring
-had ceased to be the special privilege of the knights and had become
-merely the badge of freedom. Even the engagement ring (<a href="#sect71">§71</a>) was
-usually of iron, the setting giving it its material value, although we
-are told that this particular ring was often the first article of gold
-that the young girl possessed.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect256"><b>256</b></a></span>
-Of course there were not wanting men as ready to violate the
-canons of taste in the matter of rings as in the choice of their
-garments or the style of wearing the hair and beard. We need not be
-surprised, then, to read of one having sixteen rings, or of another
-having six for each finger. One of Martial's acquaintances had a ring
-so large that the poet advised him to wear it on his leg, and Juvenal
-tells us of an upstart who wore light rings in the summer and heavy
-rings in the winter. It is a more surprising fact that the ring was
-worn on the joint, not pressed down as far as possible on the finger,
-as we wear them now. If two were worn on the same finger they were
-worn on separate joints, not touching each other. This fashion must
-have seriously interfered with the movement of the finger.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures96to98">
- <tr>
- <td width="235">
- <img src="images/figure096.jpg" alt="FIGURE 96. THE MAMILLARE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="235" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 96.
- T<small>HE</small> M<small>AMILLARE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="235" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure097.jpg" alt="FIGURE 97. THE STROPHIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="235" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 97.
- T<small>HE</small> S<small>TROPHIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="235" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure098.jpg" alt="FIGURE 98. THE ZONA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="235" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 98.
- T<small>HE</small> Z<small>ONA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect257"><b>257</b></a></span>
-<b>Dress of Women.</b>&mdash;It has been remarked already (<a href="#sect234">§234</a>) that the
-dress of men and women differed less in ancient than in modern times,
-and we shall find that in the classical period at least the principal
-articles worn were practically the same, however much they differed in
-name and probably in the fineness of their materials. At this period
-the dress of the matron consisted in general of three articles: the
-<i>tunica interior</i>, the <i>tunica exterior</i> or <i>stola</i>, and the <i>palla</i>.
-Beneath the <i>tunica interior</i> there was nothing like the modern
-corset-waist or corset, intended to modify the figure, but a band of
-soft leather (<i>mamillāre</i>) was sometimes passed around the body under
-the breasts for a support (Fig. 96), and the <i>subligāculum</i> (<a href="#sect235">§235</a>) was
-also worn by women.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect258"><b>258</b></a></span>
-<b>The Tunica Interior.</b>&mdash;The <i>tunica interior</i> did not differ much
-in material or shape from the tunic for men already described (<a href="#sect236">§236</a>).
-It fitted the figure more closely perhaps than the man's, was
-sometimes supplied with sleeves, and as it reached only to the knee
-did not require a belt to keep it from interfering with the free use
-of the limbs. A soft sash-like band of leather (<i>strophium</i>), however,
-was sometimes worn over it, close under the breasts, but merely to
-support them, and in this case we may suppose that the <i>mamillāre</i> was
-discarded. For this sash (Fig. 97) the more general terms <i>zōna</i> and
-<i>cingulum</i> are sometimes used. This tunic was not usually worn alone,
-even in the house, except by young girls.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect259"><b>259</b></a></span>
-<b>The Stola.</b>&mdash;Over the <i>tunica interior</i> was worn the <i>tunica
-exterior</i>, or <i>stola</i>, the distinctive dress of the Roman matron
-(<a href="#sect91">§91</a>). It differed in several respects from the tunic worn as a
-house-dress by men. It was open at both sides above the waist and
-fastened on the shoulders by brooches. It was much longer, reaching to
-the feet when ungirded and having in addition a wide border or flounce
-(<i>īnstita</i>) sewed to the lower hem. There was also a border around the
-neck, which seems to have been usually of purple. The <i>stola</i> was
-sleeveless if the <i>tunica interior</i> had sleeves, but if the tunic
-itself was sleeveless the <i>stola</i> had them, so that the arm was always
-protected. These sleeves, however, whether in tunic or <i>stola</i>, were
-open on the front of the upper arm and only loosely clasped with
-brooches or buttons, often of great beauty and value.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure99">
- <tr>
- <td width="653">
- <img src="images/figure099.jpg" alt="FIGURE 99. STATUE OF THE YOUNGER FAUSTINA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="653" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 99.
- S<small>TATUE OF THE</small>
- Y<small>OUNGER</small> F<small>AUSTINA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure100">
- <tr>
- <td width="254">
- <img src="images/figure100.jpg" alt="FIGURE 100. STATUE FROM HERCULANEUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="254" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 100.
- S<small>TATUE FROM</small> H<small>ERCULANEUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect260"><b>260</b></a></span>
-Owing to its great length the <i>stola</i> was always worn with a
-girdle (<i>zōna</i>) above the hips (Fig. 98), and through it the <i>stola</i>
-itself was pulled until the lower edge of the <i>īnstita</i> barely cleared
-the floor. This gave the fullness about the waist seen in the statue
-of Faustina (Fig. 99), in which the cut of the sleeves can also be
-seen. The <i>zōna</i> was usually entirely hidden by the overhanging folds.
-The <i>stola</i> was the distinctive dress of the matron, as has been said,
-and it is probable that the <i>īnstita</i> was its distinguishing feature;
-that is, the <i>tunica exterior</i> of the unmarried woman had no flounce
-or border, though it probably reached to the floor.</p>
-<table align="left" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure101">
- <tr>
- <td width="232">
- <img src="images/figure101.jpg" alt="FIGURE 101. STATUE OF LIVIA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="232" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 101.
- S<small>TATUE OF</small> L<small>IVIA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect261"><b>261</b></a></span>
-<b>The Palla.</b>&mdash;The <i>palla</i> was a shawl-like wrap for use out of
-doors. It was a rectangular piece of woolen goods, as simple as
-possible in its form, but worn in the most diverse fashions in
-different times. In the classical period it seems to have been wrapped
-around the figure, much as the toga was. One-third was thrown over the
-left shoulder from behind and allowed to fall to the feet. The rest
-was carried around the back and brought forward either over or under
-the right arm at the pleasure of the wearer. The end was then thrown
-back over the left shoulder after the style of the toga, as in the
-marble statue from Herculaneum shown in Fig. 100, or allowed to hang
-loosely over the left arm, as in the statue of Livia (Fig. 101). It
-was possible also to pull the <i>palla</i> up over the head, and this
-method of using it is supposed by some scholars to be shown in the
-statue of Livia, while others see in the covering of the head some
-sort of a veil.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect262"><b>262</b></a></span>
-<b>Shoes and Slippers.</b>&mdash;What has been said of the footgear of men
-(<a href="#sect250">§§250</a>, <a href="#sect251">251</a>) applies also to that of women. Slippers (<i>soleae</i>) were
-worn in the house, differing from those of men only in being
-embellished as much as possible, sometimes even with pearls. An idea
-of their appearance may be had from the statue of Faustina (<a href="#sect259">§259</a>).
-Shoes (<i>calceī</i>) were insisted upon for out-door use, and differed
-from those of men, as they chiefly differ from them now, in being made
-of finer and softer leather. They were often white, or gilded, or of
-bright colors, and those intended for winter wear had sometimes cork
-soles.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect263"><b>263</b></a></span>
-<b>Dressing of the Hair.</b>&mdash;The Roman woman regularly wore no hat,
-but covered the head when necessary with the <i>stola</i> or with a veil.
-Much attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, the fashions
-being as numerous and as inconstant as they are to-day. For young
-girls the favorite arrangement, perhaps, was to comb the hair back and
-gather it into a knot (<i>nōdus</i>) on the back of the neck. For matrons
-it will be sufficient to call attention to the figures already given
-(<a href="#sect77">§§77</a>, <a href="#sect259">259</a>, <a href="#sect261">261</a>), and to show from statues five styles (Fig. 102) worn
-at different times under the Empire, all belonging to ladies of the
-court.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure102">
- <tr>
- <td width="658">
- <img src="images/figure102.jpg" alt="FIGURE 102. STYLES OF DRESSING THE HAIR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="658" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 102.
- S<small>TYLES OF</small> D<small>RESSING
- THE</small> H<small>AIR</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect264"><b>264</b></a></span>
-For keeping the hair in position pins were used of ivory,
-silver, and gold, often mounted with jewels. Nets (<i>rēticula</i>) and
-ribbons (<i>vittae</i>, <i>taeniae</i>, <i>fasciolae</i>) were also worn, but combs
-were not made a part of the head-dress. The Roman woman of fashion did
-not scruple to color her hair, the golden-red color of the Greek hair
-being especially admired, or to use false hair, which had become an
-article of commercial importance early in the Empire. Mention should
-also be made of the garlands (<i>corōnae</i>) of flowers, or of flowers and
-foliage, and of the coronets of pearls and other precious stones that
-were used to supplement the natural or artificial beauty of the hair.
-These are illustrated in Fig. 102 above.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure103">
- <tr>
- <td width="429">
- <img src="images/figure103.jpg" alt="FIGURE 103. TOILET ARTICLES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="429" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 103.
- T<small>OILET</small> A<small>RTICLES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect265"><b>265</b></a></span>
-The woman's hairdresser was a female slave (<a href="#sect150">§150</a>), and Juvenal
-tells us that she suffered cruelly from the impatience of her mistress
-(<a href="#sect158">§158</a>), who found the long hairpins shown in the figure a convenient
-instrument of punishment, The <i>ōrnātrīx</i> was an adept in all the
-tricks of the toilet already mentioned, and besides used all sorts of
-unguents, oils, and tonics to make the hair soft and lustrous and to
-cause it to grow abundantly. In Fig. 103 are shown a number of common
-toilet articles: <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>h</i>, <i>i</i>, and <i>k</i> are hairpins, <i>d</i>
-and <i>g</i> are hand mirrors made of highly polished metal, <i>f</i> is a comb,
-and <i>e</i> a box for pomatum or powder.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures104and105">
- <tr>
- <td width="302">
- <img src="images/figure104.jpg" alt="FIGURE 104. THE PARASOL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="302" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 104.
- T<small>HE</small> P<small>ARASOL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="302" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure105.jpg" alt="FIGURE 105. FANS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="302" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 105.
- F<small>ANS</small> (See also Figure 73, <a href="#sect226">§226</a>)</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect266"><b>266</b></a></span>
-<b>Accessories.</b>&mdash;The parasol (<i>umbrāculum</i>, <i>umbella</i>) was commonly
-used by women at Rome at least as early as the close of the Republic,
-and was all the more necessary because they wore no hats or bonnets.
-The parasols were usually carried for them by attendants (<a href="#sect151">§151</a>). From
-vase paintings we learn that they were much like our own in shape
-(Fig. 104, see also Smith and Harper, s.v.; Baumeister, p. 1684;
-Schreiber XCV, 9), and could be closed when not in use. The fan
-(<i>flābellum</i>) was used from the earliest times and was made in various
-ways (Fig. 105); sometimes of wings of birds, sometimes of thin sheets
-of wood attached to a handle, sometimes of peacock's feathers
-artistically arranged, sometimes of linen stretched over a frame.
-These fans were not used by the woman herself, being always handled by
-an attendant who was charged with the task of keeping her cool and
-untroubled by flies (see Fig. 73 in <a href="#sect226">§226</a>). Handkerchiefs (<i>sūdāria</i>),
-the finest made of linen, were used by both sexes, but only for wiping
-the perspiration from the face or hands. For keeping the palms cool
-and dry ladies seem also to have used glass balls, or balls of amber,
-the latter, perhaps, for the fragrance also.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect267"><b>267</b></a></span>
-<b>Jewelry.</b>&mdash;The Roman woman was passionately fond of jewelry, and
-incalculable sums were spent upon the adornment of her person. Rings,
-brooches, pins, jeweled buttons, and coronets have been mentioned
-already, and besides these bracelets, necklaces, and ear-rings or
-pendants were worn from the earliest times by all who could afford
-them. Not only were they made of costly materials, but their value was
-also enhanced by the artistic workmanship that was lavished upon them.
-Almost all the precious stones that are known to us were familiar to
-the Romans and were to be found in the jewel-casket (<a href="#sect230">§230</a>) of the
-wealthy lady. The pearl, however, seems to have been in all times the
-favorite. No adequate description of these articles can be given here;
-no illustrations can do them justice. It will have to suffice that
-Suetonius says that Caesar paid six million sesterces (nearly
-$300,000) for a single pearl, which he gave to Servilia, the mother of
-Marcus Brutus, and that Lollia Paulina, the wife of the Emperor
-Caligula, possessed a single set of pearls and emeralds which is said
-by Pliny the elder to have been valued at forty million sesterces
-(nearly $2,000,000).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect268"><b>268</b></a></span>
-<b>Dress of Children and Slaves.</b>&mdash;The picture from Herculaneum
-(<a href="#sect119">§119</a>) shows that schoolboys wore the <i>subligāculum</i> and <i>tunica</i>, and
-it is probable that no other articles of clothing were worn by either
-boys or girls of the poorer classes. Besides these, children of
-well-to-do parents wore the <i>toga praetexta</i> (<a href="#sect246">§246</a>), which the girl
-laid aside on the eve of her marriage (<a href="#sect76">§76</a>) and the boy when he
-reached the age of manhood (<a href="#sect127">§127</a>). Slaves were furnished a tunic,
-wooden shoes, and in stormy weather a cloak, probably the <i>paenula</i>
-(<a href="#sect248">§248</a>). This must have been the ordinary garb of the poorer citizens
-of the working classes, for they would have had little use for the
-toga, at least in later times, and could hardly have afforded so
-expensive a garment.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect269"><b>269</b></a></span>
-<b>Materials.</b>&mdash;Fabrics of wool, linen, cotton, and silk were used
-by the Romans. For clothes woolen goods were the first to be used, and
-naturally so, for the early inhabitants of Latium were shepherds, and
-woolen garments best suited the climate. Under the Republic wool was
-almost exclusively used for the garments of both men and women, as we
-have seen, though the <i>subligāculum</i> was frequently, and the woman's
-tunic sometimes, made of linen. The best native wools came from
-Calabria and Apulia, that from near Tarentum being the best of all.
-Native wools did not suffice, however, to meet the great demand, and
-large quantities were imported. Linen goods were early manufactured in
-Italy, but were used chiefly for other purposes than clothing until in
-the Empire, and only in the third century of our era did men begin to
-make general use of them. The finest linen came from Egypt, and was as
-soft and transparent as silk. Little is positively known about the use
-of cotton, because the word <i>carbasus</i>, the genuine Indian name for
-it, was used by the Romans for linen goods also and when we meet the
-word we can not always be sure of the material meant. Silk, imported
-from China directly or indirectly, was first used for garments under
-Tiberius, and then only in a mixture of linen and silk (<i>vestēs
-sēricae</i>). These were forbidden for the use of men in his reign, but
-the law was powerless against the love of luxury. Garments of pure
-silk were first used in the third century.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect270"><b>270</b></a></span>
-<b>Colors.</b>&mdash;White was the prevailing color of all articles of dress
-throughout the Republic, in most cases the natural color of the wool,
-as we have seen (<a href="#sect246">§246</a>). The lower classes, however, selected for their
-garments shades that required cleansing less frequently, and found
-them, too, in the undyed wool. From Canusium came a brown wool with a
-tinge of red, from Baetica in Spain a light yellow, from Mutina a gray
-or a gray mixed with white, from Pollentia in Liguria the dark gray
-(<i>pulla</i>) used, as has been said (<a href="#sect246">§246</a>), for public mourning. Other
-shades from red to deep black were furnished by foreign wools. Almost
-the only artificial color used for garments under the Republic was
-purple, which seems to have varied from what we call crimson, made
-from the native trumpet-shell (<i>būcinum</i> or <i>mūrex</i>), to the true
-Tyrian purple. The former was brilliant and cheap, but liable to fade.
-Mixed with the dark <i>purpura</i> in different proportions, it furnished a
-variety of permanent tints. One of the most popular of these tints,
-violet, made the wool cost some $20 a pound, while the genuine Tyrian
-cost at least ten times as much. Probably the stripes worn by the
-knights and senators on the tunics and togas were much nearer our
-crimson than purple. Under the Empire the garments worn by women were
-dyed in various colors, and so, too, perhaps, the fancier articles
-worn by men, such as the <i>lacerna</i> (<a href="#sect247">§247</a>) and the <i>synthesis</i> (<a href="#sect249">§249</a>).
-The <i>trabea</i> of the augurs seems to have been striped with scarlet and
-purple, the <i>palūdāmentum</i> of the general to have been at different
-times white, scarlet, and purple, and the robe of the <i>triumphātor</i>
-purple.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure106">
- <tr>
- <td width="460">
- <img src="images/figure106.jpg" alt="FIGURE 106. FULLERS AT WORK">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="460" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 106.
- F<small>ULLERS AT</small> W<small>ORK</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect271"><b>271</b></a></span>
-<b>Manufacture.</b>&mdash;In the old days the wool was spun at home by the
-maidservants working under the eye of the mistress (<a href="#sect199">§199</a>), and woven
-into cloth on the family loom, and this was kept up throughout the
-Republic by some of the proudest families. Augustus wore these
-home-made garments. By the end of the Republic, however, this was no
-longer general, and while much of the native wool was worked up on the
-farms by the slaves directed by the <i>vīlica</i> (<a href="#sect148">§148</a>), cloth of any
-desired quality could be bought in the open market. It was formerly
-supposed that the garments came from the loom ready to wear, but this
-is now known to have been incorrect. We have seen that the tunic was
-made of two separate pieces sewed together (<a href="#sect236">§236</a>), that the toga had
-probably to be fitted as carefully as a modern coat (<a href="#sect243">§243</a>), and that
-even the coarse <i>paenula</i> (<a href="#sect248">§248</a>) could not have been woven or knitted
-in one piece. But ready-made garments were on sale in the towns as
-early as the time of Cato, though perhaps of the cheaper qualities
-only, and in the Empire the trade reached large proportions. It is
-remarkable that with the vast numbers of slaves in the <i>familia
-urbāna</i> (<a href="#sect149">§149</a> f.) it never became usual to have soiled garments
-cleansed at home. All garments showing traces of use were sent by the
-well-to-do to the fullers (<i>fullōnēs</i>) to be washed (Fig. 106),
-whitened (or re-dyed), and pressed. The fact that almost all were of
-woolen materials made skill and care all the more necessary.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap8"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
-
-<h4>FOOD AND MEALS</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 264-268, 300-340, 414-465; Voigt, 327-329,
-401-404; Göll, 311-454; Guhl and Koner, 747-759, 702-704; Friedländer,
-III, 29-56; Ramsay, 490-501; Pauly-Wissowa, <i>cēna</i>, <i>comissātiō;</i>
-Smith, Harper, Rich, <i>cēna</i>, <i>comissātiō</i>, <i>olea</i> (<i>olīva</i>), <i>vīnum;</i>
-Baumeister, 845, 2086; Lübker, 724 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 256-260, 267-270.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect272"><b>272</b></a></span>
-<b>Natural Conditions.</b>&mdash;Italy is blessed above all the other
-countries of central Europe with the natural conditions that go to
-make an abundant and varied supply of food. The soil is rich and
-composed of different elements in different parts of the country. The
-rainfall is abundant, and rivers and smaller streams are numerous. The
-line of greatest length runs nearly north and south, but the climate
-depends little upon latitude, being modified by surrounding bodies of
-water, by mountain ranges, and by prevailing winds. These agencies in
-connection with the varying elevation of the land itself produce such
-widely different conditions that somewhere within the confines of
-Italy almost all the grains and fruits of the temperate and subtropic
-zones find the soil and climate most favorable to their growth.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect273"><b>273</b></a></span>
-The early inhabitants of the peninsula, the Italian peoples,
-seem to have left for the Romans the task of developing and improving
-these means of subsistence. Wild fruits, nuts, and flesh have always
-been the support of uncivilized peoples, and must have been so for the
-shepherds who laid the foundations of Rome. The very word <i>pecūnia</i>
-(from <i>pecus;</i> cf. <i>pecūlium</i>, <a href="#sect162">§162</a>) shows that herds of domestic
-animals were the first source of Roman wealth. But other words show
-just as clearly that the cultivation of the soil was understood by the
-Romans in very early times: the names Fabius, Cicero, Piso, and Caepio
-are no less ancient than Porcius, Asinius, Vitellius, and Ovidius.<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small>
-Cicero puts into the mouth of the elder Cato the statement that to the
-farmer the garden was a second meat supply, but long before Cato's
-time meat had ceased to be the chief article of food. Grain and grapes
-and olives furnished subsistence for all who did not live to eat.
-These gave the wine that maketh glad the heart of man, and oil to make
-his face to shine, and bread that strengtheneth man's heart. On these
-three abundant products of the soil the mass of the people of Italy
-lived of old as they still live to-day. Something will be said of each
-below, after less important products have been considered.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> The words are connected respectively with <i>faba</i>, a bean,
-<i>cicer</i>, a chick-pea, <i>pīstor</i>, a miller, <i>caepe</i>, an onion, <i>porcus</i>,
-a pig, <i>asinus</i>, an ass, <i>vitellus</i>, a calf, and <i>ovis</i>, a sheep.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect274"><b>274</b></a></span>
-<b>Fruits.</b>&mdash;Besides the olive and the grape, the apple, pear, plum,
-and quince were either native to Italy or were introduced in
-prehistoric times. Careful attention had long been given to their
-cultivation, and by Cicero's time Italy was covered with orchards and
-all these fruits were abundant and cheap in their seasons, used by all
-sorts and conditions of men. By this time, too, had begun the
-introduction of new fruits from foreign lands and the improvement of
-native varieties. Great statesmen and generals gave their names to new
-and better sorts of apples and pears, and vied with each other in
-producing fruits out of season by hothouse culture (<a href="#sect145">§145</a>). Every fresh
-extension of Roman territory brought new fruits and nuts into Italy.
-Among the last were the walnut, hazelnut, filbert, almond, and
-pistachio; the almond after Cato's time and the pistachio not until
-that of Tiberius. Among the fruits were the peach (<i>mālum Persicum</i>),
-the apricot (<i>mālum Armeniacum</i>), the pomegranate (<i>mālum Pūnicum</i> or
-<i>grānātum</i>), the cherry (<i>cerasus</i>), brought by Lucullus from the town
-Cerasus in Pontus, and the lemon (<i>citrus</i>), not grown in Italy until
-the third century of our era. And besides the introduction of fruits
-for culture large quantities were imported for food, either dried or
-otherwise preserved. The orange, however, strange as it seems to us,
-was not grown by the Romans.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect275"><b>275</b></a></span>
-<b>Garden Produce.</b>&mdash;The garden did not yield to the orchard in the
-abundance and variety of its contributions to the supply of food. We
-read of artichokes, asparagus, beans, beets, cabbages, carrots,
-chicory, cucumbers, garlic, lentils, melons, onions, peas, the poppy,
-pumpkins, radishes, and turnips, to mention those only whose names are
-familiar to us all. It will be noticed, however, that the vegetables
-most highly prized by us, perhaps, the potato and tomato, were not
-known to the Romans. Of those mentioned the oldest seem to have been
-the bean and the onion, as shown by the names Fabius and Caepio
-already mentioned (<a href="#sect273">§273</a>), but the latter came gradually to be looked
-upon as unrefined and the former to be considered too heavy a food
-except for persons engaged in the hardest toil. Cato pronounced the
-cabbage the finest vegetable known, and the turnip figures in the
-well-known anecdote of Manius Curius (<a href="#sect299">§299</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect276"><b>276</b></a></span>
-The Roman gardener gave great attention, too, to the raising of
-green stuffs that could be used for salads. Among these the sorts most
-often mentioned are the cress and lettuce, with which we are familiar,
-and the mallow, no longer used for food. Plants in great variety were
-cultivated for seasoning. The poppy was eaten with honey as a dessert,
-or was sprinkled over bread in the oven. Anise, cumin, fennel, mint,
-and mustard were raised everywhere. And besides these seasonings that
-were found in every kitchen garden, spices were imported in large
-quantities from the east, and the rich imported vegetables of larger
-sizes or finer quality than could be raised at home. Fresh vegetables
-like fresh fruits could not be brought in those days from great
-distances.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect277"><b>277</b></a></span>
-<b>Meats.</b>&mdash;Besides the pork, beef, and mutton that we still use the
-Roman farmer had goatsflesh at his disposal, and all these meats were
-sold in the towns. Goatsflesh was considered the poorest of all, and
-was used by the lower classes only. Beef had been eaten by the Romans
-from the earliest times, but its use was a mark of luxury until very
-late in the Empire. Under the Republic the ordinary citizen ate beef
-only on great occasions when he had offered a steer or cow to the gods
-in sacrifice. The flesh then furnished a banquet for his family and
-friends, the heart, liver, and lungs (called collectively the <i>exta</i>)
-were the share of the priest, and the rest was consumed on the altar.
-Probably the great size of the carcass had something to do with the
-rarity of its use at a time when meat could be kept fresh only in the
-coldest weather; at any rate we must think of the Romans as using the
-cow for dairy purposes and the ox for draft rather than for food.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect278"><b>278</b></a></span>
-Pork was widely used by rich and poor alike, and was considered
-the choicest of all domestic meats. The very language testifies to the
-important place it occupied in the economy of the larder, for no other
-animal has so many words to describe it in its different functions.
-Besides the general term <i>sūs</i> we find <i>porcus</i>, <i>porca</i>, <i>verrēs</i>,
-<i>aper</i>, <i>scrōfa</i>, <i>māiālis</i>, and <i>nefrēns</i>. In the religious ceremony
-of the <i>suovetaurīlia</i> (<i>sūs</i> + <i>ovis</i> + <i>taurus</i>) it will be noticed
-that the swine has the first place, coming before the sheep and the
-bull. The vocabulary describing the parts used for food is equally
-rich; there are words for no less than half a dozen kinds of sausages,
-for example, with pork as their basis. We read, too, of fifty
-different ways of cooking pork.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect279"><b>279</b></a></span>
-<b>Fowl and Game.</b>&mdash;All the common domestic fowls, chickens, ducks,
-geese, and pigeons, were used by the Romans for food, and besides
-these the wealthy raised various sorts of wild fowl for the table, in
-the game preserves that have been mentioned (<a href="#sect145">§145</a>). Among these were
-cranes, grouse, partridges, snipe, thrushes, and woodcock. In Cicero's
-time the peacock was most highly esteemed, having at the feast much
-the same place of honor as the turkey has with us, but costing as much
-as $10 each. Wild animals were also bred for food in similar
-preserves, the hare and the wild boar being the favorites. The latter
-was served whole upon the table as in feudal times. As a contrast in
-size may be mentioned the dormouse (<i>glīs</i>), which was thought a great
-delicacy.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect280"><b>280</b></a></span>
-<b>Fish.</b>&mdash;The rivers of Italy and the surrounding seas must have
-furnished always a great variety of fish, but in early times fish was
-not much used as food by the Romans. By the end of the Republic,
-however, tastes had changed, and no article of food brought higher
-prices than the rarer sorts of fresh fish. Salt fish was exceedingly
-cheap and was imported in many forms from almost all the Mediterranean
-ports. One dish especially, <i>tyrotarīchus</i>, made of salt fish, eggs,
-and cheese, and therefore something like our codfish balls, is
-mentioned by Cicero in about the same way as we speak of hash. Fresh
-fish were all the more expensive because they could be transported
-only while alive. Hence the rich constructed fish ponds on their
-estates, a Marcus Licinius Crassus setting the example in 92 <small>B.C.</small>, and
-both fresh-water and salt-water fish were raised for the table. The
-names of the favorite sorts mean little to us, but we find the mullet
-(<i>mullus;</i> see <a href="#sect251">§251</a>) and a kind of turbot (<i>rhombus</i>) bringing high
-prices, and oysters (<i>ostreae</i>) were as popular as they are now.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect281"><b>281</b></a></span>
-Before passing to the more important matters of bread, wine, and
-oil, it may be well to mention a few articles that are still in
-general use. The Romans used freely the products of the dairy, milk,
-cream, curds, whey, and cheese. They drank the milk of sheep and goats
-as well as that of cows, and made cheese of the three kinds of milk.
-The cheese from ewes' milk was thought more digestible though less
-palatable than that made of cows' milk, while cheese from goats' milk
-was more palatable but less digestible. It is remarkable that they had
-no knowledge of butter except us a plaster for wounds. Honey took the
-place of sugar on the table and in cooking, for the Romans had only a
-botanical knowledge of the sugar cane. Salt was at first obtained by
-the evaporation of sea-water, but was afterwards mined. Its
-manufacture was a monopoly of the government, and care was taken
-always to keep the price low. It was used not only for seasoning, but
-also as a preservative agent. Vinegar was made from grape juice. In
-the list of articles of food unknown to the Romans we must put tea and
-coffee along with the orange, tomato, potato, butter, and sugar
-already mentioned.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect282"><b>282</b></a></span>
-<b>Cereals.</b>&mdash;The word <i>frūmentum</i><small><small><sup>2</sup></small></small> was a general term applied to
-any of the many sorts of grain that were grown for food. Of those now
-in use barley, oats, rye, and wheat were known to the Romans, though
-rye was not cultivated and oats served only as feed for cattle. Barley
-was not much used, for it was thought to lack nutriment, and therefore
-to be unfit for laborers. In very ancient times another grain, spelt
-(<i>far</i>), had been grown extensively, but it had gradually gone out of
-use except for the sacrificial cake that had given its name to the
-confarreate ceremony of marriage (<a href="#sect82">§82</a>). In classical times wheat was
-the staple grain grown for food, not differing much from that which we
-use to-day. It was usually planted in the fall, though on some soils
-it would mature as a spring wheat. After the farming land of Italy was
-diverted to other purposes (parks, pleasure grounds, game preserves:
-see <a href="#sect145">§§145</a>, <a href="#sect146">146</a>), wheat had to be imported from the provinces, first
-from Sicily, then from Africa and Egypt, the home supply being
-inadequate to the needs of the teeming population.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>2</sup></small> The word <i>frūmentum</i> occurs fifty-five times in the
-"Gallic War," meaning any kind of grain that happened to be grown for
-food in the country in which Caesar was campaigning at the time. The
-word "corn" used to translate it in our school editions is the worst
-possible, because to the schoolboy the word "corn" means a particular
-kind of grain, and a kind at that which was unknown to the Romans. The
-general word "grain" is much better for translation purposes.</small></blockquote>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures107and108">
- <tr>
- <td width="280">
- <img src="images/figure107.jpg" alt="FIGURE 107. POUNDING GRAIN">
- </td>
- <td width="363">
- <img src="images/figure108.jpg" alt="FIGURE 108. SECTION OF MILL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="280" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 107.
- P<small>OUNDING</small> G<small>RAIN</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="363" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 108.
- S<small>ECTION OF</small> M<small>ILL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect283"><b>283</b></a></span>
-<b>Preparation of the Grain.</b>&mdash;In the earliest times the grain
-(<i>far</i>) had not been ground, but merely pounded in a mortar (Fig.
-107). The meal was then mixed with water and made into a sort of
-porridge (<i>puls</i>, whence our word "poultice"), which long remained the
-national dish, something like the oatmeal of Scotland. Plautus (†184
-<small>B.C.</small>) jestingly refers to his countrymen as "pulse-eaters." The
-persons who crushed the grain were called <i>pīnsitōrēs</i> or <i>pīstōrēs</i>,
-whence the cognomen Pīsō (<a href="#sect273">§273</a>) is said to be derived, and in later
-times the bakers were also called <i>pīstōrēs</i>, because they ground the
-grain as well as baked the bread. In the ruins of bakeries we find
-mills as regularly as ovens. See the illustration in <a href="#sect285">§285</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect284"><b>284</b></a></span>
-The grinding of the grain into regular flour was done in a mill
-(<i>mola</i>). This consisted of three parts, the lower millstone (<i>mēta</i>),
-the upper (<i>catillus</i>), and the frame-work that surrounded and
-supported the latter and furnished the means to turn it upon the
-<i>mēta</i>. All these parts are shown distinctly in the cut (Fig. 108; see
-also Rich, Harper, and Smith under <i>mola;</i> Guhl and Koner, p. 774;
-Schreiber LXVII; Baumeister, p. 933), and require little explanation.
-The <i>mēta</i> was, as the name suggests, a cone-shaped stone (<i>A</i>)
-resting on a bed of masonry (<i>B</i>) with a raised rim, between which and
-the lower edge of the <i>mēta</i> the flour was collected. In the upper
-part of the <i>mēta</i> a beam (<i>C</i>) was mortised, ending above in an iron
-pin or pivot (<i>D</i>) on which hung and turned the frame-work that
-supported the <i>catillus</i>. The <i>catillus</i> (<i>E</i>) itself was shaped
-something like an hourglass, or two funnels joined at the neck. The
-upper funnel served as a hopper into which the grain was poured; the
-lower funnel fitted closely over the <i>mēta</i>, the distance between them
-being regulated by the length of the pin, mentioned above, according
-to the fineness of the flour desired. The mill without frame-work is
-shown in Fig. 109.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures109and110">
- <tr>
- <td width="366">
- <img src="images/figure109.jpg" alt="FIGURE 109.
- A POMPEIAN MILL WITHOUT ITS FRAME-WORK">
- </td>
- <td width="282">
- <img src="images/figure110.jpg" alt="FIGURE 110. HORSE AND MILL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="366" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 109.
- A P<small>OMPEIAN</small> M<small>ILL
- WITHOUT</small> I<small>TS</small>
- F<small>RAME-WORK</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="282" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 110.
- H<small>ORSE AND</small> M<small>ILL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect285"><b>285</b></a></span>
-The frame-work was very strong and massive on account of the
-heavy weight that was suspended from it. The beams used for turning
-the mill were fitted into holes in the narrow part of the <i>catillus</i>
-as shown in the cut. The power required to do the grinding was
-furnished by horses or mules attached to the beams (Fig. 110), or by
-slaves pushing against them. This last method was often used as a
-punishment, as we have seen (<a href="#sect170">§§170</a>, <a href="#sect148">148</a>). Of the same form but much
-smaller were the hand mills used by soldiers for grinding the
-<i>frūmentum</i> furnished them as rations. Under the Empire water mills
-were introduced, but they are hardly referred to in literature.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect286"><b>286</b></a></span>
-The transition from the ancient porridge (<a href="#sect283">§283</a>) to bread baked
-in the modern fashion must have been through the medium of thin cakes
-baked in or over the fire. We do not know when bread baked in ovens
-came into use. Bakers (<a href="#sect283">§283</a>) as representatives of a trade do not go
-back beyond 171 <small>B.C.</small>, but long before this time, of course, the family
-bread had been made by the <i>māter familiās</i>, or by a slave under her
-supervision. After public bakeries were once established it became
-less and less usual for bread to be made in private houses in the
-towns. Only the most pretentious of the city mansions had ovens
-attached, as shown by the ruins. In the country, on the other hand,
-the older custom was always retained (<a href="#sect148">§148</a>). Under Trajan (98-118) it
-became the custom to distribute bread to the people daily, instead of
-grain once a month, and the bakers were organized into a guild
-(<i>corpus</i>, <i>collegium</i>), and as a corporation enjoyed certain
-privileges and immunities. In Fig. 111 are shown the ruins of a
-Pompeian bakery with several mills in connection with it.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure111">
- <tr>
- <td width="638">
- <img src="images/figure111.jpg" alt="FIGURE 111. BAKERY WITH MILLS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="638" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 111.
- B<small>AKERY WITH</small> M<small>ILLS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures112and113">
- <tr>
- <td width="361" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure112.jpg" alt="FIGURE 112. OVEN FOR BREAD">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="361" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 112.
- O<small>VEN FOR</small> B<small>READ</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="361">
- <img src="images/figure113.jpg" alt="FIGURE 113. SALESROOM OF BAKERY">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="361" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 113.
- S<small>ALESROOM OF</small> B<small>AKERY</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect287"><b>287</b></a></span>
-<b>Breadmaking.</b>&mdash;After the flour collected about the edge of the
-<i>mēta</i> (<a href="#sect284">§284</a>) had been sifted, water and salt were added and the dough
-was kneaded in a trough by hand or by a simple machine shown in the
-cut in Schreiber LXVII. Yeast was added as nowadays and the bread was
-baked in an oven much like those still found in parts of Europe. One
-preserved in the ruins of Pompeii is shown in the cut (Fig. 112): at
-<i>a</i> is the oven proper, in which a fire was built, the draft being
-furnished by the openings at <i>d</i>. The surrounding chamber, <i>b</i>, is
-intended to retain the heat after the fire (usually of charcoal) had
-been raked out into the ashpit, <i>e</i>, and the vents closed. The letter
-<i>f</i> marks a receptacle for water, which seems to have been used for
-moistening the bread while baking. After the oven had been heated to
-the proper temperature and the fire raked out, the loaves were put in,
-the vents closed, and the bread left to bake.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect288"><b>288</b></a></span>
-There were several qualities of bread, varying with the sort of
-grain, the setting of the millstones (<a href="#sect284">§284</a>) and the fineness of the
-sieves (<a href="#sect287">§287</a>). The very best, made of pure wheat-flour, was called
-<i>pānis silīgneus;</i> that made of coarse flour, of flour and bran, or of
-bran alone was called <i>pānis plebēius</i>, <i>castrēnsis</i>, <i>sordidus</i>,
-<i>rūsticus</i>, etc. The loaves were circular and rather flat&mdash;some have
-been found in the ruins of Pompeii&mdash;and had their surface marked off
-by lines drawn from the center into four or more parts. The wall
-painting (Fig. 113) of a salesroom of a bakery, also found in Pompeii,
-gives a good idea of the appearance of the bread. Various kinds of
-cakes and confections were also sold at these shops.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect289"><b>289</b></a></span>
-<b>The Olive.</b>&mdash;Next in importance to the wheat came the olive. It
-was introduced into Italy from Greece, and from Italy has spread
-through all the Mediterranean countries; but in modern as well as in
-ancient times the best olives are those of Italy. The olive was an
-important article of food merely as a fruit, being eaten both fresh
-and preserved in various ways, but it found its significant place in
-the domestic economy of the Romans in the form of the olive oil with
-which we are familiar. It is the value of the oil that has caused the
-cultivation of the olive to become so general in southern Europe, and
-it is claimed that its use is constantly widening, extending
-especially northward, where wine and oil are said to be supplanting
-the native beer and butter. Many varieties were known to the Romans,
-requiring different climates and soils and adapted to different uses.
-In general it may be said that the larger berries were better suited
-for eating than for oil.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure114">
- <tr>
- <td width="237">
- <img src="images/figure114.jpg" alt="FIGURE 114. PICKING OLIVES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="237" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 114.
- P<small>ICKING</small> O<small>LIVES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect290"><b>290</b></a></span>
-The olive was eaten fresh as it ripened and was also preserved
-in various ways. The ripe olives were sprinkled with salt and left
-untouched for five days; the salt was then shaken off, and the olives
-dried in the sun. They were also preserved sweet without salt in
-boiled must (<a href="#sect296">§296</a>). Half ripe olives were picked (Fig. 114) with their
-stems and covered over in jars with the best quality of oil; in this
-way they are said to have retained for more than a year the flavor of
-the fresh fruit. Green olives were preserved whole in strong brine,
-the form in which we know them now, or were beaten into a mass and
-preserved with spices and vinegar. The preparation <i>epityrum</i> was made
-by taking the fruit in any of the three stages, removing the stones,
-chopping up the pulp, seasoning it with vinegar, coriander seeds,
-cumin, fennel, and mint, and covering the mixture in jars with oil
-enough to exclude the air. The result was a salad that was eaten with
-cheese.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect291"><b>291</b></a></span>
-<b>Olive Oil.</b>&mdash;The oil was used for several purposes. It was
-employed most anciently to anoint the body after bathing, especially
-by athletes; it was used as a vehicle for perfumes, the Romans knowing
-nothing of distillation by means of alcohol; it was burned in lamps
-(<a href="#sect228">§228</a>); it was an indispensable article of food. As a food it was
-employed as butter is now in cooking or as a relish or dressing in its
-natural state. The olive when subjected to pressure yields two fluids.
-The first to flow (<i>amurca</i>) is dark and bitter, having the
-consistency of water. It was largely used as a fertilizer, but not as
-a food. The second, which flows after greater pressure, is the oil
-(<i>oleum</i>, <i>oleum olīvum</i>). The best oil was made from olives not fully
-ripe, but the largest quantity was yielded by the ripened fruit.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure115">
- <tr>
- <td width="309">
- <img src="images/figure115.jpg" alt="FIGURE 115. OLIVE MILL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="309" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 115.
- O<small>LIVE</small> M<small>ILL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect292"><b>292</b></a></span>
-The olives were picked from the tree (Fig. 114), those that fell
-of their own accord being thought inferior (<a href="#sect160">§160</a>), and were spread
-upon sloping platforms in order that a part of the <i>amurca</i> might flow
-out by itself. Here the fruit remained until a slight fermentation
-took place. It was then subjected to the action of a machine (Fig.
-115) that bruised and pressed it. The oil that flowed out was caught
-in a jar and from it ladled into a receptacle (<i>lābrum fictile</i>),
-where it was allowed to settle, the <i>amurca</i> and other impurities
-falling to the bottom. The oil was then skimmed off into another like
-receptacle and again allowed to settle, the process being repeated (as
-often as thirty times if necessary) until all impurities had been left
-behind. The best oil was made by subjecting the berries at first to a
-gentle pressure only. The bruised pulp was then taken out, separated
-from the stones or pits, and pressed a second or even a third time,
-the quality becoming poorer each time. The oil was kept in jars which
-were glazed on the inside with wax or gum to prevent absorption, the
-covers were carefully secured and the jars stored away in vaults (Fig.
-116).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure116">
- <tr>
- <td width="652">
- <img src="images/figure116.jpg" alt="FIGURE 116. VAULT FOR STORING OIL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="652" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 116.
- V<small>AULT FOR</small> S<small>TORING</small>
- O<small>IL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect293"><b>293</b></a></span>
-<b>Grapes.</b>&mdash;Grapes were eaten fresh from the vines and were also
-dried in the sun and kept as raisins, but they owed their real
-importance in Italy as elsewhere to the wine made from them. The vine
-was not native to Italy, as until recently it was supposed to be, but
-was introduced, probably from Greece, long before history begins. The
-earliest name for Italy known to the Greeks was <i>Oenōtria</i>, "the land
-of the vine-pole," and very ancient legends ascribe to Numa
-restrictions upon the use of wine. It is probable that up to the time
-of the Gracchi wine was rare and expensive. The quantity produced
-gradually increased as the cultivation of cereals declined (<a href="#sect146">§146</a>), but
-the quality long remained inferior, all the choice wines being
-imported from Greece and the east. By Cicero's time, however,
-attention was being given to viticulture and to the scientific making
-of wines, and by the time of Augustus vintages were produced that vied
-with the best brought in from abroad. Pliny, writing about the middle
-of the first century of our era, says that of the eighty really choice
-wines then known to the Romans two-thirds were produced in Italy, and
-Arrian of about the same time says that Italian wines were famous as
-far away as India.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect294"><b>294</b></a></span>
-<b>Viticulture.</b>&mdash;Grapes could be grown almost anywhere in Italy,
-but the best wines were made south of Rome within the confines of
-Latium and Campania. The cities of Praeneste, Velitrae, and Formiae
-were famous for the wines grown on the sunny slopes of the Alban
-hills. A little farther south, near Terracina, was the <i>ager
-Caecubus</i>, where was produced the Caecuban wine, pronounced by
-Augustus the noblest of all. Then comes Mt. Massicus with the <i>ager
-Falernus</i> on its southern side, producing the Falernian wines, even
-more famous than the Caecuban. Upon and around Vesuvius, too, fine
-wines were grown, especially near Naples, Pompeii, Cumae, and
-Surrentum. Good wines but less noted than these were produced in the
-extreme south, near Beneventum, Aulon, and Tarentum. Of like quality
-were those grown east and north of Rome, near Spoletium, Caesena,
-Ravenna, Hadria, and Ancona. Those of the north and west, in Etruria
-and Gaul, were not so good.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect295"><b>295</b></a></span>
-<b>Vineyards.</b>&mdash;The sunny side of a hill was the best place for a
-vineyard. The vines were supported by poles or trellises in the modern
-fashion, or were planted at the foot of trees up which they were
-allowed to climb. For this purpose the elm (<i>ulmus</i>) was preferred,
-because it flourished everywhere, could be closely trimmed without
-endangering its life, and had leaves that made good food for cattle
-when they were plucked off to admit the sunshine to the vines. Vergil
-speaks of "marrying the vine to the elm," and Horace calls the plane
-tree a bachelor (<i>platanus coelebs</i>), because its dense foliage made
-it unfit for the vineyard. Before the gathering of the grapes the
-chief work lay in keeping the ground clear; it was spaded over once
-each month through the year. One man could properly care for about
-four acres.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure117">
- <tr>
- <td width="360">
- <img src="images/figure117.jpg" alt="FIGURE 117. MAKING WINE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="360" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 117.
- M<small>AKING</small> W<small>INE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect296"><b>296</b></a></span>
-<b>Wine Making.</b>&mdash;The making of the wine took place usually in
-September, the season varying with the soil and the climate. It was
-anticipated by a festival, the <i>vīnālia rūstica</i>, celebrated on the
-19th of August. Precisely what the festival meant the Romans
-themselves did not fully understand, perhaps, but it was probably
-intended to secure a favorable season for the gathering of the grapes.
-The general process of making the wine differed little from that
-familiar to us in Bible stories and still practiced in modern times.
-After the grapes were gathered they were first trodden with the bare
-feet (Fig. 117) and then pressed in the <i>prēlum</i> or <i>lorcular</i>. The
-juice as it came from the press was called <i>mustum</i>, "new," and was
-often drunk unfermented, as "sweet" cider is now. It could be kept
-sweet from vintage to vintage by being sealed in a jar smeared within
-and without with pitch and immersed for several weeks in cold water or
-buried in moist sand. It was also preserved by evaporation over a
-fire; when it was reduced one-half in this way it became a grape-jelly
-(<i>dēfrutum</i>) and was used as a basis for various beverages and for
-other purposes (<a href="#sect290">§290</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect297"><b>297</b></a></span>
-Fermented wine (<i>vīnum</i>) was made by collecting the <i>mustum</i> in
-huge vat-like jars (<i>dōlia</i>, shown in Fig. 116), large enough to hide
-a man and containing a hundred gallons or more. These were covered
-with pitch within and without and partially buried in the ground in
-cellars or vaults (<i>vīnāriae cellae</i>), in which they remained
-permanently. After they were nearly filled with the <i>mustum</i>, they
-were left uncovered during the process of fermentation, which lasted
-under ordinary circumstances about nine days. They were then tightly
-sealed and opened only when the wine required attention<small><small><sup>3</sup></small></small> or was to
-be removed. The cheaper wines were used directly from the <i>dōlia</i>, but
-the choicer kinds were drawn off after a year into smaller jars
-(<i>amphorae</i>), clarified and sometimes "doctored" in various ways, and
-finally stored in depositories often entirely distinct from the
-cellars (Fig. 118). A favorite place was a room in the upper story of
-the house, where the wine was artificially aged by the heat rising
-from the furnace or even by the smoke escaping from the fire. The
-<i>amphorae</i> were sometimes marked with the name of the wine, and the
-names of the consuls for the year in which they were filled.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>3</sup></small> Spoiled wine was used as vinegar (<i>acētum</i>), and vinegar
-that became insipid and tasteless was called <i>vappa</i>. This last word
-was used also as a term of reproach for shiftless and worthless men.</small></blockquote>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure118">
- <tr>
- <td width="633">
- <img src="images/figure118.jpg" alt="FIGURE 118. WINE CELLAR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="633" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 118.
- W<small>INE</small> C<small>ELLAR</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect298"><b>298</b></a></span>
-<b>Beverages.</b>&mdash;After water and milk, wine was the ordinary drink of
-the Romans of all classes. It must be distinctly understood, however,
-that they always mixed it with water and used more water than wine.
-Pliny mentions one sort of wine that would stand being mixed with
-eight times its own bulk of water. To drink wine unmixed was thought
-typical of barbarism, and among the Romans it was so drunk only by the
-dissipated at their wildest revels. Under the Empire the ordinary
-qualities of wine were cheap enough to be sold at three or four cents
-a quart (<a href="#sect388">§388</a>); the choicer kinds were very costly, entirely beyond
-the reach, Horace gives us to understand, of a man in his
-circumstances. More rarely used than wine were other beverages that
-are mentioned in literature. A favorite drink was <i>mulsum</i>, made of
-four measures of wine and one of honey. A mixture of water and honey
-allowed to ferment together was called <i>mulsa</i>. Cider also was made by
-the Romans, and wines from mulberries and dates. They also made
-various cordials from aromatic plants, but it must be remembered
-(<a href="#sect281">§281</a>) that they had no knowledge of tea or coffee.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect299"><b>299</b></a></span>
-<b>Style of Living.</b>&mdash;The table supplies of a given people vary from
-age to age with the development of civilization and refinement, and in
-the same age with the means and tastes of classes and individuals. Of
-the Romans it may be said that during the early Republic, perhaps
-almost through the second century <small>B.C.</small>, they cared little for the
-pleasures of the table. They lived frugally and ate sparingly. They
-were almost strictly vegetarians (<a href="#sect273">§273</a>), much of their food was eaten
-cold, and the utmost simplicity characterized the cooking and the
-service of their meals. Everything was prepared by the <i>māter
-familiās</i> or by the maidservants under her supervision (<a href="#sect90">§90</a>). The
-table was set in the <i>ātrium</i> (<a href="#sect188">§188</a>), and the father, mother, and
-children sat around it on stools or benches (<a href="#sect225">§225</a>), waiting upon each
-other and their guests (<a href="#sect104">§104</a>). Dependents ate of the same food, but
-apart from the family. The dishes were of the plainest sort, of
-earthenware or even of wood, though a silver saltcellar was often the
-cherished ornament of the humblest board. Table knives and forks were
-unknown, the food being cut into convenient portions before it was
-served, and spoons being used to convey to the mouth what the fingers
-could not manage. During this period there was little to choose
-between the fare of the proudest patrician and the humblest client.
-The Samnite envoys found Manius Curius, the conqueror of Pyrrhus (275
-<small>B.C.</small>), eating his dinner of vegetables (<a href="#sect275">§275</a>) from an earthen bowl. A
-century later the poet Plautus calls his countrymen a race of porridge
-eaters (<i>pultiphagōnidae</i>, <a href="#sect283">§283</a>), and gives us to understand that in
-his time even the wealthiest Romans had in their households no
-specially trained cooks. When a dinner out of the ordinary was given,
-a professional cook was hired, who brought with him to the house of
-the host his utensils and helpers, just as a plumber or surgeon
-responds to a call nowadays.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect300"><b>300</b></a></span>
-The last two centuries of the Republic saw all this changed. The
-conquest of Greece and the wars in Asia Minor gave the Romans a taste
-of eastern luxury, and altered their simple table customs, as other
-customs had been altered by like contact with the outside world (<a href="#sect5">§§5</a>,
-<a href="#sect101">101</a>, <a href="#sect112">112</a>, <a href="#sect192">192</a>). From this time the poor and the rich no longer fared
-alike. The former constrained by poverty lived frugally as of old:
-every schoolboy knows that the soldiers who won Caesar's battles for
-him lived on grain (<a href="#sect282">§282 and note</a>), which they ground in their
-handmills and baked at their campfires. The very rich, on the other
-hand, aping the luxury of the Greeks but lacking their refinement,
-became gluttons instead of gourmands. They ransacked the world<small><small><sup>4</sup></small></small> for
-articles of food, preferring the rare and the costly to what was
-really palatable and delicate. They measured the feast by the
-quantities they could consume, reviving the sated appetite by piquant
-sauces and resorting to emetics to prolong the pleasures of the table
-and prevent the effects of over-indulgence. The separate dining-room
-(<i>trīclīnium</i>) was introduced, the great houses having two or more
-(<a href="#sect204">§204</a>), and the <i>oecī</i> (<a href="#sect207">§207</a>) were pressed into service for banquet
-halls. The dining couch (<a href="#sect224">§224</a>) took the place of the bench or stool,
-slaves served the food to the reclining guests, a dinner dress (<a href="#sect249">§249</a>)
-was devised, and every <i>familia urbāna</i> (<a href="#sect149">§149</a>) included a high-priced
-chef with a staff of trained assistants. Of course there were always
-wealthy men, Atticus, the friend of Cicero, for example (<a href="#sect155">§155</a>), who
-clung to the simpler customs of the earlier days, but these could make
-little headway against the current of senseless dissipation and
-extravagance. Over against these must be set the fawning poor, who
-preferred the fleshpots of the rich patron (<a href="#sect181">§§181</a>, <a href="#sect182">182</a>) to the bread
-of honest independence. Between the two extremes was a numerous middle
-class of the well-to-do, with whose ordinary meals we are more
-concerned than with the banquets of the very rich. These meals were
-the <i>ientāculum</i>, the <i>prandium</i>, and the <i>cēna</i>.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>4</sup></small> Gellius (2d century <small>A.D.</small>) gives a list from a satirical
-poem of Varro: Peacock from Samos, heath-cock from Phrygia, crane from
-Media, kid from Ambracia, young tunny-fish from Chalcedon, <i>mūrēna</i>
-from Tartessus, cod (?) from Pessinus, oysters from Tarentum, scallop
-from Chios (?), sturgeon (?) from Rhodes, <i>scarus</i> from Cilicia, nuts
-from Thasos, dates from Egypt, chestnuts (?) from Spain.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect301"><b>301</b></a></span>
-<b>Hours for Meals.</b>&mdash;Three meals a day was the regular number with
-the Romans as with us, though hygienists were found then, as they may
-be found nowadays, who believed two meals more healthful than three,
-and then as now high livers often indulged in an extra meal taken late
-at night. Custom fixed more or less rigorously the hours for meals,
-though these varied with the age, and to a less extent with the
-occupations and even with the inclinations of individuals. In early
-times in the city and in all periods in the country the chief meal
-(<i>cēna</i>) was eaten in the middle of the day, preceded by a breakfast
-(<i>ientāculum</i>) in the early morning and followed in the evening by a
-supper (<i>vesperna</i>). In classical times the hours for meals in Rome
-were about as they are now in our large cities: that is, the <i>cēna</i>
-was postponed until the work of the day was finished, thus crowding
-out the <i>vesperna</i>, and a luncheon (<i>prandium</i>) took the place of the
-old-fashioned "noon dinner." The evening dinner came to be more or
-less of a social function, guests being present and the food and
-service the best the house could afford, while the <i>ientāculum</i> and
-<i>prandium</i> were in comparison very simple and informal meals.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect302"><b>302</b></a></span>
-<b>Breakfast and Luncheon.</b>&mdash;The breakfast (<i>ientāculum</i> or
-<i>iantāculum</i>) was eaten immediately after rising, the hour varying, of
-course, with the occupation and condition of the individual. It
-consisted usually merely of bread, eaten dry or dipped in wine or
-sprinkled over with salt, though raisins, olives, and cheese were
-sometimes added. Workmen pressed for time seem to have taken their
-breakfast in their hands to eat as they went to the place of their
-labor, and schoolboys often stopped on their way to school (<a href="#sect122">§122</a>) at a
-public bakery (<a href="#sect286">§286</a>) to buy a sort of shortcake or pancake, on which
-they made a hurried breakfast. More rarely the breakfast became a
-regular meal, eggs being served in addition to the things just
-mentioned, and <i>mulsum</i> (<a href="#sect298">§298</a>) and milk drunk with them. It is likely
-that such a breakfast was taken at a later hour and by persons who
-dispensed with the noon meal. The luncheon (<i>prandium</i>) came about
-eleven o'clock. It, too, consisted usually of cold food: bread, salads
-(<a href="#sect276">§276</a>), olives, cheese, fruits, nuts, and cold meats from the dinner
-of the day before. Occasionally, however, warm meat and vegetables
-were added, but the meal was never an elaborate one. It is sometimes
-spoken of as a morning meal, but in this case it must have followed at
-about the regular interval an extremely early breakfast, or it must
-itself have formed the breakfast, taken later than usual, when the
-<i>ientāculum</i> for some reason had been omitted. After the <i>prandium</i>
-came the midday rest or siesta (<i>merīdiātiō</i>), when all work was laid
-aside until the eighth hour, except in the law courts and in the
-senate. In the summer, at least, everybody went to sleep, and even in
-the capital the streets were almost as deserted as at midnight. The
-<i>vesperna</i>, entirely unknown in city life, closed the day on the farm.
-It was an early supper which consisted largely of the leavings of the
-noonday dinner with the addition of such uncooked food as a farm would
-naturally supply. The word <i>merenda</i> seems to have been applied in
-early times to this evening meal, then to refreshments taken at any
-time (cf. the English "lunch"), and finally to have gone out of use
-altogether.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect303"><b>303</b></a></span>
-<b>The Formal Meal.</b>&mdash;The busy life of the city had early crowded
-the dinner out of its original place in the middle of the day and
-fixed it in the afternoon. The fashion soon spread to the towns and
-was carried by city people to their country estates (<a href="#sect145">§145</a>), so that in
-classical times the late dinner (<i>cēna</i>) was the regular thing for all
-persons of any social standing throughout the length and breadth of
-Italy. It was even more of a function than it is with us, because the
-Romans knew no other form of purely social intercourse. They had no
-receptions, balls, musicales, or theater parties, no other
-opportunities to entertain their friends or be entertained by them. It
-is safe to say, therefore, that when the Roman was in town he was
-every evening host or guest at a dinner as elaborate as his means or
-those of his friends permitted, unless, of course, urgent business
-claimed his attention or some unusual circumstances had withdrawn him
-temporarily from society. On the country estates the same custom
-prevailed, the guests coming from neighboring estates or being friends
-who stopped unexpectedly, perhaps, to claim entertainment for a night
-as they passed on a journey to or from the city (<a href="#sect388">§388</a>). These dinners,
-formal as they were, are to be distinguished carefully from the
-extravagant banquets of the ostentatious rich. They were in themselves
-thoroughly wholesome, the expression of genuine hospitality. The
-guests were friends, the number was limited, the wife and children of
-the host were present, and social enjoyment was the end in view.
-Before the meal itself is described something must be said of the
-dining-room and its furniture.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures119to121">
- <tr>
- <td width="311" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure119.jpg" alt="FIGURE 119. TABLE AND COUCHES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="311" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 119.
- T<small>ABLE AND</small> C<small>OUCHES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="311" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure120.jpg" alt="FIGURE 120. TABLE AND COUCHES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="311" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 120.
- T<small>ABLE AND</small> C<small>OUCHES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="311">
- <img src="images/figure121.jpg" alt="FIGURE 121. WOMAN SITTING ON DINING COUCH">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="311" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 121.
- W<small>OMAN</small> S<small>ITTING ON</small>
- D<small>INING</small> C<small>OUCH</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect304"><b>304</b></a></span>
-<b>The Dining Couch.</b>&mdash;The position of the dining-room
-(<i>trīclīnium</i>) in the Roman house has been described already (<a href="#sect204">§204</a>),
-and it has been remarked (<a href="#sect300">§300</a>) that in classical times the stool or
-bench had given place to the couch. This couch (<i>lectus trīcliniāris</i>)
-was constructed much as the common <i>lectī</i> were (<a href="#sect224">§224</a>), except that it
-was made broader and lower, had an arm at one end only, was without a
-back, and sloped from the front to the rear. At the end where the arm
-was, a cushion or bolster was placed, and parallel with it two others
-were arranged in such a way as to divide the couch into three parts.
-Each part was for one person, and a single couch would, therefore,
-accommodate three persons. The dining-room received its name
-(<i>trīclīnium</i>) from the fact that it was planned to hold three of
-these couches (<i>κλίναι</i> in Greek), set on three sides of a table, the
-fourth side of which was open. The arrangement varied a little with
-the size of the room. In a large room the couches were set as in Fig.
-119, but if economy of space was necessary they were placed as in Fig.
-120, the latter being probably the more common arrangement of the two.
-Nine may be taken, therefore, as the ordinary number at a Roman dinner
-party. More would be invited only on unusual occasions, and then a
-larger room would be used where two or more tables could be arranged
-in the same way, each accommodating nine guests. In the case of
-members of the same family, especially if one was a child, or when the
-guests were very intimate friends, a fourth person might find room on
-a couch, but this was certainly unusual; probably when a guest
-unexpectedly presented himself some member of the family would
-surrender his place to him. Often the host reserved a place or places
-for friends that his guests might bring without notice. Such uninvited
-persons were called <i>umbrae</i>. When guests were present the wife sat on
-the edge of the couch (Fig. 121) instead of reclining, and children
-were usually accommodated on seats at the open side of the table.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect305"><b>305</b></a></span>
-<b>Places of Honor.</b>&mdash;The guest approached the couch from the rear
-and took his place upon it, lying on the left side, with his face to
-the table, and supported by his left elbow, which rested on the
-cushion or bolster mentioned above. The position of his body is
-indicated by the arrows in the cut above (Fig. 119). Each couch and
-each place on the couch had its own name according to its position
-with reference to the others. The couches were called respectively
-<i>lectus summus</i>, <i>lectus medius</i>, and <i>lectus īmus</i>, and it will be
-noticed that persons reclining on the <i>lectus medius</i> had the <i>lectus
-summus</i> on the left and the <i>lectus īmus</i> on the right. Etiquette
-assigned the <i>lectus summus</i> and the <i>lectus medius</i> to guests, while
-the <i>lectus īmus</i> was reserved for the host, his wife, and one other
-member of his family. If the host alone represented the family, the
-two places beside him on the <i>lectus īmus</i> were given to the humblest
-of the guests.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect306"><b>306</b></a></span>
-The places on each couch were named in the same way, (<i>locus</i>)
-<i>summus</i>, <i>medius</i>, and <i>īmus</i>, denoted respectively by the figures
-<i>1</i>, <i>2</i>, and <i>3</i> in the cut. The person who occupied the place
-numbered <i>1</i> was said to be above (<i>super</i>, <i>suprā</i>) the person to his
-right, while the person occupying the middle place (<i>2</i>) was above the
-person on his right and below (<i>īnfrā</i>) the one on the left. The place
-of honor on the <i>lectus summus</i> was that numbered <i>1</i>, and the
-corresponding place on the <i>lectus īmus</i> was taken by the host. The
-most distinguished guest, however, was given the place on the <i>lectus
-medius</i> marked <i>3</i>, and this place was called by the special name
-<i>locus cōnsulāris</i>, because if a consul was present it was always
-assigned to him. It will be noticed that it was next the place of the
-host, and besides was especially convenient for a public official; if
-he found it necessary to receive or send a message during the dinner
-he could communicate with the messenger without so much as turning on
-his elbow.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures122and123">
- <tr>
- <td width="195">
- <img src="images/figure122.jpg" alt="FIGURE 122. SIDEBOARD">
- </td>
- <td width="331">
- <img src="images/figure123.jpg" alt="FIGURE 123. SIDEBOARD">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="195" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 122.
- S<small>IDEBOARD</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="331" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 123.
- S<small>IDEBOARD</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect307"><b>307</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Furniture.</b>&mdash;In comparison with the <i>lectī</i> the rest of the
-furniture of the dining-room played an insignificant part. In fact the
-only other absolutely necessary article was the table (<i>mēnsa</i>),
-placed as shown in the figures above between the three couches in such
-a way that all were equally distant from it and free access to it was
-left on the fourth side. The space between the table and the couches
-might be so little that the guests could help themselves, or on the
-other hand so great that slaves could pass between to serve the food.
-The guests had no individual plates to be kept upon the table, so that
-it was used merely to receive the large dishes in which the food was
-served, and certain formal articles, such as the saltcellar (<a href="#sect299">§299</a>) and
-the things necessary for the offering to the gods. The table,
-therefore, was never very large (one such would be almost lost in a
-modern dining-room), but it was often exceedingly beautiful and costly
-(<a href="#sect227">§227</a>). Its beauties were not hidden either by any cloth or covering;
-the table-cloth, as we know it, did not come into use until about the
-end of the first century of our era. The cost and beauty of the
-dishes, too, were limited only by the means and taste of the owner.
-Besides the couches and the table, sideboards (<i>abacī</i>) were the only
-articles of furniture usually found in the <i>trīclīnium</i>. These varied
-from a simple shelf to tables of different forms and sizes and open
-cabinets, such as shown in Figs. 122 and 123 and in Schreiber LXVII,
-11. They were set out of the way against the walls and served as do
-ours to display plate and porcelain when not in use on the table.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect308"><b>308</b></a></span>
-<b>Courses.</b>&mdash;In classical times even the simplest dinner was
-divided into three parts, the <i>gustus</i> ("appetizer"), the <i>cēna</i>
-("dinner proper"), and the <i>secunda mēnsa</i><small><small><sup>5</sup></small></small> ("dessert"); the dinner
-was made elaborate by serving each of the parts in several courses.
-The <i>gustus</i> consisted of those things only that were believed to
-excite the appetite or aid the digestion: oysters and other shell-fish
-fresh, sea-fish salted or pickled, certain vegetables that could be
-eaten uncooked, especially onions, and almost invariably lettuce and
-eggs, all with piquant sauces. With these appetizers <i>mulsum</i> (<a href="#sect298">§298</a>)
-was drunk, wine being thought too heavy for an empty stomach, and from
-the drink the <i>gustus</i> was also called the <i>prōmulsis;</i> another and
-more significant name for it was <i>antecēna</i>. Then followed the real
-dinner, the <i>cēna</i>, consisting of the more substantial viands, fish,
-flesh, fowl, and vegetables. With this part of the meal wine was
-drunk, but in moderation, for it was thought to dull the sense of
-taste, and the real drinking began only when the <i>cēna</i> was over. The
-<i>cēna</i> almost always consisted of several courses (<i>mēnsa prīma</i>,
-<i>altera</i>, <i>tertia</i>, etc.), three being thought neither niggardly nor
-extravagant; we are told that Augustus often dined on three courses
-and never went beyond six. The <i>secunda mēnsa</i> closed the meal with
-all sorts of pastry, sweets, nuts, and fruits, fresh and preserved,
-with which wine was freely drunk. From the fact that eggs were eaten
-at the beginning of the meal and apples at the close came the
-proverbial expression, <i>ab ovō ad māla</i>.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>5</sup></small> This is the most common form, but the plural also occurs,
-and the adjective may follow the noun.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect309"><b>309</b></a></span>
-<b>Bills of Fare.</b>&mdash;We have preserved to us in literature the bills
-of fare of a few meals, probably actually served, which may be taken
-as typical at least of the homely, the generous, and the sumptuous
-dinner. The simplest is given by Juvenal (†2d century <small>A.D.</small>): for the
-<i>gustus</i>, asparagus and eggs; for the <i>cēna</i>, young kid and chicken;
-for the <i>secunda mēnsa</i>, fruits. Two others are given by Martial
-(43-101 <small>A.D.</small>): the first has lettuce, onions, tunny-fish, and eggs cut
-in slices; sausages with porridge, fresh cauliflower, bacon, and
-beans; pears and chestnuts, and with the wine olives, parched peas,
-and lupines. The second has mallows, onions, mint, elecampane,
-anchovies with sliced eggs, and sow's udder in tunny sauce; the <i>cēna</i>
-was served in a single course (<i>ūna mēnsa</i>), kid, chicken, cold ham,
-haricot beans, and young cabbage sprouts; fresh fruits, with wine, of
-course. The last we owe to Macrobius (†5th century <small>A.D.</small>), who assigns
-it to a feast of the pontifices during the Republic, feasts that were
-proverbial for their splendor. The <i>antecēna</i> was served in two
-courses: first, sea-urchins, raw oysters, three kinds of sea-mussels,
-thrush on asparagus, a fat hen, panned oysters, and mussels; second,
-mussels again, shell-fish, sea-nettles, figpeckers, loin of goat, loin
-of pork, fricasseed chicken, figpeckers again, two kinds of
-sea-snails. The number of courses in which the <i>cēna</i> was served is
-not given: sow's udder, head of wild boar, panned fish, panned sow's
-udder, domestic ducks, wild ducks, hares, roast chicken, starch
-pudding, bread. No vegetables or dessert are mentioned by Macrobius,
-but we may take it for granted that they corresponded to the rest of
-the feast, and the wine that the pontifices drank was famed as the
-best.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect310"><b>310</b></a></span>
-<b>Serving the Dinner.</b>&mdash;The dinner hour marked the close of the
-day's work, as has been said (<a href="#sect301">§301</a>), and varied, therefore, with the
-season of the year and the social position of the family. In general
-it may be said to have been not before the ninth and rarely after the
-tenth hour (<a href="#sect418">§418</a>). It lasted usually until bedtime, that is, for three
-or four hours at least, though the Romans went to bed early because
-they rose early (<a href="#sect79">§§79</a>, <a href="#sect122">122</a>). Sometimes even the ordinary dinner lasted
-until midnight, but when a banquet was expected to be unusually
-protracted, it was the custom to begin earlier in order that there
-might be time after it for the needed repose. Such banquets, beginning
-before the ninth hour, were called <i>tempestīva convīvia</i>, the word
-"early" in this connection carrying with it about the same reproach as
-our "late" suppers. At the ordinary family dinners the time was spent
-in conversation, though in some good houses (notably that of Atticus,
-cf. <a href="#sect155">§155</a>) a trained slave read aloud to the guests. At "gentlemen's
-dinners" other forms of entertainment were provided, music, dancing,
-juggling, etc., by professional performers (<a href="#sect153">§153</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect311"><b>311</b></a></span>
-When the guests had been ushered into the dining-room the gods
-were solemnly invoked, a custom to which our "grace before meat"
-corresponds. Then they took their places on the couches (<i>accumbere</i>,
-<i>discumbere</i>) as these were assigned them (<a href="#sect306">§306</a>), their sandals were
-removed (<a href="#sect250">§250</a>), to be cared for by their own attendants (<a href="#sect152">§152</a>), and
-water and towels were carried around for washing the hands. The meal
-then began, each course being placed upon the table on a waiter or
-tray (<i>ferculum</i>), from which the dishes were passed in regular order
-to the guests. As each course was finished the dishes were replaced on
-the <i>ferculum</i> and removed, and water and towels were again passed to
-the guests, a custom all the more necessary because the fingers were
-used for forks (<a href="#sect299">§299</a>). Between the chief parts of the meal, too, the
-table was cleared and carefully wiped with a cloth or soft sponge.
-Between the <i>cēna</i> proper and the <i>secunda mēnsa</i> a longer pause was
-made and silence was preserved while wine, salt, and meal, perhaps
-also regular articles of food, were offered to the Lares. The dessert
-was then brought on in the same way as the other parts of the meal.
-The signal to leave the couches was given by calling for the sandals
-(<a href="#sect250">§250</a>), and the guests immediately took their departure.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect312"><b>312</b></a></span>
-<b>The Comissatio.</b>&mdash;Cicero tells us of Cato and his Sabine
-neighbors lingering over their dessert and wine until late at night,
-and makes them find the chief charm of the long evening in the
-conversation. For this reason Cato declares the Latin word <i>convīvium</i>
-"a living together," a better word for such social intercourse than
-the one the Greeks used, <i>symposium</i>, "a drinking together." The
-younger men in the gayer circles of the capital inclined rather to the
-Greek view and followed the <i>cēna</i> proper with a drinking bout, or
-wine supper, called <i>comissātiō</i> or <i>compōtātiō</i>. This differed from
-the form that Cato approved not merely in the amount of wine consumed,
-in the lower tone, and in the questionable amusements, but also in the
-following of certain Greek customs unknown among the Romans until
-after the second Punic war and never adopted in the regular dinner
-parties that have been described. These were the use of perfumes and
-flowers at the feast, the selection of a Master of the Revels, and the
-method of drinking.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure124">
- <tr>
- <td width="646">
- <img src="images/figure124.jpg" alt="FIGURE 124. END OF DRINKING BOUT">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="646" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 124.
- E<small>ND OF</small> D<small>RINKING</small> B<small>OUT</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure125">
- <tr>
- <td width="177">
- <img src="images/figure125.jpg" alt="FIGURE 125. MIXING BOWL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="177" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 125.
- M<small>IXING</small> B<small>OWL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect313"><b>313</b></a></span>
-The perfumes and flowers were used not so much on account of the
-sweetness of their scent, much as the Romans enjoyed it, as because
-they believed that the scent prevented or at least retarded
-intoxication. This is shown by the fact that they did not use the
-unguents and the flowers throughout the whole meal, but waited to
-anoint the head with perfumes and crown it with flowers until the
-dessert and the wine were brought on. Various leaves and flowers were
-used for the garlands (<i>corōnae convīvālēs</i>) according to individual
-tastes, but the rose was the most popular and came to be generally
-associated with the <i>comissātiō</i>. After the guests had assumed their
-crowns (and sometimes garlands were also worn around the neck), each
-threw the dice, usually calling as he did so upon his sweetheart or
-some deity to help his throw. The one whose throw was the highest
-(<a href="#sect320">§320</a>) was forthwith declared the <i>rēx</i> (<i>magister</i>, <i>arbiter</i>)
-<i>bibendī</i>. Just what his duties and privileges were we are nowhere
-expressly told, but it can hardly be doubted that it was his province
-to determine the proportion of water to be added to the wine (<a href="#sect298">§298</a>),
-to lay down the rules for the drinking (<i>lēgēs īnsānae</i>, Horace calls
-them), to decide what each guest should do for the entertainment of
-his fellows, and to impose penalties and forfeits for the breaking of
-the rules.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure126">
- <tr>
- <td width="644">
- <img src="images/figure126.jpg" alt="FIGURE 126. DRINKING CUPS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="644" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 126.
- D<small>RINKING</small> C<small>UPS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure127">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure127.jpg" alt="FIGURE 127. CYATHUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 127.
- C<small>YATHUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect314"><b>314</b></a></span>
-The wine was mixed under the direction of the <i>magister</i> in a
-large bowl (<i>crātēr</i>), the proportions of the wine and water being
-apparently constant for the evening, and from the <i>crātēr</i> (Fig. 125),
-placed on the table in view of all, the wine was ladled by the
-servants into the goblets (<i>pōcula</i>, Fig. 126) of the guests. The
-ladle (<i>cyathus</i>, Fig. 127) held about one-twelfth of a pint, or more
-probably was graduated by twelfths. The method of drinking seems to
-have differed from that of the regular dinner chiefly in this: at the
-ordinary dinner each guest mixed his wine to suit his own taste and
-drank as little or as much as he pleased, while at the <i>comissātiō</i>
-all had to drink alike, regardless of differences in taste and
-capacity. The wine seems to have been drunk chiefly in "healths," but
-an odd custom regulated the size of the bumpers. Any guest might
-propose the health of any person he pleased to name; immediately
-slaves ladled into each goblet as many <i>cyathī</i> (twelfths of a pint)
-as there were letters in the given name, and the goblets had to be
-drained at a draft. The rest of the entertainment was undoubtedly wild
-enough (<a href="#sect310">§310</a>); gambling seems to have been common, and Cicero speaks
-of more disgraceful practices in his speeches against Catiline.
-Sometimes the guests spent the evening roaming from house to house,
-playing host in turn, and making night hideous as they staggered
-through the streets with their crowns and garlands.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect315"><b>315</b></a></span>
-<b>The Banquets of the Rich.</b>&mdash;Little need be said of the banquets
-of the wealthy nobles in the last century of the Republic and of the
-rich parvenus (<a href="#sect181">§181</a>) who thronged the courts of the earlier Emperors.
-They were arranged on the same plan as the dinners we have described,
-differing from them only in the ostentatious display of furniture,
-plate, and food. So far as particulars have reached us, they were
-grotesque and revolting, judged by the canons of to-day, rather than
-magnificent. Couches made of silver, wine instead of water for the
-hands, twenty-two courses to a single cēna, seven thousand birds
-served at another, a dish of livers of fish, tongues of flamingos,
-brains of peacocks and pheasants mixed up together, strike us as
-vulgarity run mad. The sums spent upon these feasts do not seem so
-fabulous now as they did then. Every season in our great capitals sees
-social functions that surpass the feasts of Lucullus in cost as far as
-they do in taste and refinement. As signs of the times, however, as
-indications of changed ideals, of degeneracy and decay, they deserved
-the notice that the Roman historians and satirists gave them.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap9"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
-
-<h4>AMUSEMENTS; BATHS</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 269-296, 834-861; Staatsverwaltung, III,
-504-565; Göll, III, 455-480, 104-157; Guhl and Koner, 643-658,
-804-829, 609-618; Friedländer, II, 295-637; Ramsay, 394-409;
-Pauly-Wissowa, <i>amphitheātrum</i>, <i>calx</i>, <i>circus</i>, <i>Bader;</i> Smith,
-Harper, Rich, <i>amphitheātrum</i>, <i>balneae</i>, <i>circus</i>, <i>gladiātōrēs</i>,
-<i>theātrum</i>, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister, 694, 241-244,
-2089-2111; Lübker, 1073 f., 1199 f., 477 f., 1048 f., 185, 1213;
-Kelsey-Mau, 135-161, 180-220.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure128">
- <tr>
- <td width="371">
- <img src="images/figure128.jpg" alt="FIGURE 128. DISCUS THROWER">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="371" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 128.
- D<small>ISCUS</small> T<small>HROWER</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect316"><b>316</b></a></span>
-After the games of childhood (<a href="#sect102">§§102</a>, <a href="#sect103">103</a>) were passed the Roman
-seemed to lose all instinct for play. Of sport for sport's sake he
-knew nothing, he took part in no games for the sake of excelling in
-them. He played ball before his dinner for the good of the exercise,
-he practiced riding, fencing, wrestling, hurling the discus (Fig.
-128), and swimming for the strength and skill they gave him in arms,
-he played a few games of chance for the excitement the stakes
-afforded, but there was no "national game" for the young men, and
-there were no social amusements in which men and women took part
-together. The Roman made it hard and expensive, too, for others to
-amuse him. He cared nothing for the drama, little for spectacular
-shows, more for farces and variety performances, perhaps, but the one
-thing that really appealed to him was excitement, and this he found in
-gambling or in such amusements only as involved the risk of injury to
-life and limb, the sports of the circus and the amphitheater. We may
-describe first the games in which the Roman participated himself and
-then those at which he was a mere spectator. In the first class are
-field sports and games of hazard, in the second the public and private
-games (<i>lūdī pūblicī et prīvātī</i>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect317"><b>317</b></a></span>
-<b>Sports of the Campus.</b>&mdash;The Campus Martius included all the level
-ground lying between the Tiber and the Capitoline and Quirinal hills.
-The northwestern portion of this plain, bounded on two sides by the
-Tiber, which here sweeps abruptly to the west, kept clear of public
-and private buildings and often called simply the <i>Campus</i>, was for
-centuries the playground of Rome. Here the young men gathered to
-practice the athletic games mentioned above, naturally in the cooler
-parts of the day. Even men of graver years did not disdain a visit to
-the Campus after the <i>merīdiātiō</i> (<a href="#sect302">§302</a>), in preparation for the bath
-before dinner, instead of which the younger men preferred to take a
-cool plunge in the convenient river. The sports themselves were those
-that we are accustomed to group together as track and field athletics.
-They ran foot races, jumped, threw the discus (Fig. 128), practiced
-archery, and had wrestling and boxing matches. These sports were
-carried on then much as they are now, if we may judge by Vergil's
-description in the Fifth Aeneid, but an exception must be made of the
-games of ball. These seem to have been very dull and stupid as
-compared with ours. It must be remembered, however, that they were
-played more for the healthful exercise they furnished than for the joy
-of the playing, and by men of high position, too&mdash;Caesar, Maecenas,
-and even the Emperor Augustus.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures129and130">
- <tr>
- <td width="218">
- <img src="images/figure129.jpg" alt="FIGURE 129. FOLLES">
- </td>
- <td width="356">
- <img src="images/figure130.jpg" alt="FIGURE 130. GAME OF BALL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="218" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 129.
- F<small>OLLES</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="356" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 130.
- G<small>AME OF</small> B<small>ALL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect318"><b>318</b></a></span>
-<b>Games of Ball.</b>&mdash;Balls of different sizes are known to have been
-used in the different games, variously filled with hair, feathers, and
-air (<i>follēs</i>, Fig. 129). Throwing and catching formed the basis of
-all the games, the bat being practically unknown. In the simplest game
-the player threw the ball as high as he could, and tried to catch it
-before it struck the ground. Variations of this were what we should
-call juggling, the player keeping two or more balls in the air (Fig.
-130), and throwing and catching by turns with another player. Another
-game must have resembled our handball, requiring a wall and smooth
-ground at its foot. The ball was struck with the open hand against the
-wall, allowed to fall back upon the ground and bound, and then struck
-back against the wall in the same manner. The aim of the player was to
-keep the ball going in this way longer than his opponent could.
-Private houses and the public baths often had "courts" especially
-prepared for this amusement. A third game was called <i>trigōn</i>, and was
-played by three persons, stationed at the angles of an equilateral
-triangle. Two balls were used and the aim of the player was to throw
-the ball in his possession at the one of his opponents who would be
-the less likely to catch it. As two might throw at the third at the
-same moment, or as the thrower of one ball might have to receive the
-second ball at the very moment of throwing, both hands had to be used
-and a good degree of skill was necessary. Other games, all of throwing
-and catching, are mentioned here and there, but none is described with
-sufficient detail to be clearly understood.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect319"><b>319</b></a></span>
-<b>Games of Chance.</b>&mdash;The Romans were passionately fond of games of
-chance, and gambling was so universally associated with such games
-that they were forbidden by law, even when no stakes were actually
-played for. A general indulgence seems to have been granted at the
-Saturnalia in December, and public opinion allowed old men to play at
-any time. The laws were hard to enforce, however, as such laws usually
-are, and large sums were won and lost not merely at general gambling
-resorts, but also at private houses. Games of chance, in fact, with
-high stakes, were one of the greatest attractions at the men's dinners
-that have been mentioned (<a href="#sect314">§314</a>). The commonest form of gambling was
-our "heads or tails," coins being used as with us, the value depending
-on the means of the players. Another common form was our "odd or
-even," each player guessing in turn and in turn holding counters
-concealed in his outstretched hand for his opponent to guess. The
-stake was usually the contents of the hand though side bets were not
-unusual. In a variation of this game the players tried to guess the
-actual number of the counters held in the hand. Of more interest,
-however, were the games of knuckle-bones and dice.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure131">
- <tr>
- <td width="411">
- <img src="images/figure131.jpg" alt="FIGURE 131. GIRLS PLAYING WITH KNUCKLE-BONES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="411" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 131.
- G<small>IRLS</small> P<small>LAYING WITH</small>
- K<small>NUCKLE-BONES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect320"><b>320</b></a></span>
-<b>Knuckle-bones.</b>&mdash;Knuckle-bones (<i>tālī</i>) of sheep and goats, and
-imitations of them in ivory, bronze, and stone, were used as
-playthings by children and for gaming by men. Children played our
-"jackstones" with them, throwing five into the air at once and
-catching as many as possible on the back of the hand (Fig. 131). The
-length of the <i>tālī</i> was greater than their width and they had,
-therefore, four long sides and two ends. The ends were rounded off or
-pointed, so that the <i>tālī</i> could not stand on them. Of the four long
-sides two were broader than the others. Of the two broader sides one
-was concave, the other convex; while of the narrower sides one was
-flat and the other indented. As all the sides were of different shapes
-the <i>tālī</i> did not require marking as do our dice, but for convenience
-they were sometimes marked with the numbers 1, 3, 4, and 6, the
-numbers 2 and 5 being omitted. Four <i>tālī</i> were used at a time, either
-thrown into the air with the hand or thrown from a dice-box
-(<i>fritillus</i>), and the side on which the bone rested was counted, not
-that which came up. Thirty-five different throws were possible, of
-which each had a different name. Four aces were the lowest throw,
-called the Vulture, while the highest, called the Venus, was when all
-the <i>tālī</i> came up differently. It was this throw that designated the
-<i>magister bibendī</i> (<a href="#sect313">§313</a>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure132">
- <tr>
- <td width="278">
- <img src="images/figure132.jpg" alt="FIGURE 132. PLAYING DICE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="278" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 132.
- P<small>LAYING</small> D<small>ICE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect321"><b>321</b></a></span>
-<b>Dice.</b>&mdash;The Romans had also dice (<i>tesserae</i>) precisely like our
-own. They were made of ivory, stone, or some close-grained wood, and
-had the sides numbered from one to six. Three were used at a time,
-thrown from the <i>fritillus</i>, as were the knuckle-bones (Fig. 132), but
-the sides counted that came up. The highest throw was three sixes, the
-lowest three aces. In ordinary gaming the aim of the player seems to
-have been to throw a higher number than his opponent, but there were
-also games played with dice on boards with counters, that must have
-been something like our backgammon, uniting skill with chance. Little
-more of these is known than their names, but a board used for some
-such game is shown in <a href="#sect336">§336</a> (Fig. 144). If one considers how much space
-is given in our newspapers to the game of baseball, and how impossible
-it would be for a person who had never seen a game to get a correct
-idea of one from the newspaper descriptions only, it will not seem
-strange that we know so little of Roman games.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect322"><b>322</b></a></span>
-<b>Public and Private Games.</b>&mdash;With the historical development of
-the Public Games this book has no concern (<a href="#sect2">§2</a>). It is sufficient to
-say that these free exhibitions, given first in honor of some god or
-gods at the cost of the state and extended and multiplied for
-political purposes until all religious significance was lost, had come
-by the end of the Republic to be the chief pleasure in life for the
-lower classes in Rome, so that Juvenal declares that the free bread
-(<a href="#sect286">§286</a>) and the games of the circus were the people's sole desire. Not
-only were these games free, but when they were given all public
-business was stopped and all citizens were forced to take a holiday.
-These holidays became rapidly more and more numerous; by the end of
-the Republic sixty-six days were taken up by the games, and in the
-reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) no less than one hundred and
-thirty-five days out of the year were thus closed to business.<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small>
-Besides these standing games, others were often given for
-extraordinary events, and funeral games were common when great men
-died. These last were not made legal holidays. For our purposes the
-distinction between public and private games is not important, and all
-may be classified according to the nature of the exhibitions as, <i>lūdī
-scēnicī</i>, dramatic entertainments given in a theater, <i>lūdī
-circēnsēs</i>, chariot races and other exhibitions given in a circus, and
-<i>mūnera gladiātōria</i>, shows of gladiators usually given in an
-amphitheater.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> There are sixty holidays annually in Indiana, for
-example, and this is about the average for the United States.</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect323"><b>323</b></a></span>
-<b>Dramatic Performances.</b>&mdash;The history of the development of the
-drama at Rome belongs, of course, to the history of Latin literature.
-In classical times dramatic performances consisted of comedies
-(<i>cōmoediae</i>), tragedies (<i>tragoediae</i>), farces (<i>mīmī</i>), and
-pantomimes (<i>pantomīmī</i>). The farces and pantomimes were used chiefly
-as interludes and afterpieces, though with the common people they were
-the most popular of all and outlived the others. Tragedy never had any
-real hold at Rome, and only the liveliest comedies gained favor on the
-stage. Of the comedies the only ones that have come down to us are
-those of Plautus and Terence, all adaptations from Greek originals,
-all depicting Greek life, and represented in Greek costumes (<i>fābulae
-palliātae</i>). They were a good deal more like our comic operas than our
-comedies, large parts being recited to the accompaniment of music and
-other parts sung while the actor danced. They were always presented in
-the daytime, as Roman theaters were provided with no means of
-lighting, in the early period after the noon meal (<a href="#sect301">§301</a>), but by
-Cicero's time they had come to be given in the morning. The average
-comedy must have required about two hours for the acting, with
-allowance for the occasional music between the scenes. We read of a
-play being acted twice in a day, but this must have been very
-exceptional, as time had to be allowed for the other more popular
-shows given on the same occasion.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure133">
- <tr>
- <td width="641">
- <img src="images/figure133.jpg" alt="FIGURE 133. SCENE FROM A COMEDY">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="641" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 133.
- S<small>CENE FROM A</small> C<small>OMEDY</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect324"><b>324</b></a></span>
-<b>Staging the Play.</b>&mdash;The play, as well as the other sports, was
-under the supervision of the officials in charge of the games at which
-it was given. They contracted for the production of the play with some
-recognized manager (<i>dominus gregis</i>), who was usually an actor of
-acknowledged ability and had associated with him a troupe (<i>grex</i>) of
-others only inferior to himself. The actors were all slaves (<a href="#sect143">§143</a>),
-and men took the parts of women. There was no limit fixed to the
-number of actors, but motives of economy would lead the <i>dominus</i> to
-produce each play with the smallest number possible, and two or even
-more parts were often assigned to one actor. The characters in the
-comedies wore the ordinary Greek dress of daily life and the costumes
-(Fig. 133) were, therefore, not expensive. The only make-up required
-was paint for the face, especially for the actors who took women's
-parts, and the wigs that were used conventionally to represent
-different characters, gray for old men, black for young men, red for
-slaves, etc. These and the few properties (<i>ōrnāmenta</i>) necessary were
-furnished by the <i>dominus</i>. It seems to have been customary also for
-him to feast the actors at his expense if their efforts to entertain
-were unusually successful.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect325"><b>325</b></a></span>
-<b>The Early Theater.</b>&mdash;The theater itself deserved no such name
-until very late in the Republic. During the period when the best plays
-were being written (200-160 <small>B.C.</small>) almost nothing was done for the
-accommodation of the actors or the audience. The stage was merely a
-temporary platform, rather wide than deep, built at the foot of a hill
-or a grass-covered slope. There were almost none of the things that we
-are accustomed to associate with a stage, no curtains, no flies, no
-scenery that could be changed, not even a sounding-board to aid the
-actor's voice. There was no way either to represent the interior of a
-house, and the dramatist was limited, therefore, to such situations as
-might be supposed to take place upon a public street. This street the
-stage represented; at the back of it were shown the fronts of two or
-three houses with windows and doors that could be opened, and
-sometimes there was an alley or passageway between two of the houses.
-An altar stood on the stage, we are told, to remind the people of the
-religious origin of the games. No better provision was made for the
-audience than for the actors. The people took their places on the
-slope before the stage, some reclining on the grass, some standing,
-some perhaps sitting on stools they had brought from home. There was
-always din and confusion to try the actor's voice, pushing and
-crowding, disputing and quarreling, wailing of children, and in the
-very midst of the play the report of something livelier to be seen
-elsewhere might draw the whole audience away.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure134">
- <tr>
- <td width="469">
- <img src="images/figure134.jpg" alt="FIGURE 134. EXTERIOR OF THEATER AT ORANGE">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="469" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 134.
- E<small>XTERIOR OF</small> T<small>HEATER AT</small> O<small>RANGE</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure135">
- <tr>
- <td width="357">
- <img src="images/figure135.jpg" alt="FIGURE 135. THEATER AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="357" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 135.
- T<small>HEATER AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect326"><b>326</b></a></span>
-<b>The Later Theater.</b>&mdash;Beginning about 145 <small>B.C.</small>, however, efforts
-were made to improve upon this poor apology for a theater, in spite of
-the opposition of those who considered the plays ruinous to morals. In
-that year a wooden theater on Greek lines provided with seats was
-erected, but the senate caused it to be pulled down as soon as the
-games were over. It became a fixed custom, however, for such a
-temporary theater with special and separate seats for senators, and
-much later for the knights, to be erected as often as plays were given
-at public games, until in 55 <small>B.C.</small> Pompeius Magnus erected the first
-permanent theater at Rome. It was built of stone after the plans of
-one he had seen at Mytilene and seated at least seventeen thousand
-people; Pliny says forty thousand. This theater showed two noteworthy
-divergences from its Greek model. The Greek theaters were excavated
-out of the side of the hill, while the Roman theater was erected on
-level ground (that of Pompeius in the Campus Martius) and gave,
-therefore, a better opportunity for exterior magnificence. The Greek
-theater had a large circular space for choral performances immediately
-before the stage; in the Roman theater this space, called the
-orchestra then as now, was much smaller, and was assigned to the
-senators. The first fourteen rows of seats rising immediately behind
-them were reserved for the knights. The seats back of these were
-occupied indiscriminately by the people, on the principle apparently
-of first come first served. No other permanent theaters were erected
-at Rome until 13 <small>B.C.</small>, when two were constructed. The smaller had room
-for eleven thousand spectators, the larger, erected in honor of
-Marcellus, the nephew of Augustus, for twenty thousand. These improved
-playhouses made possible spectacular elements in the performances that
-the rude scaffolding of early days had not permitted, and these
-spectacles proved the ruin of the legitimate drama. To make realistic
-the scenes representing the pillaging of a city, Pompeius is said to
-have furnished troops of cavalry and bodies of infantry, hundreds of
-mules laden with real spoils of war, and three thousand mixing bowls
-(<a href="#sect314">§314</a>). In comparison with these three thousand mixing bowls, the
-avalanches, runaway locomotives, sawmills in full operation, and
-cathedral scenes of modern times seem poor indeed.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure136">
- <tr>
- <td width="791">
- <img src="images/figure136.jpg" alt="FIGURE 136. SECTION OF THEATER OF MARCELLUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="791" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 136.
- S<small>ECTION OF</small> T<small>HEATER OF</small>
- M<small>ARCELLUS</small> (Restored)</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure137">
- <tr>
- <td width="387">
- <img src="images/figure137.jpg" alt="FIGURE 137. PLAN OF THEATER">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="387" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 137.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> T<small>HEATER</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect327"><b>327</b></a></span>
-The general appearance of these theaters, the type of hundreds
-erected later throughout the Roman world, may be gathered from Fig.
-137, the plan of a theater on lines laid down by Vitruvius (<a href="#sect187">§187</a>). GH
-is the front line of the stage (<i>proscaenium</i>); all behind it is the
-<i>scaena</i>, devoted to the actors, all before it is the <i>cavea</i>, devoted
-to the spectators. IKL in the rear mark the position of three doors,
-for example, those of the three houses mentioned above (<a href="#sect325">§325</a>). The
-semicircular orchestra CMD is the part appropriated to the senators.
-The seats behind the orchestra, rising in concentric semicircles, are
-divided by five passageways into six portions (<i>cuneī</i>), and in a
-similar way the seats above the semicircular passage (<i>praecīnctiō</i>)
-shown in the figure are divided by eleven passageways into twelve
-<i>cuneī</i>. Access to the seats of the senators was afforded by
-passageways under the higher seats at the right and the left of the
-stage, one of which may be seen in Fig. 135, which represents a part
-of the smaller of the two theaters uncovered at Pompeii, built not far
-from 80 <small>B.C.</small> Over the vaulted passage will be noticed what must have
-been the best seats in the theater, corresponding in some degree to
-the boxes of modern times. These were reserved for the emperor, if he
-was present, for the officials who superintended the games and (on the
-other side) for the Vestals. Access to the higher seats was
-conveniently given by broad stairways constructed under the seats and
-running up to the passageways between the <i>cuneī</i>. These are shown in
-Fig. 136, a theoretical restoration of the Marcellus theater mentioned
-above. Behind the highest seats were broad colonnades, affording
-shelter in case of rain, and above them were tall masts from which
-awnings (<i>vēla</i>) were spread to protect the people from the sun. The
-appearance of the stage end may be gathered from Fig. 134, showing the
-remains of a Roman theater still existing at Orange,<small><small><sup>2</sup></small></small> in the south
-of France. It should be noticed that the stage was connected with the
-auditorium by the seats over the vaulted passages to the orchestra,
-and that the curtain was raised from the bottom, to hide the stage,
-not lowered from the top as ours is now. Vitruvius suggested that
-rooms and porticos be built behind the stage, like the colonnades that
-have been mentioned, to afford space for the actors and properties and
-shelter for the people in case of rain.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>2</sup></small> This theater has been restored and used for reproductions
-of the Classical Drama. See the interesting account of it in the
-"Century Magazine" for June, 1895. It is supposed to have been erected
-in the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) and allowed to fall into
-ruins in the fourth century <small>A.D.</small></small></blockquote>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure138">
- <tr>
- <td width="239">
- <img src="images/figure138.jpg" alt="FIGURE 138. VICTORIOUS AURIGA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="239" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 138.
- V<small>ICTORIOUS</small> A<small>URIGA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect328"><b>328</b></a></span>
-<b>Roman Circuses.</b>&mdash;The games of the circus were the oldest of the
-free exhibitions at Rome and always the most popular. The word
-<i>circus</i> means simply a ring and the <i>lūdī circēnsēs</i> were therefore
-any shows that might be given in a ring. We shall see below (<a href="#sect343">§343</a>)
-that these shows were of several kinds, but the one most
-characteristic, the one that is always meant when no other is
-specifically named, is that of chariot races. For these races the
-first and really the only necessary condition is a large and level
-piece of ground. This was furnished by the valley between the Aventine
-and Palatine hills, and here in prehistoric times the first Roman race
-course was established. This remained <i>the</i> circus, the one always
-meant when no descriptive term was added, though when others were
-built it was called sometimes by way of distinction the Circus
-Maximus. None of the others ever approached it in size, in
-magnificence, or in popularity.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect329"><b>329</b></a></span>
-The second circus to be built at Rome was the <i>circus
-Flāminius</i>, founded in 221 <small>B.C.</small> by the same Caius Flaminius, who built
-the Flaminian road. It was located in the southern part of the Campus
-Martius (<a href="#sect317">§317</a>), and like the Circus Maximus was exposed to the
-frequent overflows of the Tiber. Its position is fixed beyond
-question, but the actual remains are very scanty, so that little is
-known of its size or appearance. The third to be established was that
-of Caius (Caligula) and Nero, named from the two emperors who had to
-do with its construction, and erected, therefore, in the first century
-<small>A.D.</small> It lay at the foot of the Vatican hill, but we know little more
-of it than that it was the smallest of the three. These three were the
-only circuses within the city. In the immediate neighborhood, however,
-were three others. Five miles out on the <i>via Portuēnsis</i> was the
-circus of the Arval Brethren. About three miles out on the Appian way
-was the Circus of Maxentius, erected in 309 <small>A.D.</small> This is the best
-preserved of all, and a plan of it is shown in the next paragraph. On
-the same road, some twelve miles from the city, in the old town of
-Bovillae, was a third, making six within easy reach of the people of
-Rome.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure139">
- <tr>
- <td width="650">
- <img src="images/figure139.jpg" alt="FIGURE 139. PLAN OF THE CIRCUS OF MAXENTIUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="650" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 139.
- P<small>LAN OF THE</small> C<small>IRCUS
- OF</small> M<small>AXENTIUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect330"><b>330</b></a></span>
-<b>Plan of the Circus.</b>&mdash;All of the Roman circuses known to us had
-the same general arrangement, which will be readily understood from
-the plan of the Circus of Maxentius shown in Fig. 139. The long and
-comparatively narrow stretch of ground which formed the race course
-proper (<i>arēna</i>) is almost surrounded by the tiers of seats, running
-in two long parallel lines uniting in a semicircle at one end. In the
-middle of this semicircle is a gate, marked <i>F</i> in the plan, by which
-the victor left the circus when the race was over. It was called,
-therefore, the <i>porta triumphālis</i>. Opposite this gate at the other
-end of the arena was the station for the chariots (<i>AA</i> in the plan),
-called <i>carcerēs</i>, "barriers," flanked by two towers at the corners
-(<i>II</i>), and divided into two equal sections by another gate (<i>B</i>),
-called the <i>porta pompae</i>, by which processions entered the circus.
-There are also gates (<i>HH</i>) between the towers and the seats. The
-exterior appearance of the towers and barriers, called together the
-<i>oppidum</i>, is shown in Fig. 140.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure140">
- <tr>
- <td width="622">
- <img src="images/figure140.jpg" alt="FIGURE 140. OPPIDUM OF A CIRCUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="622" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 140.
- O<small>PPIDUM OF A</small> C<small>IRCUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect331"><b>331</b></a></span>
-The arena is divided for about two-thirds its length by a fence
-or wall (<i>MM</i>), called the <i>spīna</i>, "backbone." At the end of this
-were fixed pillars (<i>LL</i>), called <i>mētae</i>, marking the inner line of
-the course. Once around the <i>spīna</i> was a lap (<i>spatium</i>,
-<i>curriculum</i>), and the fixed number of laps, usually seven to a race,
-was called a <i>missus</i>. The last lap, however, had but one turn, that
-at the <i>mēta prīma</i>, the one nearest the <i>porta triumphālis</i>, the
-finish being a straightaway dash to the <i>calx</i>. This was a chalk line
-drawn on the arena far enough away from the second <i>mēta</i> to keep it
-from being obliterated by the hoofs of the horses as they made the
-turn, and far enough also from the <i>carcerēs</i> to enable the driver to
-stop his team before dashing into them. The dotted line (<i>DN</i>) is the
-supposed location of the <i>calx</i>. It will be noticed that the important
-things about the developed circus are the <i>arēna</i>, <i>carcerēs</i>,
-<i>spīna</i>, <i>mētae</i>, and the seats, all of which will be more
-particularly described.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect332"><b>332</b></a></span>
-<b>The Arena.</b>&mdash;The arena is the level space surrounded by the seats
-and the barriers. The name was derived from the sand used to cover its
-surface to spare as much as possible the unshod feet of the horses. A
-glance at the plan will show that speed could not have been the
-important thing with the Romans that it is with us. The sand, the
-shortness of the stretches, and the sharp turns between them were all
-against great speed. The Roman found his excitement in the danger of
-the race. In every representation of the race course that has come
-down to us may be seen broken chariots, fallen horses, and drivers
-under wheels and hoofs. The distance was not a matter of close
-measurement either, but varied in the several circuses, the Circus
-Maximus being fully 300 feet longer than the Circus of Maxentius. All
-seem to have had constant, however, the number of laps, seven to the
-race, and this also goes to prove that the danger was the chief
-element in the popularity of the contests. The distance actually
-traversed in the Circus of Maxentius may be very closely estimated.
-The length of the <i>spīna</i> is about 950 feet. If we allow fifty feet
-for the turn at each <i>mēta</i>, each lap makes a distance of 2,000 feet,
-and six laps, 12,000 feet. The seventh lap had but one turn in it, but
-the final stretch to the <i>calx</i> made it perhaps 300 feet longer than
-one of the others, say 2,300 feet. This gives a total of 14,300 feet
-for the whole <i>missus</i>, or about 2.7 miles. Jordan calculates the
-<i>missus</i> of the Circus Maximus at 8.4 kilometers, which would be about
-5.2 miles, but he seems to have taken the whole length of the arena
-into account, instead of that merely of the <i>spīna</i>.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures141and142">
- <tr>
- <td width="375">
- <img src="images/figure141.jpg" alt="FIGURE 141. THE CARCERES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="375" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 141.
- T<small>HE</small> C<small>ARCERES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="375" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure142.jpg" alt="FIGURE 142. BOX OF THE DATOR LUDORUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="375" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 142.
- B<small>OX OF THE</small> D<small>ATOR</small>
- L<small>UDORUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect333"><b>333</b></a></span>
-<b>The Barriers.</b>&mdash;The <i>carcerēs</i> were the stations of the chariots
-and teams when ready for the races to begin. They were a series of
-vaulted chambers entirely separated from each other by solid walls,
-and closed behind by doors through which the chariots entered. The
-front of the chamber was formed by double doors, with the upper part
-made of grated bars, admitting the only light which it received. From
-this arrangement the name <i>carcer</i> was derived. Each chamber was large
-enough to hold a chariot with its team, and as a team was composed
-sometimes of as many as seven horses the "prison" must have been
-nearly square. There was always a separate chamber for each chariot.
-Up to the time of Domitian the highest number of chariots was eight,
-but after his time as many as twelve sometimes entered the same race,
-and twelve <i>carcerēs</i> had, therefore, to be provided, although four
-chariots was the usual number. Half of these chambers lay to the
-right, half to the left of the <i>porta pompae</i>. The appearance of a
-section of the <i>carcerēs</i> is shown in Fig. 141.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect334"><b>334</b></a></span>
-It will be noticed from the plan (<a href="#sect330">§330</a>) that the <i>carcerēs</i> were
-arranged in a curved line. This is supposed to have been drawn in such
-a way that every chariot, no matter which of the <i>carcerēs</i> it
-happened to occupy, would have the same distance to travel in order to
-reach the beginning of the course proper at the nearer end of the
-<i>spīna</i>. There was no advantage in position, therefore, at the start,
-and places were assigned by lot. In later times a starting line
-(<i>līnea alba</i>) was drawn with chalk between the second <i>mēta</i> and the
-seats to the right, but the line of <i>carcerēs</i> remained curved as of
-old. At the ends of the row of chambers, towers were built which seem
-to have been the stands for the musicians; over the <i>porta pompae</i> was
-the box of the chief official of the games (<i>dator lūdōrum</i>), and
-between his box and the towers were seats for his friends and persons
-connected with the games. In Fig. 142 is shown a victor pausing before
-the box of the <i>dator</i> to receive a prize before riding in triumph
-around the arena.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure143">
- <tr>
- <td width="331">
- <img src="images/figure143.jpg" alt="FIGURE 143. DIAGRAM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="331" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 143.</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect335"><b>335</b></a></span>
-<b>The Spina and Metae.</b>&mdash;The <i>spīna</i> divided the race course into
-two parts, making a minimum distance to be run. Its length was about
-two-thirds that of the arena, but it started only the width of the
-track from the <i>porta triumphālis</i>, leaving entirely free a much
-larger space at the end near the <i>porta pompae</i>. It was perfectly
-straight, but did not run precisely parallel to the rows of seats; at
-the end B in the exaggerated diagram (Fig. 143) the distance BC is
-somewhat greater than the distance AB, in order to allow more room at
-the starting line (<i>līnea alba</i>, <a href="#sect334">§334</a>), where the chariots would be
-side by side, than further along the course, where they would be
-strung out. The <i>mētae</i>, so named from their shape (<a href="#sect284">§284</a>), were
-pillars erected at the two ends of the <i>spīna</i> and architecturally a
-part of it, though there may have been a space between. In Republican
-times the <i>spīna</i> and the <i>mētae</i> must have been made of wood and
-movable, in order to give free space for the shows of wild beasts and
-the exhibitions of cavalry that were originally given in the circus.
-After the amphitheater was devised the circus came to be used for
-races exclusively and the <i>spīna</i> became permanent. It was built up,
-of most massive proportions, on foundations of indestructible concrete
-(<a href="#sect210">§210</a> f.) and was adorned with magnificent works of art that must have
-entirely concealed horses and chariots when they passed to the other
-side of the arena.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure144">
- <tr>
- <td width="356">
- <img src="images/figure144.jpg" alt="FIGURE 144. BOARD-GAME SHOWING SPINA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="356" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 144.
- B<small>OARD-GAME</small> S<small>HOWING</small>
- S<small>PINA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect336"><b>336</b></a></span>
-A representation of a circus has been preserved to us in a
-board-game of some sort found at Bovillae (<a href="#sect329">§329</a>), which gives an
-excellent idea of the <i>spīna</i>, (Fig. 144). We know from various
-reliefs and mosaics that the <i>spīna</i> of the Circus Maximus was covered
-with a series of statues and ornamental structures, such as obelisks,
-small temples or shrines, columns surmounted by statues, altars,
-trophies, and fountains. Augustus was the first to erect an obelisk in
-the Circus Maximus; it was restored in 1589 <small>A.D.</small>, and now stands in
-the Piazza del Popolo, measuring without the base about 78 feet in
-height. Constantius erected another (Fig. 145) in the same circus,
-which now stands before the Lateran church, measuring 105 feet. The
-obelisk of the Circus of Maxentius now stands in the Piazza Navona.
-Besides these purely ornamental features, every circus had at each end
-of its <i>spīna</i> a pedestal supporting seven large eggs (<i>ōva</i>) of
-marble, one of which was taken down at the end of each lap, in order
-that the people might know just how many remained to be run. Another
-and very different idea for the <i>spīna</i> is shown in Fig. 146 from a
-mosaic at Lyons. This is a canal filled with water, with an obelisk in
-the middle. The <i>mētae</i> in their developed form are shown very clearly
-in this mosaic, three conical pillars of stone set on a semicircular
-plinth, all of the most massive construction.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure145">
- <tr>
- <td width="635">
- <img src="images/figure145.jpg" alt="FIGURE 145. OBELISK ONCE IN CIRCUS MAXIMUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="635" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 145.
- O<small>BELISK</small> O<small>NCE IN</small>
- C<small>IRCUS</small> M<small>AXIMUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure146">
- <tr>
- <td width="652">
- <img src="images/figure146.jpg" alt="FIGURE 146. A CANAL AS SPINA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="652" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 146.
- A C<small>ANAL AS</small> S<small>PINA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect337"><b>337</b></a></span>
-<b>The Seats.</b>&mdash;The seats around the arena in the Circus Maximus
-were originally of wood, but accidents owing to decay and losses by
-fire had led by the time of the Empire to reconstruction in marble
-except perhaps in the very highest rows. The seats in the other
-circuses seem to have been from the first of stone. At the foot of the
-tiers of seats was a marble platform (<i>podium</i>) which ran along both
-sides and the curved end, coextensive therefore with them. On this
-<i>podium</i> were erected boxes for the use of the more important
-magistrates and officials of Rome, and here Augustus placed the seats
-of the senators and others of high rank. He also assigned seats
-throughout the whole <i>cavea</i> to various classes and organizations,
-separating the women from the men, though up to his time they had sat
-together. Between the <i>podium</i> and the track was a screen of open
-work, and when Caesar showed wild beasts in the circus he had a canal
-ten feet wide and ten feet deep dug next the <i>podium</i> and filled with
-water as an additional protection. Access to the seats was given from
-the rear, numerous broad stairways running up to the <i>praecīnctiōnēs</i>
-(<a href="#sect327">§327</a>), of which there were probably three in the Circus Maximus. The
-horizontal spaces between the <i>praecīnctiōnēs</i> were called <i>maeniāna</i>,
-and each of these was in turn divided by stairways into <i>cuneī</i>
-(<a href="#sect327">§327</a>), and the rows of seats in the <i>cuneī</i> were called <i>gradūs</i>. The
-sittings in the row do not seem to have been marked off any more than
-they are now in the "bleachers" at our baseball grounds. When sittings
-were reserved for a number of persons they were described as so many
-feet in such a row (<i>gradus</i>) of such a section (<i>cuneus</i>) of such a
-circle (<i>maeniānum</i>).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure147">
- <tr>
- <td width="639">
- <img src="images/figure147.jpg" alt="FIGURE 147. RESTORATION OF THE CIRCUS MAXIMUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="639" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 147.
- R<small>ESTORATION OF THE</small> C<small>IRCUS</small> M<small>AXIMUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect338"><b>338</b></a></span>
-The number of sittings testifies to the popularity of the races.
-The little circus at Bovillae had seats for at least 8,000 people,
-according to Hülsen, that of Maxentius for about 23,000, while the
-Circus Maximus, accommodating 60,000 in the time of Augustus, was
-enlarged to a capacity of nearly 200,000 in the time of Constantius.
-The seats themselves were supported upon arches of massive masonry; an
-idea of their appearance from the outside may be had from the exterior
-view of the Coliseum in <a href="#sect356">§356</a>. Every third of these vaulted chambers
-under the seats seems to have been used for a staircase, the others
-for shops and booths and in the upper parts for rooms for the employés
-of the circus, who must have been very numerous. Galleries seem to
-have crowned the seats, as in the theaters (<a href="#sect327">§327</a>), and balconies for
-the emperors were built in conspicuous places, the ruins not enabling
-their positions to be fixed precisely. An idea of the appearance of
-the seats from within the arena may be had from an attempted
-reconstruction of the Circus Maximus (Fig. 147), the details of which
-are quite uncertain.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect339"><b>339</b></a></span>
-<b>Furnishing the Races.</b>&mdash;There must have been a time, of course,
-when the races in the circus were open to all who wished to show their
-horses or their skill in driving them, but by the end of the Republic
-no persons of repute took part in the games, and the teams and drivers
-were furnished by racing syndicates (<i>factiōnēs</i>), who practically
-controlled the market so far as concerned trained horses and trained
-men. With these syndicates the giver of the games contracted for the
-number of races that he wanted (ten or twelve a day in Caesar's time,
-later twice the number, and even more on special occasions), and they
-furnished everything needed. These syndicates were named from the
-colors worn by their drivers. We hear at first of two only, the red
-(<i>russāta</i>) and the white (<i>albāta</i>); two more were added, the blue
-(<i>veneta</i>) in the time of Augustus probably, and the green (<i>prasina</i>)
-soon after, and finally Domitian added the purple and the gold. The
-greatest rivalry existed between these organizations. They spent
-immense sums of money on their horses, importing them from Greece,
-Spain, and Mauritania, and even larger sums, perhaps, upon the
-drivers. They maintained training stables on as large a scale as any
-of which modern times can boast; a mosaic found in one of these
-establishments in Algeria names among the attendants jockeys, grooms,
-stable-boys, saddlers, doctors, trainers, coaches, and messengers, and
-shows the horses covered with blankets in their stalls. This rivalry
-spread throughout the city; each <i>factiō</i> had its partisans, and vast
-sums of money were lost and won as each <i>missus</i> was finished. All the
-tricks of the ring were skillfully practiced; horses were hocused,
-drivers hired from rival syndicates or bribed, and even poisoned, we
-are told, when they were proof against money.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure148">
- <tr>
- <td width="647">
- <img src="images/figure148.jpg" alt="FIGURE 148. RACING CHARIOT AND TEAM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="647" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 148.
- R<small>ACING</small> C<small>HARIOT AND</small> T<small>EAM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect340"><b>340</b></a></span>
-<b>The Teams.</b>&mdash;The chariot used in the races was low and light,
-closed in front, open behind, with long axles and low wheels to lessen
-the risk of turning over. The driver seems to have stood well forward
-in the car, there being no standing place behind the axle, as shown in
-the cut (Fig. 148). The teams consisted of two horses (<i>bīgae</i>), three
-(<i>trīgae</i>), four (<i>quadrīgae</i>), and in later times six (<i>sēiugēs</i>) or
-even seven (<i>septeiugēs</i>), but the four-horse team was the most common
-and may be taken as the type. Two of the horses were yoked together,
-one on each side of the tongue, the others were attached to the car
-merely by traces. Of the four the horse to the extreme left was the
-most important, because the <i>mēta</i> lay always on the left and the
-highest skill of the driver was shown in turning it as closely as
-possible. The failure of the horse nearest it to respond promptly to
-the rein or the word might mean the wreck of the car (by going too
-close) or the loss of the inside track (by going too wide), and in
-either case the loss of the race. Inscriptions sometimes give the
-names of all the horses of the team, sometimes only the horse on the
-left is mentioned. Before the races began lists of the horses and
-drivers in each were published for the guidance of those who wished to
-stake their money, and while no time was kept the records of horses
-and men were followed as eagerly as now. From the nature of the course
-(<a href="#sect332">§332</a>) it is evident that strength and courage and above all lasting
-qualities were as essential as speed. The horses were almost always
-stallions (mares are very rarely mentioned), and were never raced
-under five years of age. Considering the length of the course and the
-great risk of accidents it is surprising how long the horses lasted.
-It was not unusual for a horse to win a hundred races (such a horse
-was called <i>centēnārius</i>), and one Diocles, himself a famous driver,
-owned a horse that had won two hundred (<i>ducēnārius</i>).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure149">
- <tr>
- <td width="448">
- <img src="images/figure149.jpg" alt="FIGURE 149. DRESS OF AN AURIGA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="448" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 149.
- D<small>RESS OF AN</small> A<small>URIGA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect341"><b>341</b></a></span>
-<b>The Drivers.</b>&mdash;The drivers (<i>agitātōrēs</i>, <i>aurīgae</i>) were slaves
-or freedmen, some of whom had won their freedom by their skill and
-daring in the course. Only in the most corrupt days of the Empire did
-citizens of any social position take actual part in the races. The
-dress of the driver is shown in Fig. 149; especially to be noticed are
-the close fitting cap, the short tunic (always of the color of his
-<i>factiō</i>), laced around the body with leathern thongs, the straps of
-leather around the thighs, the shoulder pads, and the heavy leather
-protectors for the legs. Our football players wear like defensive
-armor. The reins were knotted together and passed around the driver's
-body. In his belt he carried a knife to cut the reins in case he
-should be thrown from the car, or to cut the traces if a horse should
-fall and become entangled in them. The races gave as many
-opportunities then as now for skillful driving, and required even more
-of strength and daring. What we should call "fouling" was encouraged.
-The driver might turn his team against another, might upset the car of
-a rival if he could; having gained the inside track he might drive out
-of the straight course to keep a swifter team from passing his. The
-rewards were proportionately great. The successful <i>aurīga</i>, despised
-though his station, was the pet and pride of the race-mad crowd, and
-under the Empire at least he was courted and fêted by high and low.
-The pay of successful drivers was extravagant, the rival syndicates
-bidding against each other for the services of the most popular. Rich
-presents, too, were given them when they won their races, not only by
-their <i>factiōnēs</i>, but also by outsiders who had backed them and
-profited by their skill.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure150">
- <tr>
- <td width="388">
- <img src="images/figure150.jpg" alt="FIGURE 150. INSCRIPTION IN HONOR OF CRESCENS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="388" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 150.
- I<small>NSCRIPTION IN</small> H<small>ONOR OF</small> C<small>RESCENS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect342"><b>342</b></a></span>
-<b>Famous Aurigae.</b>&mdash;The names of some of these victors have come
-down to us in inscriptions (<a href="#sect10">§10</a>) erected in their honor or to their
-memory by their friends. Among these may be mentioned Publius Aelius
-Gutta Calpurnianus (<a href="#sect58">§58</a>) of the late Empire (1,127 victories), Caius
-Apuleius Diocles, a Spaniard (in twenty-four years 4,257 races, l,462
-victories, winning the sum of 35,863,120 sesterces, about $1,800,000),
-Flavius Scorpus (2,048 victories at the age of twenty-seven), Marcus
-Aurelius Liber (3,000 victories), Pompeius Muscosus (3,559 victories).
-To these may be added Crescens, an inscription<small><small><sup>3</sup></small></small> in honor of whom was
-found at Rome in 1878 and is shown in Fig. 150.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>3</sup></small> "Crescens, a driver of the blue syndicate, of the Moorish
-nation, twenty-two years of age. He won his first victory as a driver
-of a four-horse chariot in the consulship of Lucius Vipstanius
-Messalla on the birthday of the deified Nerva in the twenty-fourth
-race with these horses: Circius, Acceptor, Delicatus, and Cotynus.
-From Messalla's consulship to the birthday of the deified Claudius in
-the consulship of Glabrio he was sent from the barriers six hundred
-and eighty-six times and was victorious forty-seven times. In races
-between chariots with one from each syndicate he won nineteen times,
-with two from each twenty-three times, with three from each five
-times. He held back purposely once, took first place at the start
-eight times, took it from others thirty-eight times. He won second
-place one hundred and thirty times, third place one hundred and eleven
-times. His winnings amounted to 1,558,346 sesterces (about $78,000)."</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect343"><b>343</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Shows of the Circus.</b>&mdash;The circus was used less frequently
-for other exhibitions than chariot races. Of these may be mentioned
-the performances of the <i>dēsultōrēs</i>, men who rode two horses and
-leaped from one to the other while going at full speed, and of trained
-horses who performed various tricks while standing on a sort of
-wheeled platform which gave a very unstable footing. There were also
-exhibitions of horsemanship by citizens of good standing, riding under
-leaders in squadrons, to show the evolutions of the cavalry. The
-<i>lūdus Trōiae</i> was also performed by young men of the nobility, a game
-that Vergil has described in the Fifth Aeneid. More to the taste of
-the crowd were the hunts (<i>vēnātiōnēs</i>), when wild beasts were turned
-loose in the circus to slaughter each other or be slaughtered by men
-trained for the purpose. We read of panthers, bears, bulls, lions,
-elephants, hippopotami, and even crocodiles (in artificial lakes made
-in the arena) exhibited during the Republic. In the circus, too,
-combats of gladiators sometimes took place, but these were more
-frequently in the amphitheater. One of the most brilliant spectacles
-must have been the procession (<i>pompa circēnsis</i>) which formally
-opened some of the public games. It started from the capitol and wound
-its way down to the Circus Maximus, entering by the <i>porta pompae</i>
-(named from it, <a href="#sect330">§330</a>), and passed entirely around the arena. At the
-head in a car rode the presiding magistrate, wearing the garb of a
-triumphant general and attended by a slave who held a wreath of gold
-over his head. Next came a crowd of notables on horseback and on foot,
-then the chariots and horsemen who were to take part in the games.
-Then followed priests, arranged by their colleges, and bearers of
-incense and of the instruments used in sacrifices, and statues of
-deities on low cars drawn by mules, horses, or elephants, or else
-carried on litters (<i>fercula</i>) on the shoulders of men. Bands of
-musicians headed each division of the procession, a feeble
-reminiscence of which is seen in the parade through the streets that
-precedes the performance of the modern circus.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure151">
- <tr>
- <td width="295">
- <img src="images/figure151.jpg" alt="FIGURE 151. A 'SAMNITE'">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="295" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 151.
- A "S<small>AMNITE</small>"</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect344"><b>344</b></a></span>
-<b>Gladiatorial Combats.</b>&mdash;Gladiatorial combats seem to have been
-known in Italy long before the founding of Rome. We hear of them first
-in Campania and Etruria. In Campania the wealthy and dissolute nobles,
-we are told, made slaves fight to the death at their banquets and
-revels for the entertainment of their guests. In Etruria the combats
-go back in all probability to the offering of human sacrifices at the
-burial of distinguished men in accordance with the ancient belief that
-blood is acceptable to the dead. The victims were captives taken in
-war, and it became the custom gradually to give them a chance for
-their lives by supplying them with weapons and allowing them to fight
-each other at the grave, the victor being spared at least for the
-time. The Romans were slow to adopt the custom, the first exhibition
-being given in the year 264 <small>B.C.</small>, almost five centuries after the
-founding of the city. That they derived it from Etruria rather than
-Campania is shown by the fact that the exhibitions were at funeral
-games, the earliest at those of Brutus Pera in 264 <small>B.C.</small>, Marcus
-Aemilius Lepidus in 216 <small>B.C.</small>, Marcus Valerius Lavinus in 200 <small>B.C.</small>, and
-Publius Licinius in 183 <small>B.C.</small></p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect345"><b>345</b></a></span>
-For the first one hundred years after their introduction the
-exhibitions were infrequent as the dates just given show, those
-mentioned being all of which we have any knowledge during the period,
-but after this time they were given more and more frequently and
-always on a larger scale. During the Republic, however, they remained
-in theory at least private games (<i>mūnera</i>), not public games
-(<i>lūdī</i>); that is, they were not celebrated on fixed days recurring
-annually, and the givers of the exhibitions had to find a pretext for
-them in the death of relatives or friends, and to defray the expenses
-from their own pockets. In fact we know of but one instance in which
-actual magistrates (the consuls Publius and Manlius, 105 <small>B.C.</small>) gave
-such exhibitions, and we know too little of the attendant
-circumstances to warrant us in assuming that they acted in their
-official capacity. Even under the Empire the gladiators did not fight
-on the days of the regular public games. Augustus, however, provided
-funds for "extraordinary shows" under the direction of the praetors.
-Under Domitian the aediles-elect were put in charge of these
-exhibitions which were given regularly in December, the only instance
-known of fixed dates for the <i>mūnera gladiātōria</i>. All others of which
-we read are to be considered the freewill offerings to the people of
-emperors, magistrates, or private citizens.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure152">
- <tr>
- <td width="650">
- <img src="images/figure152.jpg" alt="FIGURE 152. WEAPONS OF GLADIATORS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="650" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 152.
- W<small>EAPONS OF</small> G<small>LADIATORS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure153">
- <tr>
- <td width="362">
- <img src="images/figure153.jpg" alt="FIGURE 153. WOUNDED GLADIATOR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="362" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 153.
- W<small>OUNDED</small> G<small>LADIATOR</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect346"><b>346</b></a></span>
-<b>Popularity of the Combats.</b>&mdash;The Romans' love of excitement
-(<a href="#sect316">§316</a>) made the exhibitions immediately and immensely popular. At the
-first exhibition mentioned above, that in honor of Brutus Pera, three
-pairs of gladiators only were shown, but in the three that followed
-the number of pairs rose in order to twenty-two, twenty-five, and
-sixty. By the time of Sulla politicians had found in the <i>mūnera</i> the
-most effective means to win the favor of the people, and vied with one
-another in the frequency of the shows and the number of the
-combatants. Besides this, the same politicians made these shows a
-pretext for surrounding themselves with bands of bravos and bullies,
-all called gladiators whether destined for the arena or not, with
-which they started riots in the streets, broke up public meetings,
-overawed the courts and even directed or prevented the elections.
-Caesar's preparations for an exhibition when he was canvassing for the
-aedileship (65 <small>B.C.</small>) caused such general fear that the senate passed a
-law limiting the number of gladiators that a private citizen might
-employ, and he was allowed to exhibit only 320 pairs. The bands of
-Clodius and Milo made the city a slaughterhouse in 53 <small>B.C.</small>, and order
-was not restored until late in the following year when Pompey as "sole
-consul" put an end to the battle of the bludgeons with the swords of
-his soldiers. During the Empire the number actually exhibited almost
-surpasses belief. Augustus gave eight <i>mūnera</i>, in which no less than
-ten thousand men fought, but these were distributed through the whole
-period of his reign. Trajan exhibited as many in four months only of
-the year 107 <small>A.D.</small>, in celebration of his conquest of the Dacians. The
-first Gordian, emperor in 238 <small>A.D.</small>, gave <i>mūnera</i> monthly in the year of
-his aedileship, the number of pairs running from 150 to 500. These
-exhibitions did not cease until the fifteenth century of our era.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect347"><b>347</b></a></span>
-<b>Sources of Supply.</b>&mdash;In the early Republic the gladiators were
-captives taken in war, naturally men practiced in the use of weapons
-(<a href="#sect161">§161</a>), who thought death by the sword a happier fate than the slavery
-that awaited them (<a href="#sect140">§140</a>). This always remained the chief source of
-supply, though it became inadequate as the demand increased. From the
-time of Sulla training-schools were established in which slaves with
-or without previous experience in war were fitted for the profession.
-These were naturally slaves of the most intractable and desperate
-character (<a href="#sect170">§170</a>). From the time of Augustus criminals were sentenced
-to the arena (later "to the lions"), but only non-citizens, and these
-for the most heinous crimes, treason, murder, arson, and the like.
-Finally in the late Empire the arena became the last desperate resort
-of the dissipated and prodigal, and these volunteers were numerous
-enough to be given as a class the name <i>auctōrātī</i>.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure154">
- <tr>
- <td width="647">
- <img src="images/figure154.jpg" alt="FIGURE 154. HELMETS OF GLADIATORS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="647" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 154.
- H<small>ELMETS OF</small> G<small>LADIATORS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect348"><b>348</b></a></span>
-As the number of the exhibitions increased it became harder and
-harder to supply the gladiators demanded, for it must be remembered
-that there were exhibitions in many of the cities of the provinces and
-in the smaller towns of Italy as well as at Rome. The lines were,
-therefore, constantly crossed, and thousands died miserably in the
-arena whom only the most glaring injustice could number in the classes
-mentioned above. In Cicero's time provincial governors were accused of
-sending unoffending provincials to be slaughtered in Rome and of
-forcing Roman citizens, obscure and friendless, of course, to fight in
-the provincial shows. Later it was common enough to send to the arena
-men sentenced for the pettiest offenses, when the supply of real
-criminals had run short, and to trump up charges against the innocent
-for the same purpose. The persecution of the Christians was largely
-due to the demand for more gladiators. So, too, the distinction was
-lost between actual prisoners of war and peaceful non-combatants;
-after the fall of Jerusalem all Jews over seventeen years of age were
-condemned by Titus to work in the mines or fight in the arena. Wars on
-the border were waged for the sole purpose of taking men who could be
-made gladiators, and in default of men, children and women were
-sometimes made to fight.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure155">
- <tr>
- <td width="796">
- <img src="images/figure155.jpg" alt="FIGURE 155. SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="796" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 155.
- S<small>CHOOL FOR</small> G<small>LADIATORS
- AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect349"><b>349</b></a></span>
-<b>Schools for Gladiators.</b>&mdash;The training-schools for gladiators
-(<i>lūdī gladiātōriī</i>) have been mentioned already. Cicero during his
-consulship speaks of one at Rome, and there were others before his
-time at Capua and Praeneste. Some of these were set up by wealthy
-nobles for the purpose of preparing their own gladiators for <i>mūnera</i>
-which they expected to give; others were the property of regular
-dealers in gladiators, who kept and trained them for hire. The
-business was almost as disreputable as that of the <i>lēnōnēs</i> (<a href="#sect139">§139</a>).
-During the Empire training-schools were maintained at public expense
-and under the direction of state officials not only in Rome, where
-there were four at least of these schools, but also in other cities of
-Italy where exhibitions were frequently given, and even in the
-provinces. The purpose of all the schools, public and private alike,
-was the same, to make the men trained in them as effective fighting
-machines as possible. The gladiators were in charge of competent
-training masters (<i>lanistae</i>); they were subject to the strictest
-discipline; their diet was carefully looked after, a special food
-(<i>sagīna gladiātōria</i>) being provided for them; regular gymnastic
-exercises were prescribed, and lessons given in the use of the various
-weapons by recognized experts (<i>magistrī</i>, <i>doctōrēs</i>). In their
-fencing bouts wooden swords (<i>rudēs</i>) were used. The gladiators
-associated in a school were collectively called a <i>familia</i>.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure156">
- <tr>
- <td width="474">
- <img src="images/figure156.jpg" alt="FIGURE 156. PLAN OF SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="474" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 156.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> S<small>CHOOL FOR</small>
- G<small>LADIATORS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect350"><b>350</b></a></span>
-These schools had also to serve as barracks for the gladiators
-between engagements, that is, practically as houses of detention. It
-was from the school of Lentulus at Capua that Spartacus had escaped,
-and the Romans needed no second lesson of the sort. The general
-arrangement of these barracks may be understood from the ruins of one
-uncovered at Pompeii, though in this case the buildings had been
-originally planned for another purpose, and the rearrangement may not
-be ideal in all respects. A central court, or exercise ground (Figs.
-155, 156) is surrounded by a wide colonnade, and this in turn by rows
-of buildings two stories in height, the general arrangement being not
-unlike that of the peristyle of a house (<a href="#sect202">§202</a>). The dimensions of the
-court are nearly 120 by 150 feet. The buildings are cut up into rooms,
-nearly all small (about twelve feet square), disconnected and opening
-upon the court, those in the first story being reached from the
-colonnade, those in the second from a gallery to which ran several
-stairways. These small rooms are supposed to be the sleeping-rooms of
-the gladiators, each accommodating two persons. There are seventy-one
-of them (marked <i>7</i> on the plan), affording room for 142 men. The uses
-of the larger rooms are purely conjectural. The entrance is supposed
-to have been at <i>3</i>, with a room, <i>15</i>, for the watchman or sentinel.
-At <i>9</i> was an <i>exedra</i>, where the gladiators may have waited in full
-panoply for their turns in the exercise ground, <i>1</i>. The guard-room,
-<i>8</i>, is identified by the remains of stocks, in which the refractory
-were fastened for punishment or safe-keeping. They permitted the
-culprits to lie on their backs or sit in a very uncomfortable
-position. At <i>6</i> was the armory or property room, if we may judge from
-articles found in it. Near it in the corner was a staircase leading to
-the gallery before the rooms of the second story. The large room,
-<i>16</i>, was the mess-room, with the kitchen, <i>12</i>, opening into it. The
-stairway, <i>13</i>, gives access to the rooms above kitchen and mess-room,
-possibly the apartments of the trainers and their helpers.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect351"><b>351</b></a></span>
-<b>Places of Exhibition.</b>&mdash;During the Republic the combats of
-gladiators took place sometimes at the grave or in the circus, but
-regularly in the forum. None of these places was well adapted to the
-purpose, the grave the least of all. The circus had seats enough, but
-the <i>spīna</i> was in the way (<a href="#sect335">§335</a>) and the arena too vast to give all
-the spectators a satisfactory view of a struggle that was confined
-practically to a single spot. In the forum, on the other hand, the
-seats could be arranged very conveniently; they would run parallel
-with the sides, would be curved around the corners, and would inclose
-only sufficient space to afford room for the combatants. The
-inconvenience here was due to the fact that the seats had to be
-erected before each performance and removed after it, a delay to
-business if they were constructed carefully and a menace to life if
-they were put up hastily. These considerations finally led the Romans,
-as they had led the Campanians half a century before, to provide
-permanent seats for the <i>mūnera</i>, arranged as they had been in the
-forum, but in a place where they would not interfere with public or
-private business. To these places for shows of gladiators came in the
-course of time to be exclusively applied the word <i>amphitheātrum</i>,
-which had been previously given in its correct general sense to any
-place, the circus for example, in which the seats ran all the way
-around, as opposed to the theater in which the rows of seats were
-broken by the stage.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect352"><b>352</b></a></span>
-<b>Amphitheaters at Rome.</b>&mdash;Just when the first amphitheaters, in
-the special sense of the word, were erected at Rome can not be
-determined with certainty. The elder Pliny (†79 <small>A.D.</small>) tells us that in
-the year 55 <small>B.C.</small> Caius Scribonius Curio built two wooden theaters back
-to back, the stages being, therefore, at opposite ends, and gave in
-them simultaneous theatrical performances in the morning. Then, while
-the spectators remained in their seats, the two theaters were turned
-by machinery and brought together face to face, the stages were
-removed, and in the space they had occupied shows of gladiators were
-given in the afternoon before the united crowds. This story is all too
-evidently invented to account for the perfected amphitheater of
-Pliny's time, which he must have interpreted to mean "a double
-theater." We are also told that Caesar erected a wooden amphitheater
-in 46 <small>B.C.</small>, but we have no detailed description of it, and no reason
-to think that it was anything more than a temporary affair. In the
-year 29 <small>B.C.</small>, however, an amphitheater was built by Statilius Taurus,
-partially at least of stone, that lasted until the great conflagration
-in the reign of Nero (64 <small>A.D.</small>). Nero himself had previously erected
-one of wood in the Campus. Finally, just before the end of the first
-century of our era, was completed the <i>amphitheātrum Flāvium</i>, later
-known as the <i>colossēum</i> or <i>colisēum</i>, which was large enough and
-durable enough to make forever unnecessary the erection of other
-similar structures in the city.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure157">
- <tr>
- <td width="645">
- <img src="images/figure157.jpg" alt="FIGURE 157. EXTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="645" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 157.
- E<small>XTERIOR OF</small> A<small>MPHITHEATER
- AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure158">
- <tr>
- <td width="638">
- <img src="images/figure158.jpg" alt="FIGURE 158. INTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="638" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 158.
- I<small>NTERIOR OF</small> A<small>MPHITHEATER
- AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure159">
- <tr>
- <td width="799">
- <img src="images/figure159.jpg" alt="FIGURE 159. SECTION OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="799" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 159.
- S<small>ECTION OF</small> A<small>MPHITHEATER
- AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect353"><b>353</b></a></span>
-<b>The Amphitheater at Pompeii.</b>&mdash;The essential features of an
-amphitheater may be most easily understood from the ruins of the one
-at Pompeii, erected about 75 <small>B.C.</small>, almost half a century before the
-first permanent structure of the sort at Rome (<a href="#sect352">§352</a>), and the earliest
-known to us from either literary or monumental sources. The exterior
-is shown in Fig. 157 (see also Overbeck, pp. 176-180; Mau-Kelsey, pp.
-206-212) and a section in Fig. 159. It will be seen at once that the
-arena and most of the seats lie in a great hollow excavated for the
-purpose, thus making sufficient for the exterior a low wall of hardly
-more than ten to thirteen feet in height. Even this wall was necessary
-on only two sides, as the amphitheater was built in the southeast
-corner of the city and its south and east sides were bounded by the
-city walls. The shape is elliptical, the major axis being 444 feet,
-the minor 342. The arena occupies the middle space. It was encircled
-by thirty-five rows of seats arranged in three divisions, the lowest
-(<i>īnfima</i> or <i>īma cavea</i>) having five rows, the second (<i>media cavea</i>)
-twelve, and the highest (<i>summa cavea</i>) eighteen. A broad terrace ran
-around the amphitheater at the height of the topmost row of seats.
-Access to this terrace was given from without by the double stairway
-on the west, shown in Fig. 157, and by single stairways next the city
-walls on the east and south (<i>10</i> in Fig. 160). Between the terrace
-and the top seats was a gallery, or row of boxes, each about four feet
-square, probably for women. Beneath the boxes persons could pass from
-the terrace to the seats. The amphitheater had seating capacity for
-about 20,000 people.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure160">
- <tr>
- <td width="647">
- <img src="images/figure160.jpg" alt="FIGURE 160. PLAN OF ARENA IN AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="647" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 160.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> A<small>RENA IN</small>
- A<small>MPHITHEATER AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect354"><b>354</b></a></span>
-The arena is shown in Fig. 158, its plan in Fig. 160. It was an
-ellipse with axes of 228 and 121 feet. Around it ran a wall a little
-more than six feet high, on a level with the top of which were the
-lowest seats. For the protection of the spectators when wild animals
-were shown, a grating of iron bars was put up on the top of the arena
-wall. Access to the arena and to the seats of the <i>cavea īma</i> and the
-<i>cavea media</i> was given by the two underground passageways, <i>1</i> and
-<i>2</i> in Fig. 160, of which <i>2</i> turns at right angles on account of the
-city wall on the south. From the arena ran also a third passage, <i>5</i>,
-low and narrow, leading to the <i>porta Libitinēnsis</i>, through which the
-bodies of the dead were dragged with ropes and hooks. Near the mouths
-of these passages were small chambers or dens, marked <i>4</i>, <i>4</i>, <i>6</i>,
-the purposes of which are not known. The floor of the arena was
-covered with sand, as in the circus (<a href="#sect332">§332</a>), but in this case to soak
-up the blood as well as to give a firm footing to the gladiators.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure161">
- <tr>
- <td width="318">
- <img src="images/figure161.jpg" alt="FIGURE 161. BISELLIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="318" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 161.
- B<small>ISELLIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect355"><b>355</b></a></span>
-Of the part of this amphitheater set aside for the spectators
-the <i>cavea īma</i> only was supported upon artificial foundations. All
-the other seats were constructed in sections as means were obtained
-for the purpose, the people in the meantime finding places for
-themselves on the sloping banks as in the early theaters (<a href="#sect325">§325</a>). The
-<i>cavea īma</i> was strictly not supplied with seats all the way around, a
-considerable section on the east and west sides being arranged with
-four low, broad ledges of stone, rising one above the other, on which
-the members of the city council could place the seats of honor
-(<i>bisellia</i>, Fig. 161) to which their rank entitled them. In the
-middle of the section on the east the lowest ledge is made of double
-width for some ten feet; this was the place set apart for the giver of
-the games and his friends. In the <i>cavea media</i> and the <i>cavea summa</i>
-the seats were of stone resting on the bank of earth. It is probable
-that all the places in the lowest section were reserved for people of
-distinction, that seats in the middle section were sold to the
-well-to-do, and that admission was free to the less desirable seats of
-the highest section.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure162">
- <tr>
- <td width="793">
- <img src="images/figure162.jpg" alt="FIGURE 162. EXTERIOR OF THE COLISEUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="793" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 162.
- E<small>XTERIOR OF THE</small> C<small>OLISEUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect356"><b>356</b></a></span>
-<b>The Coliseum.</b>&mdash;The Flavian amphitheater (<a href="#sect352">§352</a>) is the best known
-of all the buildings of ancient Rome, because to a larger extent than
-others it has survived to the present day. For our purpose it is not
-necessary to give its history or to describe its architecture; it will
-be sufficient to compare its essential parts with those of its modest
-prototype in Pompeii. The latter was built in the outskirts of the
-city, in a corner in fact of the city walls (<a href="#sect353">§353</a>); the coliseum lay
-almost in the center of Rome, the most generally accessible of all the
-public buildings. The interior of the Pompeian structure was reached
-through two passages and by three stairways only, while eighty
-numbered entrances made it easy for the Roman multitudes to find their
-appropriate places in the coliseum. Much of the earlier amphitheater
-was underground; all of the corresponding parts of the coliseum were
-above the level of the street, the walls rising to a height of nearly
-160 feet. This gave opportunity for the same architectural
-magnificence that had distinguished the Roman theater from that of the
-Greeks (<a href="#sect326">§326</a>). The general effect is shown in Fig. 162, an exterior
-view of the ruins as they exist to-day.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure163">
- <tr>
- <td width="646">
- <img src="images/figure163.jpg" alt="FIGURE 163. INTERIOR OF COLISEUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="646" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 163.
- I<small>NTERIOR OF</small> C<small>OLISEUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect357"><b>357</b></a></span>
-The interior is shown in Fig. 163. The form is an ellipse with
-axes of 620 and 513 feet, the building covering nearly six acres of
-ground. The arena is also an ellipse, its axes measuring 287 and 180
-feet. The width of the space appropriated for the spectators is,
-therefore, 166&frac12; feet all around the arena. It will be noticed, too,
-that subterranean chambers were constructed under the whole building,
-including the arena. These furnished room for the regiments of
-gladiators, the dens of wild beasts, the machinery for the
-transformation scenes that Gibbon has described in his twelfth
-chapter, and above all for the vast number of water and drainage pipes
-that made it possible to turn the arena into a lake at a moment's
-notice and as quickly to get rid of the water. The wall that
-surrounded the arena was fifteen feet high with the side faced with
-rollers and defended like the one at Pompeii with a grating or network
-of metal above it. The top of the wall was level with the floor of the
-lowest range of seats, called the <i>podium</i> as in the circus (<a href="#sect337">§337</a>),
-and this had room for two or at the most three rows of marble thrones.
-These were for the use of the emperor and the imperial family, the
-giver of the games, the magistrates, senators, Vestal virgins,
-ambassadors of foreign states, and other persons of consequence.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure164">
- <tr>
- <td width="637">
- <img src="images/figure164.jpg" alt="FIGURE 164. SECTION OF COLISEUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="637" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 164.
- S<small>ECTION OF</small> C<small>OLISEUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect358"><b>358</b></a></span>
-The arrangement of the seats with the method of reaching them is
-shown in the sectional plan, Fig. 164. The seats were arranged in
-three tiers (<i>maeniāna</i>, <a href="#sect337">§337</a>) one above the other, separated by broad
-passageways and rising more steeply the farther they were from the
-arena, and were crowned by an open gallery. In the plan the <i>podium</i>
-is marked A. Twelve feet above it begins the first <i>maeniānum</i>, B,
-with fourteen rows of seats reserved for members of the equestrian
-order. Then came a broad <i>praecīnctiō</i> (<a href="#sect327">§327</a>) and after it the second
-<i>maeniānum</i>, C, intended for ordinary citizens. Back of this was a
-wall of considerable height and above it the third <i>maeniānum</i>, D,
-supplied with rough wooden benches for the lowest classes, foreigners,
-slaves, and the like. The row of pillars along the front of this
-section made the distant view all the worse. Above this was an open
-gallery, E, in which women found an unwelcome place. No other seats
-were open to them unless they were of sufficient distinction to claim
-a place upon the <i>podium</i>. At the very top of the outside wall was a
-terrace, F, in which were fixed masts to support the awnings that gave
-protection against the sun. The seating capacity of the coliseum is
-said to have been 80,000, and it had standing room for 20,000 more.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure165">
- <tr>
- <td width="410">
- <img src="images/figure165.jpg" alt="FIGURE 165. RETIARIUS AND SECUTOR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="410" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 165.
- R<small>ETIARIUS AND</small> S<small>ECUTOR</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures166and167">
- <tr>
- <td width="202">
- <img src="images/figure166.jpg" alt="FIGURE 166. THRAEX">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="202" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 166.
- T<small>HRAEX</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="202"align="center">
- <img src="images/figure167.jpg" alt="FIGURE 167. VOTIVE GALERUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="202" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 167.
- V<small>OTIVE</small> G<small>ALERUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect359"><b>359</b></a></span>
-<b>Styles of Fighting.</b>&mdash;Gladiators fought usually in pairs, man
-against man, but sometimes in masses (<i>gregātim</i>, <i>catervātim</i>). In
-early times they were actually soldiers, captives taken in war (<a href="#sect347">§347</a>),
-and fought naturally with the weapons and equipment to which they were
-accustomed. When the professionally trained gladiators came in, they
-were given the old names, and were called Samnites, Thracians, etc.,
-according to their arms and tactics. In much later times victories
-over distant peoples were celebrated with combats in which the weapons
-and methods of war of the conquered were shown to the people of Rome;
-thus, after the conquest of Britain <i>essedāriī</i> exhibited in the arena
-the tactics of chariot fighting which Caesar had described generations
-before in his Commentaries. It was natural enough, too, for the people
-to want to see different arms and different tactics tried against each
-other, and so the Samnite was matched against the Thracian, the heavy
-armed against the light armed. This became under the Empire the
-favorite style of combat. Finally when people had tired of the regular
-shows, novelties were introduced that seem to us grotesque; men fought
-blindfold (<i>andabatae</i>), armed with two swords (<i>dimachaerī</i>), with
-the lasso (<i>laqueatōrēs</i>), with a heavy net (<i>rētiāriī</i>), and there
-were battles of dwarfs and of dwarfs with women. Of these the
-<i>rētiārius</i> became immensely popular. He carried a huge net in which
-he tried to entangle his opponent, always a <i>secūtor</i> (see below),
-despatching him with a dagger if the throw was successful. If
-unsuccessful he took to flight while preparing his net for another
-throw, of if he had lost his net tried to keep his opponent off with a
-heavy three-pronged spear (<i>fuscina</i>), his only weapon beside the
-dagger (Fig. 165).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect360"><b>360</b></a></span>
-<b>Weapons and Armor.</b>&mdash;The armor and weapons used in these combats
-are known from pieces found in various places, some of which are shown
-in Fig. 152, <a href="#sect345">§345</a>, and from paintings and sculpture, but we are not
-always able to assign them to definite classes of gladiators. The
-oldest class was that of the Samnites (Fig. 151, <a href="#sect344">§344</a>). They had
-belts, thick sleeves on the right arm (<i>manica</i>), helmets with visors,
-shown in Fig. 154, <a href="#sect348">§348</a>, greaves on the left leg, short swords, and
-the long shield (<i>scūtum</i>). Under the Empire the name Samnite was
-gradually lost and gladiators with equivalent equipment were called
-<i>hoplomachī</i> (heavy armed), when matched against the lighter armed
-Thracians, and <i>secūtōrēs</i>, when they fought with the <i>rētiāriī</i>. The
-Thracians (Fig. 166) had much the same equipment as the Samnites, the
-mark of distinction being the small shield (<i>parma</i>) in place of the
-<i>scūtum</i> and, to make up the difference, greaves on both legs. They
-carried a curved sword. The Gauls were heavy armed, but we do not know
-how they were distinguished from the Samnites. In later times they
-were called <i>murmillōnēs</i>, from an ornament on their helmets shaped
-like a fish (<i>mormyr</i>). The rētiāriī had no defensive armor except a
-leather protection for the shoulder, shown in Fig. 165. Of course the
-same man might appear by turns as Samnite, Thracian, etc., if he was
-skilled in the use of the various weapons; see the inscription in
-<a href="#sect363">§363</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect361"><b>361</b></a></span>
-<b>Announcement of the Shows.</b>&mdash;The games were advertised in
-advance by means of notices painted on the walls of public and private
-houses, and even on the tombstones that lined the approaches to the
-towns and cities. Some are worded in very general terms, announcing
-merely the name of the giver of the games with the date:</p>
-
-<center>A • S<small>VETTI</small> • C<small>ERTI</small><br>
-<small>AEDILIS</small> • <small>FAMILIA</small> •
-<small>GLADIATORIA</small> • <small>PUGNAB</small> •
-<small>POMPEIS</small><br>
-<small>PR</small> • <small>K</small> • J<small>VNIAS</small> •
-V<small>ENATIO</small> • <small>ET</small> • <small>VELA</small> •
-<small>ERUNT<small><sup>4</sup></small></small></center>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>4</sup></small> "On the last day of May the gladiators of the Aedile
-Aulus Suettius Certus will fight at Pompeii. There will also be a hunt
-and the awnings will be used."</small></blockquote>
-
-<p>Others promise in addition to the awnings that the dust will be kept
-down in the arena by sprinkling. Sometimes when the troop was
-particularly good the names of the gladiators were announced in pairs
-as they would be matched together, with details as to their equipment,
-the school in which each had been trained, the number of his previous
-battles, etc. To such a notice on one of the walls in Pompeii some one
-added after the show the result of each combat. The following is a
-specimen only of this announcement:<small><small><sup>5</sup></small></small></p>
-
-<center><img src="images/image3.jpg" alt="Announcement"></center>
-<br>
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>5</sup></small> "The games of
-N... from the 12th to the 15th of May. The Thracian Pugnax, of the gladiatorial school
-of Nero, who has fought three times will be matched against the
-<i>murmillō</i> Murranus, of the same school and the same number of fights.
-The <i>hoplomachus</i> Cycnus, from the school of Julius Caesar,
-who has fought eight times will be matched with the Thracian Atticus of the same
-school and of fourteen fights."</small></blockquote>
-
-<p>The letters in italics before the names of the gladiators were added
-after the exhibition by some interested spectator, and stand for
-<i>vīcit</i>, <i>periit</i>, and <i>missus</i> ("beaten, but spared"). Other
-announcements added to such particulars as those given above the
-statement that other pairs than those mentioned would fight each day,
-this being meant to excite the curiosity and interest of the people.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect362"><b>362</b></a></span>
-<b>The Fight Itself.</b>&mdash;The day before the exhibition a banquet
-(<i>cēna lībera</i>) was given to the gladiators and they received visits
-from their friends and admirers. The games took place in the
-afternoon. After the <i>ēditor mūneris</i> had taken his place (<a href="#sect355">§355</a>), the
-gladiators marched in procession around the arena, pausing before him
-to give the famous greeting: <i>moritūrī tē salūtant</i>. All then retired
-from the arena to return in pairs according to the published
-programme. The show began with a series of sham combats, the
-<i>prōlūsiō</i>, with blunt weapons. When the people had had enough of this
-the trumpets gave the signal for the real exhibition to begin. Those
-reluctant to fight were driven into the arena with whips or hot iron
-bars. If one of the combatants was clearly overpowered without being
-actually killed, he might appeal for mercy by holding up his finger to
-the <i>ēditor</i>. It was customary to refer the plea to the people, who
-waved cloths or napkins to show that they wished it to be granted, or
-pointed their thumbs downward as a signal for death. The gladiator who
-was refused release (<i>missiō</i>) received the death blow from his
-opponent without resistance. Combats where all must fight to the death
-were said to be <i>sine missiōne</i>, but these were forbidden by Augustus.
-The body of the dead man was dragged away through the <i>porta
-Libitinēnsis</i>, sand was sprinkled or raked over the blood, and the
-contests were continued until all had fought.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure168plus">
- <tr>
- <td width="342" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure168.jpg" alt="FIGURE 168. TESSERA GLADIATORIA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="342" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 168.
- T<small>ESSERA</small> G<small>LADIATORIA</small><small><sup>6</sup></small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="342">
- <small><small><sup>6</sup></small> <i>Lepidus
- Mummēiānī s(ervus). Spectāvit m(ense) Iuniō, C.
- Sentiō Cōnsule.</i></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="342">
- <img src="images/image4.jpg" alt="Inscription"><small><small><sup>7</sup></small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="342">
- <small><small><sup>7</sup></small> Inscription on
- tomb of a gladiator. "To the Gods Manes
- and the lasting memory of Hylas, a dimachaerus or
- essedarius of seven
- victories and head trainer. His wife Ermais
- erected this monument to
- her beloved husband and dedicated it, reserving
- the usual rights."</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect363"><b>363</b></a></span>
-<b>The Rewards.</b>&mdash;Before making his first public appearance the
-gladiator was technically called a <i>tīrō</i>. After his first victory he
-received a token of wood or ivory (Fig. 168), which had upon it his
-name and that of his master or trainer, a date, and the letters <small>SP</small>,
-<small>SPECT</small>, <small>SPECTAT</small>, or <small>SPECTAVIT</small>, meaning perhaps <i>populus spectāvit</i>.
-When after many victories he had proved himself to be the best of his
-class, or second best, in his <i>familia</i>, he received the title of
-<i>prīmus</i>, or <i>secundus</i>, <i>pālus</i>. When he had won his freedom he was
-given a wooden sword (<i>rudis</i>). From this the titles <i>prīma rudis</i> and
-<i>secunda rudis</i> seem to have been given to those who were afterwards
-employed as training masters (<i>doctōrēs</i>, <a href="#sect349">§349</a>) in the schools. The
-rewards given to famous gladiators by their masters and backers took
-the form of valuable prizes and gifts of money. These may not have
-been so generous as those given to the <i>aurīgae</i> (<a href="#sect341">§341</a>), but they were
-enough to enable them to live in luxury the rest of their lives. The
-class of men, however, who followed this profession probably found
-their most acceptable reward in the immediate and lasting notoriety
-that their strength and courage brought them. That they did not shrink
-from the <i>īnfamia</i> that the profession entailed is shown by the fact
-that they did not try to hide their connection with the amphitheater.
-On the contrary, their gravestones record their classes and the number
-of their victories, and have often cut upon them their likenesses with
-the <i>rudis</i> in their hands.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect364"><b>364</b></a></span>
-<b>Other Shows in the Amphitheater.</b>&mdash;Of other games that were
-sometimes given in the amphitheaters something has been said in
-connection with the circus (<a href="#sect343">§343</a>). The most important were the
-<i>vēnātiōnēs</i>, hunts of wild beasts. These were sometimes killed by men
-trained to hunt them, sometimes made to kill each other. As the
-amphitheater was primarily intended for the butchery of men, the
-<i>vēnātiōnēs</i> given in it gradually but surely took the form of
-man-hunts. The victims were condemned criminals, some of them guilty
-of crimes that deserved death, some of them sentenced on trumped up
-charges, some of them (and among these were women and children)
-condemned "to the lions" for political or religious convictions.
-Sometimes they were supplied with weapons, sometimes they were exposed
-unarmed, even fettered or bound to stakes, sometimes the ingenuity of
-their executioners found additional torments for them by making them
-play the parts of the sufferers in the tragedies of mythology. The
-arena was well adapted, too, for the maneuvering of boats, when it had
-been flooded with water (<a href="#sect357">§357</a>), and naval battles (<i>naumachiae</i>) were
-often fought within the coliseum as desperate and as bloody as some of
-those that have given a new turn to the history of the world. The
-earliest exhibitions of this sort were given in artificial lakes, also
-called <i>naumachiae</i>. The first of these was dug by Caesar, for a
-single exhibition, in 46 <small>B.C.</small> Augustus had a permanent basin
-constructed in 2 <small>B.C.</small>, measuring 1,800 by 1,200 feet, and four others
-at least were built by later emperors.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure169">
- <tr>
- <td width="621">
- <img src="images/figure169.jpg" alt="FIGURE 169. HALL IN THERMAE OF CARACALLA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="621" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 169.
- H<small>ALL IN</small> T<small>HERMAE OF</small>
- C<small>ARACALLA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect365"><b>365</b></a></span>
-<b>The Daily Bath.</b>&mdash;To the Roman of early times the bath had stood
-for health and decency only. He washed every day his arms and legs,
-for the ordinary costume left them exposed (<a href="#sect239">§239</a>), his body once a
-week. He bathed at home, using a very primitive sort of wash-room,
-situated near the kitchen (<a href="#sect203">§203</a>) in order that the water heated on the
-kitchen stove might be carried into it with the least possible
-inconvenience. By the last century of the Republic all this had
-changed, though the steps in the change can not now be followed. The
-bath had become a part of the daily life as momentous as the <i>cēna</i>
-itself, which it regularly preceded. It was taken, too, by preference
-in one of the public bathing establishments which were by this time
-operated on a large scale in all parts of Rome and also in the smaller
-towns of Italy and even in the provinces. These offered all sorts of
-baths, plain, plunge, douche, with massage (Turkish), and besides in
-many cases features borrowed from the Greek gymnasia, exercise
-grounds, courts for various games, reading and conversation rooms,
-libraries, gymnastic apparatus, everything in fact that our athletic
-clubs now provide for their members. The accessories had become really
-of more importance than the bathing itself and justify the description
-of the bath under the head of amusements. In places where there were
-no public baths, or where they were at an inconvenient distance, the
-wealthy fitted up bathing places in their houses, but no matter how
-elaborate they were the private baths were merely a makeshift at best.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure170">
- <tr>
- <td width="623">
- <img src="images/figure170.jpg" alt="FIGURE 170. TEPIDARIUM AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="623" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 170.
- T<small>EPIDARIUM AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect366"><b>366</b></a></span>
-<b>Essentials for the Bath.</b>&mdash;The ruins of the public and private
-baths found all over the Roman world, together with a dissertation by
-Vitruvius, and countless allusions in literature, make very clear the
-general construction and arrangement of the bath, but show that the
-widest freedom was allowed in matters of detail. For the luxurious
-bath of classical times four things were thought necessary: a warm
-ante-room, a hot bath, a cold bath, and the rubbing and anointing with
-oil. All these might have been had in a single room, as all but the
-last are furnished in every modern bathroom, but as a matter of fact
-we find at least three rooms set apart for the bath in very modest
-private houses and often five or six, while in the public
-establishments this number may be multiplied several times. In the
-better equipped houses were provided: (1) A room for undressing and
-dressing (<i>apodytērium</i>), usually unheated, but furnished with benches
-and often with lockers for the clothes; (2) the warm ante-room
-(<i>tepidārium</i>), in which the bather waited long enough for the
-perspiration to start, in order to guard against the danger of passing
-too suddenly into the high temperature of the next room; (3) the hot
-room (<i>caldārium</i>) for the hot bath; (4) the cold room (<i>frīgidārium</i>)
-for the cold bath; (5) the <i>ūnctōrium</i>, the room for the rubbing and
-anointing with oil that finished the bath, from which the bather
-returned into the <i>apodytērium</i> for his clothes.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure171">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure171.jpg" alt="FIGURE 171. STRIGILES">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 171.
- S<small>TRIGILES</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect367"><b>367</b></a></span>
-In the more modest houses space was saved by using a room for
-several purposes. The separate <i>apodytērium</i> might be dispensed with,
-the bather undressing and dressing in either the <i>frīgidārium</i> or
-<i>tepidārium</i> according to the weather; or the <i>ūnctōrium</i> might be
-saved by using the <i>tepidārium</i> for this purpose as well as for its
-own. In this way the suite of five rooms might be reduced to four or
-three. On the other hand, private houses had sometimes an additional
-hot room without water (<i>lacōnicum</i>), used for a sweat bath, and a
-public bathhouse would be almost sure to have an exercise ground
-(<i>palaestra</i>), with a pool at one side (<i>piscīna</i>) for a cold plunge
-and a room adjacent (<i>dēstrictārium</i>) in which the sweat and dirt of
-exercise were scraped off with the <i>strigilis</i> (Fig. 171) before and
-after the bath. It must not be supposed that all bathers went the
-round of all the rooms in the order given above, though that was
-common enough. Some would dispense with the hot bath altogether,
-taking instead a sweat in the <i>lacōnicum</i>, or failing that, in the
-<i>caldārium</i>, removing the perspiration with the strigil, following
-this with a cold bath (perhaps merely a shower or douche) in the
-<i>frīgidārium</i> and the rubbing with linen cloths and anointing with
-oil. Young men who deserted the campus and the Tiber (<a href="#sect317">§317</a>) for the
-<i>palaestra</i> and the bath would content themselves with removing the
-effects of their exercise with the scraper, taking a plunge in the
-open pool, and then a second scraping and the oil. Much would depend
-on the time and the tastes of individuals, and physicians laid down
-strict rules for their patients to follow.</p>
-<table align="left" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure172">
- <tr>
- <td width="425">
- <img src="images/figure172.jpg" alt="FIGURE 172. SUSPENSURA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="425" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 172.
- S<small>USPENSURA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect368"><b>368</b></a></span>
-<b>Heating the Bath.</b>&mdash;The arrangement of the rooms, were they many
-or few, depended upon the method of heating. This in early times must
-have been by stoves placed in the rooms as needed, but by the end of
-the Republic the furnace had come into use, heating the rooms as well
-as the water with a single fire. The hot air from the furnace was not
-conducted into the rooms directly, as it is with us, but was made to
-circulate under the floors and through spaces between the walls, the
-temperature of the room depending upon its proximity to the furnace.
-The <i>lacōnicum</i>, if there was one, was put directly over the furnace,
-next to it came the <i>caldārium</i> and then the <i>tepidārium</i>, while the
-<i>frīgidārium</i> and the <i>apodytērium</i> having no need of heat were at the
-greatest distance from the fire and without connection with it. If
-there were two sets of baths in the same building, as there sometimes
-were for the accommodation of both men and women at the same time, the
-two <i>caldāria</i> were put on opposite sides of the furnace (see the plan
-in <a href="#sect376">§376</a>) and the other rooms were connected with them in the regular
-order, the two entrances being at the greatest distance apart. The
-method of conducting the air under the floors is shown in Fig. 172.
-There were really two floors, the first being even with the top of the
-firepot, the second (<i>suspēnsūra</i>) with the top of the furnace.
-Between them was a space of about two feet into which the hot air
-passed. On the top of the furnace, just above the level, therefore, of
-the second floor, were two kettles for heating the water. One was
-placed well back, where the fire was not so hot, and contained water
-that was kept merely warm; the other was placed directly over the fire
-and the water in it, received from the former, was easily kept
-intensely hot. Near them was a third kettle containing cold water.
-From these three kettles the water was piped as needed to the various
-rooms. The arrangement will be easily understood after a study of the
-plans in <a href="#sect376">§§376</a>, <a href="#sect378">378</a>.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure173">
- <tr>
- <td width="621">
- <img src="images/figure173.jpg" alt="FIGURE 173. SECTION OF CALDARIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="621" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 173.
- S<small>ECTION OF</small> C<small>ALDARIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect369"><b>369</b></a></span>
-<b>The Caldarium.</b>&mdash;The hot water bath was taken in the <i>caldārium</i>
-(<i>cella caldāria</i>), which served also as a sweat bath when there was
-no <i>lacōnicum</i>. It was a rectangular room and in the public baths was
-longer than wide (Vitruvius says the proportion should be 3:2) with
-one end rounded off like an apse or bay window. At the other end stood
-the large hot water tank (<i>alveus</i>), in which the bath was taken by a
-number of persons at a time. The <i>alveus</i> (Fig. 173) was built up two
-steps from the floor of the room, its length equal to the width of the
-room and its breadth at the top not less than six feet. At the bottom
-it was not nearly so wide, the back sloping inward, so that the
-bathers could recline against it, and the front having a long broad
-step, for convenience of descent into it, upon which, too, the bathers
-sat. The water was received hot from the furnace, and was kept hot by
-a metal heater (<i>testūdō</i>), opening into the <i>alveus</i> and extending
-beneath the floor into the hot air chamber. Near the top of the tank
-was an overflow pipe, and in the bottom was an escape pipe which
-allowed the water to be emptied on the floor of the <i>caldārium</i>, to be
-used for scrubbing it. In the apse-like end of the room was a tank or
-large basin of metal (<i>lābrum</i>, <i>solium</i>), which seems to have
-contained cool water for the douche. In private baths the room was
-usually rectangular and then the <i>lābrum</i> was placed in a corner. For
-the accommodation of those using the room for the sweat bath only,
-there were benches along the wall. The air in the <i>caldārium</i> would,
-of course, be very moist, while that of the <i>lacōnicum</i> would be
-perfectly dry, so that the effect would not be precisely the same.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect370"><b>370</b></a></span>
-<b>The Frigidarium and Unctorium.</b>&mdash;The <i>frīgidārium</i> (<i>cella
-frīgidāria</i>) contained merely the cold plunge bath, unless it was made
-to do duty for the <i>apodytērium</i>, when there would be lockers on the
-wall for the clothes (at least in a public bath) and benches for the
-slaves who watched them. Persons who found the bath too cold would
-resort instead to the open swimming pool in the <i>palaestra</i>, which
-would be warmed by the sun. In one of the public baths at Pompeii a
-cold bath seems to have been introduced into the <i>tepidārium</i>, for the
-benefit, probably, of invalids who found even the <i>palaestra</i> too cool
-for comfort. The final process, that of scraping, rubbing, and oiling,
-was exceedingly important. The bather was often treated twice, before
-the warm bath and after the cold bath; the first might be omitted, but
-the second never. The special room, <i>ūnctōrium</i>, was furnished with
-benches and couches. The scrapers and oils were brought by the
-bathers, usually carried along with the towels for the bath by a slave
-(<i>capsārius</i>). The bather might scrape (<i>dēstringere</i>) and oil
-(<i>deungere</i>) himself, or he might receive a regular massage at the
-hands of a trained slave. It is probable that in the large baths
-expert operators could be hired, but we have no direct testimony on
-the subject. When there was no special <i>ūnctōrium</i> the <i>tepidārium</i> or
-<i>apodytērium</i> was made to do instead.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure174">
- <tr>
- <td width="434">
- <img src="images/figure174.jpg" alt="FIGURE 174. BATH AT CAERWENT">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="434" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 174.
- B<small>ATH AT</small> C<small>AERWENT</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect371"><b>371</b></a></span>
-<b>A Private Bathhouse.</b>&mdash;In Fig. 174 is shown the plan of a private
-bath in Caerwent, Monmouthshire, England, the ruins of which were
-discovered in the year 1855. It dates from about the time of
-Constantine (306-333), and small though it is gives a clear notion of
-the arrangement of the rooms. The entrance <i>A</i> leads into the
-<i>frīgidārium B</i>, 10'6" x 6'6" in size, with a bath <i>C</i>, 10'6" x 3'3".
-Off this is the <i>apodytērium D</i>, 10'6" x 13'3", which has the
-apse-like end that the <i>caldārium</i> ought to have. Next is the
-<i>tepidārium E</i>, 12' x 12', which contrary to all the rules is the
-largest instead of the smallest of the four main rooms. Then comes the
-<i>caldārium F</i>, 12' x 7'6", with its <i>alveus G</i>, 6' x 3' x 2', but with
-no sign of its <i>lābrum</i> left, perhaps because the basin was too small
-to require any special foundation. Finally comes the rare <i>lacōnicum
-H</i>, 8' x 4', built over one end of the furnace <i>I</i>, which was in the
-basement room <i>KK</i>. The hot air passed as indicated by the arrows,
-escaping through openings near the roof in the outside wall of the
-<i>apodytērium</i>. It should be noticed that there was no direct passage
-from the <i>caldārium</i> to the <i>frīgidārium</i>, no special entrance to the
-<i>lacōnicum</i>, and that the <i>tepidārium</i> must have served as the
-<i>ūnctōrium</i>. The dimensions of the bath as a whole are 31 x 34 feet.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect372"><b>372</b></a></span>
-<b>The Public Baths.</b>&mdash;To the simpler bathhouse of the earlier times
-as well as to the bath itself was given the name <i>balneum</i>
-(<i>balineum</i>), used often in the plural, <i>balnea</i>, by the dactylic
-poets for metrical convenience. The more complex establishments of
-later times were called <i>balneae</i>, and to the very largest with
-features derived from the Greek gymnasia (<a href="#sect365">§365</a>) the name <i>thermae</i> was
-finally given. These words, however, were loosely used and often
-interchanged in practice. Public baths are first heard of after the
-second Punic war. They increased in number rapidly, 170 at least being
-operated in Rome in the year 33 <small>B.C.</small>, and later there were more than
-800. With equal rapidity they spread through Italy and the provinces,
-all the towns and many villages even having at least one. They were
-public only in the sense of being open to all citizens who could pay
-the modest fee demanded for their use. Free baths there were none,
-except when some magistrate or public-spirited citizen or candidate
-for office arranged to relieve the people of the fees for a definite
-time by meeting the charges himself. So Agrippa in the year 33 <small>B.C.</small>
-kept open free of charge 170 establishments at Rome. The rich
-sometimes provided free baths for the people in their wills, but
-always for a limited time.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect373"><b>373</b></a></span>
-<b>Management.</b>&mdash;The first public baths were opened by individuals
-for speculative purposes. Others were built by wealthy men as gifts to
-their native towns, as such men give hospitals and libraries now, the
-administration being lodged with the town authorities who kept the
-buildings in repair and the baths open with the fees collected. Others
-were built by the towns out of public funds, and others still as
-monuments by the later emperors. However started, the management was
-practically the same for all. They were leased for a definite time and
-for a fixed sum to a manager (<i>conductor</i>) who paid his expenses and
-made his profits out of the fees which he collected. The fee
-(<i>balneāticum</i>) was hardly more than nominal. The regular price at
-Rome for men seems to have been a <i>quadrāns</i>, less than a cent, the
-bather furnishing his own towels, oil, etc., as we have seen (<a href="#sect370">§370</a>).
-Women paid more, perhaps twice as much, while children up to a certain
-age, unknown to us, paid nothing. Prices varied, of course, in
-different places. It is likely that higher prices were charged in some
-baths than in others in the same city, either because they were more
-luxuriously equipped or to make them more exclusive and fashionable
-than the rest, but we have no positive knowledge that this was done.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect374"><b>374</b></a></span>
-<b>Hours Opened.</b>&mdash;The bath was regularly taken between the
-<i>merīdiātiō</i> and <i>cēna</i>, the hour varying, therefore, within narrow
-limits in different seasons and for different classes (<a href="#sect310">§310</a>). In
-general it may be said to have been taken about the eighth hour, and
-at this hour all the <i>conductōrēs</i> were bound by their contracts to
-have the baths open and all things in readiness. As a matter of fact
-many people preferred to bathe before the <i>prandium</i> (<a href="#sect302">§302</a>), and some
-at least of the baths in the larger places must have been open then.
-All were regularly kept open until sunset, but in the smaller towns,
-where public baths were fewer, it is probable that they were kept open
-later; at least the lamps found in large numbers in the Pompeian baths
-seem to point at evening hours. It may be taken for granted that the
-managers would keep the doors open as long as was profitable for them.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect375"><b>375</b></a></span>
-<b>Accommodations for Women.</b>&mdash;Women of respectability bathed in the
-public baths, as they bathe in public places now, but with women only,
-enjoying the opportunity to meet their friends as much as did the men.
-In the large cities there were separate baths devoted to their
-exclusive use. In the larger towns separate rooms were set apart for
-them in the baths intended generally for men. Such a combination is
-shown in the next paragraph and the arrangement has been explained in
-<a href="#sect368">§368</a>. In the very small places the bath was opened to men and women at
-different hours. Late in the Empire we read of men and women bathing
-together, but this was true of women only who had no claim to
-respectability at all.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure175">
- <tr>
- <td width="629">
- <img src="images/figure175.jpg" alt="FIGURE 175. THERMAE AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="629" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 175.
- T<small>HERMAE AT</small> P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect376"><b>376</b></a></span>
-<b>Thermae.</b>&mdash;In Fig. 175 is shown a plan of the so-called Stabian
-baths at Pompeii, which gives a correct idea of the smaller <i>thermae</i>
-and serves at the same time to illustrate the combination of baths for
-men and women under the same roof. In the plan the unnumbered rooms
-opening upon the surrounding streets were used for shops and stores
-independent of the baths, those opening within were for the use of the
-attendants or for purposes that can not now be determined. The main
-entrance (<i>1</i>), on the south, opened upon the <i>palaestra</i> (<i>2</i>),
-surrounded on three sides by colonnades and on the west by a bowling
-alley (<i>3</i>), where large stone balls were found. Behind the bowling
-alley was the <i>piscīna</i> (<i>6</i>) open to the sun, with a room on either
-side (<i>5</i>, <i>7</i>) for douche baths and a <i>dēstrictārium</i> (<i>4</i>) for the
-use of the athletes. There were two side entrances (<i>8</i>, <i>11</i>) at the
-northwest, with the porter's room (<i>12</i>) and manager's office (<i>10</i>)
-within convenient reach. The room (<i>9</i>) at the head of the bowling
-alley was for the use of the players and may be compared with the
-similar room for the use of the gladiators marked <i>9</i> in Fig. 156
-(<a href="#sect350">§350</a>). Behind the office was the <i>latrīna</i> (<i>14</i>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect377"><b>377</b></a></span>
-On the east are the baths proper, the men's to the south. There
-were two <i>apodytēria</i> (<i>24</i>, <i>25</i>) for the men, each with a separate
-waiting-room for the slaves (<i>26</i>, <i>27</i>) with a door to the street.
-Then come in order the <i>frīgidārium</i> (<i>22</i>), the <i>tepidārium</i> (<i>23</i>),
-and the <i>caldārium</i> (<i>21</i>). The <i>tepidārium</i>, contrary to custom, had
-a cold bath as explained in <a href="#sect370">§370</a>. The main entrance to the women's
-bath was at the northeast (<i>17</i>), but there was also an entrance from
-the northwest through the long corridor (<i>15</i>), both opening into the
-<i>apodytērium</i> (<i>16</i>). This contained in one corner a cold bath, there
-being no separate <i>frīgidārium</i> in the baths for women. Then come in
-the regular position the <i>tepidārium</i> (<i>18</i>) and <i>caldārium</i> (<i>19</i>).
-The furnace (<i>20</i>) was between the two <i>caldāria</i>, and the position of
-the three kettles (<a href="#sect368">§368</a>) which furnished the water is clearly shown.
-It should be noticed that there was no <i>lacōnicum</i>. It is possible
-that one of the waiting-rooms for men (<i>24</i>) may have been used as an
-<i>ūnctōrium</i>. The ruins show that the rooms were most artistically
-decorated and there can be no doubt that they were luxuriously
-furnished. The colonnades and the large waiting-rooms gave ample space
-for the lounge after the bath, which the Roman prized so highly.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure176">
- <tr>
- <td width="626">
- <img src="images/figure176.jpg" alt="FIGURE 176. BATHS OF DIOCLETIAN">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="626" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 176.
- B<small>ATHS OF</small> D<small>IOCLETIAN</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect378"><b>378</b></a></span>
-<b>Baths of Diocletian.</b>&mdash;The irregularity of plan and the waste of
-space in the Pompeian <i>thermae</i> just described are due to the fact
-that it was rebuilt at various times with all sorts of alterations and
-additions. Nothing can be more symmetrical than the <i>thermae</i> of the
-later emperors, as a type of which is shown in Fig. 176 the plan of
-the Baths of Diocletian, dedicated in 305 <small>A.D.</small> They lay on the east
-side of the city and were the largest and with the exception of those
-of Caracalla the most magnificent of the Roman baths. The plan shows
-the arrangement of the main rooms, all in the line of the minor axis
-of the building; the uncovered <i>piscīna</i> (1), the <i>apodytērium</i> and
-<i>frīgidārium</i> (2), combined as in the women's baths at Pompeii, the
-<i>tepidārium</i> (3), and the <i>caldārium</i> (4) projecting beyond the other
-rooms for the sake of the sunshine. The uses of the surrounding halls
-and courts can not now be determined, but it is clear from the plan
-that nothing was omitted known to the luxury of the time. An idea of
-the magnificence of the central room may be had from Fig. 169 (<a href="#sect365">§365</a>),
-showing the corresponding room in the Baths of Caracalla.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap10"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER X</h3>
-
-<h4>TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 469-474, 731-738, 799-833; Voigt, 359 f.; Göll,
-II, 418-462, III, 1-45; Guhl and Koner, 538-544, 766 f., 783 f.;
-Friedländer, II, 36-291; Ramsay, 76-78, 512-516; Pauly-Wissowa,
-<i>carpentum</i>, <i>cisium</i>, <i>charta</i>, <i>Brief</i>, <i>Buch</i>, <i>Buchhandlung</i>,
-<i>Bibliotheken;</i> Smith, Harper, Rich, Lübker, <i>viae</i>, <i>tabulae</i>,
-<i>liber</i>, <i>bibliothēca</i>, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister,
-2079 f., 354, 361-364; Blümner, I, 308-327; Johnston, Latin
-Manuscripts, 13-21, 27-34, 36.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect379"><b>379</b></a></span>
-For our knowledge of the means of traveling employed by the
-Romans we have to rely upon indirect sources (<a href="#sect12">§12</a>), because if any
-volumes of travel were ever written they have not come down to us. We
-know, however, that while no distance was too great to be traversed,
-no hardships too severe to be surmounted, for the sake of fame or
-fortune, the Roman cared nothing for traveling in itself, for the mere
-pleasure, that is, of sight-seeing. This was partly due to his
-blindness to the charms of nature, more perhaps to his feeling that to
-be out of Rome was to be forgotten. He made once in his life the grand
-tour (<a href="#sect116">§116</a>), he spent a year abroad in the train of some general or
-governor (<a href="#sect118">§118</a>), but this done, only the most urgent private affairs
-or public duties could draw him from Italy. And Italy was to him only
-Rome and his country estates (<a href="#sect145">§145</a>). These he visited when the hot
-months had closed the courts and adjourned the senate, roaming
-restlessly from one to another, impatient for his real life to begin
-again. Even when public or private business called him from Rome, he
-kept in touch with affairs by correspondence, expecting his friends to
-write him voluminous letters, ready himself to return the favor when
-positions should be reversed. So, too, the proconsul kept as near to
-Rome as the boundaries of his province would permit; almost all the
-uprisings in farther Gaul were due to Caesar's habit of hurrying off
-to Italy as soon as winter had put an end to active operations in the
-field.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect380"><b>380</b></a></span>
-<b>By Water.</b>&mdash;The means of travel were the same as our ancestors
-used a century ago. By water the Roman used sailing vessels, rarely
-canal boats; by land vehicles drawn by horses or mules, for short
-distances sedan chairs or litters. There were, however, no
-transportation companies, no lines of boats or vehicles, that is,
-running between certain places and prepared to carry passengers at a
-fixed price on a regular schedule. The traveler by sea whose means did
-not permit him to buy or charter a vessel for his exclusive use had
-therefore to wait at the port until he found a boat going in the
-desired direction and then make such terms as he could for his
-passage. And there were other inconveniences. The boats were small,
-and this made them uncomfortable in rough weather; the lack of the
-compass caused them to follow the coast as much as possible, and this
-often increased the distance; in winter navigation was usually
-suspended. Traveling by water was, therefore, avoided as much as
-possible. Rather than sail to Athens from Ostia or Naples, for
-example, the traveler would go by land to Brundisium, by sea across to
-Dyrrachium, and continue the journey by land. Between Brundisium and
-Dyrrachium boats were constantly passing, and the only delay to be
-feared was that caused by bad weather. The short voyage, only 100
-miles, was usually made within twenty-four hours.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect381"><b>381</b></a></span>
-<b>By Land.</b>&mdash;The Roman who traveled by land was distinctly better
-off than Americans of the time of the Revolution. His inns were not so
-good, it is true, but his vehicles and cattle were fully equal to
-theirs, and his roads were the best that have ever been built.
-Horseback riding was not a recognized mode of traveling (the Romans
-had no saddles), but there were vehicles with two wheels and with
-four, for one horse and for two or more, covered and uncovered. These
-were kept for hire near the gates of all important towns, but the
-price is not known. To save the trouble of loading and unloading the
-baggage it is probable that persons going great distances took their
-own vehicles and merely hired fresh horses from time to time. There
-were, however, no postroutes, and no places where horses were changed
-at the end of regular stages for ordinary travelers, though there were
-such arrangements for couriers and officers of the government,
-especially in the provinces. For short journeys and when haste was not
-necessary travelers would naturally use their own horses as well as
-their own carriages. Of the pomp that often accompanied such journeys
-something has been said in <a href="#sect152">§152</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect382"><b>382</b></a></span>
-<b>The Vehicles.</b>&mdash;The streets of Rome were so narrow (the widest
-not over twenty-five feet, the average about fourteen) that wagons and
-carriages were not allowed upon them at hours when they were likely to
-be thronged with people. Throughout the Republic and for at least two
-centuries afterwards the streets were closed to all vehicles during
-the first ten hours of the day, with the exception of four classes
-only: market wagons, which brought produce into the city by night and
-were allowed to leave empty the next morning, transfer wagons
-(<i>plaustra</i>) conveying material for public buildings, the carriages
-used by the Vestals, <i>flāminēs</i>, and <i>rēx sacrōrum</i> in their priestly
-functions, and the chariots driven in the <i>pompa circēnsis</i> (<a href="#sect343">§343</a>) and
-in the triumphal processions. Similar regulations were in force in
-almost all the Italian towns. This made general the use within the
-walls of the <i>lectīca</i> and its bearers (<a href="#sect151">§151</a>). Besides the litter in
-which the passenger reclined a sedan chair was common in which he sat
-erect. Both were covered and curtained. The <i>lectīca</i> was sometimes
-used for short journeys, and in place of the six or eight bearers,
-mules were sometimes put between the shafts, one before and one
-behind, but not until late in the Empire. Such a litter was called a
-<i>basterna</i>.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure177">
- <tr>
- <td width="307">
- <img src="images/figure177.jpg" alt="FIGURE 177. CARPENTUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="307" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 177.
- C<small>ARPENTUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect383"><b>383</b></a></span>
-<b>Carriages.</b>&mdash;The monuments show us rude representations of
-several kinds of vehicles and the names of at least eight have come
-down to us, but we are not able positively to connect the figures and
-the names, and have, therefore, very general notions only of the form
-and construction of even the most common. Some seem to have been of
-ancient design and retained merely for use as state carriages in the
-processions that have been mentioned. Such were the <i>pīlentum</i> and the
-<i>carpentum</i>, the former with four wheels, the latter with two, both
-covered, both drawn by two horses, both used by the Vestals and
-priests. The <i>carpentum</i> is rarely spoken of as a traveling carriage,
-and its use for such a purpose was a mark of luxury. Livy makes the
-first Tarquin come from Etruria to Rome in one, and it is generally
-supposed that one is shown in an Etruscan painting reproduced here in
-Fig. 177. The <i>petōritum</i> was also used in the triumphal processions,
-but only for the spoils of war. It was essentially a baggage wagon and
-was occupied by the servants in a traveler's train. The <i>carūca</i> was a
-luxurious traveling van, of which we hear first in the late Empire. It
-was furnished with a bed on which the traveler reclined by day and
-slept by night.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure178">
- <tr>
- <td width="282">
- <img src="images/figure178.jpg" alt="FIGURE 178. CISIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="282" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 178.
- C<small>ISIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect384"><b>384</b></a></span>
-<b>The Reda and Cisium.</b>&mdash;The usual traveling vehicles, however,
-were the <i>rēda</i> and the <i>cisium</i>. The former was large and heavy,
-covered, had four wheels, and was drawn by two or four horses. It was
-regularly used by persons accompanied by their families or having
-baggage with them, and was kept for hire for this purpose. For rapid
-journeys, when a man had no traveling companions and little baggage,
-the two-wheeled and uncovered <i>cisium</i> was the favorite vehicle. It
-was drawn by two horses, one between shafts and the other attached by
-traces; it is possible that three were sometimes used. The <i>cisium</i>
-had a single seat, broad enough to accommodate a driver also. It is
-very likely that the cart on a monument found near Trieves (Fig. 178)
-is a <i>cisium</i>, but the identification is not absolutely certain.
-Cicero speaks of these carts making fifty-six miles in ten hours,
-probably with one or more changes of horses. Other vehicles of the
-cart type that came into use during the Empire were the <i>essedum</i> and
-the <i>covīnus</i>, but we do not know how they differed from the <i>cisium</i>.
-These carts had no springs, but the traveler took care to have plenty
-of cushions. It is worth noticing that none of the vehicles mentioned
-has a Latin name, all being Gallic with perhaps one exception
-(<i>pīlentum</i>). In like manner most of our own carriages have foreign
-names.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figures179to184">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure179.jpg" alt="FIGURE 179. ROAD CUT THROUGH HILL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 179.
- R<small>OAD</small> C<small>UT THROUGH</small>
- H<small>ILL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure180.jpg" alt="FIGURE 180. BRIDGE OVER STREAM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 180.
- B<small>RIDGE OVER</small> S<small>TREAM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure181.jpg" alt="FIGURE 181. VIADUCT OVER MARSH">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 181.
- V<small>IADUCT OVER</small> M<small>ARSH</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="100" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure182.jpg" alt="FIGURE 182. MILESTONE">
- </td>
- <td width="314" align="center">
- <img src="images/image5.jpg" alt="MILESTONE INSCRIPTION"><small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="100" align="center" valign="top">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 182.
- M<small>ILESTONE</small></small>
- </td>
- <td width="314">
- <small><small><sup>1</sup></small> Inscription on
- a milestone of the <i>via Salaria</i>.
- "Erected by the consul (117 <small>B.C.</small>)
- Lucius Caecilius Metellus, etc.
- (<a href="#sect39">§39</a>). One hundred and
- nineteen (miles) from Rome."</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414">
- <img src="images/figure183.jpg" alt="FIGURE 183. EMBANKMENT AND CROSS-SECTION">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 183.
- E<small>MBANKMENT AND</small> C<small>ROSS-SECTION</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure184.jpg" alt="FIGURE 184. CONSTRUCTION OF ROAD">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" width="414" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 184.
- C<small>ONSTRUCTION OF</small> R<small>OAD</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect385"><b>385</b></a></span>
-<b>The Roads.</b>&mdash;The engineering skill of the Romans and the lavish
-outlay of money made their roads the best that the world has ever
-known. They were strictly military works, built for strategic
-purposes, intended to facilitate the despatching of supplies to the
-frontier and the massing of troops in the shortest possible time.
-Beginning with the first important acquisition of territory in Italy
-(the <i>via Appia</i> was built in 312 <small>B.C.</small>) they kept pace with the
-expansion of the Republic and the Empire. In Italy they were built at
-the cost of the state, in the provinces the conquered communities bore
-the expense of construction and maintenance, but the work was done
-under the direction of Roman engineers and often by the legions
-between campaigns. They ran in straight lines between the towns they
-were to connect, with frequent crossroads and branch roads only less
-carefully constructed. No natural obstacles were permitted to change
-their course. The grade was always easy, hills being cut through (Fig.
-179), gorges and rivers crossed on arches of solid stone (Fig. 180),
-and valleys and marshes spanned by viaducts of the same material (Fig.
-181).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect386"><b>386</b></a></span>
-Their surface was perfectly smooth and carefully rounded off and
-there were gutters at the sides to carry off the rain and melted snow.
-Regard was had for the comfort of all classes of travelers. Milestones
-showed the distance from the starting point of the road and often that
-to important places in the opposite direction, as well as the names of
-the consuls or emperors under whom the roads were built (Fig. 182).
-The roadbed was wide enough to permit the meeting and passing of the
-largest wagons without trouble. For the pedestrian there was a
-footpath on either side with frequent stepping-stones so he might
-cross to the other side above the mud or dust of the wagon way, and
-seats for him to rest upon were often built by the milestones. The
-horseman found blocks of stone set here and there for his convenience
-in mounting and dismounting. Where springs were discovered wayside
-fountains for men and watering-troughs for cattle were constructed.
-Such roads often went a hundred years without repairs, and some
-portions of them have endured the traffic of centuries and are still
-in good condition to-day.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect387"><b>387</b></a></span>
-<b>Construction.</b>&mdash;Our knowledge of the construction of the military
-roads is derived from a treatise of Vitruvius on pavements and from
-existing remains of the roads themselves. The Latin phrase for
-building a road (<i>mūnīre viam</i>) epitomizes the process exactly, for
-throughout its full length, whether carried above the level of the
-surrounding country (Fig. 183) or in a cut below it, the road was a
-solid wall averaging fifteen feet in width and perhaps three feet in
-height. The method followed will be easily understood from Fig. 184. A
-cut (<i>fossa</i>) was first made of the width of the intended road and of
-a depth sufficient to hold the filling which varied with the nature of
-the soil. The earth at the bottom of the cut (E) was leveled and made
-solid with heavy rammers (<a href="#sect213">§213</a>). Upon this was spread the <i>statūmen</i>
-(D), a foundation course of stones not too large to be held in the
-hand, the thickness of the layer varying with the porosity of the
-soil. Over this came the <i>rūdus</i> (C), a nine-inch layer of coarse
-concrete or rubble (<a href="#sect210">§210</a>) made of broken stones and lime. Over this
-was laid the <i>nūcleus</i> (B), a six-inch bedding of fine concrete made
-of broken potsherds and lime, in which was set the final course (A) of
-blocks of lava or of other hard stone furnished by the adjacent
-country. This last course (<i>dorsum</i>) made the roadway (<i>agger viae</i>)
-and was laid with the greatest care so as to leave no seams or
-fissures to admit water or to jar the wheels of vehicles. In the
-diagram the stones are represented with the lower surface flat, but
-they were commonly cut to a point or edge, as in Fig. 183, in order to
-be held more firmly by the <i>nūcleus</i>. The <i>agger</i> was bounded on the
-sides by <i>umbōnēs</i> (G,G), curbstones, behind which lay the footpaths
-(F,F), <i>sēmitae</i> or <i>marginēs</i>. On a subsoil of rocky character the
-foundation course or even the first and second courses might be
-unnecessary. On the less traveled branch roads the <i>agger</i> seems to
-have consisted of a thick course of gravel (<i>glārea</i>), well rounded
-and compacted, instead of the blocks of stone, and the crossroads may
-have been of still cheaper materials.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure185">
- <tr>
- <td width="176">
- <img src="images/figure185.jpg" alt="FIGURE 185. PLAN OF INN">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="176" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 185.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> I<small>NN</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect388"><b>388</b></a></span>
-<b>The Inns.</b>&mdash;There were numerous lodging houses and restaurants in
-all the cities and towns of Italy, but all of the meanest character.
-Respectable travelers avoided them scrupulously, either possessing
-stopping places of their own (<i>dēversōria</i>) on roads that they used
-frequently, or claiming entertainment from friends (<a href="#sect303">§303</a>) and
-<i>hospitēs</i> (<a href="#sect184">§184</a>), whom they would be sure to have everywhere. Nothing
-but accident, stress of weather, or unusual haste could drive them to
-places of public entertainment (<i>tabernae dēversōriae</i>, <i>caupōnae</i>).
-The guests of such places were, therefore, of the lowest class, and
-innkeepers (<i>caupōnēs</i>) and inns bore the most unsavory reputations.
-Food and beds were furnished the travelers, and their cattle were
-accommodated under the same roof and in unpleasant proximity. The plan
-of an inn at Pompeii (Fig. 185) may be taken as a fair sample of all
-such houses. The entrance (<i>a</i>) is broad enough to admit wagons into
-the wagon-room (<i>f</i>), behind which is the stable (<i>k</i>). In one corner
-is a watering-trough (<i>l</i>), in another a <i>latrīna</i> (<i>i</i>). On either
-side of the entrance is a wineroom (<i>b</i>, <i>d</i>), with the room of the
-proprietor (<i>c</i>) opening off one of them. The small rooms (<i>e</i>, <i>g</i>,
-<i>h</i>) are bedrooms, and others in the second story over the wagon-room
-were reached by the back stairway. The front stairway has an entrance
-of its own from the street and the rooms reached by it had probably no
-connection with the inn. Behind this stairway on the lower floor was a
-fireplace (<i>m</i>) with a water heater. An idea of the moderate prices
-charged in such places may be had from a bill which has come down to
-us in an inscription preserved in the museum at Naples: a pint of wine
-with bread, one cent; other food, two cents; hay for a mule, two
-cents. The corners of streets were the favorite sites for inns, and
-they had signs (the elephant, the eagle, etc.) like those of much
-later times.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect389"><b>389</b></a></span>
-<b>Speed.</b>&mdash;The lack of public conveyances running on regular
-schedules (<a href="#sect380">§380</a>) makes it impossible to tell the speed ordinarily made
-by travelers. It depended upon the total distance to be covered, the
-degree of comfort demanded by the traveler, the urgency of his
-business, and the facilities at his command. Cicero speaks of
-fifty-six miles in ten hours by cart (<a href="#sect384">§384</a>) as something unusual, but
-on such roads it ought to have been possible to go much faster, if
-fresh horses were provided at the proper distances, and if the
-traveler could stand the fatigue. The sending of letters gives the
-best standard of comparison. There was no public postal service, but
-every Roman of position had among his slaves special messengers
-(<i>tabellāriī</i>), whose business it was to deliver important letters for
-him. They covered from twenty-six to twenty-seven miles on foot in a
-day, and from forty to fifty in carts. We know that letters were sent
-from Rome to Brundisium, 370 Roman miles, in six days, and on to
-Athens in fifteen more. A letter from Sicily would reach Rome on the
-seventh day, from Africa on the twenty-first day, from Britain on the
-thirty-third day, and from Syria on the fiftieth day. In the time of
-Washington it was no unusual thing for a letter to take a month to go
-from the eastern to the southern states in winter.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect390"><b>390</b></a></span>
-<b>Sending Letters.</b>&mdash;For long distances, especially over seas,
-sending letters by special messengers was very expensive, and, except
-for the most urgent matters, recourse was had to traders and travelers
-going in the desired direction. Persons sending messengers or
-intending to travel themselves made it a point of honor to notify
-their friends in time for letters to be prepared and also carried
-letters for entire strangers, if requested to do so. There was great
-danger, of course, that letters sent in this way might fall into the
-wrong hands or be lost. It was customary, therefore, to send a copy of
-an important letter (<i>litterae eōdem exemplō</i>, <i>ūnō exemplō</i>), or at
-least an abstract of its contents, by another person and if possible
-by a different route. It was also customary to disguise the meaning by
-the use of fictitious names known to the correspondents only or by the
-employment of regular cypher codes. Suetonius tells us that Caesar
-simply substituted for each letter the one that stood three places
-lower in the alphabet: D for A, E for B, etc., but really elaborate
-and intricate systems were in common use.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure186">
- <tr>
- <td width="564">
- <img src="images/figure186.jpg" alt="FIGURE 186. CODICILLI">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="564" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 186.
- C<small>ODICILLI</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure187">
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <img src="images/figure187.jpg" alt="FIGURE 187. BRONZE STILUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="150" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 187.<br>
- B<small>RONZE</small> S<small>TILUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect391"><b>391</b></a></span>
-<b>Writing the Letters.</b>&mdash;The extensive correspondence carried on by
-every Roman of position (<a href="#sect379">§379</a>) made it impossible for him to write any
-but the most important of his letters or those to his dearest friends
-with his own hand. The place of the stenographer and writing machine
-of to-day was taken by slaves or freedmen, often highly educated
-(<a href="#sect154">§154</a>), who wrote at his dictation. Such slaves were called in general
-terms <i>librāriī</i>, more accurately <i>servī ab epistolīs</i>, <i>servī ā
-manū</i>, or <i>āmanuēnsēs</i>. Notes and short letters were written on
-tablets (<i>tabellae</i>, Fig. 24, <a href="#sect110">§110</a>) of firwood or ivory of various
-sizes, often fastened together in sets of two or more by wire hinges
-(<i>codicillī</i>, <i>pugillārēs</i>, Fig. 186). The inner faces were slightly
-hollowed out and the depression was nearly filled with wax, so as to
-leave merely a raised rim about the edges, much like the frame of an
-old-fashioned slate. Upon the wax the letters were traced with an
-ivory or metal tool (<i>stilus</i>, <i>graphium</i>) with one end pointed, like
-a pencil, for writing, and the other made broad and flat, like a paper
-cutter, for smoothing the wax (Fig. 187). With the flat end mistakes
-could be corrected or the whole letter erased and the tablets used
-again, often for the reply to the letter itself. For longer
-communications the Romans used a coarse paper (<i>papyrus</i>), the making
-of which will be described below. Upon it they wrote with pens made of
-split reeds and with a thick ink made of soot (lampblack) mixed with
-resinous gums. Paper, pens, and ink were so poor that the bulky and
-awkward tablets were used by preference for all but the longest
-letters. Parchment did not come into general use until the fourth or
-fifth century of our era.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect392"><b>392</b></a></span>
-<b>Sealing and Opening the Letters.</b>&mdash;For sealing the letter thread
-(<i>līnum</i>), wax (<i>cēra</i>), and a seal (<i>sīgnum</i>) were necessary. The
-seal (<a href="#sect255">§255</a>) not only secured the letter against improper inspection,
-but also attested the genuineness of those written by the <i>librariī</i>,
-as autograph signatures seem not to have been thought of. The tablets
-having been put together face to face with the writing on the inside,
-the thread was passed around them and through small holes bored
-through them, and was then securely tied. Upon the knot softened wax
-was dropped and to this the seal was applied. Letters written on
-sheets of paper (<i>schedae</i>) were rolled longitudinally and then
-secured in the same way. On the outside was written the name of the
-person addressed with perhaps the place where he was to be found if
-the letter was not sent by a special messenger. When the letter was
-opened care was taken not to break the seal, the cutting of the thread
-giving access to the contents. If the letter was preserved the seal
-was kept attached to it in order to attest its authenticity. Cicero
-describes the opening of a letter in the tenth paragraph of the Third
-Oration against Catiline.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure188">
- <tr>
- <td width="620">
- <img src="images/figure188.jpg" alt="FIGURE 188.
- FRAGMENT OF PAPYRUS ROLL FROM HERCULANEUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="620" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 188.
- F<small>RAGMENT OF</small> P<small>APYRUS</small>
- R<small>OLL FROM</small> H<small>ERCULANEUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect393"><b>393</b></a></span>
-<b>Books.</b>&mdash;Almost all the materials used by the ancients to receive
-writing were known to the Romans and used by them for one purpose or
-another, at one time or another. For the publication of works of
-literature, however, during the period when the great classics were
-produced, the only material was paper (<i>papyrus</i>), the only form the
-roll (<i>volūmen</i>). The book of modern form (<i>cōdex</i>), written on
-parchment (<i>membrānum</i>), played an important part in the preservation
-of the literature of Rome, but did not come into use for the purpose
-of publication until long after the canon of the classics had been
-completed and the great masters had passed away. The Romans adopted
-the papyrus roll from the Greeks; the Greeks had received it from the
-Egyptians. When the Egyptians first made use of it we do not know, but
-we have preserved to us Egyptian rolls that were written at least
-twenty-five hundred years before the Christian era. The oldest Roman
-books of this sort that have been preserved were found in Herculaneum,
-badly charred and broken. Those that have been deciphered contain no
-Latin author of any value. A specimen of the writing on one of these,
-a mere fragment by an unknown author, is shown in Fig. 188. At the
-time it was buried there were still to be seen rolls in the
-handwriting of the Gracchi, and autographs of Cicero, Vergil, and
-Horace must have been common enough. All these have since perished so
-far as we know.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect394"><b>394</b></a></span>
-<b>Manufacture of Paper.</b>&mdash;The papyrus reed had a jointed stem,
-triangular in shape, and reached a maximum height of perhaps fourteen
-feet with a thickness of four or five inches. The stem contained a
-pith of which the paper was made by a process substantially as
-follows: The stem was cut through at the joints, the hard rind
-removed, and the pith cut into thin sections or strips as evenly as
-possible. The first cut seems to have been made from one of the angles
-to the middle of the opposite side, and the others parallel with it to
-the right and left. The strips were then assorted according to width,
-and enough of them were arranged side by side as closely as possible
-upon a board to make their combined width almost equal to the length
-of the single strip. Across these was laid another layer at right
-angles, with perhaps a coating of glue or paste between them. The
-mat-like sheet that resulted was then soaked in water and pressed or
-hammered into a substance not unlike our paper, called by the Romans
-<i>charta</i>. After the sheets (<i>schēdae</i>) had been dried and bleached in
-the sun, they were rid by scraping of rough places and trimmed into
-uniform sizes, depending upon the length of the strips of pith. The
-fewer the strips that composed each sheet, or in other words the
-greater the width of each strip, the closer the texture of the
-<i>charta</i> and the better its quality. It was possible, therefore, to
-grade the paper by its size, and the width of the sheet rather than
-its height was taken as the standard. The best quality seems to have
-been sold in sheets about ten inches wide, the poorest that could be
-used to write upon, about six. The height in each case was perhaps one
-inch to two inches greater. It has been calculated that a single
-papyrus plant would make about twenty sheets of the size proportioned
-to its height, and this number seems to have been made the commercial
-unit of measure (<i>scāpus</i>), by which the paper was sold in the market,
-a unit corresponding roughly to our quire.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure189">
- <tr>
- <td width="373">
- <img src="images/figure189.jpg" alt="FIGURE 189.
- INSTRUMENTS USED IN WRITING">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="373" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 189.
- I<small>NSTRUMENTS</small> U<small>SED IN</small>
- W<small>RITING</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect395"><b>395</b></a></span>
-<b>Pens and Ink.</b>&mdash;Only the upper surface of the sheet was commonly
-written upon, the one formed by the horizontal layer of strips, and
-these showing even after the process of manufacture served to guide
-the pen of the writer. In the case of books where it was important to
-keep the number of lines constant to the page, they were ruled with a
-circular piece of lead. The pen (<i>calamus</i>) was made of a reed brought
-to a point and cleft much as our quill pens are. For the black ink
-(<i>ātrāmentum</i>, <a href="#sect391">§391</a>) was occasionally substituted the liquid of the
-cuttlefish. Red ink was much used for headings, ornaments, and the
-like, and in pictures the inkstand is generally represented with two
-compartments (Fig. 189). The ink was more like paint than modern ink,
-and could be wiped off when fresh with a damp sponge and washed off
-even when it had become dry and hard. To wash sheets in order to use
-them a second time was a mark of poverty or niggardliness, but the
-reverse side of <i>schēdae</i> that had served their purpose was often used
-for scratch paper, especially in the schools (<a href="#sect110">§110</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect396"><b>396</b></a></span>
-<b>Making the Roll.</b>&mdash;A single sheet might serve for a letter or
-other brief document, but for literary purposes many sheets would be
-required. These were not fastened side by side in a back, as are the
-separate sheets in our books, or numbered and laid loosely together,
-as we arrange them in our letters and manuscripts, but after the
-writing was done they were glued together at the sides (not at the
-tops) into a long unwieldy strip, with the lines on each sheet running
-parallel with the length of the strip, and with the writing on each
-sheet forming a column perpendicular to the length of the strip. On
-each side of the sheet, therefore, a margin was left as the writing
-was done, and these margins overlapping and glued together made a
-thick blank space, a double thickness of paper, between every two
-sheets in the strip. Very broad margins, too, were left at the top and
-bottom, where the paper would suffer from use a great deal more than
-in our books. When the sheets had been securely fastened together in
-the proper order a thin slip of wood was glued to the left (outer)
-margin of the first sheet, and a second slip (<i>umbilīcus</i>) to the
-right (also outer) margin of the last sheet, much as a wall map is
-mounted to-day. When not in use the volume was kept tightly rolled
-about the <i>umbilīcus</i>, and hence received its name (<i>volūmen</i>).</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure190">
- <tr>
- <td width="143">
- <img src="images/figure190.jpg" alt="FIGURE 190. CAPSA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="143" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 190.
- C<small>APSA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect397"><b>397</b></a></span>
-A roll intended for permanent preservation was finished with the
-greatest care. The top and bottom (<i>frontēs</i>) were trimmed perfectly
-smooth, polished with pumice-stone, and often painted black. The back
-of the roll was rubbed with cedar oil to defend it from moths and
-mice. To the ends of the <i>umbilīcus</i> were added knobs (<i>cornua</i>),
-sometimes gilded or painted a bright color. The first sheet would be
-used for the dedication, if there was one, and on the back of it a few
-words were frequently written giving a clue to the contents of the
-roll; sometimes a portrait of the author graced this page. In many
-books the full title and the name of the author were written only at
-the end of the roll on the last sheet, but in any case to the top of
-this sheet was glued a strip of parchment (<i>titulus</i>) with the title
-and author's name upon it, which projected above the edge of the roll.
-For every roll a parchment cover was made, cylindrical in form, into
-which it was slipped from the top, the <i>titulus</i> alone being visible.
-If a work was divided into several volumes (see below), the rolls were
-put together in a bundle (<i>fascis</i>) and kept in a wooden box (<i>capsa</i>,
-<i>scrīnium</i>) like a modern hat box. When the cover was removed the
-<i>titulī</i> were visible and the roll desired could be taken without
-disturbing the others (Fig. 190). The rolls were kept sometimes in
-cupboards (<i>armāria</i>, <a href="#sect231">§231</a>), laid lengthwise on the shelves with the
-<i>titulī</i> to the front, as shown in the figure in the next paragraph.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure191">
- <tr>
- <td width="315">
- <img src="images/figure191.jpg" alt="FIGURE 191. READING A ROLL">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="315" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 191.
- R<small>EADING A</small> R<small>OLL</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect398"><b>398</b></a></span>
-<b>Size of the Rolls.</b>&mdash;When a volume was consulted the roll was
-held in both hands and unrolled column by column with the right hand,
-while with the left the reader rolled up the part he was done with on
-the slip of wood fastened to the margin of the first sheet (Fig. 191).
-When he had finished reading he rolled it back upon the <i>umbilīcus</i>,
-usually holding it under the chin and turning the <i>cornua</i> with both
-hands. In the case of a long roll this turning backward and forward
-took much time and patience and must have sadly soiled and damaged the
-roll itself. The early rolls were always long and heavy. There was
-theoretically no limit to the number of sheets that might be glued
-together, and consequently none to the size or length of the roll. It
-was made as long as was necessary to contain the given work. In
-ancient Egypt rolls were put together of more than fifty yards in
-length, and in early times rolls of approximate length were used in
-Greece and Rome. From the third century <small>B.C.</small>, however, it had become
-customary to divide works of great length into two or more volumes,
-the division at first being purely arbitrary and made wherever it was
-convenient to end the roll, no matter how much the unity of thought
-was interrupted. A century later authors had begun to divide their
-works into convenient parts, each part having a unity of its own, such
-as the five "books" of Cicero's <i>Dē Fīnibus</i>, and to each of these
-parts or "books" was given a separate roll. An innovation so
-convenient and sensible quickly became the universal rule. It even
-worked backward, some ancient works being divided into books, which
-had not been so divided by their authors, e.g., Herodotus, Thucydides,
-and Naevius. About the same time, too, it became the custom to put the
-sheets upon the market already glued together, to the amount at least
-of the <i>scāpus</i> (<a href="#sect394">§394</a>). It was, of course, much easier to glue two or
-three of these together, or to cut off the unused part of one, than to
-work with the separate sheets. The ready-made rolls, moreover, were
-put together in a most workmanlike manner. Even sheets of the same
-quality (<a href="#sect394">§394</a>) would vary slightly in toughness or finish, and the
-manufacturers of the roll were careful to put the very best sheets at
-the beginning, where the wear was the most severe, and to keep for the
-end the less perfect sheets, which might sometimes be cut off
-altogether.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect399"><b>399</b></a></span>
-<b>Multiplication of Books.</b>&mdash;The process of publishing the largest
-book at Rome differed in no important respect from that of writing the
-shortest letter. Every copy was made by itself, the hundredth or the
-thousandth taking just as much time and labor as the first had done.
-The author's copy would be distributed among a number of <i>librāriī</i>,
-his own, if he were a man of wealth, a Caesar or a Sallust, his
-patron's, if he were a poor man, a Terence or a Vergil. Each of the
-<i>librāriī</i> would write and rewrite the portions assigned to him, until
-the required number of copies had been made. The sheets would then be
-arranged in the proper order and the rolls mounted as has been
-described. Finally the books had to be looked through to correct the
-errors that were sure to be made, a process much more tedious than the
-modern proofreading, because every copy had to be corrected
-separately, as no two copies would show precisely the same errors.
-Books made in this way were almost exclusively for gifts, though
-friends would exchange books with friends and a few might find their
-way into the market. Up to the last century of the Republic, however,
-there was no organized book trade, and no such thing as commercial
-publication. When a man wanted a book, instead of buying it at a
-bookstore he borrowed a copy from a friend and had his <i>librāriī</i> make
-him as many more as he desired. In this way Atticus made for himself
-and Cicero copies of all the Greek and Latin books on which he could
-lay his hands, and distributed Cicero's own writings everywhere.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect400"><b>400</b></a></span>
-<b>Commercial Publication.</b>&mdash;The publication of books at Rome as a
-business began in the time of Cicero. There was no copyright law and
-no protection therefore for author or publisher. The author's
-pecuniary returns came in the form of gifts or grants from those whose
-favor he had won by his genius; the publisher depended, in the case of
-new books, upon meeting the demand before his rivals could market
-their editions, and, in the case of standard books, upon the accuracy,
-elegance, and cheapness of his copies. The process of commercial
-publication was essentially the same as that already described, except
-that larger numbers of <i>librāriī</i> would be employed and the copy would
-be read to all at once to save them the trouble of handling the
-awkward roll and keeping the place as they wrote. The publisher would
-estimate as closely as possible the demand for any new work that he
-had secured, would put as large a number of scribes upon it as
-possible, and would take care that no copies should leave his
-establishment until his whole edition was ready. After the copies were
-once on sale they could be reproduced by anyone. The best houses took
-all possible pains to have their books free from errors, having
-competent correctors to read them copy by copy, but in spite of their
-efforts blunders were legion. Authors sometimes corrected with their
-own hands the copies intended for their friends. In the case of
-standard works purchasers often hired scholars of reputation to revise
-their copies for them, and copies of known excellence were borrowed or
-hired at high prices for the purpose of comparison.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect401"><b>401</b></a></span>
-<b>Rapidity and Cost of Publication.</b>&mdash;Cicero tells us of Roman
-senators who wrote fast enough to take evidence <i>verbātim</i>, and the
-trained scribes must have far surpassed them in speed. Martial tells
-us that his second book could be copied in an hour. It contains five
-hundred and forty verses, which would make the scribe equal to nine
-verses to the minute. It is evident that a small edition, no larger,
-for example, than twice or three times the number of the scribes,
-could be put upon the market more quickly than it could be furnished
-now. The cost of the books varied, of course, with their size and the
-style of their mounting. Martial's first book, containing eight
-hundred and twenty lines and covering twenty-nine pages in Teubner's
-text, sold at thirty cents, fifty cents, and one dollar; his <i>Xenia</i>,
-containing two hundred and seventy-four verses and covering fourteen
-pages in Teubner's text, sold at twenty cents, but cost the publisher
-less than ten. Such prices would hardly be considered excessive now.
-Much would depend upon the reputation of the author and the consequent
-demand, and high prices were put on certain books. Autograph
-copies&mdash;Gellius († about 180 <small>A.D.</small>) says that one by Vergil cost the
-owner $100&mdash;and copies whose correctness was vouched for by some
-recognized authority commanded extraordinary prices.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect402"><b>402</b></a></span>
-<b>Libraries.</b>&mdash;The gathering of books in large private collections
-began to be general only toward the end of the Republic. Cicero had
-considerable libraries not only in his house at Rome, but also at
-every one of his half-dozen country seats. Probably the bringing to
-Rome of whole libraries from the East and Greece by Lucullus and Sulla
-started the fashion of collecting books; at any rate collections were
-made by many persons who knew and cared nothing about the contents of
-the rolls, and every town house had its library (<a href="#sect206">§206</a>) lined with
-volumes. In these libraries were often displayed busts of great
-writers and statues of the Muses. Public libraries date from the time
-of Augustus. The first to be opened in Rome was founded by Asinius
-Pollio (†4 <small>A.D.</small>), and was housed in the <i>Ātrium Lībertātis</i>. Augustus
-himself founded two others, and the number was brought up to
-twenty-eight by his successors. The most magnificent of these was the
-<i>Bibliothēca Ulpia</i>, founded by Trajan. Smaller cities had their
-libraries, too, and even the little town of Comum boasted one founded
-by the younger Pliny and supported by an endowment that produced
-thirty thousand sesterces annually. The public baths often had
-libraries and reading-rooms attached (<a href="#sect365">§365</a>).</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap11"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
-
-<h4>SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY</h4>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect403"><b>403</b></a></span>
-It is evident from what has been said that abundant means were
-necessary to support the state in which every Roman of position lived.
-It will be of interest to see how the great mass of the people also
-earned the scantier living with which they were forced to be content.
-For the sake of this inquiry it will be convenient, if not very
-accurate, to divide the people of Rome into the three great classes of
-nobles, knights, and commons, into which political history has
-distributed them. At the same time it must be remembered that there
-was no hard and fixed line drawn between any two of these classes; a
-noble might if he pleased associate himself with the knights, provided
-only that he possessed the required sum of $20,000, and any freeborn
-citizen might aspire to the highest offices of the state, however mean
-the circumstances of his birth, however poor in pocket or in talent he
-might be.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect404"><b>404</b></a></span>
-<b>Careers of the Nobles.</b>&mdash;The nobles inherited certain of the
-aristocratic notions of the old patriciate, which limited their
-business activities and had much to do with the corruption of public
-life in the last century of the Republic. Men in their position were
-held to be above all manner of work, with the hands or with the head,
-for the sake of sordid gain. Agriculture alone was free from debasing
-associations, as it has been in England within our own time, and
-statecraft and war were the only careers fit to engage their energies.
-Even as statesmen and generals, too, they served their fellow citizens
-without material reward, for no salaries were drawn by the senators,
-none were attached to the magistracies or to positions of military
-command. This theory had worked well enough in the time before the
-Punic wars, when every Roman was a farmer, when the farm produced all
-that he needed for his simple wants, when he left it only to serve as
-a soldier in his young manhood or as a senator in his old age, and
-returned to his fields, like Cincinnatus, when his services were no
-longer required by his country. Under the aristocracy that supplanted
-the pure democracy of the earlier time, it subverted every aim that it
-was intended to secure.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect405"><b>405</b></a></span>
-<b>Agriculture.</b>&mdash;The farm life that Cicero has described so
-eloquently and praised so enthusiastically in his <i>Catō Māior</i> would
-have scarcely been recognized by Cato himself and had become a memory
-or a dream long before Cicero wrote. The farmer no longer tilled his
-fields, even with the help of his slaves. The yeoman class had
-practically disappeared from Italy. The small holdings had been
-absorbed in the vast estates of the wealthy landowners, and the aims
-and methods of farming had wholly changed. Something has been said of
-this already (<a href="#sect146">§146</a> f.), and it will be sufficient here to recall the
-fact that grain was no longer raised for the market in Italy, simply
-because the market could be supplied more cheaply from over seas. The
-grape and the olive had become the chief sources of wealth, and for
-them Sallust and Horace complain that less and less space was being
-left by the parks and pleasure grounds (<a href="#sect145">§145</a>). Still, the making of
-wine and oil under the direction of a careful steward (<a href="#sect148">§148</a>) must have
-been very profitable in Italy and many of the nobles had plantations
-in the provinces as well, the revenues of which helped to maintain
-their state at Rome.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect406"><b>406</b></a></span>
-<b>Political Office.</b>&mdash;Politics must have been profitable for those
-only who played the game to the end. No salaries were attached to the
-offices, and the indirect gains from one of the lower would hardly pay
-the expenses necessary to secure the next in order. The gain came
-always through positions in the provinces. The quaestorship might be
-spent in one, the praetorship and the consulship were sure to be
-followed by a year abroad. To honest men the places gave the
-opportunity to learn of profitable investments, and a good governor
-was often selected by a community to look after its interests in the
-capital, and this meant an honorarium in the form of valuable presents
-from time to time. Cicero's justice and moderation as quaestor in
-Sicily earned him a rich reward when he came to prosecute Verres for
-plundering that same province, and when he was in charge of the grain
-supply during his aedileship. To corrupt officials the provinces were
-gold mines. Every sort of robbery and extortion was practiced, and the
-governor was expected to enrich not merely himself but also the
-<i>cohors</i> (<a href="#sect118">§118</a>) that had accompanied him. Catullus bitterly complains
-of the selfishness of Memmius, who had kept for himself all the
-plunder of Bithynia. The story of Verres may be read in any history of
-Rome; it differs from that of the average governor only in the fate
-that overtook the offender.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect407"><b>407</b></a></span>
-<b>The Law.</b>&mdash;Closely connected with the political career then as
-now was that of the law, but Rome knew of no class of professional
-advocates practicing for fees and living upon their practice. And
-there were no conditions imposed for practicing in the courts, not
-even the good moral character which is insisted upon in Indiana.
-Anyone could bring suit against anyone else on any charge that he
-pleased, and it was no uncommon thing for a young politician to use
-this license for the purpose of gaining notoriety, even when he knew
-there were no grounds for the charges he brought. On the other hand
-the lawyer was forbidden to accept pay for his services. In olden
-times the client had of his right gone to his patron for legal advice
-(<a href="#sect179">§179</a>), and the lawyer of later times was theoretically at least at
-the service of all who applied to him. Men of the highest character
-made it a point of honor to put their technical knowledge freely at
-the disposal of their fellow citizens. At the same time the statutes
-against fees were easily evaded. Grateful clients could not be
-prevented from making valuable presents, and it was a very common
-thing for generous legacies to be left to successful advocates. Cicero
-had no other source of income, so far as we know, but while he was
-never a rich man, he owned a house on the Palatine (<a href="#sect221">§221</a>, note) and
-half a dozen country seats, lived well, and spent money lavishly on
-works of art (<a href="#sect227">§227</a>) that appealed to his tastes, and on books (<a href="#sect402">§402</a>).
-Corrupt judges (<i>praetōrēs</i>) could find other sources of income then
-as now, of course, but we hear more of this in relation to the jurors
-(<i>iudicēs</i>) than the judges, probably because with a province before
-him the <i>praetor</i> did not think it fitting to stoop to petty
-bribetaking.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect408"><b>408</b></a></span><b>The Army.</b>&mdash;The spoils of war went nominally into the treasury of
-the state. Practically they passed first through the hands of the
-commanding general, who kept what he pleased for himself, his staff
-(<a href="#sect118">§118</a>), and his soldiers and sent the rest to Rome. The opportunities
-were magnificent, and the Roman general understood how to use them
-all. Some of them were legitimate enough according to the usages of
-the time, the plunder of the towns and cities that were taken, the
-ransom exacted from those that were spared, the sale of captives as
-slaves (<a href="#sect134">§134</a>). Entirely illegitimate, of course, were the fortunes
-made by furnishing supplies to the army at extravagant prices or
-diverting these supplies to private uses. The reconstruction of the
-conquered territory brought in returns equally rich; it is safe to say
-that the Aedui paid Caesar well for the supremacy in central Gaul that
-he assured them after his defeat of the Helvetii. The civil wars that
-cost the best blood of Italy made the victors immensely rich. Besides
-the looting of the public treasury, the estates of men in the opposing
-party were confiscated and sold to the highest bidder. The proceeds
-went nominally to the treasury of the new government, but the proceeds
-were infinitesimal in comparison with the profits. After Sulla had
-established himself in Rome the names of friends and foes alike were
-put on the proscription lists, and if powerful influence was not
-exerted in their behalf they lost lives and fortunes. For the
-influence they had to pay dearly. One example may be cited. The estate
-of one Roscius of Ameria, valued at $300,000, was bid in for $100 by
-Lucius Chrysogonus, a freedman of Sulla, because no one dared bid
-against the creature of the dictator. The settling of the soldiers on
-grants of land made good business for the three commissioners who
-superintended the distribution of the land. The grants were always of
-farms owned and occupied by adherents of the beaten party, and the
-bribes came from both sides.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect409"><b>409</b></a></span>
-<b>Careers of the Equites.</b>&mdash;The name of knight had lost its
-original significance long before the time of Cicero. The equites had
-become the class of capitalists who found in financial transactions
-the excitement and the profit that the nobles found in politics and
-war. It was the immense scale of their operations that relieved them
-from the stigma that attached to working for gain, just as in modern
-times the wholesale dealer may have a social position entirely beyond
-the hopes of the small retailer. As a body the equites exerted
-considerable political influence, holding in fact the balance of power
-between the senatorial and the democratic parties. As a rule they
-exerted this influence only so far as was necessary to secure
-legislation favorable to them as a class, and to insure as governors
-for the provinces men that would not look too closely into their
-transactions there. For it was in the provinces that the knights as
-well as the nobles found their best opportunities. Their chief
-business was the farming of the revenues. For this purpose syndicates
-were formed, which paid into the public treasury a lump sum, fixed by
-the senate, and reimbursed themselves by collecting what they could
-from the province. The profits were beyond all reason, and the word
-publican became a synonym for sinner. Besides farming the revenues
-they "financed" the provinces and allied states, advancing money to
-meet the ordinary or extraordinary expenses. Sulla levied a
-contribution of 20,000 talents (about $20,000,000) on Asia. The money
-was advanced by a syndicate of Roman capitalists, and they had
-collected the amount six times over when Sulla interfered, for fear
-that there would be nothing left for him in case of further needs.
-More than one pretender was set upon a puppet throne in the East in
-order to secure the payment of sums previously loaned him by the
-capitalists. Their operations as individuals were only less extensive
-and profitable. The grain in the provinces, the wool, the products of
-mines and factories could be moved only with the money advanced by
-them. They ventured, too, to engage in commercial enterprises abroad
-that were barred against them at home, doing the buying and selling
-themselves, not merely supplying the means to others. They loaned
-money to individuals, too, though at Rome money lending was
-discreditable. The usual rate was twelve per cent, but Marcus Brutus
-was loaning money at forty-eight per cent in Cilicia, when Cicero went
-there as governor in 51 <small>B.C.</small>, and expected Cicero to enforce his
-contracts for him.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect410"><b>410</b></a></span>
-<b>The Soldiers.</b>&mdash;The freeborn citizens of Rome below the nobles
-and the knights may be roughly divided into two classes, the soldiers
-and the proletariate. The civil wars had driven them from their farms
-or had unfitted them for the work of farming, and the pride of race or
-the competition of slave labor had closed against them the other
-avenues of industry, numerous as these must have been in the world's
-capital. The best of this class turned to the army. This had long
-since ceased to be composed of citizen-soldiers, called out to meet a
-special emergency for a single campaign, and disbanded at its close.
-It was what we should call a regular army, the soldiers enlisting for
-a term of twenty years, receiving stated pay and certain privileges
-after an honorable discharge. In time of peace, when there was peace,
-they were employed on public works (<a href="#sect385">§385</a>). The pay was small, perhaps
-forty or fifty dollars a year with rations in Caesar's time, but this
-was as much as a laborer could earn by the hardest kind of toil, and
-the soldier had the glory of war to set over against the stigma of
-work, and hopes of presents from his commander and the privilege of
-occasional pillage and plunder. After he had completed his time he
-might if he chose return to Rome, but many had formed connections in
-the communities where their posts were fixed and preferred to make
-their homes there on free grants of land, an important instrument in
-spreading Roman civilization.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect411"><b>411</b></a></span>
-<b>The Proletariate.</b>&mdash;In addition to the idle and the profligate
-attracted to Rome by the free corn and by the other allurements that
-bring a like element into our cities now, large numbers of the
-industrious and the frugal had been forced into the city by the loss
-of their property during the civil wars and the failure to find
-employment elsewhere. No exact estimate of the number of these
-unemployed people can be given, but it is known that before Caesar's
-time it had passed the mark of 300,000. Relief was occasionally given
-by the establishing of colonies on the frontiers&mdash;in this way Caesar
-put as many as 80,000 in the way of earning their living again, short
-as was his administration of affairs at Rome&mdash;but it was the least
-harmful element that was willing to emigrate and the dregs were left
-behind. Aside from beggary and petty crimes their only source of
-income was the sale of their votes, and this made them a real menace
-to the Republic. Under the Empire their political influence was lost
-and the state found it necessary to make distributions of money
-occasionally to relieve their want. Some of them played client to the
-upstart rich (<a href="#sect181">§181</a>), but the most were content to be fed by the state
-and amused by the constantly increasing shows and games (<a href="#sect322">§322</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect412"><b>412</b></a></span>
-<b>Professions and Trades.</b>&mdash;The professions and trades, between
-which the Romains made no distinction, in the last years of the
-Republic were practically given over to the <i>lībertīnī</i> (<a href="#sect175">§175</a>) and to
-foreigners. Of some of these something has been said already. Teachers
-were poorly paid (<a href="#sect121">§121</a>), and usually looked upon with contempt.
-Physicians were held in no higher esteem, but seem to have been well
-paid, if we may judge from those that were attached to the court. Two
-of these left a joint estate of $1,000,000, and another received from
-the Emperor Claudius a yearly stipend of $25,000. In knowledge and
-skill in both surgery and medicine they do not seem to have been much
-behind the practitioners of two centuries ago. Bankers united money
-changing with money loaning. The former was very necessary in a city
-into which came all the coins of the known world; the latter was never
-looked upon as entirely respectable for a Roman, but there can be no
-doubt that many a Roman of the highest respectability drew large
-profits from this business, carried on discreetly in the name of a
-freedman. The trades were early organized at Rome in guilds, but their
-only purpose seems to have been to hand down and perfect the technique
-of the crafts; at least there was no obstacle in the way of workmen
-not belonging to the guilds, and there were no such things known as
-patents or special privileges in the way of work. Eight of these
-guilds are older than history, those of the fullers, cobblers,
-carpenters, goldsmiths, coppersmiths, potters, dyers, and (oddly
-enough) the fluteblowers. Numerous others were formed as knowledge of
-the arts advanced or the division of labor proceeded. Special parts of
-the city seem to have been appropriated by special classes of workmen,
-as like businesses are apt to be carried on in the same neighborhood
-in our cities: Cicero speaks of a street of the Scythemakers.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect413"><b>413</b></a></span>
-<b>Business and Commerce.</b>&mdash;The commerce of Rome covered all lands
-and seas. Pliny tells us that the trade with India and China took from
-Rome $5,000,000 yearly. The wholesale trade was to a large extent in
-the hands of the capitalist class, the retail business was conducted
-by freedmen and foreigners. How large these businesses were we have no
-means of telling. The supplying of the food to the city must have
-given employment to thousands; the clothing trade has been mentioned
-already (<a href="#sect271">§271</a>). Building operations were carried on at an immense cost
-and on the largest scale. All the public buildings and many of the
-important private buildings were built by contract. There can be
-little doubt that the letting of the contracts for the public
-buildings was made very profitable for the officers who had it to do,
-but it must be admitted on the other hand that the work was well done.
-Crassus seems to have done a sort of salvage business. When buildings
-seemed certain to be destroyed by fire he would buy them with their
-contents at a nominal sum, and then fight the flames with gangs of
-slaves that he had trained for the purpose. The slave trade itself was
-very considerable and large fortunes were amassed in it (<a href="#sect139">§139</a>). The
-heavy work of ordinary laborers was performed almost entirely by
-slaves (<a href="#sect148">§148</a>), and it must be remembered that much work was then done
-by hand that is now done by machinery. The book business has been
-mentioned (<a href="#sect400">§400</a>). Even the place of the modern newspaper was taken by
-letters written as a business by persons who collected all the news,
-gossip, and scandal of the city, had it copied by slaves, and sent it
-to persons away from the city who did not like to trouble their
-friends (<a href="#sect379">§379</a>) and were willing to pay for intelligence.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect414"><b>414</b></a></span>
-<b>The Civil Service.</b>&mdash;The free persons employed in the offices of
-the various magistrates were of the lowest class, mostly <i>lībertīnī</i>.
-They were paid by the state, and while appointed nominally for a year
-only, they seem to have practically held their places during good
-behavior. This was largely due to the shortness of the term of the
-regular magistrates and the rarity of reëlection. Having no
-experience themselves in conducting their offices the magistrates
-would have all the greater need of thoroughly trained and experienced
-assistants. The highest class of these officials formed an <i>ōrdō</i>, the
-<i>scrībae</i>, whose name gives no adequate notion of the extent and
-importance of their duties. All that is now done by cabinet officers,
-secretaries, department heads, bureau chiefs, auditors, comptrollers,
-recorders, and accountants, down to the work of the ordinary clerks
-and copyists, was done by these "scribes." Below them came others
-almost equally necessary but not equally respected, the lictors,
-messengers, etc. These civil servants had special places at the
-theater and the circus. The positions seem to have been in great
-demand, as such places are now in France, for example. Horace is said
-to have been a department clerk.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect415"><b>415</b></a></span>
-<b>The Roman's Day.</b>&mdash;The way in which a Roman spent his day
-depended, of course, upon his position and business, and varied
-greatly with individuals and with the particular day. The ordinary
-routine of a man of the higher class, the man of whom we read most
-frequently in Roman literature, was something like this: The Roman
-rose at a very early hour, his day beginning before sunrise, because
-it ended so early. After a hurried breakfast (<a href="#sect302">§302</a>) he devoted such
-time as was necessary to his private business, looking over accounts,
-consulting with his managers, giving directions, etc. Cicero and Pliny
-found these early hours the best for their literary work. Horace tells
-of lawyers giving free advice at three in the morning. After his
-private business was despatched the Roman took his place in the
-<i>ātrium</i> (<a href="#sect198">§198</a>) for the <i>salūtātiō</i> (<a href="#sect182">§182</a>), when his clients came to
-pay their respects, perhaps to ask for the help or advice that he was
-bound to furnish them (<a href="#sect179">§179</a>). All this business of the early morning
-might have to be dispensed with, however, if the Roman was asked to a
-wedding (<a href="#sect79">§79</a>), or to be present at the naming of a child (<a href="#sect97">§97</a>), or to
-witness the coming of age (<a href="#sect128">§128</a>) of the son of a friend, for all these
-semi-public functions took place in the early morning. But after them
-or after the levee the Roman went to the forum attended by his clients
-and carried in his litter (<a href="#sect151">§151</a>) with his <i>nōmenclātor</i> at his elbow.
-The business of the courts and of the senate began about the third
-hour, and might continue until the ninth or tenth, that of the senate
-was bound to stop at sunset. Except on extraordinary occasions all
-business was pretty sure to be over before eleven o'clock, and at this
-time the lunch was taken (<a href="#sect302">§302</a>).</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect416"><b>416</b></a></span>
-Then came the midday siesta, so general that the streets were as
-deserted as at midnight, and one of the Roman writers fixes upon this
-as the proper time for a ghost story. Of course there were no sessions
-of the courts or meetings of the senate on the public holidays, and
-then the hours generally given to business might be spent at the
-theater or the circus or other games. As a matter of fact the Romans
-of the better class rather avoided these shows, unless they were
-officially connected with them, and many of them devoted the holidays
-to visiting their country estates. After the siesta, which lasted for
-an hour or more, the Roman was ready for his regular athletic exercise
-and bath, either in the Campus and the Tiber (<a href="#sect317">§317</a>) or in one of the
-public bathing establishments (<a href="#sect365">§365</a>). The bath proper (<a href="#sect367">§367</a>) was
-followed by the lounge (<a href="#sect377">§377</a>), perhaps a promenade in the court, which
-gave him a chance for a chat with a friend, or an opportunity to hear
-the latest news, to consult business associates, in short to talk over
-any of the things that men now discuss at their clubs. After this came
-the great event of the day, the dinner (<a href="#sect303">§303</a>), at his own house or at
-that of some friend, followed immediately by retirement for the night.
-Even on the days spent in the country this programme would not be
-materially changed, and the Roman took with him into the provinces the
-customs of his home life so far as possible.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure192">
- <tr>
- <td width="312">
- <img src="images/figure192.jpg" alt="FIGURE 192. ANCIENT CALENDAR">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="312" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 192.
- A<small>NCIENT</small> C<small>ALENDAR</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect417"><b>417</b></a></span>
-<b>Hours of the Day.</b>&mdash;The day itself was divided into twelve hours
-(<i>hōrae</i>), each being one-twelfth of the time between sunrise and
-sunset and varying therefore with the season of the year. The length
-of the day and hour at Rome in different times of the year is shown in
-the following table:</p>
-<table align="center" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="lengthofday">
- <tr>
- <td align="center">Month and Day</td>
- <td align="center">Length of Day</td>
- <td align="center">Length of Hour</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dec. 23</td>
- <td align="right">8° 54'</td>
- <td align="right">44' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Feb. 6</td>
- <td align="right">9° 50'</td>
- <td align="right">49' 10"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>March 23</td>
- <td align="right">12° 00'</td>
- <td align="right">1° 00' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>May 9</td>
- <td align="right">14° 10'</td>
- <td align="right">1° 10' 50"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>June 25</td>
- <td align="right">15° 06'</td>
- <td align="right">1° 15' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Aug. 10</td>
- <td align="right">14° 10'</td>
- <td align="right">1° 10' 50"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Sept. 25</td>
- <td align="right">12° 00'</td>
- <td align="right">1° 00' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Nov. 9</td>
- <td align="right">9° 50'</td>
- <td align="right">49' 10"</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect418"><b>418</b></a></span>
-Taking the days of June 25 and December 23 as respectively the
-longest and shortest of the year, the following table gives the
-conclusion of each hour for summer and winter:</p>
-<table align="center" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="hoursofday">
- <tr>
- <td align="center">Time</td>
- <td align="center">Summer</td>
- <td align="center">Winter</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">Sunrise</td>
- <td align="right">4° 27' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">7° 33' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">1st Hour</td>
- <td align="right">5° 42' 30"</td>
- <td align="right">8° 17' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">2d Hour</td>
- <td align="right">6° 58' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">9° 02' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">3d Hour</td>
- <td align="right">8° 13' 30"</td>
- <td align="right">9° 46' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">4th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">9° 29' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">10° 31' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">5th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">10° 44' 30"</td>
- <td align="right">11° 15' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">6th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">12° 00' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">12° 00' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">7th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">1° 15' 30"</td>
- <td align="right">12° 44' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">8th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">2° 31' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">1° 29' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">9th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">3° 46' 30"</td>
- <td align="right">2° 13' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">10th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">5° 02' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">2° 58' 00"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">11th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">6° 17' 30"</td>
- <td align="right">3° 42' 30"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td align="right">12th Hour</td>
- <td align="right">7° 33' 00"</td>
- <td align="right">4° 27' 00"</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>In the same way the hours may be calculated for any given day, the
-length of the day and the hour of sunrise being known, but for all
-practical purposes the old couplet will serve:</p>
-<table align="center" summary="quote2">
- <tr><td>The English hour you may fix,<br>
- If to the Latin you add six.</td></tr>
-</table>
-<p>When the Latin hour is above six it will be more convenient to
-subtract than to add.</p>
-<br>
-<br><a name="chap12"></a>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3>
-
-<h4>BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES</h4>
-
-<blockquote><small>R<small>EFERENCES</small>: Marquardt, 340-388; Voigt, 319-322, 396, 455; Göll, 480-547;
-Guhl and Koner, 580-595, 857-863; Friedländer, III, 125-137; Ramsay,
-479-482; Pauly-Wissowa, <i>cenotaphium</i>, <i>columbārium;</i> Smith, Harper,
-Rich, <i>columbārium</i>, <i>fūnus</i>, <i>sepulcrum;</i> Lübker, <i>Bestattung</i>,
-<i>sepulcrum;</i> Baumeister, 308-311, 604-609, 1520 f.; Mau-Kelsey,
-399-428; Gusman, 44-54; Egbert, Latin Inscriptions, 230-242; Lanciani,
-Ancient Rome, 64, 129 f.</small></blockquote>
-<br>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect419"><b>419</b></a></span>
-<b>Importance of Burial.</b>&mdash;The Romans' view of the future life
-explains the importance they attached to the ceremonial burial of the
-dead. The soul, they thought, could find rest only when the body had
-been duly laid in the grave; until this was done it haunted the home,
-unhappy itself and bringing unhappiness to others. To perform the
-funeral offices (<i>iūsta facere</i>) was, therefore, a solemn religious
-duty, devolving upon the surviving members of the family (<a href="#sect28">§28</a>), and
-the Latin words show that these marks of respect were looked upon as
-the right of the dead. In the case of a body lost at sea, or for any
-other reason unrecovered, the ceremonies were just as piously
-performed, an empty tomb (<i>cenotaphium</i>) being erected sometimes in
-honor of the dead. And these same rites the Roman was bound to
-perform, if he came anywhere upon the unburied corpse of a citizen,
-because all were members of the greater family of the commonwealth. In
-this case the scattering of three handfuls of dust over the body was
-sufficient for ceremonial burial and the happiness of the troubled
-spirit, if for any reason the body could not actually be interred.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect420"><b>420</b></a></span>
-<b>Interment and Cremation.</b>&mdash;Burial was the way of disposing of the
-dead practiced most anciently by the Romans, and even after cremation
-came into very general use it was ceremonially necessary that some
-small part of the remains, usually the bone of a finger, should be
-buried in the earth. Burning was practiced before the time of the
-Twelve Tables, for it is mentioned together with burial in them, but
-we do not know how long before. Hygienic reasons had probably
-something to do with its general adoption, and this implies, of
-course, cities of considerable size. By the time of Augustus it was
-all but universal, but even in Rome the practice of burial was never
-entirely discontinued, for cremation was too costly for the very
-poorest classes, and some of the wealthiest and most aristocratic
-families held fast to the more ancient custom. The Cornelii, for
-example, always buried their dead until the dictator required his body
-to be burned for fear that his bones might be disinterred and
-dishonored by his enemies, as he had dishonored those of Marius.
-Children less than forty days old were always buried, and so, too,
-slaves whose funeral expenses were paid by their masters. After the
-introduction of Christianity burial came again to be the prevailing
-use, largely because of the increased expense of burning.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure193">
- <tr>
- <td width="523">
- <img src="images/figure193.jpg" alt="FIGURE 193. TOMB OF PLANCUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="523" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 193.
- T<small>OMB OF</small> P<small>LANCUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure194">
- <tr>
- <td width="618">
- <img src="images/figure194.jpg" alt="FIGURE 194. TOMB OF CESTIUS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="618" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 194.
- T<small>OMB OF</small> C<small>ESTIUS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect421"><b>421</b></a></span>
-<b>Places of Burial.</b>&mdash;The most ancient place of burial, at least
-for the head of the house, was beneath the hearthstone in the <i>ātrium</i>
-of his house, later in the garden behind his house, but this had
-ceased to be the custom long before history begins, and the Twelve
-Tables forbade the burial or even the burning of the dead within the
-walls of the city. For the very poor, places of burial were provided
-in remote localities outside the walls, corresponding in some degree
-to the Potter's Field of modern cities. The well-to-do made their
-burial-places as conspicuous as their means would permit, with the
-hope that the inscriptions upon the monuments would keep alive the
-names and virtues of the dead, and with the idea, perhaps, that they
-still had some part in the busy life around them. To this end they
-lined the great roads on either side for miles out of the cities with
-rows of tombs of the most elaborate and costly architecture. In the
-vicinity of Rome the Appian way as the oldest (<a href="#sect385">§385</a>) showed the
-monuments of the noblest and most ancient families, but none of the
-roads lacked similar memorials. Many of these tombs were standing in
-the sixteenth century, a few still remain. The same custom was
-followed in the smaller towns, and an idea of the appearance of the
-monuments may be had from the so-called "Street of Tombs" in Pompeii
-(Fig. 195). There were other burial-places near the cities, of course,
-less conspicuous and less expensive, and on the farms and country
-estates like provision was made for persons of humbler station.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure195">
- <tr>
- <td width="629">
- <img src="images/figure195.jpg" alt="FIGURE 195. STREET OF TOMBS AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="629" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 195.
- S<small>TREET OF</small> T<small>OMBS AT</small>
- P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure196">
- <tr>
- <td width="465">
- <img src="images/figure196.jpg" alt="FIGURE 196. EXTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="465" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 196.
- E<small>XTERIOR OF</small> T<small>OMB AT</small>
- P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect422"><b>422</b></a></span>
-<b>The Tombs.</b>&mdash;The tombs, whether intended to receive the bodies or
-merely the ashes, or both, differed widely in size and construction
-with the different purposes for which they were erected. Some were for
-individuals only, but these in most cases were strictly public
-memorials as distinguished from actual tombs intended to receive the
-remains of the dead. The larger number of those that lined the roads
-were family tombs, ample in size for whole generations of descendants
-and retainers of the family, including guest-friends (<a href="#sect185">§185</a>), who had
-died away from their own homes, and freedmen (<a href="#sect175">§175</a>). There were also
-the burial-places of the <i>gentēs</i> (<a href="#sect21">§21</a>), in which provision was made
-for all, even the humblest and poorest, who claimed connection with
-the <i>gēns</i> and had had a place in its formal organization (<a href="#sect22">§22</a>).
-Others were erected on a large scale by speculators who sold at low
-prices space enough for an urn or two to persons too poor to erect
-tombs of their own and without any claim on a family or gentile
-burying-place. In imitation of these structures others were erected on
-the same plan by burial societies formed by persons of the artisan
-class, and others still by benevolent men, as we have seen baths
-(<a href="#sect373">§373</a>) and libraries (<a href="#sect402">§402</a>) erected and maintained for the public
-good. Something will be said of the tombs of all these kinds after the
-public burying-places have been described.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure197">
- <tr>
- <td width="620">
- <img src="images/figure197.jpg" alt="FIGURE 197. SECTIONS OF TOMB SHOWN IN FIGURE 196">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="620" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 197.
- S<small>ECTIONS OF</small> T<small>OMB</small>
- S<small>HOWN IN</small> F<small>IGURE</small> 196</small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect423"><b>423</b></a></span>
-<b>The Potter's Field.</b>&mdash;During the Republic the Esquiline Hill, or
-at least the eastern part of it, was the place to which was carted all
-the refuse of the city that the sewers would not carry away. Here,
-too, were the gravepits (<i>puticulī</i>) for the pauper class. They were
-merely holes in the ground, about twelve feet square, without lining
-of any kind. Into them were thrown the bodies of the friendless poor,
-and along with them and over them the carcasses of dead animals and
-the filth and scrapings of the streets. The pits were kept open,
-uncovered apparently even when filled, and the stench and the
-disease-breeding pollution made the hill absolutely uninhabitable.
-Under Augustus the danger to the health of the whole city became so
-great that the dumping grounds were moved to a greater distance, and
-the Esquiline, covered over pits and all with pure soil to the depth
-of twenty-five feet, was made a park, known as the <i>Hortī Maecēnātis</i>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect424"><b>424</b></a></span>
-It is not to be understood, however, that the bodies of Roman
-citizens were ordinarily disposed of in this revolting way. Faithful
-freedmen were cared for by their patrons, the industrious poor made
-provision for themselves in coöperative societies mentioned above, and
-the proletariate class (<a href="#sect411">§411</a>) was in general saved from such a fate by
-gentile relations, by patrons (<a href="#sect181">§181</a>), or by the benevolence of
-individuals. Only in times of plague and pestilence, it is safe to
-say, were the bodies of known citizens cast into these pits, as under
-like circumstances bodies have been burned in heaps in our own cities.
-The uncounted thousands that peopled the Potter's Field of Rome were
-the riffraff from foreign lands, abandoned slaves (<a href="#sect156">§156</a>), the victims
-that perished in the arena (<a href="#sect362">§362</a>), outcasts of the criminal class, and
-the "unidentified" that are buried nowadays at public expense.
-Criminals put to death by authority were not buried at all; their
-carcasses were left to birds and beasts of prey at the place of
-execution near the Esquiline gate.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure198">
- <tr>
- <td width="359">
- <img src="images/figure198.jpg" alt="FIGURE 198. INTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="359" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 198.
- I<small>NTERIOR OF</small> T<small>OMB AT</small>
- P<small>OMPEII</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect425"><b>425</b></a></span>
-<b>Plan of Tombs and Grounds.</b>&mdash;The utmost diversity prevails in the
-outward form and construction of the tombs, but those of the classical
-period seem to have been planned with the thought that the tomb was to
-be a home for the dead and that they were not altogether cut off from
-the living. The tomb, therefore, whether built for one person or for
-many, was ordinarily a building inclosing a room (<i>sepulcrum</i>), and
-this room was really the important thing. Attention has already been
-called (<a href="#sect189">§189</a>) to the fact that even the urns had in ancient times the
-shape of the house of one room. The floor of the <i>sepulcrum</i> was quite
-commonly below the level of the surrounding grounds and was reached by
-a short flight of steps. Around the base of the walls ran a slightly
-elevated platform (<i>podium</i>, cf. <a href="#sect337">§§337</a>, <a href="#sect357">357</a>) on which were placed the
-coffins of those who were buried, while the urns were placed either on
-the platform or in niches in the wall. An altar or shrine is often
-found, at which offerings were made to the <i>mānēs</i> of the departed.
-Lamps are very common and so are other simple articles of furniture,
-and the walls, floors, and ceilings are decorated in the same style as
-those of houses (<a href="#sect220">§220</a> f.). Things that the dead liked to have around
-them when living, especially things that they had used in their
-ordinary occupations, were placed in the tomb at the time of burial,
-or burned with them on the funeral pyre, and in general an effort was
-made to give an air of life to the chamber of rest. The interior of a
-tomb at Pompeii is shown in Fig. 198, and sections of another in Fig.
-197, <a href="#sect423">§423</a>.</p>
-<table align="right" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure199">
- <tr>
- <td width="253">
- <img src="images/figure199.jpg" alt="FIGURE 199. PLAN OF GROUNDS ABOUT TOMB">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="253" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 199.
- P<small>LAN OF</small> G<small>ROUNDS ABOUT</small>
- T<small>OMB</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect426"><b>426</b></a></span>
-The monument itself was always built upon a plot of ground as
-spacious as the means of the builders would permit, sometimes several
-acres in extent. In it provision was made for the comfort of surviving
-members of the family, who were bound to visit the resting-place of
-their dead on certain regularly recurring festivals (<a href="#sect438">§438</a>). If the
-grounds were small there would be at least a seat, perhaps a bench. On
-more extensive grounds there were places of shelter, arbors, or summer
-houses. Dining-rooms, too, in which were celebrated the anniversary
-feasts, and private <i>ūstrīnae</i> (places for the burning of bodies) are
-frequently mentioned. Often the grounds were laid out as gardens or
-parks, with trees and flowers, wells, cisterns or fountains, and even
-a house, with other buildings perhaps, for the accommodation of the
-slaves or freedmen who were in charge. A plan of such a garden is
-shown in Fig. 199. In the middle of the garden is the <i>ārea</i>, the
-technical word for the plot of ground set aside for the tomb, with
-several buildings upon it, one of which is a storehouse or granary
-(<i>horreum</i>); around the tomb itself are beds of roses and violets,
-used in festivals (<a href="#sect438">§438</a>), and around them in turn are grapes trained
-on trellises. In the front is a terrace (<i>sōlārium</i>, cf. <a href="#sect207">§207</a>), and in
-the rear two pools (<i>piscīnae</i>) connected with the <i>ārea</i> by a little
-canal, while at the back is a thicket of shrubbery (<i>harundinētum</i>).
-The purpose of the granary is not clear as no grain seems to have been
-raised on the lot, but it may have been left where it stood before the
-ground was consecrated. A tomb surrounded by grounds of some extent
-was called a <i>cēpotaphium</i>.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure200">
- <tr>
- <td width="606">
- <img src="images/figure200.jpg" alt="FIGURE 200. RUINS OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="606" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 200.
- R<small>UINS OF</small> C<small>OLUMBARIUM OF</small> L<small>IVIA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect427"><b>427</b></a></span>
-<b>Exterior of the Tombs.</b>&mdash;An idea of the exterior appearance of
-monuments of the better sort may be had from Figs. 193-196. The forms
-are very many, those of the altar and temple are the most common,
-perhaps, but memorial arches and niches are often found, and at
-Pompeii the semicircular bench that was used for conversation out of
-doors occurs several times, covered and uncovered. Not all of the
-tombs have the sepulchral chamber, the remains being sometimes
-deposited in the earth beneath the monument. In such cases a tube or
-pipe of lead ran from the receptacle to the surface, through which
-offerings of wine and milk could be poured (<a href="#sect429">§§429</a>, <a href="#sect438">438</a>). In Fig. 193,
-<a href="#sect420">§420</a>, is shown the round monument at Caieta of Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, one of Caesar's marshals (<i>lēgātī</i>) in Gaul, the
-inscription<small><small><sup>1</sup></small></small> on which recounts the positions he had filled and the
-work he had done. In Fig. 194, <a href="#sect420">§420</a>, is shown the pyramid erected at
-Rome in honor of Caius Cestius by his heirs, one of whom was Marcus
-Agrippa. According to the inscription on it the monument was completed
-in 330 days. The most imposing of all was the mausoleum of Hadrian
-(Fig. 205, <a href="#sect438">§438</a>) at Rome, now the castle of St. Angelo. A less
-elaborate exterior is that of the "tomb with the marble door" at
-Pompeii, given in Fig. 196, <a href="#sect422">§422</a>.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>1</sup></small> Inscription on the tomb of Plancus: "Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, son, etc. (<a href="#sect39">§39</a>), consul, censor, twice imperator, member of
-the board of seven in charge of sacrificial feasts. He celebrated a
-triumph over the people of Raetia. From the spoils of war he erected a
-temple to Saturn. In Italy he assigned lands about Beneventum. In Gaul
-he planted colonies at Lugdunum and Raurica."</small></blockquote>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure201">
- <tr>
- <td width="371">
- <img src="images/figure201.jpg" alt="FIGURE 201. GROUND PLAN OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="371" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 201.
- G<small>ROUND</small> P<small>LAN OF</small>
- C<small>OLUMBARIUM OF</small> L<small>IVIA</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure202">
- <tr>
- <td width="403">
- <img src="images/figure202.jpg" alt="FIGURE 202. SARCOPHAGUS OF SCIPIO">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="403" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 202.
- S<small>ARCOPHAGUS OF</small> S<small>CIPIO</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect428"><b>428</b></a></span>
-<b>The Columbaria.</b>&mdash;From the family tombs were developed the
-immense structures mentioned in <a href="#sect422">§422</a> intended to receive great numbers
-of urns. They began to be erected in the time of Augustus and seem to
-have been confined to Rome, where the high price of land made the
-purchase of private burial-grounds impossible for the poorer classes.
-An idea of their interior arrangements may be had from the ruins (Fig.
-200) of one erected on the Appian way for the freedmen of Livia, the
-wife of Augustus. From their resemblance to a dovecote or pigeon house
-they were called <i>columbāria</i>. They are usually partly underground,
-rectangular in form, with great numbers of the niches (also called
-<i>columbāria</i>) running in regular rows horizontally (<i>gradūs</i>) and
-vertically (<i>ōrdinēs</i>). In the larger <i>columbāria</i> provision was made
-for as many as a thousand urns. Around the walls at the base was a
-<i>podium</i>, on which were placed the sarcophagi of those whose remains
-had not been burned, and sometimes chambers were excavated beneath the
-floor for the same purpose. In the <i>podium</i> were also niches that no
-space might be lost. If the height of the building was great enough to
-warrant it, wooden galleries ran around the walls. Access to the room
-was given by a stairway in which were niches, too; light was furnished
-by small windows near the ceiling, and walls and floors were
-handsomely finished and decorated.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure203">
- <tr>
- <td width="361">
- <img src="images/figure203.jpg" alt="FIGURE 203. AEDICULA IN COLUMBARIUM">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="361" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 203.
- A<small>EDICULA IN</small> C<small>OLUMBARIUM</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect429"><b>429</b></a></span>
-The niches were sometimes rectangular in form, but more commonly
-half round, as shown in Figs. 200 and 203. Some of the <i>columbāria</i>
-have the lower rows rectangular, those above arched. They contained
-ordinarily two urns (<i>ollae</i>, <i>ollae ossuāriae</i>) each, arranged side
-by side, that they might be visible from the front. Occasionally the
-niches were made deep enough for two sets of urns, those behind being
-elevated a little over those in front. Above or below each niche was
-fastened to the wall a piece of marble (<i>titulus</i>) on which was cut
-the name of the owner. If a person required for his family a group of
-four or six niches, it was customary to mark them off from the others
-by wall decorations to show that they made a unit; a very common way
-was to erect pillars at the sides so as to give the appearance of the
-front of a temple (Fig. 203). Such groups were called <i>aediculae</i>. The
-value of the places depended upon their position, those in the higher
-rows (<i>gradūs</i>) being less expensive than those near the floor, those
-under the stairway the least desirable of all. The urns themselves
-were of various materials (<a href="#sect437">§437</a>) and usually cemented to the bottom of
-the niches. The tops could be removed, but they, too, were sealed
-after the ashes had been placed in them, small openings being left
-through which offerings of milk and wine could be poured. On the urns
-or their tops were painted the names of the dead with sometimes the
-day and the month of death. The year is almost never found. Over the
-door of such a <i>columbārium</i> on the outside was cut an inscription
-giving the names of the owners, the date of erection, and other
-particulars.</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure204">
- <tr>
- <td width="535">
- <img src="images/figure204.jpg" alt="FIGURE 204. CINERARY URNS">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="535" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 204.
- C<small>INERARY</small> U<small>RNS</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect430"><b>430</b></a></span>
-<b>Burial Societies.</b>&mdash;Early in the Empire associations were
-formed for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their
-members, whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the
-purpose of building <i>columbāria</i>, or for both. These coöperative
-associations (<i>collegia fūnerāticia</i>) started originally among members
-of the same guild (<a href="#sect412">§412</a>) or among persons of the same occupation. They
-called themselves by many names, <i>cultōrēs</i> of this deity or that,
-<i>collegia salūtāria</i>, <i>collegia iuvenum</i>, etc., but their objects and
-methods were practically the same. If the members had provided places
-for the disposal of their bodies after death they now provided for the
-necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a
-small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When
-a member died a stated sum was drawn for his funeral from the
-treasury, a committee saw that the rites were decently performed, and
-at the proper seasons (<a href="#sect438">§438</a>) the society made corporate offerings to
-the dead. If the purpose of the society was the building of a
-<i>columbārium</i>, the cost was first determined and the sum total divided
-into what we should call shares (<i>sortēs virīlēs</i>), each member taking
-as many as he could afford and paying their value into the treasury.
-Sometimes a benevolent person would contribute toward the expense of
-the undertaking, and then such a person would be made an honorary
-member of the society with the title of <i>patrōnus</i> or <i>patrōna</i>. The
-erection of the building was intrusted to a number of <i>cūrātōrēs</i>,
-chosen by ballot, naturally the largest shareholders and most
-influential men. They let the contracts and superintended the
-construction, rendering account for all the money expended. The office
-of the curators was considered very honorable, especially as their
-names appeared on the inscription without the building, and they often
-showed their appreciation of the honor done them by providing at their
-own expense for the decoration of the interior, or by furnishing all
-or a part of the <i>titulī</i>, <i>ollae</i>, etc., or by erecting on the
-surrounding grounds places of shelter and dining-rooms for the use of
-the members, like those mentioned in <a href="#sect426">§426</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect431"><b>431</b></a></span>
-After the completion of the building the <i>cūrātōrēs</i> allotted
-the niches to the individual members. The niches were either numbered
-consecutively throughout or their position was fixed by the number of
-the <i>ōrdō</i> and <i>gradus</i> (<a href="#sect428">§428</a>) in which they were situated. Because
-they were not all equally desirable, as has been explained, the
-curators divided them into sections as fairly as possible and then
-assigned the sections (<i>locī</i>) by lot to the shareholders. If a man
-held several shares of stock he received a corresponding number of
-<i>locī</i>, though they might be in widely different parts of the
-building. The members were allowed freely to dispose of their holdings
-by exchange, sale, or gift, and many of the larger stockholders
-probably engaged in the enterprise for the sake of the profits to be
-made in this way. After the division was made the owners had their
-names cut upon the <i>titulī</i>, and might put up the columns to mark the
-<i>aediculae</i>, set up statues, etc., if they pleased. Some of the
-<i>titulī</i> give besides the name of the owner the number and position of
-his <i>locī</i> or <i>ollae</i>. Sometimes they record the purchase of <i>ollae</i>,
-giving the number bought and the name of the previous owner. Sometimes
-the names on the <i>ollae</i> do not correspond with that over the niche,
-showing that the owner had sold a part only of his holdings, or that
-the purchaser had not taken the trouble to replace the <i>titulus</i>. The
-expenses of maintenance were probably paid from the weekly dues of the
-members, as were the funeral benefits.</p>
-<center><img src="images/image6.jpg" alt="Titulus in Latin"><small><small><sup>2</sup></small></small></center>
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>2</sup></small> Titulus in Columbarium: "Lucius Abucius Hermes (has
-acquired) in this row, running from the ground to the top, nine niches
-with eighteen urns for (the ashes of) himself and his descendants."</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect432"><b>432</b></a></span>
-<b>Funeral Ceremonies.</b>&mdash;The detailed accounts of funeral ceremonies
-that have come down to us relate almost exclusively to those of
-persons of high position, and the information gleaned from other
-sources (<a href="#sect12">§12</a>) is so scattered that there is great danger of confusing
-usages of widely different times. It is quite certain, however, that
-very young children were buried at all times simply and quietly
-(<i>fūnus acerbum</i>), that no ceremonies at all attended the burial of
-slaves (<a href="#sect420">§420</a>) when conducted by their masters (nothing is known of the
-forms used by the burial societies mentioned above), and that citizens
-of the lowest class were laid to rest without public parade (<i>fūnus
-plēbēium</i>). It is also known that burials took place by night except
-during the last century of the Republic and the first two centuries of
-the Empire, and it is natural to suppose that, even in the case of
-persons of high position, there was ordinarily much less of pomp and
-parade than on occasions that the Roman writers thought it worth while
-to describe. This has been found true in the matter of wedding
-festivities (<a href="#sect79">§79</a>). It will be convenient to take in order the
-proceedings at the house, the funeral procession, and the ceremonies
-at the place of burial.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect433"><b>433</b></a></span>
-<b>At the House.</b>&mdash;When the Roman died at home surrounded by his
-family, it was the duty of his oldest son to bend over the body and
-call him by name, as if with the hope of recalling him to life. The
-formal performance of the act (<i>conclāmātiō</i>) he announced immediately
-with the words: <i>conclāmātum est</i>. The eyes of the dead were then
-closed, the body was washed with warm water and anointed, the limbs
-were straightened, and if the deceased had held a curule office a wax
-impression of his features was taken. The body was then dressed in the
-toga (<a href="#sect240">§240</a>) with all the insignia of rank that the dead had been
-entitled to wear in life, and was placed upon the funeral couch
-(<i>lectus fūnebris</i>) in the <i>ātrium</i> (<a href="#sect198">§198</a>), with the feet to the door,
-to lie in state until the time of the funeral. The couch was
-surrounded with flowers, and incense was burned about it. Before the
-door of the house were set branches of pine or cypress as a warning
-that the house was polluted by death. The simple offices that have
-been described were performed in humble life by the relatives and
-servants, in other cases by professional undertakers (<i>libitīnāriī</i>),
-who also embalmed the body and superintended all the rest of the
-ceremonies. Reference is made occasionally to the kissing of the dying
-person as he breathed his last, as if this last breath was to be
-caught in the mouth of the living, and in very early and very late
-times it was undoubtedly the custom to put a small coin between the
-teeth of the dead with which to pay his passage across the Styx in
-Charon's boat. Neither of these formalities seems to have obtained
-generally in classical times.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect434"><b>434</b></a></span>
-<b>The Funeral Procession.</b>&mdash;The funeral procession of the ordinary
-citizen was simple enough. Notice was given to neighbors and friends,
-and surrounded by them and by the family, carried on the shoulders of
-the sons or other near relatives, with perhaps a band of musicians in
-the lead, the body was borne to the tomb. The procession of one of the
-mighty, on the other hand, was marshaled with all possible display and
-ostentation. It occurred as soon after death as the necessary
-preparations could be made, there being no fixed intervening time.
-Notice was given by a public crier in the ancient words of style:
-<i>Ollus Quiris lētō datus. Exsequiās, quibus est commodum, īre iam
-tempus est. Ollus ex aedibus effertur.</i><small><small><sup>3</sup></small></small> Questions of order and
-precedence were settled by one of the undertakers (<i>dēsīgnātor</i>). At
-the head went a band of musicians, followed at least occasionally by
-persons singing dirges in praise of the dead, and by bands of buffoons
-and jesters, who made merry with the bystanders and imitated even the
-dead himself. Then came the imposing part of the display. The wax
-masks of the dead man's ancestors had been taken from their place in
-the <i>ālae</i> (<a href="#sect200">§200</a>) and assumed by actors in the dress appropriate to
-the time and station of the worthies they represented. It must have
-seemed as if the ancient dead had returned to earth to guide their
-descendant to his place among them. Servius tells us that six hundred
-<i>imāginēs</i> were displayed at the funeral of the young Marcellus, the
-nephew of Augustus. Then followed the memorials of the great deeds of
-the deceased, if he had been a general, as in a triumphal procession,
-and then the dead himself, carried with face uncovered on a lofty
-couch. Then came the family, including freedmen (especially those made
-free by the testament of their master) and slaves, and then the
-friends, all in mourning garb (<a href="#sect246">§§246</a>, <a href="#sect254">254</a>), and all freely giving
-expression to the emotion that we try to suppress on such occasions.
-Torch-bearers attended the train, even by day, as a remembrance of the
-older custom of burial by night.</p>
-
-<blockquote><small><small><sup>3</sup></small> "This citizen has been surrendered to death. For those
-who find it convenient it is now time to attend the funeral. He is
-being brought from his house."</small></blockquote>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect435"><b>435</b></a></span>
-<b>The Funeral Oration.</b>&mdash;The procession passed from the house
-directly to the place of interment, unless the deceased was a person
-of sufficient consequence to be honored by public authority with a
-funeral oration (<i>laudātiō</i>) in the forum. In this case the funeral
-coach was placed before the <i>rostra</i>, the men in the masks took their
-places on curule chairs (<a href="#sect225">§225</a>) around it, the general crowd was massed
-in a semicircle behind, and a son or other near relative delivered the
-address. It recited the virtues and achievements of the dead and
-recounted the history of the family to which he belonged. Like such
-addresses in more recent times it contained much that was false and
-more that was exaggerated. The honor of the <i>laudātiō</i> was freely
-given in later times, especially to members of the imperial family,
-including women. Under the Republic it was less common and more highly
-prized, and so far as we know the only women so honored belonged to
-the <i>gēns Iūlia</i>. It will be remembered that it was Caesar's address
-on the occasion of the funeral of his aunt, the widow of Marius, that
-pointed him out to the opponents of Sulla as a future leader. When the
-address in the forum was not authorized, one was sometimes given more
-privately at the grave or at the house.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect436"><b>436</b></a></span>
-<b>At the Tomb.</b>&mdash;When the train reached the place of burial the
-proceedings varied according to the time, but all provided for the
-three things ceremonially necessary: the consecration of the
-resting-place, the casting of earth upon the remains, and the
-purification of all polluted by the death. In ancient times the body,
-if buried, was lowered into the grave either upon the couch on which
-it had been brought to the spot, or in a coffin of burnt clay or
-stone. If the body was to be burned a shallow grave was dug and filled
-with dry wood, upon which the couch and body were placed. The pile was
-then fired and when wood and body had been consumed, earth was heaped
-over the ashes into a mound (<i>tumulus</i>). Such a grave in which the
-body was burned was called <i>būstum</i>, and was consecrated as a regular
-<i>sepulcrum</i> by the ceremonies mentioned below. In later times the
-body, if not to be burned, was placed in a sarcophagus (Fig. 203)
-already prepared in the tomb (<a href="#sect425">§425</a>). If the remains were to be burned
-they were taken to the <i>ūstrīna</i> (<a href="#sect426">§426</a>), which was not regarded as a
-part of the <i>sepulcrum</i>, and placed upon the pile of wood (<i>rogus</i>).
-Spices and perfumes were thrown upon it, together with gifts (<a href="#sect425">§425</a>)
-and tokens from the persons present. The pyre was then lighted with a
-torch by a relative, who kept his face averted during the act. After
-the fire had burned out the embers were extinguished with water or
-wine and those present called a last farewell to the dead. The water
-of purification was then thrice sprinkled over those present, and all
-except the immediate family left the place. The ashes were then
-collected in a cloth to be dried, and the ceremonial bone (<a href="#sect420">§420</a>),
-called <i>os resectum</i>, was buried. A sacrifice of a pig was then made,
-by which the place of burial was made sacred ground, and food
-(<i>silicernium</i>) was eaten together by the mourners. They then returned
-to the house which was purified by an offering to the <i>Larēs</i>, and the
-funeral rites were over.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect437"><b>437</b></a></span>
-<b>After Ceremonies.</b>&mdash;With the day of the burial or burning of the
-remains began the Nine Days of Sorrow, solemnly observed by the
-immediate family. Some time during this period, when the ashes had had
-time to dry thoroughly, members of the family went privately to the
-<i>ūstrīna</i>, removed them from the cloth, placed them in an <i>olla</i> (Fig.
-204) of earthenware, glass, alabaster, bronze, or other material, and
-with bare feet and loosened girdles carried them into the <i>sepulcrum</i>
-(<a href="#sect425">§425</a>). At the end of the nine days the <i>sacrificium novendiāle</i> was
-offered to the dead and the <i>cēna novendiālis</i> was celebrated at the
-house. On this day, too, the heirs formally entered upon their
-inheritance and the funeral games (<a href="#sect344">§344</a>) were originally given. The
-period of mourning, however, was not concluded on the ninth day. For
-husband or wife, ascendants, and grown descendants mourning was worn
-for ten months, the ancient year; for other adult relatives, eight
-months; for children between the ages of three and ten years, for as
-many months as they were years old.</p>
-<p><span class="sectnum"><a name="sect438"><b>438</b></a></span>
-<b>Memorial Festivals.</b>&mdash;The memory of the dead was kept alive by
-regularly recurring days of obligation of both public and private
-character. To the former belong the <i>parentālia</i>, or <i>diēs parentālēs</i>
-(<a href="#sect75">§75</a>), lasting from the 13th to the 21st of February, the final day
-being especially distinguished as the <i>fērālia</i>. To the latter belong
-the annual celebration of the birthday (or the burial-day) of the
-person commemorated, and the festivals of violets and roses
-(<i>violāria</i>, <i>rosāria</i>), about the end of March and May respectively,
-when violets and roses were distributed among the relatives and laid
-upon the graves or heaped over the urns. On all these occasions
-offerings were made in the temples to the gods and at the tombs to the
-<i>mānēs</i> of the dead, and the lamps were lighted in the tombs (<a href="#sect425">§425</a>),
-and at the tombs the relatives feasted together and offered food to
-their dead (<a href="#sect426">§426</a>).</p>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" summary="figure205">
- <tr>
- <td width="619">
- <img src="images/figure205.jpg" alt="FIGURE 205. HADRIAN'S TOMB">
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="619" align="center">
- <small>F<small>IGURE</small> 205.
- H<small>ADRIAN'S</small> T<small>OMB</small></small>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>INDEX</h3>
-
-<center>References are to Paragraphs. An asterisk denotes a cut.</center>
-<br>
-<br>
-A<br>
-<br>
-<b>ā manū</b>, <a href="#sect391">391</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>abacus</b>, reckoning board,
-<a href="#sect111">111*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;panels in wall decorations,
-<a href="#sect220">220</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;sideboard,
-<a href="#sect227">227</a>,
-<a href="#sect307">307*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ABBREVIATIONS</small> in names,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ab epistolīs</b>,
-<a href="#sect391">391</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>abolla</b>, cloak,
-<a href="#sect249">249*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ab ovō ad māla</b>,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ACTORS</small>, slave, men only,
-<a href="#sect324">324</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ad</b> (<b>malam</b>) <b>crucem</b>,
-<a href="#sect174">174</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ADDITIONAL</small> names,
-<a href="#sect51">51</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ADDRESS</small> of letters,
-<a href="#sect392">392</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>adfīnēs</b>, blood relations,
-<a href="#sect26">26</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ADJUSTABLE</small> tables,
-<a href="#sect227">227*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>adoptiō</b>, see
-<a href="#adoption"><small>ADOPTION</small></a>.<br>
-<a name="adoption"></a><br>
-<small>ADOPTION</small>, two kinds,
-<a href="#sect29">29</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of a <b>fīlius familiās</b>,
-<a href="#sect30">30</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of a <b>pater familiās</b>,
-<a href="#sect30">30</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;name given adopted person,
-<a href="#sect52">52</a>,
-<a href="#sect56">56</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>adrogātiō</b>, see
-<a href="#adoption"><small>ADOPTION</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>adversitōrēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect152">152</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ADVERTISEMENTS</small> of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect361">361*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>aediculae</b>, in <b>columbāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect429">429*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>AFFECTION</small> for nurses,
-<a href="#sect101">101</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for pedagogues,
-<a href="#sect123">123</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>agger viae</b>,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>agitātōrēs</b>, drivers of chariots,
-<a href="#sect341">341</a>. See
-<a href="#aurigae"><b>aurīgae</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>agnātī</b>, related through males,
-<a href="#sect23">23</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>AGRICULTURE</small>, honorable occupation,
-<a href="#sect404">404</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ālae</b>, in house,
-<a href="#sect191">191</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;later,
-<a href="#sect200">200</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>aliēnō iūrī subiectus</b>,
-<a href="#sect17">17</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>alveus</b>, in bath,
-<a href="#sect369">369*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>amictus</b>, outer garments,
-<a href="#sect240">240*</a>-<a href="#sect249">249*</a>.<br>
-<a name="amphitheater"></a><br>
-<small>AMPHITHEATER</small>, meaning of word,
-<a href="#sect351">351</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;early at Rome,
-<a href="#sect352">352</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at Pompeii,
-<a href="#sect353">353*</a>,
-<a href="#sect354">354*</a>,
-<a href="#sect355">355*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the coliseum,
-<a href="#sect356">356*</a>,
-<a href="#sect357">357*</a>,
-<a href="#sect358">358*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>amphitheātrum</b>, see
-<a href="#amphitheater"><small>AMPHITHEATER</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>amphorae</b>, for wine,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>amurca</b>, bitter fluid of olives,
-<a href="#sect291">291</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>AMUSEMENTS</small>, <a href="#chap9">Chap. IX</a>. See <a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>andabatae</b>, blindfold gladiators,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>andrōn</b>, formerly called <b>faucēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect192">192</a> note.<br>
-<br>
-Andronicus,
-<a href="#sect113">113</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>anteambulōnēs</b>, outriders,
-<a href="#sect151">151</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>antecēna</b>, appetizer,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ANTIQUITIES</small>, public and private distinguished,
-<a href="#sect2">2</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and history,
-<a href="#sect4">4</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;private defined,
-<a href="#sect1">1</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in philology,
-<a href="#sect6">6</a>,
-<a href="#sect7">7</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;recent interest,
-<a href="#sect8">8</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>apodytērium</b>,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;makeshift for,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;usually unheated,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;one heated,
-<a href="#sect378">378*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in <b>thermae</b>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>,
-<a href="#sect377">377*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>APPIAN WAY</small>, as burial-place,
-<a href="#sect421">421</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;construction,
-<a href="#sect385">385</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<small>APPRENTICESHIP</small> in education,
-<a href="#sect117">117</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>arbiter bibendī</b>, toast master,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ārca</b>, strong box,
-<a href="#sect188">188</a>,
-<a href="#sect201">201</a>,
-<a href="#sect230">230*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Archias, name explained,
-<a href="#sect60">60</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ārea</b>, ground for tomb,
-<a href="#sect426">426</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>arēna</b>, circus,
-<a href="#sect330">330*</a>,
-<a href="#sect332">332</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;amphitheater (Pompeii),
-<a href="#sect354">354*</a>, (Rome),
-<a href="#sect357">357*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ARITHMETIC</small>, in the schools,
-<a href="#sect111">111*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>armāria</b>, cabinets,
-<a href="#sect231">231</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ARMY</small>, as a career, (for nobles),
-<a href="#sect408">408</a>, (for commons),
-<a href="#sect410">410</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ARRANGEMENT</small> of hair,
-<a href="#sect263">263</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of hair of bride,
-<a href="#sect78">78</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of couches in dining-room,
-<a href="#sect304">304*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ATHENS</small>, university of Rome,
-<a href="#sect116">116</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ATHLETIC</small> sports and games,
-<a href="#sect316">316*</a>,
-<a href="#sect317">317*</a>,
-<a href="#sect318">318*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ātriēnsis</b>, butler,
-<a href="#sect149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ātrium</b>, in primitive house,
-<a href="#sect188">188</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;meaning,
-<a href="#sect189">189</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the developed <b>ātrium</b>,
-<a href="#sect196">196</a>,
-<a href="#sect197">197</a>,
-<a href="#sect198">198*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;burial-place of Head of House,
-<a href="#sect421">421</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Atticus,
-<a href="#sect155">155</a>,
-<a href="#sect300">300</a>,
-<a href="#sect310">310</a>,
-<a href="#sect399">399</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>auctōrātī</b>, volunteer gladiators,
-<a href="#sect347">347</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>aulaea</b>, portières,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<a name="aurigae"></a><br>
-<b>aurīgae</b>, chariot drivers, (Figs. <a href="#sect328">138</a>,
-<a href="#sect333">142</a>),
-<a href="#sect341">341*</a>,
-<a href="#sect342">342</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-B<br>
-<br>
-<small>BAKERIES</small>,
-<a href="#sect286">286*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BAKERS</small>, as a guild,
-<a href="#sect286">286</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BALL</small>, played by children,
-<a href="#sect102">102*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;by men,
-<a href="#sect318">318*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>balneae</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect372">372</a>. See
-<a href="#bath"><small>BATH</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>balneāticum</b>, bath fee,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>balneum</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect372">372</a>. See
-<a href="#bath"><small>BATH</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BANKING</small>, as profession,
-<a href="#sect412">412</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BANQUETS</small>,
-<a href="#sect315">315</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BARBER</small> shops,
-<a href="#sect253">253</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BARRIERS</small>, in circus,
-<a href="#sect330">330*</a>,
-<a href="#sect333">333*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>basterna</b>, litter drawn by mules,
-<a href="#sect382">382</a>.<br>
-<a name="bath"></a><br>
-<small>BATH</small>, in early times,
-<a href="#sect365">365</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public and private,
-<a href="#sect365">365</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;essentials for,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;rooms combined,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;heating,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>caldārium</b>,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>frīgidārium</b>,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>ūnctōrium</b>,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;private bathhouse,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public baths,
-<a href="#sect372">372</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;time opened,
-<a href="#sect374">374</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;fees,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for women,
-<a href="#sect375">375</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>thermae</b>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>,
-<a href="#sect377">377*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BATHHOUSE</small>, in Caerwent,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in Pompeii,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in Rome,
-<a href="#sect377">377*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BATHROOMS</small>, in residences,
-<a href="#sect203">203</a>,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BEANS</small>, considered heavy food,
-<a href="#sect275">275</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BEARDS</small>, fashions in,
-<a href="#sect254">254</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BEEF</small>, rarely used,
-<a href="#sect277">277</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Benoist, his definition of Philology,
-<a href="#sect6">6</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BETROTHALS</small>,
-<a href="#sect70">70</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BEVERAGES</small>,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>bibliothēca</b>,
-<a href="#sect206">206</a>,
-<a href="#sect402">402</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BILLS</small> of fare,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>,
-<a href="#sect309">309</a>.<br>
-<a name="books"></a><br>
-<small>BOOKS</small>, ancient forms,
-<a href="#sect393">393</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;materials,
-<a href="#sect394">394</a>,
-<a href="#sect395">395</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;making,
-<a href="#sect396">396</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;finish of,
-<a href="#sect397">397</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;size,
-<a href="#sect398">398</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;publishing,
-<a href="#sect399">399</a>,
-<a href="#sect400">400</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cost,
-<a href="#sect401">401</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;libraries,
-<a href="#sect402">402</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<small>BOOKS</small>," divisions of literary work,
-<a href="#sect398">398</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BOXES</small>, in theater,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in circus,
-<a href="#sect334">334</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect353">353</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BOY</small>, named,
-<a href="#sect97">97</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;home training,
-<a href="#sect104">104</a>,
-<a href="#sect106">106</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;athletics,
-<a href="#sect107">107</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;education, see
-<a href="#schools"><small>SCHOOLS</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;coming of age,
-<a href="#sect125">125</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;given citizenship,
-<a href="#sect128">128</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>brācātae</b>, wearing trousers,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BRAZIERS</small>,
-<a href="#sect218">218*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BREAD</small>,
-<a href="#sect286">286</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;making,
-<a href="#sect287">287</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;kinds of,
-<a href="#sect288">288</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"Bread and the Games of the Circus,"
-<a href="#sect322">322</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BREAKFAST</small>,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BREAKING</small> promise of marriage,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BRICKS</small>,
-<a href="#sect212">212*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>bulla</b>,
-<a href="#sect99">99*</a>.<br>
-<a name="burial"></a><br>
-<small>BURIAL</small>-places and ceremonies,
-<a href="#chap12">Chapter XII</a>. See <a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BURIAL SOCIETIES</small>,
-<a href="#sect430">430</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BUSINESS</small> rooms added to houses,
-<a href="#sect193">193</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;interests at Rome,
-<a href="#sect413">413</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>BUTTER</small>, not a food,
-<a href="#sect281">281</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-C<br>
-<br>
-<small>CABINETS</small>,
-<a href="#sect231">231</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>calamus</b> (<b>scriptōrius</b>),
-<a href="#sect395">395</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>calceātor</b>,
-<a href="#sect150">150</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>calceī</b>,
-<a href="#sect251">251*</a>,
-<a href="#sect262">262</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>senātōriī</b>,
-<a href="#sect251">251</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>patriciī</b>,
-<a href="#sect251">251</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>caldārium</b>,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;near furnace,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;furniture,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;other uses of,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in plans,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>,
-<a href="#sect378">378*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>caligae</b>, half-boots,
-<a href="#sect251">251</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>calx</b>, in circus,
-<a href="#sect331">331*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>camillus</b>,
-<a href="#sect82">82*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>campus Mārtius</b>,
-<a href="#sect317">317</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>candēlābra</b>,
-<a href="#sect229">229</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CANDIDATES</small>' dress,
-<a href="#sect235">235</a>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>candidātī</b>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CANDLES</small>, ill made,
-<a href="#sect229">229</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CAP</small>, of liberty,
-<a href="#sect175">175*</a>,
-<a href="#sect252">252</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CAPITALISTS</small>, their field,
-<a href="#sect409">409</a>,
-<a href="#sect413">413</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>capsa</b>,
-<a href="#sect397">397*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>capsārius</b>,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Caracalla, hall in baths of,
-<a href="#sect365">365*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cāra cognātiō</b>, feast of,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>carcerēs</b>, in circus,
-<a href="#sect330">330*</a>,
-<a href="#sect333">333*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>carnifex</b>, term of abuse,
-<a href="#sect174">174</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>carpentum</b>, traveling carriage,
-<a href="#sect383">383*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CARRIAGES</small>, for travel,
-<a href="#sect383">383*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>carūca</b>, sleeping car,
-<a href="#sect383">383</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>casa Rōmulī</b>,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cathedra</b>, easy chair,
-<a href="#sect226">226*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>catillus</b>, outer part of mill,
-<a href="#sect284">284*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cato (234-149), treatment of slaves,
-<a href="#sect159">159</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;opinion of cabbage,
-<a href="#sect275">275</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;word for dinner,
-<a href="#sect312">312</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>causia</b>, hat,
-<a href="#sect252">252*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cavea</b>, in theater,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in circus,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in amphitheater (Pompeii),
-<a href="#sect353">353*</a>, (Rome),
-<a href="#sect358">358*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cavum aedium</b>,
-<a href="#sect196">196</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CEILINGS</small>, construction,
-<a href="#sect213">213</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cellae</b>, <b>servōrum</b>,
-<a href="#sect207">207</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>vīnāriae</b>,
-<a href="#sect297">297*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>oleāriae</b>,
-<a href="#sect292">292*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cēna</b>, in early times,
-<a href="#sect301">301</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the city,
-<a href="#sect303">303</a>-<a href="#sect311">311</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;hours,
-<a href="#sect303">303</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;importance in social life,
-<a href="#sect303">303</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;bills of fare,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>,
-<a href="#sect309">309</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;service,
-<a href="#sect310">310</a>,
-<a href="#sect311">311</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>lībera</b>,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>nūptiālis</b>,
-<a href="#sect85">85</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cēna</b>, "dinner proper,"
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cenotaphium</b>, empty tomb,
-<a href="#sect419">419</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>centēnārius</b>, winner of 100 races,
-<a href="#sect340">340</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cēpotaphium</b>, tomb with grounds,
-<a href="#sect426">426</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cēra</b>, for sealing letter,
-<a href="#sect392">392</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cerasus</b>, cherry,
-<a href="#sect274">274</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CEREALS</small> for food,
-<a href="#sect282">282</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cestius, tomb of,
-(<a href="#sect420">420*</a>),
-<a href="#sect427">427</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHAIRS</small>,
-<a href="#sect225">225*</a>,
-<a href="#sect226">226*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHALKED FEET</small>,
-<a href="#sect139">139</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHARIOT RACES</small>,
-<a href="#sect330">330</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;number of chariots,
-<a href="#sect333">333</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;racing syndicates,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;teams,
-<a href="#sect340">340</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;drivers,
-<a href="#sect341">341</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>charta</b>, paper, see
-<a href="#papyrus"><b>papyrus</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHEESE</small>,
-<a href="#sect281">281</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHESTS</small>,
-<a href="#sect230">230*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHILDHOOD</small>, see
-<a href="#children"><small>CHILDREN</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;end of,
-<a href="#sect125">125</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHILDLESSNESS</small>, a reproach,
-<a href="#sect28">28</a>.<br>
-<a name="children"></a><br>
-<small>CHILDREN</small>, rights of, see
-<a href="#potestas"><b>potestās</b></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;property of, see
-<a href="#peculium"><b>pecūlium</b></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;civil position of,
-<a href="#sect69">69</a>,
-<a href="#sect94">94</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;acknowledgment of,
-<a href="#sect95">95</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;exposure of,
-<a href="#sect96">96</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;maiming of,
-<a href="#sect96">96</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;games, etc.,
-<a href="#sect102">102</a>,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;home training,
-<a href="#sect104">104</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;punishment of,
-<a href="#sect120">120*</a>,
-<a href="#sect124">124</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the dining-room,
-<a href="#sect304">304</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;burial of young children,
-<a href="#sect420">420</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Chrysogonus and Roscius,
-<a href="#sect408">408</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CHURCH</small>, like Roman house,
-<a href="#sect191">191</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cicero (106-43), number of his slaves,
-<a href="#sect155">155</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;names of his freedmen,
-<a href="#sect59">59</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;goodness to slaves,
-<a href="#sect158">158</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;his books,
-<a href="#sect399">399</a>,
-<a href="#sect402">402</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;income,
-<a href="#sect407">407</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CINERARY</small> urns,
-<a href="#sect189">189*</a>,
-<a href="#sect428">428</a>,
-<a href="#sect437">437</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ciniflōnēs</b>, hairdressers,
-<a href="#sect150">150</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CIRCUS</small> at Rome,
-<a href="#sect328">328</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;plan,
-<a href="#sect330">330*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>arēna</b>,
-<a href="#sect332">332*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>carcerēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect333">333*</a>,
-<a href="#sect334">334*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>spīna</b>, <b>mētae</b>,
-<a href="#sect335">335*</a>,
-<a href="#sect336">336*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;seats,
-<a href="#sect337">337*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;capacity,
-<a href="#sect338">338</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;races in,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>circus Flāminius</b>,
-<a href="#sect329">329</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>circus Maxentiī</b>,
-<a href="#sect329">329</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;plan of,
-<a href="#sect330">330*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>arēna</b>,
-<a href="#sect332">332</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;obelisk in,
-<a href="#sect336">336</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;seating capacity,
-<a href="#sect338">338</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>circus Maximus</b>,
-<a href="#sect328">328</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>missus</b> in,
-<a href="#sect332">332</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>spīna</b> in,
-<a href="#sect336">336</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;obelisk in
-<a href="#sect336">336*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;seats in,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>,
-<a href="#sect338">338*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;reconstruction,
-<a href="#sect338">338*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cisium</b>, two-wheeled cart,
-<a href="#sect384">384*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CIVIL SERVICE</small>,
-<a href="#sect414">414</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>clepsydra</b>, water-clock,
-<a href="#sect232">232</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>clientēla</b>, clientage,
-<a href="#sect177">177</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CLIENTS</small>,
-<a href="#chap5">Chap. V</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CLIMATE</small> of Italy,
-<a href="#sect272">272</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CLOCKS</small>,
-<a href="#sect232">232</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CLOTHING</small>,
-<a href="#chap7">Chap. VII</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;colors worn,
-<a href="#sect270">270</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;manufacture of,
-<a href="#sect271">271</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cleaning,
-<a href="#sect271">271*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>codicillī</b>, set of writing tablets,
-<a href="#sect391">391*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>coēmptiō</b>, plebeian form of marriage,
-<a href="#sect63">63</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;implying <b>manus</b>,
-<a href="#sect66">66</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremony of,
-<a href="#sect83">83</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COFFINS</small>,
-<a href="#sect425">425</a>,
-<a href="#sect436">436</a>.<br>
-<a name="cognates"></a><br>
-<small>COGNATES</small>, defined,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;importance among plebeians,
-<a href="#sect65">65</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;degrees between,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>,
-<a href="#sect68">68</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cognātī</b>, see
-<a href="#cognates"><small>COGNATES</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cognātiō</b>, see
-<a href="#cognates"><small>COGNATES</small></a>.<br>
-<a name="cognomen"></a><br>
-<b>cognōmen</b>, before <b>nōmen</b>,
-<a href="#sect40">40</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;marking family,
-<a href="#sect48">48</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;age of,
-<a href="#sect49">49</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;nickname,
-<a href="#sect49">49</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;indication of lineage,
-<a href="#sect50">50</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>ex virtūte</b>,
-<a href="#sect53">53</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;differing in same family,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as fourth element in name,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<a name="coliseum"></a><br>
-<small>COLISEUM</small>, date of,
-<a href="#sect352">352</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;plan,
-<a href="#sect356">356*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>arēna</b>,
-<a href="#sect357">357*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;seats,
-<a href="#sect358">358*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>collegia</b>, <b>fūnerāticia</b>, <b>iuvenum</b>, <b>salūtāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect430">430</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COLONIES</small>,
-<a href="#sect411">411</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COLORS</small>, of articles of dress,
-<a href="#sect270">270</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of racing syndicates,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>columbāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect428">428*</a>-<a href="#sect431">431*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COMIC OPERAS</small>,
-<a href="#sect323">323</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COMMERCE</small>,
-<a href="#sect413">413</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>comissātiō</b>, drinking bout,
-<a href="#sect312">312*</a>,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COMMON PEOPLE</small>, employments of,
-<a href="#sect410">410</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>compluvium</b>,
-<a href="#sect188">188</a>,
-<a href="#sect191">191</a>,
-<a href="#sect196">196</a>,
-<a href="#sect198">198</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>compōtātiō</b>, drinking bout,
-<a href="#sect312">312*</a><br>
-<br>
-<b>conclāmātiō</b>, cry of farewell,
-<a href="#sect433">433</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CONCRETE</small>, extensive use,
-<a href="#sect146">146</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;method of making,
-<a href="#sect211">211*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in roads,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>conductor</b>, manager of baths,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cōnfarreātiō</b>,
-<a href="#sect61">61</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;religious aspect,
-<a href="#sect64">64</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;implying <b>manus</b>,
-<a href="#sect66">66</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremony of,
-<a href="#sect81">81</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CONFISCATION</small> of property,
-<a href="#sect408">408</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CONFUSION</small> of names,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CONSENT</small> necessary to marriage,
-<a href="#sect74">74</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Constantius (Emperor 337-361 <small>A.D.</small>),
-<a href="#sect338">338</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CONSTRUCTION</small> of house,
-<a href="#sect210">210*</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mill,
-<a href="#sect284">284*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;roads,
-<a href="#sect387">387*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>contubernia</b>, unions of slaves,
-<a href="#sect138">138</a>,
-<a href="#sect156">156</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>conventiō in manum</b>,
-<a href="#sect35">35</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>cum conventiōne</b>,
-<a href="#sect61">61</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>sine conventiōne</b>,
-<a href="#sect62">62</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>convīvia</b>, dinners,
-<a href="#sect312">312</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>convīvia tempestīva</b>,
-<a href="#sect310">310</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COOKS</small>, hired in early times,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cornelii, buried their dead,
-<a href="#sect420">420</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>corōnae convīvālēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CORRESPONDENCE</small>,
-<a href="#sect391">391</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COST</small>, of baths,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;books,
-<a href="#sect401">401</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;meals (inns),
-<a href="#sect388">388</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;slaves,
-<a href="#sect140">140</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;tables,
-<a href="#sect227">227</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;wines,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COTTON</small> goods,
-<a href="#sect269">269</a>.<br>
-<a name="couches"></a><br>
-<small>COUCHES</small>, sofas or beds,
-<a href="#sect224">224*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;dining,
-<a href="#sect304">304*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>COVERINGS</small> for the head, men,
-<a href="#sect252">252*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;women,
-<a href="#sect263">263</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>covīnus</b>, two-wheeled cart,
-<a href="#sect384">384</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crassus, in salvage business,
-<a href="#sect413">413</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>crātēr</b>, mixing bowl,
-<a href="#sect314">314*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CREMATION</small>, introduced at Rome,
-<a href="#sect420">420</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>crepundia</b>, child's rattle,
-<a href="#sect98">98*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crescens, famous driver,
-<a href="#sect342">342</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CRIMSON</small> or purple,
-<a href="#sect270">270</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CRUCIFIXION</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect173">173</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cubicula</b>, bedrooms,
-<a href="#sect205">205</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cucullus</b>, hood,
-<a href="#sect247">247</a>,
-<a href="#sect248">248</a>,
-<a href="#sect252">252</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>culīna</b>, kitchen,
-<a href="#sect203">203*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cumerus</b>,
-<a href="#sect82">82*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cuneī</b>, in theater,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;circus,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cūrātōrēs</b>, of burial societies,
-<a href="#sect430">430</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Curius and his dinner,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>curriculum</b>, lap in race,
-<a href="#sect331">331</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CURTAIN</small> in later theater,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CURULE</small> chair,
-<a href="#sect225">225*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>cyathus</b>, ladle,
-<a href="#sect314">314*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CYPHER</small> correspondence,
-<a href="#sect390">390</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>CYPRESS</small>, as emblem of death,
-<a href="#sect433">433</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-D<br>
-<br>
-<small>DAIRY</small> products,
-<a href="#sect281">281</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DANCERS</small>,
-<a href="#sect153">153</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dator lūdōrum</b>, giver of games,
-<a href="#sect334">334</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DAY</small>, a Roman's,
-<a href="#sect415">415</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dēclāmātiō</b>, public speaking,
-<a href="#sect115">115</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DECORATION</small> of houses,
-<a href="#sect220">220</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;walls,
-<a href="#sect220">220*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;doors,
-<a href="#sect221">221*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;floors,
-<a href="#sect221">221*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of tombs,
-<a href="#sect425">425*</a>,
-<a href="#sect428">428*</a>,
-<a href="#sect430">430*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>decuriae</b>, of slaves,
-<a href="#sect133">133</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dēfrutum</b>, grape jelly,
-<a href="#sect296">296</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>delphica</b> (<b>mēnsa</b>),
-<a href="#sect227">227*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dēsīgnātor</b>, funeral director,
-<a href="#sect434">434</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dēstrictārium</b>, in baths,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dēsultōrēs</b>, circus riders,
-<a href="#sect343">343</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DEVELOPMENT</small> of the house,
-<a href="#sect188">188*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dextrārum iūnctiō</b>, in marriage,
-<a href="#sect81">81*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DICE</small>, gaming with,
-<a href="#sect321">321*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>diēs</b>, <b>lūstricus</b>,
-<a href="#sect97">97</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>parentālēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect75">75</a>,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>religiōsī</b>,
-<a href="#sect75">75</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dimachaerī</b>, gladiators with two swords,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DINING-ROOM</small>,
-<a href="#sect204">204</a>,
-<a href="#sect304">304*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DINNER</small>, in the city,
-<a href="#sect303">303</a>-<a href="#sect311">311</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;early times,
-<a href="#sect301">301</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;hour,
-<a href="#sect310">310</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;bill of fare,
-<a href="#sect309">309</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;order of courses,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;places of honor,
-<a href="#sect306">306</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Diocletian (Emperor 284-305 <small>A.D.</small>) baths of,
-<a href="#sect378">378*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>discus</b>, throwing the,
-<a href="#sect316">316*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dispēnsātor</b>, steward,
-<a href="#sect149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>diurna cubicula</b>,
-<a href="#sect205">205</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DIVORCE</small>,
-<a href="#sect72">72</a>,
-<a href="#sect93">93</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DOG</small>, as pet,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in hallway,
-<a href="#sect195">195*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dōlia</b>, for oil,
-<a href="#sect292">292*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for wine,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dominica potestās</b>,
-<a href="#sect37">37</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dominus gregis</b>, head actor,
-<a href="#sect324">324</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Domitian (Emperor 81-96 <small>A.D.</small>),
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>domus</b>,
-<a href="#sect186">186</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;see
-<a href="#house"><small>HOUSE</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DOORS</small>, construction,
-<a href="#sect215">215*</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;names,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dormitōria</b>,
-<a href="#sect205">205</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dorsum</b>, top course in road,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>dōs</b>, dowry,
-<a href="#sect72">72</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DOWRY</small>,
-<a href="#sect72">72</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DRAMATIC</small> performances,
-<a href="#sect323">323</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DRESS</small>,
-<a href="#chap7">Chap. VII</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DRINKING</small> bouts,
-<a href="#sect312">312*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DRIVERS</small>, chariot races,
-<a href="#sect341">341*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ducēnārius</b>, horse of 200 victories,
-<a href="#sect340">340</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>DWARFS</small>, kept for amusement,
-<a href="#sect153">153</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-E<br>
-<br>
-"<small>EARLY DINNERS</small>,"
-<a href="#sect310">310</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EARLY FORMS</small>, of marriage,
-<a href="#sect61">61</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of names,
-<a href="#sect38">38</a>,
-<a href="#sect57">57</a>,
-<a href="#sect58">58</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of table customs,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of toga,
-<a href="#sect245">245</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of theater,
-<a href="#sect325">325</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of baths,
-<a href="#sect365">365</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of gladiatorial shows,
-<a href="#sect345">345</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EARLY HOURS</small> at Rome,
-<a href="#sect79">79</a>,
-<a href="#sect415">415</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EARS</small> of slaves bored,
-<a href="#sect139">139</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EDUCATION</small>,
-<a href="#chap4">Chap. IV</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ELM TREE</small>, for grapes,
-<a href="#sect295">295</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for switches,
-<a href="#sect167">167</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"essence of elm,"
-<a href="#sect168">168</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ēditor mūnerum</b>, giver of gladiatorial show,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ELOCUTION</small> in schools,
-<a href="#sect114">114</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EMANCIPATION</small>, of a son,
-<a href="#sect18">18</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of a slave,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>endormis</b>, bath robe,
-<a href="#sect249">249</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ENGAGEMENTS</small>, marriage,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EPIGRAPHIC</small> sources,
-<a href="#sect10">10</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>epityrum</b>, olive salad,
-<a href="#sect290">290</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>equitēs</b>, career of,
-<a href="#sect409">409</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ERRORS</small> in manuscript books,
-<a href="#sect399">399</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Esquiline Hill, as burial-place,
-<a href="#sect423">423</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>essedāriī</b>, chariot fighters,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;spelled <b>assidāriī</b>,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ESSENTIALS</small> for the bath,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for burial,
-<a href="#sect436">436</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EXAGGERATION</small> in satire,
-<a href="#sect93">93</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ex cathedrā</b>, official utterance,
-<a href="#sect226">226</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>exedrae</b>, reception halls,
-<a href="#sect207">207</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>expōnere</b>, "expose," of children,
-<a href="#sect95">95</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EXPOSURE</small> of children,
-<a href="#sect32">32</a>,
-<a href="#sect95">95</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;slaves,
-<a href="#sect157">157</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>exta</b>, of the sacrifices,
-<a href="#sect277">277</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>EXTINCTION</small> of the <b>potestās</b>,
-<a href="#sect34">34</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of a family,
-<a href="#sect30">30</a>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;See
-<a href="#adoption"><small>ADOPTION</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-F<br>
-<br>
-<b>f.</b>, abbreviation in names,
-<a href="#sect39">39</a>,
-<a href="#sect57">57</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for <b>fugitīvus</b>,
-<a href="#sect172">172</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fābulae palliātae</b>,
-<a href="#sect323">323</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>facēs</b>, torches kept in doorways,
-<a href="#sect229">229</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>factiōnēs</b>, racing syndicates,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>.<br>
-<a name="familia"></a><br>
-<b>familia</b>, meanings,
-<a href="#sect17">17</a>,
-<a href="#sect21">21</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;=<b>stirps</b>,
-<a href="#sect22">22</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>gladiātōria</b>,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>rūstica</b>,
-<a href="#sect142">142</a>,
-<a href="#sect145">145</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>urbāna</b>,
-<a href="#sect149">149</a>.<br>
-<a name="family"></a><br>
-<small>FAMILY</small>,
-<a href="#chap1">Chap. I</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;defined,
-<a href="#sect17">17</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;splitting up of,
-<a href="#sect19">19</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cult,
-<a href="#sect27">27</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FANS</small>,
-<a href="#sect266">266*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>far</b>, early sort of grain,
-<a href="#sect282">282</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FARMING</small> of revenues,
-<a href="#sect409">409</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FARM</small> slaves, see
-<a href="#familia"><b>familia rūstica</b></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;work,
-<a href="#sect148">148</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fasciae</b>, wrappings of cloth,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fascinātiō</b>, evil eye,
-<a href="#sect98">98</a>,
-<a href="#sect99">99</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fascis</b>, a set of books,
-<a href="#sect397">397</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FASTENINGS</small> for doors,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FATHER</small>, see
-<a href="#paterfamilias"><b>pater familiās</b></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as companion of his sons,
-<a href="#sect106">106</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>faucēs</b>, in a house,
-<a href="#sect192">192</a>, note.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FEES</small>, in schools,
-<a href="#sect109">109</a>,
-<a href="#sect119">119</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;baths,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fēlīciter</b>, in congratulations,
-<a href="#sect82">82</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>feminālia</b>, wrappings for legs,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fenestrae</b>, windows,
-<a href="#sect217">217*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fērālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Fescinnīnī versūs</b>,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FESTIVALS</small>, <b>cāra cognātiō</b>,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>fērālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>mātrōnālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect91">91</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>līberālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect127">127</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>rosāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>Sāturnālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect319">319</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>vīnālia rūstica</b>,
-<a href="#sect296">296</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>violāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FESTIVITIES</small>, wedding,
-<a href="#sect80">80</a>,
-<a href="#sect85">85</a>,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>,
-<a href="#sect89">89</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;coming of age,
-<a href="#sect127">127</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FIREMEN</small>, slaves as,
-<a href="#sect141">141</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FISH</small>, as food,
-<a href="#sect280">280</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fistūca</b>, heavy rammer,
-<a href="#sect213">213</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>flābellum</b>, fan,
-<a href="#sect266">266*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>flagrum</b>, scourge,
-<a href="#sect167">167*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>flammeum</b>, bridal veil,
-<a href="#sect77">77*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Flāvium amphitheātrum</b>, see
-<a href="#coliseum"><small>COLISEUM</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FLOORS</small>, construction,
-<a href="#sect213">213</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FLOWERS</small>, at feasts,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at tombs,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fōcālia</b>, wrappings for throat,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>foculī</b>, heating stoves,
-<a href="#sect218">218*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>follēs</b>, balls filled with air,
-<a href="#sect318">318*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FOOD</small>,
-<a href="#chap8">Chap. VIII</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FORBIDDEN DEGREES</small> of kinship,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>,
-<a href="#sect68">68</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>forēs</b>, double doors,
-<a href="#sect195">195</a>,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FORKS</small>, not used,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>forum</b>, place of early shows,
-<a href="#sect351">351</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FOUNDLINGS</small>, fate of,
-<a href="#sect96">96</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FOWLS</small>, domestic,
-<a href="#sect279">279</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FREEDMAN</small>, name,
-<a href="#sect59">59</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;relation to patron,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>frīgidārium</b>,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;other uses,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;position,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;furnishings,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;shown on plans,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>,
-<a href="#sect377">377*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fritillus</b>, dice box,
-<a href="#sect321">321</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>frontēs</b>, of papyrus rolls,
-<a href="#sect397">397</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FRUITS</small>, known to Romans,
-<a href="#sect274">274</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>frūmentum</b>, grain,
-<a href="#sect282">282</a>, and note.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fugitīvī</b>,
-<a href="#sect172">172</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fullōnēs</b>, as cleaners,
-<a href="#sect271">271*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FUNERAL</small> games,
-<a href="#sect344">344</a>,
-<a href="#sect345">345</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremonies,
-<a href="#chap12">Chap. XII</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>fūnus</b>, <b>acerbum</b>, <b>plēbēium</b>,
-<a href="#sect432">432</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>furca</b>, as punishment,
-<a href="#sect169">169</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FURNACE</small> for houses,
-<a href="#sect218">218</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for baths,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>FURNITURE</small>,
-<a href="#sect222">222</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;modern lacking,
-<a href="#sect223">223</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;couches,
-<a href="#sect224">224*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;chairs,
-<a href="#sect225">225*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;tables,
-<a href="#sect227">227*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;lamps,
-<a href="#sect228">228*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;chests and cabinets,
-<a href="#sect230">230*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;other articles,
-<a href="#sect232">232</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-G<br>
-<br>
-<b>Gāius</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect44">44</a>,
-<a href="#sect81">81</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as a nomen,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>,
-<a href="#sect81">81</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the marriage ceremony,
-<a href="#sect81">81</a>,
-<a href="#sect88">88</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GAME</small>, wild, for table,
-<a href="#sect279">279</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GAMES</small>, of children,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>,
-<a href="#sect320">320*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public and private, see <small>AMUSEMENTS</small>.
-<a href="#chap9">Chap. IX</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of ball for men,
-<a href="#sect318">318*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of chance,
-<a href="#sect319">319*</a>,
-<a href="#sect320">320*</a>,
-<a href="#sect321">321*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;funeral,
-<a href="#sect344">344</a>,
-<a href="#sect345">345</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GARDEN</small>, behind the peristyle,
-<a href="#sect202">202</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;produce,
-<a href="#sect275">275</a>,
-<a href="#sect276">276</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GARLANDS</small> worn by slaves,
-<a href="#sect134">134</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;by bride and groom,
-<a href="#sect78">78</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;by women,
-<a href="#sect264">264</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at feasts by men,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GEESE</small> as pets,
-<a href="#sect103">103*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>gēns</b>, theory of,
-<a href="#sect22">22</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;marked by <b>nōmen</b>,
-<a href="#sect38">38</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;burial-places of,
-<a href="#sect422">422</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>gentīlēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect22">22</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at the confarreate ceremony,
-<a href="#sect81">81*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<small>GENTLEMEN'S DINNERS</small>,"
-<a href="#sect310">310</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GIRL</small>, named,
-<a href="#sect97">97</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;home training,
-<a href="#sect104">104</a>,
-<a href="#sect105">105</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;married at early age,
-<a href="#sect67">67</a>,
-<a href="#sect105">105</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;admitted to schools,
-<a href="#sect109">109</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GLADIATORS</small>,
-<a href="#sect344">344</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in Etruria and Campania,
-<a href="#sect344">344</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;first shows at Rome,
-<a href="#sect344">344</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in theory private shows,
-<a href="#sect345">345</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;numbers exhibited,
-<a href="#sect346">346</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;whence obtained,
-<a href="#sect347">347</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;innocent and guilty,
-<a href="#sect348">348</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;training,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;fashions and tactics,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;armor,
-<a href="#sect360">360</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the fight,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;rewards,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;bravos and bullies,
-<a href="#sect346">346</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GLASS</small>, for windows,
-<a href="#sect217">217</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;balls for hands,
-<a href="#sect266">266</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>gradūs</b>, rows of seats,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of urns,
-<a href="#sect428">428</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GRAMMAR</small> schools,
-<a href="#sect112">112</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>grammaticus</b>, of a teacher,
-<a href="#sect112">112</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GRAPES</small>,
-<a href="#sect293">293</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;where grown,
-<a href="#sect294">294</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;how grown,
-<a href="#sect295">295</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;jelly,
-<a href="#sect296">296</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GREEK</small>, place in schools,
-<a href="#sect112">112</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;nurses,
-<a href="#sect101">101</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;teachers,
-<a href="#sect115">115</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;taught to children,
-<a href="#sect101">101</a>,
-<a href="#sect116">116</a>,
-<a href="#sect123">123</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GROUNDS</small>, about tombs,
-<a href="#sect426">426*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>GUARDIANS</small>, of women,
-<a href="#sect19">19</a>,
-<a href="#sect70">70</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of children,
-<a href="#sect22">22</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>gustus</b>, first course at dinner,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-H<br>
-<br>
-Hadrian (Emperor 117-138 <small>A.D.</small>), tomb,
-<a href="#sect427">427</a>,
-<a href="#sect438">438*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HAIR</small>, arrangement, men,
-<a href="#sect254">254</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;women,
-<a href="#sect263">263</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of a bride,
-<a href="#sect78">78</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HANDBALL</small>,
-<a href="#sect318">318</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HANDKERCHIEFS</small>,
-<a href="#sect266">266</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HARD LABOR</small>, as punishment,
-<a href="#sect170">170</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>hasta</b>, sign of auction,
-<a href="#sect134">134</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HATS</small>,
-<a href="#sect252">252</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HEAD</small> of the House, see
-<a href="#paterfamilias"><b>pater familiās</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HEATING</small> houses,
-<a href="#sect218">218</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;baths,
-<a href="#sect368">368*</a>,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HINGES</small> of doors,
-<a href="#sect215">215*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HISTORY</small>, and antiquities,
-<a href="#sect4">4</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;not taught systematically in schools,
-<a href="#sect112">112</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HOLIDAYS</small>, numerous,
-<a href="#sect322">322</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;school,
-<a href="#sect122">122</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;avoided as wedding days,
-<a href="#sect75">75</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;spent in country,
-<a href="#sect416">416</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HOME</small> training,
-<a href="#sect104">104</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HONEY</small>, used for sugar,
-<a href="#sect281">281</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>hoplomachī</b>, later name for "Samnites,"
-<a href="#sect360">360</a>,
-<a href="#sect344">344*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Horace, (65-8 <small>B.C.</small>), his slaves,
-<a href="#sect133">133</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HORSES</small>, in chariot races,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>,
-<a href="#sect340">340</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in other shows,
-<a href="#sect343">343</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Hortī Maecēnātis</b>,
-<a href="#sect423">423</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>hospitēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect183">183</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>hospitium</b>,
-<a href="#sect184">184</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HOURS</small>, of the day,
-<a href="#sect417">417</a>,
-<a href="#sect418">418</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for meals,
-<a href="#sect301">301</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for baths,
-<a href="#sect374">374</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;all semi-public functions,
-<a href="#sect415">415</a>.<br>
-<a name="house"></a><br>
-<small>HOUSE</small>, dwelling,
-<a href="#chap6">Chap. VI</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;=<b>familia</b>, see
-<a href="#family"><small>FAMILY</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Head of House,
-<a href="#paterfamilias">see <b>pater familiās</b></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;house slaves,
-<a href="#sect149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HOUSE</small> of Pansa,
-<a href="#sect208">208*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Sallust, court,
-<a href="#sect204">204*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of the poet, ruins,
-<a href="#sect199">199*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HOUSEHOLD</small>, translation of <b>familia</b>,
-<a href="#sect17">17</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HUMAN</small> sacrifices,
-<a href="#sect344">344</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>HUT</small>, of Romulus,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;early Romans,
-<a href="#sect189">189*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>hymenaeus</b>, marriage hymn,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-I<br>
-<br>
-<b>iānitor</b>, chained to post,
-<a href="#sect150">150</a>,
-<a href="#sect195">195</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>iantāculum</b>, breakfast,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>iānua</b>, distinguished from <b>ōstium</b>,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ientāculum</b>, breakfast,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>imāginēs</b>, kept in <b>ālae</b>,
-<a href="#sect200">200</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in funeral processions,
-<a href="#sect434">434</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>imbricēs</b>, tiles for roof,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>imperium paternum</b>,
-<a href="#sect31">31</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>impluvium</b>,
-<a href="#sect188">188</a>,
-<a href="#sect191">191</a>,
-<a href="#sect196">196*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INCOME</small>, sources of,
-<a href="#chap11">Chap. XI</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INDUSTRIAL</small> employment of slaves,
-<a href="#sect143">143</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>indūtus</b>, clothing,
-<a href="#sect234">234</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INK</small>, <small>INKSTANDS</small>, etc.,
-<a href="#sect395">395*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INNS</small>,
-<a href="#sect388">388*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INSCRIPTIONS</small>, importance of,
-<a href="#sect10">10</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of a <b>fugitīvus</b>,
-<a href="#sect172">172</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Crescens,
-<a href="#sect342">342</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;gladiatorial show,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Hylas,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;milestone,
-<a href="#sect386">386</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in <b>columbāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect431">431</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Plancus,
-<a href="#sect427">427</a>, note,
-<a href="#sect420">420</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>īnstita</b>, flounce of <b>stola</b>,
-<a href="#sect260">260</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INSURRECTIONS</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect132">132</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>INTERMENT</small>, see
-<a href="#burial"><small>BURIAL</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>iūdicium domesticum</b>,
-<a href="#sect32">32</a>.<br>
-<br>
--<b>ius</b>, original in <b>nōmen</b>,
-<a href="#sect46">46</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in other names,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>iūs cōnūbiī</b>,
-<a href="#sect64">64</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>ōsculī</b>,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>patrium</b>,
-<a href="#sect31">31</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>iūstī līberī</b>, rightful children,
-<a href="#sect69">69</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-J<br>
-<br>
-<small>JACKSTONES</small>,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>,
-<a href="#sect320">320*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>JESTERS</small>,
-<a href="#sect153">153</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>JEWELRY</small> worn by men,
-<a href="#sect255">255</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;women,
-<a href="#sect267">267</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>JOINING</small> hands in marriage ceremony,
-<a href="#sect74">74</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Juvenal (about 67-127 <small>A.D.</small>), on the toga,
-<a href="#sect244">244</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"bread and games,"
-<a href="#sect322">322</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-K<br>
-<br>
-<small>KITCHEN</small>,
-<a href="#sect203">203</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>KNIGHTS</small>, income of,
-<a href="#sect409">409</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>KNIVES</small> and forks,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>KNUCKLE-BONES</small>,
-<a href="#sect320">320*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-L<br>
-<br>
-<b>l.</b>, abbreviation for <b>lībertus</b>,
-<a href="#sect59">59</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lābrum</b>, basin in bath,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376</a>,
-<a href="#sect377">377</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lacerna</b>, cloak,
-<a href="#sect247">247</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lacōnicum</b>, dry sweat bath,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>laena</b>, woolen cloak,
-<a href="#sect249">249</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LAMPS</small>,
-<a href="#sect228">228</a>,
-<a href="#sect229">229*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LAND</small>, travel by,
-<a href="#sect381">381</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lanista</b>, trainer of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>laqueatōrēs</b>, gladiators with lassos,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>larēs</b>, <b>compitālēs</b>, gods of crossroads,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of the house,
-<a href="#sect199">199</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LATER</small> theater,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>laterēs coctī</b>,
-<a href="#sect212">212*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>crūdī</b>,
-<a href="#sect210">210</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LATIN</small> in schools,
-<a href="#sect113">113</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;best spoken by women,
-<a href="#sect92">92</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lātrīna</b>, toilet room,
-<a href="#sect203">203*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>laudātiō funebris</b>, funeral address,
-<a href="#sect435">435</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LAW</small>, practice of,
-<a href="#sect407">407</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lectīca</b>, and bearers,
-<a href="#sect151">151*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;on journeys,
-<a href="#sect382">382</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lectus</b>, see
-<a href="#couches"><small>COUCHES</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>adversus</b>,
-<a href="#sect199">199</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LEGAL</small> status of children,
-<a href="#sect94">94</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;slaves,
-<a href="#sect156">156</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;women,
-<a href="#sect35">35</a>,
-<a href="#sect36">36</a>,
-<a href="#sect90">90</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lēnōnēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect139">139</a>.<br>
-<a name="letters"></a><br>
-<small>LETTERS</small>, writing of,
-<a href="#sect391">391</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;sending,
-<a href="#sect390">390</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;speed,
-<a href="#sect389">389</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;sealing and opening,
-<a href="#sect392">392</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the address,
-<a href="#sect392">392</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lībera cēna</b>, feast for gladiators,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Līberālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect127">127</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lībertīnī</b>, in business,
-<a href="#sect412">412</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lībertus</b>, opposed to <b>lībertīnus</b>,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;relation to patron,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LIBERTY</small>, cap of,
-<a href="#sect175">175*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>libitīnāriī</b>, undertakers,
-<a href="#sect433">433</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LIBRARIES</small>,
-<a href="#sect206">206</a>,
-<a href="#sect402">402</a>.<br>
-<a name="librarii"></a><br>
-<b>librāriī</b>, copyists,
-<a href="#sect391">391</a>,
-<a href="#sect399">399</a>,
-<a href="#sect401">401</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>līmen</b>, threshold,
-<a href="#sect195">195</a>,
-<a href="#sect215">215</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>superum</b>,
-<a href="#sect215">215</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LIMITATIONS</small> of <b>patria poteatās</b>,
-<a href="#sect32">32</a>,
-<a href="#sect33">33</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of <b>manus</b>,
-<a href="#sect36">36</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of <b>dominica potestās</b>,
-<a href="#sect156">156</a>,
-<a href="#sect157">157</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LINEN</small> goods,
-<a href="#sect269">269</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>līnum</b>,
-<a href="#sect392">392</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LITERARY</small> sources,
-<a href="#sect9">9</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>litterae</b>, see
-<a href="#letters"><small>LETTERS</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>eōdem exemplō</b>,
-<a href="#sect390">390</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Livia, <b>columbārium</b> of,
-<a href="#sect428">428*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LOAVES</small> of bread,
-<a href="#sect288">288*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>locus</b>, <b>cōnsulāris</b>,
-<a href="#sect306">306</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in <b>columbārium</b>,
-<a href="#sect431">431</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lōrārius</b>, executioner,
-<a href="#sect174">174</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lucerna</b>, lamp,
-<a href="#sect228">228*</a>,
-<a href="#sect229">229*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lūdī</b>, <b>circēnsēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect328">328</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>scēnicī</b>,
-<a href="#sect323">323</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>gladiātōriī</b> (schools),
-<a href="#sect349">349*</a>,
-<a href="#sect350">350</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lūdus</b>, see
-<a href="#schools"><small>SCHOOLS</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>lūdus Trōiae</b>,
-<a href="#sect343">343</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>LUNCHEON</small>,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>lūnula</b>, ornament,
-<a href="#sect98">98</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for shoe,
-<a href="#sect251">251</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-M<br>
-<br>
-<b>M.</b> and <b>M'</b>, in names,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>m.</b>, for <b>missus</b>, of pardoned gladiator,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Maecenas, gardens of,
-<a href="#sect423">423</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>maeniāna</b>, sections of seats,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>,
-<a href="#sect358">358</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>maeniānum</b>, projecting second story,
-<a href="#sect233">233*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>magister bibendī</b>, master of revels,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>maiestās patria</b>,
-<a href="#sect31">31</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mālum</b>, <b>Armeniacum</b>, <b>grānātum</b>, <b>Persicum</b>, <b>Pūnicum</b>,
-<a href="#sect274">274</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mamillāre</b>,
-<a href="#sect257">257*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mangōnēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect135">135</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MANHOOD</small>, when reached,
-<a href="#sect126">126</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MANUFACTURE</small> of clothing,
-<a href="#sect271">271</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MANUMISSION</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>manus</b>, defined,
-<a href="#sect35">35</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;limited,
-<a href="#sect36">36</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;unpopular,
-<a href="#sect65">65</a>,
-<a href="#sect66">66</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when necessary,
-<a href="#sect66">66</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Marcellus</b>, theater of,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>.<br>
-<a name="marriage"></a><br>
-<small>MARRIAGE</small>,
-<a href="#chap3">Chap. III</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table Of Contents</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;by capture,
-<a href="#sect78">78</a>,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>,
-<a href="#sect88">88</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;hymn,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cry,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;torch,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>,
-<a href="#sect89">89</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;religious duty,
-<a href="#sect28">28</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Martial (43-101 <small>A.D.</small>) and the toga,
-<a href="#sect244">244</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and cost of books,
-<a href="#sect401">401</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MASTER</small>, heir of his slaves,
-<a href="#sect164">164</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MATERIALS</small> for clothing,
-<a href="#sect269">269</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MATCHED PAIRS</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect140">140</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mātrimōnium</b>, motherhood,
-<a href="#sect64">64</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>iniūstum</b>,
-<a href="#sect69">69</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mātrīmus</b>, with a living mother,
-<a href="#sect82">82</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mātrōnālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect91">91</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MEALS</small>,
-<a href="#chap8">Chap. VIII</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MEANINGS</small> of names,
-<a href="#sect44">44</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MEAT</small>, early food of Italians,
-<a href="#sect273">273</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;various kinds,
-<a href="#sect277">277</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MEMORIAL</small> festivals,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mēnsa</b>, table in general,
-<a href="#sect227">227</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;dining,
-<a href="#sect307">307</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mēnsa prīma</b>, first course,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mēnsa secunda</b>, dessert,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>,
-<a href="#sect309">309</a>,
-<a href="#sect311">311</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MENU</small>, of dinner,
-<a href="#sect309">309</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>merenda</b>, irregular meal,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>merīdiātiō</b>, noonday rest,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mēta</b>, of a grain mill,
-<a href="#sect284">284*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mētae</b>, in a circus,
-<a href="#sect331">331*</a>,
-<a href="#sect335">335</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MILESTONES</small>,
-<a href="#sect386">386*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MILL</small>, for grain,
-<a href="#sect284">284*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for olives,
-<a href="#sect292">292*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as a punishment,
-<a href="#sect148">148</a>,
-<a href="#sect171">171</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>missus</b>, seven laps in a race,
-<a href="#sect331">331</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"spared," of a gladiator,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MIXING BOWLS</small>,
-<a href="#sect314">314*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;three thousand of Pompeius,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mixing wine,
-<a href="#sect314">314</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mola</b>, mill,
-<a href="#sect284">284*</a>,
-<a href="#sect285">285*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>monopodium</b>, table with one support,
-<a href="#sect227">227*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MONUMENTAL</small> sources,
-<a href="#sect11">11</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<b>Moritūrī tē salūtant</b>,"
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MOSAICS</small>,
-<a href="#sect221">221</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MOTHER</small>, as nurse,
-<a href="#sect100">100</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as teacher,
-<a href="#sect104">104</a>,
-<a href="#sect105">105</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MOURNING</small>, signs of,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>,
-<a href="#sect253">253</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;periods of,
-<a href="#sect437">437</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mulleus</b>, patrician shoe,
-<a href="#sect251">251</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mulsa</b>, water and honey,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mulsum</b>, wine and honey,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>.<br>
-<a name="munera"></a><br>
-<b>mūnera</b>, opposed to <b>lūdī</b>,
-<a href="#sect345">345</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;gladiātōria,
-<a href="#chap9">Chap. IX</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mūnīre viam</b>, of road building,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>murmillōnēs</b>, class of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect360">360</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mustāceum</b>, wedding cake,
-<a href="#sect85">85</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>mustum</b>, new wine,
-<a href="#sect296">296</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>MUTUAL</small> obligations, of patron and freedman,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;patrician patron and client,
-<a href="#sect179">179</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;later patron and client,
-<a href="#sect182">182</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of hospitēs,
-<a href="#sect185">185</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-N<br>
-<br>
-<small>NAME</small>,
-<a href="#chap2">Chap. II</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;See also
-<a href="#praenomen"><b>praenōmen</b></a>,
-<a href="#nomen"><b>nōmen</b></a>,
-<a href="#cognomen"><b>cognōmen</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nārrātiō</b>, narration, taught in schools,
-<a href="#sect115">115</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NATURALIZED</small> citizens, names of,
-<a href="#sect60">60</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>naumachiae</b>, naval battles,
-<a href="#sect364">364</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NETS</small>, for the hair,
-<a href="#sect264">264</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NEW</small> clients,
-<a href="#sect181">181</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NEWSPAPER</small>, substitute for,
-<a href="#sect413">413</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NICKNAMES</small>,
-<a href="#sect54">54</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;See also
-<a href="#cognomen"><b>cognōmen</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NIGHT</small> for burial,
-<a href="#sect432">432</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NOBLES</small>, debarred from business careers,
-<a href="#sect404">404</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;funerals of,
-<a href="#sect433">433</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nodus Herculāneus</b>,
-<a href="#sect77">77</a>.<br>
-<a name="nomen"></a><br>
-<b>nōmen</b>, before and after <b>cognōmen</b>,
-<a href="#sect40">40</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;endings of,
-<a href="#sect46">46</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;sign of <b>gēns</b>,
-<a href="#sect21">21</a>,
-<a href="#sect47">47</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;two or more in one name,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;used as <b>praenōmen</b>,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nōmenclātor</b>,
-<a href="#sect151">151</a>,
-<a href="#sect415">415</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nōminālia</b>,
-<a href="#sect97">97</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>novendiāle</b>,
-<a href="#sect437">437</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nūbere</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect77">77</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nūcleus</b>, in roads,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NUMERALS</small> as <b>praenōmina</b>,
-<a href="#sect44">44</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as names of women,
-<a href="#sect57">57</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>nūptiae iūstae</b>,
-<a href="#sect67">67</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>iniūstae</b>,
-<a href="#sect69">69</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NURSERY</small> stories,
-<a href="#sect100">100</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NURSES</small>,
-<a href="#sect100">100</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Greek preferred,
-<a href="#sect101">101</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>NUTS</small>, in wedding festivities,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for marbles,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;grown in Italy,
-<a href="#sect274">274</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-O<br>
-<br>
-<small>OBELISKS</small> in the circuses,
-<a href="#sect336">336*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>OCCUPATIONS</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect143">143</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>oecī</b>, rooms in house,
-<a href="#sect207">207</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>OLD</small> and new clients,
-<a href="#sect176">176</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>oleum olīvum</b>, olive oil,
-<a href="#sect291">291</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>OLIVE</small>, uses,
-<a href="#sect289">289</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;preserved,
-<a href="#sect290">290</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;oil, uses,
-<a href="#sect291">291</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;manufacture,
-<a href="#sect292">292</a>.<br>
-<a name="ollae"></a><br>
-<b>ollae</b>, urns for ashes of dead,
-<a href="#sect428">428</a>,
-<a href="#sect429">429</a>,
-<a href="#sect430">430*</a>,
-<a href="#sect431">431</a>,
-<a href="#sect437">437</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ollus quiris lētō datus</b>,
-<a href="#sect434">434</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ONION</small>, unrefined,
-<a href="#sect275">275</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>oppidum</b>, in circus,
-<a href="#sect330">330*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>opus</b>, <b>caementīcium</b>,
-<a href="#sect210">210</a>,
-<a href="#sect211">211*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>incertum</b>,
-<a href="#sect212">212*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>quadrātum</b>,
-<a href="#sect210">210*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>rēticulātum</b>,
-<a href="#sect212">212*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Orange, theater at,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ORANGE</small>, not grown in Italy,
-<a href="#sect274">274</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ōrdō</b>, in <b>columbārium</b>,
-<a href="#sect428">428</a>,
-<a href="#sect431">431</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>scrībārum</b>,
-<a href="#sect414">414</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ōrnāmenta</b>, theatrical properties,
-<a href="#sect324">324</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ōrnātor</b>, valet,
-<a href="#sect150">150</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ōrnātrīx</b>, ladies' maid,
-<a href="#sect150">150</a>,
-<a href="#sect265">265</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>os resectum</b>, bone for burial,
-<a href="#sect436">436</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ōstium</b>, door,
-<a href="#sect195">195</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ōva</b>, in the circus,
-<a href="#sect336">336</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>OVEN</small>, for bread,
-<a href="#sect287">287*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-P<br>
-<br>
-<b>p.</b>, for <b>periit</b>, of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>paedagōgus</b>,
-<a href="#sect123">123*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>paenula</b>, cloak,
-<a href="#sect248">248*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>palaestra</b>, exercise ground,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>palla</b>, woman's robe,
-<a href="#sect261">261</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>palūdāmentum</b>, general's cloak,
-<a href="#sect247">247</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pālus</b>, with <b>prīmus</b> or <b>secundus</b>,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>.<br>
-<a name="papyrus"></a><br>
-<b>papyrus</b>, manufacture,
-<a href="#sect394">394</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;rolls,
-<a href="#sect396">396</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PARASOL</small>,
-<a href="#sect266">266*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>parentālia</b>, festival of,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pariēs</b>, house wall,
-<a href="#sect210">210</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pater</b> and derivatives,
-<a href="#sect26">26</a>.<br>
-<a name="paterfamilias"></a><br>
-<b>pater familiās</b>, defined,
-<a href="#sect17">17</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;powers, see
-<a href="#potestas"><b>potestās</b></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;adopted into another family,
-<a href="#sect30">30</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>patria potestās</b>, see
-<a href="#potestas"><b>potestās</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>patriciī</b>, sons of fathers,
-<a href="#sect64">64</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>patrimōnium prōfundere</b>,
-<a href="#sect33">33</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>patrīmus</b>, with a living father,
-<a href="#sect82">82</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>patrōnus</b>, derivation of word,
-<a href="#sect26">26</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and <b>lībertus</b>,
-<a href="#sect175">175</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;patrician and client,
-<a href="#sect179">179</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and client of later times,
-<a href="#sect182">182</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PAUPERS</small>, burial of,
-<a href="#sect423">423</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PAVEMENT</small>, construction,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pavīmentum</b>, floor,
-<a href="#sect213">213</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PAY</small> of teachers,
-<a href="#sect121">121</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of chariot drivers,
-<a href="#sect342">342</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of soldiers,
-<a href="#sect410">410</a>.<br>
-<a name="peculium"></a><br>
-<b>pecūlium</b>, defined,
-<a href="#sect33">33</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of slaves,
-<a href="#sect162">162</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pecūnia</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect273">273</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pedisequī</b>, lackeys,
-<a href="#sect123">123</a>,
-<a href="#sect150">150</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PENS</small>,
-<a href="#sect395">395</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>peregrīnus</b>, foreigner,
-<a href="#sect69">69</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PERFUMES</small> at feasts,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PERISTYLE</small>,
-<a href="#sect192">192</a>,
-<a href="#sect202">202*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;perhaps a kitchen garden originally,
-<a href="#sect197">197</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pērō</b>, shoe of untanned leather,
-<a href="#sect251">251</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Persius (34-62 <small>A.D.</small>) as a schoolboy,
-<a href="#sect124">124</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pessulī</b>, bolts for doors,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>petasus</b>, hat,
-<a href="#sect252">252*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>petōritum</b>, baggage wagon,
-<a href="#sect383">383</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PETS</small> for children,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PHILOLOGY</small>, defined,
-<a href="#sect6">6</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PHYSICIANS</small>, income and attainments,
-<a href="#sect412">412</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pietās</b>, affection,
-<a href="#sect73">73</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pīlentum</b>, state carriage,
-<a href="#sect383">383</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pilleus</b>, cap of liberty,
-<a href="#sect175">175*</a>,
-<a href="#sect252">252</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>piscīna</b>, plunge bath,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>,
-<a href="#sect377">377*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pīstōrēs</b>, millers and bakers,
-<a href="#sect283">283</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PLACES</small>, of honor at dinner,
-<a href="#sect305">305*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the theater,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the circus,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the amphitheater (Pompeii),
-<a href="#sect355">355</a>, (Rome),
-<a href="#sect358">358</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;where gladiators were shown,
-<a href="#sect356">356</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of burial,
-<a href="#sect421">421</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PLAN</small>, of theater after Vitruvius,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;circus of Maxentius,
-<a href="#sect330">330</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of gladiatorial school at Pompeii,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of houses,
-<a href="#sect189">189</a>,
-<a href="#sect190">190</a>,
-<a href="#sect191">191</a>,
-<a href="#sect192">192</a>,
-<a href="#sect193">193</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of house of Pansa,
-<a href="#sect208">208</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of baths,
-<a href="#sect371">371</a>,
-<a href="#sect376">376</a>,
-<a href="#sect378">378</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of inn,
-<a href="#sect388">388</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of tombs and grounds,
-<a href="#sect425">425</a>,
-<a href="#sect426">426</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Plancus, tomb of,
-<a href="#sect420">420*</a>,
-<a href="#sect427">427</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Plautus (†184 <small>B.C.</small>) on <b>puls</b>,
-<a href="#sect283">283</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PLAYTHINGS</small> for children,
-<a href="#sect102">102*</a>.<br>
-<a name="plebeians"></a><br>
-<small>PLEBEIANS</small>, marriages of,
-<a href="#sect62">62</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;importance of cognates,
-<a href="#sect65">65</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;gain right of marriage,
-<a href="#sect64">64</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;old plebeians,
-<a href="#sect177">177</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;new,
-<a href="#sect178">178</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>plēbs</b>, see
-<a href="#plebeians"><small>PLEBEIANS</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-Pliny, the elder (†79 <small>A.D.</small>),
-<a href="#sect352">352</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pōcula</b>, goblets,
-<a href="#sect314">314*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>podium</b>, in circus,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect357">357</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in tombs,
-<a href="#sect425">425</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>POLITICS</small>, as a career,
-<a href="#sect406">406</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Pollio, Vedius, cruelty of,
-<a href="#sect158">158</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>POLYGAMY</small> unknown at Rome,
-<a href="#sect61">61</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pompa circēnsis</b>, parade in circus,
-<a href="#sect343">343</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Pompeii, importance of discoveries at,
-<a href="#sect11">11</a>,
-<a href="#sect12">12</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;house plans,
-<a href="#sect187">187</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;business rooms in private house,
-<a href="#sect194">194</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;small house at,
-<a href="#sect197">197*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;house of poet,
-<a href="#sect199">199*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Pansa,
-<a href="#sect208">208*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;smaller theater at,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>lūdī gladiātōriī</b>,
-<a href="#sect350">350*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect353">353*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>thermae</b>,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;street of tombs,
-<a href="#sect421">421*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;tomb with marble door,
-<a href="#sect427">427*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pondera</b>, stepping-stones,
-<a href="#sect233">233*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pontifex maximus</b>, in marriage ceremony,
-<a href="#sect82">82</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>POOR</small>, burial of,
-<a href="#sect428">428</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>por</b>, for <b>puer</b> in names,
-<a href="#sect58">58</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PORK</small>, favorite meat,
-<a href="#sect278">278</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PORRIDGE</small>,
-<a href="#sect283">283</a>,
-<a href="#sect286">286</a>,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>porta triumphālis</b> in circus,
-<a href="#sect330">330</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>pompae</b>,
-<a href="#sect330">330</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>Libitinēnsis</b>,
-<a href="#sect354">354</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>POSITION</small> of women,
-<a href="#sect90">90</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>POSTAL</small> service,
-<a href="#sect389">389</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>postīcum</b>, garden door,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<a name="potestas"></a><br>
-<b>potestās</b>, <b>patria</b>,
-<a href="#sect31">31</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;limitations,
-<a href="#sect32">32</a>,
-<a href="#sect73">73</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;extinguished,
-<a href="#sect34">34</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;suspension of,
-<a href="#sect34">34</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>dominica</b>,
-<a href="#sect37">37</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>POTTER</small>'s <small>FIELD</small> at Rome,
-<a href="#sect423">423</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>praecīnctiō</b>, in theater,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in circus,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in coliseum,
-<a href="#sect358">358</a>.<br>
-<a name="praenomen"></a><br>
-<b>praenōmen</b>, first name,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;number,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;abbreviations,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>,
-<a href="#sect45">45</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;limited in certain families,
-<a href="#sect42">42</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;given to firstborn son,
-<a href="#sect43">43</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;meanings of,
-<a href="#sect44">44</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;two in one name,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>prandium</b>, luncheon,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PRICES</small>, of baths,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;books,
-<a href="#sect401">401</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;houses,
-<a href="#sect221">221</a>, note;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;meals,
-<a href="#sect388">388</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;slaves,
-<a href="#sect140">140</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;tables,
-<a href="#sect227">227</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;wines,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PRIMITIVE</small> house,
-<a href="#sect188">188</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>prīmus pālus</b>, title of honor,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PRIVATE</small>, antiquities,
-<a href="#sect2">2</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;slaves,
-<a href="#sect141">142</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;bathhouse at Caerwent,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;games,
-<a href="#sect322">322</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;rooms in house,
-<a href="#sect203">203</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PROCESSION</small>, bridal,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in circus,
-<a href="#sect343">343</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>prōcūrātor</b>, steward,
-<a href="#sect149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PROFESSIONS</small> in hands of freedmen and foreigners,
-<a href="#sect412">412</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;even of slaves,
-<a href="#sect143">143</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PROLETARIATE</small>,
-<a href="#sect411">411</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>prōlūsiō</b>, sham fight,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>prōmulsis</b>, appetizer,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>prōnuba</b>, matron of honor,
-<a href="#sect81">81</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PROVINCES</small>, corruption in,
-<a href="#sect406">406</a>,
-<a href="#sect409">409</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PUBLIC</small>, antiquities,
-<a href="#sect2">2</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;baths,
-<a href="#sect372">372</a> f.,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>,
-<a href="#sect377">377*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;fountains,
-<a href="#sect233">233*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;games,
-<a href="#sect322">322</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;opinion, in case of children,
-<a href="#sect32">32</a>,
-<a href="#sect33">33</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in case of slaves,
-<a href="#sect156">156</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<small>PUBLICANS</small> and sinners,"
-<a href="#sect409">409</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PUBLICATION</small> of books,
-<a href="#sect400">400</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>puer</b>, for <b>servus</b>,
-<a href="#sect58">58</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;written por,
-<a href="#sect58">58</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pugillārēs</b>, writing tablets in sets,
-<a href="#sect391">391*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>puls</b>, ancient national diet,
-<a href="#sect283">283</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pultiphagōnidae</b>,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PUNISHMENTS</small> of schoolboys,
-<a href="#sect120">120*</a>,
-<a href="#sect124">124</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of slaves,
-<a href="#sect166">166</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>pūp</b>(<b>us</b>), of unnamed child,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>PURPLE</small> or crimson,
-<a href="#sect270">270</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>puticulī</b>, gravepits,
-<a href="#sect423">423</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Q<br>
-<br>
-<b>quadrāns</b>, regular bath charge,
-<a href="#sect373">373</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>quadrīgae</b>, in races,
-<a href="#sect340">340</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-R<br>
-<br>
-<small>RACEHORSES</small>,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RACES</small> in circus,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;teams,
-<a href="#sect340">340</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;drivers,
-<a href="#sect341">341</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;syndicates,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RACING</small> syndicates,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RAPE</small> of the Sabines,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>READING</small>, how taught,
-<a href="#sect110">110</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rēda</b>, carriage,
-<a href="#sect384">384</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>REFERENCE</small> books,
-<a href="#sect13">13</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RELATIONSHIPS</small>, <b>agnātī</b>,
-<a href="#sect23">23</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>cognātī</b>,
-<a href="#sect25">25</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>adfīnēs</b>,
-<a href="#sect26">26</a>.<br>
-<a name="renuntiare"></a><br>
-<b>renūntiāre</b>, break an engagement to marry,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>repōtia</b>,
-<a href="#sect85">85</a>,
-<a href="#sect89">89</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>repudium renūntiāre</b>, see
-<a href="#renuntiare"><b>renūntiāre</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rētiāriī</b>, gladiators with nets,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>,
-<a href="#sect360">360*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rēticula</b>, nets for the hair,
-<a href="#sect264">264</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>REWARDS</small> of <b>aurīgae</b>,
-<a href="#sect341">341</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rēx bibendī</b>, lord of the feast,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RICE</small> in modern wedding festivities,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RINGS</small>, engagement,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;men's,
-<a href="#sect255">255</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;women's,
-<a href="#sect267">267</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;worn on joint,
-<a href="#sect256">256</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ROADS</small>,
-<a href="#sect385">385*</a>-<a href="#sect387">387*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Romulus, legislation of,
-<a href="#sect32">32</a>,
-<a href="#sect95">95</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;wall of,
-<a href="#sect210">210*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;hut of,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>ROOF</small>, of peristyle,
-<a href="#sect202">202*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;construction of,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rosāria</b>, feast of roses,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rudēs</b>, fencing swords,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;with <b>prīma</b> or <b>secunda</b>,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>rūdus</b>, in roads,
-<a href="#sect387">387*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>RUNAWAY</small> slaves,
-<a href="#sect161">161</a>,
-<a href="#sect172">172*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-S<br>
-<br>
-<b>sacra gentīlīcia</b>,
-<a href="#sect22">22</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sacrārium</b>, private chapel,
-<a href="#sect207">207*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SADDLES</small>, not used by Romans,
-<a href="#sect381">381</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sagīna gladiātōria</b>, training food,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sagum</b>, military cloak,
-<a href="#sect247">247</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SALADS</small>,
-<a href="#sect276">276</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SALES</small> of captives,
-<a href="#sect134">134</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of slaves,
-<a href="#sect139">139</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SALTCELLAR</small> of silver,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;always on table,
-<a href="#sect307">307</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>salūtātiō</b>, morning levee,
-<a href="#sect182">182</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<b>Samnītēs</b>," name for gladiators,
-<a href="#sect359">359</a>,
-<a href="#sect360">360*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;later called <b>secūtōrēs</b> or <b>hoplomachī</b>,
-<a href="#sect360">360</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SANDALS</small>, see
-<a href="#slippers"><small>SLIPPERS</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sarcophagus</b>
-<a href="#sect436">436*</a>,
-<a href="#sect428">428</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SAVINGS</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect162">162</a>-<a href="#sect164">164</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SCALES</small>, in marriage ceremony,
-<a href="#sect83">83</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>scāpus</b>, fixed quantity of paper,
-<a href="#sect394">394</a>,
-<a href="#sect398">398</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>schēdae</b>, sheets of paper,
-<a href="#sect395">395</a>.<br>
-<a name="schools"></a><br>
-<small>SCHOOLS</small>,
-<a href="#chap4">Chap. IV</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SCHOOLS</small> for gladiators,
-<a href="#sect349">349*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>scrībae</b>, in civil service,
-<a href="#sect414">414</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;as copyists, see
-<a href="#librarii"><b>librāriī</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>scrīnium</b>, case for books,
-<a href="#sect397">397*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SEALS</small>,
-<a href="#sect255">255*</a>,
-<a href="#sect392">392</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SEATS</small>, in theater, of classes,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;arrangement,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in circus,
-<a href="#sect337">337</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in amphitheater (Pompeii),
-<a href="#sect355">355</a>, (Rome),
-<a href="#sect358">358</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>secunda mēnsa</b>,
-<a href="#sect308">308</a>,
-<a href="#sect309">309</a>,
-<a href="#sect311">311</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>secūtōrēs</b>, later name for "<b>Samnītēs</b>,"
-<a href="#sect360">360</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SEDAN CHAIRS</small>, in travel,
-<a href="#sect382">382</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sella curūlis</b>,
-<a href="#sect225">225*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sēmitae</b>, sidewalks,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sepulcrum</b>,
-<a href="#sect425">425</a>,
-<a href="#sect436">436</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>serae</b>, bars,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Servius</b> and <b>Sergius</b>, derivation,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Servius, grammarian (4th cent. <small>A.D.</small>),
-<a href="#sect434">434</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SEVENTEEN</small>, time of coming of age,
-<a href="#sect126">126</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SHIPS</small>, travel by,
-<a href="#sect380">380</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SHOES</small>,
-<a href="#sect251">251*</a>,
-<a href="#sect262">262*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SHOWS</small> of gladiators. See
-<a href="#munera">mūnera</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SHUTTERS</small> for windows,
-<a href="#sect217">217</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SIDEWALKS</small>,
-<a href="#sect233">233</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SIGNS</small> of mercy in amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>silicernium</b>, funeral feast,
-<a href="#sect436">436</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SILK</small> goods,
-<a href="#sect269">269</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sine missiōne</b>, "to the death,"
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SIZE</small> of books,
-<a href="#sect398">398</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SLAVEHUNTERS</small>,
-<a href="#sect161">161</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SLAVERY</small> and clientage,
-<a href="#sect180">180</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SLAVES</small>,
-<a href="#chap5">Chap. V</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SLEEPING</small> rooms,
-<a href="#sect205">205</a>.<br>
-<a name="slippers"></a><br>
-<small>SLIPPERS</small>,
-<a href="#sect250">250*</a>,
-<a href="#sect262">262*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SMOKE</small> to ripen wine,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sōlārium</b>, place to take the sun,
-<a href="#sect207">207</a>,
-<a href="#sect426">426</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;sun-dial,
-<a href="#sect232">232</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SOLDIERS</small>, career,
-<a href="#sect410">410</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>soleae</b>,
-<a href="#sect250">250*</a>,
-<a href="#sect262">262*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>soleās poscere</b>, "to take leave,"
-<a href="#sect250">250</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>solium</b>, chair,
-<a href="#sect226">226*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;basin in bath,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sōlum</b>, floor,
-<a href="#sect213">213</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sordidātī</b>, in mourning garb,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sortēs virīlis</b>, a shareholder's part,
-<a href="#sect430">430</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SOURCES</small> of philological knowledge, literary,
-<a href="#sect9">9</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;epigraphic,
-<a href="#sect10">10</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;monumental,
-<a href="#sect11">11</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Sp.</b>, abbreviation for <b>Spurius</b>,
-<a href="#sect41">41</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sp.</b>, abbreviation for <b>spectāvit populus</b>,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Spartacus,
-<a href="#sect132">132</a>,
-<a href="#sect172">172</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>spatium</b>, lap in circus,
-<a href="#sect331">331</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SPEED</small>, in travel,
-<a href="#sect389">389</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in writing,
-<a href="#sect401">401</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>spīna</b> in circus,
-<a href="#sect331">331*</a>,
-<a href="#sect336">336*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>spīna alba</b>, of wedding torch,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SPINNING</small> wheel,
-<a href="#sect199">199</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SPLITTING</small> up of a house,
-<a href="#sect19">19</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>spondeō</b>, technical word in contract,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>spōnsa</b>, of a girl betrothed,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>spōnsālia</b>, ceremony of betrothal,
-<a href="#sect70">70</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SPORT</small>, Roman idea of,
-<a href="#sect316">316</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SPORTS</small> of the campus,
-<a href="#sect317">317</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of children,
-<a href="#sect102">102</a>,
-<a href="#sect103">103</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sportula</b>, the clients' dole,
-<a href="#sect182">182</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STAGE</small>, early,
-<a href="#sect325">325</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;later,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Vitruvius,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STAGING</small> a play,
-<a href="#sect324">324</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>statūmen</b> in roads,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STEPPING-STONES</small> in streets,
-<a href="#sect233">233*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>stilus</b>, for writing,
-<a href="#sect391">391</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>stola</b>,
-<a href="#sect259">259</a>,
-<a href="#sect260">260*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>mātrōnālis</b>,
-<a href="#sect91">91</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STOOLS</small>,
-<a href="#sect225">225*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STOVE</small>, for cooking,
-<a href="#sect203">203*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for heating,
-<a href="#sect218">218*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STREET</small>, appearance,
-<a href="#sect233">233*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;construction,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;closed to vehicles,
-<a href="#sect382">382</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of tombs at Pompeii,
-<a href="#sect421">421*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>strigilēs</b>, flesh scrapers,
-<a href="#sect367">367*</a>,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>strophium</b>, girdle,
-<a href="#sect258">258</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STUCCO</small>, as finish for exterior wall,
-<a href="#sect212">212</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>STYLE</small> of living,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of bathing,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Styx, passage of,
-<a href="#sect433">433</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>suāsōria</b>, debates in schools,
-<a href="#sect115">115</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sub hastā vēnīre</b>, auction sale,
-<a href="#sect134">134</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SUBJECTS</small> taught in schools,
-<a href="#chap4">Chap. IV</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>subligāculum</b>, loin cloth,
-<a href="#sect235">235</a>,
-<a href="#sect257">257</a> .<br>
-<br>
-<b>subūcula</b>, under-tunic,
-<a href="#sect237">237</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>sūdāria</b>, handkerchiefs,
-<a href="#sect266">266</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Suetonius (about 75-160),
-<a href="#sect390">390</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SUICIDE</small> of captives and slaves,
-<a href="#sect140">140*</a>,
-<a href="#sect161">161</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>suī iūris</b>, independent,
-<a href="#sect17">17</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Sulla</b> and <b>Sura</b>, derivation,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SUPPLY</small> of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect347">347</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of slaves,
-<a href="#sect134">134</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of horses for racing,
-<a href="#sect339">339</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Sura</b>, derivation,
-<a href="#sect55">55</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>susceptiō</b>, acknowledgment of children,
-<a href="#sect95">95</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SUSPENSION</small> of <b>potestās</b>,
-<a href="#sect34">34</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>suspēnsūra</b>, elevated floor of bath room,
-<a href="#sect368">368*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>SWEAT</small> bath, dry,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;moist,
-<a href="#sect369">369</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>synthesis</b>, dinner dress,
-<a href="#sect249">249</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-T<br>
-<br>
-<b>tabellae</b>, for writing,
-<a href="#sect110">110*</a>,
-<a href="#sect391">391*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tabellāriī</b>, letter carriers,
-<a href="#sect389">389</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TABLE</small> knives and forks unknown,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TABLES</small>, cost, kinds, materials,
-<a href="#sect227">227*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tablīnum</b>, in early house,
-<a href="#sect190">190</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in later house,
-<a href="#sect201">201</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;meaning of word,
-<a href="#sect201">201</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Tacitus (about 55-117) on the toga,
-<a href="#sect133">133</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Talassiō</b>, marriage cry,
-<a href="#sect87">87</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tālī</b>, knuckle-bones,
-<a href="#sect320">320*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TEACHERS</small>,
-<a href="#sect121">121</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tēcta</b>, roofs,
-<a href="#sect214">214</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tēgulae</b>, tiles,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tepidārium</b>, purpose,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;other uses,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;position,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;unusual size,
-<a href="#sect371">371*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;several in one bath,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the large <b>thermae</b>,
-<a href="#sect377">377</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;with cold bath,
-<a href="#sect370">370</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tessera gladiātōria</b>,
-<a href="#sect363">363*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>hospitālis</b>,
-<a href="#sect185">185</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>THEATER</small>, early,
-<a href="#sect325">325</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;later,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Vitruvius,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at Pompeii,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at Orange,
-<a href="#sect327">327*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Pompeius,
-<a href="#sect326">326</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>thermae</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect372">372</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;plan of small,
-<a href="#sect376">376*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of large,
-<a href="#sect378">378*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>THIRD FINGER</small> for engagement ring,
-<a href="#sect71">71</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<b>Thracians</b>," gladiators,
-<a href="#sect360">360*</a>,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"<small>THUMBS</small> down," signal for death,
-<a href="#sect362">362</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Tiberius (Emperor, 14-37 <small>A.D.</small>),
-<a href="#sect274">274</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tībiālia</b>, wrappings for the legs,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TILES</small>, for roofs, etc.,
-<a href="#sect214">214*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tīrōcinium forī</b>,
-<a href="#sect117">117</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>mīlitiae</b>,
-<a href="#sect118">118</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tīrōnēs</b>, of untrained gladiators,
-<a href="#sect118">118</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>titulus</b>, description of slave,
-<a href="#sect139">139</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in <b>columbāria</b>,
-<a href="#sect429">429</a>,
-<a href="#sect431">431*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TOAST-MASTER</small>,
-<a href="#sect313">313</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TOASTS</small>,
-<a href="#sect314">314</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TOGA</small>, material and use,
-<a href="#sect240">240</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;appearance,
-<a href="#sect241">241*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in literature,
-<a href="#sect242">242*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;on the monuments,
-<a href="#sect243">243*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cumbrous and uncomfortable,
-<a href="#sect244">244</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;earlier toga,
-<a href="#sect245">245*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;kinds of,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;see also the Latin word below.<br>
-<br>
-<b>toga</b>, see the English word above;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>candida</b>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>lībera</b>,
-<a href="#sect127">127</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>picta</b>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>pulla</b>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>pūra</b>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>praetexta</b>,
-<a href="#sect76">76</a>,
-<a href="#sect125">125</a>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>splendēns</b>,
-<a href="#sect246">246</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>virīlis</b>,
-<a href="#sect125">125</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TOILET</small> articles,
-<a href="#sect265">265*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tollere</b>, acknowledge a child,
-<a href="#sect44">44</a>,
-<a href="#sect95">95</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TOMBS</small>,
-<a href="#sect422">422</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tōnsor</b>, barber and barber-shop,
-<a href="#sect254">254</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TORCHES</small>, at funerals,
-<a href="#sect434">434</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;weddings,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>,
-<a href="#sect89">89</a>.<br>
-<br>
-"To the lions,"
-<a href="#sect364">364</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TOWN-SLAVES</small>,
-<a href="#sect159">159</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>trabea</b>, cloak for men,
-<a href="#sect247">247</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TRADES</small>,
-<a href="#sect412">412</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TRAINERS</small> of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect349">349</a>,
-<a href="#sect363">363</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TRAVEL</small>,
-<a href="#chap10">Chap. X</a>. See
-<a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TRAVELING</small> cloak,
-<a href="#sect248">248</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TREADING</small> grapes for wine,
-<a href="#sect296">296*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TREATMENT</small> of slaves,
-<a href="#sect158">158</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>trīclīnium</b>, dining-room,
-<a href="#sect204">204</a>,
-<a href="#sect304">304*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in court,
-<a href="#sect204">204*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>trigōn</b>, three handed ball,
-<a href="#sect318">318</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TRIPLE</small> name,
-<a href="#sect38">38</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;expanded,
-<a href="#sect39">39</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;shortened,
-<a href="#sect40">40</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Tullus</b>, meaning,
-<a href="#sect44">44</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TUNIC</small>,
-<a href="#sect236">236*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tunica</b>,
-<a href="#sect236">236*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>angustī clāvī</b>,
-<a href="#sect238">238</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>lātī clāvī</b>,
-<a href="#sect238">238</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>exterior</b> (men's),
-<a href="#sect237">237</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(women's),
-<a href="#sect259">259*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>interior</b>,
-<a href="#sect237">237</a>,
-<a href="#sect258">258</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>manicāta</b>,
-<a href="#sect237">237</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>tālāris</b>,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>rēcta</b>,
-<a href="#sect76">76</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>rēgilla</b>,
-<a href="#sect76">76</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Tūscanicum ātrium</b>,
-<a href="#sect196">196</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tūtor</b>, guardian,
-<a href="#sect19">19</a>,
-<a href="#sect70">70</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>TWELVE TABLES</small> (450 <small>B.C.</small>), in the schools,
-<a href="#sect111">111</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;mention both burial and burning of dead,
-<a href="#sect420">420</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>tyrotarīchus</b>, a dish of cheese and salt fish,
-<a href="#sect280">280</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-U<br>
-<br>
-<b>umbella</b>, parasol,
-<a href="#sect266">266*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>umbilīcus</b>, of a papyrus roll,
-<a href="#sect397">397</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>umbōnēs</b>, of a road,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>umbrāculum</b>, parasol,
-<a href="#sect266">266*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>umbrae</b>, unexpected guests,
-<a href="#sect304">304</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ūnctōrium</b>, use,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;makeshift for,
-<a href="#sect367">367</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>UNLUCKY</small> days,
-<a href="#sect75">75</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>URNS</small>, for ashes of dead, see
-<a href="#ollae"><b>ollae</b></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ūstrīna</b>, place for private cremation,
-<a href="#sect426">426</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ūsus</b>, of marriage, definition,
-<a href="#sect62">62</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ceremony of,
-<a href="#sect84">84</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-V<br>
-<br>
-<b>v.</b>, for <b>vīcit</b>, of gladiators,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vappa</b>, term of reproach,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a>, note.<br>
-<br>
-Varro (116-28 <small>B.C.</small>),
-<a href="#sect253">253</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VEGETABLES</small> grown by Romans,
-<a href="#sect275">275</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VEGETARIANS</small>, early Romans,
-<a href="#sect299">299</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VEHICLES</small>, used for travel,
-<a href="#sect382">382</a> f.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vēla</b>, portières,
-<a href="#sect216">216</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;awnings,
-<a href="#sect358">358</a>,
-<a href="#sect361">361</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vēnātiōnēs</b>, hunts in circus and amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect343">343</a>,
-<a href="#sect364">364</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>ventrālia</b>, wrappings for the body,
-<a href="#sect239">239</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Venus</b>, the high throw,
-<a href="#sect320">320</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vernae</b>, slaves born in the house,
-<a href="#sect138">138</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Atticus,
-<a href="#sect155">155</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Verrēs</b>, as a <b>nōmen</b>,
-<a href="#sect46">46</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the governor of Sicily,
-<a href="#sect406">406</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vesperna</b>, evening meal in country,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>Vestālēs</b>, special seats in theater,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect357">357</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;allowed carriages in the city,
-<a href="#sect382">382</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vestibulum</b>, space before the door,
-<a href="#sect194">194</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>via Appia</b>,
-<a href="#sect385">385*</a>,
-<a href="#sect387">387*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vicārius</b>, a slave's slave,
-<a href="#sect164">164</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vīlicus</b>, overseer,
-<a href="#sect145">145</a>,
-<a href="#sect148">148</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cheats slaves,
-<a href="#sect160">160</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VILLAS</small> of the rich,
-<a href="#sect145">145</a>,
-<a href="#sect379">379</a>,
-<a href="#sect416">416</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vīnālia rūstica</b>, festival,
-<a href="#sect296">296</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VINEGAR</small>,
-<a href="#sect281">281</a>,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a>, note.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VINEYARD</small>,
-<a href="#sect295">295</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>vīnum</b>, fermented wine,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>violāria</b>, feast of violets,
-<a href="#sect438">438</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VITICULTURE</small>,
-<a href="#sect293">293</a>,
-<a href="#sect294">294</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Vitruvius, architect of the first century,
-<a href="#sect187">187</a>,
-<a href="#sect327">327</a>,
-<a href="#sect366">366</a>,
-<a href="#sect387">387</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<b>volūmen</b>, papyrus roll,
-<a href="#sect396">396</a>. See
-<a href="#books"><small>BOOKS</small></a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>VULTURE</small>, the lowest throw,
-<a href="#sect320">320</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-W<br>
-<br>
-<small>WALL</small>, of house,
-<a href="#sect210">210</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;facing for,
-<a href="#sect212">212*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;around arena,
-<a href="#sect354">354*</a>,
-<a href="#sect357">357*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WATER</small>, supply for houses,
-<a href="#sect219">219</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for baths,
-<a href="#sect368">368</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;traveling by,
-<a href="#sect380">380</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WAX</small> masks, of the dead,
-<a href="#sect433">433</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WEDDING</small>, see
-<a href="#marriage"><small>MARRIAGE</small></a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;day,
-<a href="#sect75">75</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;feast,
-<a href="#sect85">85</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;garments,
-<a href="#sect76">76</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;torch,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>,
-<a href="#sect89">89</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;procession,
-<a href="#sect86">86</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Whitney (1827-1894), definition of Philology,
-<a href="#sect6">6</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WINDOWS</small>,
-<a href="#sect217">217*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WINE</small>, in Italy,
-<a href="#sect293">293</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;districts,
-<a href="#sect294">294</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;making,
-<a href="#sect296">296*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;vaults,
-<a href="#sect297">297*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;jars,
-<a href="#sect297">297</a> (Fig. 116);<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;drunk diluted,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;cost,
-<a href="#sect298">298</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WOMEN</small>, names of,
-<a href="#sect57">57</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;position of,
-<a href="#sect90">90</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;education of,
-<a href="#sect92">92</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;dress of,
-<a href="#sect257">257</a> f.;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at table,
-<a href="#sect302">302</a>,
-<a href="#sect304">304*</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at amphitheater,
-<a href="#sect353">353</a>,
-<a href="#sect358">358</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at baths,
-<a href="#sect375">375</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WOOL</small> for clothing,
-<a href="#sect269">269</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WORDS</small> of style in contracts,
-<a href="#sect70">70</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;at funerals,
-<a href="#sect434">434</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<small>WRITING</small>, how taught,
-<a href="#sect110">110</a>;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of books,
-<a href="#sect398">398</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Z<br>
-<br>
-<b>zōna</b>, girdle,
-<a href="#sect260">260*</a>.<br>
-<br>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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@@ -1,12083 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Private Life of the Romans, by
-Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Private Life of the Romans
-
-Author: Harold Whetstone Johnston
-
-Release Date: August 20, 2012 [EBook #40549]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Ron Swanson
-
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS
-
-
-BY HAROLD WHETSTONE JOHNSTON
-
-PROFESSOR OF LATIN IN THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY
-
-
-
-
-CHICAGO
-
-SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY
-
-1909
-
-
-
-
-BY THE SAME AUTHOR (_Scott, Foresman and Company_)
-
-SELECTED ORATIONS AND LETTERS OF CICERO
-
-LATIN MANUSCRIPTS
-
-THE METRICAL LICENSES OF VERGIL
-
-
-
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY SCOTT, FORESMAN AND COMPANY
-
-
-
-
-ROBT. O. LAW CO., PRINTERS AND BINDERS, CHICAGO.
-
-TYPOGRAPHY BY MARSH, AITKEN & CURTIS COMPANY, CHICAGO.
-
-
-
-
-_CHARLES S. RANNELLS_
-
- _MEMOR_
-_ACTAE NON ALIO REGE PUERTIAE_
-
-_AMORIS CAUSA_
-
-_D D D_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-In preparing this book I have had in mind the needs of three classes
-of students.
-
-It is intended in the first place for seniors in high schools and
-freshmen in colleges, and is meant to give such an account of the
-Private Life of the Romans in the later Republic and earlier Empire as
-will enable them to understand the countless references to it in the
-Latin texts which they read in the class-room. It is hoped that the
-book contains all that they will need for this purpose and nothing
-that is beyond their comprehension.
-
-It is intended in the second place for more advanced college students
-who may be taking lectures on the subjects of which it treats. The
-work of both teacher and student will be made less irksome and more
-effective if the student is aided in the taking of notes by even so
-general a knowledge of the subject (previously announced to the class)
-as is here given. This I know from actual experience with my own
-classes.
-
-In the third place it is intended for readers and students of Roman
-history, who are engaged chiefly with important political and
-constitutional questions, and often feel the need of a simple and
-compact description of domestic life, to give more reality to the
-shadowy forms whose public careers they are following. Such students
-will find the Index especially useful.
-
-The book is written as far as possible in English: that is, no great
-knowledge of Latin is presumed on the part of the reader. I have tried
-not to crowd the text with Latin words, even when they are immediately
-explained, and those given will usually be found worth remembering.
-Quotations from Latin authors are very few, and the references to
-their works, fewer still, are made to well-known passages only.
-
-To every chapter are prefixed references to the standard secondary
-authorities in English and German. Primary sources are not indicated:
-they would be above the heads of the less advanced students, and to
-the more advanced the lecturer will prefer to indicate the sources on
-which his views are based. It is certain, however, that all these
-sources are indicated in the authorities named, and the teacher
-himself may occasionally find the references helpful.
-
-The illustrations are numerous and are intended to illustrate. Many
-others are referred to in the text, which limited space kept me from
-using, and I hope that Schreiber's Atlas, at least, if not
-Baumeister's Denkmaeler, may be within the reach of students in
-class-room or library.
-
-It goes without saying that there must be many errors in a book like
-this, although I have done my best to make it accurate. When these
-errors are due to relaxed attention or to ignorance, I shall be
-grateful to the person who will point them out. When they are due to
-mistaken judgment, the teacher will find in the references, I hope,
-sufficient authorities to convince his pupils that he is right and I
-am wrong.
-
-H. W. JOHNSTON.
-
-THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY,
-
-February, 1903.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.--Scope of the Book 1; Public and Private
- Antiquities 2; Antiquities and History 4; Antiquities and
- Philology 6; Sources 9; Reference Books 13; Systematic
- Treatises 14; Encyclopedic Works 15; Other Books 16
-
-I. THE FAMILY.--The Household 17; The Splitting Up of a House
- 19; Other Meanings of _Familia_ 21; _Agnati_ and
- _Cognati_ 23; _Adfines_ 26; The Family Cult 27; Adoption
- 30; The _Patria Potestas_ 31; Limitations 32; Extinction
- of the _Potestas_ 34; _Manus_ 35; _Dominica Potestas_ 37
-
-II. THE NAME.--The Triple Name 38; The _Praenomen_ 41; The
- _Nomen_ 46; The _Cognomen_ 48; Additional Names 51;
- Confusion of Names 55; Names of Women 57; Names of Slaves
- 58; Names of Freedmen 59; Naturalized Citizens 60
-
-III. MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN.--Early Forms of Marriage
- 61; _Ius Conubii_ 64; _Nuptiae Iustae_ 67; Betrothals
- 70; The Dowry 72; Essential Forms 73; The Wedding Day
- 75; The Wedding Garments 76; The Ceremony 79; The
- Wedding Feast 85; The Bridal Procession 86; The Position
- of Women 90
-
-IV. CHILDREN AND EDUCATION.--Legal Status 94; _Susceptio_ 95;
- _Dies Lustricus_ 97; The _Bulla_ 99; Nurses 100;
- Playthings 102; Pets and Games 103; Home Training 104;
- Schools 108; Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools 110;
- Grammar Schools 112; Schools of Rhetoric 115; Travel
- 116; Apprenticeship 117; Remarks on the Schools 119; The
- Teacher 121; Schooldays and Holidays 122; The
- _Paedagogus_ 123; Discipline 124; End of Childhood 125;
- The _Liberalia_ 127
-
-V. DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES.--Growth of Slavery
- 129; Numbers of Slaves 131; Sources of Supply 134; Sales
- of Slaves 139; Prices of Slaves 140; Public and Private
- Slaves 141; Private Slaves 142; Industrial Employment
- 143; The _Familia Rustica_ 145; Farm Slaves 146; The
- _Vilicus_ 148; The _Familia Urbana_ 149; Legal Status of
- Slaves 156; The Treatment of Slaves 158; Food and Dress
- 160; The _Peculium_ 162; Punishments 166; Manumission
- 175; The Clients 176; The Old Clients 177; Mutual
- Obligations 179; The New Clients 181; Duties and Rewards
- 182; The _Hospites_ 183; _Hospitium_ 184; Obligations of
- _Hospitium_ 185
-
-VI. THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE.--_Domus_ 186; The Development
- of the House 188; The _Vestibulum_ 194; The _Ostium_
- 195; The _Atrium_ 196; The Change in the _Atrium_ 197;
- The _Alae_ 200; The _Tablinum_ 201; The Peristyle 202;
- Private Rooms 203; The House of Pansa 208; The Walls
- 210; _Paries Caementicius_ 211; Wall Facings 212; Floors
- and Ceilings 213; Roofs 214; The Doors 215; The Windows
- 217; Heating 218; Water Supply 219; Decoration 220;
- Furniture 222; Principal Articles 223; The Couches 224;
- The Chairs 225; Tables 227; The Lamps 228; Chests and
- Cabinets 230; Other Articles 232; The Street 233
-
-VII. DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS.--_Indutus_: The _Subligaculum_
- 235; The Tunic 236; _Amictus_: The _Toga_ 240; Form and
- Arrangement 241; Kinds of Togas 246; The _Lacerna_ 247;
- The _Paenula_ 248; Other Wraps 249; Footgear: The
- _Soleae_ 250; The _Calcei_ 251; Coverings for the Head
- 252; The Hair and Beard 253; Jewelry 255; Dress of Women
- 257; The _Tunica Interior_ 258; The _Stola_ 259; The
- _Palla_ 261; Shoes and Slippers 262; Dressing of the Hair
- 263; Accessories 266; Jewelry 267; Dress of the Children
- and Slaves 268; Materials 269; Colors 270; Manufacture
- 271
-
-VIII. FOOD AND MEALS.--Natural Conditions 272; Fruits 274;
- Garden Produce 275; Meats 277; Fowl and Game 279; Fish
- 280; Cereals 282; Preparation of the Grain 283;
- Breadmaking 287; The Olive 289; Olive Oil 291; Grapes
- 293; Viticulture 294; Vineyards 295; Wine Making 296;
- Beverages 298; Style of Living 299; Hours for Meals 301;
- Breakfast and Luncheon 302; The Formal Meal 303; The
- Dining Couch 304; Places of Honor 305; Other Furniture
- 307; Courses 308; Bills of Fare 309; Serving the Dinner
- 310; The _Comissatio_ 312; The Banquets of the Rich 315
-
-IX. AMUSEMENTS; BATHS.--General 316; Sports of the Campus 317;
- Games of Ball 318; Games of Chance 319; Knuckle-bones
- 320; Dice 321; Public and Private Games 322; Dramatic
- Performances 323; Staging the Play 324; The Early Theater
- 325; The Later Theater 326; Roman Circuses 328; Plan of
- the Circus 330; The Arena 332; The Barriers 333; The
- _Spina_ and _Metae_ 335; The Seats 337; Furnishing the
- Races 339; The Teams 340; The Drivers 341; Famous
- _Aurigae_ 342; Other Shows of the Circus 343;
- Gladiatorial Combats 344; Popularity of the Combats 346;
- Sources of Supply 347; Schools for Gladiators 349; Places
- of Exhibition 351; Amphitheaters at Rome 352; The
- Amphitheater at Pompeii 353; The Coliseum 356; Styles of
- Fighting 359; Weapons and Armor 360; Announcement of the
- Shows 361; The Fight Itself 362; The Rewards 363; Other
- Shows in the Amphitheater 364; The Daily Bath 365;
- Essentials for the Bath 366; Heating the Bath 368; The
- _Caldarium_ 369; The _Frigidarium_ and _Unctorium_ 370; A
- Private Bathhouse 371; The Public Baths 372; Management
- 373; Hours Opened 374; Accommodations for Women 375;
- _Thermae_ 376; Baths of Diocletian 378
-
-X. TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS.--In General 379; By Water
- 380; By Land 381; The Vehicles 382; Carriages 383; The
- _Reda_ and _Cisium_ 384; The Roads 385; Construction
- 387; The Inns 388; Speed 389; Sending Letters 390;
- Writing the Letters 391; Sealing and Opening the Letters
- 392; Books 393; Manufacture of Paper 394; Pens and Ink
- 395; Making the Roll 396; Size of the Rolls 398;
- Multiplication of Books 399; Commercial Publication 400;
- Rapidity and Cost of Publication 401; Libraries 402
-
-XI. SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY.--In
- General 403; Careers of the Nobles 404; Agriculture 405;
- Political Office 406; The Law 407; The Army 408; Careers
- of the Equites 409; The Soldiers 410; The Proletariate
- 411; Professions and Trades 412; Business and Commerce
- 413; The Civil Service 414; The Roman's Day 415; Hours
- of the Day 417
-
-XII. BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES.--Importance of Burial
- 419; Interment and Cremation 420; Places of Burial 421;
- The Tombs 422; The Potter's Field 423; Plan of Tombs and
- Grounds 425; Exterior of the Tombs 427; The _Columbaria_
- 428; Burial Societies 430; Funeral Ceremonies 432; At
- the House 433; The Funeral Procession 434; The Funeral
- Oration 435; At the Tomb 436; After Ceremonies 437;
- Memorial Festivals 438
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE ROMANS
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-1. The topics that are discussed in this book have to do with the
-everyday life of the Roman people. Such things will be considered as
-the family, the Roman name, marriage and the position of women,
-children and education, slaves, clients, the house and its furniture,
-clothing, food and meals, amusements, travel and correspondence,
-funeral ceremonies and burial customs, etc. These things are of
-interest to us in the case of any ancient or foreign people; in the
-case of the Romans they are of especial importance, because they help
-to explain the powerful influence which that nation exerted over the
-old world, and make it easier to understand why that influence is
-still felt in some degree to-day.
-
-2. Public and Private Antiquities.--The subjects that have been named
-above belong to what is called Classical Antiquities, taking their
-place in the subdivision of Roman Antiquities as opposed to Greek
-Antiquities. They are grouped loosely together as Private Antiquities
-in opposition to what we call Public Antiquities. Under the latter
-head we consider the Roman as a citizen, and we examine the several
-classes of citizens, their obligations and their privileges; we study
-the form of their government, its officers and machinery, its
-legislative, judicial, and executive procedure, its revenues and
-expenditures, etc. It is evident that no hard and fast line can be
-drawn between the two branches of the subject: they cross each other
-at every turn. One scarcely knows, for example, under which head to
-put the religion of the Romans or their games in the circus.
-
-3. In the same way, the daily employment of a slave, his keep, his
-punishments, his rewards, are properly considered under the head of
-Private Antiquities. But the state undertook sometimes to regulate by
-law the number of slaves that a master might have, the state regulated
-the manumission of the slave and gave him certain rights as a
-freedman, and these matters belong to Public Antiquities. So, too, a
-man might or might not be eligible to certain state offices according
-to the particular ceremony used at the marriage of his parents. It
-will be found, therefore, that the study of Private Antiquities can
-not be completely separated from its complement, though in this book
-the dividing line will be crossed as seldom as possible.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: Students in secondary schools will find useful for
-preliminary reading the outline of the Roman Constitution in the
-Introduction to the author's "Selected Orations and Letters of
-Cicero." For more advanced students three books have lately appeared
-on this subject: Abbott's "Roman Political Institutions," Granrud's
-"Roman Constitutional History," and Greenidge's "Roman Public Life."]
-
-4. Antiquities and History.--It is just as impossible to draw the
-boundary line between the subjects of Antiquities and History. The
-older history, it is true, concerned itself little with the private
-life of the people, almost solely with the rise and fall of dynasties.
-It told us of kings and generals, of the wars they waged, the
-victories they won, and the conquests they made. Then, in course of
-time, institutions took the place of dynasties and parties the place
-of heroes, and history traced the growth of great political ideas:
-such masterpieces as Thirlwall's and Grote's histories of Greece are
-largely constitutional histories. But changes in international
-relations affect the private life of a people as surely, if not as
-speedily, as they affect the machinery of government. You can not
-bring into contact, friendly or unfriendly, two different
-civilizations without a change in the peoples concerned, without
-altering their occupations, their ways of living, their very ideas of
-life and its purposes. These changes react in turn upon the temper and
-character of a people, they affect its capacity for self-government
-and the government of others, and in the course of time they bring
-about the movements of which even the older history took notice. Hence
-our recent histories give more and more space to the life of the
-common people, to the very matters, that is, that were mentioned in
-the first paragraph as belonging to Private Antiquities. This may be
-seen in such titles as these: Green's "History of the English People,"
-McMaster's "History of the People of the United States."
-
-5. On the other hand it is equally true that a knowledge of political
-history is necessary for the study of Private Antiquities. We shall
-find the Romans giving up certain ways of living and habits of
-thinking that seemed to have become fixed and characteristic. These
-changes we could not explain at all, if political history did not
-inform us that just before they took place the Romans had come into
-contact with the widely different ideas and opposing civilizations of
-other nations. The most important event of this sort was the
-introduction of Greek culture after the Punic wars, and to this we
-shall have to refer again and again. It follows from all this that
-students who have had even the most elementary course in Roman history
-have already some knowledge of Private Antiquities, and that those who
-have not studied the history of Rome at all will find very helpful the
-reading of even the briefest of our school histories.
-
-6. Antiquities and Philology.--The subject of Classical Antiquities
-has always been regarded as a branch--"discipline" is the technical
-word--of Classical Philology since Friedrich August Wolf (1759-1824)
-made Philology a science. It is quite true that in the common
-acceptation of the word Philology is merely the science of language,
-but even here Antiquities has an important part to play. It is
-impossible to read understandingly an ode of Horace or an oration of
-Cicero, if one is ignorant of the social life and the political
-institutions of Rome. But Classical Philology is much more than the
-science of understanding and interpreting the classical languages. It
-claims for itself the investigation of Greek and Roman life in all its
-aspects, social, intellectual, and political, so far as it has become
-known to us from the surviving literary, epigraphic, and monumental
-records. Whitney puts it thus: Philology deals with human speech and
-with all that speech discloses as to the nature and history of man. If
-it is hard to remember these definitions one can hardly forget the
-epigram of Benoist: Philology is the geology of the intellectual
-world. Under this, the only scientific conception of Philology, the
-study of Antiquities takes at once a higher place. It becomes the end
-with linguistics the means, and this is the true relation between
-them.
-
-7. But it happens that the study of the languages in which the records
-of classical antiquity are preserved must first occupy the
-investigator, and that the study of language as mere language, its
-origin, its growth, its decay, is in itself very interesting and
-profitable. It happens, moreover, that the languages of Greece and
-Rome can not be studied apart from literatures of singular richness,
-beauty, and power, and the study of literature has always been one of
-the most attractive and absorbing to cultivated men. It is not hard to
-understand, therefore, why the study of Antiquities has not been more
-prominent in connection with philological training. It was the end to
-which only the few pressed on. It was reserved, at least in systematic
-form, for the trained scholar in the university. In the congested
-condition of the old curricula in our colleges it was crowded out by
-the more obvious, but not more essential or interesting, subjects of
-linguistics and literary criticism, or it was presented at best in the
-form of scrappy notes on the authors read in the classroom or in the
-dismembered alphabetical arrangement of a dictionary.
-
-8. Within the last few years, however, a change has been taking place,
-a change due to several causes. In the first place, the literary
-criticism which was once taught exclusively in connection with
-classical authors and which claimed so large a part of the time
-allotted to classical study has found a more appropriate place in the
-departments of English that were hardly known a generation ago. In the
-second place, the superior preparation in the classics now demanded
-for admission to our colleges has relieved their courses of much
-elementary linguistic drill that was formerly necessary. In the third
-place, the last half century has seen a greater advance in the
-knowledge of Antiquities than all the years before, and it is now
-possible to present in positive dogmatic form much that was recently
-mere guesswork and speculation. Finally, modern theories of education,
-which have narrowed the stream of classical instruction only to deepen
-its channel and quicken its current, have caused more stress to be
-laid upon the points of contact between the ancient and the modern
-world. The teacher of the classics has come to realize that the
-obligations of the present to the past are not to be so clearly
-presented and so vividly appreciated in connection with the formal
-study of art and literature as in the investigation of the great
-social, political, and religious problems which throughout all the
-ages have engaged the thought of cultivated men.
-
-9. Sources.--It has been already remarked (section 6) that Classical
-Philology draws its knowledge from three sources, the literary,
-epigraphic, and monumental remains of Greece and Rome. It is necessary
-that we should understand at the outset precisely what is meant by
-each of these. By literary sources we mean the writings of the Greeks
-and Romans, that is, the books which they published, that have come
-down to us. The form of these books, the way they were published and
-have been preserved, will be considered later. For the present it is
-sufficient to say that a mere fraction only of these writings has come
-down to our day, and that of these poor remnants we possess no
-originals but merely more or less imperfect copies. It is true,
-nevertheless, that these form as a whole the most important of our
-sources of information, largely because they have been most carefully
-studied and are best understood.
-
-10. By epigraphic sources we mean the words that were written,
-scratched, cut, or stamped on hard materials, such as metal, stone, or
-wood, without thought of literary finish. These vary from single words
-to records of very considerable extent, and are briefly called
-inscriptions. The student may get a good idea of the most ancient and
-curious by merely turning over a few pages of Ritschl's "Priscae
-Latinitatis Monumenta Epigraphica" or of Egbert's "Latin
-Inscriptions." Of one sort of great importance, the legends on coins
-and medals, many have found their way into American museums. With
-modern inscriptions on similar materials and for similar purposes
-every student is, of course, familiar.
-
-11. By monumental evidence we mean all the things actually made by the
-Greeks and Romans that have come down to us. These things are
-collectively very numerous and of very many kinds: coins, medals,
-pieces of jewelry, armor, pottery, statues, paintings, bridges,
-aqueducts, fortifications, ruins of cities, etc. It is impossible to
-enumerate them all. It is upon such remains as these that most of the
-inscriptions mentioned above are preserved. Of the most importance for
-the study of the private life of the Romans are the ruins of the city
-of Pompeii preserved to us by the protection of the ashes that buried
-it at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius in the year 79 A.D.
-
-12. It will be seen at once that the importance of these sources will
-vary with the nature of the subject we are studying and the fullness
-of their preservation. For example, we may read in a Roman poet a
-description of an ornament worn by a bride. A painting of a bride
-wearing such an ornament would make the description clearer, but any
-doubt that might remain would be removed if there should be found in
-the ruins of Pompeii a similar ornament with its character proved by
-an inscription upon it. In this case the three sources would have
-contributed to our knowledge. For other matters, especially intangible
-things, we may have to rely solely upon descriptions, that is, upon
-literary sources. But it may well happen that no Roman wrote a set
-description of the particular thing that we are studying, or if he did
-that his writings have been lost, so that we may be forced to build up
-our knowledge bit by bit, by putting together laboriously the scraps
-of information, mere hints perhaps, that we find scattered here and
-there in the works of different authors, and these perhaps of very
-different times. It is not hard to understand, therefore, that our
-knowledge of some things pertaining to Roman antiquities may be fairly
-complete, while of others we may have no knowledge at all. It may be
-worth remarking of literary sources that the more common and familiar
-a thing was to the ancients, the less likely is it that we shall find
-a description of it in ancient literature.
-
-13. Reference Books.--The collecting and arranging of the information
-gleaned from these sources has been the task of philologists from very
-early times, but so much has been added to our knowledge by recent
-discoveries that all but the latest books may be neglected by the
-student. A very full list of books treating of Roman Antiquities may
-be found in Hubner's "Bibliographie der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft," and a convenient list in Professor Kelsey's
-"Fifty Topics in Roman Antiquities with References," but the student
-should not fail to notice at the head of each chapter the lists of
-authorities to be consulted in the books specifically mentioned below.
-These have been arranged in two classes, systematic treatises and
-encyclopedic works, and the student who lacks time to consult all the
-references should select one at least of the better and larger works
-in each class for regular and methodical study.
-
-14. Systematic Treatises:
-
-Marquardt, Joachim, "Das Privatleben der Romer," 2d edition by A. Mau.
-This is the seventh volume of the _Handbuch der romischen Alterthumer_
-by Marquardt and Mommsen. It is the fullest and most authoritative of
-all the treatises on the subject and has a few illustrations.
-
-Voigt, Moritz, "Die Romischen Privataltertumer," 2d edition. This is a
-part of the fourth volume of the _Handbuch der klassischen
-Altertumswissenschaft_ by Iwan von Muller. It is the latest work on
-the subject, especially rich in the citation of authorities.
-
-Guhl and Koner, "Leben der Griechen und Romer," 6th edition by
-Engelmann. A standard and authoritative work enriched by copious
-illustrations. There is an English translation of an earlier edition
-which may be used by those who read no German.
-
-Becker, W. A., "Gallus oder romische Scenen aus der Zeit Augusts," new
-edition by Hermann Goll. This is a standard authority in the form of a
-novel. The story is of no particular interest, but the notes and
-excursuses are of the first importance. There is an English
-translation of the first edition which may be used with caution by
-those who read no German.
-
-Friedlander, L., "Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms in der
-Zeit von August bis zum Ausgang der Antonine," 6th edition. This is
-the great authority for the time it covers and will be found to
-include practically the history from the earliest times of all the
-matters of which it treats.
-
-Blumner, Hugo, "Technologie und Terminologie der Gewerbe und Kunste
-bei Griechen und Romern." The very best description of the arts and
-industries of ancient Greece and Rome.
-
-Ramsay, William, "A Manual of Roman Antiquities," 15th edition,
-revised and partly rewritten by Rodolfo Lanciani. This includes public
-as well as private antiquities, but the revision seems to have been
-but partial and the larger part of the book is hopelessly out of date.
-
-Wilkins, A. S., "Roman Antiquities," and Preston and Dodge, "The
-Private Life of the Romans." Two little books, of which the former is
-by a good scholar and is worth reading.
-
-15. Encyclopedic Works:
-
-Pauly-Wissowa, "Real-Encyclopadie der classischen
-Altertumswissenschaft." A monumental work, destined to be for many
-years the great authority upon the subject. Unfortunately it is
-appearing very slowly and has reached only the word _Demodoros_. There
-are a few illustrations.
-
-Smith, William, "A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities," revised
-edition by Wayte and Marindin. This is the very best work of the sort
-in English, the best possibly of similar size in any language.
-
-Baumeister, "Denkmaler des klassischen Altertums." The most richly
-illustrated work on the subject, absolutely indispensable.
-
-"Harper's Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities." Largely
-from Smith, but with valuable additions.
-
-Rich, "Dictionary of Roman and Greek Antiquities." A convenient manual
-with many illustrations. Very good for ready reference.
-
-Schreiber, "Atlas of Classical Antiquities." A very copious collection
-of illustrations bearing on Greek and Roman life. The illustrations
-are accompanied by explanatory text.
-
-Seyffert-Nettleship, "Dictionary of Classical Antiquities." The
-illustrations are numerous and the book is of some value on the side
-of ancient art.
-
-Lubker, "Real-Lexicon des klassischen Altertums," 7th edition by Max
-Erler. The best brief handbook for those who read German. It is
-compact and accurate.
-
-16. Other Books.--Besides these, three books may be mentioned treating
-of the discoveries at Pompeii, the importance of which has been
-mentioned (section 11):
-
-Overbeck, J., "Pompeii," 4th edition by August Mau, the standard
-popular work upon the subject, richly supplied with illustrations.
-
-Mau, August, "Pompeii, its Life and Art," translated by Kelsey. This
-is the best account of the treasures of the buried city that has
-appeared in English, at once interesting and scholarly.
-
-Gusman, Pierre, "Pompeii, the City, its Life and Art," translated by
-Simmonds and Jourdain. The very best collection of illustrations, but
-not so trustworthy in letterpress.
-
-Finally the student should be warned not to neglect a book merely
-because it happens to be written in a language that he does not read
-fluently: the very part that he wants may happen to be easy to read,
-and many of these books contain illustrations that tell their own
-story independently of the letterpress that accompanies them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE FAMILY
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, pp. 1-6; Voigt, 307-311, 386-388; Goll, II.
-1-4, 61-65, 187; Pauly-Wissowa, under _adfinitas_, _agnatio_,
-_cognatio_; Smith, under _cognati_, _familia_, _patria potestas_;
-Seyffert, under _agnatio_, _cognatio_, _familia_, _manus_; Lubker,
-under _agnatio_, _cognatio_, _familia_, _manus_, _patria potestas_.
-
-Look up the word _familia_ in Harper's lexicon and notice carefully
-its range of meanings.
-
-See also Muirhead, "Roman Law," pp. 24-33, and the paragraph on the
-Quiritian Family in the article on Roman Law by the same writer in the
-"Encyclopaedia Britannica," Vol. XX.
-
-
-17. The Household.--If by our word family we usually understand a
-group of husband, wife, and children, we may acknowledge at once that
-it does not correspond exactly to any of the meanings of the Latin
-_familia_, varied as the dictionaries show these to be. Husband, wife,
-and children did not necessarily constitute an independent family
-among the Romans, and were not necessarily members even of the same
-family. Those persons made up the Roman _familia_, in the sense
-nearest to its English derivative, who were subject to the authority
-of the same Head of the House (_pater familias_). These persons might
-make a host in themselves: wife, unmarried daughters, sons real or
-adopted, married or unmarried, with their wives, sons, unmarried
-daughters, and even remoter descendants (always through males), yet
-they made but one _familia_ in the eyes of the Romans. The Head of
-such a family--"household" or "house" is the nearest English word--was
-always _sui iuris_ ("independent," "one's own master"), while the
-others were _alieno iuri subiecti_ ("dependent").
-
-18. The authority of the _pater familias_ over his wife was called
-_manus_, over his descendants _patria potestas_, over his chattels
-_dominica potestas_. So long as he lived and retained his citizenship,
-these powers could be terminated only by his own deliberate act. He
-could dispose of his property by gift or sale as freely as we do now.
-He might "emancipate" his sons, a very formal proceeding
-(_emancipatio_) by which they became each the Head of a new family,
-though they were childless themselves or unmarried or even mere
-children. He might also emancipate an unmarried daughter, who thus in
-her own self became an independent family. Or he might give her in
-marriage to another Roman citizen, an act by which she passed by early
-usage (section 61) into the family of which her husband was Head, if
-he was _sui iuris_, or of which he was a member, if he was still
-_alieno iuri subiectus_. It must be carefully noticed, on the other
-hand, that the marriage of a son did not make him a _pater familias_
-or relieve him in any degree from the _patria potestas_: he and his
-wife and their children were subject to the same Head of the House as
-he had been before his marriage. On the other hand, the Head of the
-House could not number in his _familia_ his daughter's children:
-legitimate children always followed the father, while an illegitimate
-child was from the moment of birth in himself or herself an
-independent family.
-
-19. The Splitting Up of a House.--Emancipation was not very common and
-it usually happened that the household was dissolved only by the death
-of the Head. When this occurred, as many new households were formed as
-there were persons directly subject to his _potestas_ at the moment of
-his death: wife, sons, unmarried daughters, widowed daughters-in-law,
-and children of a deceased son. The children of a surviving son, it
-must be noticed, merely passed from the _potestas_ of their
-grandfather to that of their father. A son under age or an unmarried
-daughter was put under the care of a guardian (_tutor_), selected from
-the same _gens_, very often an older brother, if there was one. The
-following diagram will make this clearer:
-
- 1Gaius (_pater familias_) = (died)2Gaia (_mater familias_)
- |
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- | | | | |
-3Faustus = 4Tullia (died)5Balbus = 6Licinia 7Publius 8Terentia |
- | | 9Marcus = 10Terentia Minor
- ----------- ------------ |
- | | | | ------------
-11Titus 12Tiberius 13Quintus 14Sextius | |
- 15Servius 16Decimus
-
-20. It is assumed that Gaius is a widower who has had five children,
-three sons and two daughters. Of the sons, Faustus and Balbus married
-and had each two children; Balbus then died. Of the daughters,
-Terentia Minor married Marcus and became the mother of two children.
-Publius and Terentia were unmarried at the death of Gaius, who had
-emancipated none of his children. It will be noticed:
-
-1. The living descendants of Gaius were ten (3, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13,
-14, 15, 16), his son Balbus being dead.
-
-2. Subject to his _potestas_ were nine (3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13,
-14).
-
-3. His daughter Terentia Minor (10) had passed out of his _potestas_
-by her marriage with Marcus (9), and her children (15, 16) alone out
-of all the descendants of Gaius had not been subject to him.
-
-4. At his death are formed six independent families, one consisting of
-four persons (3, 4, 11, 12), the others of one person each (6, 7, 8,
-13, 14).
-
-5. Titus and Tiberius (11, 12) have merely passed out of the
-_potestas_ of their grandfather Gaius to come under that of their
-father Faustus.
-
-21. Other Meanings of Familia.--The word _familia_ was also very
-commonly used in a slightly wider sense to include in addition to the
-persons named above (section 17) all the slaves and clients and all
-the property real and personal belonging to the _pater familias_, or
-acquired and used by the persons under his _potestas_. The word was
-also used of the slaves alone, and rarely of the property alone. In a
-still wider and more important sense the word was applied to a larger
-group of related persons, the _gens_, consisting of all the
-"households" (_familiae_ in the sense of section 17) who derived their
-descent through males from a common ancestor. This remote ancestor,
-could his life have lasted through all the intervening centuries,
-would have been the _pater familias_ of all the persons included in
-the _gens_, and all would have been subject to his _potestas_.
-Membership in the _gens_ was proved by the possession of the _nomen_,
-the second of the three names that every citizen of the Republic
-regularly had (section 38).
-
-22. Theoretically this _gens_ had been in prehistoric times one of the
-_familiae_, "households," whose union for political purposes had
-formed the state. Theoretically its _pater familias_ had been one of
-the Heads of Houses who in the days of the Kings had formed the
-_patres_, or assembly of old men (_senatus_). The splitting up of this
-prehistoric household in the manner explained in section 19, a process
-repeated generation after generation, was believed to account for the
-numerous _familiae_ who claimed connection with the great _gentes_ in
-later times. The _gens_ had an organization of which little is known.
-It passed resolutions binding upon its members; it furnished guardians
-for minor children, and curators for the insane and for spendthrifts.
-When a member died without leaving natural heirs, it succeeded to such
-property as he did not dispose of by will and administered it for the
-common good of all its members. These members were called _gentiles_,
-were bound to take part in the religious services of the _gens_
-(_sacra gentilicia_), had a claim to the common property, and might if
-they chose be laid to rest in the common burial ground.
-
-Finally, the word _familia_ was often applied to certain branches of a
-_gens_ whose members had the same _cognomen_ (section 48), the last of
-the three names mentioned in section 21. For this use of _familia_ a
-more accurate word is _stirps_.
-
-23. Agnati.--It has been remarked (section 18) that the children of a
-daughter could not be included in the _familia_ of her father, and
-(section 21) that membership in the larger organization called the
-_gens_ was limited to those who could trace their descent through
-males. All persons who could in this way trace their descent through
-males to a common ancestor, in whose _potestas_ they would be were he
-alive, were called _agnati_, and this _agnatio_ was the closest tie of
-relationship known to the Romans. In the list of _agnati_ were
-included two classes of persons who would seem by the definition to be
-excluded. These were the wife, who passed by _manus_ into the family
-of her husband (section 18), becoming by law his agnate and the agnate
-of all his agnates, and the adopted son. On the other hand a son who
-had been emancipated (section 18) was excluded from _agnatio_ with his
-father and his father's agnates, and could have no agnates of his own
-until he married or was adopted into another _familia_. The following
-diagram will make this clearer:
-
- 1Gaius (_pater familias_) = 2Gaia (_mater familias_)
- |
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- | : | | | |
-3Faustus = 4Tullia : 5Balbus = 6Licinia 7Publius 8Terentia |
- | : [Emancipated]| [Emancipated] |
- ----------- : ------------ 9Marcus = 10Terentia Minor
- | | : | | |
-11Titus 12Tiberius : 13Quintus 14Sextius -------------
- : | |
- :[Servius adopted by Gaius] 15Servius 16Decimus
- :.........................[Emancipated]
-
-24. It is supposed that Gaius and Gaia have five children (Faustus,
-Balbus, Publius, Terentia, and Terentia Minor), and six grandsons
-(Titus and Tiberius the sons of Faustus, Quintus and Sextius the sons
-of Balbus, and Servius and Decimus the sons of Terentia Minor). Gaius
-has emancipated two of his sons, Balbus and Publius, and has adopted
-his grandson Servius, who had previously been emancipated by his
-father Marcus. There are four sets of _agnati_:
-
-1. Gaius, his wife, and those whose _pater familias_ he is, viz.:
-Faustus, Tullia the wife of Faustus, Terentia, Titus, Tiberius, and
-Servius, a son by adoption (1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 11, 12, 15).
-
-2. Balbus, his wife, and their two sons (5, 6, 13, and 14).
-
-3. Publius, who is himself a _pater familias_, but has no _agnati_ at
-all.
-
-4. Marcus, his wife Terentia Minor, and their child Decimus (9, 10,
-16). Notice that the other child, Servius (15), having been
-emancipated by Marcus is no longer agnate to his father, mother, or
-brother.
-
-25. Cognati, on the other hand, were what we call blood relations, no
-matter whether they traced their relationship through males or
-females, and regardless of what _potestas_ had been over them. The
-only barrier in the eyes of the law was loss of citizenship (section
-18), and even this was not always regarded. Thus, in the table last
-given, Gaius, Faustus, Balbus, Publius, Terentia, Terentia Minor,
-Titus, Tiberius, Quintus, Sextius, Servius, and Decimus are all
-cognates with one another. So, too, is Gaia with all her descendants
-mentioned. So also are Tullia, Titus, and Tiberius; Licinia, Quintus,
-and Sextius; Marcus, Servius, and Decimus. But husband and wife (Gaius
-and Gaia, Faustus and Tullia, Balbus and Licinia, Marcus and Terentia
-Minor) were not cognates by virtue of their marriage, though that made
-them agnates. In fact public opinion discountenanced the marriage of
-cognates within the sixth (later the fourth) degree, and persons
-within this degree were said to have the _ius osculi_. The degree was
-calculated by counting from one of the interested parties through the
-common ancestor to the other and may be easily understood from the
-table given in Smith's "Dictionary of Antiquities" under _cognati_, or
-the one given here (Fig. 1). Cognates did not form an organic body in
-the state as did the agnates (section 22), but the 22d of February was
-set aside to commemorate the tie of blood (_cara cognatio_), and on
-this day presents were exchanged and family reunions probably held. It
-must be understood, however, that _cognatio_ gave no legal rights or
-claims under the Republic.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 1. TABLE OF RELATIONSHIP]
-
-26. Adfines.--Persons connected by marriage only were called
-_adfines_, as a wife with her husband's cognates and he with hers.
-There were no formal degrees of _adfinitas_, as there were of
-_cognatio_. Those adfines for whom distinctive names were in common
-use were: _gener_, son-in-law; _nurus_, daughter-in-law; _socer_,
-father-in-law; _socrus_, mother-in-law; _privignus_, _privigna_,
-step-son, step-daughter; _ritricus_, step-father; _noverca_,
-step-mother. If we compare these names with the awkward compounds that
-do duty for them in English, we shall have additional proof of the
-stress laid by the Romans on family ties: two women who married
-brothers were called _ianitrices_, a relationship for which we do not
-have even a compound. The names of blood relations tell the same
-story: a glance at the table of cognates will show how strong the
-Latin is here, how weak the English. We have "uncle," "aunt," and
-"cousin," but between _avunculus_ and _patruus_, _matertera_ and
-_amita_, _patruelis_ and _consobrinus_, we can distinguish only by
-descriptive phrases. For _atavus_ and _tritavus_ we have merely the
-indefinite "forefathers." In the same way the language testifies to
-the headship of the father. We speak of the "mother country" and
-"mother tongue," but to the Roman these were _patria_ and _sermo
-patrius_. As the _pater_ stood to the _filius_, so stood the
-_patronus_ to the _cliens_, the _patricii_ to the _plebeii_, the
-_patres_ (=senators) to the rest of the citizens, and _Iupiter_ (Jove
-the Father) to the other gods of Olympus.
-
-27. The Family Cult.--It has been said (section 23) that _agnatio_ was
-the closest tie known to the Romans. The importance they attached to
-the agnatic family is largely explained by their ideas of the future
-life. They believed that the souls of men had an existence apart from
-the body, but not in a separate spirit-land. They conceived of the
-soul as hovering around the place of burial and requiring for its
-peace and happiness that offerings of food and drink should be made to
-it regularly. Should these offerings be discontinued, the soul would
-cease to be happy itself, and might become perhaps a spirit of evil.
-The maintenance of these rites and ceremonies devolved naturally upon
-the descendants from generation to generation, whom the spirits in
-turn would guide and guard.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 2. LUCIUS JUNIUS BRUTUS]
-
-28. The Roman was bound, therefore, to perform these acts of affection
-and piety so long as he lived himself, and bound no less to provide
-for their performance after his death by perpetuating his race and the
-family cult. A curse was believed to rest upon the childless man.
-Marriage was, therefore, a solemn religious duty, entered into only
-with the approval of the gods ascertained by the auspices. In taking a
-wife to himself the Roman made her a partaker of his family mysteries,
-a service that brooked no divided allegiance. He therefore separated
-her entirely from her father's family, and was ready in turn to
-surrender his daughter without reserve to the husband with whom she
-was to minister at another altar. The _pater familias_ was the priest
-of the household, and those subject to his _potestas_ assisted in the
-prayers and offerings, the _sacra familiaria_.
-
-29. But it might be that a marriage was fruitless, or that the Head of
-the House saw his sons die before him. In this case he had to face the
-prospect of the extinction of his family, and his own descent to the
-grave with no posterity to make him blessed. One of two alternatives
-was open to him to avert such a calamity. He might give himself in
-adoption and pass into another family in which the perpetuation of the
-family cult seemed certain, or he might adopt a son and thus
-perpetuate his own. He usually followed the latter course, because it
-secured peace for the souls of his ancestors no less than for his own.
-
-30. Adoption.--The person adopted might be either a _pater familias_
-himself or, more usually, a _filius familias_. In the case of the
-latter the process was called _adoptio_ and was a somewhat complicated
-proceeding by which the natural parent conveyed his son to the other,
-the effect being to transfer the adopted person from one family to the
-other. The adoption of a _pater familias_ was a much more serious
-matter, for it involved the extinction of one family (section 29) in
-order to prevent the extinction of another. It was called _adrogatio_
-and was an affair of state. It had to be sanctioned by the
-_pontifices_, the highest officers of religion, who had probably to
-make sure that the _adrogatus_ had brothers enough to attend to the
-interests of the ancestors whose cult he was renouncing. If the
-_pontifices_ gave their consent, it had still to be sanctioned by the
-_comitia curiata_, as the adrogation might deprive the _gens_ of its
-succession to the property of the childless man (section 22). If the
-_comitia_ gave consent, the _adrogatus_ sank from the position of Head
-of a House to that of a _filius familias_ in the household of his
-adoptive father. If he had wife and children, they passed with him
-into the new family, and so did all his property. Over him the
-adoptive father had _potestas_ as over a son of his own, and looked
-upon him as flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone. We can have at
-best only a feeble and inadequate notion of what adoption meant to the
-Romans.
-
-31. The Patria Potestas.--The authority of the _pater familias_ over
-his descendants was called usually the _patria potestas_, but also the
-_patria maiestas_, the _patrium ius_, and the _imperium paternum_. It
-was carried to a greater length by the Romans than by any other
-people, a length that seems to us excessive and cruel. As they
-understood it, the _pater familias_ had absolute power over his
-children and other agnatic descendants. He decided whether or not the
-newborn child should be reared; he punished what he regarded as
-misconduct with penalties as severe as banishment, slavery, and death;
-he alone could own and exchange property--all that his descendants
-earned or acquired in any way was his: according to the letter of the
-law they were little better than his chattels. If his right to one of
-them was disputed, he vindicated it by the same form of action that he
-used to maintain his right to a house or a horse; if one was stolen,
-he proceeded against the abductor by the ordinary action for theft; if
-for any reason he wished to transfer one of them to a third person, it
-was done by the same form of conveyance that he employed to transfer
-inanimate things. The jurists boasted that these powers were enjoyed
-by Roman citizens only.
-
-32. Limitations.--But however stern this authority was theoretically,
-it was greatly modified in practice, under the Republic by custom,
-under the Empire by law. King Romulus was said to have ordained that
-all sons should be reared and also all firstborn daughters;
-furthermore that no child should be put to death until its third year,
-unless it was grievously deformed. This at least secured life for the
-child, though the _pater familias_ still decided whether it should be
-admitted to his household, with the implied social and religious
-privileges, or be disowned and become an outcast. King Numa was said
-to have forbidden the sale into slavery of a son who had married with
-the consent of his father. But of much greater importance was the
-check put upon arbitrary and cruel punishments by custom. Custom, not
-law, obliged the _pater familias_ to call a council of relatives and
-friends (_iudicium domesticum_) when he contemplated inflicting severe
-punishment upon his children, and public opinion obliged him to abide
-by their verdict. Even in the comparatively few cases where tradition
-tells us that the death penalty was actually inflicted, we usually
-find that the father acted in the capacity of a magistrate happening
-to be in office when the offense was committed, or that the penalties
-of the ordinary law were merely anticipated, perhaps to avoid the
-disgrace of a public trial and execution.
-
-33. So, too, in regard to the ownership of property the conditions
-were not really so hard as the strict letter of the law makes them
-appear to us. It was customary for the Head of the House to assign to
-his children property, _peculia_ ("cattle of their own"), for them to
-manage for their own benefit. And more than this, although the _pater
-familias_ held legal title to all their acquisitions, yet practically
-all property was acquired for and belonged to the household as a
-whole, and he was in effect little more than a trustee to hold and
-administer it for the common benefit. This is shown by the fact that
-there was no graver offense against public morals, no fouler blot on
-private character, than to prove untrue to this trust, _patrimonium
-profundere_. Besides this, the long continuance of the _potestas_ is
-in itself a proof that its rigor was more apparent than real.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 3. PUBLIUS CORNELIUS SCIPIO AFRICANUS]
-
-34. Extinction of the Potestas.--The _patria potestas_ was
-extinguished in various ways:
-
-1. By the death of the _pater familias_, as has been explained in
-section 19.
-
-2. By the emancipation of the son or daughter.
-
-3. By the loss of citizenship by either father or son.
-
-4. If the son became a _flamen dialis_ or the daughter a _virgo
-vestalis_.
-
-5. If either father or child was adopted by a third party.
-
-6. If the daughter passed by formal marriage into the power (_in
-manum_) of a husband, though this did not essentially change her
-dependent condition (section 35).
-
-7. If the son became a public magistrate. In this case the _potestas_
-was suspended during the period of office, but after it expired the
-father might hold the son accountable for his acts, public and
-private, while holding the magistracy.
-
-35. Manus.--The subject of marriage will be considered later; at this
-point it is only necessary to define the power over the wife possessed
-by the husband in its most extreme form, called by the Romans _manus_.
-By the oldest and most solemn form of marriage the wife was separated
-entirely from her father's family (section 28) and passed into her
-husband's power or "hand" (_conventio in manum_). This assumes, of
-course, that he was _sui iuris_; if he was not, then though nominally
-in his "hand" she was really subject as he was to his _pater
-familias_. Any property she had of her own, and to have had any she
-must have been independent before her marriage, passed to him as a
-matter of course. If she had none, her _pater familias_ furnished a
-dowry (_dos_), which shared the same fate. Whatever she acquired by
-her industry or otherwise while the marriage lasted also became her
-husband's. So far, therefore, as property rights were concerned the
-_manus_ differed in no respect from the _patria potestas_: the wife
-was _in loco filiae_, and on the husband's death took a daughter's
-share in his estate.
-
-36. In other respects _manus_ conferred more limited powers. The
-husband was required by law, not merely obliged by custom, to refer
-alleged misconduct of his wife to the _iudicium domesticum_, and this
-was composed in part of her cognates (section 25). He could put her
-away for certain grave offenses only; if he divorced her without good
-cause he was punished with the loss of all his property. He could not
-sell her at all. In short, public opinion and custom operated even
-more strongly for her protection than for that of her children. It
-must be noticed, therefore, that the chief distinction between _manus_
-and _patria potestas_ lay in the fact that the former was a legal
-relationship based upon the consent of the weaker party, while the
-latter was a natural relationship antecedent to all law and choice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 4. LUCIUS CORNELIUS SULLA]
-
-37. Dominica Potestas.--The right of ownership in his property
-(_dominica potestas_) was absolute in the case of a _pater familias_
-and has been sufficiently explained in preceding paragraphs. This
-ownership included slaves as well as inanimate things, and slaves as
-well as inanimate things were mere chattels in the eyes of the law.
-The influence of custom and public opinion, so far as these tended to
-mitigating the horrors of their condition, will be discussed later. It
-will be sufficient to say here that there was nothing to which the
-slave could appeal from the judgment of his master. It was final and
-absolute.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE NAME
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 7-27; Voigt, 311, 316 f., 454; Pauly-Wissowa,
-under _cognomen_; Smith, Harper, and Lubker, under _nomen_.
-
-See also: Egbert, "Latin Inscriptions," Chapter IV; Cagnat, "Cours
-d'Epigraphie Latine," Chapter I; Hubner, "Romische Epigraphik," pp.
-653-680 of Muller's _Handbuch_, Vol. I.
-
-
-38. The Triple Name.--Nothing is more familiar to the student of Latin
-than the fact that the Romans whose works he reads first have each a
-threefold name, Caius Julius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero, Publius
-Vergilius Maro. This was the system that prevailed in the best days of
-the Republic, but it was itself a development, starting with a more
-simple form in earlier times and ending in utter confusion under the
-Empire. The earliest legends of Rome show us single names, Romulus,
-Remus, Faustulus; but side by side with these we find also double
-names, Numa Pompilius, Ancus Marcius, Tullus Hostilius. It is possible
-that single names were the earliest fashion, but when we pass from
-legends to real history the oldest names that we find are double, the
-second being always in the genitive case, representing the father or
-the Head of the House: Marcus Marci, Caecilia Metelli. A little later
-these genitives were followed by the letter _f_ (for _filius_ or
-_filia_) or _uxor_, to denote the relationship. Later still, but very
-anciently nevertheless, we find the freeborn man in possession of the
-three names with which we are familiar, the _nomen_ to mark the clan
-(_gens_), the _cognomen_ to mark the family, and the _praenomen_ to
-mark the individual. The regular order of the three names is
-_praenomen_, _nomen_, _cognomen_, although in poetry the order is
-often changed to adapt the name to the meter.
-
-39. Great formality required even more than the three names. In
-official documents and in the state records it was usual to insert
-between a man's _nomen_ and _cognomen_ the _praenomina_ of his father,
-grandfather, and great-grandfather, and sometimes even the name of the
-tribe to which he belonged. So Cicero might write his name: M. Tullius
-M. f. M. n. M. pr. Cor. Cicero; that is, Marcus Tullius Cicero, son
-(_filius_) of Marcus, grandson (_nepos_) of Marcus, great-grandson
-(_pronepos_) of Marcus, of the tribe Cornelia. See another example in
-section 427.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 5. MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO]
-
-40. On the other hand even the triple name was too long for ordinary
-use. Children, slaves, and intimate friends addressed the citizen,
-master, and friend by his _praenomen_ only. Ordinary acquaintances
-used the _cognomen_ with the _praenomen_ prefixed for emphatic
-address. In earnest appeals we find the _nomen_ also used, with
-sometimes the _praenomen_ or the possessive _mi_ prefixed. When two
-only of the three names are thus used in familiar intercourse the
-order varies. If the _praenomen_ is one of the two, it always stands
-first, except in the poets for metrical reasons and in a few places in
-prose where the text is uncertain. If the _praenomen_ is omitted, the
-arrangement varies: the older writers and Cicero put the _cognomen_
-first, _Ahala Servilius_ (Cic. Milo, 3, 8: cf. _C. Servilius Ahala_,
-Cat. I., 1, 3). Caesar puts the nomen first; Horace, Livy, and Tacitus
-have both arrangements, while Pliny adheres to Caesar's usage. It will
-be convenient to consider the three names separately, and to discuss
-the names of men before considering those of the other members of the
-_familia_.
-
-41. The Praenomen.--The number of names used as _praenomina_ seems to
-us preposterously small as compared with our Christian names, to which
-they in some measure correspond. It was never much in excess of
-thirty, and in Sulla's time had dwindled to eighteen. The full list is
-given by the authorities named above, but the following are all that
-are often found in our school and college authors: _Aulus_ (_A_),
-_Decimus_ (_D_), _Gaius_ (_C_), _Gnaeus_ (_CN_), _Kaeso_ (_K_),
-_Lucius_ (_L_), _Manius_ (_M'_), _Marcus_ (_M_), _Publius_ (_P_),
-_Quintus_ (_Q_), _Servius_ (_SER_), _Sextus_ (_SEX_), _Spurius_
-(_SP_), _Tiberius_ (_TI_), and _Titus_ (_T_). The forms of these names
-were not absolutely fixed, and we find for _Gnaeus_ the forms
-_Gnaivos_ (early), _Naevos_, _Naeus_, and _Gneus_ (rare); so also for
-_Servius_ we find _Sergius_, the two forms going back to an ancient
-_Serguius_. The abbreviations also vary: for _Aulus_ we find regularly
-_A_, but also _AV_ and _AVL_; for _Sextus_ we find _SEXT_ and _S_ as
-well as _SEX_, and similar variations are found in the case of other
-names.
-
-42. But small as this list seems to us the natural conservatism of the
-Romans found in it a chance to display itself, and the great families
-repeated the names of their children from generation to generation in
-such a way as to make the identification of the individual very
-difficult in modern times. Thus the Aemilii contented themselves with
-seven of these _praenomina_, _Gaius_, _Gnaeus_, _Lucius_, _Manius_,
-_Marcus_, _Quintus_, and _Tiberius_, but used in addition one that is
-not found in any other gens, _Mamercus_ (_MAM_). The Claudii used six,
-_Gaius_, _Decimus_, _Lucius_, _Publius_, _Tiberius_, and _Quintus_,
-with the additional name _Appius_ (_APP_), of Sabine origin, which
-they brought to Rome. The Cornelii used seven, _Aulus_, _Gnaeus_,
-_Lucius_, _Marcus_, _Publius_, _Servius_, and _Tiberius_. A still
-smaller number sufficed for the Julian gens, _Gaius_, _Lucius_, and
-_Sextus_, with the name _Vopiscus_, which went out of use in very
-early times. And even these selections were subject to further
-limitations. Thus, of the _gens Claudia_ only one branch (_stirps_),
-known as the _Claudii Nerones_, used the names _Decimus_ and
-_Tiberius_, and out of the seven names used in the _gens Cornelia_ the
-branch of the Scipios (_Cornelii Scipiones_) used only _Gnaeus_,
-_Lucius_, and _Publius_. Even after a _praenomen_ had found a place in
-a given family, it might be deliberately discarded: thus, the Claudii
-gave up the name _Lucius_ and the Manlii the name _Marcus_ on account
-of the disgrace brought upon their families by men who bore these
-names; and the Antonii never used the name _Marcus_ after the downfall
-of the famous triumvir, Marcus Antonius.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 6. CAESAR]
-
-43. From the list of names usual in his family the father gave one to
-his son on the ninth day after his birth, the _dies lustricus_. It was
-a custom then, one that seems natural enough in our own times, for the
-father to give his own _praenomen_ to his firstborn son; Cicero's name
-(section 39) shows the name _Marcus_ four times repeated, and it is
-probable that he came from a long line of eldest sons. When these
-names were first given they must have been chosen with due regard to
-their etymological meanings and have had some relation to the
-circumstances attending the birth of the child: Livy in speaking of
-the mythical Silvius Aeneas gives us to understand that he received
-his first name because he was born in a forest (_silva_).
-
-44. So, _Lucius_ meant originally "born by day," _Manius_, "born in
-the morning"; _Quintus_, _Sextus_, _Decimus_, _Postumus_, etc.,
-indicated the succession in the family; _Tullus_ was connected with
-the verb _tollere_ in the sense of "acknowledge" (section 95),
-_Servius_ with _servare_, _Gaius_ with _gaudere_. Others are
-associated with the name of some divinity, as _Marcus_ and _Mamercus_
-with Mars, and _Tiberius_ with the river god Tiberis. But these
-meanings in the course of time were forgotten as completely as we have
-forgotten the meanings of our Christian names, and even the numerals
-were employed with no reference to their proper force: Cicero's only
-brother was called _Quintus_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 7. AUGUSTUS]
-
-45. The abbreviation of the _praenomen_ was not a matter of mere
-caprice, as is the writing of initials with us, but was an established
-custom, indicating perhaps Roman citizenship. The _praenomen_ was
-written out in full only when it was used by itself or when it
-belonged to a person in one of the lower classes of society. When
-Roman names are carried over into English, they should always be
-written out in full and pronounced accordingly. In the same way, when
-we read a Latin author and find a name abbreviated, the full name
-should always be pronounced if we read aloud or translate.
-
-46. The Nomen.--This, the all-important name, is called for greater
-precision the _nomen gentile_ and the _nomen gentilicium_. The child
-inherited it, as one inherits his surname now, and there was,
-therefore, no choice or selection about it. The _nomen_ ended
-originally in _-ius_, and this ending was sacredly preserved by the
-patrician families: the endings _-eius_, _-aius_, _-aeus_, and _-eus_
-are merely variations from it. Other endings point to a non-Latin
-origin of the gens. Those in _-acus_ (_Avidiacus_) are Gallic, those
-in _-na_ (_Caecina_) are Etruscan, those in _-enus_ or _-ienus_
-(_Salvidienus_) are Umbrian or Picene. Some others are formed from the
-name of the town from which the family sprang, either with the regular
-terminations _-anus_ and _-ensis_ (_Albanus_, _Norbanus_,
-_Aquiliensis_), or with the suffix _-ius_ (_Perusius_, _Parmensius_)
-in imitation of the older and more aristocratic use. Standing entirely
-apart is the _nomen_ of the notorious _Gaius Verres_, which looks like
-a _cognomen_ out of place (section 55).
-
-47. The _nomen_ belonged by custom to all connected with the gens, to
-the plebeian as well as the patrician branches, to men, women,
-clients, and freedmen without distinction. It was perhaps the natural
-desire to separate themselves from the more humble bearers of their
-_nomen_ that led patrician families to use a limited number of
-_praenomina_, avoiding those used by their clansmen of inferior social
-standing. At any rate it is noticeable that the plebeian families, as
-soon as political nobility and the busts in their halls gave them a
-standing above their fellows, showed the same exclusiveness in the
-selection of names for their children that the patricians had
-displayed before them (section 42).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 8. NERO]
-
-48. The Cognomen.--Besides the individual name and the name that
-marked his _gens_, the Roman had often a third name, called the
-_cognomen_, that served to indicate the family or branch of the _gens_
-to which he belonged. Almost all the great _gentes_ were thus divided,
-some of them into numerous branches. The Cornelian gens, for example,
-included the plebeian Dolabellae, Lentuli, Cethegi, and Cinnae, in
-addition to the patrician Scipiones, Maluginenses, Rufini, etc. The
-recognition of a group of clansmen as such a branch, or _stirps_, and
-as entitled to transmit a common _cognomen_ required the formal
-consent of the whole _gens_, and carried with it the loss of certain
-privileges as _gentiles_ to the members of the _stirps_.
-
-49. From the fact that in the official name (section 39) the
-_cognomen_ followed the name of the tribe, it is generally believed
-that the oldest of these _cognomina_ did not go back beyond the time
-of the division of the people into tribes. It is also generally
-believed that the _cognomen_ was originally a nickname, bestowed on
-account of some personal peculiarity or characteristic, sometimes as a
-compliment, sometimes in derision. So, we find many pointing at
-physical traits, such as _Albus_, _Barbatus_, _Cincinnatus_,
-_Claudus_, _Longus_ (all originally adjectives), and the nouns _Naso_
-and _Capito_ ("the man with a nose," "with a head"); others refer to
-the temperament, such as _Benignus_, _Blandus_, _Cato_, _Serenus_,
-_Severus_; others still denote origin, such as _Gallus_, _Ligus_,
-_Sabinus_, _Siculus_, _Tuscus_. These names, it must be remembered,
-descended from father to son, and would naturally lose their
-appropriateness as they passed along, until in the course of time
-their meanings were entirely lost sight of, as were those of the
-_praenomina_ (section 44).
-
-50. Under the Republic the patricians had almost without exception
-this third or family name; we are told of but one man, Caius Marcius,
-who lacked the distinction. With the plebeians the _cognomen_ was not
-so common, perhaps its possession was the exception. The great
-families of the Marii, Mummii, and Sertorii had none, although the
-plebeian branches of the Cornelian gens (section 48), the Tullian
-gens, and others, did. The _cognomen_ came, therefore, to be prized as
-an indication of ancient lineage, and individuals whose nobility was
-new were anxious to acquire it to transmit to their children. Hence
-many assumed _cognomina_ of their own selection. Some of these were
-conceded by public opinion as their due, as in the case of Cnaeus
-Pompeius, who took _Magnus_ as his _cognomen_. Others were derided by
-their contemporaries, as we deride the made-to-order coat of arms of
-some nineteenth century upstart. It is probable, however, that only
-nobles ventured to assume _cognomina_ under the Republic, though under
-the Empire their possession was hardly more than the badge of freedom.
-
-51. Additional Names.--Besides the three names already described, we
-find not infrequently, even in Republican times, a fourth or fifth.
-These were also called _cognomina_ by a loose extension of the word,
-until in the fourth century of our era the name _agnomina_ was given
-them by the grammarians. They may be conveniently considered under
-four heads:
-
-In the first place, the process that divided the gens into branches
-might be continued even further. That is, as the _gens_ became
-numerous enough to throw off a _stirps_, so the _stirps_ in process of
-time might throw off a branch of itself, for which there is no better
-name than the vague _familia_. This actually happened very frequently:
-the _gens Cornelia_, for example, threw off the _stirps_ of the
-_Scipiones_, and these in turn the family or "house" of the _Nasicae_.
-So we find the quadruple name _Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica_, in
-which the last name was probably given very much in the same way as
-the third had been given before the division took place.
-
-52. In the second place, when a man passed from one family to another
-by adoption (section 30) he regularly took the three names of his
-adoptive father and added his own _nomen gentile_ with the suffix _-
-anus_. Thus, Lucius Aemilius Paulus, the son of Lucius Aemilius Paulus
-Macedonicus (see section 53 for the last name), was adopted by Publius
-Cornelius Scipio, and took as his new name _Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Aemilianus_. In the same way, when Caius Octavius Caepias was adopted
-by Caius Julius Caesar, he became _Gaius Iulius Caesar Octavianus_,
-and is hence variously styled Octavius and Octavianus in the
-histories.
-
-53. In the third place, an additional name, sometimes called _cognomen
-ex virtute_, was often given by acclamation to a great statesman or
-victorious general, and was put after his _cognomen_. A well known
-example is the name of Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus, the last
-name having been given him after his defeat of Hannibal. In the same
-way, his grandson by adoption, the Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus
-mentioned above, received the same honorable name after he had
-destroyed Carthage, and was called _Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus
-Aemilianus_. Such a name is Macedonicus given to Lucius Aemilius
-Paulus for his defeat of Persens, and the title Augustus given by the
-senate to Octavianus. It is not certainly known whether or not these
-names passed by inheritance to the descendants of those who originally
-earned them, but it is probable that the eldest son only was strictly
-entitled to take his father's title of honor.
-
-54. In the fourth place, the fact that a man had inherited a nickname
-from his ancestors in the form of a _cognomen_ (section 49) did not
-prevent his receiving another from some personal characteristic,
-especially as the inherited name had often no application, as we have
-seen, to its later possessor. To some ancient Publius Cornelius was
-given the nickname _Scipio_ (section 49), and in the course of time
-this was taken by all his descendants without thought of its
-appropriateness and became a _cognomen_; then to one of these
-descendants was given another nickname for personal reasons, _Nasica_,
-and in course of time it lost its individuality and became the name of
-a whole family (section 51); then in precisely the same way a member
-of this family became prominent enough to need a separate name and was
-called _Corculum_, his full name being _Publius Cornelius Scipio
-Nasica Corculum_. It is evident that there is no reason why the
-expansion should not have continued indefinitely. Such names are
-Publius Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer,
-and Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio. It is also evident that
-we can not always distinguish between a mere nickname, one belonging
-strictly to this paragraph, and the additional _cognomen_ that marked
-the family off from the rest of the _stirps_ to which it belonged. It
-is perfectly possible that the name Spinther mentioned above has as
-good a right as Nasica to a place in the first division (section 51).
-
-55. Confusion of Names.--A system so elaborate as that we have
-described was almost sure to be misunderstood or misapplied, and in
-the later days of the Republic and under the Empire we find all law
-and order disregarded. The giving of the _praenomen_ to the child
-seems to have been delayed too long sometimes, and burial inscriptions
-are numerous which have in place of a first name the word _pupus_
-(_PVP_) "child," showing that the little one had died unnamed. One
-such inscription gives the age of the unnamed child as sixteen years.
-Then confusion was caused by the misuse of the _praenomen_. Sometimes
-two are found in one name, e.g., _Publius Aelius Alienus Archelaus
-Marcus_. Sometimes words ending like the _nomen_ in _-ius_ were used
-as _praenomina_: Cicero tells us that one _Numerius Quintius Rufus_
-owed his escape from death in a riot to his ambiguous first name. The
-familiar Gaius must have been a _nomen_ in very ancient times. Like
-irregularities occur in the use of the _nomen_. Two in a name were not
-uncommon, one being derived from the family of the mother perhaps;
-occasionally three or four are used, and fourteen are found in the
-name of one of the consuls of the year 169 A.D. Then by a change, the
-converse of that mentioned above, a word might go out of use as a
-_praenomen_ and become a _nomen_: Cicero's enemy _Lucius Sergius
-Catilina_ had for his gentile name _Sergius_, which had once been a
-first name (section 41). The _cognomen_ was similarly abused. It
-ceased to denote the family and came to distinguish members of the
-same family, as the _praenomina_ originally had done: thus the three
-sons of Marcus Annaeus Seneca, for example, were called _Marcus
-Annaeus Novatus_, _Lucius Annaeus Seneca_, and _Lucius Annaeus Mela_.
-So, too, a word used as a _cognomen_ in one name might be used as a
-fourth element in another: for example in the names _Lucius Cornelius
-Sulla_ and _Lucius Cornelius Lentulus Sura_ the third and fourth
-elements respectively are really the same, being merely shortened
-forms of _Surula_. Finally it may be remarked that the same name might
-be arranged differently at different times: in the consular lists we
-find the same man called _Lucius Lucretius Tricipitinus Flavus_ and
-_Lucius Lucretius Flavus Tricipitinus_.
-
-56. There is even greater variation in the names of persons who had
-passed from one family into another by adoption. Some took the
-additional name (section 52) from the _stirps_ instead of from the
-_gens_, that is, from the _cognomen_ instead of from the _nomen_. A
-son of Marcus Claudius Marcellus was adopted by a certain Publius
-Cornelius Lentulus and ought to have been called _Publius Cornelius
-Lentulus Claudianus_; he took instead the name _Publius Cornelius
-Lentulus Marcellinus_, and this name descended to his children. The
-confusion in this direction is well illustrated by the name of the
-famous Marcus Junius Brutus. A few years before Caesar fell by his
-hand, Brutus, as we usually call him, was adopted by his mother's
-brother, Quintus Servilius Caepio, and ought to have been called
-_Quintus Servilius Caepio Iunianus_. For some reason unknown to us he
-retained his own _cognomen_, and even his close friend Cicero seems
-scarcely to know what to call him. Sometimes he writes of him as
-_Quintus Caepio Brutus_, sometimes as _Marcus Brutus_, sometimes
-simply as _Brutus_. The great scholar of the first century, Asconius,
-calls him _Marcus Caepio_. Finally it may be noticed that late in the
-Empire we find a man struggling under the load of forty names.
-
-57. Names of Women.--No very satisfactory account of the names of
-women can be given, because it is impossible to discover any system in
-the choice and arrangement of those that have come down to us. It may
-be said in general that the threefold name was unknown in the best
-days of the Republic, and that _praenomina_ were rare and when used
-were not abbreviated. We find such _praenomina_ as _Paulla_ and
-_Vibia_ (the masculine forms of which early disappeared), _Gaia_,
-_Lucia_, and _Publia_, and it is probable that the daughter took these
-from her father. More common were the adjectives _Maxuma_ and _Minor_,
-and the numerals _Secunda_ and _Tertia_, but these unlike the
-corresponding names of men seem always to have denoted the place of
-the bearer among a group of sisters. It was more usual for the
-unmarried woman to be called by her father's _nomen_ in its feminine
-form, _Tullia_, _Cornelia_, with the addition of her father's
-_cognomen_ in the genitive case, _Caecilia Metelli_, followed later by
-the letter _f_ (=_filia_) to mark the relationship. Sometimes she used
-her mother's _nomen_ after her father's. The married woman, if she
-passed into her husband's hand (_manus_, section 35) by the ancient
-patrician ceremony, originally took his _nomen_, just as an adopted
-son took the name of the family into which he passed, but it can not
-be shown that the rule was universally or even usually observed. Under
-the later forms of marriage she retained her maiden name. In the time
-of the Empire we find the threefold name for women in general use,
-with the same riotous confusion in selection and arrangement as
-prevailed in the case of the names of men at the same time.
-
-58. Names of Slaves.--Slaves had no more right to names of their own
-than they had to other property, but took such as their masters were
-pleased to give them, and even these did not descend to their
-children. In the simpler life of early times the slave was called
-_puer_, just as the word "boy" was once used in this country for
-slaves of any age. Until late in the Republic the slave was known only
-by this name corrupted to _por_ and affixed to the genitive of his
-master's first name: _Marcipor_ (=_Marci puer_), "Marcus's slave."
-When slaves became numerous this simple form no longer sufficed to
-distinguish them, and they received individual names. These were
-usually foreign names, often denoting the nationality of the slave,
-sometimes, in mockery perhaps, the high-sounding appellations of
-eastern potentates, such names as Afer, Eleutheros, Pharnaces. By this
-time, too, the word _servus_ had supplanted _puer_. We find,
-therefore, that toward the end of the Republic the full name of a
-slave consisted of his individual name followed by the _nomen_ and
-_praenomen_ (the order is important) of his master and the word
-_servus_: _Pharnaces Egnatii Publii servus_. When a slave passed from
-one master to another he took the _nomen_ of the new master and added
-to it the _cognomen_ of the old with the suffix _-anus_: when Anna the
-slave of Maecenas became the property of Livia, she was called _Anna
-Liviae serva Maecenatiana_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 9. TRAJAN]
-
-59. Names of Freedmen.--The freedman regularly kept the individual
-name which he had had as a slave, and was given the _nomen_ of his
-master with any _praenomen_ the latter assigned him. Thus, Andronicus,
-the slave of Marcus Livius Salinator, became when freed _Lucius Livius
-Andronicus_, the individual name coming last as a sort of _cognomen_.
-It happened naturally that the master's _praenomen_ was often given,
-especially to a favorite slave. The freedman of a woman took the name
-of her father, e.g., _Marcus Livius Augustae l Ismarus_; the letter
-_l_ stands for _libertus_, and was inserted in all formal documents.
-Of course the master might disregard the regular form and give the
-freedman any name he pleased. Thus, when Cicero manumitted his slaves
-Tiro and Dionysius he called the former in strict accord with custom
-_Marcus Tullius Tiro_, but to the latter he gave his own _praenomen_
-and the _nomen_ of his friend Titus Pomponius Atticus, the new name
-being _Marcus Pomponius Dionysius_. The individual names (Pharnaces,
-Dionysius, etc.) were dropped by the descendants of freedmen, who were
-anxious with good reason to hide all traces of their mean descent.
-
-60. Naturalized Citizens.--When a foreigner was given the right of
-citizenship, he took a new name, which was arranged on much the same
-principles as have been explained in the cases of freedmen. His
-original name was retained as a sort of _cognomen_, and before it were
-written the _praenomen_ that suited his fancy and the _nomen_ of the
-person, always a Roman citizen, to whom he owed his citizenship. The
-most familiar example is that of the Greek poet Archias, whom Cicero
-defended under the name of _Aulus Licinius Archias_ in the well-known
-oration. He had long been attached to the family of the Luculli and
-when he was made a citizen took as his _nomen_ that of his
-distinguished patron Lucius Licinius Lucullus; we do not know why he
-selected the first name Aulus. Another example is that of the Gaul
-mentioned by Caesar (B. G., I, 47), _Gaius Valerius Caburus_. He took
-his name from Caius Valerius Flaccus, the governor of Gaul at the time
-that he was given his citizenship. It is to this custom of taking the
-names of governors and generals that is due the frequent occurrence of
-the name Julius in Gaul, Pompeius in Spain, and Cornelius in Sicily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MARRIAGE AND THE POSITION OF WOMEN
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 28-80; Voigt, 318, 449; Goll, II, 5 f.;
-Friedlander, I, 451 f.; Ramsay, 293 f., 477; Preston, 8 f.; Smith,
-_matrimonium_; Baumeister, 696 f.; Harper, _conubium_, _matrimonium_;
-Lubker, 364; Pauly-Wissowa, _coemptio_, _confarreatio_, _conubium_.
-
-
-61. Early Forms of Marriage.--Polygamy was never practiced at Rome,
-and we are told that for five centuries after the founding of the city
-divorce was entirely unknown. Up to the time of the Servian
-constitution (date uncertain) the patricians were the only citizens
-and intermarried only with patricians and with members of surrounding
-communities having like social standing. The only form of marriage
-known to them was the stately religious ceremonial called, as will be
-explained hereafter, _confarreatio_. With the direct consent of the
-gods, with the _pontifices_ celebrating the solemn rites, in the
-presence of the accredited representatives of his _gens_, the
-patrician took his wife from her father's family into his own (section
-28), to be a _mater familias_, to rear him children who should
-conserve the family mysteries, perpetuate his ancient race, and extend
-the power of Rome. By this, the one legal marriage of the time, the
-wife passed _in manum viri_, and the husband acquired over her
-practically the same rights as he had over his own children (sections
-35, 36) and other dependent members of his family. Such a marriage was
-said to be _cum conventione uxoris in manum viri_ (section 35).
-
-62. During this period, too, the free non-citizens (sections 177,
-178), the plebeians, had been busy in marrying and giving in marriage.
-There is little doubt that their unions had been as sacred in their
-eyes, their family ties as strictly regarded and as pure, as those of
-the patricians, but these unions were unhallowed by the national gods
-and unrecognized by the civil law, simply because the plebeians were
-not yet citizens. Their form of marriage was called _usus_, and
-consisted essentially in the living together of the man and woman as
-husband and wife for a year, though there were, of course,
-conventional forms and observances, about which we know absolutely
-nothing. The plebeian husband might acquire the same rights over the
-person and property of his wife as the patrician, but the form of
-marriage did not in itself involve _manus_. The wife might remain a
-member of her father's family and retain such property as he allowed
-her (section 33) by merely absenting herself from her husband for the
-space of a _trinoctium_ each year. If she did this the marriage was
-_sine conventione in manum_, and the husband had no control over her
-property; if she did not, the marriage like that of the patricians was
-_cum conventione in manum_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 10. HADRIAN]
-
-63. At least as far back as the time of Servius goes another Roman
-form of marriage, also plebeian, though not so ancient as _usus_. It
-was called _coemptio_ and was a fictitious sale, by which the _pater
-familias_ of the woman, or her guardian (_tutor_) if she was _sui
-iuris_, transferred her to the man _matrimonii causa_. This form must
-have been a survival of the old custom of purchase and sale of wives,
-but we do not know when it was introduced among the Romans. It carried
-_manus_ with it as a matter of course and seems to have been regarded
-socially as better form than _usus_. The two existed for centuries
-side by side, but _coemptio_ survived _usus_ as a form of marriage
-_cum conventione in manum_.
-
-64. Ius Conubii.--While the Servian constitution made the plebeians
-citizens and thereby legalized their forms of marriage, it did not
-give them the right of intermarriage with the patricians. Many of the
-plebeian families were hardly less ancient than the patricians, many
-were rich and powerful, but it was not until 445 B.C. that marriages
-between the two orders were formally sanctioned by the civil law. The
-objection on the part of the patricians was largely a religious one:
-The gods of the state were patrician gods, the auspices could be taken
-by patricians only, the marriages of patricians only were sanctioned
-by heaven. Their orators protested that the unions of the plebeians
-were no better than promiscuous intercourse, they were not _iustae
-nuptiae_ (section 67); the plebeian wife was taken _in matrimonium_,
-she was at best an _uxor_, not a _mater familias_; her offspring were
-"mother's children," not _patricii_.
-
-65. Much of this was class exaggeration, but it is true that at this
-early date the _gens_ was not so highly valued by the plebeians as by
-the patricians, and that the plebeians assigned to cognates certain
-duties and privileges that devolved upon the patrician _gentiles_.
-With, the _ius conubii_ many of these points of difference
-disappeared. New conditions were fixed for _iustae nuptiae_;
-_coemptio_ by a sort of compromise became the usual form of marriage
-when one of the parties was a plebeian; and the stigma disappeared
-from the word _matrimonium_. On the other hand patrician women learned
-to understand the advantages of a marriage _sine conventione_ and
-marriage with _manus_ gradually became less frequent, the taking of
-the auspices before the ceremony came to be considered a mere form,
-and marriage began to lose its sacramental character, and with these
-changes came later the laxness in the marital relation and the freedom
-of divorce that seemed in the time of Augustus to threaten the very
-life of the commonwealth.
-
-66. It is probable that by the time of Cicero marriage with _manus_
-was uncommon, and consequently that _confarreatio_ and _coemptio_ had
-gone out of general use. To a limited extent, however, the former was
-retained until Christian times, because certain priestly offices
-(_flamines maiores_ and _reges sacrorum_) could be filled only by
-persons whose parents had been married by the confarreate ceremony,
-the one sacramental form, and who had themselves been married by the
-same form. But so great became the reluctance of women to submit to
-_manus_, that in order to fill even these few priestly offices it was
-found necessary under Tiberius to eliminate _manus_ from the
-confarreate ceremony.
-
-67. Nuptiae Iustae.--There were certain conditions that had to be
-satisfied before a legal marriage could be contracted even by
-citizens. It was required:
-
-1. That the consent of both parties should be given, or of the _pater
-familias_ if one or both were _in potestate_. Under Augustus it was
-provided that the _pater familias_ should not withhold his consent
-unless he could show valid reasons for doing so.
-
-2. That both parties should be _puberes_; there could be no marriage
-between children. Although no precise age was fixed by law, it is
-probable that fourteen and twelve were the lowest limit for the man
-and woman respectively.
-
-3. That both man and woman should be unmarried. Polygamy was never
-practiced at Rome.
-
-68. 4. That the parties should not be nearly related. The restrictions
-in this direction were fixed rather by public opinion than by law and
-varied greatly at different times, becoming gradually less severe. In
-general it may be said that marriage was absolutely forbidden between
-ascendants and descendants, between other cognates within the fourth
-degree (section 25), and the nearer _adfines_ (section 26). If the
-parties could satisfy these conditions they might be legally married,
-but distinctions were still made that affected the civil status of the
-children, although no doubt was cast upon their legitimacy or upon the
-moral character of their parents.
-
-69. If the husband and wife were both Roman citizens, their marriage
-was called _iustae nuptiae_, which we may translate "regular
-marriage," their children were _iusti liberi_ and were by birth _cives
-optimo iure_, "possessed of all civil rights."
-
-If but one of the parties was a Roman citizen and the other a member
-of a community having the _ius conubii_ but not the full _civitas_,
-the marriage was still called _iustae nuptiae_, but the children took
-the civil standing of the father. This means that if the father was a
-citizen and the mother a foreigner, the children were citizens; but if
-the father was a foreigner and the mother a citizen, the children were
-foreigners (_peregrini_) with the father.
-
-But if either of the parties was without the _ius conubii_, the
-marriage, though still legal, was called _nuptiae iniustae_ or
-_matrimonium iniustum_, "an irregular marriage," and the children,
-though legitimate, took the civil position of the parent of lower
-degree. We seem to have something analogous to this in the loss of
-social standing which usually follows the marriage of a person with
-one of distinctly inferior position.
-
-70. Betrothals.--Betrothal (_sponsalia_) as a preliminary to marriage
-was considered good form but was not legally necessary and carried
-with it no obligations that could be enforced by law. In the
-_sponsalia_ the maiden was promised to the man as his bride with
-"words of style," that is, in solemn form. The promise was made, not
-by the maiden herself, but by her _pater familias_, or by her _tutor_
-if she was not _in potestate_. In the same way, the promise was made
-to the man directly only in case he was _sui iuris_, otherwise to the
-Head of his House, who had asked for him the maiden in marriage. The
-"words of style" were probably something like this:
-
-"_Spondesne Gaiam, tuam filiam_ (or if she was a ward: _Gaiam, Lucii
-filiam_), _mihi_ (or _filio meo_) _uxorem dari?_"
-
-"_Di bene vortant! Spondeo._"
-
-"_Di bene vortant!_"
-
-71. At any rate the word _spondeo_ was technically used of the
-promise, and the maiden was henceforth _sponsa_. The person who made
-the promise had always the right to cancel it. This was usually done
-through an intermediary (_nuntius_), and hence the formal expression
-for breaking an engagement was _repudium renuntiare_, or simply
-_renuntiare_. While the contract was entirely one-sided, it should be
-noticed that a man was liable to _infamia_ if he formed two
-engagements at the same time, and that he could not recover any
-presents made with a view to a future marriage if he himself broke the
-engagement. Such presents were almost always made, and while we find
-that articles for personal use, the toilet, etc., were common, a ring
-was usually given. The ring was worn on the third finger of the left
-hand, because it was believed that a nerve ran directly from this
-finger to the heart. It was also usual for the _sponsa_ to make a
-present to her betrothed.
-
-72. The Dowry.--It was a point of honor with the Romans, as it is now
-with some European nations, for the bride to bring to her husband a
-dowry (_dos_). In the case of a girl _in potestate_ this would
-naturally be furnished by the Head of her House; in the case of one
-_sui iuris_ it was furnished from her own property, or if she had none
-was contributed by her relatives. It seems that if they were reluctant
-she might by process of law compel her ascendants at least to furnish
-it. In early times, when marriage _cum conventione_ prevailed, all the
-property brought by the bride became the property of her husband, or
-of his _pater familias_ (section 35), but in later times, when _manus_
-was less common, and especially after divorce had become of frequent
-occurrence, a distinction was made. A part of the bride's possessions
-was reserved for her own exclusive use, and a part was made over to
-the groom under the technical name of _dos_. The relative proportions
-varied, of course, with circumstances.
-
-73. Essential Forms.--There were really no legal forms necessary for
-the solemnization of a marriage; there was no license to be procured
-from the civil authorities, the ceremonies simple or elaborate did not
-have to be performed by persons authorized by the state. The one thing
-necessary was the consent of both parties, if they were _sui iuris_,
-or of their _patres familias_, if they were _in potestate_. It has
-been already remarked (section 67, 1) that the _pater familias_ could
-refuse his consent for valid reasons only; on the other hand, he could
-command the consent of persons subject to him. It is probable that
-parental and filial affection (_pietas_) made this hardship less
-rigorous than it now seems to us (sections 32, 33).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 11. ANTONINUS PIUS]
-
-74. But while this consent was the only condition for a legal
-marriage, it had to be shown by some act of personal union between the
-parties; that is, the marriage could not be entered into by letter or
-by the intervention of a third party. Such an overt act was the
-joining of hands (_dextrarum iunctio_) in the presence of witnesses,
-or the escorting of the bride to her husband's house, never omitted
-when the parties had any social standing, or in later times the
-signing of the marriage contract. It was never necessary to a valid
-marriage that the parties should live together as man and wife,
-though, as we have seen (section 62), this living together of itself
-constituted a legal marriage.
-
-75. The Wedding Day.--It will be noticed that superstition played an
-important part in the arrangements for a wedding two thousand years
-ago, as it does now. Especial pains had to be taken to secure a lucky
-day. The Kalends, Nones, and Ides of each month, and the day following
-each of them, were unlucky. So was all of May and the first half of
-June, on account of certain religious ceremonies observed in these
-months, the Argean offerings and the _Lemuria_ in May and the _dies
-religiosi_ connected with Vesta in June. Besides these the _dies
-parentales_, February 13-21, and the days when the entrance to the
-lower world was supposed to be open, August 24, October 5, and
-November 8, were carefully avoided. One-third of the year, therefore,
-was absolutely barred. The great holidays, too, and these were legion,
-were avoided, not because they were unlucky, but because on these days
-friends and relatives were sure to have other engagements. Women
-marrying for the second time chose these very holidays to make their
-weddings less conspicuous.
-
-76. The Wedding Garments.--On the eve of her wedding day the bride
-dedicated to the _Lares_ of her father's house her _bulla_ (section
-99) and the _toga praetexta_, which married women did not wear, and
-also if she was not much over twelve years of age her childish
-playthings. For the sake of the omen she put on before going to sleep
-the _tunica recta_, or _regilla_, woven in one piece and falling to
-the feet. A very doubtful picture is shown in Rich under the word
-_recta_. It seems to have derived its name from having been woven in
-the old-fashioned way at an upright loom. This same tunic was worn at
-the wedding.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 12. DRESSING THE BRIDE]
-
-77. On the morning of the wedding day the bride was dressed for the
-ceremony by her mother, and Roman poets show unusual tenderness as
-they describe her solicitude. There is a wall painting of such a
-scene, found at Pompeii and reproduced in Fig. 12. The chief article
-of dress was the _tunica regilla_ already mentioned, which was
-fastened around the waist with a band of wool tied in the knot of
-Hercules (_nodus Herculaneus_), probably because Hercules was the
-guardian of wedded life. This knot the husband only was privileged to
-untie. Over the tunic was worn the bridal veil, the flame-colored veil
-(_flammeum_), shown in Fig. 13. So important was the veil of the bride
-that _nubere_, "to veil one's self," is the regular word for "marry"
-when used of a woman.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 13. THE FLAMMEUM]
-
-78. Especial attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, but
-unfortunately we have no picture preserved to us to make its
-arrangement clear. We only know that it was divided into six locks by
-the point of a spear, probably a reminiscence of the ancient marriage
-by capture, and that these locks perhaps braided were kept in position
-by ribbons (_vittae_). The bride had also a wreath of flowers and
-sacred plants gathered by herself. The groom wore of course the toga
-and had a similar wreath of flowers on his head. He was accompanied to
-the home of the bride at the proper time by relatives, friends, and
-clients, who were bound to do him every honor on his wedding day.
-
-79. The Ceremony.--The house of the bride's father, where the ceremony
-was performed, was decked with flowers, boughs of trees, bands of
-wool, and tapestries. The guests arrived before the hour of sunrise,
-and even then the omens had been already taken. In the ancient
-confarreate ceremony these were taken by the public augur, but in
-later times, no matter what the ceremony, the haruspices merely
-consulted the entrails of a sheep which had been killed in sacrifice.
-When the marriage ceremonies are described it must be remembered that
-only the consent was necessary (section 73) with the act expressing
-the consent, and that all other forms and ceremonies were unessential
-and variable. Something depended upon the particular form used, but
-more upon the wealth and social position of the families interested.
-It is probable that most weddings were a good deal simpler than those
-described by our chief authorities.
-
-80. After the omens had been pronounced favorable the bride and groom
-appeared in the atrium, the chief room, and the wedding began. This
-consisted of two parts:
-
-1. The ceremony proper, varying according to the form used
-(_confarreatio_, _coemptio_, or _usus_), the essential part being the
-consent before witnesses.
-
-2. The festivities, including the feast at the bride's home, the
-taking of the bride with a show of force from her mother's arms, the
-escort to her new home (the essential part), and her reception there.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 14. A MARRIAGE SCENE]
-
-81. The confarreate ceremony began with the _dextrarum iunctio_. The
-bride and groom were brought together by the _pronuba_, a matron
-married to her first husband, and joined hands in the presence of ten
-witnesses representing the ten _gentes_ of the _curia_. These are
-shown on an ancient sarcophagus found at Naples (Fig. 14). Then
-followed the words of consent spoken by the bride: _Quando tu Gaius,
-ego Gaia_. The formula was unchanged, no matter what the names of the
-bride and groom, and goes back to a time when _Gaius_ was a _nomen_,
-not a _praenomen_ (section 55). It implied that the bride was actually
-entering the _gens_ of the groom (sections 23, 28, 35), and was
-probably chosen for its lucky meaning (section 44). Even in marriages
-_sine conventione_ the old formula came to be used, its import having
-been lost in lapse of time. The bride and groom then took their places
-side by side at the left of the altar and facing it, sitting on stools
-covered with the pelt of the sheep slain for the sacrifice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 15. A CAMILLUS]
-
-82. A bloodless offering was then made to Jupiter by the _Pontifex
-Maximus_ and the _Flamen Dialis_, consisting of the cake of spelt
-(_farreum libum_) from which the _confarreatio_ got its name. With the
-offering to Jupiter a prayer was recited by the Flamen to Juno as the
-goddess of marriage, and to Tellus, Picumnus, and Pilumnus, deities of
-the country and its fruits. The utensils necessary for the offering
-were carried in a covered basket (_cumerus_) by a boy called
-_camillus_ (Fig. 15), whose parents must have both been living at the
-time (_patrimus et matrimus_). Then followed the congratulations, the
-guests using the word _feliciter_.
-
-83. The _coemptio_ began with the fictitious sale, carried out in the
-presence of no less than five witnesses. The purchase money
-represented by a single coin was laid in the scales held by a
-_libripens_. The scales, scaleholder, coin, and witnesses were all
-necessary for this kind of marriage. Then followed the _dextrarum
-iunctio_ and the words of consent, borrowed, as has been said, from
-the confarreate ceremony. Originally the groom had asked the bride:
-_An sibi mater familias esse vellet._ She assented, and put to him a
-similar question: _An sibi pater familias esse vellet._ To this he too
-gave the answer "Yes." A prayer was then recited and sometimes perhaps
-a sacrifice offered, after which came the congratulations as in the
-other and more elaborate ceremony.
-
-84. The third form, that is, the ceremonies preliminary to _usus_,
-probably admitted of more variation than either of the others, but no
-description has come down to us. We may be sure that the hands were
-clasped, the words of consent spoken, and congratulations offered, but
-we know of no special customs or usages. It was almost necessary for
-the three forms to get more or less alike in the course of time,
-though the cake of spelt could not be borrowed from the confarreate
-ceremony by either of the others, or the scales and their holder from
-the ceremony of _coemptio_.
-
-85. The Wedding Feast.--After the conclusion of the ceremony came the
-wedding feast (_cena nuptialis_) lasting until evening. There can be
-no doubt that this was regularly given at the house of the bride's
-father and that the few cases when we know that it was given at the
-groom's house were exceptional and due to special circumstances which
-might cause a similar change to-day. The feast seems to have concluded
-with the distribution among the guests of pieces of the wedding cake
-(_mustaceum_), which was made of meal steeped in must (section 296)
-and served on bay leaves. There came to be so much extravagance at
-these feasts and at the _repotia_ mentioned below (section 89) that
-under Augustus it was proposed to limit their cost by law to one
-thousand sesterces ($50), a piece of sumptuary legislation as vain as
-such restrictions have usually proved to be.
-
-86. The Bridal Procession.--After the wedding feast the bride was
-formally taken to her husband's house. This ceremony was called
-_deductio_, and as it was essential to the validity of the marriage
-(section 74) it was never omitted. It was a public function, that is,
-any one might join the procession and take part in the merriment that
-distinguished it, and we are told that persons of rank did not scruple
-to wait in the street to see the bride. As evening approached the
-procession was formed before the house with torch bearers and flute
-players at its head. When all was ready the marriage hymn
-(_hymenaeus_) was sung and the groom took the bride with a show of
-force from the arms of her mother. The Romans saw in this custom a
-reminiscence of the rape of the Sabines, but it probably goes far back
-beyond the founding of Rome to the custom of marriage by capture that
-prevailed among many peoples. The bride then took her place in the
-procession attended by three boys, _patrimi et matrimi_ (section 82);
-two of these walked by her side, holding each a hand, while the other
-carried before her the wedding torch of white thorn (_spina alba_).
-Behind the bride were carried the distaff and spindle, emblems of
-domestic life. The _camillus_ with his _cumerus_ also walked in the
-procession.
-
-87. During the march were sung the _versus Fescennini_, abounding in
-coarse jests and personalities. The crowd also shouted the ancient
-marriage cry, the significance of which the Romans themselves did not
-understand. We find it in at least five forms, all variations of the
-name Talassius or Talassio, who was probably a Sabine divinity, though
-his functions are unknown. Livy derives it from the supposed name of a
-senator in the time of Romulus. The bride dropped on the way one of
-three coins which she carried as an offering to the _Lares
-compitales_; of the other two she gave one to the groom as an emblem
-of the dowry she brought him, and one to the _Lares_ of his house. The
-groom meanwhile scattered nuts through the crowd. This is explained by
-Catullus as a token of his having become a man and having put away
-childish things (section 103), but the nuts were rather a symbol of
-fruitfulness. The custom survives in the throwing of rice in modern
-times.
-
-88. When the procession reached the house, the bride wound the door
-posts with bands of wool, probably a symbol of her own work as
-mistress of the household, and anointed the door with oil and fat,
-emblems of plenty. She was then lifted carefully over the threshold,
-in order to avoid the chance of so bad an omen as a slip of the foot
-on entering the house for the first time. Others, however, see in the
-custom another survival of marriage by capture. She then pronounced
-again the words of consent: _Ubi tu Gaius, ego Gaia_, and the doors
-were closed against the general crowd; only the invited guests entered
-with the pair.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 16. THE MARRIAGE COUCH]
-
-89. The husband met the wife in the atrium and offered her fire and
-water in token of the life they were to live together and her part in
-the home. Upon the hearth was ready the wood for a fire, and this the
-bride kindled with the marriage torch which had been carried before
-her. The torch was afterwards thrown among the guests to be scrambled
-for as a lucky possession. A prayer was then recited by the bride and
-she was placed by the _pronuba_ on the _lectus genialis_ (Fig. 16),
-which always stood on the wedding night in the atrium. Here it
-afterwards remained as a piece of ornamental furniture only. On the
-next day was given in the new home the second wedding feast
-(_repotia_) to the friends and relatives, and at this feast the bride
-made her first offering to the gods as a _matrona_. A series of feasts
-followed, given in honor of the newly wedded pair by those in whose
-social circles they moved.
-
-90. The Position of Women.--With her marriage the Roman woman reached
-a position unattained by the women of any other nation in the ancient
-world. No other people held its women in so high respect; nowhere else
-did they exert so strong and beneficent an influence. In her own house
-the Roman matron was absolute mistress. She directed its economy and
-supervised the tasks of the household slaves but did no menial work
-herself. She was her children's nurse, and conducted their early
-training and education. Her daughters were fitted under their mother's
-eye to be mistresses of similar homes, and remained her closest
-companions until she herself had dressed them for the bridal and their
-husbands had torn them from her arms. She was her husband's helpmeet
-in business as well as in household affairs, and he often consulted
-her on affairs of state. She was not confined at home to a set of
-so-called women's apartments, as were her sisters in Greece; the whole
-house was hers. She received her husband's guests and sat at table
-with them. Even when subject to the _manus_ of her husband the
-restraint was so tempered by law and custom (section 36) that she
-could hardly have been chafed by the fetters which had been forged
-with her own consent (section 73).
-
-91. Out of the house the matron's dress (_stola matronalis_, section
-259) secured for her the most profound respect. Men made way for her
-in the street; she had a place at the public games, at the theaters,
-and at the great religious ceremonies of state. She could give
-testimony in the courts, and until late in the Republic might even
-appear as an advocate. Her birthday was sacredly observed and made a
-joyous occasion by the members of her household, and the people as a
-whole celebrated the _Matronalia_, the great festival on the first of
-March, and gave presents to their wives and mothers. Finally, if she
-came of a noble family, she might be honored, after she had passed
-away, with a public eulogy, delivered from the _rostra_ in the forum.
-
-92. It must be admitted that the education of women was not carried
-far at Rome, and that their accomplishments were few, and rather
-useful and homely than elegant. But the Roman women spoke the purest
-and best Latin known in the highest and most cultivated circles, and
-so far as accomplishments were concerned their husbands fared no
-better. Respectable women in Greece were allowed no education at all.
-
-93. It must be admitted, too, that a great change took place in the
-last years of the Republic. With the laxness of the family life, the
-freedom of divorce, and the inflow of wealth and extravagance, the
-purity and dignity of the Roman matron declined, as had before
-declined the manhood and the strength of her father and her husband.
-It must be remembered, however, that ancient writers did not dwell
-upon certain subjects that are favorites with our own. The simple joys
-of childhood and domestic life, home, the praises of sister, wife, and
-mother may not have been too sacred for the poet and the essayist of
-Rome, but the essayist and the poet did not make them their themes.
-The mother of Horace must have been a singularly gifted woman, but she
-is never mentioned by her son. The descriptions of domestic life,
-therefore, that have come down to us are either from Greek sources, or
-are selected from precisely those circles where fashion, profligacy,
-and impurity made easy the work of the satirist. It is, therefore,
-safe to say that the pictures painted for us in the verse of Catullus
-and Juvenal, for example, are not true of Roman women as a class in
-the times of which they write. The strong, pure woman of the early day
-must have had many to imitate her virtues in the darkest times of the
-Empire. There were mothers then, as well as in the times of the
-Gracchi; there were wives as noble as the wife of Marcus Brutus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-CHILDREN AND EDUCATION
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 80-134; Voigt, 322 f., 397 f., 455 f.; Goll,
-"Gallus," II, 65-113; Friedlander, I, 456 f., III, 376 f.; Ramsay, 475
-f.; Smith, _ludus litterarius_; Harper, _education_; Baumeister, 237,
-1588 f.; Schreiber, Pl. 79, 82, 89, 90; Lubker, _Erziehung_.
-
-
-94. Legal Status.--The position of the children in the _familia_ has
-been already explained (sections 31, 32). It has been shown that in
-the eyes of the law they were little better than the chattels of the
-Head of the House. It rested with him to grant them the right to live;
-all that they earned was his; they married at his bidding, and either
-remained under his _potestas_ or passed under another no less severe.
-It has also been suggested that custom (section 32) and _pietas_
-(section 73) had made this condition less rigorous than it seems to
-us.
-
-95. Susceptio.--The power of the _pater familias_ was displayed
-immediately after the birth of the child. By invariable custom it was
-laid upon the ground at his feet. If he raised (_tollere_,
-_suscipere_) it in his arms, he acknowledged it as his own by the act
-(_susceptio_) and admitted it to all the rights and privileges that
-membership in a Roman family implied. If he refused to do so, the
-child became an outcast, without family, without the protection of the
-spirits of the dead (section 27), utterly friendless and forsaken. The
-disposal of the child did not ordinarily call for any act of downright
-murder, such as was contemplated in the case of Romulus and Remus and
-was afterwards forbidden by Romulus the King (section 32). The child
-was simply "exposed" (_exponere_), that is, taken by a slave from the
-house and left on the highway to live or to die. When we consider the
-slender chance for life that the newborn child has with even the
-tenderest care, the result of this exposure will not seem doubtful.
-
-96. But there was a chance for life, and the mother, powerless to
-interpose in her infant's behalf, often sent with it some trinkets or
-trifling articles of jewelry that would serve perhaps to identify it,
-if it should live. Even if the child was found in time by persons
-disposed to save its life, its fate might be worse than death. Slavery
-was the least of the evils to which it was exposed. Such foundlings
-often fell into the hands of those whose trade was beggary and who
-trained children for the same profession. In the time of the Empire,
-at least, they cruelly maimed and deformed their victims, in order to
-excite more readily the compassion of those to whom they appealed for
-alms. Such things are still done in southern Europe.
-
-97. Dies Lustricus.--The first eight days of the life of the
-acknowledged child were called _primordia_, and were the occasion of
-various religious ceremonies. During this time the child was called
-_pupus_ (section 55), although to weak and puny children the
-individual name might be given soon after birth. On the ninth day in
-the case of a boy, on the eighth in the case of a girl, the
-_praenomen_ (section 43) was given with due solemnity. A sacrifice was
-offered and the ceremony of purification was performed, which gave the
-day its name, _dies lustricus_, although it was also called the _dies
-nominum_ and _nominalia_. These ceremonies seem to have been private;
-that is, it can not be shown that there was any taking of the child to
-a _templum_, as there was among the Jews, or any enrollment of the
-name upon an official list. In the case of the boy the registering of
-the name on the list of citizens may have occurred at the time of
-putting on the _toga virilis_ (section 127).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 17. CREPUNDIA]
-
-98. The _dies lustricus_ was, however, a time of rejoicing and
-congratulation among the relatives and friends, and these together
-with the household slaves presented the child with little metal toys
-or ornaments in the form of flowers, miniature axes and swords, and
-especially figures shaped like a half-moon (_lunulae_), etc. These,
-called collectively _crepundia_, were strung together and worn around
-the neck and over the breast (Fig. 17). They served in the first place
-as playthings to keep the child amused, hence the name "rattles," from
-_crepo_. Besides, they were a protection against witchcraft or the
-evil eye (_fascinatio_), especially the _lunulae_. More than this,
-they were a means of identification in the case of lost or stolen
-children, and for this reason Terence calls them _monumenta_. Such
-were the trinkets sometimes left with an abandoned child (section 96),
-their value depending, of course, upon the material of which they were
-made.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 18. THE BULLA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 19. GIRL'S NECKLACE]
-
-99. The Bulla.--But of more significance than these was the _bulla
-aurea_, which the father hung around the child's neck on this day, if
-he had not done so at the time of the _susceptio_. It consisted of two
-concave pieces of gold, like a watch case (Fig. 18), fastened together
-by a wide spring of the same metal and containing an amulet as a
-protection against _fascinatio_. It was hung around the neck by a
-chain or cord and worn upon the breast. The _bulla_ came originally
-from Etruria,[1] and for a long time the children of patricians only
-were allowed to wear those of gold, the plebeians contenting
-themselves with an imitation made of leather, hung on a leathern
-thong. In the course of time the distinction ceased to be observed, as
-we have seen such distinctions die out in the use of names and in the
-marriage ceremonies, and by Cicero's time the _bulla aurea_ might be
-worn by the child of any freeborn citizen. The choice of material
-depended rather upon the wealth and generosity of the father than upon
-his social position. The girl wore her _bulla_ (Fig. 19) until the eve
-of her wedding day, laying it aside with other childish things, as we
-have seen (section 76); the boy wore his until he assumed the _toga
-virilis_, when it was dedicated to the _Lares_ of the house and
-carefully preserved. If the boy became a successful general and won
-the coveted honor of a triumph, he always wore his _bulla_ in the
-triumphal procession as a protection against envy.
-
-[Footnote 1: The influence of Etruria upon Rome faded before that of
-Greece (section 5), but from Etruria the Romans got the art of
-divination, certain forms of architecture, the insignia of royalty,
-and the games of the circus and the amphitheater.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 20. CHILD IN LITTER]
-
-100. Nurses.--The mother was the child's nurse (section 90) not only
-in the days of the Republic but even into the Empire, the Romans
-having heeded the teachings of nature in this respect longer than any
-other civilized nation of the old world. Of course it was not always
-possible then, as it is not always possible now, for the mother to
-nurse her children, and then her place was taken by a slave
-(_nutrix_), to whom the name _mater_ seems to have been given out of
-affection. In the ordinary care of the children, too, the mother was
-assisted, but only assisted, by slaves. Under the eye of the mother,
-slaves washed and dressed the child, told it stories, sang it
-lullabies, and rocked it to sleep on the arm or in a cradle. None of
-these nursery stories have come down to us, but Quintilian tells us
-that Aesop's fables resembled them. For a picture of a cradle see
-Smith under the words _cunae_ and _cunabula_; in Rich under _cunaria_
-is a picture of a nurse giving a baby its bath. The place of the
-modern baby carriage was taken by a litter (_lectica_), and a terra
-cotta figure has come down to us (Fig. 20) representing a child
-carried in such a litter by two men.
-
-101. After the Punic wars (section 5) it became customary for the
-well-to-do to select for the child's nurse a Greek slave, that the
-child might acquire the Greek language as naturally as its own. In
-Latin literature are many passages that testify to the affection felt
-for each other by nurse and child, an affection that lasted on into
-manhood and womanhood. It was a common thing for the young wife to
-take with her into her new home, as her adviser and confidant, the
-nurse who had watched over her in infancy. Faithfulness on the part of
-such slaves was also frequently repaid by manumission.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 21. JOINTED DOLL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 22. CHILDREN PLAYING BALL]
-
-102. Playthings.--But little is known of the playthings, pets, and
-games of Roman children, because as has been said (section 93)
-domestic life was not a favorite theme of Roman writers and no books
-were then written especially for the young. Still there are scattered
-references in literature from which we can learn something, and more
-is known from monumental sources (section 10). This evidence shows
-that playthings were numerous and of very many kinds. The _crepundia_
-have been mentioned already (section 98), and these miniature tools
-and implements seem to have been very common. Dolls there were, too,
-and some of these have come down to us, though we can not always
-distinguish between statuettes and genuine playthings. Some were made
-of clay, others of wax, and even jointed arms and legs were not
-unknown (Fig. 21). Little wagons and carts were also common
-(Schreiber, LXXXII, 10), and Horace speaks of hitching mice to toys of
-this sort. There are numerous pictures and descriptions of children
-spinning tops, making them revolve by blows of a whiplash, as in
-Europe nowadays. Hoops also were a favorite plaything, driven with a
-stick and having pieces of metal fastened to them to warn people of
-their approach. Boys walked on stilts and played with balls (Fig. 22),
-too, but as men enjoyed this sport as well, it may be deferred until
-we reach the subject of amusements (section 318).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 23. BOY AND GOOSE]
-
-103. Pets and Games.--Pets were even more common then than now, and
-then as now the dog was easily first in the affections of children
-(Schreiber, LXXXII, 6). The cat, on the other hand, was hardly known
-until very late in the history of Greece and Rome. Birds were very
-commonly made pets, and besides the doves and pigeons which are
-familiar to us as well, we are told that ducks, crows, and quail were
-pets of children. So also were geese, odd as this seems to us, and the
-statue of a child struggling with a goose as large as himself is well
-known (Fig. 23). Monkeys were known, but could not have been common.
-Mice have been mentioned already. Games of many kinds were played by
-children, but we can only guess at the nature of most of them, as we
-have hardly any formal descriptions. There were games corresponding to
-our Odd or Even, Blindman's Buff, Hide and Seek, Jackstones (section
-320), and Seesaw (Schreiber, LXXIX and LXXX). Pebbles and nuts were
-used in games something like our marbles, and there were board-games
-also. To these may be added for boys riding, swimming, and wrestling,
-although these were taken too seriously, perhaps, to be called games
-and belonged rather to their training for the duties of citizenship.
-
-104. Home Training.--The training of the children was conducted by the
-father and mother in person. More stress was laid upon the moral than
-upon the intellectual development: reverence for the gods, respect for
-the law, unquestioning and instant obedience to authority,
-truthfulness, and self-reliance were the most important lessons for
-the child to learn. Much of this came from the constant association of
-the children with their parents, which was the characteristic feature
-of the home training of the Romans as compared with that of other
-peoples of the time. The children sat at table with their elders or
-helped to serve the meals. Until the age of seven both boys and girls
-had their mother for their teacher. From her they learned to speak
-correctly their native tongue, and Latin rhetoricians tell us that the
-best Latin was spoken by the noble women of the great houses of Rome.
-The mother taught them the elements of reading and writing and as much
-of the simpler operations of arithmetic as children so young could
-learn.
-
-105. From about the age of seven the boy passed under the care of
-regular teachers, but the girl remained her mother's constant
-companion. Her schooling was necessarily cut short, because the Roman
-girl became a wife so young (section 67), and there were things to
-learn in the meantime that books do not teach. From her mother she
-learned to spin and weave and sew: even Augustus wore garments woven
-by his wife. By her mother she was initiated into all the mysteries of
-household economy and fitted to take her place as the mistress of a
-household of her own, to be a Roman _matrona_, the most dignified
-position to which a woman could aspire in the ancient world (sections
-90, 91).
-
-106. The boy, except during the hours of school, was equally his
-father's companion. If the father was a farmer, as all Romans were in
-earlier times, the boy helped in the fields and learned to plow and
-plant and reap. If the father was a man of high position and lived in
-the capital, the boy stood by him in his hall as he received his
-guests, learned to know their faces, names, and rank, and acquired a
-practical knowledge of politics and affairs of state. If the father
-was a senator, the boy, in the earlier days only it is true,
-accompanied him to the senate house to hear the debates and listen to
-the great orators of the time; and the son could always go with him to
-the forum when he was an advocate or concerned in a public trial.
-
-107. Then as every Roman was bred a soldier the father trained the son
-in the use of arms and in the various military exercises, as well as
-in the manly sports of riding, swimming, wrestling, and boxing. In
-these exercises strength and agility were kept in view, rather than
-the grace of movement and symmetrical development of form, on which
-the Greeks laid so much stress. On great occasions, too, when the
-cabinets in the atrium were opened and the wax busts of their
-ancestors displayed, the boy and girl of noble family were always
-present and learned the history of the family of which they were a
-part, and with it the history of Rome.
-
-108. Schools.--The actual instruction given to the children by the
-father would vary with his own education and at best be subject to all
-sorts of interruptions due to his private business or his public
-duties. We find that this embarrassment was appreciated in very early
-times, and that it was customary for a _pater familias_ who happened
-to have among his slaves one competent to give the needed instruction,
-to turn over to him the actual teaching of the children. It must be
-remembered that slaves taken in war were often much better educated
-than their Roman masters. Not all households, however, would include a
-competent teacher, and it would seem only natural for the fortunate
-owner of such a slave to receive into his house at fixed hours of the
-day the children of his friends and neighbors to be taught together
-with his own.
-
-109. For this privilege he might charge a fee for his own benefit, as
-we are told that Cato actually did, or he might allow the slave to
-retain as his _peculium_ (section 33) the little presents given him by
-his pupils in lieu of direct payment. The next step, one taken in
-times too early to be accurately fixed, was to select for the school a
-more convenient place than a private house, one that was central and
-easily accessible, and to receive as pupils all who could pay the
-modest fee that was demanded. To these schools girls as well as boys
-were admitted, but for the reason given in section 105 the girls had
-little time for studying more than their mothers could teach them, and
-those who did carry their studies further came usually of families who
-preferred to educate their daughters in the privacy of their own homes
-and could afford to do so. The exceptions to this rule were so few,
-that from this point we may consider the education of boys alone.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 24. WAXED TABLETS AND STILUS]
-
-110. Subjects Taught in Elementary Schools.--In these elementary
-schools the only subjects taught were reading, writing, and
-arithmetic. In the first, great stress was laid upon the
-pronunciation: the sounds were easy enough but quantity was hard to
-master. The teacher pronounced first syllable by syllable, then the
-separate words, and finally the whole sentence, the pupils pronouncing
-after him at the tops of their voices. In the teaching of writing, wax
-tablets (Fig. 24) were employed, much as slates were a generation ago.
-The teacher first traced with a _stilus_ the letters that served as a
-copy, then he guided the pupil's hand with his own until the child had
-learned to form the letters independently. When some dexterity had
-been acquired, the pupil was taught to use the reed pen and write with
-ink upon papyrus. For practice, sheets were used that had had one side
-written upon already for more important purposes. If any books at all
-were used in these schools, the pupils must have made them for
-themselves by writing from the teacher's dictation.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 25. ABACUS]
-
-111. In arithmetic mental calculation was emphasized, but the pupil
-was taught to use his fingers in a very elaborate way that is not now
-thoroughly understood, and harder sums were worked out with the help
-of the reckoning board (_abacus_, Fig. 25). In addition to all this,
-attention was paid to the training of the memory, and the pupil was
-made to learn by heart all sorts of wise and pithy sayings and
-especially the Twelve Tables of the Law. These last became a regular
-fetich in the schools, and even when the language in which they were
-written had become obsolete pupils continued to learn and recite them.
-Cicero had learned them in his boyhood, but within his lifetime they
-were dropped from the schools.
-
-112. Grammar Schools.--Among the results of contact with other peoples
-that followed the Punic wars (section 5) was the extension of
-education at Rome beyond these elementary and strictly utilitarian
-subjects. The Greek language came to be generally learned (section
-101) and Greek ideas of education were in some degree adopted. Schools
-were established in which the central thing was the study of the Greek
-poets, and these schools we may call Grammar Schools because the
-teacher was called _grammaticus_. Homer was long the universal
-text-book, and students were not only taught the language, but were
-instructed in the matters of geography, mythology, antiquities,
-history, and ethics suggested by the portions of the text which they
-read. The range of instruction and its value depended entirely upon
-the teacher, as does such instruction to-day, but it was at best
-fragmentary and disconnected. There was no systematic study of any of
-these subjects, not even of history, despite its interest and
-practical value to a world-ranging people like the Romans.
-
-113. The Latin language was soon made the subject of similar study, at
-first in separate schools. The lack of Latin poetry to work upon, for
-prose authors were not yet made text-books, led to the translation by
-a Greek slave, Livius Andronicus (3d century B.C.), of the Odyssey of
-Homer into Latin Saturnian verses. From this translation, rude as the
-surviving fragments show it to have been, dates the beginning of Latin
-literature, and it was not until this literature had furnished poets
-like Terence, Vergil, and Horace, that the rough Saturnians of Livius
-Andronicus disappeared from the schools.
-
-114. In these Grammar Schools, Greek as well as Latin, great stress
-seems to have been laid upon elocution, a thing less surprising when
-we consider the importance of oratory under the Republic. The teacher
-had the pupils pronounce after him first the words, then the clauses,
-and finally the complete sentences. The elements of rhetoric were
-taught in some of these schools, but technical instruction in the
-subject was not given until the establishment at a much later period
-of special schools of rhetoric. In the Grammar Schools were also
-taught music and geometry, and these made complete the ordinary
-education of boyhood.
-
-115. Schools of Rhetoric.--The Schools of Rhetoric were formed on
-Greek lines and conducted by Greek teachers. They were not a part of
-the regular system of education, but corresponded more nearly to our
-colleges, being frequented by persons beyond the age of boyhood and
-with rare exceptions, of the higher classes only. In these schools the
-study of prose authors was begun, but the main thing was the practice
-of composition. This was begun in its simplest form, the narrative
-(_narratio_), and continued step by step until the end in view was
-reached, the practice of public speaking (_declamatio_). One of the
-intermediate forms was the _suasoria_, in which the students took
-sides on some disputed point of history and supported their views by
-argument. A favorite exercise also was the writing of a speech to be
-put in the mouth of some person famous in legend or history. How
-effective these could be made is seen in the speeches inserted in
-their histories by Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus.
-
-116. Travel.--In the case of persons of the noblest and most wealthy
-families, or those whose talents in early manhood promised a brilliant
-future, the training of the schools was sure to be supplemented by a
-period of travel and residence abroad. Greece, Rhodes, and Asia Minor
-were the most frequently visited, whether the young Roman cared for
-the scenes of great historical events and the rich collections of
-works of literature and art, or merely enjoyed the natural charms and
-social splendors of the gay and luxurious capitals of the east. For
-the purposes of serious study Athens offered the greatest attractions
-and might almost have been called the university of Rome, in this
-respect standing to Italy much as Germany now stands to the United
-States. It must be remembered, however, that the Roman who studied in
-Athens was as familiar with Greek as with his native Latin and for
-this reason was much better prepared to profit by the lectures he
-heard than is the average American who now studies on the continent.
-
-117. Apprenticeship.--There were certain matters, a knowledge of which
-was essential to a successful public life, for training in which no
-provision was made by the Roman system of education. Such matters were
-jurisprudence, administration and diplomacy, and war. It was
-customary, therefore, for the young citizen to attach himself for a
-time to some older man, eminent in these lines or in some one of them,
-in order to gain an opportunity for observation and practical
-experience in the performance of duties that would sooner or later
-devolve upon him. So Cicero learned the civil law under Quintus Mucius
-Scaevola, the most eminent jurist of the time, and in later years the
-young Marcus Coelius Rufus in turn served the same voluntary
-apprenticeship (_tirocinium fori_) under Cicero. This arrangement was
-not only very advantageous to the young men but was considered very
-honorable for those under whom they studied.
-
-118. In the same way the governors of provinces and generals in the
-field were attended by a voluntary staff (_cohors_) of young men, whom
-they had invited to accompany them at state expense for personal or
-political reasons. These _tirones_ became familiar in this way
-(_tirocinium militiae_) with the practical side of administration and
-war, while at the same time they were relieved of many of the
-hardships and dangers suffered by those, less fortunate, who had to
-rise from the ranks. It was this staff of inexperienced young men who
-hid in their tents or went back to Rome when Caesar determined to meet
-Ariovistus in battle, although some of them, no doubt, made gallant
-soldiers and wise commanders afterward.
-
-119. Remarks on the Schools.--Having considered the possibilities in
-the way of education and training within the reach of the more favored
-few, we may now go back to the Elementary and Grammar Schools to get
-an idea of the actual school life of the ordinary Roman boy. While
-these were not public schools in our sense of the word, that is, while
-they were not supported or supervised by the state, and while
-attendance was not compulsory, it is nevertheless true that the
-elements at least of education, a knowledge of the three R's, were
-more generally diffused among the Romans than among any other people
-of the ancient world. The schools were distinctly democratic in this,
-that they were open to all classes, that the fees were little more
-than nominal, that so far as concerned discipline and the treatment of
-the pupils no distinction was made between the children of the
-humblest and of the most lordly families.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 26. A ROMAN SCHOOL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 27: CARICATURE OF A SCHOOL]
-
-120. The school was usually in a _pergula_, a shedlike attachment to a
-public building, roofed against the sun and rain, but open at the
-sides and furnished merely with rough benches without backs. The
-children were exposed, therefore, to all the distractions of the busy
-town life around them, and the people living near were in turn annoyed
-by the noisy recitations (section 110) and even noisier punishments. A
-picture of a schoolroom from a wall painting in Herculaneum is shown
-in Fig. 26 and an ancient caricature, by a schoolboy probably, in Fig.
-27.
-
-121. The Teacher.--The teacher was originally a slave, perhaps usually
-a freedman. The position was not an honorable one, though this
-depended upon the character of the teacher himself, and while the
-pupils feared the master they seem to have had little respect for him.
-The pay he received was a mere pittance, varying from three dollars a
-year for the elementary teacher (_litterator_, _magister litterarum_)
-to five or six times that sum for a _grammaticus_ (section 112). In
-addition to the fee, the pupils were expected to bring the master from
-time to time little presents, a custom persisting probably from the
-time when these presents were his only reward (section 109). The fees
-varied, however, with the qualifications of the master, and some whose
-reputations were established and whose schools were "fashionable"
-charged no fees at all, but left the amount to be paid (_honorarium_)
-to the generosity of their patrons.
-
-122. Schooldays and Holidays.--The schoolday began before sunrise, as
-did all the work at Rome on account of the heat in the middle of the
-day (cf. section 79). The students brought candles by which to study
-until it became light, and the roof was soon black with the grime and
-smoke. The session lasted until time for the noonday luncheon and
-siesta (section 302), and was resumed in the afternoon. We do not know
-definitely that there was any fixed length for the school-year. We
-know that it regularly began on the 24th of March and that there were
-numerous holidays, notably the Saturnalia in December and the
-Quinquatria from the 19th to the 23rd of March. The great religious
-festivals, too, especially those celebrated with games, would
-naturally be observed by the schools, and apparently the market days
-(_nundinae_) were also holidays. It was until lately supposed that
-there was no school from the last of June until the first of November,
-but this view rested upon an incorrect interpretation of certain
-passages of Horace and Martial which are now otherwise explained. It
-is certain, however, that the children of wealthy parents would be
-absent from Rome during the hot season, and this would at least cut
-down the attendance in some of the schools and might perhaps close
-them altogether.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 28. PAEDAGOGUS]
-
-123. The Paedagogus.--The boy of good family was always attended by a
-trustworthy slave (_paedagogus_), who accompanied him to school,
-remained with him during the sessions, and saw him safely home again
-when school was out. If the boy had wealthy parents, he might have,
-besides, one or more slaves (_pedisequi_) to carry his satchel and
-tablets. The _paedagogus_ was usually an elderly man, selected for his
-good character and expected to keep the boy out of all harm, moral as
-well as physical. He was not a teacher, despite the meaning of the
-English derivative, except that after the learning of Greek became
-general a Greek slave was usually selected for the position in order
-that the boy might not forget what he had learned from his nurse
-(section 101). The scope of his regular duties is clearly shown by the
-Latin words used sometimes instead of _paedagogus_: _comes_, _custos_,
-_monitor_, and _rector_. He was addressed by his ward as _dominus_,
-and seems to have had the right to compel obedience by mild
-punishments (Fig. 28). His duties ceased when the boy assumed the toga
-of manhood, but the same warm affection often continued between them
-as between the woman and her nurse (section 101).
-
-124. Discipline.--The discipline seems to have been really Roman in
-its severity, if we may judge from the picture of a school above
-referred to (section 120) and by the grim references to the rod and
-ferule in Juvenal and Martial. Horace has given to his teacher,
-Orbilius, a deathless fame by the adjective _plagosus_. From Nepos we
-learn that then as now teachers might have appealed to the natural
-emulation between well-bred boys, and we know that prizes, too, were
-offered. Perhaps we may think the ferule well deserved when we read of
-the schoolboy's trick immortalized by Persius. The passage (III, 44
-f.) is worth quoting in full:
-
- _Saepe oculos, memini, tangebam parvus olivo,_
- _Grandia si nollem morituri verba Catonis_
- _Discere et insano multum laudanda magistro!_[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: "Often, I remember, as a small boy I used to give my eyes
-a touch with oil, if I did not want to learn Cato's grand dying
-speech, sure to be rapturously applauded by my wrong-headed master."]
-
-125. End of Childhood.--There was no special ceremony to mark the
-passing of girlhood into womanhood, but for the boy the attainment of
-his majority was marked by the laying aside of the crimson-bordered
-_toga praetexta_ and the putting on of the pure white _toga virilis_.
-There was no fixed year, corresponding to the twenty-first with us, in
-which the _puer_ became _iuvenis_; something depended upon the
-physical and intellectual development of the boy himself, something
-upon the will or caprice of his _pater familias_, more perhaps upon
-the time in which he lived. We may say generally, however, that the
-_toga virilis_ was assumed between the fourteenth and seventeenth
-years, the later age belonging to the earlier time when citizenship
-carried with it more responsibility than under the Empire and demanded
-a greater maturity.
-
-126. For the classical period we may put the age required at sixteen,
-and if we add to this the _tirocinium_ (section 117), which followed
-the donning of the garb of manhood, we shall have the seventeen years
-after the expiration of which the citizen had been liable in ancient
-times to military duty. The day was even less precisely fixed. We
-should expect the birthday at the beginning of the seventeenth year,
-but it seems to have been the more usual, but by no means invariable,
-custom to select for the ceremony the feast of Liber which happened to
-come nearest to the seventeenth birthday. This feast was celebrated on
-the 17th of March and was called the _liberalia_. No more appropriate
-time could have been selected to suggest the freer life of manhood
-upon which the boy was now about to enter.
-
-127. The Liberalia.--The festivities of the great day began in the
-early morning, when the boy laid before the Lares of his house the
-_bulla_ (section 99) and _toga praetexta_, called together the
-_insignia pueritiae_. A sacrifice was then offered, and the _bulla_
-was hung over the hearth, not to be taken down and worn again except
-on some occasion when the man who had worn it as a boy should be in
-danger of the envy of men and gods. The boy then dressed himself in
-the _tunica recta_ (section 76), having one or two crimson stripes if
-he was the son of a senator or a knight, and over this was carefully
-draped the _toga virilis_. This was also called in contrast to the
-gayer garb of boyhood the _toga pura_, and with reference to the
-freedom of manhood the _toga libera_.
-
-128. Then began the procession to the forum. The father had gathered
-his slaves and freedmen and clients, had been careful to notify his
-relatives and friends, and had used all his personal and political
-influence to make the escort of his son as numerous and imposing as
-possible. If the ceremony took place on the _liberalia_, the forum was
-sure to be crowded with similar processions of rejoicing friends. Here
-were extended the formal congratulations, and the name of one more
-citizen was added to the official list. An offering was then made in
-the temple of Liber on the Capitoline Hill, and the day ended with a
-feast at the father's house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-DEPENDENTS: SLAVES AND CLIENTS. HOSPITES
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 135-212; Goll, II, 114-212; Guhl and Koner,
-764-772; Friedlander, I, 404 f.; Ramsay, 124 f.; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_clientes_; Smith, _servus_, _libertus_, _cliens_, _clientela_,
-_hospitium_; Harper, _servus_, _liberti_, _clientes_; Lubker, _servi_,
-_libertinus_, _hospitium_, _patronus_.
-
-
-129. Growth of Slavery.--So far as we may learn from history and
-legend, slavery was always known at Rome. In the early days of the
-Republic, however, the farm was the only place where slaves were
-employed. The fact that most of the Romans were farmers and that they
-and their free laborers were constantly called from the fields to
-fight the battles of their country led to a gradual increase in the
-number of slaves, until they were far more numerous than the free
-laborers who worked for hire. We can not tell when the custom became
-general of employing slaves in personal service and in industrial
-pursuits, but it was one of the grossest evils resulting from Rome's
-foreign conquests. In the last century of the Republic all manual
-labor, almost all trades, and certain of what we now call professions
-were in the hands of slaves. Not only were free laborers unable to
-compete with slaves, but every occupation in which slaves engaged was
-degraded in the eyes of freemen, until all labor was looked upon as
-dishonorable. The small farms were gradually absorbed in the vast
-estates of the rich, the sturdy yeomanry of Rome disappeared, and by
-the time of Augustus the freeborn citizens of Italy who were not
-soldiers were either slaveholders themselves or the idle proletariate
-of the cities.
-
-130. Ruinous as were the economic results of slavery, the moral
-effects were no less destructive. It is to slavery more than to
-anything else that is due the change in the character of the Romans in
-the first century of the Empire. With slaves swarming in their houses,
-ministering to their luxury, pandering to their appetites, directing
-their amusements, managing their business, and even educating their
-children, it is no wonder that the old Roman virtues of simplicity,
-frugality, and temperance declined and perished. And with the passing
-of Roman manhood into oriental effeminacy began the passing of Roman
-sway over the civilized world.
-
-131. Numbers of Slaves.--We have almost no testimony as to the number
-of slaves in Italy, none even as to the ratio of the free to the
-servile population. We have indirect evidence enough, however, to make
-good the statements in the preceding paragraphs. That slaves were few
-in early times is shown by their names (section 58): if it had been
-usual for a master to have more than one slave, such names as
-_Marcipor_, and Olipor would not have sufficed to distinguish them. An
-idea of the rapid increase after the Punic wars may be gained from the
-number of captives sold into slavery by successful generals. Scipio
-Aemilianus is said to have disposed in this way of 60,000
-Carthaginians, Marius of 140,000 Cimbri, Aemilius Paulus of 150,000
-Greeks, Pompeius and Caesar together of more than a million of
-Asiatics and Gauls.
-
-132. The very insurrections of the slaves, unsuccessful as they always
-were, also testify to their overwhelming numbers. Of the two in
-Sicily, the first lasted from 134 to 132 B.C., and the second from 102
-to 98; the last in spite of the fact that at the close of the first
-the consul Rupilius had crucified 20,000, whom he had taken alive, as
-a warning to others to submit in silence to their servitude. Spartacus
-defied the armies of Rome for two years, and in the decisive battle
-with Crassus (71 B.C.) left 60,000 dead upon the field. Cicero's
-orations against Catiline show clearly that it was the calling out of
-the hordes of slaves by the conspirators that was most dreaded in the
-city.
-
-133. Of the number under the Empire we may get some idea from more
-direct testimony. Horace tells us that ten slaves were as few as a
-gentleman in even moderate circumstances could afford to own. He
-himself had two in town and eight on his little Sabine farm, and he
-was a poor man and his father had been a slave. Tacitus tells us of a
-city prefect who had four hundred slaves in his mansion. Pliny says
-that one Caius Caecilius Claudius Isodorus left at his death over four
-thousand slaves. Athenaeus (170-230 A.D.) gives us to understand that
-individuals owned as many as ten thousand and twenty thousand. The
-fact that house slaves were commonly divided into "groups of ten"
-(_decuriae_) points in the same direction.
-
-134. Sources of Supply.--Under the Republic the largest number of
-slaves brought to Rome and offered there for sale were captives taken
-in war, and an idea of the magnitude of this source of supply has
-already been given (section 131). The captives were sold as soon as
-possible after they were taken, in order that the general might be
-relieved of the trouble and risk of feeding and guarding such large
-numbers of men in a hostile country. The sale was conducted by a
-quaestor, and the purchasers were the wholesale slave dealers that
-always followed an army along with other traders and peddlers. The
-spear (_hasta_), which was always the sign of a sale conducted under
-public authority, was set up in the ground to mark the place, and the
-captives had garlands on their heads as did the victims offered in
-sacrifice. Hence the expression _sub hasta_ and _sub corona venire_
-came to have practically the same meaning.
-
-135. The wholesale dealers (_mangones_) assembled their purchases in
-convenient depots, and when sufficient numbers had been collected
-marched them to Rome, in chains and under guard, to be sold to local
-dealers or to private individuals. The slaves obtained in this way
-were usually men and likely to be physically sound and strong for the
-simple reason that they had been soldiers. On the other hand they were
-likely to prove intractable and ungovernable, and many preferred even
-suicide to servitude. It sometimes happened, of course, that the
-inhabitants of towns and whole districts were sold into slavery
-without distinction of age or sex.
-
-136. Under the Empire large numbers came to Rome as articles of
-ordinary commerce, and Rome became one of the great slave marts of the
-world. The slaves were brought from all the provinces of the Empire:
-blacks from Egypt; swift runners from Numidia; grammarians from
-Alexandria; from Cyrene those who made the best house servants; from
-Greece handsome boys and girls, and well-trained scribes, accountants,
-amanuenses, and even teachers; from Epirus and Illyria experienced
-shepherds; from Cappadocia the most patient and enduring laborers.
-
-137. Some of these were captives taken in the petty wars that Rome was
-always waging in defense of her boundaries, but these were numerically
-insignificant. Others had been slaves in the countries from which they
-came, and merely exchanged old masters for new when they were sent to
-Rome. Others still were the victims of slave hunters, who preyed on
-weak and defenseless peoples two thousand years ago much as they are
-said to do in Africa in our own time. These man-hunts were not
-prevented, though perhaps not openly countenanced, by the Roman
-governors.
-
-138. A less important source of supply was the natural increase in the
-slave population as men and women formed permanent connections with
-each other, called _contubernia_. This became of general importance
-only late in the Empire, because in earlier times, especially during
-the period of conquest, it was found cheaper to buy than to breed
-slaves. To the individual owner, however, the increase in his slaves
-in this way was a matter of as much interest as the increase of his
-flocks and herds. Such slaves would be more valuable at maturity, for
-they would be acclimated and less liable to disease, and besides would
-be trained from childhood in the performance of the very tasks for
-which they were destined. They would also have more love for their
-home and for their master's family, for his children were often their
-playmates. It was only natural, therefore, for slaves born in the
-_familia_ to have a claim upon their master's confidence and
-consideration that others lacked, and it is not surprising that they
-were proverbially pert and forward. They were called _vernae_ as long
-as they remained the property of their first master. The derivation of
-the word is not certain, but it is probable that it has the same
-origin as Vesta and means something like "born in the house."
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 29. SALE OF A SLAVE]
-
-139. Sales of Slaves.--Slave dealers usually offered their wares at
-public auction sales (Fig. 29). These were under the supervision of
-the aediles, who appointed the place and made rules and regulations to
-govern them. A tax was imposed on imported slaves and they were
-offered for sale with their feet whitened with chalk; those from the
-east had also their ears bored, a common sign of slavery among
-oriental peoples. As bids were asked for each slave he was made to
-mount a stone or platform, corresponding to the "block" familiar to
-the readers of our own history. From his neck hung a scroll
-(_titulus_), setting forth his character and serving as a warrant for
-the purchaser. If the slave had defects not made known in this warrant
-the vendor was bound to take him back within six months or make good
-the loss to the buyer. The chief items in the _titulus_ were the age
-and nationality of the slave, and his freedom from such common defects
-as chronic ill-health, especially epilepsy, and tendencies to
-thievery, running away, and suicide. In spite of the guarantee the
-purchaser took care to examine the slaves as closely as possible. For
-this reason they were commonly stripped, made to move around, handled
-freely by the purchaser, and even examined by physicians. If no
-warrant was given by the dealer, a cap (_pilleus_) was put on the
-slave's head at the time of the sale and the purchaser took all risks.
-The dealer might also offer the slaves at private sale, and this was
-the rule in the case of all of unusual value and especially of marked
-personal beauty. These were not exposed to the gaze of the crowd, but
-were offered to those only who were likely to purchase. Private sales
-and exchanges between citizens without the intervention of a regular
-dealer were as common as the sales of other property, and no stigma
-was attached to them. The trade of the _mangones_, on the other hand,
-was looked upon as utterly disreputable, but it was very lucrative and
-great fortunes were often made in it. Vilest of all the dealers were
-the _lenones_, who kept and sold slaves for immoral purposes only.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 30. THE GAUL AND HIS WIFE]
-
-140. Prices of Slaves.--The prices of slaves varied as did the prices
-of other commodities. Much depended upon the times, the supply and
-demand, the characteristics and accomplishments of the particular
-slave, and the requirements of the purchaser. Captives bought upon the
-battlefield rarely brought more than nominal prices, because the sale
-was in a measure forced (section 134), and because the dealer was sure
-to lose a large part of his purchase on the long march home through
-disease, fatigue, and especially suicide. There is a famous piece of
-statuary representing a hopeless Gaul killing his wife and then
-himself (Fig. 30). We are told that Lucullus once sold slaves in his
-camp at an average price of eighty cents each. In Rome male slaves
-varied in value from $100, paid for common laborers in the time of
-Horace, to $28,000 paid by Marcus Scaurus for an accomplished
-grammarian. Handsome boys, well trained and educated, sold for as much
-as $4,000. Very high prices were also paid for handsome and
-accomplished girls. The music girls in Plautus and Terence cost their
-lovers from $500 to $700, but girls of the lowest class sold for as
-little as $25. It seems strange to us that slaves were matched in size
-and color as carefully as horses are now, and that a well-matched pair
-of boys would bring a much larger sum when sold together than when
-sold separately.
-
-141. Public and Private Slaves.--Slaves were called _servi publici_
-and _servi privati_ according as they were owned by the state or by
-individuals. The condition of the former was considered the more
-desirable: they were not so likely to be sold, were not worked so
-hard, and were not exposed to the whims of a capricious master. They
-were employed to take care of the public buildings and as servants of
-the magistrates and priests. The quaestors and aediles had great
-numbers of them in their service, and they were drilled as a corps of
-firemen to serve at night under the _triumviri nocturni_. Others were
-employed as lictors, jailers, executioners, etc. The number of public
-slaves while considerable in itself was inconsiderable as compared
-with that of those in private service.
-
-142. Private Slaves.--Private slaves either were employed in the
-personal service of their master and his family or were kept for gain.
-The former, known as the _familia urbana_, will be described later.
-The latter may be classified according as they were kept for hire or
-employed in the business enterprises of their master. Of these last
-the most important as well as the oldest (section 129) class was that
-of the farm laborers (_familia rustica_). Of the others, engaged in
-all sorts of industries, it may be remarked that it was considered
-more honorable for a master to employ his slaves in enterprises of his
-own than to hire them out to others. At the same time slaves could
-always be hired for any desired purpose in Rome or any other city.
-
-143. Industrial Employment.--It must be remembered that there were
-practically no freeborn laborers left in the last century of the
-Republic (section 129), and that much work was then done by hand that
-is now done by machinery. In work of this sort were employed armies of
-slaves fit only for unskilled labor: porters for the transportation of
-materials and merchandise, stevedores for the lading and discharging
-of vessels, men who handled the spade, pickax, and crowbar, men of
-great physical strength but of little else to make them worth their
-keep. Above these came artisans, mechanics, and skilled workmen of
-every kind: smiths, carpenters, bricklayers, masons, seamen, etc. The
-merchants and shopkeepers required assistants, and so did the millers
-and bakers, the dealers in wool and leather, the keepers of lodging
-houses and restaurants, all who helped to supply the countless wants
-of a great city. Even the professions, as we should call them, were
-largely in the hands of slaves. Books were multiplied by slaves. The
-artists who carved wood and stone, designed furniture, laid mosaics,
-painted pictures, and decorated the walls and ceilings of public and
-private buildings were slaves. So were the musicians and the acrobats,
-actors and gladiators who amused the people at the public games. So
-too, as we have seen (section 121), were many of the teachers in the
-schools, and physicians were usually slaves.
-
-144. And slaves did not merely perform these various functions under
-the direction of their master or of the employer to whom he had hired
-them for the time. Many of them were themselves captains of industry.
-When a slave showed executive ability as well as technical knowledge,
-it was common enough for his master to furnish him with the necessary
-capital to carry on independently the business or profession which he
-understood. In this way slaves were often the managers of estates, of
-banks, of commercial enterprises, though these might take them far
-beyond the reach of their masters' observation, even into foreign
-countries. Sometimes such a slave was expected to pay the master
-annually a fixed sum out of the proceeds of the business; sometimes he
-was allowed to keep for himself a certain share of the profits;
-sometimes he was merely required to repay the sum advanced with
-interest from the time he had received it. In all cases, however, his
-industry and intelligence were stimulated by the hope of acquiring
-sufficient means from the venture to purchase his freedom and
-eventually make the business his own.
-
-145. The Familia Rustica.--Under this name are comprised the slaves
-that were employed upon the vast estates that long before the end of
-the Republic had supplanted the small farms of the earlier day. The
-very name points at this change, for it implies that the estate was no
-longer the only home of the master. He had become a landlord, living
-in the capital and visiting his lands only occasionally for pleasure
-or for business. The estates may, therefore, be divided into two
-classes: country seats for pleasure and farms or ranches for profit.
-The former were selected with great care, the purchaser having regard
-to their proximity to the city or other resorts of fashion, their
-healthfulness, and the natural beauty of their scenery. They were
-maintained upon the most extravagant scale. There were villas and
-pleasure grounds, parks, game preserves, fish ponds and artificial
-lakes, everything that ministered to open air luxury. Great numbers of
-slaves were required to keep these places in order, and many of them
-were slaves of the highest class: landscape gardeners, experts in the
-culture of fruits and flowers, experts even in the breeding and
-keeping of the birds, game, and fish, of which the Romans were
-inordinately fond. These had under them assistants and laborers of
-every sort, and all were subject to the authority of a superintendent
-or steward (_vilicus_), who had been put in charge of the estate by
-the master.
-
-146. Farm Slaves.--But the name _familia rustica_ is more
-characteristically used of the drudges upon the farms, because the
-slaves employed upon the country seats were more directly in the
-personal service of the master and can hardly be said to have been
-kept for profit. The raising of grain for the market had long ceased
-to be profitable, but various industries had taken its place upon the
-farms. Wine and oil had become the most important products of the
-soil, and vineyards and olive orchards were found wherever climate and
-other conditions were favorable. Cattle and swine were raised in
-countless numbers, the former more for draft purposes and the products
-of the dairy than for beef. Sheep were kept for the wool, and woolen
-garments were worn by the rich and poor alike. Cheese was made in
-large quantities, all the larger because butter was unknown. The
-keeping of bees was an important industry, because honey served, so
-far as it could, the purposes for which sugar is used in modern times.
-Besides these things that we are even now accustomed to associate with
-farming, there were others that are now looked upon as distinct and
-separate businesses. Of these the most important, perhaps, as it was
-undoubtedly the most laborious, was the quarrying of stone; another
-was the cutting of timber and working it up into rough lumber, and
-finally the preparing of sand for the use of the builder. This last
-was of much greater importance relatively then than now, on account of
-the extensive use of concrete at Rome.
-
-147. In some of these tasks intelligence and skill were required as
-they are to-day, but in many of them the most necessary qualifications
-were strength and endurance, as the slaves took the place of much of
-the machinery of modern times. This was especially true of the men
-employed in the quarries, who were usually of the rudest and most
-ungovernable class, and were worked in chains by day and housed in
-dungeons by night, as convicts have been housed and worked in much
-later times.
-
-148. The Vilicus.--The management of such an estate was also intrusted
-to a _vilicus_ (section 145), who was proverbially a hard taskmaster,
-simply because his hopes of freedom depended upon the amount of
-profits he could turn into his master's coffers at the end of the
-year. His task was no easy one. Besides planning for and overseeing
-the gangs of slaves already mentioned, he had under his charge another
-body of slaves only less numerous, employed in providing for the wants
-of the others. Everything necessary for the farm was produced or
-manufactured on the farm. Enough grain was raised for food, and this
-grain was ground in the farm mills and baked in the farm ovens by
-millers and bakers who were slaves on the farm. The task of turning
-the mill was usually given to a horse or mule, but slaves were often
-made to do the grinding as a punishment. Wool was carded, spun, and
-woven into cloth, and this cloth was made into clothes by the female
-slaves under the eye of the steward's consort, the _vilica_. Buildings
-were erected, and the tools and implements necessary for the work of
-the farm were made and repaired. These things required a number of
-carpenters, smiths, and masons, though they were not necessarily
-workmen of the highest class. It was the touchstone of a good
-_vilicus_ to keep his men always busy, and it is to be understood that
-the slaves were alternately plowmen and reapers, vinedressers and
-treaders of the grapes, perhaps even quarrymen and lumbermen,
-according to the season of the year and the place of their toiling.
-
-149. The Familia Urbana.--The number of slaves kept by the wealthy
-Roman in his city mansion was measured not by his needs, but by the
-demands of fashion and his means. In the early days a sort of butler
-(_atriensis_), or major domo, had relieved the master of his household
-cares, had done the buying, had kept the accounts, had seen that the
-house and furniture were in order, and had looked after the few
-servants who did the actual work. Even under the Republic all this was
-changed. Other slaves, the _procurator_ and _dispensator_, relieved
-the _atriensis_ of the purchasing of the supplies and the keeping of
-the accounts, and left to him merely the supervision of the house and
-its furniture. The duties of the slaves under him were, in the same
-way, distributed among a number many times greater. Every part of the
-house had its special staff of servants, often so numerous as to be
-distributed into _decuriae_ (section 133), with a separate
-superintendent for each division: one for the kitchen, another for the
-dining-rooms, another for the bedrooms, etc.
-
-150. The very entrance door had assigned to it its special slave
-(_ostiarius_ or _ianitor_), who was often chained to it like a
-watchdog, in order to keep him literally at his post. And the duties
-of the several sets were again divided and subdivided, each slave
-having some one office to perform, and only one. The names of the
-various functionaries of the kitchen, the dining-rooms, and the
-bedchambers are too numerous to mention, but an idea of the complexity
-of the service may be gained from the number of attendants that
-assisted the master and mistress with their toilets. The former had
-his _ornator_, _tonsor_, and _calceator_ (who cared for the feet); the
-latter her hairdressers (_ciniflones_ or _cinerarii_) and _ornatrix_;
-and besides these each had no less than three or four more to assist
-with the bath. The children, too, had each his or her own attendants,
-beginning with the _nutrix_, and continuing in the case of the boy
-with the _paedagogus_ and _pedisequi_ (section 123).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 31. LECTICA]
-
-151. When the master or mistress left the house a numerous retinue was
-deemed necessary. If they walked, slaves went before to clear the way
-(_anteambulones_), and pages and lackeys followed carrying wraps or
-the sunshade and fan of the mistress, and ready to perform any little
-service that might be necessary. The master was always accompanied out
-of the house by his _nomenclator_, who prompted him in case he had
-forgotten the name of any one who greeted him. If they did not walk,
-they were carried in litters (_lecticae_, Fig. 31), something like
-sedan chairs. The bearers were strong men, by preference Syrians or
-Cappadocians (section 136), all carefully matched in size (section
-140) and dressed in gorgeous liveries. As each member of the household
-had his own litter and bearers, this one class of slaves made an
-important item in the family budget. And even when they rode in this
-way the same attendants accompanied them as when they walked.
-
-152. When the master dined at the house of a friend his slaves
-attended him as far as the door at least. Some remained with him to
-care for his sandals, and others (_adversitores_) returned at the
-appointed hour to see him home. A journey out of the city was a more
-serious matter and called for more pomp and display. In addition to
-the horses and mules that drew the carts of those who rode, there were
-mounted outriders and beasts of burden loaded with baggage and
-supplies. Numerous slaves followed on foot, and a band of gladiators
-not infrequently acted as escort and bodyguard. It is not too much to
-say that the ordinary train of a wealthy traveler included scores,
-perhaps hundreds, of slaves.
-
-153. Among the _familia urbana_ must be numbered also those who
-furnished amusement and entertainment for the master and his guests,
-especially during and after meals. There were musicians and readers,
-and for persons of less refined tastes, dancers, jesters, dwarfs, and
-even misshapen freaks. Under the Empire little children were kept for
-the same purpose.
-
-154. Lastly may be mentioned the slaves of the highest class, the
-confidential assistants of the master, the amanuenses who wrote his
-letters, the secretaries who kept his accounts, and the agents through
-whom he collected his income, audited the reports of his stewards and
-managers, made his investments, and transacted all sorts of business
-matters. The greater the luxury and extravagance of the house, the
-more the master would need these trained and experienced men to
-relieve him of cares which he detested, and by their fidelity and
-skill to make possible the gratification of his tastes and passions.
-
-155. Such a staff as has been described belonged, of course, to a
-wealthy and fashionable man. Persons with more good sense had only
-such slaves as could be profitably employed. Atticus, the friend of
-Cicero, a man of sufficient wealth and social position to defy the
-demands of fashion, kept in his service only _vernae_ (section 138),
-and had them so carefully trained that the meanest could read and
-write for him. Cicero, on the other hand, could not think it good form
-to have a slave do more than one kind of work, and Cicero was not to
-be considered a rich man.
-
-156. Legal Status of Slaves.--The power of the master over the slave,
-called _dominium_ (section 37), was absolute. He could assign him the
-most laborious and degrading tasks, punish him even unto death at his
-sole discretion, sell him, and kill him (or turn him out in the street
-to die) when age or illness had made him incapable of labor. Slaves
-were mere chattels in the eyes of the law, like oxen or horses. They
-could not hold property, they could not make contracts, they could
-testify in the courts only on the rack, they could not marry. The free
-person _in potestate_ was little better off legally (section 31), but
-there were two important differences between the son, for example, and
-the slave. The son was relieved of the _potestas_ on the death of the
-_pater familias_ (section 34), but the death of the master did not
-make the slave free. Again, the condition of the son was ameliorated
-by _pietas_ (section 73) and public opinion (sections 32, 33), but
-there was no _pietas_ for the slave and public opinion hardly operated
-in his behalf. It did enable him to hold as his own his scanty savings
-(section 162), and it gave a sort of sanction to the permanent unions
-of male and female slaves called _contubernium_, but in other respects
-it did little for his benefit.
-
-157. Under the Empire various laws were passed that seemed to
-recognize the slave as a person, not a thing: it was forbidden to sell
-him for the purpose of fighting with wild beasts in the amphitheater;
-it was provided that the slave should not be put to death by the
-master simply because he was too old or too ill to work, and that a
-slave "exposed" (section 95) should become free by the act; at last
-the master was forbidden to kill the slave at all without due process
-of law. As a matter of fact these laws were very generally
-disregarded, much as are our laws for the prevention of cruelty to
-animals, and it may be said that it was only the influence of
-Christianity that at last changed the condition of the slave for the
-better.
-
-158. The Treatment of Slaves.--There is nothing in the stern and
-selfish character of the Roman that would lead us to expect from him
-gentleness or mercy in the treatment of his slaves. At the same time
-he was too shrewd and sharp in all matters of business to forget that
-a slave was a piece of valuable property, and to run the risk of the
-loss or injury of that property by wanton cruelty. Much depended, of
-course, upon the character and temper of the individual owner, and
-Juvenal gives us to understand that the mistress was likely to be more
-spiteful and unreasonable than the master. But the case of Vedius
-Pollio, in the time of Augustus, who ordered a slave to be thrown
-alive into a pond as food for the fish because he had broken a goblet,
-may be balanced by that of Cicero, whose letters to his slave Tiro
-disclose real affection and tenderness of feeling. The passionate man
-nowadays may kill or maim the dog or horse, although it has a money
-value and he needs its services, and most of us know of worn-out
-horses turned out upon the common to die. But these things are
-exceptional, and if we consider the age in which the Roman lived and
-pass for a moment the matter of punishments, we may say that he was
-rather pitiless as a taskmaster than habitually cruel to his slaves.
-
-159. Of the daily life of the town slave we know but little except
-that his work was light and he was the envy of the drudge upon the
-farm. Of the treatment of the latter we get some knowledge from the
-writings of the elder Cato, who may be taken as a fair specimen of the
-rugged farmer of his time (234-149 B.C.). He held that slaves should
-always be at work except in the hours, few enough at best, allowed
-them for sleep, and he took pains to find plenty for his to do even on
-the public holidays. He advised farmers to sell immediately worn-out
-draft cattle, diseased sheep, broken implements, aged and feeble
-slaves, "and other useless things."
-
-160. Food and Dress.--Slaves were fed on coarse food, but when Cato
-tells us that in addition to the monthly allowance of grain (about a
-bushel) they were to have merely the fallen olives, or, failing these,
-a little salt fish and vinegar, we must remember that this was no less
-and no worse than the common food of the poorer Romans. Every
-schoolboy knows that grain was the only ration of the sturdy soldiers
-that won Caesar's battles for him. A slave was furnished a tunic every
-year, and a cloak and a pair of wooden shoes every two years. Worn-out
-clothes were returned to the _vilicus_ to be made up into patchwork
-quilts. We are told that this same _vilicus_ often cheated the slaves
-by stinting their allowance for his own benefit, and we can not doubt
-that he, a slave himself, was more likely to be brutal and cruel than
-the master would have been.
-
-161. But entirely apart from the grinding toil and the harshness and
-insolence of the master and the overseer, the mere restraint from
-liberty was torture enough in itself. There was little chance of
-escape by flight. The Greek slave might hope to cross the boundary of
-the little principality in which he served, to find freedom and refuge
-under the protection of an adjoining power. But Italy was not cut up
-into hostile communities, and should the slave by a miracle reach the
-Rubicon or the sea, no neighboring state would dare defend him or even
-hide him from his Roman master. If he attempted flight, he must live
-the life of an outlaw, with organized bands of slave hunters on his
-track, with a reward offered for his return, and unspeakable tortures
-awaiting him as a warning for others. It is no wonder, then, that vast
-numbers of slaves sought rest from their labors by a voluntary death
-(section 140). It must be remembered that many of them were men of
-good birth and high position in the countries from which they came,
-some of them even soldiers, taken on the field of battle with weapons
-in their hands.
-
-162. The Peculium.--We have seen that the free man _in potestate_
-could not legally hold property, that all that he acquired belonged
-strictly to his _pater familias_ (section 31). We have also seen that
-he was allowed to hold, manage and use property assigned to him by the
-_pater familias_, just as if it had been his own (section 33). The
-same thing was true in the case of a slave, and the property was
-called by the same name (_peculium_). His claim to it could not be
-maintained by law, but was confirmed by public opinion and by
-inviolable custom. If the master respected these, there were several
-ways in which an industrious and frugal slave could scrape together
-bit by bit a little fund of his own, depending in great measure, of
-course, upon the generosity of his master and his own position in the
-_familia_.
-
-163. If he belonged to the _familia rustica_, the opportunities were
-not so good, but by stinting himself he might save something from his
-monthly allowance of food (section 160), and he might, perhaps, do a
-little work for himself in the hours allowed for sleep and rest,
-tilling, for example, a few square yards of garden for his own
-benefit. If he were a city slave there were besides these chances the
-tips from his master's friends and guests, and perhaps a bribe for
-some little piece of knavery or a reward for its success. We have
-already seen that a slave teacher received presents from his pupils
-(section 121). It was no uncommon thing either, as has been said, for
-a shrewd master to teach a slave a trade and allow him to keep a
-portion of the increased earnings which his deftness and skill would
-bring. More rarely the master would furnish the capital and allow the
-slave to start in business and retain a portion of the profits
-(section 144).
-
-164. For the master the custom was undoubtedly profitable in the long
-run. It stimulated the slave's energy and made him more contented and
-cheerful. It also furnished a means of control more effective than the
-severest corporal punishment, and that without physical injury to the
-chattel. To the ambitious slave the _peculium_ gave at least a chance
-of freedom, for he hoped to save enough in time to buy himself from
-his master. Many, of course, preferred to use their earnings to
-purchase little comforts and luxuries nearer than distant liberty.
-Some upon whom a high price was set by their owners used their
-_peculium_ to buy for themselves cheaper slaves, whom they hired out
-to the employers of laborers already mentioned (section 143). In this
-way they hoped to increase their savings more rapidly. The slave's
-slave was called _vicarius_, and legally belonged to the owner of his
-master, but public opinion regarded him as a part of the
-slave-master's _peculium_. The slave had a life interest only in his
-savings, that is, they did not pass to his heirs on his death, for a
-slave could have no "heirs," and he could not dispose of them by will.
-If he died in slavery his property went to his master. Public slaves
-(section 141) were allowed as one of their greatest privileges to
-dispose of one-half of their property by will.
-
-165. At the best the accumulation of a sum large enough (section 140)
-to buy his liberty was pitifully slow and painful for the slave, all
-the more because the more energetic and industrious he was, the higher
-the price that would be set upon him. We can not help feeling a great
-respect for the man who at so great a price obtained his freedom. We
-can sympathize, too, with the poor fellows who had to take from their
-little hoards to make to the members of their masters' families the
-presents that were expected on such great occasions as the marriage of
-one of them, the naming of a child (section 98), or the birthday of
-the mistress (section 91).
-
-166. Punishments.--It is not the purpose of the following sections to
-catalogue the fiendish tortures sometimes inflicted upon slaves by
-their masters. They were not very common for the reason suggested in
-section 158, and were no more characteristic of the ordinary
-correction of slaves than lynching and whitecapping are characteristic
-of the administration of justice in Georgia and Indiana. Certain
-punishments, however, are so frequently mentioned in Latin literature,
-that a description of them is necessary in order that the passages in
-which they occur may be understood by the reader.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 32. FLAGELLUM]
-
-167. The most common punishment for neglect of duty or petty
-misconduct was a beating with a stick or flogging with a lash. If the
-picture of a Roman school already referred to (section 119) gives a
-correct idea of the punishments inflicted upon a schoolboy with the
-consent of his parents, we should expect that of a slave to be as
-severe as regard for his usefulness afterwards would permit. Hence we
-find that for the single rod or stick was often substituted a bundle
-of rods, usually elm (_ulmi_) corresponding to the birch of England
-and the hickory of America. For the lash or rawhide (_scutica_ or
-_lorum_) was often used a sort of cat-o'-nine-tails, made of cords or
-thongs of leather. When the offense was more serious, bits of bone
-were attached to this, and even metal buttons, to tear the flesh, and
-the instrument was called a _flagrum_ or _flagellum_ (Fig. 32). It
-could not have been less severe than the knout of Russia, and we may
-well believe that slaves died beneath its blows. To render the victim
-incapable of resistance he was sometimes drawn up to a beam by the
-arms, and weights were even attached to his feet, so that he could not
-so much as writhe under the torture.
-
-168. In the comedies are many references to these punishments, and the
-slaves make grim jests on the rods and the scourge, taunting each
-other with the beatings they have had or deserve to have. Sometimes
-the rods are parasites, who shave close the person to whom they attach
-themselves; sometimes they are pens, the back of the culprit being the
-copybook; sometimes they are catapults, dealing darts and death.
-Sometimes the victim is a bottomless abyss of rods; sometimes he has
-absorbed so much essence of elm that he is in danger of himself
-becoming a tree; sometimes he is an anvil; sometimes he is a solid
-melting under the blows; sometimes he is a garden well watered by
-blows. Sometimes an entertainment is being prepared scot-free for his
-back; and sometimes his back is a beautifully embroidered carpet.
-
-169. Another punishment for offenses of the same trivial nature
-resembled the stocks of old New England days. The offender was exposed
-to the derision of his fellows with his limbs so confined that he
-could make no motion at all, could not so much as brush a fly from his
-face. Variations of this form of punishment are seen in the _furca_
-and in the "making a quadruped out of a man." The latter must have
-been something like the "bucking and gagging" used as a punishment in
-the militia; the former was so common that _furcifer_ became a mere
-term of abuse. The culprit carried upon his shoulders a log of wood,
-shaped like a V, and had his arms stretched out before him with his
-hands fastened to the ends of the fork. This log he had to carry
-around in order that the other members of the _familia_ might see him
-and take warning. Sometimes to this punishment was added a lashing as
-he moved painfully along.
-
-170. Less painful and degrading for the moment, but far more dreaded
-by the slave, was a sentence to harder labor than he had been
-accustomed to perform. The final penalty for misconduct on the part of
-a city slave, for whom the rod had been spoiled in vain, was
-banishment to the farm, and to this might be added at a stroke the
-odious task of grinding at the mill (section 148), or the crushing
-toil of labor in the quarries. The last were the punishments of the
-better class of farm slaves, while the desperate and dangerous class
-of slaves who regularly worked in the quarries paid for their misdeeds
-under the scourge and in heavier shackles by day and fewer hours of
-rest by night. These may be compared to the galley slaves of later
-times. Those utterly incorrigible might be sold for gladiators.
-
-171. For actual crimes, not mere faults or offenses, the punishments
-were far more severe. Slaves were so numerous (section 131) and their
-various employments gave them such free access to the person of the
-master, that his property and very life were always at their mercy. It
-was indeed a just and gentle master that did not sometimes dream of a
-slave holding a dagger at his throat. There was nothing within the
-confines of Italy so much dreaded as an uprising of the slaves. It was
-simply this haunting fear that led to the inhuman tortures inflicted
-upon the slave guilty of an attempt upon the life of his master or of
-the destruction of his property. The Romans had not learned twenty
-centuries ago, as some of our own citizens have not yet learned, that
-crimes are not lessened by increasing the sufferings of the criminals.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 33. SLAVE'S COLLAR--_Servus sum dom(i)ni mei
-Scholastici v(iri) sp(ectabilis). Tene me ne fugiam de domo
-Pulverata._]
-
-172. The runaway slave was a criminal: he had stolen himself. He was
-also guilty of setting a bad example to his fellow slaves; and, worst
-of all, runaway slaves always became bandits (section 161) and they
-might find a Spartacus to lead them (section 132). There were,
-therefore, standing rewards for the capture of _fugitivi_, and there
-were men who made it their business to track them down and return them
-to their masters. The _fugitivus_ was brought back in shackles, and
-was sure to be flogged within an inch of his life and sent to the
-quarries for the rest of his miserable days. Besides this, he was
-branded on the forehead with the letter F, for _fugitivus_, and
-sometimes had a metal collar riveted about his neck. One such, still
-preserved at Rome, is shown in Fig. 33, and another has the
-inscription:
-
- FUGI. TENE ME. CUM REVOCAVERIS ME D. M.
- ZONINO, ACCIPIS SOLIDUM.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: I have run away. Catch me. If you take me back to my
-master Zoninus you'll be rewarded.]
-
-173. For an attempt upon the life of the master the penalty was death
-in its most agonizing form, by crucifixion. This was also the penalty
-for taking part in an insurrection, witness the twenty thousand
-crucified in Sicily (section 132) and the six thousand crosses that
-Pompeius erected along the road to Rome, each bearing the body of one
-of the survivors of the final battle in which Spartacus fell. And the
-punishment was inflicted not only upon the slave guilty of his
-master's life, but also upon the family of the slave, if he had wife
-(section 156) and children. If the guilty man could not be found, his
-punishment was made certain by the crucifixion of all the slaves of
-the murdered man. Tacitus tells us that in the reign of Nero four
-hundred slaves were executed for the murder of their master, Pedianus
-Secundus, by one of their number undetected.
-
-174. The cross stood to the slave as the horror of horrors. The very
-word (_crux_) was used among them as a curse, especially in the form
-_ad (malam) crucem_. The various minor punishments were inflicted at
-the order of the master or his representative by some fellow slave
-called for the time _carnifex_ or _lorarius_, though these words by no
-means imply that he was regularly or even commonly designated for the
-disagreeable duty. Still, the administration of punishment to a fellow
-slave was felt to be degrading, and the word _carnifex_ was apt to
-attach itself to such a person and finally came to be a standing term
-of abuse and taunt. It is applied to each other by quarreling slaves,
-apparently with no notion of its literal meaning, as many vulgar
-epithets are applied to-day. The actual execution of a death sentence
-was carried out by one of the _servi publici_ (section 141) at a fixed
-place of execution outside of the city walls.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 34. COIN, SHOWING THE PILLEUS]
-
-175. Manumission.--The slave might purchase his freedom from his
-master by means of his savings, as we have seen (section 164), or he
-might be set free as a reward for faithful service or some special act
-of devotion. In either case it was only necessary for the master to
-pronounce him free in the presence of witnesses, though a formal act
-of manumission often took place before a praetor. The new-made
-freedman set proudly on his head the cap of liberty (_pilleus_), often
-seen on Roman coins (Fig. 34). He was now called _libertus_ in
-reference to his master, _libertinus_ in reference to others; his
-master was no longer _dominus_, but _patronus_. The relation that now
-existed between them was one of mutual helpfulness. The patron
-assisted the freedman in business, often supplying the means with
-which he was to make a start in his new life. It the freedman died
-first, the patron paid the expenses of a decent funeral and had the
-body buried near the spot where his own ashes would be laid. He became
-the guardian of the freedman's children, or if no heirs were left, he
-himself inherited the property. The freedman was bound to show his
-patron marked deference and respect on all occasions, to attend him
-upon public occasions, to assist him in case of reverse of fortune,
-and in short to stand to him in the same relation as the client had
-stood to the patron in the brave days of old.
-
-176. The Clients.--The word _cliens_ (from _clueo_; therefore
-"hearer," "one who obeys") is used in Roman history of two very
-different classes of dependents, who are separated by a considerable
-interval of time and may be roughly distinguished as the Old Clients
-and the New. The former played an important part under the Kings, and
-especially in the struggles between the patricians and plebeians in
-the early days of the Republic, but had practically disappeared by the
-time of Cicero. The latter are first heard of after the Empire was
-well advanced, and never had any political significance. Between the
-two classes there is absolutely no connection, and the student must be
-careful to notice that the later is not a development of the earlier
-class.
-
-177. The Old Clients.--Clientage (_clientela_) goes back beyond the
-founding of Rome to the most ancient social institutions of the
-Italian communities. The _gentes_ who settled on the hills along the
-Tiber (section 22) had brought with them as a part of their _familiae_
-(section 21) numerous free retainers, who seem to have farmed their
-lands, tended their flocks, and done them certain personal services in
-return for protection against cattle thieves, raiders, and open
-enemies. These retainers were regarded as inferior members of the
-_gens_ to which they had severally attached themselves, had a share in
-the increase of the flocks and herds (section 33, _peculia_), and were
-given the clan name (section 47), but they had no right of marriage
-with persons of the higher class and no voice in the government. They
-were the original _plebs_, while the _gentiles_ (section 22) were the
-_populus_ of Rome.
-
-178. Rome's policy of expansion soon brought within the city a third
-element, distinct from both _gentiles_ and _clientes_. Conquered
-communities, especially those dangerously near, were made to destroy
-their own strongholds (_oppida_) and move in mass to the city. Those
-who possessed already the gentile organization were allowed to become
-a part of the _populus_, or governing body, and these, too, brought
-their _clientes_ with them. Those who had no such organization either
-attached themselves to the _gentes_ as clients, or preferring personal
-independence settled here and there, in and about the city, to make a
-living as best they might. Some were possessed of means as large
-perhaps as those of the patricians; others were artisans and laborers,
-hewers of wood and drawers of water; but all alike were without
-political rights and occupied the lowest position in the new state.
-Their numbers increased rapidly with the expansion of Roman territory,
-and they soon outnumbered the patricians with their retainers, with
-whom, of course, as conquered people they could have no sympathies or
-social ties. To them also the name of _plebs_ was given, and the old
-_plebs_, the _clientes_, began to occupy an intermediate position in
-the state, though politically included with the plebeians. Many of
-them, owing perhaps to the dying out of ancient patrician families,
-gradually lost their dependent relation and became identified in
-interests with the newer element.
-
-179. Mutual Obligations.--The relation between the patrician patrons
-and the plebeian clients is not now thoroughly understood; the
-problems connected with it seem beyond solution. We know that it was
-hereditary and that the great houses boasted of the number of their
-clients and were eager to increase them from generation to generation.
-We know that it was regarded as something peculiarly sacred, that the
-client stood to the patron as little less than a son. Vergil tells us
-that a special punishment in the underworld awaited the patron who
-defrauded a client. We read, too, of instances of splendid loyalty to
-their patrons on the part of clients, a loyalty to which we can only
-compare in modern times that of Highlanders to the chief of their
-clan. But when we try to get an idea of the reciprocal duties and
-obligations we find little in our authorities that is definite
-(section 12, end). The patron furnished means of support for the
-client and his family (section 177), gave him the benefit of his
-advice and counsel, and assisted him in his transactions with third
-parties, representing him if necessary in the courts. On the other
-hand the client was bound to advance the interests of his patron in
-every possible way. He tilled his fields, herded his flocks, attended
-him in war, and assisted him in special emergencies with money.
-
-180. It is evident that the mutuality of this relation depended solely
-upon the predominant position of the patron in the state. So long as
-the patricians were the only full citizens, so long, that is, as the
-plebeians had no civil rights, the client might well afford to
-sacrifice his personal independence for the sake of the countenance
-and protection of one of the mighty. In the case of disputes over
-property, for example, the support of his patron would assure him
-justice even against a patrician, and might secure more than justice
-were his opponent a plebeian without another such advocate. It is
-evident, too, that the relation could not long endure after the
-equalization of the orders. For a generation or two the patron and the
-client might stand together against their old adversaries, but sooner
-or later the client would see that he was getting no equivalent for
-the service he rendered, and his children or his children's children
-would throw off the yoke. The introduction of slavery, on the other
-hand, helped to make the patron independent of the client, and while
-we can hardly tell whether its rapid growth (section 129) was the
-cause or the effect of declining clientage, it is nevertheless
-significant that the new relation of _patronus_ and _libertus_
-(section 175) marks the disappearance of that of _patronus_ and
-_cliens_ in the old and better sense of the words.
-
-181. The New Clients.--The new clients need not detain us long. They
-came in with the upstart rich, who counted a long train of dependents
-as necessary to their state as a string of high-sounding names
-(section 50), or a mansion crowded with useless slaves (section 155).
-These dependents were simply obscure and needy men who toadied to the
-rich and great for the sake of the crumbs that fell from their tables.
-There might be among them men of perverted talents, philosophers or
-poets like Martial and Statius, but they were all at best a swarm of
-cringing, fawning, time-serving flatterers and parasites. It is
-important to understand that there was no personal tie between the new
-patron and the new client, no bond of hereditary association. No
-sacrifice was involved on either side. The client did not attach
-himself for life to one patron for better or for worse; he frequently
-paid his court to several at a time and changed his masters as often
-as he could hope for better things. The patron in like manner
-dismissed a client when he had tired of him.
-
-182. Duties and Rewards.--The service, however mean and degrading, was
-easy enough. The chief duty was the _salutatio_: the clients arrayed
-in the toga, the formal dress for all social functions, assembled
-early in the morning in the great man's hall to greet him when he
-first appeared. This might be all required of them for the day, and
-there might be time to hurry through the streets to another house to
-pay similar homage to another patron, perhaps to others still, for the
-rich slept late. On the other hand the patron might command their
-attendance in the house or by his litter (section 151), if he was
-going out, and keep them at his side the whole day long. Then there
-was no chance to wait upon the second patron, but every chance to be
-forgotten by him. And the rewards were no greater than the services. A
-few coins for a clever witticism or a fulsome compliment; a cast-off
-toga occasionally, for a shabby dress disgraced the levee; or an
-invitation to the dinner table if the patron was particularly
-gracious. One meal a day was always expected, and felt to be the due
-of the client. But sometimes the patron did not receive and the
-clients were sent empty away. Sometimes, too, after a day's attendance
-the hungry and tired train were dismissed with a gift of cold food
-distributed in little baskets (_sportulae_), a poor and sorry
-substitute for the good cheer they had hoped for. From these baskets
-the "dole," as we should call it now, came to be called _sportula_
-itself, and in the course of time an equivalent in money, fixed
-finally at about thirty cents, took the place of this. But it was
-something to be admitted to the familiar presence of the rich and
-fashionable, there was always the hope of a little legacy, if the
-flattery was adroit, and even the dole would enable one to live more
-easily than by work, especially if one could stand well with several
-patrons and draw the dole from each of them.
-
-183. The Hospites.--Finally we come to the _hospites_, though these in
-strictness ought not to be reckoned among the dependents. It is true
-that they were often dependent on others for protection and help, but
-it is also true that they were equally ready and able to extend like
-help and protection to others who had the right to claim assistance
-from them. It is important to observe that _hospitium_ differed from
-clientship in this respect, that the parties to it were actually on
-the footing of absolute equality. Although at some particular time one
-might be dependent upon the other for food or shelter, at another time
-the relations might be reversed and the protector and the protected
-change places.
-
-184. _Hospitium_, in its technical sense, goes back to a time when
-there were no international relations, to the time when stranger and
-enemy were not merely synonymous words, but absolutely the same word.
-In this early stage of society, when distinct communities were
-numerous, every stranger was looked upon with suspicion, and the
-traveler in a state not his own found it difficult to get his wants
-supplied, even if his life was not actually in danger. Hence the
-custom arose for a man engaged in commerce or in any other occupation
-that might compel him to visit a foreign country to form previously a
-connection with a citizen of that country, who would be ready to
-receive him as a friend, to supply his needs, to vouch for his good
-intentions, and to act if necessary as his protector. Such a
-relationship, called _hospitium_, was always strictly reciprocal: if A
-agreed to entertain and protect B, when B visited A's country, then B
-was bound to entertain and protect A, if A visited B's country. The
-parties to an agreement of this sort were called _hospites_, and hence
-the word _hospes_ has a double signification, at one time denoting the
-entertainer, at another the guest.
-
-185. Obligations of Hospitium.--The obligations imposed by this
-covenant were of the most sacred character, and any failure to regard
-its provisions was sacrilege, bringing upon the offender the anger of
-_Iuppiter Hospitalis_. Either of the parties might cancel the bond,
-but only after a formal and public notice of his intentions. On the
-other hand the tie was hereditary, descending from father to son, so
-that persons might be _hospites_ who had never so much as seen each
-other, whose immediate ancestors even might have had no personal
-intercourse. As a means of identification the original parties
-exchanged tokens _tesserae hospitales_, (see Rich and Harper, s. v.),
-by which they or their descendants might recognize each other. These
-tokens were carefully preserved, and when a stranger claimed
-_hospitium_ his _tessera_ had to be produced and submitted for
-examination. If it was found to be genuine, he was entitled to all the
-privileges that the best-known guest-friend could expect. These seem
-to have been entertainment so long as he remained in his host's city,
-protection including legal assistance if necessary, nursing and
-medical attendance in case of illness, the means necessary for
-continuing his journey, and honorable burial if he died among
-strangers. It will be noticed that these are almost precisely the
-duties devolving upon members of our great benevolent societies at the
-present time when appealed to by a brother in distress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE HOUSE AND ITS FURNITURE
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 213-250, 607-645; Goll, II, 213-417; Guhl and
-Koner, 556-580, 676-688, 705-725; Ramsay, 516-521; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_atrium_, _compluvium_; Smith, Harper, Rich, under _domus_, _murus_,
-_tegula_, and the other Latin words used in the text; Lubker, 507-509;
-Baumeister, 1365 f., 631, 927 f., 1373 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 239-348,
-361-373, 446-474; Overbeck, 244-376, 520-537; Gusman, 253-316.
-
-
-186. Domus.--The house with which we are concerned is the residence
-(_domus_) of the single household, as opposed to lodging houses or
-apartment houses (_insulae_) intended for the accommodation of several
-families, and the residence, moreover, of the well-to-do citizen, as
-opposed on the one hand to the mansion of the millionaire and on the
-other to the hovels of the very poor. At the same time it must be
-understood that the Roman house did not show as many distinct types as
-does the American house of the present time. The Roman was naturally
-conservative, he was particularly reluctant to introduce foreign
-ideas, and his house in all times and of all classes preserved certain
-main features essentially unchanged. The proportion of these might
-vary with the size and shape of the lot at the builder's disposal, the
-number of apartments added would depend upon the means and tastes of
-the owner, but the kernel, so to speak, is always the same, and this
-makes the general plan much less complex, the description much less
-confusing.
-
-187. Our sources of information are unusually abundant. Vitruvius, an
-architect and engineer of the time of Caesar and Augustus, has left a
-work on building, giving in detail his own principles of construction;
-the works of many of the Roman writers contain either set descriptions
-of parts of houses or at least numerous hints and allusions that are
-collectively very helpful; and finally the ground plans of many houses
-have been uncovered in Rome and elsewhere, and in Pompeii we have even
-the walls of some houses left standing. There are still, however,
-despite the fullness and authority of our sources, many things in
-regard to the arrangement and construction of the house that are
-uncertain and disputed (section 12, end).
-
-188. The Development of the House.--The primitive Roman house came
-from the Etruscans. It goes back to the simple farm life of early
-times, when all members of the household, father, mother, children,
-and dependents, lived in one large room together. In this room the
-meals were cooked, the table spread, all indoor work performed, the
-sacrifices offered to the Lares (section 27), and at night a space
-cleared in which to spread the hard beds or pallets. The primitive
-house had no chimney, the smoke escaping through a hole in the middle
-of the roof. Rain could enter where the smoke escaped, and from this
-fact the hole was called the _impluvium_; just beneath it in later
-times a basin (_compluvium_) was hollowed out in the floor to catch
-the water for domestic purposes. There were no windows, all natural
-light coming through the _impluvium_ or, in pleasant weather, through
-the open door. There was but one door, and the space opposite it seems
-to have been reserved as much as possible for the father and mother.
-Here was the hearth, where the mother prepared the meals, and near it
-stood the implements she used in spinning and weaving; here was the
-strong box (_arca_), in which the master kept his valuables, and here
-their couch
-was spread.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 35. CINERARY URN]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 36. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-189. The outward appearance of such a house is shown in the Etruscan
-cinerary urns (Fig. 35; see also Smith, I, 668; Schreiber, LIII, 5;
-Baumeister, Fig. 146) found in various places in Italy. The ground
-plan is a simple rectangle, as shown in Figure 36, without partitions.
-This may be regarded as historically and architecturally the kernel of
-the Roman house; it is found in all of which we have any knowledge.
-Its very name (_atrium_), denoting originally the whole house, was
-also preserved, as is shown in the names of certain very ancient
-buildings in Rome used for religious purposes, the _atrium Vestae_,
-the _atrium Libertatis_, etc., but afterwards applied to the
-characteristic single room. The name was once supposed to mean "the
-black (_ater_) room," but many scholars recognize in it the original
-Etruscan word for house.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 37. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-190. The first change in the primitive house came in the form of a
-shed or "lean-to" on the side of the _atrium_ opposite the door. It
-was probably intended at first for merely temporary purposes, being
-built of wooden boards (_tabulae_), and having an outside door and no
-connection with the _atrium_. It could not have been long, however,
-until the wall between was broken through, and this once done and its
-convenience demonstrated, the partition wall was entirely removed, and
-the second form of the Roman house resulted (Fig. 37). This
-improvement also persisted, and the _tablinum_ is found in all the
-houses from the humblest to the costliest of which we have any
-knowledge.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 38. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-191. The next change was made by widening the _atrium_, but in order
-that the roof might be more easily supported walls were erected along
-the lines of the old _atrium_ for about two-thirds of its depth. These
-may have been originally mere pillars, as nowadays in our cellars, not
-continuous walls. At any rate, the _atrium_ at the end next the
-_tablinum_ was given the full width between the outside walls, and the
-additional spaces, one on each side, were called _alae_. The
-appearance of such a house as seen from the entrance door must have
-been much like that of an Anglican or Roman Catholic church. The open
-space between the supporting walls corresponded to the nave, the two
-_alae_ to the transepts, while the bay-like _tablinum_ resembled the
-chancel. The space between the outside walls and those supporting the
-roof was cut off into rooms of various sizes, used for various
-purposes (Fig. 38). So far as we know they received light only from
-the _atrium_, for no windows are assigned to them by Roman writers,
-and none are found in the ruins, but it is hardly probable that in the
-country no holes were made for light and air, however considerations
-of privacy and security may have influenced builders in the towns.
-From this ancient house we find preserved in its successors all
-opposite the entrance door: the _atrium_ with its _alae_ and
-_tablinum_, the _impluvium_ and _compluvium_. These are the
-characteristic features of the Roman house, and must be so regarded in
-the description which follows of later developments under foreign
-influence.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 39. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-192. The Greeks seem to have furnished the idea next adopted by the
-Romans, a court at the rear of the _atrium_, open to the sky,
-surrounded by rooms, and set with flowers, trees, and shrubs. The open
-space had columns around it, and often a fountain in the middle (Fig.
-39). This court was called the _peristylum_ or _peristylium_.
-According to Vitruvius its breadth should have exceeded its depth by
-one-third, but we do not find these or any other proportions strictly
-observed in the houses that are known to us. Access to the
-_peristylium_ from the _atrium_ could be had through the _tablinum_,
-though this might be cut off from it by folding doors, and by a narrow
-passage[1] by its side. The latter would be naturally used by servants
-and by others who did not wish to pass through the master's room. Both
-passage and _tablinum_ might be closed on the side of the _atrium_ by
-portieres. The arrangement of the various rooms around the court seems
-to have varied with the notions of the builder, and no one plan for
-them can be laid down. According to the means of the owner there were
-bedrooms, dining-rooms, libraries, drawing-rooms, kitchen, scullery,
-closets, private baths, together with the scanty accommodations
-necessary even for a large number of slaves. But no matter whether
-these rooms were many or few they all faced the court, receiving from
-it light and air, as did the rooms along the sides of the _atrium_.
-There was often a garden behind the court.
-
-[Footnote 1: This passage is called _fauces_ in the older books. Mau
-has shown that the _fauces_ was on the entrance side of the _atrium_.
-He calls the passage by the _tablinum_ the _andron_.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 40. PLAN OF HOUSE]
-
-193. The next change took place in the city and town house only,
-because it was due to conditions of town life that did not obtain in
-the country. In ancient as well as in modern times business was likely
-to spread from the center of the town into residence districts, and it
-often became desirable for the owner of a dwelling-house to adapt it
-to the new conditions. This was easily done in the case of the Roman
-house on account of the arrangement of the rooms. Attention has
-already been called to the fact that the rooms all opened to the
-interior of the house, that no windows were placed in the outer walls,
-and that the only door was in front. If the house faced a business
-street, it is evident that the owner could, without interfering with
-the privacy of his house or decreasing its light, build rooms in front
-of the _atrium_ for commercial purposes. He reserved, of course, a
-passageway to his own door, narrower or wider according to the
-circumstances. If the house occupied a corner, such rooms might be
-added on the side as well as in front (Fig. 40), and as they had no
-necessary connection with the interior they might be rented as
-living-rooms, as such rooms often are in our own cities. It is
-probable that rooms were first added in this way for business purposes
-by an owner who expected to carry on some enterprise of his own in
-them, but even men of good position and considerable means did not
-hesitate to add to their incomes by renting to others these
-disconnected parts of their houses. All the larger houses uncovered in
-Pompeii are arranged in this manner. One occupying a whole square and
-having rented rooms on three sides is described in section 208. Such a
-detached house was called an _insula_.
-
-194. The Vestibulum.--Having traced the development of the house as a
-whole and described briefly its permanent and characteristic parts, we
-may now examine these more closely and at the same time call attention
-to other parts introduced at a later time. It will be convenient to
-begin with the front of the house. The city house was built even more
-generally than now on the street line. In the poorer houses the door
-opening into the _atrium_ was in the front wall, and was separated
-from the street only by the width of the threshold. In the better sort
-of houses, those described in the last section, the separation of the
-_atrium_ from the street by the row of stores gave opportunity for
-arranging a more imposing entrance. A part at least of this space was
-left as an open court, with a costly pavement running from the street
-to the door, adorned with shrubs and flowers, with statuary even, and
-trophies of war, if the owner was rich and a successful general. This
-courtyard was called the _vestibulum_. The derivation of the word is
-disputed, but it probably comes from _ve-_, "apart," "separate," and
-_stare_ (cf. _prostibulum_ from _prostare_), and means "a private
-standing place"; other explanations are suggested in the dictionaries.
-The important thing to notice is that it does not correspond at all to
-the part of a modern house called after it the vestibule. In this
-_vestibulum_ the clients gathered, before daybreak perhaps (section
-182), to wait for admission to the _atrium_, and here the _sportula_
-was doled out to them. Here, too, was arranged the wedding procession
-(section 86), and here was marshaled the train that escorted the boy
-to the forum the day that he put away childish things (section 128).
-Even in the poorer houses the same name was given to the little space
-between the door and the edge of the sidewalk.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 41. MOSAIC DOG]
-
-195. The Ostium.--The entrance to the house was called the _ostium_.
-This includes the doorway and the door itself, and the word is applied
-to either, though _fores_ and _ianua_ are the more precise words for
-the door. In the poorer houses (section 194) the _ostium_ was directly
-on the street, and there can be no doubt that it originally opened
-directly into the _atrium_; in other words, the ancient _atrium_ was
-separated from the street only by its own wall. The refinement of
-later times led to the introduction of a hall or passageway between
-the _vestibulum_ and the _atrium_, and the _ostium_ opened into this
-hall and gradually gave its name to it. The threshold (_limen_) was
-broad, the door being placed well back, and often had the word _salve_
-worked on it in mosaic. Over the door were words of good omen, _Nihil
-intret mali_, for example, or a charm against fire. In the great
-houses where an _ostiarius_ or _ianitor_ (section 150) was kept on
-duty, his place was behind the door, and sometimes he had here a small
-room. A dog was often kept chained in the _ostium_, or in default of
-one a picture was painted on the wall or worked in mosaic on the floor
-(Fig. 41) with the warning beneath it: _Cave canem!_ The hallway was
-closed on the side of the _atrium_ with a curtain (_velum_). This
-hallway was not so long that through it persons in the _atrium_ could
-not see passers-by in the street.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 42. IMPLUVIUM IN TUSCAN ATRIUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 43. SECTION OF TUSCAN ATRIUM]
-
-196. The Atrium.--The _atrium_ (section 188) was the kernel of the
-Roman house, and to it was given the appropriate name _cavum aedium_.
-It is possible that this later name belonged strictly to the unroofed
-portion only, but the two words came to be used indiscriminately. The
-old view that the _cavum aedium_ was a middle court between the
-_atrium_ and the _peristylium_ is still held by a few scholars, but is
-not supported by the monumental evidence (section 187). The most
-conspicuous features of the _atrium_ were the _impluvium_ and the
-_compluvium_ (section 188). The water collected in the latter was
-carried into cisterns; over the former a curtain could be drawn when
-the light was too intense, as over a photographer's skylight nowadays.
-We find that the two words were carelessly used for each other by
-Roman writers. So important was the _impluvium_ to the _atrium_, that
-the latter was named from the manner in which the former was
-constructed. Vitruvius tells us that there were four styles. The first
-was called the _atrium Tuscanicum_. In this the roof was formed by two
-pairs of beams crossing each other at right angles, the inclosed space
-being left uncovered and thus forming the _impluvium_ (Figs. 42, 43).
-The name (section 188) as well as the simple construction shows that
-this was the earliest form of the _atrium_, and it is evident that it
-could not be used for rooms of very large dimensions. The second was
-called the _atrium tetrastylon_. The beams were supported at their
-intersections by pillars or columns. The third, _atrium Corinthium_,
-differed from the second only in having more than four supporting
-pillars. It is probable that these two similar styles came in with the
-widening of the _atrium_ (section 191). The fourth was called the
-_atrium displuviatum_. In this the roof sloped toward the outer walls,
-as shown in the cinerary urn mentioned in section 189, and the water
-was carried off by gutters on the outside, the _compluvium_ collecting
-only so much as actually fell into it from the heavens. We are told
-that there was another style of _atrium_, the _testudinatum_, which
-was covered all over and had neither _impluvium_ nor _compluvium_. We
-do not know how this was lighted; perhaps by windows in the alae.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 44. SMALL HOUSE AT POMPEII]
-
-197. The Change in the Atrium.--The _atrium_ as it was in the early
-days of the Republic has been described in section 188. The simplicity
-and purity of the family life of that period lent a dignity to the
-one-room house that the vast palaces of the late Republic and Empire
-failed utterly to inherit. By Cicero's time the _atrium_ had ceased to
-be the center of domestic life; it had become a state apartment used
-only for display. We do not know the successive steps in the process
-of change. Probably the rooms along the sides (section 191) were first
-used as bedrooms, for the sake of greater privacy. The need of a
-detached room for the cooking must have been felt as soon as the
-_peristylium_ was adopted (it may well be that the court was
-originally a kitchen garden), and then of a dining-room convenient to
-it. Then other rooms were added about this court and these were made
-sleeping-apartments for the sake of still greater privacy. Finally
-these rooms were needed for other purposes (section 192) and the
-sleeping-rooms were moved again, this time to an upper story. When
-this second story was added we do not know, but it presupposes the
-small and costly lots of a city. Even the most unpretentious houses in
-Pompeii have in them the remains of staircases (Fig. 44).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 45. ATRIUM IN HOUSE OF SALLUST IN POMPEII]
-
-198. The _atrium_ was now fitted up with all the splendor and
-magnificence that the owner's means would permit. The opening in the
-roof was enlarged to admit more light, and the supporting pillars
-(section 196) were made of marble or costly woods. Between these
-pillars and along the walls statues and other works of art were
-placed. The _compluvium_ became a marble basin, with a fountain in the
-center, and was often richly carved or adorned with figures in relief.
-The floors were mosaic, the walls painted in brilliant colors or
-paneled with marbles of many hues, and the ceilings were covered with
-ivory and gold. In such a hall (Fig. 45) the host greeted his guests
-(section 185), the patron received his clients (section 182), the
-husband welcomed his wife (section 89), and here his body lay in state
-when the pride of life was over.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 46. RUINS OF THE HOUSE OF THE POET IN POMPEII]
-
-199. Still some memorials of the older day were left in even the most
-imposing _atrium_. The altar to the Lares and Penates remained near
-the place where the hearth had been, though the regular sacrifices
-were made in a special chapel in the _peristylium_. In even the
-grandest houses the implements for spinning were kept in the place
-where the matron had once sat among her maidservants (sections 86,
-105), as Livy tells us in the story of Lucretia. The cabinets retained
-the masks of simpler and may be stronger men (section 107), and the
-marriage couch stood opposite the _ostium_ (hence its other name,
-_lectus adversus_), where it had been placed on the wedding night
-(section 89), though no one slept in the _atrium_. In the country much
-of the old-time use of the _atrium_ survived even Augustus, and the
-poor, of course, had never changed their style of living. What use was
-made of the small rooms along the sides of the _atrium_, after they
-had ceased to be bedchambers, we do not know; they served perhaps as
-conversation rooms, private parlors, and drawing-rooms.
-
-200. The Alae.--The manner in which the _alae_, or wings, were formed
-has been explained (section 191); they were simply the rectangular
-recesses left on the right and left of the _atrium_, when the smaller
-rooms on the sides were walled off. It must be remembered that they
-were entirely open to the _atrium_, and formed a part of it, perhaps
-originally furnishing additional light from windows in their outer
-walls. In them were kept the _imagines_, as the wax busts of those
-ancestors who had held curule offices were called, arranged in
-cabinets in such a way that, by the help of cords running from one to
-another and of inscriptions under each of them, their relation to each
-other could be made clear and their great deeds kept in mind. Even
-when Roman writers or those of modern times speak of the _imagines_ as
-in the _atrium_, it is the _alae_ that are intended.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 47. VIEW FROM THE ATRIUM]
-
-201. The Tablinum.--The probable origin of the _tablinum_, has been
-explained above (section 190), and its name has been derived from the
-material (_tabulae_, "planks") of the "lean-to," perhaps a summer
-kitchen, from which it developed. Others think that the room received
-its name from the fact that in it the master kept his account books
-(_tabulae_) as well as all his business and private papers. He kept
-here also the money chest or strong box (_arca_), which in the olden
-time had been chained to the floor of the _atrium_, and made the room
-in fact his office or study. By its position it commanded the whole
-house, as the rooms could be entered only from the _atrium_ or
-_peristylium_, and the _tablinum_ was right between them. The master
-could secure entire privacy by closing the folding doors which cut off
-the private court, or by pulling the curtains across the opening into
-the great hall. On the other hand, if the _tablinum_ was left open,
-the guest entering the _ostium_ must have had a charming vista,
-commanding at a glance all the public and semi-public parts of the
-house (Fig. 47). Even when the _tablinum_ was closed, there was free
-passage from the front of the house to the rear through the short
-corridor (section 192) by the side of the _tablinum_. It should be
-noticed that there was only one such passage, though the older
-authorities assert that there were two.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 48. THE PERISTYLE FROM HOUSE IN POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 49. ROOF OF PERISTYLE]
-
-202. The Peristyle.--The _peristylium_ or _peristylum_ was adopted, as
-we have seen (section 192), from the Greeks, but despite the way in
-which the Roman clung to the customs of his fathers it was not long in
-becoming the more important of the two main sections of the house. We
-must think of a spacious court (Fig. 48) open to the sky, but
-surrounded by a continuous row of buildings, or rather rooms, for the
-buildings soon became one, all facing it and having doors and latticed
-windows opening upon it. All these buildings had covered porches on
-the side next the court (Fig. 49), and these porches forming an
-unbroken colonnade on the four sides were strictly the peristyle,
-though the name came to be used of the whole section of the house,
-including court, colonnade, and surrounding rooms. The court was much
-more open to the sun than the _atrium_, and all sorts of rare and
-beautiful plants and flowers bloomed and flourished in it, protected
-by the walls from cold winds. Fountains and statuary adorned the
-middle part; the colonnade furnished cool or sunny promenades, no
-matter what the time of day or the season of the year. Loving the open
-air and the charms of nature as the Romans did, it is no wonder that
-they soon made the peristyle the center of their domestic life in all
-the houses of the better class, and reserved the _atrium_ for the more
-formal functions which their political and public position demanded
-(section 197). It must be remembered that there was often a garden
-behind the peristyle, and there was also very commonly a direct
-connection with the street.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 50. KITCHEN RANGE]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 51. LATRINA]
-
-203. Private Rooms.--The rooms surrounding the court varied so much
-with the means and tastes of the owners of the houses that we can
-hardly do more than give a list of those most frequently mentioned in
-literature. It is important to remember that in the town house all
-these rooms received their light by day from the court (section 193),
-while in the country there may well have been windows and doors in the
-exterior wall (section 191). First in importance comes the kitchen
-(_culina_), placed on the side of the court opposite the _tablinum_.
-It was supplied with an open fireplace for roasting and boiling, and
-with a stove (Fig. 50) not unlike the charcoal affairs still used in
-Europe. Near it was the bakery, if the mansion required one, supplied
-with an oven. Near it, too, was the bathhouse (_latrina_) with the
-necessary closet, in order that all might use the same connection with
-the sewer (Fig. 51). If the house had a stable, it was also put near
-the kitchen, as nowadays in Latin countries.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 52. DINING-ROOM IN COURT]
-
-204. The dining-room (_triclinium_) may be mentioned next. It was not
-necessarily in immediate juxtaposition to the kitchen, because the
-army of slaves (section 149) made its position of little importance so
-far as convenience was concerned. It was customary to have several
-triclinia for use at different seasons of the year, in order that the
-room might be warmed by the sun in winter, and in summer escape its
-rays. Vitruvius thought that its length should be twice its breadth,
-but the ruins show no fixed proportions. The Romans were so fond of
-the air and the sky that the court must have often served as a dining-
-room, and Horace has left us a charming picture of the master dining
-under an arbor attended by a single slave. Such an outdoor dining-room
-is found in the so-called House of Sallust at Pompeii (Fig. 52).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 53. BEDROOM]
-
-205. The sleeping-rooms (_cubicula_) were not considered so important
-by the Romans as by us, for the reason, probably, that they were used
-merely to sleep in and not for living-rooms as well. They were very
-small and the furniture was scant (Fig. 53) in even the best houses.
-Some of these seem to have had anterooms in connection with the
-_cubicula_, which were probably occupied by attendants (section 150),
-and in even the ordinary houses there was often a recess for the bed.
-Some of the bedrooms seem to have been used merely for the midday
-siesta (section 122), and these were naturally situated in the coolest
-part of the court; they were called _cubicula diurna_. The others were
-called by way of distinction _cubicula nocturna_ or _dormitoria_, and
-were placed so far as possible on the west side of the court in order
-that they might receive the morning sun. It should be remembered that
-in the best houses the bedrooms were preferably in the second story of
-the peristyle.
-
-206. A library (_bibliotheca_) had a place in the house of every Roman
-of education. Collections of books were large as well as numerous, and
-were made then as now by persons even who cared nothing about their
-contents. The books or rolls, which will be described later, were kept
-in cases or cabinets around the walls, and in one library discovered
-in Herculaneum an additional rectangular case occupied the middle of
-the room. It was customary to decorate the room with statues of
-Minerva and the Muses, and also with the busts and portraits of
-distinguished men. Vitruvius recommends an eastern aspect for the
-_bibliotheca_, probably to guard against dampness.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 54. CHAPEL IN HOUSE]
-
-207. Besides these rooms, which must have been found in all good
-houses, there were others of less importance, some of which were so
-rare that we scarcely know their uses. The _sacrarium_ was a private
-chapel (Fig. 54) in which the images of the gods were kept, acts of
-worship performed, and sacrifices offered. The Lar or tutelary
-divinity of the house seems, however, to have retained his ancient
-place in the _atrium_. The _oeci_ were halls or saloons, corresponding
-perhaps to our parlors and drawing-rooms, used occasionally, it may
-be, for banquet halls. The _exedrae_ were rooms supplied with
-permanent seats which seem to have been used for lectures and similar
-entertainments. The _solarium_ was a place to bask in the sun,
-sometimes a terrace, often the flat roof of the house, which was then
-covered with earth and laid out like a garden and made beautiful with
-flowers and shrubs. Besides these there were, of course, sculleries,
-pantries, and storerooms. The slaves had to have their quarters
-(_cellae servorum_), in which they were packed as closely as possible.
-Cellars under the houses seem to have been rare, though some have been
-found at Pompeii.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 55. HOUSE OF PANSA]
-
-208. The House of Pansa.--Finally we may describe a house that
-actually existed, taking as an illustration one that must have
-belonged to a wealthy and influential man, the so-called House of
-Pansa at Pompeii (Fig. 55; and see also Overbeck's _Pompeii_, p. 325;
-Harper, p. 549; Becker, II, p. 214; Smith, I, p. 681; Schreiber, LIII,
-16; the various plans are slightly different). The house occupied an
-entire square, facing a little east of south. Most of the rooms on the
-front and sides were rented out for shops or stores; in the rear was a
-garden. The rooms that did not belong to the house proper are shaded
-in the plan here given. The _vestibulum_, marked 1 in the plan, is the
-open space between two of the shops (section 193). Behind it is the
-_ostium_ (1'), with a figure of a dog (section 195) in mosaic, opening
-into the _atrium_ (2, 2) with three rooms on each side, the _alae_
-(2', 2') being in the regular place, the _compluvium_ (3) in the
-middle, the _tablinum_ (4) opposite the _ostium_, and the passage on
-the eastern side (5). The _atrium_ is of the _Tuscanicum_ style
-(section 196), and is paved with concrete; the _tablinum_ and the
-passage have mosaic floors. From these, steps lead down into the
-court, which is lower than the _atrium_, measures 65 by 50 feet, and
-is surrounded by a colonnade with sixteen pillars. There are two rooms
-on the side next the _atrium_, one of these (6) has been called the
-_bibliotheca_ (section 206), because a manuscript was found in it, but
-its purpose is uncertain; the other (6') was possibly a dining-room.
-The court has two projections (7', 7') much like the _alae_, which
-have been called _exedrae_ (section 207); it will be noticed that one
-of these has the convenience of an exit (section 202) to the street.
-The rooms on the west and the small room on the east can not be
-definitely named. The large room on the east (T) is the main dining-
-room (section 204), the remains of the dining couches being marked on
-the plan. The kitchen is at the northwest corner (13), with the stable
-(14) next to it (section 203, end); off the kitchen is a paved yard
-(15) with a gateway into the street by which a cart could enter. East
-of the kitchen and yard is a narrow passage connecting the peristyle
-with the garden (section 202). East of this are two rooms, the larger
-of which (9) is one of the most imposing rooms of the house, 33 by 24
-feet in size, with a large window guarded by a low balustrade, and
-opening into the garden. This was probably an _oecus_ (section 207).
-In the center of the court is a basin about two feet deep, the rim of
-which was once decorated with figures of water plants and fish. Along
-the whole north end of the house ran a long veranda (16, 16),
-overlooking the garden (11, 11) in which was a sort of summer house
-(12). The house had an upper story, but the stairs leading to it are
-in the rented rooms, suggesting that the upper floor was not occupied
-by Pansa's family.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 56. SECTION OF THE HOUSE OF PANSA IN POMPEII]
-
-209. Of the rooms facing the street it will be noticed that one,
-lightly shaded in the plan, is connected with the _atrium_; it was
-probably used for some business conducted by Pansa himself (section
-193, end), possibly with a slave (section 144) or a freedman (section
-175) in immediate charge of it. Of the others the suites on the east
-side (A, B) seem to have been rented out as living apartments. The
-others were shops and stores. The four connected rooms on the west,
-near the front, seem to have been a large bakery; the room marked C
-was the salesroom, with a large room opening off of it containing
-three stone mills, troughs for kneading the dough, a water tap with
-sink, and a recessed oven. The uses of the others are uncertain. The
-section plan (Fig. 56) represents the appearance of the house if all
-were cut away on one side of a line drawn from front to rear through
-the middle of the house. It is, of course, largely conjectural, but
-gives a clear idea of the general way in which the division walls and
-roof must have been arranged.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 57. WALL OF ROMULUS]
-
-210. The Walls.--The materials of which the wall (_paries_) was
-composed varied with the time, the place, and the cost of
-transportation. Stone and unburned bricks (_lateres crudi_) were the
-earliest materials used in Italy, as almost everywhere else, timber
-being employed for merely temporary structures, as in the addition
-(section 190) from which the _tablinum_ developed. For private houses
-in very early times and for public buildings in all times, walls of
-dressed stone (_opus quadratum_) were laid in regular courses,
-precisely as in modern times (Fig. 57). Over the wall was spread a
-coating of fine marble stucco for decorative purposes, which gave it a
-finish of dazzling white. For less pretentious houses, not for public
-buildings, the sun-dried bricks were largely used up to about the
-beginning of the first century B.C. These, too, were covered with the
-stucco, for protection against the weather as well as for decoration,
-but even the hard stucco has not preserved walls of this perishable
-material to our times. In classical times a new material had come into
-use, better than either brick or stone, cheaper, more durable, more
-easily worked and transported, which was employed almost exclusively
-for private houses, and very generally for public buildings. Walls
-constructed in the new way (_opus caementicium_) are variously called
-"rubble-work" or "concrete" in our books of reference, but neither
-term is quite descriptive; the _opus caementicium_ was not laid in
-courses, as is our rubble-work, while on the other hand larger stones
-were used in it than in the concrete of which walls for buildings are
-now constructed.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 58. METHOD OF CASTING CONCRETE WALLS]
-
-211. Paries Caementicius.--The materials varied with the place. At
-Rome lime and volcanic ashes (_lapis Puteolanus_) were used with
-pieces of stone as large or larger than the fist. Brickbats sometimes
-took the place of stone, and sand (section 146) that of the volcanic
-ashes; potsherds crushed fine were better than the sand. The harder
-the stones the better the concrete; the very best was made with pieces
-of lava, the material with which the roads were generally paved. The
-method of forming the concrete walls was the same as that of modern
-times, familiar to us all in the construction of sidewalks. It will be
-easily understood from the illustration (Fig. 58). Upright posts,
-about 5 by 6 inches thick, and from 10 to 15 feet in height, were
-fixed about 3 feet apart along the line of both faces of the intended
-wall. On the outside of these were nailed horizontally boards, 10 or
-12 inches wide, overlapping each other. Into the intermediate space
-the semi-fluid concrete was poured, receiving the imprint of posts and
-boards. When the concrete had hardened, the frame-work was removed and
-placed on top of it and the work continued until the wall had reached
-the required height. Walls made in this way varied in thickness from a
-seven-inch partition wall in an ordinary house to the eighteen-foot
-walls of the Pantheon of Agrippa. They were far more durable than
-stone walls, which might be removed stone by stone with little more
-labor than was required to put them together; the concrete wall was a
-single slab of stone throughout its whole extent, and large parts of
-it might be cut away without diminishing the strength of the rest in
-the slightest degree.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 59. WALL FACINGS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 60. BRICK FOR FACING WALL]
-
-212. Wall Facings.--Impervious to the weather though these walls were,
-they were usually faced with stone or kiln-burned brick (_lateres
-cocti_). The stone employed was usually the soft tufa, not nearly so
-well adapted to stand the weather as the concrete itself. The earliest
-fashion was to take bits of stone having one smooth face but of no
-regular size or shape and arrange them with the smooth faces against
-the frame-work as fast as the concrete was poured in; when the frame-
-work was removed the wall presented the appearance shown at A in Fig.
-59. Such a wall was called _opus incertum_. In later times the tufa
-was used in small blocks having the smooth face square and of a
-uniform size. A wall so faced looked as if covered with a net (B in
-Fig. 59) and was therefore called _opus reticulatum_. A section at a
-corner is shown at C. In either case the exterior face of the wall was
-usually covered with a fine limestone or marble stucco, which gave a
-hard finish, smooth and white. The burned bricks were triangular in
-shape, but their arrangement and appearance can be more easily
-understood from the illustration (Fig. 60) than from any description
-that could be given here. It must be noticed that there were no walls
-made of _lateres cocti_ alone, even the thin partition walls having a
-core of concrete.
-
-213. Floors and Ceilings.--In the poorer houses the floor (_solum_) of
-the first story was made by smoothing the ground between the walls,
-covering it thickly with small pieces of stone, bricks, tile, and
-potsherds, and pounding all down solidly and smoothly with a heavy
-rammer (_fistuca_). Such a floor was called _pavimentum_, and the name
-came gradually to be used of floors of all kinds. In houses of a
-better sort the floor was made of stone slabs fitted smoothly
-together. The more pretentious houses had concrete floors, made as has
-been described. Floors of upper stories were sometimes made of wood,
-but concrete was used here, too, poured over a temporary flooring of
-wood. Such a floor was very heavy, and required strong walls to
-support it; examples are preserved of the thickness of eighteen inches
-and a span of twenty feet. A floor of this kind made a perfect ceiling
-for the room below, requiring only a finish of stucco. Other ceilings
-were made much as they are now, laths being nailed on the stringers or
-rafters and covered with mortar and stucco.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 61. HUT OF ROMULUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 62. TILE FOR ROOF]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 63. TILE ROOF]
-
-214. Roofs.--The construction of the roofs (_tecta_) differed very
-little from the modern method, as may be seen in the illustration
-shown in section 196. They varied as much as ours do in shape, some
-being flat, others sloping in two directions, others in four. In the
-most ancient times the covering was a thatch of straw, as in the so-
-called hut of Romulus (_casa Romuli_) on the Palatine Hill preserved
-even under the Empire as a relic of the past (Fig. 61). Shingles
-followed the straw, only to give place in turn to tiles. These were at
-first flat, like our shingles, but were later made with a flange on
-each side (Fig. 62) in such a way that the lower part of one would
-slip into the upper part of the one below it on the roof. The tiles
-(_tegulae_) were laid side by side and the flanges covered by other
-tiles, called _imbrices_ (Fig. 63) inverted over them. Gutters also of
-tile ran along the eaves to conduct the water into cisterns, if it was
-needed for domestic purposes. The appearance of the completed roof is
-shown in Fig. 49, section 202.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 64. DOOR OF ROMAN HOUSE]
-
-215. The Doors.--The Roman doorway, like our own, had four parts: the
-threshold (_limen_), the two jambs (_postes_), and the lintel (_limen
-superum_). The lintel was always of a single piece of stone and
-peculiarly massive. The doors were exactly like those of modern times,
-except in the matter of hinges, for while the Romans had hinges like
-ours they did not use them on their doors. The door-hinge was really a
-cylinder of hard wood, a little longer than the door and of a diameter
-a little greater than the thickness of the door, terminating above and
-below in pivots. These pivots turned in sockets made to receive them
-in the threshold and lintel. To this cylinder the door was mortised,
-their combined weight coming upon the lower pivot. The cut (Fig. 64)
-makes this clear, and reminds one of an old-fashioned homemade gate.
-The comedies are full of references to the creaking of these doors.
-
-216. The outer door of the house was properly called _ianua_, an inner
-door _ostium_, but the two words came to be used indiscriminately, and
-the latter was even applied to the whole entrance (section 195).
-Double doors were called _fores_, and the back door, usually opening
-into a garden (section 208), was called the _posticum_. The doors
-opened inwards and those in the outer wall were supplied with bolts
-(_pessuli_) and bars (_serae_). Locks and keys by which the doors
-could be fastened from without were not unknown, but were very heavy
-and clumsy. Finally it should be noticed that in the interiors of
-private houses doors were not nearly so common as now, the Romans
-preferring portieres (_vela_, _aulaea_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 65. WINDOW]
-
-217. The Windows.--In the principal rooms of the house the windows
-opened on the court, as has been seen, and it may be set down as a
-rule that in rooms situated on the first floor and used for domestic
-purposes there were no windows opening on the street. In the upper
-floors there must have been windows on the street in such apartments
-as had no outlook on the court, as in those for example above the
-rented rooms in the House of Pansa (section 208). Country houses may
-also have had outside windows in the first story (section 203). All
-the windows (_fenestrae_) were small (Fig. 65), hardly larger than
-three feet by two. Some were provided with shutters, which were made
-to slide backward and forward in a frame-work on the outside of the
-wall. These shutters were sometimes in two parts moving in opposite
-directions, and when closed were said to be _iunctae_. Other windows
-were latticed, and others still were covered with a fine network to
-keep out mice and other objectionable animals. Glass was known to the
-Romans of the Empire but was too expensive for general use. Talc and
-other translucent materials were also employed in window frames as a
-protection against cold, but only in very rare instances.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 66. STOVE FOR HEATING]
-
-218. Heating.--Even in the mild climate of Italy the houses must often
-have been too cold for comfort. On merely chilly days the occupants
-probably contented themselves with moving into rooms warmed by the
-direct rays of the sun (section 204), or with wearing wraps or heavier
-clothing. In the more severe weather of actual winter they used
-charcoal stoves or braziers of the sort that is still used in the
-countries of southern Europe. They were merely metal boxes (Fig. 66)
-in which hot coals could be put, with legs to keep the floors from
-injury and handles by which they could be carried from room to room.
-They were called _foculi_. The wealthy had furnaces resembling ours
-under their houses, the heat being carried to the rooms by tile pipes;
-in some instances the partitions and floors seem to have been made of
-hollow tiles, through which the hot air circulated, warming the rooms
-without being admitted to them. These furnaces had chimneys, but
-furnaces were seldom used.
-
-219. Water Supply.--All the important towns of Italy had abundant
-supplies of water piped from hills and brought sometimes from a
-considerable distance. The Romans' aqueducts were among their most
-stupendous and most successful works of engineering. Mains were laid
-down the middle of the streets and from these the water was piped into
-the houses. There was often a tank in the upper part of the house,
-from which the water was distributed as it was needed. It was not
-usually carried into many of the rooms, but there was always a jet or
-fountain in the court (section 202), in the bathhouse, the garden, and
-the closet. The bathhouse had a separate heating apparatus of its own,
-which kept the room or rooms at the desired temperature and furnished
-hot water as required.
-
-220. Decoration.--The outside of the house was left severely plain,
-the walls being merely covered with stucco, as we have seen (section
-212). The interior was decorated to suit the tastes and means of the
-owner, not even the poorer houses lacking charming effects in this
-direction. At first the stucco-finished walls were merely marked off
-into rectangular panels (_abaci_), which were painted deep, rich
-colors, reds and yellows predominating. Then in the middle of these
-panels simple center-pieces were painted and the whole surrounded with
-the most brilliant arabesques. Then came elaborate pictures, figures,
-interiors, landscapes, etc., of large size and most skillfully
-executed, all painted directly upon the wall, as in some of our public
-buildings to-day. Illustrations of these decorations may be found in
-Baumeister II, L, and LI, and in colors in Gusman IX-XI, Kelsey XI. A
-little later the walls began to be covered with panels of thin slabs
-of marble with a baseboard and cornice. Beautiful effects were
-produced by combining marbles of different tints, and the Romans
-ransacked the world for striking colors. Later still came raised
-figures of stucco work, enriched with gold and colors, and mosaic
-work, chiefly of minute pieces of colored glass which had a jewel-like
-effect.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 67. MOSAIC THRESHOLD]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 68. CARVED DOORWAY]
-
-221. The doors and doorways gave opportunities for treatment equally
-artistic. The doors were richly paneled and carved, or were plated
-with bronze, or made of solid bronze. The threshold was often of
-mosaic (see the example from Pompeii in Fig. 67). The _postes_ were
-sheathed with marble elaborately carved, as in the example from
-Pompeii, shown in Fig. 68. The floors were covered with marble tiles
-arranged in geometrical figures with contrasting colors, much as they
-are now in public buildings, or with mosaic pictures only less
-beautiful than those upon the walls. The most famous of these, "Darius
-at the Battle of Issus," is shown in black and white in all our
-reference books (best in Baumeister under _Mosaik_, Fig. 1000, and in
-colors in Overbeck after p. 612). It measures sixteen feet by eight,
-but despite its size has no less than one hundred and fifty separate
-pieces to each square inch. The ceilings were often barrel-vaulted and
-painted brilliant colors, or were divided into panels (_lacus_,
-_lacunae_), deeply sunk, by heavy intersecting beams of wood or
-marble, and then decorated in the most elaborate manner with raised
-stucco work, or gold or ivory, or with bronze plates heavily
-gilded.[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: The magnificence of some of the great houses, even in
-Republican times, may be inferred from the prices paid for them.
-Cicero paid about $140,000 for his; the consul Messala the same price
-for his; Clodius $600,000 for his, the most costly known to us. All
-these were on the Palatine Hill, where ground was costly, too.]
-
-222. Furniture.--Our knowledge of Roman furniture is largely indirect,
-because only such articles have come down to us as were made of stone
-or metal. Fortunately the secondary sources are abundant and good.
-Many articles are incidentally described in works of literature, many
-are shown in the wall paintings mentioned above (section 220), and
-some have been restored from casts taken in the hardened ashes of
-Pompeii and Herculaneum. In general we may say that the Romans had
-very few articles of furniture in their houses, and that they cared
-less for comfort, not to say luxurious ease, than they did for costly
-materials, fine workmanship, and artistic forms. The mansions on the
-Palatine were enriched with all the spoils of Greece and Asia, but it
-may be doubted whether there was a comfortable bed within the walls of
-Rome.
-
-223. Principal Articles.--Many of the most common and useful articles
-of modern furniture were entirely unknown to the Romans. No mirrors
-hung on their walls, they had no desks or writing tables, no dressers
-or chiffoniers, no glass-doored cabinets for the display of
-bric-a-brac, tableware, or books, no mantels, no hat-racks even. The
-principal articles found in even the best houses were couches or beds,
-chairs, tables, and lamps. If to these we add chests or cabinets, an
-occasional brazier (section 218), and still rarer water-clock, we
-shall have everything that can be called furniture except tableware
-and kitchen utensils. Still it must not be thought that their rooms
-presented a desolate or dreary appearance. When one considers the
-decorations (sections 220, 221), the stately pomp of the _atrium_
-(section 198), and the rare beauty of the peristyle (section 202), it
-is evident that a very few articles of real artistic excellence were
-more in keeping with them than would have been the litter and jumble
-that we now think necessary in our rooms.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 69. THE LECTUS]
-
-224. The Couches.--The couch (_lectus_, _lectulus_) was found
-everywhere in the Roman house, a sofa by day, a bed by night. In its
-simplest form it consisted of a frame of wood with straps across the
-top on which was laid a mattress. At one end there was an arm, as in
-the case of our sofas; sometimes there was an arm at each end, and a
-back besides. It was always provided with pillows and rugs or
-coverlets. The mattress was originally stuffed with straw, but this
-gave place to wool and even feathers. In some of the bedrooms of
-Pompeii the frame seems to have been lacking, the mattress being laid
-on a support built up from the floor (section 205). The couches used
-for beds seem to have been larger than those used as sofas, and they
-were so high that stools (Fig. 69) or even steps were necessary
-accompaniments. As a sofa the _lectus_ was used in the library for
-reading and writing, the student supporting himself on the left arm
-and holding the book or writing with the right hand. In the
-dining-room it had a permanent place, as will be described later. Its
-honorary position in the great hall has been already mentioned
-(section 199). It will be seen that the _lectus_ could be made highly
-ornamental. The legs and arms were carved or made of costly woods, or
-inlaid or plated with tortoise-shell or the precious metals. We even
-read of frames of solid silver. The coverings were often made of the
-finest fabrics, dyed the most brilliant colors and worked with figures
-of gold.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 70. THE SELLA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 71. CURULE CHAIRS]
-
-225. The Chairs.--The primitive form of seat (_sedile_) among the
-Romans as elsewhere was the stool or bench with four perpendicular
-legs and no back. The remarkable thing is that it did not give place
-to something better as soon as means permitted. The stool (_sella_)
-was the ordinary seat for one person (Fig. 70), used by men and women
-resting or working, and by children and slaves at their meals as well.
-The bench (_subsellium_) differed from the stool only in accommodating
-more than one person. It was used by senators in the _curia_, by the
-jurors in the courts, and by boys in the school (section 120), as well
-as in private houses. A special form of the _sella_ was the famous
-curule chair (_sella curulis_), having curved legs of ivory (Fig. 71).
-The curule chair folded up like our camp-stools for convenience of
-carriage and had straps across the top to support the cushion which
-formed the seat.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 72. THE SOLIUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 73. CATHEDRA]
-
-226. The first improvement upon the _sella_ was the _solium_, a stiff,
-straight, high-backed chair with solid arms, looking as if cut from a
-single block of wood (Fig. 72), and so high that a footstool was as
-necessary with it as with a bed (section 224). Poets represented gods
-and kings as seated in such a chair, and it was kept in the _atrium_
-for the use of the patron when he received his clients (sections 182,
-198). Lastly, we find the _cathedra_, a chair without arms, but with a
-curved back (Fig. 73) sometimes fixed at an easy angle (_cathedra
-supina_), the only approximation to a comfortable seat that the Romans
-knew. It was at first used by women only, being regarded as too
-luxurious for men, but finally came into general use. Its employment
-by teachers in the schools of rhetoric (section 115) gave rise to the
-expression _ex cathedra_, applied to authoritative utterances of every
-kind, and its use by bishops explains our word cathedral. Neither the
-_solium_ nor the _cathedra_ was upholstered, but with them both were
-used cushions and coverings as with the _lecti_, and they afforded
-like opportunities for skillful workmanship and lavish decoration.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 74. MENSA DELPHICA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 75. ADJUSTABLE TABLE]
-
-227. Tables.--The table (_mensa_) was the most important article of
-furniture in the Roman house whether we consider its manifold uses, or
-the prices often paid for certain kinds. They varied in form and
-construction as much as our own, many of which are copied directly
-from Roman models. All sorts of materials were used for their supports
-and tops, stone, wood, solid or veneered, the precious metals,
-probably in thin plates only. The most costly, so far as we know, were
-the round tables made from cross-sections of the citrus-tree, found in
-Africa. The wood was beautifully marked and single pieces could be had
-from three to four feet in diameter. For one of these Cicero paid
-$20,000, Asinius Pollio $44,000, King Juba $52,000, and the family of
-the Cethegi possessed one valued at $60,000. Special names were given
-to tables of certain forms. The _monopodium_ was a table or stand with
-but one support, used especially to hold a lamp or toilet articles.
-The _abacus_ was a table with a rectangular top having a raised rim
-and used for plate and dishes, in the place of the modern sideboard.
-The _delphica_ (sc. _mensa_) had three legs, as shown in Fig. 74.
-Tables were frequently made with adjustable legs, so that the height
-might be altered; the mechanism is clearly shown in the cut (Fig. 75).
-On the other hand the permanent tables in the _triclinia_ (section
-204) were often built up from the floor of solid masonry or concrete,
-having tops of polished stone or mosaic. The table gave a better
-opportunity than even the couch or chair for artistic workmanship,
-especially in the matter of carving and inlaying the legs and top.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 76. VARIOUS FORMS OF LAMPS]
-
-228. The Lamps.--The Roman lamp (_lucerna_) was essentially simple
-enough, merely a vessel that would hold oil or melted grease with a
-few threads twisted loosely together for a wick and drawn out through
-a hole in the cover or top (Fig. 76). The light thus furnished must
-have been very uncertain and dim. There was no glass to keep the flame
-steady, much less was there a chimney or central draft. As works of
-art, however, they were exceedingly beautiful, those of the cheapest
-material being often of graceful form and proportions, while to those
-of costly material the skill of the artist in many cases must have
-given a value far above that of the rare stones or precious metals of
-which they were made.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 77. BASES FOR LAMPS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 78. CANDELABRA]
-
-229. Some of these lamps (cf. Fig. 76) were intended to be carried in
-the hand, as shown by the handles, others to be suspended from the
-ceiling by chains. Others still were kept on tables expressly made for
-them, as the _monopodia_ (section 227) commonly used in the bedrooms,
-or the tripods shown in Fig. 77. For lighting the public rooms there
-were, besides these, tall stands, like those of our piano lamps,
-examples of which may be seen in the last cut (Fig. 78). On some of
-these, several lamps perhaps were placed at a time. The name of these
-stands (_candelabra_) shows that they were originally intended to hold
-wax or tallow candles (_candelae_), and the fact that these candles
-were supplanted in the houses of the rich by the smoking and ill-
-smelling lamp is good proof that the Romans were not skilled in the
-art of making them. Finally it may be noticed that a supply of torches
-(_faces_) of dry, inflammable wood, often soaked in oil or smeared
-with pitch, was kept near the outer door for use upon the streets.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 79. STRONG BOX]
-
-230. Chests and Cabinets.--Every house was supplied with chests
-(_arcae_) of various sizes for the purpose of storing clothes and
-other articles not always in use, and for the safe keeping of papers,
-money, and jewelry. The material was usually wood, often bound with
-iron and ornamented with hinges and locks of bronze. The smaller
-_arcae_, used for jewel cases, were often made of silver or even gold.
-Of most importance, perhaps, was the strong box kept in the _tablinum_
-(section 201), in which the _pater familias_ stored his ready money.
-It was made as strong as possible so that it could not easily be
-opened by force, and was so large and heavy that it could not be
-carried away entire. As an additional precaution it was sometimes
-chained to the floor. This, too, was often richly carved and mounted,
-as is seen in the illustration from Pompeii (Fig. 79).
-
-231. The cabinets (_armaria_) were designed for similar purposes and
-made of similar materials. They were often divided into compartments
-and were always supplied with hinges and locks. Two of the most
-important uses of these cabinets have been mentioned already: in the
-library (section 206) for the preserving of books against mice and
-men, and in the _alae_ (section 200) for the keeping of the
-_imagines_, or death-masks of wax. It must be noticed that they lacked
-the convenient glass doors of the cabinets or cases that we use for
-books and similar things, but they were as well adapted to decorative
-purposes as the other articles of furniture that have been mentioned.
-
-232. Other Articles.--The heating stove, or brazier, has been already
-described (section 218). It was at best a poor substitute for the
-poorest modern stove. The place of our clock was taken in the court or
-garden by the sun-dial (_solarium_), such as is often seen nowadays in
-our parks, which measured the hours of the day by the shadow of a
-stick or pin. It was introduced into Rome from Greece in 268 B.C.
-About a century later the water-clock (_clepsydra_) was also borrowed
-from the Greeks, a more useful invention because it marked the hours
-of the night as well as of the day and could be used in the house. It
-consisted essentially of a vessel filled at a regular time with water,
-which was allowed to escape from it at a fixed rate, the changing
-level marking the hours on a scale. As the length of the Roman hours
-varied with the season of the year and the flow of the water with the
-temperature, the apparatus was far from accurate. Shakspere's striking
-of the clock in "Julius Caesar" (II, i, 192) is an anachronism. Of the
-other articles sometimes reckoned as furniture, the tableware and
-kitchen utensils, some account will be given elsewhere.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 80. A STREET IN POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 81. A PUBLIC FOUNTAIN]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 82. STEPPING-STONES]
-
-233. The Street.--It is evident from what has been said that a
-residence street in a Roman town must have been severely plain and
-monotonous in its appearance. The houses were all of practically the
-same style, they were finished alike in stucco (section 212), the
-windows were few and in the upper stories only, there were no lawns or
-gardens, there was nothing in short to lend variety or to please the
-eye, except perhaps the decorations of the _vestibula_ (section 194),
-or the occasional extension of one story over another (_maenianum_,
-Fig. 80), or a public fountain (Fig. 81). The street itself was paved,
-as will be explained hereafter, and was supplied with a footway on
-either side raised from twelve to eighteen inches above its surface.
-The inconvenience of such a height to persons crossing from one
-footway to the other was relieved by stepping-stones (_pondera_) of
-the same height firmly fixed at suitable distances from each other
-across the street. These stepping-stones were placed at convenient
-points on each street, not merely at the intersections of two or more
-streets. They were usually oval in shape, had flat tops, and measured
-about three feet by eighteen inches, the longer axis being parallel
-with the walk. The spaces between them were often cut into deep ruts
-by the wheels of vehicles, the distance between the ruts showing that
-the wheels were about three feet apart. The arrangement of the
-stepping-stones is shown clearly in Fig. 82, but it is hard to see how
-the draft-cattle managed to work their way between them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 475-606; Voigt, 329-335, 404-412; Goll, III,
-189-310; Guhl and Koner, 728-747; Ramsay, 504-512; Blumner, I,
-189-307; Smith, Harper, Rich, under _toga_, _tunica_, _stola_,
-_palla_, and the other Latin words in the text; Lubker, under
-_Kleidung_; Baumeister, 574 f., 1822-1846; Pauly-Wissowa, under
-_calcei_.
-
-
-234. From the earliest to the latest times the clothing of the Romans
-was very simple, consisting ordinarily of two or three articles only
-besides the covering of the feet. These articles varied in material,
-style, and name from age to age, it is true, but were practically
-unchanged during the Republic and the early Empire. The mild climate
-of Italy (section 218) and the hardening effect of the physical
-exercise of the young (section 107) made unnecessary the closely
-fitting garments to which we are accustomed, while contact with the
-Greeks on the south and perhaps the Etruscans on the north gave the
-Romans a taste for the beautiful that found expression in the graceful
-arrangement of their loosely flowing robes. The clothing of men and
-women differed much less than in modern times, but it will be
-convenient to describe their garments separately. Each article was
-assigned by Latin writers to one of two classes and called from the
-way it was put on _indutus_ or _amictus_. To the first class we may
-give the name of under garments, to the second outer garments, though
-these terms very inadequately represent the Latin words.
-
-235. The Subligaculum.--Next the person was worn the _subligaculum_,
-the loin-cloth familiar to us in pictures of ancient athletes and
-gladiators (see Fig. 151, section 344, and the culprit in Fig. 26,
-section 119), or perhaps the short drawers (trunks), worn nowadays by
-bathers or college athletes. We are told that in the earliest times
-this was the only under garment worn by the Romans, and that the
-family of the Cethegi adhered to this ancient practice throughout the
-Republic, wearing the toga immediately over it. This, too, was done by
-individuals who wished to pose as the champions of old-fashioned
-simplicity, as for example the younger Cato, and by candidates for
-public office. In the best times, however, the _subligaculum_ was worn
-under the tunic or replaced by it.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 83. THE TUNIC]
-
-236. The Tunic.--The tunic was also adopted in very early times and
-came to be the chief article of the kind covered by the word
-_indutus_. It was a plain woolen shirt, made in two pieces, back and
-front, sewed together at the sides, and resembled somewhat the modern
-sweater. It had very short sleeves, covering hardly half of the upper
-arm, as shown in Fig. 83. It was long enough to reach from the neck to
-the calf, but if the wearer wished for greater freedom for his limbs
-he could shorten it by merely pulling it through a girdle or belt worn
-around the waist. Tunics with sleeves reaching to the wrists (_tunicae
-manicatae_), and tunics falling to the ankles (_tunicae talares_) were
-not unknown in the late Republic, but were considered unmanly and
-effeminate.
-
-237. The tunic was worn in the house without any outer garment and
-probably without a girdle; in fact it came to be the distinctive
-house-dress as opposed to the toga, the dress for formal occasions
-only. It was also worn with nothing over it by the citizen while at
-work, but he never appeared in public without the toga over it, and
-even then, hidden by the toga though it was, good form required the
-wearing of the girdle with it. Two tunics were often worn (_tunica
-interior_, or _subucula_, and _tunica exterior_), and persons who
-suffered from the cold, as did Augustus for example, might wear a
-larger number still when the cold was very severe. The tunics intended
-for use in the winter were probably thicker and warmer than those worn
-in the summer, though both kinds were of wool.
-
-238. The tunic of the ordinary citizen was the natural color of the
-white wool of which it was made, without trimmings or ornaments of any
-kind. Knights and senators, on the other hand, had stripes of purple,
-narrow and wide respectively, running from the shoulder to the bottom
-of the tunic both behind and in front. These stripes were either woven
-in the garment or sewed upon it. From them the tunic of the knight was
-called _tunica angusti clavi_ (or _angusticlavia_), and that of the
-senator _lati clavi_ (or _laticlavia_). Some authorities think that
-the badge of the senatorial tunic was a single broad stripe running
-down the middle of the garment in front and behind, but unfortunately
-no picture has come down to us that absolutely decides the question.
-Under this official tunic the knight or senator wore usually a plain
-_tunica interior_. When in the house he left the outer tunic unbelted
-in order to display the stripes as conspicuously as possible.
-
-239. Besides the _subligaculum_ and the _tunica_ the Romans had no
-regular underwear. Those who were feeble through age or ill health
-sometimes wound strips of woolen cloth (_fasciae_) around the legs for
-the sake of additional warmth. These were called _feminalia_ or
-_tibialia_ according as they covered the upper or lower part of the
-leg. Such persons might also use similar wrappings for the body
-(_ventralia_) and even for the throat (_focalia_), but all these were
-looked upon as the badges of senility or decrepitude and formed no
-part of the regular costume of sound men. It must be especially
-noticed that the Romans had nothing corresponding to our trousers or
-even long drawers, the _braccae_ or _bracae_ being a Gallic article
-that was not used at Rome until the time of the latest emperors. The
-phrase _nationes bracatae_ in classical times was a contemptuous
-expression for the Gauls in particular and barbarians in general.
-
-240. The Toga.--Of the outer garments or wraps the most ancient and
-the most important was the _toga_ (cf. _tegere_). Whence the Romans
-got it we do not know, but it goes back to the very earliest time of
-which tradition tells, and was the characteristic garment of the
-Romans for more than a thousand years. It was a heavy, white, woolen
-robe, enveloping the whole figure, falling to the feet, cumbrous but
-graceful and dignified in appearance. All its associations suggested
-formality. The Roman of old tilled his fields clad only in the
-_subligaculum_; in the privacy of his home or at his work the Roman of
-every age wore the comfortable, blouse-like _tunica_; but in the
-forum, in the _comitia_, in the courts, at the public games,
-everywhere that social forms were observed he appeared and had to
-appear in the toga. In the toga he assumed the responsibilities of
-citizenship (section 127), in the toga he took his wife from her
-father's house to his (section 78), in the toga he received his
-clients also toga-clad (section 182), in the toga he discharged his
-duties as a magistrate, governed his province, celebrated his triumph,
-and in the toga he was wrapped when he lay for the last time in his
-hall (section 198). No foreign nation had a robe of the same material,
-color, and arrangement; no foreigner was allowed to wear it, though he
-lived in Italy or even in Rome itself; even the banished citizen left
-the toga with his civil rights behind him. Vergil merely gave
-expression to the national feeling when he wrote the proud verse (Aen.
-I, 282):
-
- Romanos, rerum dominos, gentemque togatam.[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: The Romans, lords of deeds, the race that wears the
-toga.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 84. TIBERIUS IN THE TOGA]
-
-241. Form and Arrangement.--The general appearance of the toga is
-known to every schoolboy; of few ancient garments are pictures so
-common and in general so good (Becker, p. 203; Guhl and Koner, p. 729;
-Baumeister, p. 1823; Schreiber, LXXXV, 8-10; Harper, Rich, and Smith,
-s.v.). They are derived from numerous statues of men clad in it, which
-have come down to us from ancient times, and we have besides full and
-careful descriptions of its shape and of the manner of wearing it in
-the works of writers who had worn it themselves. As a matter of fact,
-however, it has been found impossible to reconcile the descriptions in
-literature with the representations in art (Fig. 84) and scholars are
-by no means agreed as to the precise cut of the toga or the way it was
-put on. It is certain, however, that in its earlier form it was
-simpler, less cumbrous, and more closely fitted to the figure than in
-later times, and that even as early as the classical period its
-arrangement was so complicated that the man of fashion could not array
-himself in it without assistance.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 85. BACK OF TOGA]
-
-242. Scholars who lay the greater stress on the literary authorities
-describe the cut and arrangement of the toga about as follows: It
-consisted of one piece of cloth of semicircular cut, about five yards
-long by four wide, a certain portion of which was pressed into long
-narrow plaits. This cloth was doubled lengthwise, not down the center
-but so that one fold was deeper than the other. It was then thrown
-over the left shoulder in such a manner that the end in front reached
-to the ground, and the part behind (Fig. 85) was in length about twice
-a man's height. This end was then brought around under the right arm
-and again thrown over the left shoulder so as to cover the whole of
-the right side from the armpit to the calf. The broad folds in which
-it hung over were thus gathered together on the left shoulder. The
-part which crossed the breast diagonally was known as the _sinus_, or
-bosom. It was deep enough to serve as a pocket for the reception of
-small articles. According to this description the toga was in one
-piece and had no seams.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 86. CUT OF TOGA]
-
-243. Those who attempt the reconstruction of the toga wholly or
-chiefly from works of art find it impossible to reproduce on the
-living form the drapery seen on the statues, with a toga of one piece
-of goods or of a semicircular pattern. An experimental form is shown
-in Fig. 86, and resembles that of a lamp shade cut in two and
-stretched out to its full extent. The dotted line _GC_ is the straight
-edge of the goods; the heavy lines show the shape of the toga after it
-had been cut out, and had had sewed upon it the ellipse-like piece
-marked _FRAcba_. The dotted line _GE_ is of a length equivalent to the
-height of a man at the shoulder, and the other measurements are to be
-calculated proportionately. When the toga is placed on the figure the
-point _E_ must be on the left shoulder, with the point _G_ touching
-the ground in front. The point _F_ comes at the back of the neck, and
-as the larger part of the garment is allowed to fall behind the figure
-the points _L_ and _M_ will fall on the calves of the legs behind, the
-point _a_ under the right elbow, and the point _b_ on the stomach. The
-material is carried behind the back and under the right arm and then
-thrown over the left shoulder again. The point _c_ will fall on _E_,
-and the portion _OPCa_ will hang down the back to the ground, as shown
-in Fig. 85, section 242. The part _FRA_ is then pulled over the right
-shoulder to cover the right side of the chest and form the _sinus_,
-and the part running from the left shoulder to the ground in front is
-pulled up out of the way of the feet, worked under the diagonal folds
-and allowed to fall out a little to the front. The front should then
-present an appearance similar to that shown in the figure in section
-241. It will be found in practice, however, that much of the grace of
-the toga must have been due to the trained _vestiplicus_, who kept it
-properly creased when it was not in use and carefully arranged each
-fold after his master had put it on. We are not told of any pins or
-tapes to hold it in place, but are told that the part falling from the
-left shoulder to the ground behind kept all in position by its own
-weight, and that this weight was sometimes increased by lead sewed in
-the hem.
-
-244. It is evident that in this fashionable toga the limbs were
-completely fettered, and that all rapid, not to say violent, motion
-was absolutely impossible. In other words the toga of the
-ultrafashionable in the time of Cicero was fit only for the formal,
-stately, ceremonial life of the city. It is easy to see, therefore,
-how it had come to be the emblem of peace, being too cumbrous for use
-in war, and how Cicero could sneer at the young dandies of his time
-for wearing "sails not togas." We can also understand the eagerness
-with which the Roman welcomed a respite from civic and social duties.
-Juvenal sighed for the freedom of the country, where only the dead had
-to wear the toga. Martial praises the unconventionality of the
-provinces for the same reason. Pliny makes it one of the attractions
-of his villa that no guest need wear the toga there. Its cost, too,
-made it all the more burdensome for the poor, and the working classes
-could scarcely have worn it at all.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 87. THE EARLIER TOGA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 88. THE CINCTUS GABINUS]
-
-245. The earlier toga must have been simpler by far, but no certain
-representation of it has come down to us. The Dresden statue, often
-used to illustrate its arrangement (Smith, Fig. 7, p. 848_b_;
-Schreiber LXXXV, 8; Marquardt, Fig. 2, p. 558; Baumeister, Fig. 1921),
-is more than doubtful, the garment being probably a Greek mantle of
-some sort. An approximate idea of it may be gained perhaps from a
-statue in Florence of an Etruscan orator (Fig. 87), which corresponds
-very closely with the descriptions of it in literary sources. At any
-rate it was possible for men to fight in it by tying the trailing ends
-around the body and drawing the back folds over the head. This was
-called the _cinctus Gabinus_, and long after the toga had ceased to be
-worn in war this _cinctus_ was used in certain ceremonial observances.
-It is shown in Fig. 88, though the toga is one of later times.
-
-246. Kinds of Togas.--The toga of the ordinary citizen was, like the
-tunic (section 238), of the natural color of the white wool of which
-it was made, and varied in texture, of course, with the quality of the
-wool. It was called _toga pura_ (or _virilis_, _libera_ section 127).
-A dazzling brilliancy could be given to the toga by a preparation of
-fuller's chalk, and one so treated was called _toga splendens_ or
-_candida_. In such a toga all persons running for office arrayed
-themselves, and from it they were called _candidati_. The curule
-magistrates, censors, and dictators wore the _toga praetexta_,
-differing from the ordinary toga only in having a purple border. It
-was also worn by boys (section 127) and by the chief officers of the
-free towns and colonies. The _toga picta_ was wholly of purple covered
-with embroidery of gold, and was worn by the victorious general in his
-triumphal procession and later by the Emperors. The _toga pulla_ was
-simply a dingy toga worn by persons in mourning or threatened with
-some calamity, usually a reverse of political fortune. Persons
-assuming it were called _sordidati_ and were said _mutare vestem_.
-This _vestis mutatio_ was a common form of public demonstration of
-sympathy with a fallen leader. In this case curule magistrates
-contented themselves with merely laying aside the _toga praetexta_ for
-the _toga pura_, and only the lower orders wore the _toga pulla_.
-
-247. The Lacerna.--In Cicero's time there was just coming into
-fashionable use a mantle called _lacerna_, which seems to have been
-first used by soldiers and the lower classes and then adopted by their
-betters on account of its convenience. These wore it at first over the
-toga as a protection against dust and sudden showers. It was a woolen
-mantle, short, light, open at the sides, without sleeves, but fastened
-with a brooch or buckle on the right shoulder. It was so easy and
-comfortable that it began to be worn not over the toga but instead of
-it, and so generally that Augustus issued an edict forbidding it to be
-used in public assemblages of citizens. Under the later Emperors,
-however, it came into fashion again, and was the common outer garment
-at the theaters. It was made of various colors, dark naturally for the
-lower classes, white for formal occasions, but also of brighter hues.
-It was sometimes supplied with a hood (_cucullus_), which the wearer
-could pull over the head as a protection or a disguise. No
-representation of the _lacerna_ in art has come down to us that can be
-positively identified; that in Rich s.v. is very doubtful. The
-military cloak, first called the _trabea_, then _paludamentum_ and
-_sagum_, was much like the _lacerna_, but made of heavier material.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 89. THE PAENULA]
-
-248. The Paenula.--Older than the _lacerna_ and used by all sorts and
-conditions of men was the _paenula_ (Fig. 89), a heavy coarse wrap of
-wool, leather, or fur, used merely for protection against rain or
-cold, and therefore never a substitute for the toga or made of fine
-materials or bright colors. It seems to have varied in length and
-fullness, but to have been a sleeveless wrap, made in one piece with a
-hole in the middle, through which the wearer thrust his head. It was,
-therefore, classed with the _vestimenta clausa_, or closed garments,
-and must have been much like the modern poncho. It was drawn on over
-the head, like a tunic or sweater, and covered the arms, leaving them
-much less freedom than the _lacerna_ did. In those of some length
-there was a slit in front running from the waist down, and this
-enabled the wearer to hitch the cloak up over one shoulder, leaving
-one arm comparatively free, but at the same time exposing it to the
-weather. It was worn over either tunic or toga according to
-circumstances, and was the ordinary traveling habit of citizens of the
-better class. It was also commonly worn by slaves, and seems to have
-been furnished regularly to soldiers stationed in places where the
-climate was severe. Like the _lacerna_ it was sometimes supplied with
-a hood.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 90. SOLDIER WEARING THE ABOLLA]
-
-249. Other Wraps.--Of other articles included under the general term
-_amictus_ we know little more than the names. The _synthesis_ was a
-dinner dress worn at table over the tunic by the ultrafashionable, and
-sometimes dignified by the special name of _vestis cenatoria_, or
-_cenatorium_ alone. It was not worn out of the house except on the
-Saturnalia, and was usually of some bright color. Its shape is
-unknown. The _laena_ and _abolla_ were very heavy woolen cloaks, the
-latter (Fig. 90) being a favorite with poor people who had to make one
-garment do duty for two or three. It was used especially by
-professional philosophers, who were proverbially careless about their
-dress. One is thought to be worn by the man on the extreme left, in
-the picture of a school shown in section 119. The _endormis_ was
-something like the modern bath robe, used by men after violent
-gymnastic exercise to keep from taking cold, and hardly belongs under
-the head of dress.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 91. SOLEAE]
-
-250. Footgear: the Soleae.--It may be set down as a rule that freemen
-did not appear in public at Rome with bare feet, except as nowadays
-under the compulsion of the direst poverty. Two styles of footwear
-were in use, slippers or sandals (_soleae_) and shoes (_calcei_). The
-slipper consisted essentially of a sole of leather or matting attached
-to the foot in various ways (see the several styles in Fig. 91).
-Custom limited its use to the house and it went characteristically
-with the tunic (section 237), when that was not covered by an outer
-garment. Oddly enough, it seems to us, the slippers were not worn at
-meals. Host and guests wore them into the dining-room, but as soon as
-they had taken their places on the couches (section 224) slaves
-removed the slippers from their feet and cared for them until the meal
-was over (section 152). Hence the phrase _soleas poscere_ came to mean
-"to prepare to take leave." When a guest went out to dinner in a
-_lectica_ (section 151) he wore the _soleae_, but if he walked he wore
-the regular out-door shoes (_calcei_) and had his slippers carried by
-a slave.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 92. ROMAN SHOES]
-
-251. The Calcei.--Out of doors the _calceus_ was always worn, although
-it was much heavier and less comfortable than the _solea_. Good form
-forbade the toga to be worn without the _calcei_, and they were worn
-also with all the other garments included under the word _amictus_.
-The _calceus_ was essentially our shoe, made on a last of leather,
-covering the upper part of the foot as well as protecting the sole,
-fastened with laces or straps. The higher classes had shoes peculiar
-to their rank. The shoe for senators is best known to us (_calceus
-senatorius_), and is shown in Fig. 92; but we know only its shape, not
-its color. It had a thick sole, was open on the inside at the ankle,
-and was fastened by wide straps which ran from the juncture of the
-sole and the upper, were wrapped around the leg and tied above the
-instep. The _mulleus_ or _calceus patricius_ was worn originally by
-patricians only, but later by all curule magistrates. It was shaped
-like the senator's shoe, was red in color like the fish from which it
-was named, and had an ivory or silver ornament of crescent shape
-(_lunula_) fastened on the outside of the ankle. We know nothing of
-the shoe worn by the knights. Ordinary citizens wore shoes that opened
-in front and were fastened by a strap of leather running from one side
-of the shoe near the top. They did not come up so high on the leg as
-those of the senators and were probably of uncolored leather. The
-poorer classes naturally wore shoes of coarser material, often of
-untanned leather (_perones_), and laborers and soldiers had half-boots
-(_caligae_) of the stoutest possible make, or wore wooden shoes. No
-stockings were worn by the Romans, but persons with tender feet might
-wrap them with _fasciae_ (section 239) to keep the shoes and boots
-from chafing them.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 93. THE CAUSIA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 94. THE PETASUS]
-
-252. Coverings for the Head.--Men of the upper classes in Rome had
-ordinarily no covering for the head. When they went out in bad weather
-they protected themselves, of course, with the _lacerna_ and
-_paenula_, and these, as we have seen (sections 247, 248), were
-provided with hoods (_cuculli_). If they were caught without wraps in
-a sudden shower they made shift as best they could by pulling the toga
-up over the head, cf. Fig. 88 in section 245. Persons of lower
-standing, especially workmen who were out of doors all day, wore a
-conical felt cap called the _pilleus_, see the illustration in section
-175. It is probable that this was a survival of what had been in
-prehistoric times an essential part of the Roman dress, for it was
-preserved among the insignia of the oldest priesthoods, the
-Pontifices, Flamines, and Salii, and figured in the ceremony of
-manumission. Out of the city, that is, while traveling or while in the
-country, the upper classes, too, protected the head, especially
-against the sun, with a broad-brimmed felt hat of foreign origin, the
-_causia_ or _petasus_. They are shown in Figs. 93 and 94. They were
-worn in the city also by the old and feeble, and in later times by all
-classes in the theaters. In the house, of course, the head was left
-uncovered.
-
-253. The Hair and Beard.--The Romans in early times wore long hair and
-full beards, as did all uncivilized peoples. Varro tells us that
-professional barbers came first to Rome in the year 300 B.C., but we
-know that the razor and shears were used by the Romans long before
-history begins. Pliny says that the younger Scipio (died 129 B.C.) was
-the first of the Romans to shave every day, and the story may be true.
-People of wealth and position had the hair and beard kept in order at
-home by their own slaves (section 150), and these slaves, if skillful
-barbers, brought high prices in the market. People of the middle class
-went to public barber shops, and made them gradually places of general
-resort for the idle and the gossiping. But in all periods the hair and
-beard were allowed to grow as a sign of sorrow, and were the regular
-accompaniments of the mourning garb already mentioned (section 246).
-The very poor, too, went usually unshaven and unshorn, simply because
-this was the cheap and easy fashion.
-
-254. Styles varied with the years of the persons concerned. The hair
-of children, boys and girls alike, was allowed to grow long and hang
-around the neck and shoulders. When the boy assumed the toga of
-manhood the long locks were cut off, sometimes with a good deal of
-formality, and under the Empire they were often made an offering to
-some deity. In the classical period young men seem to have worn close
-clipped beards; at least Cicero jeers at those who followed Catiline
-for wearing full beards, and on the other hand declares that their
-companions who could show no signs of beard on their faces were worse
-than effeminate. Men of maturity wore the hair cut short and the face
-shaved clean. Most of the portraits that have come down to us show
-beardless men until well into the second century of our era, but after
-the time of Hadrian (117-138 A.D.) the full beard became fashionable.
-Figs. 2 to 11, sections 28-74, are arranged chronologically and will
-serve to show the changes in styles.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 95. SEAL RINGS]
-
-255. Jewelry.--The ring was the only article of jewelry worn by a
-Roman citizen after he reached the age of manhood (section 99), and
-good taste limited him to a single ring. It was originally of iron,
-and though often set with a precious stone and made still more
-valuable by the artistic cutting of the stone, it was always worn more
-for use than ornament. The ring was in fact in almost all cases a seal
-ring, having some device upon it (Fig. 95) which the wearer imprinted
-in melted wax when he wished to acknowledge some document as his own,
-or to secure cabinets and coffers against prying curiosity. The iron
-ring was worn generally until late in the Empire, even after the gold
-ring had ceased to be the special privilege of the knights and had
-become merely the badge of freedom. Even the engagement ring (section
-71) was usually of iron, the setting giving it its material value,
-although we are told that this particular ring was often the first
-article of gold that the young girl possessed.
-
-256. Of course there were not wanting men as ready to violate the
-canons of taste in the matter of rings as in the choice of their
-garments or the style of wearing the hair and beard. We need not be
-surprised, then, to read of one having sixteen rings, or of another
-having six for each finger. One of Martial's acquaintances had a ring
-so large that the poet advised him to wear it on his leg, and Juvenal
-tells us of an upstart who wore light rings in the summer and heavy
-rings in the winter. It is a more surprising fact that the ring was
-worn on the joint, not pressed down as far as possible on the finger,
-as we wear them now. If two were worn on the same finger they were
-worn on separate joints, not touching each other. This fashion must
-have seriously interfered with the movement of the finger.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 96. THE MAMILLARE]
-
-257. Dress of Women.--It has been remarked already (section 234) that
-the dress of men and women differed less in ancient than in modern
-times, and we shall find that in the classical period at least the
-principal articles worn were practically the same, however much they
-differed in name and probably in the fineness of their materials. At
-this period the dress of the matron consisted in general of three
-articles: the _tunica interior_, the _tunica exterior_ or _stola_, and
-the _palla_. Beneath the _tunica interior_ there was nothing like the
-modern corset-waist or corset, intended to modify the figure, but a
-band of soft leather (_mamillare_) was sometimes passed around the
-body under the breasts for a support (Fig. 96), and the _subligaculum_
-(section 235) was also worn by women.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 97. THE STROPHIUM]
-
-258. The Tunica Interior.--The _tunica interior_ did not differ much
-in material or shape from the tunic for men already described (section
-236). It fitted the figure more closely perhaps than the man's, was
-sometimes supplied with sleeves, and as it reached only to the knee
-did not require a belt to keep it from interfering with the free use
-of the limbs. A soft sash-like band of leather (_strophium_), however,
-was sometimes worn over it, close under the breasts, but merely to
-support them, and in this case we may suppose that the _mamillare_ was
-discarded. For this sash (Fig. 97) the more general terms _zona_ and
-_cingulum_ are sometimes used. This tunic was not usually worn alone,
-even in the house, except by young girls.
-
-259. The Stola.--Over the _tunica interior_ was worn the _tunica
-exterior_, or _stola_, the distinctive dress of the Roman matron
-(section 91). It differed in several respects from the tunic worn as a
-house-dress by men. It was open at both sides above the waist and
-fastened on the shoulders by brooches. It was much longer, reaching to
-the feet when ungirded and having in addition a wide border or flounce
-(_instita_) sewed to the lower hem. There was also a border around the
-neck, which seems to have been usually of purple. The _stola_ was
-sleeveless if the _tunica interior_ had sleeves, but if the tunic
-itself was sleeveless the _stola_ had them, so that the arm was always
-protected. These sleeves, however, whether in tunic or _stola_, were
-open on the front of the upper arm and only loosely clasped with
-brooches or buttons, often of great beauty and value.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 98. THE ZONA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 99. STATUE OF THE YOUNGER FAUSTINA]
-
-260. Owing to its great length the _stola_ was always worn with a
-girdle (_zona_) above the hips (Fig. 98), and through it the _stola_
-itself was pulled until the lower edge of the _instita_ barely cleared
-the floor. This gave the fullness about the waist seen in the statue
-of Faustina (Fig. 99), in which the cut of the sleeves can also be
-seen. The _zona_ was usually entirely hidden by the overhanging folds.
-The _stola_ was the distinctive dress of the matron, as has been said,
-and it is probable that the _instita_ was its distinguishing feature;
-that is, the _tunica exterior_ of the unmarried woman had no flounce
-or border, though it probably reached to the floor.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 100. STATUE FROM HERCULANEUM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 101. STATUE OF LIVIA]
-
-261. The Palla.--The _palla_ was a shawl-like wrap for use out of
-doors. It was a rectangular piece of woolen goods, as simple as
-possible in its form, but worn in the most diverse fashions in
-different times. In the classical period it seems to have been wrapped
-around the figure, much as the toga was. One-third was thrown over the
-left shoulder from behind and allowed to fall to the feet. The rest
-was carried around the back and brought forward either over or under
-the right arm at the pleasure of the wearer. The end was then thrown
-back over the left shoulder after the style of the toga, as in the
-marble statue from Herculaneum shown in Fig. 100, or allowed to hang
-loosely over the left arm, as in the statue of Livia (Fig. 101). It
-was possible also to pull the _palla_ up over the head, and this
-method of using it is supposed by some scholars to be shown in the
-statue of Livia, while others see in the covering of the head some
-sort of a veil.
-
-262. Shoes and Slippers.--What has been said of the footgear of men
-(sections 250, 251) applies also to that of women. Slippers (_soleae_)
-were worn in the house, differing from those of men only in being
-embellished as much as possible, sometimes even with pearls. An idea
-of their appearance may be had from the statue of Faustina (section
-259). Shoes (_calcei_) were insisted upon for out-door use, and
-differed from those of men, as they chiefly differ from them now, in
-being made of finer and softer leather. They were often white, or
-gilded, or of bright colors, and those intended for winter wear had
-sometimes cork soles.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 102. STYLES OF DRESSING THE HAIR]
-
-263. Dressing of the Hair.--The Roman woman regularly wore no hat, but
-covered the head when necessary with the _stola_ or with a veil. Much
-attention was given to the arrangement of the hair, the fashions being
-as numerous and as inconstant as they are to-day. For young girls the
-favorite arrangement, perhaps, was to comb the hair back and gather it
-into a knot (_nodus_) on the back of the neck. For matrons it will be
-sufficient to call attention to the figures already given (sections
-77, 259, 261), and to show from statues five styles (Fig. 102) worn at
-different times under the Empire, all belonging to ladies of the
-court.
-
-264. For keeping the hair in position pins were used of ivory, silver,
-and gold, often mounted with jewels. Nets (_reticula_) and ribbons
-(_vittae_, _taeniae_, _fasciolae_) were also worn, but combs were not
-made a part of the head-dress. The Roman woman of fashion did not
-scruple to color her hair, the golden-red color of the Greek hair
-being especially admired, or to use false hair, which had become an
-article of commercial importance early in the Empire. Mention should
-also be made of the garlands (_coronae_) of flowers, or of flowers and
-foliage, and of the coronets of pearls and other precious stones that
-were used to supplement the natural or artificial beauty of the hair.
-These are illustrated in Fig. 102 above.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 103. TOILET ARTICLES]
-
-265. The woman's hairdresser was a female slave (section 150), and
-Juvenal tells us that she suffered cruelly from the impatience of her
-mistress (section 158), who found the long hairpins shown in the
-figure a convenient instrument of punishment, The _ornatrix_ was an
-adept in all the tricks of the toilet already mentioned, and besides
-used all sorts of unguents, oils, and tonics to make the hair soft and
-lustrous and to cause it to grow abundantly. In Fig. 103 are shown a
-number of common toilet articles: _a_, _b_, _c_, _h_, _i_, and _k_ are
-hairpins, _d_ and _g_ are hand mirrors made of highly polished metal,
-_f_ is a comb, and _e_ a box for pomatum or powder.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 104. THE PARASOL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 105. FANS (See also Figure 73, section 226)]
-
-266. Accessories.--The parasol (_umbraculum_, _umbella_) was commonly
-used by women at Rome at least as early as the close of the Republic,
-and was all the more necessary because they wore no hats or bonnets.
-The parasols were usually carried for them by attendants (section
-151). From vase paintings we learn that they were much like our own in
-shape (Fig. 104, see also Smith and Harper, s.v.; Baumeister, p. 1684;
-Schreiber XCV, 9), and could be closed when not in use. The fan
-(_flabellum_) was used from the earliest times and was made in various
-ways (Fig. 105); sometimes of wings of birds, sometimes of thin sheets
-of wood attached to a handle, sometimes of peacock's feathers
-artistically arranged, sometimes of linen stretched over a frame.
-These fans were not used by the woman herself, being always handled by
-an attendant who was charged with the task of keeping her cool and
-untroubled by flies (see Fig. 73 in section 226). Handkerchiefs
-(_sudaria_), the finest made of linen, were used by both sexes, but
-only for wiping the perspiration from the face or hands. For keeping
-the palms cool and dry ladies seem also to have used glass balls, or
-balls of amber, the latter, perhaps, for the fragrance also.
-
-267. Jewelry.--The Roman woman was passionately fond of jewelry, and
-incalculable sums were spent upon the adornment of her person. Rings,
-brooches, pins, jeweled buttons, and coronets have been mentioned
-already, and besides these bracelets, necklaces, and ear-rings or
-pendants were worn from the earliest times by all who could afford
-them. Not only were they made of costly materials, but their value was
-also enhanced by the artistic workmanship that was lavished upon them.
-Almost all the precious stones that are known to us were familiar to
-the Romans and were to be found in the jewel-casket (section 230) of
-the wealthy lady. The pearl, however, seems to have been in all times
-the favorite. No adequate description of these articles can be given
-here; no illustrations can do them justice. It will have to suffice
-that Suetonius says that Caesar paid six million sesterces (nearly
-$300,000) for a single pearl, which he gave to Servilia, the mother of
-Marcus Brutus, and that Lollia Paulina, the wife of the Emperor
-Caligula, possessed a single set of pearls and emeralds which is said
-by Pliny the elder to have been valued at forty million sesterces
-(nearly $2,000,000).
-
-268. Dress of Children and Slaves.--The picture from Herculaneum
-(section 119) shows that schoolboys wore the _subligaculum_ and
-_tunica_, and it is probable that no other articles of clothing were
-worn by either boys or girls of the poorer classes. Besides these,
-children of well-to-do parents wore the _toga praetexta_ (section
-246), which the girl laid aside on the eve of her marriage (section
-76) and the boy when he reached the age of manhood (section 127).
-Slaves were furnished a tunic, wooden shoes, and in stormy weather a
-cloak, probably the _paenula_ (section 248). This must have been the
-ordinary garb of the poorer citizens of the working classes, for they
-would have had little use for the toga, at least in later times, and
-could hardly have afforded so expensive a garment.
-
-269. Materials.--Fabrics of wool, linen, cotton, and silk were used by
-the Romans. For clothes woolen goods were the first to be used, and
-naturally so, for the early inhabitants of Latium were shepherds, and
-woolen garments best suited the climate. Under the Republic wool was
-almost exclusively used for the garments of both men and women, as we
-have seen, though the _subligaculum_ was frequently, and the woman's
-tunic sometimes, made of linen. The best native wools came from
-Calabria and Apulia, that from near Tarentum being the best of all.
-Native wools did not suffice, however, to meet the great demand, and
-large quantities were imported. Linen goods were early manufactured in
-Italy, but were used chiefly for other purposes than clothing until in
-the Empire, and only in the third century of our era did men begin to
-make general use of them. The finest linen came from Egypt, and was as
-soft and transparent as silk. Little is positively known about the use
-of cotton, because the word _carbasus_, the genuine Indian name for
-it, was used by the Romans for linen goods also and when we meet the
-word we can not always be sure of the material meant. Silk, imported
-from China directly or indirectly, was first used for garments under
-Tiberius, and then only in a mixture of linen and silk (_vestes
-sericae_). These were forbidden for the use of men in his reign, but
-the law was powerless against the love of luxury. Garments of pure
-silk were first used in the third century.
-
-270. Colors.--White was the prevailing color of all articles of dress
-throughout the Republic, in most cases the natural color of the wool,
-as we have seen (section 246). The lower classes, however, selected
-for their garments shades that required cleansing less frequently, and
-found them, too, in the undyed wool. From Canusium came a brown wool
-with a tinge of red, from Baetica in Spain a light yellow, from Mutina
-a gray or a gray mixed with white, from Pollentia in Liguria the dark
-gray (_pulla_) used, as has been said (section 246), for public
-mourning. Other shades from red to deep black were furnished by
-foreign wools. Almost the only artificial color used for garments
-under the Republic was purple, which seems to have varied from what we
-call crimson, made from the native trumpet-shell (_bucinum_ or
-_murex_), to the true Tyrian purple. The former was brilliant and
-cheap, but liable to fade. Mixed with the dark _purpura_ in different
-proportions, it furnished a variety of permanent tints. One of the
-most popular of these tints, violet, made the wool cost some $20 a
-pound, while the genuine Tyrian cost at least ten times as much.
-Probably the stripes worn by the knights and senators on the tunics
-and togas were much nearer our crimson than purple. Under the Empire
-the garments worn by women were dyed in various colors, and so, too,
-perhaps, the fancier articles worn by men, such as the _lacerna_
-(section 247) and the _synthesis_ (section 249). The _trabea_ of the
-augurs seems to have been striped with scarlet and purple, the
-_paludamentum_ of the general to have been at different times white,
-scarlet, and purple, and the robe of the _triumphator_ purple.
-
-271. Manufacture.--In the old days the wool was spun at home by the
-maidservants working under the eye of the mistress (section 199), and
-woven into cloth on the family loom, and this was kept up throughout
-the Republic by some of the proudest families. Augustus wore these
-home-made garments. By the end of the Republic, however, this was no
-longer general, and while much of the native wool was worked up on the
-farms by the slaves directed by the _vilica_ (section 148), cloth of
-any desired quality could be bought in the open market. It was
-formerly supposed that the garments came from the loom ready to wear,
-but this is now known to have been incorrect. We have seen that the
-tunic was made of two separate pieces sewed together (section 236),
-that the toga had probably to be fitted as carefully as a modern coat
-(section 243), and that even the coarse _paenula_ (section 248) could
-not have been woven or knitted in one piece. But ready-made garments
-were on sale in the towns as early as the time of Cato, though perhaps
-of the cheaper qualities only, and in the Empire the trade reached
-large proportions. It is remarkable that with the vast numbers of
-slaves in the _familia urbana_ (section 149 f.) it never became usual
-to have soiled garments cleansed at home. All garments showing traces
-of use were sent by the well-to-do to the fullers (_fullones_) to be
-washed (Fig. 106), whitened (or re-dyed), and pressed. The fact that
-almost all were of woolen materials made skill and care all the more
-necessary.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 106. FULLERS AT WORK]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FOOD AND MEALS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 264-268, 300-340, 414-465; Voigt, 327-329,
-401-404; Goll, 311-454; Guhl and Koner, 747-759, 702-704; Friedlander,
-III, 29-56; Ramsay, 490-501; Pauly-Wissowa, _cena_, _comissatio_;
-Smith, Harper, Rich, _cena_, _comissatio_, _olea_ (_oliva_), _vinum_;
-Baumeister, 845, 2086; Lubker, 724 f.; Mau-Kelsey, 256-260, 267-270.
-
-
-272. Natural Conditions.--Italy is blessed above all the other
-countries of central Europe with the natural conditions that go to
-make an abundant and varied supply of food. The soil is rich and
-composed of different elements in different parts of the country. The
-rainfall is abundant, and rivers and smaller streams are numerous. The
-line of greatest length runs nearly north and south, but the climate
-depends little upon latitude, being modified by surrounding bodies of
-water, by mountain ranges, and by prevailing winds. These agencies in
-connection with the varying elevation of the land itself produce such
-widely different conditions that somewhere within the confines of
-Italy almost all the grains and fruits of the temperate and subtropic
-zones find the soil and climate most favorable to their growth.
-
-273. The early inhabitants of the peninsula, the Italian peoples, seem
-to have left for the Romans the task of developing and improving these
-means of subsistence. Wild fruits, nuts, and flesh have always been
-the support of uncivilized peoples, and must have been so for the
-shepherds who laid the foundations of Rome. The very word _pecunia_
-(from _pecus_; cf. _peculium_, section 162) shows that herds of
-domestic animals were the first source of Roman wealth. But other
-words show just as clearly that the cultivation of the soil was
-understood by the Romans in very early times: the names Fabius,
-Cicero, Piso, and Caepio are no less ancient than Porcius, Asinius,
-Vitellius, and Ovidius.[1] Cicero puts into the mouth of the elder
-Cato the statement that to the farmer the garden was a second meat
-supply, but long before Cato's time meat had ceased to be the chief
-article of food. Grain and grapes and olives furnished subsistence for
-all who did not live to eat. These gave the wine that maketh glad the
-heart of man, and oil to make his face to shine, and bread that
-strengtheneth man's heart. On these three abundant products of the
-soil the mass of the people of Italy lived of old as they still live
-to-day. Something will be said of each below, after less important
-products have been considered.
-
-[Footnote 1: The words are connected respectively with _faba_, a bean,
-_cicer_, a chick-pea, _pistor_, a miller, _caepe_, an onion, _porcus_,
-a pig, _asinus_, an ass, _vitellus_, a calf, and _ovis_, a sheep.]
-
-274. Fruits.--Besides the olive and the grape, the apple, pear, plum,
-and quince were either native to Italy or were introduced in
-prehistoric times. Careful attention had long been given to their
-cultivation, and by Cicero's time Italy was covered with orchards and
-all these fruits were abundant and cheap in their seasons, used by all
-sorts and conditions of men. By this time, too, had begun the
-introduction of new fruits from foreign lands and the improvement of
-native varieties. Great statesmen and generals gave their names to new
-and better sorts of apples and pears, and vied with each other in
-producing fruits out of season by hothouse culture (section 145).
-Every fresh extension of Roman territory brought new fruits and nuts
-into Italy. Among the last were the walnut, hazelnut, filbert, almond,
-and pistachio; the almond after Cato's time and the pistachio not
-until that of Tiberius. Among the fruits were the peach (_malum
-Persicum_), the apricot (_malum Armeniacum_), the pomegranate (_malum
-Punicum_ or _granatum_), the cherry (_cerasus_), brought by Lucullus
-from the town Cerasus in Pontus, and the lemon (_citrus_), not grown
-in Italy until the third century of our era. And besides the
-introduction of fruits for culture large quantities were imported for
-food, either dried or otherwise preserved. The orange, however,
-strange as it seems to us, was not grown by the Romans.
-
-275. Garden Produce.--The garden did not yield to the orchard in the
-abundance and variety of its contributions to the supply of food. We
-read of artichokes, asparagus, beans, beets, cabbages, carrots,
-chicory, cucumbers, garlic, lentils, melons, onions, peas, the poppy,
-pumpkins, radishes, and turnips, to mention those only whose names are
-familiar to us all. It will be noticed, however, that the vegetables
-most highly prized by us, perhaps, the potato and tomato, were not
-known to the Romans. Of those mentioned the oldest seem to have been
-the bean and the onion, as shown by the names Fabius and Caepio
-already mentioned (section 273), but the latter came gradually to be
-looked upon as unrefined and the former to be considered too heavy a
-food except for persons engaged in the hardest toil. Cato pronounced
-the cabbage the finest vegetable known, and the turnip figures in the
-well-known anecdote of Manius Curius (section 299).
-
-276. The Roman gardener gave great attention, too, to the raising of
-green stuffs that could be used for salads. Among these the sorts most
-often mentioned are the cress and lettuce, with which we are familiar,
-and the mallow, no longer used for food. Plants in great variety were
-cultivated for seasoning. The poppy was eaten with honey as a dessert,
-or was sprinkled over bread in the oven. Anise, cumin, fennel, mint,
-and mustard were raised everywhere. And besides these seasonings that
-were found in every kitchen garden, spices were imported in large
-quantities from the east, and the rich imported vegetables of larger
-sizes or finer quality than could be raised at home. Fresh vegetables
-like fresh fruits could not be brought in those days from great
-distances.
-
-277. Meats.--Besides the pork, beef, and mutton that we still use the
-Roman farmer had goatsflesh at his disposal, and all these meats were
-sold in the towns. Goatsflesh was considered the poorest of all, and
-was used by the lower classes only. Beef had been eaten by the Romans
-from the earliest times, but its use was a mark of luxury until very
-late in the Empire. Under the Republic the ordinary citizen ate beef
-only on great occasions when he had offered a steer or cow to the gods
-in sacrifice. The flesh then furnished a banquet for his family and
-friends, the heart, liver, and lungs (called collectively the _exta_)
-were the share of the priest, and the rest was consumed on the altar.
-Probably the great size of the carcass had something to do with the
-rarity of its use at a time when meat could be kept fresh only in the
-coldest weather; at any rate we must think of the Romans as using the
-cow for dairy purposes and the ox for draft rather than for food.
-
-278. Pork was widely used by rich and poor alike, and was considered
-the choicest of all domestic meats. The very language testifies to the
-important place it occupied in the economy of the larder, for no other
-animal has so many words to describe it in its different functions.
-Besides the general term _sus_ we find _porcus_, _porca_, _verres_,
-_aper_, _scrofa_, _maialis_, and _nefrens_. In the religious ceremony
-of the _suovetaurilia_ (_sus_ + _ovis_ + _taurus_) it will be noticed
-that the swine has the first place, coming before the sheep and the
-bull. The vocabulary describing the parts used for food is equally
-rich; there are words for no less than half a dozen kinds of sausages,
-for example, with pork as their basis. We read, too, of fifty
-different ways of cooking pork.
-
-279. Fowl and Game.--All the common domestic fowls, chickens, ducks,
-geese, and pigeons, were used by the Romans for food, and besides
-these the wealthy raised various sorts of wild fowl for the table, in
-the game preserves that have been mentioned (section 145). Among these
-were cranes, grouse, partridges, snipe, thrushes, and woodcock. In
-Cicero's time the peacock was most highly esteemed, having at the
-feast much the same place of honor as the turkey has with us, but
-costing as much as $10 each. Wild animals were also bred for food in
-similar preserves, the hare and the wild boar being the favorites. The
-latter was served whole upon the table as in feudal times. As a
-contrast in size may be mentioned the dormouse (_glis_), which was
-thought a great delicacy.
-
-280. Fish.--The rivers of Italy and the surrounding seas must have
-furnished always a great variety of fish, but in early times fish was
-not much used as food by the Romans. By the end of the Republic,
-however, tastes had changed, and no article of food brought higher
-prices than the rarer sorts of fresh fish. Salt fish was exceedingly
-cheap and was imported in many forms from almost all the Mediterranean
-ports. One dish especially, _tyrotarichus_, made of salt fish, eggs,
-and cheese, and therefore something like our codfish balls, is
-mentioned by Cicero in about the same way as we speak of hash. Fresh
-fish were all the more expensive because they could be transported
-only while alive. Hence the rich constructed fish ponds on their
-estates, a Marcus Licinius Crassus setting the example in 92 B.C., and
-both fresh-water and salt-water fish were raised for the table. The
-names of the favorite sorts mean little to us, but we find the mullet
-(_mullus_; see section 251) and a kind of turbot (_rhombus_) bringing
-high prices, and oysters (_ostreae_) were as popular as they are now.
-
-281. Before passing to the more important matters of bread, wine, and
-oil, it may be well to mention a few articles that are still in
-general use. The Romans used freely the products of the dairy, milk,
-cream, curds, whey, and cheese. They drank the milk of sheep and goats
-as well as that of cows, and made cheese of the three kinds of milk.
-The cheese from ewes' milk was thought more digestible though less
-palatable than that made of cows' milk, while cheese from goats' milk
-was more palatable but less digestible. It is remarkable that they had
-no knowledge of butter except us a plaster for wounds. Honey took the
-place of sugar on the table and in cooking, for the Romans had only a
-botanical knowledge of the sugar cane. Salt was at first obtained by
-the evaporation of sea-water, but was afterwards mined. Its
-manufacture was a monopoly of the government, and care was taken
-always to keep the price low. It was used not only for seasoning, but
-also as a preservative agent. Vinegar was made from grape juice. In
-the list of articles of food unknown to the Romans we must put tea and
-coffee along with the orange, tomato, potato, butter, and sugar
-already mentioned.
-
-282. Cereals.--The word _frumentum_[2] was a general term applied to
-any of the many sorts of grain that were grown for food. Of those now
-in use barley, oats, rye, and wheat were known to the Romans, though
-rye was not cultivated and oats served only as feed for cattle. Barley
-was not much used, for it was thought to lack nutriment, and therefore
-to be unfit for laborers. In very ancient times another grain, spelt
-(_far_), had been grown extensively, but it had gradually gone out of
-use except for the sacrificial cake that had given its name to the
-confarreate ceremony of marriage (section 82). In classical times
-wheat was the staple grain grown for food, not differing much from
-that which we use to-day. It was usually planted in the fall, though
-on some soils it would mature as a spring wheat. After the farming
-land of Italy was diverted to other purposes (parks, pleasure grounds,
-game preserves: see sections 145, 146), wheat had to be imported from
-the provinces, first from Sicily, then from Africa and Egypt, the home
-supply being inadequate to the needs of the teeming population.
-
-[Footnote 2: The word _frumentum_ occurs fifty-five times in the
-"Gallic War," meaning any kind of grain that happened to be grown for
-food in the country in which Caesar was campaigning at the time. The
-word "corn" used to translate it in our school editions is the worst
-possible, because to the schoolboy the word "corn" means a particular
-kind of grain, and a kind at that which was unknown to the Romans. The
-general word "grain" is much better for translation purposes.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 107. POUNDING GRAIN]
-
-283. Preparation of the Grain.--In the earliest times the grain
-(_far_) had not been ground, but merely pounded in a mortar (Fig.
-107). The meal was then mixed with water and made into a sort of
-porridge (_puls_, whence our word "poultice"), which long remained the
-national dish, something like the oatmeal of Scotland. Plautus (died
-184 B.C.) jestingly refers to his countrymen as "pulse-eaters." The
-persons who crushed the grain were called _pinsitores_ or _pistores_,
-whence the cognomen Piso (section 273) is said to be derived, and in
-later times the bakers were also called _pistores_, because they
-ground the grain as well as baked the bread. In the ruins of bakeries
-we find mills as regularly as ovens. See the illustration in section
-285.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 108. SECTION OF MILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 109. A POMPEIAN MILL WITHOUT ITS FRAME-WORK]
-
-284. The grinding of the grain into regular flour was done in a mill
-(_mola_). This consisted of three parts, the lower millstone (_meta_),
-the upper (_catillus_), and the frame-work that surrounded and
-supported the latter and furnished the means to turn it upon the
-_meta_. All these parts are shown distinctly in the cut (Fig. 108; see
-also Rich, Harper, and Smith under _mola_; Guhl and Koner, p. 774;
-Schreiber LXVII; Baumeister, p. 933), and require little explanation.
-The _meta_ was, as the name suggests, a cone-shaped stone (_A_)
-resting on a bed of masonry (_B_) with a raised rim, between which and
-the lower edge of the _meta_ the flour was collected. In the upper
-part of the _meta_ a beam (_C_) was mortised, ending above in an iron
-pin or pivot (_D_) on which hung and turned the frame-work that
-supported the _catillus_. The _catillus_ (_E_) itself was shaped
-something like an hourglass, or two funnels joined at the neck. The
-upper funnel served as a hopper into which the grain was poured; the
-lower funnel fitted closely over the _meta_, the distance between them
-being regulated by the length of the pin, mentioned above, according
-to the fineness of the flour desired. The mill without frame-work is
-shown in Fig. 109.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 110. HORSE AND MILL]
-
-285. The frame-work was very strong and massive on account of the
-heavy weight that was suspended from it. The beams used for turning
-the mill were fitted into holes in the narrow part of the _catillus_
-as shown in the cut. The power required to do the grinding was
-furnished by horses or mules attached to the beams (Fig. 110), or by
-slaves pushing against them. This last method was often used as a
-punishment, as we have seen (sections 170, 148). Of the same form but
-much smaller were the hand mills used by soldiers for grinding the
-_frumentum_ furnished them as rations. Under the Empire water mills
-were introduced, but they are hardly referred to in literature.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 111. BAKERY WITH MILLS]
-
-286. The transition from the ancient porridge (section 283) to bread
-baked in the modern fashion must have been through the medium of thin
-cakes baked in or over the fire. We do not know when bread baked in
-ovens came into use. Bakers (section 283) as representatives of a
-trade do not go back beyond 171 B.C., but long before this time, of
-course, the family bread had been made by the _mater familias_, or by
-a slave under her supervision. After public bakeries were once
-established it became less and less usual for bread to be made in
-private houses in the towns. Only the most pretentious of the city
-mansions had ovens attached, as shown by the ruins. In the country, on
-the other hand, the older custom was always retained (section 148).
-Under Trajan (98-118) it became the custom to distribute bread to the
-people daily, instead of grain once a month, and the bakers were
-organized into a guild (_corpus_, _collegium_), and as a corporation
-enjoyed certain privileges and immunities. In Fig. 111 are shown the
-ruins of a Pompeian bakery with several mills in connection with it.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 112. OVEN FOR BREAD]
-
-287. Breadmaking.--After the flour collected about the edge of the
-_meta_ (section 284) had been sifted, water and salt were added and
-the dough was kneaded in a trough by hand or by a simple machine shown
-in the cut in Schreiber LXVII. Yeast was added as nowadays and the
-bread was baked in an oven much like those still found in parts of
-Europe. One preserved in the ruins of Pompeii is shown in the cut
-(Fig. 112): at _a_ is the oven proper, in which a fire was built, the
-draft being furnished by the openings at _d_. The surrounding chamber,
-_b_, is intended to retain the heat after the fire (usually of
-charcoal) had been raked out into the ashpit, _e_, and the vents
-closed. The letter _f_ marks a receptacle for water, which seems to
-have been used for moistening the bread while baking. After the oven
-had been heated to the proper temperature and the fire raked out, the
-loaves were put in, the vents closed, and the bread left to bake.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 113. SALESROOM OF BAKERY]
-
-288. There were several qualities of bread, varying with the sort of
-grain, the setting of the millstones (section 284) and the fineness of
-the sieves (section 287). The very best, made of pure wheat-flour, was
-called _panis siligneus_; that made of coarse flour, of flour and
-bran, or of bran alone was called _panis plebeius_, _castrensis_,
-_sordidus_, _rusticus_, etc. The loaves were circular and rather flat-
--some have been found in the ruins of Pompeii--and had their surface
-marked off by lines drawn from the center into four or more parts. The
-wall painting (Fig. 113) of a salesroom of a bakery, also found in
-Pompeii, gives a good idea of the appearance of the bread. Various
-kinds of cakes and confections were also sold at these shops.
-
-289. The Olive.--Next in importance to the wheat came the olive. It
-was introduced into Italy from Greece, and from Italy has spread
-through all the Mediterranean countries; but in modern as well as in
-ancient times the best olives are those of Italy. The olive was an
-important article of food merely as a fruit, being eaten both fresh
-and preserved in various ways, but it found its significant place in
-the domestic economy of the Romans in the form of the olive oil with
-which we are familiar. It is the value of the oil that has caused the
-cultivation of the olive to become so general in southern Europe, and
-it is claimed that its use is constantly widening, extending
-especially northward, where wine and oil are said to be supplanting
-the native beer and butter. Many varieties were known to the Romans,
-requiring different climates and soils and adapted to different uses.
-In general it may be said that the larger berries were better suited
-for eating than for oil.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 114. PICKING OLIVES]
-
-290. The olive was eaten fresh as it ripened and was also preserved in
-various ways. The ripe olives were sprinkled with salt and left
-untouched for five days; the salt was then shaken off, and the olives
-dried in the sun. They were also preserved sweet without salt in
-boiled must (section 296). Half ripe olives were picked (Fig. 114)
-with their stems and covered over in jars with the best quality of
-oil; in this way they are said to have retained for more than a year
-the flavor of the fresh fruit. Green olives were preserved whole in
-strong brine, the form in which we know them now, or were beaten into
-a mass and preserved with spices and vinegar. The preparation
-_epityrum_ was made by taking the fruit in any of the three stages,
-removing the stones, chopping up the pulp, seasoning it with vinegar,
-coriander seeds, cumin, fennel, and mint, and covering the mixture in
-jars with oil enough to exclude the air. The result was a salad that
-was eaten with cheese.
-
-291. Olive Oil.--The oil was used for several purposes. It was
-employed most anciently to anoint the body after bathing, especially
-by athletes; it was used as a vehicle for perfumes, the Romans knowing
-nothing of distillation by means of alcohol; it was burned in lamps
-(section 228); it was an indispensable article of food. As a food it
-was employed as butter is now in cooking or as a relish or dressing in
-its natural state. The olive when subjected to pressure yields two
-fluids. The first to flow (_amurca_) is dark and bitter, having the
-consistency of water. It was largely used as a fertilizer, but not as
-a food. The second, which flows after greater pressure, is the oil
-(_oleum_, _oleum olivum_). The best oil was made from olives not fully
-ripe, but the largest quantity was yielded by the ripened fruit.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 115. OLIVE MILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 116. VAULT FOR STORING OIL]
-
-292. The olives were picked from the tree (Fig. 114), those that fell
-of their own accord being thought inferior (section 160), and were
-spread upon sloping platforms in order that a part of the _amurca_
-might flow out by itself. Here the fruit remained until a slight
-fermentation took place. It was then subjected to the action of a
-machine (Fig. 115) that bruised and pressed it. The oil that flowed
-out was caught in a jar and from it ladled into a receptacle (_labrum
-fictile_), where it was allowed to settle, the _amurca_ and other
-impurities falling to the bottom. The oil was then skimmed off into
-another like receptacle and again allowed to settle, the process being
-repeated (as often as thirty times if necessary) until all impurities
-had been left behind. The best oil was made by subjecting the berries
-at first to a gentle pressure only. The bruised pulp was then taken
-out, separated from the stones or pits, and pressed a second or even a
-third time, the quality becoming poorer each time. The oil was kept in
-jars which were glazed on the inside with wax or gum to prevent
-absorption, the covers were carefully secured and the jars stored away
-in vaults (Fig. 116).
-
-293. Grapes.--Grapes were eaten fresh from the vines and were also
-dried in the sun and kept as raisins, but they owed their real
-importance in Italy as elsewhere to the wine made from them. The vine
-was not native to Italy, as until recently it was supposed to be, but
-was introduced, probably from Greece, long before history begins. The
-earliest name for Italy known to the Greeks was _Oenotria_, "the land
-of the vine-pole," and very ancient legends ascribe to Numa
-restrictions upon the use of wine. It is probable that up to the time
-of the Gracchi wine was rare and expensive. The quantity produced
-gradually increased as the cultivation of cereals declined (section
-146), but the quality long remained inferior, all the choice wines
-being imported from Greece and the east. By Cicero's time, however,
-attention was being given to viticulture and to the scientific making
-of wines, and by the time of Augustus vintages were produced that vied
-with the best brought in from abroad. Pliny, writing about the middle
-of the first century of our era, says that of the eighty really choice
-wines then known to the Romans two-thirds were produced in Italy, and
-Arrian of about the same time says that Italian wines were famous as
-far away as India.
-
-294. Viticulture.--Grapes could be grown almost anywhere in Italy, but
-the best wines were made south of Rome within the confines of Latium
-and Campania. The cities of Praeneste, Velitrae, and Formiae were
-famous for the wines grown on the sunny slopes of the Alban hills. A
-little farther south, near Terracina, was the _ager Caecubus_, where
-was produced the Caecuban wine, pronounced by Augustus the noblest of
-all. Then comes Mt. Massicus with the _ager Falernus_ on its southern
-side, producing the Falernian wines, even more famous than the
-Caecuban. Upon and around Vesuvius, too, fine wines were grown,
-especially near Naples, Pompeii, Cumae, and Surrentum. Good wines but
-less noted than these were produced in the extreme south, near
-Beneventum, Aulon, and Tarentum. Of like quality were those grown east
-and north of Rome, near Spoletium, Caesena, Ravenna, Hadria, and
-Ancona. Those of the north and west, in Etruria and Gaul, were not so
-good.
-
-295. Vineyards.--The sunny side of a hill was the best place for a
-vineyard. The vines were supported by poles or trellises in the modern
-fashion, or were planted at the foot of trees up which they were
-allowed to climb. For this purpose the elm (_ulmus_) was preferred,
-because it flourished everywhere, could be closely trimmed without
-endangering its life, and had leaves that made good food for cattle
-when they were plucked off to admit the sunshine to the vines. Vergil
-speaks of "marrying the vine to the elm," and Horace calls the plane
-tree a bachelor (_platanus coelebs_), because its dense foliage made
-it unfit for the vineyard. Before the gathering of the grapes the
-chief work lay in keeping the ground clear; it was spaded over once
-each month through the year. One man could properly care for about
-four acres.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 117. MAKING WINE]
-
-296. Wine Making.--The making of the wine took place usually in
-September, the season varying with the soil and the climate. It was
-anticipated by a festival, the _vinalia rustica_, celebrated on the
-19th of August. Precisely what the festival meant the Romans
-themselves did not fully understand, perhaps, but it was probably
-intended to secure a favorable season for the gathering of the grapes.
-The general process of making the wine differed little from that
-familiar to us in Bible stories and still practiced in modern times.
-After the grapes were gathered they were first trodden with the bare
-feet (Fig. 117) and then pressed in the _prelum_ or _lorcular_. The
-juice as it came from the press was called _mustum_, "new," and was
-often drunk unfermented, as "sweet" cider is now. It could be kept
-sweet from vintage to vintage by being sealed in a jar smeared within
-and without with pitch and immersed for several weeks in cold water or
-buried in moist sand. It was also preserved by evaporation over a
-fire; when it was reduced one-half in this way it became a grape-jelly
-(_defrutum_) and was used as a basis for various beverages and for
-other purposes (section 290).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 118. WINE CELLAR]
-
-297. Fermented wine (_vinum_) was made by collecting the _mustum_ in
-huge vat-like jars (_dolia_, shown in Fig. 116), large enough to hide
-a man and containing a hundred gallons or more. These were covered
-with pitch within and without and partially buried in the ground in
-cellars or vaults (_vinariae cellae_), in which they remained
-permanently. After they were nearly filled with the _mustum_, they
-were left uncovered during the process of fermentation, which lasted
-under ordinary circumstances about nine days. They were then tightly
-sealed and opened only when the wine required attention[3] or was to
-be removed. The cheaper wines were used directly from the _dolia_, but
-the choicer kinds were drawn off after a year into smaller jars
-(_amphorae_), clarified and sometimes "doctored" in various ways, and
-finally stored in depositories often entirely distinct from the
-cellars (Fig. 118). A favorite place was a room in the upper story of
-the house, where the wine was artificially aged by the heat rising
-from the furnace or even by the smoke escaping from the fire. The
-_amphorae_ were sometimes marked with the name of the wine, and the
-names of the consuls for the year in which they were filled.
-
-[Footnote 3: Spoiled wine was used as vinegar (_acetum_), and vinegar
-that became insipid and tasteless was called _vappa_. This last word
-was used also as a term of reproach for shiftless and worthless men.]
-
-298. Beverages.--After water and milk, wine was the ordinary drink of
-the Romans of all classes. It must be distinctly understood, however,
-that they always mixed it with water and used more water than wine.
-Pliny mentions one sort of wine that would stand being mixed with
-eight times its own bulk of water. To drink wine unmixed was thought
-typical of barbarism, and among the Romans it was so drunk only by the
-dissipated at their wildest revels. Under the Empire the ordinary
-qualities of wine were cheap enough to be sold at three or four cents
-a quart (section 388); the choicer kinds were very costly, entirely
-beyond the reach, Horace gives us to understand, of a man in his
-circumstances. More rarely used than wine were other beverages that
-are mentioned in literature. A favorite drink was _mulsum_, made of
-four measures of wine and one of honey. A mixture of water and honey
-allowed to ferment together was called _mulsa_. Cider also was made by
-the Romans, and wines from mulberries and dates. They also made
-various cordials from aromatic plants, but it must be remembered
-(section 281) that they had no knowledge of tea or coffee.
-
-299. Style of Living.--The table supplies of a given people vary from
-age to age with the development of civilization and refinement, and in
-the same age with the means and tastes of classes and individuals. Of
-the Romans it may be said that during the early Republic, perhaps
-almost through the second century B.C., they cared little for the
-pleasures of the table. They lived frugally and ate sparingly. They
-were almost strictly vegetarians (section 273), much of their food was
-eaten cold, and the utmost simplicity characterized the cooking and
-the service of their meals. Everything was prepared by the _mater
-familias_ or by the maidservants under her supervision (section 90).
-The table was set in the _atrium_ (section 188), and the father,
-mother, and children sat around it on stools or benches (section 225),
-waiting upon each other and their guests (section 104). Dependents ate
-of the same food, but apart from the family. The dishes were of the
-plainest sort, of earthenware or even of wood, though a silver
-saltcellar was often the cherished ornament of the humblest board.
-Table knives and forks were unknown, the food being cut into
-convenient portions before it was served, and spoons being used to
-convey to the mouth what the fingers could not manage. During this
-period there was little to choose between the fare of the proudest
-patrician and the humblest client. The Samnite envoys found Manius
-Curius, the conqueror of Pyrrhus (275 B.C.), eating his dinner of
-vegetables (section 275) from an earthen bowl. A century later the
-poet Plautus calls his countrymen a race of porridge eaters
-(_pultiphagonidae_, section 283), and gives us to understand that in
-his time even the wealthiest Romans had in their households no
-specially trained cooks. When a dinner out of the ordinary was given,
-a professional cook was hired, who brought with him to the house of
-the host his utensils and helpers, just as a plumber or surgeon
-responds to a call nowadays.
-
-300. The last two centuries of the Republic saw all this changed. The
-conquest of Greece and the wars in Asia Minor gave the Romans a taste
-of eastern luxury, and altered their simple table customs, as other
-customs had been altered by like contact with the outside world
-(sections 5, 101, 112, 192). From this time the poor and the rich no
-longer fared alike. The former constrained by poverty lived frugally
-as of old: every schoolboy knows that the soldiers who won Caesar's
-battles for him lived on grain (section 282 and note), which they
-ground in their handmills and baked at their campfires. The very rich,
-on the other hand, aping the luxury of the Greeks but lacking their
-refinement, became gluttons instead of gourmands. They ransacked the
-world[4] for articles of food, preferring the rare and the costly to
-what was really palatable and delicate. They measured the feast by the
-quantities they could consume, reviving the sated appetite by piquant
-sauces and resorting to emetics to prolong the pleasures of the table
-and prevent the effects of over-indulgence. The separate dining-room
-(_triclinium_) was introduced, the great houses having two or more
-(section 204), and the _oeci_ (section 207) were pressed into service
-for banquet halls. The dining couch (section 224) took the place of
-the bench or stool, slaves served the food to the reclining guests, a
-dinner dress (section 249) was devised, and every _familia urbana_
-(section 149) included a high-priced chef with a staff of trained
-assistants. Of course there were always wealthy men, Atticus, the
-friend of Cicero, for example (section 155), who clung to the simpler
-customs of the earlier days, but these could make little headway
-against the current of senseless dissipation and extravagance. Over
-against these must be set the fawning poor, who preferred the
-fleshpots of the rich patron (sections 181, 182) to the bread of
-honest independence. Between the two extremes was a numerous middle
-class of the well-to-do, with whose ordinary meals we are more
-concerned than with the banquets of the very rich. These meals were
-the _ientaculum_, the _prandium_, and the _cena_.
-
-[Footnote 4: Gellius (2d century A.D.) gives a list from a satirical
-poem of Varro: Peacock from Samos, heath-cock from Phrygia, crane from
-Media, kid from Ambracia, young tunny-fish from Chalcedon, _murena_
-from Tartessus, cod (?) from Pessinus, oysters from Tarentum, scallop
-from Chios (?), sturgeon (?) from Rhodes, _scarus_ from Cilicia, nuts
-from Thasos, dates from Egypt, chestnuts (?) from Spain.]
-
-301. Hours for Meals.--Three meals a day was the regular number with
-the Romans as with us, though hygienists were found then, as they may
-be found nowadays, who believed two meals more healthful than three,
-and then as now high livers often indulged in an extra meal taken late
-at night. Custom fixed more or less rigorously the hours for meals,
-though these varied with the age, and to a less extent with the
-occupations and even with the inclinations of individuals. In early
-times in the city and in all periods in the country the chief meal
-(_cena_) was eaten in the middle of the day, preceded by a breakfast
-(_ientaculum_) in the early morning and followed in the evening by a
-supper (_vesperna_). In classical times the hours for meals in Rome
-were about as they are now in our large cities: that is, the _cena_
-was postponed until the work of the day was finished, thus crowding
-out the _vesperna_, and a luncheon (_prandium_) took the place of the
-old-fashioned "noon dinner." The evening dinner came to be more or
-less of a social function, guests being present and the food and
-service the best the house could afford, while the _ientaculum_ and
-_prandium_ were in comparison very simple and informal meals.
-
-302. Breakfast and Luncheon.--The breakfast (_ientaculum_ or
-_iantaculum_) was eaten immediately after rising, the hour varying, of
-course, with the occupation and condition of the individual. It
-consisted usually merely of bread, eaten dry or dipped in wine or
-sprinkled over with salt, though raisins, olives, and cheese were
-sometimes added. Workmen pressed for time seem to have taken their
-breakfast in their hands to eat as they went to the place of their
-labor, and schoolboys often stopped on their way to school (section
-122) at a public bakery (section 286) to buy a sort of shortcake or
-pancake, on which they made a hurried breakfast. More rarely the
-breakfast became a regular meal, eggs being served in addition to the
-things just mentioned, and _mulsum_ (section 298) and milk drunk with
-them. It is likely that such a breakfast was taken at a later hour and
-by persons who dispensed with the noon meal. The luncheon (_prandium_)
-came about eleven o'clock. It, too, consisted usually of cold food:
-bread, salads (section 276), olives, cheese, fruits, nuts, and cold
-meats from the dinner of the day before. Occasionally, however, warm
-meat and vegetables were added, but the meal was never an elaborate
-one. It is sometimes spoken of as a morning meal, but in this case it
-must have followed at about the regular interval an extremely early
-breakfast, or it must itself have formed the breakfast, taken later
-than usual, when the _ientaculum_ for some reason had been omitted.
-After the _prandium_ came the midday rest or siesta (_meridiatio_),
-when all work was laid aside until the eighth hour, except in the law
-courts and in the senate. In the summer, at least, everybody went to
-sleep, and even in the capital the streets were almost as deserted as
-at midnight. The _vesperna_, entirely unknown in city life, closed the
-day on the farm. It was an early supper which consisted largely of the
-leavings of the noonday dinner with the addition of such uncooked food
-as a farm would naturally supply. The word _merenda_ seems to have
-been applied in early times to this evening meal, then to refreshments
-taken at any time (cf. the English "lunch"), and finally to have gone
-out of use altogether.
-
-303. The Formal Meal.--The busy life of the city had early crowded the
-dinner out of its original place in the middle of the day and fixed it
-in the afternoon. The fashion soon spread to the towns and was carried
-by city people to their country estates (section 145), so that in
-classical times the late dinner (_cena_) was the regular thing for all
-persons of any social standing throughout the length and breadth of
-Italy. It was even more of a function than it is with us, because the
-Romans knew no other form of purely social intercourse. They had no
-receptions, balls, musicales, or theater parties, no other
-opportunities to entertain their friends or be entertained by them. It
-is safe to say, therefore, that when the Roman was in town he was
-every evening host or guest at a dinner as elaborate as his means or
-those of his friends permitted, unless, of course, urgent business
-claimed his attention or some unusual circumstances had withdrawn him
-temporarily from society. On the country estates the same custom
-prevailed, the guests coming from neighboring estates or being friends
-who stopped unexpectedly, perhaps, to claim entertainment for a night
-as they passed on a journey to or from the city (section 388). These
-dinners, formal as they were, are to be distinguished carefully from
-the extravagant banquets of the ostentatious rich. They were in
-themselves thoroughly wholesome, the expression of genuine
-hospitality. The guests were friends, the number was limited, the wife
-and children of the host were present, and social enjoyment was the
-end in view. Before the meal itself is described something must be
-said of the dining-room and its furniture.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 119. TABLE AND COUCHES]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 120. TABLE AND COUCHES]
-
-304. The Dining Couch.--The position of the dining-room (_triclinium_)
-in the Roman house has been described already (section 204), and it
-has been remarked (section 300) that in classical times the stool or
-bench had given place to the couch. This couch (_lectus tricliniaris_)
-was constructed much as the common _lecti_ were (section 224), except
-that it was made broader and lower, had an arm at one end only, was
-without a back, and sloped from the front to the rear. At the end
-where the arm was, a cushion or bolster was placed, and parallel with
-it two others were arranged in such a way as to divide the couch into
-three parts. Each part was for one person, and a single couch would,
-therefore, accommodate three persons. The dining-room received its
-name (_triclinium_) from the fact that it was planned to hold three of
-these couches ([Greek: _klinai_] in Greek), set on three sides of a
-table, the fourth side of which was open. The arrangement varied a
-little with the size of the room. In a large room the couches were set
-as in Fig. 119, but if economy of space was necessary they were placed
-as in Fig. 120, the latter being probably the more common arrangement
-of the two. Nine may be taken, therefore, as the ordinary number at a
-Roman dinner party. More would be invited only on unusual occasions,
-and then a larger room would be used where two or more tables could be
-arranged in the same way, each accommodating nine guests. In the case
-of members of the same family, especially if one was a child, or when
-the guests were very intimate friends, a fourth person might find room
-on a couch, but this was certainly unusual; probably when a guest
-unexpectedly presented himself some member of the family would
-surrender his place to him. Often the host reserved a place or places
-for friends that his guests might bring without notice. Such uninvited
-persons were called _umbrae_. When guests were present the wife sat on
-the edge of the couch (Fig. 121) instead of reclining, and children
-were usually accommodated on seats at the open side of the table.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 121. WOMAN SITTING ON DINING COUCH]
-
-305. Places of Honor.--The guest approached the couch from the rear
-and took his place upon it, lying on the left side, with his face to
-the table, and supported by his left elbow, which rested on the
-cushion or bolster mentioned above. The position of his body is
-indicated by the arrows in the cut above (Fig. 119). Each couch and
-each place on the couch had its own name according to its position
-with reference to the others. The couches were called respectively
-_lectus summus_, _lectus medius_, and _lectus imus_, and it will be
-noticed that persons reclining on the _lectus medius_ had the _lectus
-summus_ on the left and the _lectus imus_ on the right. Etiquette
-assigned the _lectus summus_ and the _lectus medius_ to guests, while
-the _lectus imus_ was reserved for the host, his wife, and one other
-member of his family. If the host alone represented the family, the
-two places beside him on the _lectus imus_ were given to the humblest
-of the guests.
-
-306. The places on each couch were named in the same way, (_locus_)
-_summus_, _medius_, and _imus_, denoted respectively by the figures
-_1_, _2_, and _3_ in the cut. The person who occupied the place
-numbered _1_ was said to be above (_super_, _supra_) the person to his
-right, while the person occupying the middle place (_2_) was above the
-person on his right and below (_infra_) the one on the left. The place
-of honor on the _lectus summus_ was that numbered _1_, and the
-corresponding place on the _lectus imus_ was taken by the host. The
-most distinguished guest, however, was given the place on the _lectus
-medius_ marked _3_, and this place was called by the special name
-_locus consularis_, because if a consul was present it was always
-assigned to him. It will be noticed that it was next the place of the
-host, and besides was especially convenient for a public official; if
-he found it necessary to receive or send a message during the dinner
-he could communicate with the messenger without so much as turning on
-his elbow.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 122. SIDEBOARD]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 123. SIDEBOARD]
-
-307. Other Furniture.--In comparison with the _lecti_ the rest of the
-furniture of the dining-room played an insignificant part. In fact the
-only other absolutely necessary article was the table (_mensa_),
-placed as shown in the figures above between the three couches in such
-a way that all were equally distant from it and free access to it was
-left on the fourth side. The space between the table and the couches
-might be so little that the guests could help themselves, or on the
-other hand so great that slaves could pass between to serve the food.
-The guests had no individual plates to be kept upon the table, so that
-it was used merely to receive the large dishes in which the food was
-served, and certain formal articles, such as the saltcellar (section
-299) and the things necessary for the offering to the gods. The table,
-therefore, was never very large (one such would be almost lost in a
-modern dining-room), but it was often exceedingly beautiful and costly
-(section 227). Its beauties were not hidden either by any cloth or
-covering; the table-cloth, as we know it, did not come into use until
-about the end of the first century of our era. The cost and beauty of
-the dishes, too, were limited only by the means and taste of the
-owner. Besides the couches and the table, sideboards (_abaci_) were
-the only articles of furniture usually found in the _triclinium_.
-These varied from a simple shelf to tables of different forms and
-sizes and open cabinets, such as shown in Figs. 122 and 123 and in
-Schreiber LXVII, 11. They were set out of the way against the walls
-and served as do ours to display plate and porcelain when not in use
-on the table.
-
-308. Courses.--In classical times even the simplest dinner was divided
-into three parts, the _gustus_ ("appetizer"), the _cena_ ("dinner
-proper"), and the _secunda mensa_[5] ("dessert"); the dinner was made
-elaborate by serving each of the parts in several courses. The
-_gustus_ consisted of those things only that were believed to excite
-the appetite or aid the digestion: oysters and other shell-fish fresh,
-sea-fish salted or pickled, certain vegetables that could be eaten
-uncooked, especially onions, and almost invariably lettuce and eggs,
-all with piquant sauces. With these appetizers _mulsum_ (section 298)
-was drunk, wine being thought too heavy for an empty stomach, and from
-the drink the _gustus_ was also called the _promulsis_; another and
-more significant name for it was _antecena_. Then followed the real
-dinner, the _cena_, consisting of the more substantial viands, fish,
-flesh, fowl, and vegetables. With this part of the meal wine was
-drunk, but in moderation, for it was thought to dull the sense of
-taste, and the real drinking began only when the _cena_ was over. The
-_cena_ almost always consisted of several courses (_mensa prima_,
-_altera_, _tertia_, etc.), three being thought neither niggardly nor
-extravagant; we are told that Augustus often dined on three courses
-and never went beyond six. The _secunda mensa_ closed the meal with
-all sorts of pastry, sweets, nuts, and fruits, fresh and preserved,
-with which wine was freely drunk. From the fact that eggs were eaten
-at the beginning of the meal and apples at the close came the
-proverbial expression, _ab ovo ad mala_.
-
-[Footnote 5: This is the most common form, but the plural also occurs,
-and the adjective may follow the noun.]
-
-309. Bills of Fare.--We have preserved to us in literature the bills
-of fare of a few meals, probably actually served, which may be taken
-as typical at least of the homely, the generous, and the sumptuous
-dinner. The simplest is given by Juvenal (died 2d century A.D.): for
-the _gustus_, asparagus and eggs; for the _cena_, young kid and
-chicken; for the _secunda mensa_, fruits. Two others are given by
-Martial (43-101 A.D.): the first has lettuce, onions, tunny-fish, and
-eggs cut in slices; sausages with porridge, fresh cauliflower, bacon,
-and beans; pears and chestnuts, and with the wine olives, parched
-peas, and lupines. The second has mallows, onions, mint, elecampane,
-anchovies with sliced eggs, and sow's udder in tunny sauce; the _cena_
-was served in a single course (_una mensa_), kid, chicken, cold ham,
-haricot beans, and young cabbage sprouts; fresh fruits, with wine, of
-course. The last we owe to Macrobius (died 5th century A.D.), who
-assigns it to a feast of the pontifices during the Republic, feasts
-that were proverbial for their splendor. The _antecena_ was served in
-two courses: first, sea-urchins, raw oysters, three kinds of
-sea-mussels, thrush on asparagus, a fat hen, panned oysters, and
-mussels; second, mussels again, shell-fish, sea-nettles, figpeckers,
-loin of goat, loin of pork, fricasseed chicken, figpeckers again, two
-kinds of sea-snails. The number of courses in which the _cena_ was
-served is not given: sow's udder, head of wild boar, panned fish,
-panned sow's udder, domestic ducks, wild ducks, hares, roast chicken,
-starch pudding, bread. No vegetables or dessert are mentioned by
-Macrobius, but we may take it for granted that they corresponded to
-the rest of the feast, and the wine that the pontifices drank was
-famed as the best.
-
-310. Serving the Dinner.--The dinner hour marked the close of the
-day's work, as has been said (section 301), and varied, therefore,
-with the season of the year and the social position of the family. In
-general it may be said to have been not before the ninth and rarely
-after the tenth hour (section 418). It lasted usually until bedtime,
-that is, for three or four hours at least, though the Romans went to
-bed early because they rose early (sections 79, 122). Sometimes even
-the ordinary dinner lasted until midnight, but when a banquet was
-expected to be unusually protracted, it was the custom to begin
-earlier in order that there might be time after it for the needed
-repose. Such banquets, beginning before the ninth hour, were called
-_tempestiva convivia_, the word "early" in this connection carrying
-with it about the same reproach as our "late" suppers. At the ordinary
-family dinners the time was spent in conversation, though in some good
-houses (notably that of Atticus, cf. section 155) a trained slave read
-aloud to the guests. At "gentlemen's dinners" other forms of
-entertainment were provided, music, dancing, juggling, etc., by
-professional performers (section 153).
-
-311. When the guests had been ushered into the dining-room the gods
-were solemnly invoked, a custom to which our "grace before meat"
-corresponds. Then they took their places on the couches (_accumbere_,
-_discumbere_) as these were assigned them (section 306), their sandals
-were removed (section 250), to be cared for by their own attendants
-(section 152), and water and towels were carried around for washing
-the hands. The meal then began, each course being placed upon the
-table on a waiter or tray (_ferculum_), from which the dishes were
-passed in regular order to the guests. As each course was finished the
-dishes were replaced on the _ferculum_ and removed, and water and
-towels were again passed to the guests, a custom all the more
-necessary because the fingers were used for forks (section 299).
-Between the chief parts of the meal, too, the table was cleared and
-carefully wiped with a cloth or soft sponge. Between the _cena_ proper
-and the _secunda mensa_ a longer pause was made and silence was
-preserved while wine, salt, and meal, perhaps also regular articles of
-food, were offered to the Lares. The dessert was then brought on in
-the same way as the other parts of the meal. The signal to leave the
-couches was given by calling for the sandals (section 250), and the
-guests immediately took their departure.
-
-312. The Comissatio.--Cicero tells us of Cato and his Sabine neighbors
-lingering over their dessert and wine until late at night, and makes
-them find the chief charm of the long evening in the conversation. For
-this reason Cato declares the Latin word _convivium_ "a living
-together," a better word for such social intercourse than the one the
-Greeks used, _symposium_, "a drinking together." The younger men in
-the gayer circles of the capital inclined rather to the Greek view and
-followed the _cena_ proper with a drinking bout, or wine supper,
-called _comissatio_ or _compotatio_. This differed from the form that
-Cato approved not merely in the amount of wine consumed, in the lower
-tone, and in the questionable amusements, but also in the following of
-certain Greek customs unknown among the Romans until after the second
-Punic war and never adopted in the regular dinner parties that have
-been described. These were the use of perfumes and flowers at the
-feast, the selection of a Master of the Revels, and the method of
-drinking.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 124. END OF DRINKING BOUT]
-
-313. The perfumes and flowers were used not so much on account of the
-sweetness of their scent, much as the Romans enjoyed it, as because
-they believed that the scent prevented or at least retarded
-intoxication. This is shown by the fact that they did not use the
-unguents and the flowers throughout the whole meal, but waited to
-anoint the head with perfumes and crown it with flowers until the
-dessert and the wine were brought on. Various leaves and flowers were
-used for the garlands (_coronae convivales_) according to individual
-tastes, but the rose was the most popular and came to be generally
-associated with the _comissatio_. After the guests had assumed their
-crowns (and sometimes garlands were also worn around the neck), each
-threw the dice, usually calling as he did so upon his sweetheart or
-some deity to help his throw. The one whose throw was the highest
-(section 320) was forthwith declared the _rex_ (_magister_, _arbiter_)
-_bibendi_. Just what his duties and privileges were we are nowhere
-expressly told, but it can hardly be doubted that it was his province
-to determine the proportion of water to be added to the wine (section
-298), to lay down the rules for the drinking (_leges insanae_, Horace
-calls them), to decide what each guest should do for the entertainment
-of his fellows, and to impose penalties and forfeits for the breaking
-of the rules.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 125. MIXING BOWL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 126. DRINKING CUPS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 127. CYATHUS]
-
-314. The wine was mixed under the direction of the _magister_ in a
-large bowl (_crater_), the proportions of the wine and water being
-apparently constant for the evening, and from the _crater_ (Fig. 125),
-placed on the table in view of all, the wine was ladled by the
-servants into the goblets (_pocula_, Fig. 126) of the guests. The
-ladle (_cyathus_, Fig. 127) held about one-twelfth of a pint, or more
-probably was graduated by twelfths. The method of drinking seems to
-have differed from that of the regular dinner chiefly in this: at the
-ordinary dinner each guest mixed his wine to suit his own taste and
-drank as little or as much as he pleased, while at the _comissatio_
-all had to drink alike, regardless of differences in taste and
-capacity. The wine seems to have been drunk chiefly in "healths," but
-an odd custom regulated the size of the bumpers. Any guest might
-propose the health of any person he pleased to name; immediately
-slaves ladled into each goblet as many _cyathi_ (twelfths of a pint)
-as there were letters in the given name, and the goblets had to be
-drained at a draft. The rest of the entertainment was undoubtedly wild
-enough (section 310); gambling seems to have been common, and Cicero
-speaks of more disgraceful practices in his speeches against Catiline.
-Sometimes the guests spent the evening roaming from house to house,
-playing host in turn, and making night hideous as they staggered
-through the streets with their crowns and garlands.
-
-315. The Banquets of the Rich.--Little need be said of the banquets of
-the wealthy nobles in the last century of the Republic and of the rich
-parvenus (section 181) who thronged the courts of the earlier
-Emperors. They were arranged on the same plan as the dinners we have
-described, differing from them only in the ostentatious display of
-furniture, plate, and food. So far as particulars have reached us,
-they were grotesque and revolting, judged by the canons of to-day,
-rather than magnificent. Couches made of silver, wine instead of water
-for the hands, twenty-two courses to a single cena, seven thousand
-birds served at another, a dish of livers of fish, tongues of
-flamingos, brains of peacocks and pheasants mixed up together, strike
-us as vulgarity run mad. The sums spent upon these feasts do not seem
-so fabulous now as they did then. Every season in our great capitals
-sees social functions that surpass the feasts of Lucullus in cost as
-far as they do in taste and refinement. As signs of the times,
-however, as indications of changed ideals, of degeneracy and decay,
-they deserved the notice that the Roman historians and satirists gave
-them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-AMUSEMENTS; BATHS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 269-296, 834-861; Staatsverwaltung, III,
-504-565; Goll, III, 455-480, 104-157; Guhl and Koner, 643-658,
-804-829, 609-618; Friedlander, II, 295-637; Ramsay, 394-409;
-Pauly-Wissowa, _amphitheatrum_, _calx_, _circus_, _Bader_; Smith,
-Harper, Rich, _amphitheatrum_, _balneae_, _circus_, _gladiatores_,
-_theatrum_, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister, 694, 241-244,
-2089-2111; Lubker, 1073 f., 1199 f., 477 f., 1048 f., 185, 1213;
-Kelsey-Mau, 135-161, 180-220.
-
-
-316. After the games of childhood (sections 102, 103) were passed the
-Roman seemed to lose all instinct for play. Of sport for sport's sake
-he knew nothing, he took part in no games for the sake of excelling in
-them. He played ball before his dinner for the good of the exercise,
-he practiced riding, fencing, wrestling, hurling the discus (Fig.
-128), and swimming for the strength and skill they gave him in arms,
-he played a few games of chance for the excitement the stakes
-afforded, but there was no "national game" for the young men, and
-there were no social amusements in which men and women took part
-together. The Roman made it hard and expensive, too, for others to
-amuse him. He cared nothing for the drama, little for spectacular
-shows, more for farces and variety performances, perhaps, but the one
-thing that really appealed to him was excitement, and this he found in
-gambling or in such amusements only as involved the risk of injury to
-life and limb, the sports of the circus and the amphitheater. We may
-describe first the games in which the Roman participated himself and
-then those at which he was a mere spectator. In the first class are
-field sports and games of hazard, in the second the public and private
-games (_ludi publici et privati_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 128. DISCUS THROWER]
-
-317. Sports of the Campus.--The Campus Martius included all the level
-ground lying between the Tiber and the Capitoline and Quirinal hills.
-The northwestern portion of this plain, bounded on two sides by the
-Tiber, which here sweeps abruptly to the west, kept clear of public
-and private buildings and often called simply the _Campus_, was for
-centuries the playground of Rome. Here the young men gathered to
-practice the athletic games mentioned above, naturally in the cooler
-parts of the day. Even men of graver years did not disdain a visit to
-the Campus after the _meridiatio_ (section 302), in preparation for
-the bath before dinner, instead of which the younger men preferred to
-take a cool plunge in the convenient river. The sports themselves were
-those that we are accustomed to group together as track and field
-athletics. They ran foot races, jumped, threw the discus (Fig. 128),
-practiced archery, and had wrestling and boxing matches. These sports
-were carried on then much as they are now, if we may judge by Vergil's
-description in the Fifth Aeneid, but an exception must be made of the
-games of ball. These seem to have been very dull and stupid as
-compared with ours. It must be remembered, however, that they were
-played more for the healthful exercise they furnished than for the joy
-of the playing, and by men of high position, too--Caesar, Maecenas,
-and even the Emperor Augustus.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 129. FOLLES]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 130. GAME OF BALL]
-
-318. Games of Ball.--Balls of different sizes are known to have been
-used in the different games, variously filled with hair, feathers, and
-air (_folles_, Fig. 129). Throwing and catching formed the basis of
-all the games, the bat being practically unknown. In the simplest game
-the player threw the ball as high as he could, and tried to catch it
-before it struck the ground. Variations of this were what we should
-call juggling, the player keeping two or more balls in the air (Fig.
-130), and throwing and catching by turns with another player. Another
-game must have resembled our handball, requiring a wall and smooth
-ground at its foot. The ball was struck with the open hand against the
-wall, allowed to fall back upon the ground and bound, and then struck
-back against the wall in the same manner. The aim of the player was to
-keep the ball going in this way longer than his opponent could.
-Private houses and the public baths often had "courts" especially
-prepared for this amusement. A third game was called _trigon_, and was
-played by three persons, stationed at the angles of an equilateral
-triangle. Two balls were used and the aim of the player was to throw
-the ball in his possession at the one of his opponents who would be
-the less likely to catch it. As two might throw at the third at the
-same moment, or as the thrower of one ball might have to receive the
-second ball at the very moment of throwing, both hands had to be used
-and a good degree of skill was necessary. Other games, all of throwing
-and catching, are mentioned here and there, but none is described with
-sufficient detail to be clearly understood.
-
-319. Games of Chance.--The Romans were passionately fond of games of
-chance, and gambling was so universally associated with such games
-that they were forbidden by law, even when no stakes were actually
-played for. A general indulgence seems to have been granted at the
-Saturnalia in December, and public opinion allowed old men to play at
-any time. The laws were hard to enforce, however, as such laws usually
-are, and large sums were won and lost not merely at general gambling
-resorts, but also at private houses. Games of chance, in fact, with
-high stakes, were one of the greatest attractions at the men's dinners
-that have been mentioned (section 314). The commonest form of gambling
-was our "heads or tails," coins being used as with us, the value
-depending on the means of the players. Another common form was our
-"odd or even," each player guessing in turn and in turn holding
-counters concealed in his outstretched hand for his opponent to guess.
-The stake was usually the contents of the hand though side bets were
-not unusual. In a variation of this game the players tried to guess
-the actual number of the counters held in the hand. Of more interest,
-however, were the games of knuckle-bones and dice.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 131. GIRLS PLAYING WITH KNUCKLE-BONES]
-
-320. Knuckle-bones.--Knuckle-bones (_tali_) of sheep and goats, and
-imitations of them in ivory, bronze, and stone, were used as
-playthings by children and for gaming by men. Children played our
-"jackstones" with them, throwing five into the air at once and
-catching as many as possible on the back of the hand (Fig. 131). The
-length of the _tali_ was greater than their width and they had,
-therefore, four long sides and two ends. The ends were rounded off or
-pointed, so that the _tali_ could not stand on them. Of the four long
-sides two were broader than the others. Of the two broader sides one
-was concave, the other convex; while of the narrower sides one was
-flat and the other indented. As all the sides were of different shapes
-the _tali_ did not require marking as do our dice, but for convenience
-they were sometimes marked with the numbers 1, 3, 4, and 6, the
-numbers 2 and 5 being omitted. Four _tali_ were used at a time, either
-thrown into the air with the hand or thrown from a dice-box
-(_fritillus_), and the side on which the bone rested was counted, not
-that which came up. Thirty-five different throws were possible, of
-which each had a different name. Four aces were the lowest throw,
-called the Vulture, while the highest, called the Venus, was when all
-the _tali_ came up differently. It was this throw that designated the
-_magister bibendi_ (section 313).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 132. PLAYING DICE]
-
-321. Dice.--The Romans had also dice (_tesserae_) precisely like our
-own. They were made of ivory, stone, or some close-grained wood, and
-had the sides numbered from one to six. Three were used at a time,
-thrown from the _fritillus_, as were the knuckle-bones (Fig. 132), but
-the sides counted that came up. The highest throw was three sixes, the
-lowest three aces. In ordinary gaming the aim of the player seems to
-have been to throw a higher number than his opponent, but there were
-also games played with dice on boards with counters, that must have
-been something like our backgammon, uniting skill with chance. Little
-more of these is known than their names, but a board used for some
-such game is shown in section 336 (Fig. 144). If one considers how
-much space is given in our newspapers to the game of baseball, and how
-impossible it would be for a person who had never seen a game to get a
-correct idea of one from the newspaper descriptions only, it will not
-seem strange that we know so little of Roman games.
-
-322. Public and Private Games.--With the historical development of the
-Public Games this book has no concern (section 2). It is sufficient to
-say that these free exhibitions, given first in honor of some god or
-gods at the cost of the state and extended and multiplied for
-political purposes until all religious significance was lost, had come
-by the end of the Republic to be the chief pleasure in life for the
-lower classes in Rome, so that Juvenal declares that the free bread
-(section 286) and the games of the circus were the people's sole
-desire. Not only were these games free, but when they were given all
-public business was stopped and all citizens were forced to take a
-holiday. These holidays became rapidly more and more numerous; by the
-end of the Republic sixty-six days were taken up by the games, and in
-the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) no less than one hundred and
-thirty-five days out of the year were thus closed to business.[1]
-Besides these standing games, others were often given for
-extraordinary events, and funeral games were common when great men
-died. These last were not made legal holidays. For our purposes the
-distinction between public and private games is not important, and all
-may be classified according to the nature of the exhibitions as, _ludi
-scenici_, dramatic entertainments given in a theater, _ludi
-circenses_, chariot races and other exhibitions given in a circus, and
-_munera gladiatoria_, shows of gladiators usually given in an
-amphitheater.
-
-[Footnote 1: There are sixty holidays annually in Indiana, for
-example, and this is about the average for the United States.]
-
-323. Dramatic Performances.--The history of the development of the
-drama at Rome belongs, of course, to the history of Latin literature.
-In classical times dramatic performances consisted of comedies
-(_comoediae_), tragedies (_tragoediae_), farces (_mimi_), and
-pantomimes (_pantomimi_). The farces and pantomimes were used chiefly
-as interludes and afterpieces, though with the common people they were
-the most popular of all and outlived the others. Tragedy never had any
-real hold at Rome, and only the liveliest comedies gained favor on the
-stage. Of the comedies the only ones that have come down to us are
-those of Plautus and Terence, all adaptations from Greek originals,
-all depicting Greek life, and represented in Greek costumes (_fabulae
-palliatae_). They were a good deal more like our comic operas than our
-comedies, large parts being recited to the accompaniment of music and
-other parts sung while the actor danced. They were always presented in
-the daytime, as Roman theaters were provided with no means of
-lighting, in the early period after the noon meal (section 301), but
-by Cicero's time they had come to be given in the morning. The average
-comedy must have required about two hours for the acting, with
-allowance for the occasional music between the scenes. We read of a
-play being acted twice in a day, but this must have been very
-exceptional, as time had to be allowed for the other more popular
-shows given on the same occasion.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 133. SCENE FROM A COMEDY]
-
-324. Staging the Play.--The play, as well as the other sports, was
-under the supervision of the officials in charge of the games at which
-it was given. They contracted for the production of the play with some
-recognized manager (_dominus gregis_), who was usually an actor of
-acknowledged ability and had associated with him a troupe (_grex_) of
-others only inferior to himself. The actors were all slaves (section
-143), and men took the parts of women. There was no limit fixed to the
-number of actors, but motives of economy would lead the _dominus_ to
-produce each play with the smallest number possible, and two or even
-more parts were often assigned to one actor. The characters in the
-comedies wore the ordinary Greek dress of daily life and the costumes
-(Fig. 133) were, therefore, not expensive. The only make-up required
-was paint for the face, especially for the actors who took women's
-parts, and the wigs that were used conventionally to represent
-different characters, gray for old men, black for young men, red for
-slaves, etc. These and the few properties (_ornamenta_) necessary were
-furnished by the _dominus_. It seems to have been customary also for
-him to feast the actors at his expense if their efforts to entertain
-were unusually successful.
-
-325. The Early Theater.--The theater itself deserved no such name
-until very late in the Republic. During the period when the best plays
-were being written (200-160 B.C.) almost nothing was done for the
-accommodation of the actors or the audience. The stage was merely a
-temporary platform, rather wide than deep, built at the foot of a hill
-or a grass-covered slope. There were almost none of the things that we
-are accustomed to associate with a stage, no curtains, no flies, no
-scenery that could be changed, not even a sounding-board to aid the
-actor's voice. There was no way either to represent the interior of a
-house, and the dramatist was limited, therefore, to such situations as
-might be supposed to take place upon a public street. This street the
-stage represented; at the back of it were shown the fronts of two or
-three houses with windows and doors that could be opened, and
-sometimes there was an alley or passageway between two of the houses.
-An altar stood on the stage, we are told, to remind the people of the
-religious origin of the games. No better provision was made for the
-audience than for the actors. The people took their places on the
-slope before the stage, some reclining on the grass, some standing,
-some perhaps sitting on stools they had brought from home. There was
-always din and confusion to try the actor's voice, pushing and
-crowding, disputing and quarreling, wailing of children, and in the
-very midst of the play the report of something livelier to be seen
-elsewhere might draw the whole audience away.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 134. EXTERIOR OF THEATER AT ORANGE]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 135. THEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 136. SECTION OF THEATER OF MARCELLUS (Restored)]
-
-326. The Later Theater.--Beginning about 145 B.C., however, efforts
-were made to improve upon this poor apology for a theater, in spite of
-the opposition of those who considered the plays ruinous to morals. In
-that year a wooden theater on Greek lines provided with seats was
-erected, but the senate caused it to be pulled down as soon as the
-games were over. It became a fixed custom, however, for such a
-temporary theater with special and separate seats for senators, and
-much later for the knights, to be erected as often as plays were given
-at public games, until in 55 B.C. Pompeius Magnus erected the first
-permanent theater at Rome. It was built of stone after the plans of
-one he had seen at Mytilene and seated at least seventeen thousand
-people; Pliny says forty thousand. This theater showed two noteworthy
-divergences from its Greek model. The Greek theaters were excavated
-out of the side of the hill, while the Roman theater was erected on
-level ground (that of Pompeius in the Campus Martius) and gave,
-therefore, a better opportunity for exterior magnificence. The Greek
-theater had a large circular space for choral performances immediately
-before the stage; in the Roman theater this space, called the
-orchestra then as now, was much smaller, and was assigned to the
-senators. The first fourteen rows of seats rising immediately behind
-them were reserved for the knights. The seats back of these were
-occupied indiscriminately by the people, on the principle apparently
-of first come first served. No other permanent theaters were erected
-at Rome until 13 B.C., when two were constructed. The smaller had room
-for eleven thousand spectators, the larger, erected in honor of
-Marcellus, the nephew of Augustus, for twenty thousand. These improved
-playhouses made possible spectacular elements in the performances that
-the rude scaffolding of early days had not permitted, and these
-spectacles proved the ruin of the legitimate drama. To make realistic
-the scenes representing the pillaging of a city, Pompeius is said to
-have furnished troops of cavalry and bodies of infantry, hundreds of
-mules laden with real spoils of war, and three thousand mixing bowls
-(section 314). In comparison with these three thousand mixing bowls,
-the avalanches, runaway locomotives, sawmills in full operation, and
-cathedral scenes of modern times seem poor indeed.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 137. PLAN OF THEATER]
-
-327. The general appearance of these theaters, the type of hundreds
-erected later throughout the Roman world, may be gathered from Fig.
-137, the plan of a theater on lines laid down by Vitruvius (section
-187). GH is the front line of the stage (_proscaenium_); all behind it
-is the _scaena_, devoted to the actors, all before it is the _cavea_,
-devoted to the spectators. IKL in the rear mark the position of three
-doors, for example, those of the three houses mentioned above (section
-325). The semicircular orchestra CMD is the part appropriated to the
-senators. The seats behind the orchestra, rising in concentric
-semicircles, are divided by five passageways into six portions
-(_cunei_), and in a similar way the seats above the semicircular
-passage (_praecinctio_) shown in the figure are divided by eleven
-passageways into twelve _cunei_. Access to the seats of the senators
-was afforded by passageways under the higher seats at the right and
-the left of the stage, one of which may be seen in Fig. 135, which
-represents a part of the smaller of the two theaters uncovered at
-Pompeii, built not far from 80 B.C. Over the vaulted passage will be
-noticed what must have been the best seats in the theater,
-corresponding in some degree to the boxes of modern times. These were
-reserved for the emperor, if he was present, for the officials who
-superintended the games and (on the other side) for the Vestals.
-Access to the higher seats was conveniently given by broad stairways
-constructed under the seats and running up to the passageways between
-the _cunei_. These are shown in Fig. 136, a theoretical restoration of
-the Marcellus theater mentioned above. Behind the highest seats were
-broad colonnades, affording shelter in case of rain, and above them
-were tall masts from which awnings (_vela_) were spread to protect the
-people from the sun. The appearance of the stage end may be gathered
-from Fig. 134, showing the remains of a Roman theater still existing
-at Orange,[2] in the south of France. It should be noticed that the
-stage was connected with the auditorium by the seats over the vaulted
-passages to the orchestra, and that the curtain was raised from the
-bottom, to hide the stage, not lowered from the top as ours is now.
-Vitruvius suggested that rooms and porticos be built behind the stage,
-like the colonnades that have been mentioned, to afford space for the
-actors and properties and shelter for the people in case of rain.
-
-[Footnote 2: This theater has been restored and used for reproductions
-of the Classical Drama. See the interesting account of it in the
-"Century Magazine" for June, 1895. It is supposed to have been erected
-in the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180) and allowed to fall into
-ruins in the fourth century A.D.]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 138. VICTORIOUS AURIGA]
-
-328. Roman Circuses.--The games of the circus were the oldest of the
-free exhibitions at Rome and always the most popular. The word
-_circus_ means simply a ring and the _ludi circenses_ were therefore
-any shows that might be given in a ring. We shall see below (section
-343) that these shows were of several kinds, but the one most
-characteristic, the one that is always meant when no other is
-specifically named, is that of chariot races. For these races the
-first and really the only necessary condition is a large and level
-piece of ground. This was furnished by the valley between the Aventine
-and Palatine hills, and here in prehistoric times the first Roman race
-course was established. This remained _the_ circus, the one always
-meant when no descriptive term was added, though when others were
-built it was called sometimes by way of distinction the Circus
-Maximus. None of the others ever approached it in size, in
-magnificence, or in popularity.
-
-329. The second circus to be built at Rome was the _circus Flaminius_,
-founded in 221 B.C. by the same Caius Flaminius, who built the
-Flaminian road. It was located in the southern part of the Campus
-Martius (section 317), and like the Circus Maximus was exposed to the
-frequent overflows of the Tiber. Its position is fixed beyond
-question, but the actual remains are very scanty, so that little is
-known of its size or appearance. The third to be established was that
-of Caius (Caligula) and Nero, named from the two emperors who had to
-do with its construction, and erected, therefore, in the first century
-A.D. It lay at the foot of the Vatican hill, but we know little more
-of it than that it was the smallest of the three. These three were the
-only circuses within the city. In the immediate neighborhood, however,
-were three others. Five miles out on the _via Portuensis_ was the
-circus of the Arval Brethren. About three miles out on the Appian way
-was the Circus of Maxentius, erected in 309 A.D. This is the best
-preserved of all, and a plan of it is shown in the next paragraph. On
-the same road, some twelve miles from the city, in the old town of
-Bovillae, was a third, making six within easy reach of the people of
-Rome.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 139. PLAN OF THE CIRCUS OF MAXENTIUS]
-
-330. Plan of the Circus.--All of the Roman circuses known to us had
-the same general arrangement, which will be readily understood from
-the plan of the Circus of Maxentius shown in Fig. 139. The long and
-comparatively narrow stretch of ground which formed the race course
-proper (_arena_) is almost surrounded by the tiers of seats, running
-in two long parallel lines uniting in a semicircle at one end. In the
-middle of this semicircle is a gate, marked _F_ in the plan, by which
-the victor left the circus when the race was over. It was called,
-therefore, the _porta triumphalis_. Opposite this gate at the other
-end of the arena was the station for the chariots (_AA_ in the plan),
-called _carceres_, "barriers," flanked by two towers at the corners
-(_II_), and divided into two equal sections by another gate (_B_),
-called the _porta pompae_, by which processions entered the circus.
-There are also gates (_HH_) between the towers and the seats. The
-exterior appearance of the towers and barriers, called together the
-_oppidum_, is shown in Fig. 140.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 140. OPPIDUM OF A CIRCUS]
-
-331. The arena is divided for about two-thirds its length by a fence
-or wall (_MM_), called the _spina_, "backbone." At the end of this
-were fixed pillars (_LL_), called _metae_, marking the inner line of
-the course. Once around the _spina_ was a lap (_spatium_,
-_curriculum_), and the fixed number of laps, usually seven to a race,
-was called a _missus_. The last lap, however, had but one turn, that
-at the _meta prima_, the one nearest the _porta triumphalis_, the
-finish being a straightaway dash to the _calx_. This was a chalk line
-drawn on the arena far enough away from the second _meta_ to keep it
-from being obliterated by the hoofs of the horses as they made the
-turn, and far enough also from the _carceres_ to enable the driver to
-stop his team before dashing into them. The dotted line (_DN_) is the
-supposed location of the _calx_. It will be noticed that the important
-things about the developed circus are the _arena_, _carceres_,
-_spina_, _metae_, and the seats, all of which will be more
-particularly described.
-
-332. The Arena.--The arena is the level space surrounded by the seats
-and the barriers. The name was derived from the sand used to cover its
-surface to spare as much as possible the unshod feet of the horses. A
-glance at the plan will show that speed could not have been the
-important thing with the Romans that it is with us. The sand, the
-shortness of the stretches, and the sharp turns between them were all
-against great speed. The Roman found his excitement in the danger of
-the race. In every representation of the race course that has come
-down to us may be seen broken chariots, fallen horses, and drivers
-under wheels and hoofs. The distance was not a matter of close
-measurement either, but varied in the several circuses, the Circus
-Maximus being fully 300 feet longer than the Circus of Maxentius. All
-seem to have had constant, however, the number of laps, seven to the
-race, and this also goes to prove that the danger was the chief
-element in the popularity of the contests. The distance actually
-traversed in the Circus of Maxentius may be very closely estimated.
-The length of the _spina_ is about 950 feet. If we allow fifty feet
-for the turn at each _meta_, each lap makes a distance of 2,000 feet,
-and six laps, 12,000 feet. The seventh lap had but one turn in it, but
-the final stretch to the _calx_ made it perhaps 300 feet longer than
-one of the others, say 2,300 feet. This gives a total of 14,300 feet
-for the whole _missus_, or about 2.7 miles. Jordan calculates the
-_missus_ of the Circus Maximus at 8.4 kilometers, which would be about
-5.2 miles, but he seems to have taken the whole length of the arena
-into account, instead of that merely of the _spina_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 141. THE CARCERES]
-
-333. The Barriers.--The _carceres_ were the stations of the chariots
-and teams when ready for the races to begin. They were a series of
-vaulted chambers entirely separated from each other by solid walls,
-and closed behind by doors through which the chariots entered. The
-front of the chamber was formed by double doors, with the upper part
-made of grated bars, admitting the only light which it received. From
-this arrangement the name _carcer_ was derived. Each chamber was large
-enough to hold a chariot with its team, and as a team was composed
-sometimes of as many as seven horses the "prison" must have been
-nearly square. There was always a separate chamber for each chariot.
-Up to the time of Domitian the highest number of chariots was eight,
-but after his time as many as twelve sometimes entered the same race,
-and twelve _carceres_ had, therefore, to be provided, although four
-chariots was the usual number. Half of these chambers lay to the
-right, half to the left of the _porta pompae_. The appearance of a
-section of the _carceres_ is shown in Fig. 141.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 142. BOX OF THE DATOR LUDORUM]
-
-334. It will be noticed from the plan (section 330) that the
-_carceres_ were arranged in a curved line. This is supposed to have
-been drawn in such a way that every chariot, no matter which of the
-_carceres_ it happened to occupy, would have the same distance to
-travel in order to reach the beginning of the course proper at the
-nearer end of the _spina_. There was no advantage in position,
-therefore, at the start, and places were assigned by lot. In later
-times a starting line (_linea alba_) was drawn with chalk between the
-second _meta_ and the seats to the right, but the line of _carceres_
-remained curved as of old. At the ends of the row of chambers, towers
-were built which seem to have been the stands for the musicians; over
-the _porta pompae_ was the box of the chief official of the games
-(_dator ludorum_), and between his box and the towers were seats for
-his friends and persons connected with the games. In Fig. 142 is shown
-a victor pausing before the box of the _dator_ to receive a prize
-before riding in triumph around the arena.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 143.]
-
-335. The Spina and Metae.--The _spina_ divided the race course into
-two parts, making a minimum distance to be run. Its length was about
-two-thirds that of the arena, but it started only the width of the
-track from the _porta triumphalis_, leaving entirely free a much
-larger space at the end near the _porta pompae_. It was perfectly
-straight, but did not run precisely parallel to the rows of seats; at
-the end B in the exaggerated diagram (Fig. 143) the distance BC is
-somewhat greater than the distance AB, in order to allow more room at
-the starting line (_linea alba_, section 334), where the chariots
-would be side by side, than further along the course, where they would
-be strung out. The _metae_, so named from their shape (section 284),
-were pillars erected at the two ends of the _spina_ and
-architecturally a part of it, though there may have been a space
-between. In Republican times the _spina_ and the _metae_ must have
-been made of wood and movable, in order to give free space for the
-shows of wild beasts and the exhibitions of cavalry that were
-originally given in the circus. After the amphitheater was devised the
-circus came to be used for races exclusively and the _spina_ became
-permanent. It was built up, of most massive proportions, on
-foundations of indestructible concrete (section 210 f.) and was
-adorned with magnificent works of art that must have entirely
-concealed horses and chariots when they passed to the other side of
-the arena.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 144. BOARD-GAME SHOWING SPINA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 145. OBELISK ONCE IN CIRCUS MAXIMUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 146. A CANAL AS SPINA]
-
-336. A representation of a circus has been preserved to us in a board-
-game of some sort found at Bovillae (section 329), which gives an
-excellent idea of the _spina_, (Fig. 144). We know from various
-reliefs and mosaics that the _spina_ of the Circus Maximus was covered
-with a series of statues and ornamental structures, such as obelisks,
-small temples or shrines, columns surmounted by statues, altars,
-trophies, and fountains. Augustus was the first to erect an obelisk in
-the Circus Maximus; it was restored in 1589 A.D., and now stands in
-the Piazza del Popolo, measuring without the base about 78 feet in
-height. Constantius erected another (Fig. 145) in the same circus,
-which now stands before the Lateran church, measuring 105 feet. The
-obelisk of the Circus of Maxentius now stands in the Piazza Navona.
-Besides these purely ornamental features, every circus had at each end
-of its _spina_ a pedestal supporting seven large eggs (_ova_) of
-marble, one of which was taken down at the end of each lap, in order
-that the people might know just how many remained to be run. Another
-and very different idea for the _spina_ is shown in Fig. 146 from a
-mosaic at Lyons. This is a canal filled with water, with an obelisk in
-the middle. The _metae_ in their developed form are shown very clearly
-in this mosaic, three conical pillars of stone set on a semicircular
-plinth, all of the most massive construction.
-
-337. The Seats.--The seats around the arena in the Circus Maximus were
-originally of wood, but accidents owing to decay and losses by fire
-had led by the time of the Empire to reconstruction in marble except
-perhaps in the very highest rows. The seats in the other circuses seem
-to have been from the first of stone. At the foot of the tiers of
-seats was a marble platform (_podium_) which ran along both sides and
-the curved end, coextensive therefore with them. On this _podium_ were
-erected boxes for the use of the more important magistrates and
-officials of Rome, and here Augustus placed the seats of the senators
-and others of high rank. He also assigned seats throughout the whole
-_cavea_ to various classes and organizations, separating the women
-from the men, though up to his time they had sat together. Between the
-_podium_ and the track was a screen of open work, and when Caesar
-showed wild beasts in the circus he had a canal ten feet wide and ten
-feet deep dug next the _podium_ and filled with water as an additional
-protection. Access to the seats was given from the rear, numerous
-broad stairways running up to the _praecinctiones_ (section 327), of
-which there were probably three in the Circus Maximus. The horizontal
-spaces between the _praecinctiones_ were called _maeniana_, and each
-of these was in turn divided by stairways into _cunei_ (section 327),
-and the rows of seats in the _cunei_ were called _gradus_. The
-sittings in the row do not seem to have been marked off any more than
-they are now in the "bleachers" at our baseball grounds. When sittings
-were reserved for a number of persons they were described as so many
-feet in such a row (_gradus_) of such a section (_cuneus_) of such a
-circle (_maenianum_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 147. RESTORATION OF THE CIRCUS MAXIMUS]
-
-338. The number of sittings testifies to the popularity of the races.
-The little circus at Bovillae had seats for at least 8,000 people,
-according to Hulsen, that of Maxentius for about 23,000, while the
-Circus Maximus, accommodating 60,000 in the time of Augustus, was
-enlarged to a capacity of nearly 200,000 in the time of Constantius.
-The seats themselves were supported upon arches of massive masonry; an
-idea of their appearance from the outside may be had from the exterior
-view of the Coliseum in section 356. Every third of these vaulted
-chambers under the seats seems to have been used for a staircase, the
-others for shops and booths and in the upper parts for rooms for the
-employes of the circus, who must have been very numerous. Galleries
-seem to have crowned the seats, as in the theaters (section 327), and
-balconies for the emperors were built in conspicuous places, the ruins
-not enabling their positions to be fixed precisely. An idea of the
-appearance of the seats from within the arena may be had from an
-attempted reconstruction of the Circus Maximus (Fig. 147), the details
-of which are quite uncertain.
-
-339. Furnishing the Races.--There must have been a time, of course,
-when the races in the circus were open to all who wished to show their
-horses or their skill in driving them, but by the end of the Republic
-no persons of repute took part in the games, and the teams and drivers
-were furnished by racing syndicates (_factiones_), who practically
-controlled the market so far as concerned trained horses and trained
-men. With these syndicates the giver of the games contracted for the
-number of races that he wanted (ten or twelve a day in Caesar's time,
-later twice the number, and even more on special occasions), and they
-furnished everything needed. These syndicates were named from the
-colors worn by their drivers. We hear at first of two only, the red
-(_russata_) and the white (_albata_); two more were added, the blue
-(_veneta_) in the time of Augustus probably, and the green (_prasina_)
-soon after, and finally Domitian added the purple and the gold. The
-greatest rivalry existed between these organizations. They spent
-immense sums of money on their horses, importing them from Greece,
-Spain, and Mauritania, and even larger sums, perhaps, upon the
-drivers. They maintained training stables on as large a scale as any
-of which modern times can boast; a mosaic found in one of these
-establishments in Algeria names among the attendants jockeys, grooms,
-stable-boys, saddlers, doctors, trainers, coaches, and messengers, and
-shows the horses covered with blankets in their stalls. This rivalry
-spread throughout the city; each _factio_ had its partisans, and vast
-sums of money were lost and won as each _missus_ was finished. All the
-tricks of the ring were skillfully practiced; horses were hocused,
-drivers hired from rival syndicates or bribed, and even poisoned, we
-are told, when they were proof against money.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 148. RACING CHARIOT AND TEAM]
-
-340. The Teams.--The chariot used in the races was low and light,
-closed in front, open behind, with long axles and low wheels to lessen
-the risk of turning over. The driver seems to have stood well forward
-in the car, there being no standing place behind the axle, as shown in
-the cut (Fig. 148). The teams consisted of two horses (_bigae_), three
-(_trigae_), four (_quadrigae_), and in later times six (_seiuges_) or
-even seven (_septeiuges_), but the four-horse team was the most common
-and may be taken as the type. Two of the horses were yoked together,
-one on each side of the tongue, the others were attached to the car
-merely by traces. Of the four the horse to the extreme left was the
-most important, because the _meta_ lay always on the left and the
-highest skill of the driver was shown in turning it as closely as
-possible. The failure of the horse nearest it to respond promptly to
-the rein or the word might mean the wreck of the car (by going too
-close) or the loss of the inside track (by going too wide), and in
-either case the loss of the race. Inscriptions sometimes give the
-names of all the horses of the team, sometimes only the horse on the
-left is mentioned. Before the races began lists of the horses and
-drivers in each were published for the guidance of those who wished to
-stake their money, and while no time was kept the records of horses
-and men were followed as eagerly as now. From the nature of the course
-(section 332) it is evident that strength and courage and above all
-lasting qualities were as essential as speed. The horses were almost
-always stallions (mares are very rarely mentioned), and were never
-raced under five years of age. Considering the length of the course
-and the great risk of accidents it is surprising how long the horses
-lasted. It was not unusual for a horse to win a hundred races (such a
-horse was called _centenarius_), and one Diocles, himself a famous
-driver, owned a horse that had won two hundred (_ducenarius_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 149. DRESS OF AN AURIGA]
-
-341. The Drivers.--The drivers (_agitatores_, _aurigae_) were slaves
-or freedmen, some of whom had won their freedom by their skill and
-daring in the course. Only in the most corrupt days of the Empire did
-citizens of any social position take actual part in the races. The
-dress of the driver is shown in Fig. 149; especially to be noticed are
-the close fitting cap, the short tunic (always of the color of his
-_factio_), laced around the body with leathern thongs, the straps of
-leather around the thighs, the shoulder pads, and the heavy leather
-protectors for the legs. Our football players wear like defensive
-armor. The reins were knotted together and passed around the driver's
-body. In his belt he carried a knife to cut the reins in case he
-should be thrown from the car, or to cut the traces if a horse should
-fall and become entangled in them. The races gave as many
-opportunities then as now for skillful driving, and required even more
-of strength and daring. What we should call "fouling" was encouraged.
-The driver might turn his team against another, might upset the car of
-a rival if he could; having gained the inside track he might drive out
-of the straight course to keep a swifter team from passing his. The
-rewards were proportionately great. The successful _auriga_, despised
-though his station, was the pet and pride of the race-mad crowd, and
-under the Empire at least he was courted and feted by high and low.
-The pay of successful drivers was extravagant, the rival syndicates
-bidding against each other for the services of the most popular. Rich
-presents, too, were given them when they won their races, not only by
-their _factiones_, but also by outsiders who had backed them and
-profited by their skill.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 150. INSCRIPTION IN HONOR OF CRESCENS]
-
-342. Famous Aurigae.--The names of some of these victors have come
-down to us in inscriptions (section 10) erected in their honor or to
-their memory by their friends. Among these may be mentioned Publius
-Aelius Gutta Calpurnianus (section 58) of the late Empire (1,127
-victories), Caius Apuleius Diocles, a Spaniard (in twenty-four years
-4,257 races, l,462 victories, winning the sum of 35,863,120 sesterces,
-about $1,800,000), Flavius Scorpus (2,048 victories at the age of
-twenty-seven), Marcus Aurelius Liber (3,000 victories), Pompeius
-Muscosus (3,559 victories). To these may be added Crescens, an
-inscription[3] in honor of whom was found at Rome in 1878 and is shown
-in Fig. 150.
-
-[Footnote 3: "Crescens, a driver of the blue syndicate, of the Moorish
-nation, twenty-two years of age. He won his first victory as a driver
-of a four-horse chariot in the consulship of Lucius Vipstanius
-Messalla on the birthday of the deified Nerva in the twenty-fourth
-race with these horses: Circius, Acceptor, Delicatus, and Cotynus.
-From Messalla's consulship to the birthday of the deified Claudius in
-the consulship of Glabrio he was sent from the barriers six hundred
-and eighty-six times and was victorious forty-seven times. In races
-between chariots with one from each syndicate he won nineteen times,
-with two from each twenty-three times, with three from each five
-times. He held back purposely once, took first place at the start
-eight times, took it from others thirty-eight times. He won second
-place one hundred and thirty times, third place one hundred and eleven
-times. His winnings amounted to 1,558,346 sesterces (about $78,000)."]
-
-343. Other Shows of the Circus.--The circus was used less frequently
-for other exhibitions than chariot races. Of these may be mentioned
-the performances of the _desultores_, men who rode two horses and
-leaped from one to the other while going at full speed, and of trained
-horses who performed various tricks while standing on a sort of
-wheeled platform which gave a very unstable footing. There were also
-exhibitions of horsemanship by citizens of good standing, riding under
-leaders in squadrons, to show the evolutions of the cavalry. The
-_ludus Troiae_ was also performed by young men of the nobility, a game
-that Vergil has described in the Fifth Aeneid. More to the taste of
-the crowd were the hunts (_venationes_), when wild beasts were turned
-loose in the circus to slaughter each other or be slaughtered by men
-trained for the purpose. We read of panthers, bears, bulls, lions,
-elephants, hippopotami, and even crocodiles (in artificial lakes made
-in the arena) exhibited during the Republic. In the circus, too,
-combats of gladiators sometimes took place, but these were more
-frequently in the amphitheater. One of the most brilliant spectacles
-must have been the procession (_pompa circensis_) which formally
-opened some of the public games. It started from the capitol and wound
-its way down to the Circus Maximus, entering by the _porta pompae_
-(named from it, section 330), and passed entirely around the arena. At
-the head in a car rode the presiding magistrate, wearing the garb of a
-triumphant general and attended by a slave who held a wreath of gold
-over his head. Next came a crowd of notables on horseback and on foot,
-then the chariots and horsemen who were to take part in the games.
-Then followed priests, arranged by their colleges, and bearers of
-incense and of the instruments used in sacrifices, and statues of
-deities on low cars drawn by mules, horses, or elephants, or else
-carried on litters (_fercula_) on the shoulders of men. Bands of
-musicians headed each division of the procession, a feeble
-reminiscence of which is seen in the parade through the streets that
-precedes the performance of the modern circus.
-
-344. Gladiatorial Combats.--Gladiatorial combats seem to have been
-known in Italy long before the founding of Rome. We hear of them first
-in Campania and Etruria. In Campania the wealthy and dissolute nobles,
-we are told, made slaves fight to the death at their banquets and
-revels for the entertainment of their guests. In Etruria the combats
-go back in all probability to the offering of human sacrifices at the
-burial of distinguished men in accordance with the ancient belief that
-blood is acceptable to the dead. The victims were captives taken in
-war, and it became the custom gradually to give them a chance for
-their lives by supplying them with weapons and allowing them to fight
-each other at the grave, the victor being spared at least for the
-time. The Romans were slow to adopt the custom, the first exhibition
-being given in the year 264 B.C., almost five centuries after the
-founding of the city. That they derived it from Etruria rather than
-Campania is shown by the fact that the exhibitions were at funeral
-games, the earliest at those of Brutus Pera in 264 B.C., Marcus
-Aemilius Lepidus in 216 B.C., Marcus Valerius Lavinus in 200 B.C., and
-Publius Licinius in 183 B.C.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 151. A "SAMNITE"]
-
-345. For the first one hundred years after their introduction the
-exhibitions were infrequent as the dates just given show, those
-mentioned being all of which we have any knowledge during the period,
-but after this time they were given more and more frequently and
-always on a larger scale. During the Republic, however, they remained
-in theory at least private games (_munera_), not public games
-(_ludi_); that is, they were not celebrated on fixed days recurring
-annually, and the givers of the exhibitions had to find a pretext for
-them in the death of relatives or friends, and to defray the expenses
-from their own pockets. In fact we know of but one instance in which
-actual magistrates (the consuls Publius and Manlius, 105 B.C.) gave
-such exhibitions, and we know too little of the attendant
-circumstances to warrant us in assuming that they acted in their
-official capacity. Even under the Empire the gladiators did not fight
-on the days of the regular public games. Augustus, however, provided
-funds for "extraordinary shows" under the direction of the praetors.
-Under Domitian the aediles-elect were put in charge of these
-exhibitions which were given regularly in December, the only instance
-known of fixed dates for the _munera gladiatoria_. All others of which
-we read are to be considered the freewill offerings to the people of
-emperors, magistrates, or private citizens.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 152. WEAPONS OF GLADIATORS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 153. WOUNDED GLADIATOR]
-
-346. Popularity of the Combats.--The Romans' love of excitement
-(section 316) made the exhibitions immediately and immensely popular.
-At the first exhibition mentioned above, that in honor of Brutus Pera,
-three pairs of gladiators only were shown, but in the three that
-followed the number of pairs rose in order to twenty-two, twenty-five,
-and sixty. By the time of Sulla politicians had found in the _munera_
-the most effective means to win the favor of the people, and vied with
-one another in the frequency of the shows and the number of the
-combatants. Besides this, the same politicians made these shows a
-pretext for surrounding themselves with bands of bravos and bullies,
-all called gladiators whether destined for the arena or not, with
-which they started riots in the streets, broke up public meetings,
-overawed the courts and even directed or prevented the elections.
-Caesar's preparations for an exhibition when he was canvassing for the
-aedileship (65 B.C.) caused such general fear that the senate passed a
-law limiting the number of gladiators that a private citizen might
-employ, and he was allowed to exhibit only 320 pairs. The bands of
-Clodius and Milo made the city a slaughterhouse in 53 B.C., and order
-was not restored until late in the following year when Pompey as "sole
-consul" put an end to the battle of the bludgeons with the swords of
-his soldiers. During the Empire the number actually exhibited almost
-surpasses belief. Augustus gave eight _munera_, in which no less than
-ten thousand men fought, but these were distributed through the whole
-period of his reign. Trajan exhibited as many in four months only of
-the year 107 A.D., in celebration of his conquest of the Dacians. The
-first Gordian, emperor in 238 A.D., gave _munera_ monthly in the year
-of his aedileship, the number of pairs running from 150 to 500. These
-exhibitions did not cease until the fifteenth century of our era.
-
-347. Sources of Supply.--In the early Republic the gladiators were
-captives taken in war, naturally men practiced in the use of weapons
-(section 161), who thought death by the sword a happier fate than the
-slavery that awaited them (section 140). This always remained the
-chief source of supply, though it became inadequate as the demand
-increased. From the time of Sulla training-schools were established in
-which slaves with or without previous experience in war were fitted
-for the profession. These were naturally slaves of the most
-intractable and desperate character (section 170). From the time of
-Augustus criminals were sentenced to the arena (later "to the lions"),
-but only non-citizens, and these for the most heinous crimes, treason,
-murder, arson, and the like. Finally in the late Empire the arena
-became the last desperate resort of the dissipated and prodigal, and
-these volunteers were numerous enough to be given as a class the name
-_auctorati_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 154. HELMETS OF GLADIATORS]
-
-348. As the number of the exhibitions increased it became harder and
-harder to supply the gladiators demanded, for it must be remembered
-that there were exhibitions in many of the cities of the provinces and
-in the smaller towns of Italy as well as at Rome. The lines were,
-therefore, constantly crossed, and thousands died miserably in the
-arena whom only the most glaring injustice could number in the classes
-mentioned above. In Cicero's time provincial governors were accused of
-sending unoffending provincials to be slaughtered in Rome and of
-forcing Roman citizens, obscure and friendless, of course, to fight in
-the provincial shows. Later it was common enough to send to the arena
-men sentenced for the pettiest offenses, when the supply of real
-criminals had run short, and to trump up charges against the innocent
-for the same purpose. The persecution of the Christians was largely
-due to the demand for more gladiators. So, too, the distinction was
-lost between actual prisoners of war and peaceful non-combatants;
-after the fall of Jerusalem all Jews over seventeen years of age were
-condemned by Titus to work in the mines or fight in the arena. Wars on
-the border were waged for the sole purpose of taking men who could be
-made gladiators, and in default of men, children and women were
-sometimes made to fight.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 155. SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS AT POMPEII]
-
-349. Schools for Gladiators.--The training-schools for gladiators
-(_ludi gladiatorii_) have been mentioned already. Cicero during his
-consulship speaks of one at Rome, and there were others before his
-time at Capua and Praeneste. Some of these were set up by wealthy
-nobles for the purpose of preparing their own gladiators for _munera_
-which they expected to give; others were the property of regular
-dealers in gladiators, who kept and trained them for hire. The
-business was almost as disreputable as that of the _lenones_ (section
-139). During the Empire training-schools were maintained at public
-expense and under the direction of state officials not only in Rome,
-where there were four at least of these schools, but also in other
-cities of Italy where exhibitions were frequently given, and even in
-the provinces. The purpose of all the schools, public and private
-alike, was the same, to make the men trained in them as effective
-fighting machines as possible. The gladiators were in charge of
-competent training masters (_lanistae_); they were subject to the
-strictest discipline; their diet was carefully looked after, a special
-food (_sagina gladiatoria_) being provided for them; regular gymnastic
-exercises were prescribed, and lessons given in the use of the various
-weapons by recognized experts (_magistri_, _doctores_). In their
-fencing bouts wooden swords (_rudes_) were used. The gladiators
-associated in a school were collectively called a _familia_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 156. PLAN OF SCHOOL FOR GLADIATORS]
-
-350. These schools had also to serve as barracks for the gladiators
-between engagements, that is, practically as houses of detention. It
-was from the school of Lentulus at Capua that Spartacus had escaped,
-and the Romans needed no second lesson of the sort. The general
-arrangement of these barracks may be understood from the ruins of one
-uncovered at Pompeii, though in this case the buildings had been
-originally planned for another purpose, and the rearrangement may not
-be ideal in all respects. A central court, or exercise ground (Figs.
-155, 156) is surrounded by a wide colonnade, and this in turn by rows
-of buildings two stories in height, the general arrangement being not
-unlike that of the peristyle of a house (section 202). The dimensions
-of the court are nearly 120 by 150 feet. The buildings are cut up into
-rooms, nearly all small (about twelve feet square), disconnected and
-opening upon the court, those in the first story being reached from
-the colonnade, those in the second from a gallery to which ran several
-stairways. These small rooms are supposed to be the sleeping-rooms of
-the gladiators, each accommodating two persons. There are seventy-one
-of them (marked _7_ on the plan), affording room for 142 men. The uses
-of the larger rooms are purely conjectural. The entrance is supposed
-to have been at _3_, with a room, _15_, for the watchman or sentinel.
-At _9_ was an _exedra_, where the gladiators may have waited in full
-panoply for their turns in the exercise ground, _1_. The guard-room,
-_8_, is identified by the remains of stocks, in which the refractory
-were fastened for punishment or safe-keeping. They permitted the
-culprits to lie on their backs or sit in a very uncomfortable
-position. At _6_ was the armory or property room, if we may judge from
-articles found in it. Near it in the corner was a staircase leading to
-the gallery before the rooms of the second story. The large room,
-_16_, was the mess-room, with the kitchen, _12_, opening into it. The
-stairway, _13_, gives access to the rooms above kitchen and mess-room,
-possibly the apartments of the trainers and their helpers.
-
-351. Places of Exhibition.--During the Republic the combats of
-gladiators took place sometimes at the grave or in the circus, but
-regularly in the forum. None of these places was well adapted to the
-purpose, the grave the least of all. The circus had seats enough, but
-the _spina_ was in the way (section 335) and the arena too vast to
-give all the spectators a satisfactory view of a struggle that was
-confined practically to a single spot. In the forum, on the other
-hand, the seats could be arranged very conveniently; they would run
-parallel with the sides, would be curved around the corners, and would
-inclose only sufficient space to afford room for the combatants. The
-inconvenience here was due to the fact that the seats had to be
-erected before each performance and removed after it, a delay to
-business if they were constructed carefully and a menace to life if
-they were put up hastily. These considerations finally led the Romans,
-as they had led the Campanians half a century before, to provide
-permanent seats for the _munera_, arranged as they had been in the
-forum, but in a place where they would not interfere with public or
-private business. To these places for shows of gladiators came in the
-course of time to be exclusively applied the word _amphitheatrum_,
-which had been previously given in its correct general sense to any
-place, the circus for example, in which the seats ran all the way
-around, as opposed to the theater in which the rows of seats were
-broken by the stage.
-
-352. Amphitheaters at Rome.--Just when the first amphitheaters, in the
-special sense of the word, were erected at Rome can not be determined
-with certainty. The elder Pliny (died 79 A.D.) tells us that in the
-year 55 B.C. Caius Scribonius Curio built two wooden theaters back to
-back, the stages being, therefore, at opposite ends, and gave in them
-simultaneous theatrical performances in the morning. Then, while the
-spectators remained in their seats, the two theaters were turned by
-machinery and brought together face to face, the stages were removed,
-and in the space they had occupied shows of gladiators were given in
-the afternoon before the united crowds. This story is all too
-evidently invented to account for the perfected amphitheater of
-Pliny's time, which he must have interpreted to mean "a double
-theater." We are also told that Caesar erected a wooden amphitheater
-in 46 B.C., but we have no detailed description of it, and no reason
-to think that it was anything more than a temporary affair. In the
-year 29 B.C., however, an amphitheater was built by Statilius Taurus,
-partially at least of stone, that lasted until the great conflagration
-in the reign of Nero (64 A.D.). Nero himself had previously erected
-one of wood in the Campus. Finally, just before the end of the first
-century of our era, was completed the _amphitheatrum Flavium_, later
-known as the _colosseum_ or _coliseum_, which was large enough and
-durable enough to make forever unnecessary the erection of other
-similar structures in the city.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 157. EXTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 158. INTERIOR OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 159. SECTION OF AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-353. The Amphitheater at Pompeii.--The essential features of an
-amphitheater may be most easily understood from the ruins of the one
-at Pompeii, erected about 75 B.C., almost half a century before the
-first permanent structure of the sort at Rome (section 352), and the
-earliest known to us from either literary or monumental sources. The
-exterior is shown in Fig. 157 (see also Overbeck, pp. 176-180; Mau-
-Kelsey, pp. 206-212) and a section in Fig. 159. It will be seen at
-once that the arena and most of the seats lie in a great hollow
-excavated for the purpose, thus making sufficient for the exterior a
-low wall of hardly more than ten to thirteen feet in height. Even this
-wall was necessary on only two sides, as the amphitheater was built in
-the southeast corner of the city and its south and east sides were
-bounded by the city walls. The shape is elliptical, the major axis
-being 444 feet, the minor 342. The arena occupies the middle space. It
-was encircled by thirty-five rows of seats arranged in three
-divisions, the lowest (_infima_ or _ima cavea_) having five rows, the
-second (_media cavea_) twelve, and the highest (_summa cavea_)
-eighteen. A broad terrace ran around the amphitheater at the height of
-the topmost row of seats. Access to this terrace was given from
-without by the double stairway on the west, shown in Fig. 157, and by
-single stairways next the city walls on the east and south (_10_ in
-Fig. 160). Between the terrace and the top seats was a gallery, or row
-of boxes, each about four feet square, probably for women. Beneath the
-boxes persons could pass from the terrace to the seats. The
-amphitheater had seating capacity for about 20,000 people.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 160. PLAN OF ARENA IN AMPHITHEATER AT POMPEII]
-
-354. The arena is shown in Fig. 158, its plan in Fig. 160. It was an
-ellipse with axes of 228 and 121 feet. Around it ran a wall a little
-more than six feet high, on a level with the top of which were the
-lowest seats. For the protection of the spectators when wild animals
-were shown, a grating of iron bars was put up on the top of the arena
-wall. Access to the arena and to the seats of the _cavea ima_ and the
-_cavea media_ was given by the two underground passageways, _1_ and
-_2_ in Fig. 160, of which _2_ turns at right angles on account of the
-city wall on the south. From the arena ran also a third passage, _5_,
-low and narrow, leading to the _porta Libitinensis_, through which the
-bodies of the dead were dragged with ropes and hooks. Near the mouths
-of these passages were small chambers or dens, marked _4_, _4_, _6_,
-the purposes of which are not known. The floor of the arena was
-covered with sand, as in the circus (section 332), but in this case to
-soak up the blood as well as to give a firm footing to the gladiators.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 161. BISELLIUM]
-
-355. Of the part of this amphitheater set aside for the spectators the
-_cavea ima_ only was supported upon artificial foundations. All the
-other seats were constructed in sections as means were obtained for
-the purpose, the people in the meantime finding places for themselves
-on the sloping banks as in the early theaters (section 325). The
-_cavea ima_ was strictly not supplied with seats all the way around, a
-considerable section on the east and west sides being arranged with
-four low, broad ledges of stone, rising one above the other, on which
-the members of the city council could place the seats of honor
-(_bisellia_, Fig. 161) to which their rank entitled them. In the
-middle of the section on the east the lowest ledge is made of double
-width for some ten feet; this was the place set apart for the giver of
-the games and his friends. In the _cavea media_ and the _cavea summa_
-the seats were of stone resting on the bank of earth. It is probable
-that all the places in the lowest section were reserved for people of
-distinction, that seats in the middle section were sold to the
-well-to-do, and that admission was free to the less desirable seats of
-the highest section.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 162. EXTERIOR OF THE COLISEUM]
-
-356. The Coliseum.--The Flavian amphitheater (section 352) is the best
-known of all the buildings of ancient Rome, because to a larger extent
-than others it has survived to the present day. For our purpose it is
-not necessary to give its history or to describe its architecture; it
-will be sufficient to compare its essential parts with those of its
-modest prototype in Pompeii. The latter was built in the outskirts of
-the city, in a corner in fact of the city walls (section 353); the
-coliseum lay almost in the center of Rome, the most generally
-accessible of all the public buildings. The interior of the Pompeian
-structure was reached through two passages and by three stairways
-only, while eighty numbered entrances made it easy for the Roman
-multitudes to find their appropriate places in the coliseum. Much of
-the earlier amphitheater was underground; all of the corresponding
-parts of the coliseum were above the level of the street, the walls
-rising to a height of nearly 160 feet. This gave opportunity for the
-same architectural magnificence that had distinguished the Roman
-theater from that of the Greeks (section 326). The general effect is
-shown in Fig. 162, an exterior view of the ruins as they exist to-day.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 163. INTERIOR OF COLISEUM]
-
-357. The interior is shown in Fig. 163. The form is an ellipse with
-axes of 620 and 513 feet, the building covering nearly six acres of
-ground. The arena is also an ellipse, its axes measuring 287 and 180
-feet. The width of the space appropriated for the spectators is,
-therefore, 166-1/2 feet all around the arena. It will be noticed, too,
-that subterranean chambers were constructed under the whole building,
-including the arena. These furnished room for the regiments of
-gladiators, the dens of wild beasts, the machinery for the
-transformation scenes that Gibbon has described in his twelfth
-chapter, and above all for the vast number of water and drainage pipes
-that made it possible to turn the arena into a lake at a moment's
-notice and as quickly to get rid of the water. The wall that
-surrounded the arena was fifteen feet high with the side faced with
-rollers and defended like the one at Pompeii with a grating or network
-of metal above it. The top of the wall was level with the floor of the
-lowest range of seats, called the _podium_ as in the circus (section
-337), and this had room for two or at the most three rows of marble
-thrones. These were for the use of the emperor and the imperial
-family, the giver of the games, the magistrates, senators, Vestal
-virgins, ambassadors of foreign states, and other persons of
-consequence.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 164. SECTION OF COLISEUM]
-
-358. The arrangement of the seats with the method of reaching them is
-shown in the sectional plan, Fig. 164. The seats were arranged in
-three tiers (_maeniana_, section 337) one above the other, separated
-by broad passageways and rising more steeply the farther they were
-from the arena, and were crowned by an open gallery. In the plan the
-_podium_ is marked A. Twelve feet above it begins the first
-_maenianum_, B, with fourteen rows of seats reserved for members of
-the equestrian order. Then came a broad _praecinctio_ (section 327)
-and after it the second _maenianum_, C, intended for ordinary
-citizens. Back of this was a wall of considerable height and above it
-the third _maenianum_, D, supplied with rough wooden benches for the
-lowest classes, foreigners, slaves, and the like. The row of pillars
-along the front of this section made the distant view all the worse.
-Above this was an open gallery, E, in which women found an unwelcome
-place. No other seats were open to them unless they were of sufficient
-distinction to claim a place upon the _podium_. At the very top of the
-outside wall was a terrace, F, in which were fixed masts to support
-the awnings that gave protection against the sun. The seating capacity
-of the coliseum is said to have been 80,000, and it had standing room
-for 20,000 more.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 165. RETIARIUS AND SECUTOR]
-
-359. Styles of Fighting.--Gladiators fought usually in pairs, man
-against man, but sometimes in masses (_gregatim_, _catervatim_). In
-early times they were actually soldiers, captives taken in war
-(section 347), and fought naturally with the weapons and equipment to
-which they were accustomed. When the professionally trained gladiators
-came in, they were given the old names, and were called Samnites,
-Thracians, etc., according to their arms and tactics. In much later
-times victories over distant peoples were celebrated with combats in
-which the weapons and methods of war of the conquered were shown to
-the people of Rome; thus, after the conquest of Britain _essedarii_
-exhibited in the arena the tactics of chariot fighting which Caesar
-had described generations before in his Commentaries. It was natural
-enough, too, for the people to want to see different arms and
-different tactics tried against each other, and so the Samnite was
-matched against the Thracian, the heavy armed against the light armed.
-This became under the Empire the favorite style of combat. Finally
-when people had tired of the regular shows, novelties were introduced
-that seem to us grotesque; men fought blindfold (_andabatae_), armed
-with two swords (_dimachaeri_), with the lasso (_laqueatores_), with a
-heavy net (_retiarii_), and there were battles of dwarfs and of dwarfs
-with women. Of these the _retiarius_ became immensely popular. He
-carried a huge net in which he tried to entangle his opponent, always
-a _secutor_ (see below), despatching him with a dagger if the throw
-was successful. If unsuccessful he took to flight while preparing his
-net for another throw, of if he had lost his net tried to keep his
-opponent off with a heavy three-pronged spear (_fuscina_), his only
-weapon beside the dagger (Fig. 165).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 166. THRAEX]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 167. VOTIVE GALERUS]
-
-360. Weapons and Armor.--The armor and weapons used in these combats
-are known from pieces found in various places, some of which are shown
-in Fig. 152, section 345, and from paintings and sculpture, but we are
-not always able to assign them to definite classes of gladiators. The
-oldest class was that of the Samnites (Fig. 151, section 344). They
-had belts, thick sleeves on the right arm (_manica_), helmets with
-visors, shown in Fig. 154, section 348, greaves on the left leg, short
-swords, and the long shield (_scutum_). Under the Empire the name
-Samnite was gradually lost and gladiators with equivalent equipment
-were called _hoplomachi_ (heavy armed), when matched against the
-lighter armed Thracians, and _secutores_, when they fought with the
-_retiarii_. The Thracians (Fig. 166) had much the same equipment as
-the Samnites, the mark of distinction being the small shield (_parma_)
-in place of the _scutum_ and, to make up the difference, greaves on
-both legs. They carried a curved sword. The Gauls were heavy armed,
-but we do not know how they were distinguished from the Samnites. In
-later times they were called _murmillones_, from an ornament on their
-helmets shaped like a fish (_mormyr_). The retiarii had no defensive
-armor except a leather protection for the shoulder, shown in Fig. 165.
-Of course the same man might appear by turns as Samnite, Thracian,
-etc., if he was skilled in the use of the various weapons; see the
-inscription in section 363.
-
-361. Announcement of the Shows.--The games were advertised in advance
-by means of notices painted on the walls of public and private houses,
-and even on the tombstones that lined the approaches to the towns and
-cities. Some are worded in very general terms, announcing merely the
-name of the giver of the games with the date:
-
- A . SVETTI . CERTI
- AEDILIS . FAMILIA . GLADIATORIA . PUGNAB . POMPEIS
- PR . K . JVNIAS . VENATIO . ET . VELA . ERUNT[4]
-
-[Footnote 4: "On the last day of May the gladiators of the Aedile
-Aulus Suettius Certus will fight at Pompeii. There will also be a hunt
-and the awnings will be used."]
-
-Others promise in addition to the awnings that the dust will be kept
-down in the arena by sprinkling. Sometimes when the troop was
-particularly good the names of the gladiators were announced in pairs
-as they would be matched together, with details as to their equipment,
-the school in which each had been trained, the number of his previous
-battles, etc. To such a notice on one of the walls in Pompeii some one
-added after the show the result of each combat. The following is a
-specimen only of this announcement:
-
- MVNUS . N... . IV . III
- PRID . IDUS . IDIBUS . MAIS
- T M O T
- _v._ PUGNAX . NER . III _v._ CYCNVS . IVL . VIII
- _p._ MVRRANVS . NER . III _m._ ATTICVS . IVL . XIV[5]
-
-[Footnote 5: "The games of N... from the 12th to the 15th of May. The
-Thracian Pugnax, of the gladiatorial school of Nero, who has fought
-three times will be matched against the _murmillo_ Murranus, of the
-same school and the same number of fights. The _hoplomachus_ Cycnus,
-from the school of Julius Caesar, who has fought eight times will be
-matched with the Thracian Atticus of the same school and of fourteen
-fights."]
-
-The letters in italics before the names of the gladiators were added
-after the exhibition by some interested spectator, and stand for
-_vicit_, _periit_, and _missus_ ("beaten, but spared"). Other
-announcements added to such particulars as those given above the
-statement that other pairs than those mentioned would fight each day,
-this being meant to excite the curiosity and interest of the people.
-
-362. The Fight Itself.--The day before the exhibition a banquet (_cena
-libera_) was given to the gladiators and they received visits from
-their friends and admirers. The games took place in the afternoon.
-After the _editor muneris_ had taken his place (section 355), the
-gladiators marched in procession around the arena, pausing before him
-to give the famous greeting: _morituri te salutant_. All then retired
-from the arena to return in pairs according to the published
-programme. The show began with a series of sham combats, the
-_prolusio_, with blunt weapons. When the people had had enough of this
-the trumpets gave the signal for the real exhibition to begin. Those
-reluctant to fight were driven into the arena with whips or hot iron
-bars. If one of the combatants was clearly overpowered without being
-actually killed, he might appeal for mercy by holding up his finger to
-the _editor_. It was customary to refer the plea to the people, who
-waved cloths or napkins to show that they wished it to be granted, or
-pointed their thumbs downward as a signal for death. The gladiator who
-was refused release (_missio_) received the death blow from his
-opponent without resistance. Combats where all must fight to the death
-were said to be _sine missione_, but these were forbidden by Augustus.
-The body of the dead man was dragged away through the _porta
-Libitinensis_, sand was sprinkled or raked over the blood, and the
-contests were continued until all had fought.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 168. TESSERA GLADIATORIA][6]
-
-[Footnote 6: _Lepidus Mummeiani s(ervus). Spectavit m(ense) Iunio, C.
-Sentio Consule._]
-
- D . M . ET . MEMORIAE
- AETERNAE . HYLATIS
- DYMACHAERO . SIVE
- ASSIDARIO . P . VII . RV . I
- ERMAIS . CONIVX
- CONIVGI . KARISSIMO
- P . C . ET . S . AS . D[7]
-
-[Footnote 7: Inscription on tomb of a gladiator. "To the Gods Manes
-and the lasting memory of Hylas, a dimachaerus or essedarius of seven
-victories and head trainer. His wife Ermais erected this monument to
-her beloved husband and dedicated it, reserving the usual rights."]
-
-363. The Rewards.--Before making his first public appearance the
-gladiator was technically called a _tiro_. After his first victory he
-received a token of wood or ivory (Fig. 168), which had upon it his
-name and that of his master or trainer, a date, and the letters SP,
-SPECT, SPECTAT, or SPECTAVIT, meaning perhaps _populus spectavit_.
-When after many victories he had proved himself to be the best of his
-class, or second best, in his _familia_, he received the title of
-_primus_, or _secundus_, _palus_. When he had won his freedom he was
-given a wooden sword (_rudis_). From this the titles _prima rudis_ and
-_secunda rudis_ seem to have been given to those who were afterwards
-employed as training masters (_doctores_, section 349) in the schools.
-The rewards given to famous gladiators by their masters and backers
-took the form of valuable prizes and gifts of money. These may not
-have been so generous as those given to the _aurigae_ (section 341),
-but they were enough to enable them to live in luxury the rest of
-their lives. The class of men, however, who followed this profession
-probably found their most acceptable reward in the immediate and
-lasting notoriety that their strength and courage brought them. That
-they did not shrink from the _infamia_ that the profession entailed is
-shown by the fact that they did not try to hide their connection with
-the amphitheater. On the contrary, their gravestones record their
-classes and the number of their victories, and have often cut upon
-them their likenesses with the _rudis_ in their hands.
-
-364. Other Shows in the Amphitheater.--Of other games that were
-sometimes given in the amphitheaters something has been said in
-connection with the circus (section 343). The most important were the
-_venationes_, hunts of wild beasts. These were sometimes killed by men
-trained to hunt them, sometimes made to kill each other. As the
-amphitheater was primarily intended for the butchery of men, the
-_venationes_ given in it gradually but surely took the form of
-man-hunts. The victims were condemned criminals, some of them guilty
-of crimes that deserved death, some of them sentenced on trumped up
-charges, some of them (and among these were women and children)
-condemned "to the lions" for political or religious convictions.
-Sometimes they were supplied with weapons, sometimes they were exposed
-unarmed, even fettered or bound to stakes, sometimes the ingenuity of
-their executioners found additional torments for them by making them
-play the parts of the sufferers in the tragedies of mythology. The
-arena was well adapted, too, for the maneuvering of boats, when it had
-been flooded with water (section 357), and naval battles
-(_naumachiae_) were often fought within the coliseum as desperate and
-as bloody as some of those that have given a new turn to the history
-of the world. The earliest exhibitions of this sort were given in
-artificial lakes, also called _naumachiae_. The first of these was dug
-by Caesar, for a single exhibition, in 46 B.C. Augustus had a
-permanent basin constructed in 2 B.C., measuring 1,800 by 1,200 feet,
-and four others at least were built by later emperors.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 169. HALL IN THERMAE OF CARACALLA]
-
-365. The Daily Bath.--To the Roman of early times the bath had stood
-for health and decency only. He washed every day his arms and legs,
-for the ordinary costume left them exposed (section 239), his body
-once a week. He bathed at home, using a very primitive sort of wash-
-room, situated near the kitchen (section 203) in order that the water
-heated on the kitchen stove might be carried into it with the least
-possible inconvenience. By the last century of the Republic all this
-had changed, though the steps in the change can not now be followed.
-The bath had become a part of the daily life as momentous as the
-_cena_ itself, which it regularly preceded. It was taken, too, by
-preference in one of the public bathing establishments which were by
-this time operated on a large scale in all parts of Rome and also in
-the smaller towns of Italy and even in the provinces. These offered
-all sorts of baths, plain, plunge, douche, with massage (Turkish), and
-besides in many cases features borrowed from the Greek gymnasia,
-exercise grounds, courts for various games, reading and conversation
-rooms, libraries, gymnastic apparatus, everything in fact that our
-athletic clubs now provide for their members. The accessories had
-become really of more importance than the bathing itself and justify
-the description of the bath under the head of amusements. In places
-where there were no public baths, or where they were at an
-inconvenient distance, the wealthy fitted up bathing places in their
-houses, but no matter how elaborate they were the private baths were
-merely a makeshift at best.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 170. TEPIDARIUM AT POMPEII]
-
-366. Essentials for the Bath.--The ruins of the public and private
-baths found all over the Roman world, together with a dissertation by
-Vitruvius, and countless allusions in literature, make very clear the
-general construction and arrangement of the bath, but show that the
-widest freedom was allowed in matters of detail. For the luxurious
-bath of classical times four things were thought necessary: a warm
-ante-room, a hot bath, a cold bath, and the rubbing and anointing with
-oil. All these might have been had in a single room, as all but the
-last are furnished in every modern bathroom, but as a matter of fact
-we find at least three rooms set apart for the bath in very modest
-private houses and often five or six, while in the public
-establishments this number may be multiplied several times. In the
-better equipped houses were provided: (1) A room for undressing and
-dressing (_apodyterium_), usually unheated, but furnished with benches
-and often with lockers for the clothes; (2) the warm ante-room
-(_tepidarium_), in which the bather waited long enough for the
-perspiration to start, in order to guard against the danger of passing
-too suddenly into the high temperature of the next room; (3) the hot
-room (_caldarium_) for the hot bath; (4) the cold room (_frigidarium_)
-for the cold bath; (5) the _unctorium_, the room for the rubbing and
-anointing with oil that finished the bath, from which the bather
-returned into the _apodyterium_ for his clothes.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 171. STRIGILES]
-
-367. In the more modest houses space was saved by using a room for
-several purposes. The separate _apodyterium_ might be dispensed with,
-the bather undressing and dressing in either the _frigidarium_ or
-_tepidarium_ according to the weather; or the _unctorium_ might be
-saved by using the _tepidarium_ for this purpose as well as for its
-own. In this way the suite of five rooms might be reduced to four or
-three. On the other hand, private houses had sometimes an additional
-hot room without water (_laconicum_), used for a sweat bath, and a
-public bathhouse would be almost sure to have an exercise ground
-(_palaestra_), with a pool at one side (_piscina_) for a cold plunge
-and a room adjacent (_destrictarium_) in which the sweat and dirt of
-exercise were scraped off with the _strigilis_ (Fig. 171) before and
-after the bath. It must not be supposed that all bathers went the
-round of all the rooms in the order given above, though that was
-common enough. Some would dispense with the hot bath altogether,
-taking instead a sweat in the _laconicum_, or failing that, in the
-_caldarium_, removing the perspiration with the strigil, following
-this with a cold bath (perhaps merely a shower or douche) in the
-_frigidarium_ and the rubbing with linen cloths and anointing with
-oil. Young men who deserted the campus and the Tiber (section 317) for
-the _palaestra_ and the bath would content themselves with removing
-the effects of their exercise with the scraper, taking a plunge in the
-open pool, and then a second scraping and the oil. Much would depend
-on the time and the tastes of individuals, and physicians laid down
-strict rules for their patients to follow.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 172. SUSPENSURA]
-
-368. Heating the Bath.--The arrangement of the rooms, were they many
-or few, depended upon the method of heating. This in early times must
-have been by stoves placed in the rooms as needed, but by the end of
-the Republic the furnace had come into use, heating the rooms as well
-as the water with a single fire. The hot air from the furnace was not
-conducted into the rooms directly, as it is with us, but was made to
-circulate under the floors and through spaces between the walls, the
-temperature of the room depending upon its proximity to the furnace.
-The _laconicum_, if there was one, was put directly over the furnace,
-next to it came the _caldarium_ and then the _tepidarium_, while the
-_frigidarium_ and the _apodyterium_ having no need of heat were at the
-greatest distance from the fire and without connection with it. If
-there were two sets of baths in the same building, as there sometimes
-were for the accommodation of both men and women at the same time, the
-two _caldaria_ were put on opposite sides of the furnace (see the plan
-in section 376) and the other rooms were connected with them in the
-regular order, the two entrances being at the greatest distance apart.
-The method of conducting the air under the floors is shown in Fig.
-172. There were really two floors, the first being even with the top
-of the firepot, the second (_suspensura_) with the top of the furnace.
-Between them was a space of about two feet into which the hot air
-passed. On the top of the furnace, just above the level, therefore, of
-the second floor, were two kettles for heating the water. One was
-placed well back, where the fire was not so hot, and contained water
-that was kept merely warm; the other was placed directly over the fire
-and the water in it, received from the former, was easily kept
-intensely hot. Near them was a third kettle containing cold water.
-From these three kettles the water was piped as needed to the various
-rooms. The arrangement will be easily understood after a study of the
-plans in sections 376, 378.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 173. SECTION OF CALDARIUM]
-
-369. The Caldarium.--The hot water bath was taken in the _caldarium_
-(_cella caldaria_), which served also as a sweat bath when there was
-no _laconicum_. It was a rectangular room and in the public baths was
-longer than wide (Vitruvius says the proportion should be 3:2) with
-one end rounded off like an apse or bay window. At the other end stood
-the large hot water tank (_alveus_), in which the bath was taken by a
-number of persons at a time. The _alveus_ (Fig. 173) was built up two
-steps from the floor of the room, its length equal to the width of the
-room and its breadth at the top not less than six feet. At the bottom
-it was not nearly so wide, the back sloping inward, so that the
-bathers could recline against it, and the front having a long broad
-step, for convenience of descent into it, upon which, too, the bathers
-sat. The water was received hot from the furnace, and was kept hot by
-a metal heater (_testudo_), opening into the _alveus_ and extending
-beneath the floor into the hot air chamber. Near the top of the tank
-was an overflow pipe, and in the bottom was an escape pipe which
-allowed the water to be emptied on the floor of the _caldarium_, to be
-used for scrubbing it. In the apse-like end of the room was a tank or
-large basin of metal (_labrum_, _solium_), which seems to have
-contained cool water for the douche. In private baths the room was
-usually rectangular and then the _labrum_ was placed in a corner. For
-the accommodation of those using the room for the sweat bath only,
-there were benches along the wall. The air in the _caldarium_ would,
-of course, be very moist, while that of the _laconicum_ would be
-perfectly dry, so that the effect would not be precisely the same.
-
-370. The Frigidarium and Unctorium.--The _frigidarium_ (_cella
-frigidaria_) contained merely the cold plunge bath, unless it was made
-to do duty for the _apodyterium_, when there would be lockers on the
-wall for the clothes (at least in a public bath) and benches for the
-slaves who watched them. Persons who found the bath too cold would
-resort instead to the open swimming pool in the _palaestra_, which
-would be warmed by the sun. In one of the public baths at Pompeii a
-cold bath seems to have been introduced into the _tepidarium_, for the
-benefit, probably, of invalids who found even the _palaestra_ too cool
-for comfort. The final process, that of scraping, rubbing, and oiling,
-was exceedingly important. The bather was often treated twice, before
-the warm bath and after the cold bath; the first might be omitted, but
-the second never. The special room, _unctorium_, was furnished with
-benches and couches. The scrapers and oils were brought by the
-bathers, usually carried along with the towels for the bath by a slave
-(_capsarius_). The bather might scrape (_destringere_) and oil
-(_deungere_) himself, or he might receive a regular massage at the
-hands of a trained slave. It is probable that in the large baths
-expert operators could be hired, but we have no direct testimony on
-the subject. When there was no special _unctorium_ the _tepidarium_ or
-_apodyterium_ was made to do instead.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 174. BATH AT CAERWENT]
-
-371. A Private Bathhouse.--In Fig. 174 is shown the plan of a private
-bath in Caerwent, Monmouthshire, England, the ruins of which were
-discovered in the year 1855. It dates from about the time of
-Constantine (306-333), and small though it is gives a clear notion of
-the arrangement of the rooms. The entrance _A_ leads into the
-_frigidarium B_, 10'6" x 6'6" in size, with a bath _C_, 10'6" x 3'3".
-Off this is the _apodyterium D_, 10'6" x 13'3", which has the
-apse-like end that the _caldarium_ ought to have. Next is the
-_tepidarium E_, 12' x 12', which contrary to all the rules is the
-largest instead of the smallest of the four main rooms. Then comes the
-_caldarium F_, 12' x 7'6", with its _alveus G_, 6' x 3' x 2', but with
-no sign of its _labrum_ left, perhaps because the basin was too small
-to require any special foundation. Finally comes the rare _laconicum
-H_, 8' x 4', built over one end of the furnace _I_, which was in the
-basement room _KK_. The hot air passed as indicated by the arrows,
-escaping through openings near the roof in the outside wall of the
-_apodyterium_. It should be noticed that there was no direct passage
-from the _caldarium_ to the _frigidarium_, no special entrance to the
-_laconicum_, and that the _tepidarium_ must have served as the
-_unctorium_. The dimensions of the bath as a whole are 31 x 34 feet.
-
-372. The Public Baths.--To the simpler bathhouse of the earlier times
-as well as to the bath itself was given the name _balneum_
-(_balineum_), used often in the plural, _balnea_, by the dactylic
-poets for metrical convenience. The more complex establishments of
-later times were called _balneae_, and to the very largest with
-features derived from the Greek gymnasia (section 365) the name
-_thermae_ was finally given. These words, however, were loosely used
-and often interchanged in practice. Public baths are first heard of
-after the second Punic war. They increased in number rapidly, 170 at
-least being operated in Rome in the year 33 B.C., and later there were
-more than 800. With equal rapidity they spread through Italy and the
-provinces, all the towns and many villages even having at least one.
-They were public only in the sense of being open to all citizens who
-could pay the modest fee demanded for their use. Free baths there were
-none, except when some magistrate or public-spirited citizen or
-candidate for office arranged to relieve the people of the fees for a
-definite time by meeting the charges himself. So Agrippa in the year
-33 B.C. kept open free of charge 170 establishments at Rome. The rich
-sometimes provided free baths for the people in their wills, but
-always for a limited time.
-
-373. Management.--The first public baths were opened by individuals
-for speculative purposes. Others were built by wealthy men as gifts to
-their native towns, as such men give hospitals and libraries now, the
-administration being lodged with the town authorities who kept the
-buildings in repair and the baths open with the fees collected. Others
-were built by the towns out of public funds, and others still as
-monuments by the later emperors. However started, the management was
-practically the same for all. They were leased for a definite time and
-for a fixed sum to a manager (_conductor_) who paid his expenses and
-made his profits out of the fees which he collected. The fee
-(_balneaticum_) was hardly more than nominal. The regular price at
-Rome for men seems to have been a _quadrans_, less than a cent, the
-bather furnishing his own towels, oil, etc., as we have seen (section
-370). Women paid more, perhaps twice as much, while children up to a
-certain age, unknown to us, paid nothing. Prices varied, of course, in
-different places. It is likely that higher prices were charged in some
-baths than in others in the same city, either because they were more
-luxuriously equipped or to make them more exclusive and fashionable
-than the rest, but we have no positive knowledge that this was done.
-
-374. Hours Opened.--The bath was regularly taken between the
-_meridiatio_ and _cena_, the hour varying, therefore, within narrow
-limits in different seasons and for different classes (section 310).
-In general it may be said to have been taken about the eighth hour,
-and at this hour all the _conductores_ were bound by their contracts
-to have the baths open and all things in readiness. As a matter of
-fact many people preferred to bathe before the _prandium_ (section
-302), and some at least of the baths in the larger places must have
-been open then. All were regularly kept open until sunset, but in the
-smaller towns, where public baths were fewer, it is probable that they
-were kept open later; at least the lamps found in large numbers in the
-Pompeian baths seem to point at evening hours. It may be taken for
-granted that the managers would keep the doors open as long as was
-profitable for them.
-
-375. Accommodations for Women.--Women of respectability bathed in the
-public baths, as they bathe in public places now, but with women only,
-enjoying the opportunity to meet their friends as much as did the men.
-In the large cities there were separate baths devoted to their
-exclusive use. In the larger towns separate rooms were set apart for
-them in the baths intended generally for men. Such a combination is
-shown in the next paragraph and the arrangement has been explained in
-section 368. In the very small places the bath was opened to men and
-women at different hours. Late in the Empire we read of men and women
-bathing together, but this was true of women only who had no claim to
-respectability at all.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 175. THERMAE AT POMPEII]
-
-376. Thermae.--In Fig. 175 is shown a plan of the so-called Stabian
-baths at Pompeii, which gives a correct idea of the smaller _thermae_
-and serves at the same time to illustrate the combination of baths for
-men and women under the same roof. In the plan the unnumbered rooms
-opening upon the surrounding streets were used for shops and stores
-independent of the baths, those opening within were for the use of the
-attendants or for purposes that can not now be determined. The main
-entrance (_1_), on the south, opened upon the _palaestra_ (_2_),
-surrounded on three sides by colonnades and on the west by a bowling
-alley (_3_), where large stone balls were found. Behind the bowling
-alley was the _piscina_ (_6_) open to the sun, with a room on either
-side (_5_, _7_) for douche baths and a _destrictarium_ (_4_) for the
-use of the athletes. There were two side entrances (_8_, _11_) at the
-northwest, with the porter's room (_12_) and manager's office (_10_)
-within convenient reach. The room (_9_) at the head of the bowling
-alley was for the use of the players and may be compared with the
-similar room for the use of the gladiators marked _9_ in Fig. 156
-(section 350). Behind the office was the _latrina_ (_14_).
-
-377. On the east are the baths proper, the men's to the south. There
-were two _apodyteria_ (_24_, _25_) for the men, each with a separate
-waiting-room for the slaves (_26_, _27_) with a door to the street.
-Then come in order the _frigidarium_ (_22_), the _tepidarium_ (_23_),
-and the _caldarium_ (_21_). The _tepidarium_, contrary to custom, had
-a cold bath as explained in section 370. The main entrance to the
-women's bath was at the northeast (_17_), but there was also an
-entrance from the northwest through the long corridor (_15_), both
-opening into the _apodyterium_ (_16_). This contained in one corner a
-cold bath, there being no separate _frigidarium_ in the baths for
-women. Then come in the regular position the _tepidarium_ (_18_) and
-_caldarium_ (_19_). The furnace (_20_) was between the two _caldaria_,
-and the position of the three kettles (section 368) which furnished
-the water is clearly shown. It should be noticed that there was no
-_laconicum_. It is possible that one of the waiting-rooms for men
-(_24_) may have been used as an _unctorium_. The ruins show that the
-rooms were most artistically decorated and there can be no doubt that
-they were luxuriously furnished. The colonnades and the large waiting-
-rooms gave ample space for the lounge after the bath, which the Roman
-prized so highly.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 176. BATHS OF DIOCLETIAN]
-
-378. Baths of Diocletian.--The irregularity of plan and the waste of
-space in the Pompeian _thermae_ just described are due to the fact
-that it was rebuilt at various times with all sorts of alterations and
-additions. Nothing can be more symmetrical than the _thermae_ of the
-later emperors, as a type of which is shown in Fig. 176 the plan of
-the Baths of Diocletian, dedicated in 305 A.D. They lay on the east
-side of the city and were the largest and with the exception of those
-of Caracalla the most magnificent of the Roman baths. The plan shows
-the arrangement of the main rooms, all in the line of the minor axis
-of the building; the uncovered _piscina_ (1), the _apodyterium_ and
-_frigidarium_ (2), combined as in the women's baths at Pompeii, the
-_tepidarium_ (3), and the _caldarium_ (4) projecting beyond the other
-rooms for the sake of the sunshine. The uses of the surrounding halls
-and courts can not now be determined, but it is clear from the plan
-that nothing was omitted known to the luxury of the time. An idea of
-the magnificence of the central room may be had from Fig. 169 (section
-365), showing the corresponding room in the Baths of Caracalla.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TRAVEL AND CORRESPONDENCE. BOOKS
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 469-474, 731-738, 799-833; Voigt, 359 f.; Goll,
-II, 418-462, III, 1-45; Guhl and Koner, 538-544, 766 f., 783 f.;
-Friedlander, II, 36-291; Ramsay, 76-78, 512-516; Pauly-Wissowa,
-_carpentum_, _cisium_, _charta_, _Brief_, _Buch_, _Buchhandlung_,
-_Bibliotheken_; Smith, Harper, Rich, Lubker, _viae_, _tabulae_,
-_liber_, _bibliotheca_, and other Latin words in text; Baumeister,
-2079 f., 354, 361-364; Blumner, I, 308-327; Johnston, Latin
-Manuscripts, 13-21, 27-34, 36.
-
-
-379. For our knowledge of the means of traveling employed by the
-Romans we have to rely upon indirect sources (section 12), because if
-any volumes of travel were ever written they have not come down to us.
-We know, however, that while no distance was too great to be
-traversed, no hardships too severe to be surmounted, for the sake of
-fame or fortune, the Roman cared nothing for traveling in itself, for
-the mere pleasure, that is, of sight-seeing. This was partly due to
-his blindness to the charms of nature, more perhaps to his feeling
-that to be out of Rome was to be forgotten. He made once in his life
-the grand tour (section 116), he spent a year abroad in the train of
-some general or governor (section 118), but this done, only the most
-urgent private affairs or public duties could draw him from Italy. And
-Italy was to him only Rome and his country estates (section 145).
-These he visited when the hot months had closed the courts and
-adjourned the senate, roaming restlessly from one to another,
-impatient for his real life to begin again. Even when public or
-private business called him from Rome, he kept in touch with affairs
-by correspondence, expecting his friends to write him voluminous
-letters, ready himself to return the favor when positions should be
-reversed. So, too, the proconsul kept as near to Rome as the
-boundaries of his province would permit; almost all the uprisings in
-farther Gaul were due to Caesar's habit of hurrying off to Italy as
-soon as winter had put an end to active operations in the field.
-
-380. By Water.--The means of travel were the same as our ancestors
-used a century ago. By water the Roman used sailing vessels, rarely
-canal boats; by land vehicles drawn by horses or mules, for short
-distances sedan chairs or litters. There were, however, no
-transportation companies, no lines of boats or vehicles, that is,
-running between certain places and prepared to carry passengers at a
-fixed price on a regular schedule. The traveler by sea whose means did
-not permit him to buy or charter a vessel for his exclusive use had
-therefore to wait at the port until he found a boat going in the
-desired direction and then make such terms as he could for his
-passage. And there were other inconveniences. The boats were small,
-and this made them uncomfortable in rough weather; the lack of the
-compass caused them to follow the coast as much as possible, and this
-often increased the distance; in winter navigation was usually
-suspended. Traveling by water was, therefore, avoided as much as
-possible. Rather than sail to Athens from Ostia or Naples, for
-example, the traveler would go by land to Brundisium, by sea across to
-Dyrrachium, and continue the journey by land. Between Brundisium and
-Dyrrachium boats were constantly passing, and the only delay to be
-feared was that caused by bad weather. The short voyage, only 100
-miles, was usually made within twenty-four hours.
-
-381. By Land.--The Roman who traveled by land was distinctly better
-off than Americans of the time of the Revolution. His inns were not so
-good, it is true, but his vehicles and cattle were fully equal to
-theirs, and his roads were the best that have ever been built.
-Horseback riding was not a recognized mode of traveling (the Romans
-had no saddles), but there were vehicles with two wheels and with
-four, for one horse and for two or more, covered and uncovered. These
-were kept for hire near the gates of all important towns, but the
-price is not known. To save the trouble of loading and unloading the
-baggage it is probable that persons going great distances took their
-own vehicles and merely hired fresh horses from time to time. There
-were, however, no postroutes, and no places where horses were changed
-at the end of regular stages for ordinary travelers, though there were
-such arrangements for couriers and officers of the government,
-especially in the provinces. For short journeys and when haste was not
-necessary travelers would naturally use their own horses as well as
-their own carriages. Of the pomp that often accompanied such journeys
-something has been said in section 152.
-
-382. The Vehicles.--The streets of Rome were so narrow (the widest not
-over twenty-five feet, the average about fourteen) that wagons and
-carriages were not allowed upon them at hours when they were likely to
-be thronged with people. Throughout the Republic and for at least two
-centuries afterwards the streets were closed to all vehicles during
-the first ten hours of the day, with the exception of four classes
-only: market wagons, which brought produce into the city by night and
-were allowed to leave empty the next morning, transfer wagons
-(_plaustra_) conveying material for public buildings, the carriages
-used by the Vestals, _flamines_, and _rex sacrorum_ in their priestly
-functions, and the chariots driven in the _pompa circensis_ (section
-343) and in the triumphal processions. Similar regulations were in
-force in almost all the Italian towns. This made general the use
-within the walls of the _lectica_ and its bearers (section 151).
-Besides the litter in which the passenger reclined a sedan chair was
-common in which he sat erect. Both were covered and curtained. The
-_lectica_ was sometimes used for short journeys, and in place of the
-six or eight bearers, mules were sometimes put between the shafts, one
-before and one behind, but not until late in the Empire. Such a litter
-was called a _basterna_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 177. CARPENTUM]
-
-383. Carriages.--The monuments show us rude representations of several
-kinds of vehicles and the names of at least eight have come down to
-us, but we are not able positively to connect the figures and the
-names, and have, therefore, very general notions only of the form and
-construction of even the most common. Some seem to have been of
-ancient design and retained merely for use as state carriages in the
-processions that have been mentioned. Such were the _pilentum_ and the
-_carpentum_, the former with four wheels, the latter with two, both
-covered, both drawn by two horses, both used by the Vestals and
-priests. The _carpentum_ is rarely spoken of as a traveling carriage,
-and its use for such a purpose was a mark of luxury. Livy makes the
-first Tarquin come from Etruria to Rome in one, and it is generally
-supposed that one is shown in an Etruscan painting reproduced here in
-Fig. 177. The _petoritum_ was also used in the triumphal processions,
-but only for the spoils of war. It was essentially a baggage wagon and
-was occupied by the servants in a traveler's train. The _caruca_ was a
-luxurious traveling van, of which we hear first in the late Empire. It
-was furnished with a bed on which the traveler reclined by day and
-slept by night.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 178. CISIUM]
-
-384. The Reda and Cisium.--The usual traveling vehicles, however, were
-the _reda_ and the _cisium_. The former was large and heavy, covered,
-had four wheels, and was drawn by two or four horses. It was regularly
-used by persons accompanied by their families or having baggage with
-them, and was kept for hire for this purpose. For rapid journeys, when
-a man had no traveling companions and little baggage, the two-wheeled
-and uncovered _cisium_ was the favorite vehicle. It was drawn by two
-horses, one between shafts and the other attached by traces; it is
-possible that three were sometimes used. The _cisium_ had a single
-seat, broad enough to accommodate a driver also. It is very likely
-that the cart on a monument found near Trieves (Fig. 178) is a
-_cisium_, but the identification is not absolutely certain. Cicero
-speaks of these carts making fifty-six miles in ten hours, probably
-with one or more changes of horses. Other vehicles of the cart type
-that came into use during the Empire were the _essedum_ and the
-_covinus_, but we do not know how they differed from the _cisium_.
-These carts had no springs, but the traveler took care to have plenty
-of cushions. It is worth noticing that none of the vehicles mentioned
-has a Latin name, all being Gallic with perhaps one exception
-(_pilentum_). In like manner most of our own carriages have foreign
-names.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 179. ROAD CUT THROUGH HILL]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 180. BRIDGE OVER STREAM]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 181. VIADUCT OVER MARSH]
-
-385. The Roads.--The engineering skill of the Romans and the lavish
-outlay of money made their roads the best that the world has ever
-known. They were strictly military works, built for strategic
-purposes, intended to facilitate the despatching of supplies to the
-frontier and the massing of troops in the shortest possible time.
-Beginning with the first important acquisition of territory in Italy
-(the _via Appia_ was built in 312 B.C.) they kept pace with the
-expansion of the Republic and the Empire. In Italy they were built at
-the cost of the state, in the provinces the conquered communities bore
-the expense of construction and maintenance, but the work was done
-under the direction of Roman engineers and often by the legions
-between campaigns. They ran in straight lines between the towns they
-were to connect, with frequent crossroads and branch roads only less
-carefully constructed. No natural obstacles were permitted to change
-their course. The grade was always easy, hills being cut through (Fig.
-179), gorges and rivers crossed on arches of solid stone (Fig. 180),
-and valleys and marshes spanned by viaducts of the same material (Fig.
-181).
-
-386. Their surface was perfectly smooth and carefully rounded off and
-there were gutters at the sides to carry off the rain and melted snow.
-Regard was had for the comfort of all classes of travelers. Milestones
-showed the distance from the starting point of the road and often that
-to important places in the opposite direction, as well as the names of
-the consuls or emperors under whom the roads were built (Fig. 182).
-The roadbed was wide enough to permit the meeting and passing of the
-largest wagons without trouble. For the pedestrian there was a
-footpath on either side with frequent stepping-stones so he might
-cross to the other side above the mud or dust of the wagon way, and
-seats for him to rest upon were often built by the milestones. The
-horseman found blocks of stone set here and there for his convenience
-in mounting and dismounting. Where springs were discovered wayside
-fountains for men and watering-troughs for cattle were constructed.
-Such roads often went a hundred years without repairs, and some
-portions of them have endured the traffic of centuries and are still
-in good condition to-day.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 182. MILESTONE]
-
- L . CAECILI . Q . F
- METEL . COS
- CXIX
- ROMA[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: Inscription on a milestone of the _via Salaria_. "Erected
-by the consul (117 B.C.) Lucius Caecilius Metellus, etc. (section 39).
-One hundred and nineteen (miles) from Rome."]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 183. EMBANKMENT AND CROSS-SECTION]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 184. CONSTRUCTION OF ROAD]
-
-387. Construction.--Our knowledge of the construction of the military
-roads is derived from a treatise of Vitruvius on pavements and from
-existing remains of the roads themselves. The Latin phrase for
-building a road (_munire viam_) epitomizes the process exactly, for
-throughout its full length, whether carried above the level of the
-surrounding country (Fig. 183) or in a cut below it, the road was a
-solid wall averaging fifteen feet in width and perhaps three feet in
-height. The method followed will be easily understood from Fig. 184. A
-cut (_fossa_) was first made of the width of the intended road and of
-a depth sufficient to hold the filling which varied with the nature of
-the soil. The earth at the bottom of the cut (E) was leveled and made
-solid with heavy rammers (section 213). Upon this was spread the
-_statumen_ (D), a foundation course of stones not too large to be held
-in the hand, the thickness of the layer varying with the porosity of
-the soil. Over this came the _rudus_ (C), a nine-inch layer of coarse
-concrete or rubble (section 210) made of broken stones and lime. Over
-this was laid the _nucleus_ (B), a six-inch bedding of fine concrete
-made of broken potsherds and lime, in which was set the final course
-(A) of blocks of lava or of other hard stone furnished by the adjacent
-country. This last course (_dorsum_) made the roadway (_agger viae_)
-and was laid with the greatest care so as to leave no seams or
-fissures to admit water or to jar the wheels of vehicles. In the
-diagram the stones are represented with the lower surface flat, but
-they were commonly cut to a point or edge, as in Fig. 183, in order to
-be held more firmly by the _nucleus_. The _agger_ was bounded on the
-sides by _umbones_ (G,G), curbstones, behind which lay the footpaths
-(F,F), _semitae_ or _margines_. On a subsoil of rocky character the
-foundation course or even the first and second courses might be
-unnecessary. On the less traveled branch roads the _agger_ seems to
-have consisted of a thick course of gravel (_glarea_), well rounded
-and compacted, instead of the blocks of stone, and the crossroads may
-have been of still cheaper materials.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 185. PLAN OF INN]
-
-388. The Inns.--There were numerous lodging houses and restaurants in
-all the cities and towns of Italy, but all of the meanest character.
-Respectable travelers avoided them scrupulously, either possessing
-stopping places of their own (_deversoria_) on roads that they used
-frequently, or claiming entertainment from friends (section 303) and
-_hospites_ (section 184), whom they would be sure to have everywhere.
-Nothing but accident, stress of weather, or unusual haste could drive
-them to places of public entertainment (_tabernae deversoriae_,
-_cauponae_). The guests of such places were, therefore, of the lowest
-class, and innkeepers (_caupones_) and inns bore the most unsavory
-reputations. Food and beds were furnished the travelers, and their
-cattle were accommodated under the same roof and in unpleasant
-proximity. The plan of an inn at Pompeii (Fig. 185) may be taken as a
-fair sample of all such houses. The entrance (_a_) is broad enough to
-admit wagons into the wagon-room (_f_), behind which is the stable
-(_k_). In one corner is a watering-trough (_l_), in another a
-_latrina_ (_i_). On either side of the entrance is a wineroom (_b_,
-_d_), with the room of the proprietor (_c_) opening off one of them.
-The small rooms (_e_, _g_, _h_) are bedrooms, and others in the second
-story over the wagon-room were reached by the back stairway. The front
-stairway has an entrance of its own from the street and the rooms
-reached by it had probably no connection with the inn. Behind this
-stairway on the lower floor was a fireplace (_m_) with a water heater.
-An idea of the moderate prices charged in such places may be had from
-a bill which has come down to us in an inscription preserved in the
-museum at Naples: a pint of wine with bread, one cent; other food, two
-cents; hay for a mule, two cents. The corners of streets were the
-favorite sites for inns, and they had signs (the elephant, the eagle,
-etc.) like those of much later times.
-
-389. Speed.--The lack of public conveyances running on regular
-schedules (section 380) makes it impossible to tell the speed
-ordinarily made by travelers. It depended upon the total distance to
-be covered, the degree of comfort demanded by the traveler, the
-urgency of his business, and the facilities at his command. Cicero
-speaks of fifty-six miles in ten hours by cart (section 384) as
-something unusual, but on such roads it ought to have been possible to
-go much faster, if fresh horses were provided at the proper distances,
-and if the traveler could stand the fatigue. The sending of letters
-gives the best standard of comparison. There was no public postal
-service, but every Roman of position had among his slaves special
-messengers (_tabellarii_), whose business it was to deliver important
-letters for him. They covered from twenty-six to twenty-seven miles on
-foot in a day, and from forty to fifty in carts. We know that letters
-were sent from Rome to Brundisium, 370 Roman miles, in six days, and
-on to Athens in fifteen more. A letter from Sicily would reach Rome on
-the seventh day, from Africa on the twenty-first day, from Britain on
-the thirty-third day, and from Syria on the fiftieth day. In the time
-of Washington it was no unusual thing for a letter to take a month to
-go from the eastern to the southern states in winter.
-
-390. Sending Letters.--For long distances, especially over seas,
-sending letters by special messengers was very expensive, and, except
-for the most urgent matters, recourse was had to traders and travelers
-going in the desired direction. Persons sending messengers or
-intending to travel themselves made it a point of honor to notify
-their friends in time for letters to be prepared and also carried
-letters for entire strangers, if requested to do so. There was great
-danger, of course, that letters sent in this way might fall into the
-wrong hands or be lost. It was customary, therefore, to send a copy of
-an important letter (_litterae eodem exemplo_, _uno exemplo_), or at
-least an abstract of its contents, by another person and if possible
-by a different route. It was also customary to disguise the meaning by
-the use of fictitious names known to the correspondents only or by the
-employment of regular cypher codes. Suetonius tells us that Caesar
-simply substituted for each letter the one that stood three places
-lower in the alphabet: D for A, E for B, etc., but really elaborate
-and intricate systems were in common use.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 186. CODICILLI]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 187. BRONZE STILUS]
-
-391. Writing the Letters.--The extensive correspondence carried on by
-every Roman of position (section 379) made it impossible for him to
-write any but the most important of his letters or those to his
-dearest friends with his own hand. The place of the stenographer and
-writing machine of to-day was taken by slaves or freedmen, often
-highly educated (section 154), who wrote at his dictation. Such slaves
-were called in general terms _librarii_, more accurately _servi ab
-epistolis_, _servi a manu_, or _amanuenses_. Notes and short letters
-were written on tablets (_tabellae_, Fig. 24, section 110) of firwood
-or ivory of various sizes, often fastened together in sets of two or
-more by wire hinges (_codicilli_, _pugillares_, Fig. 186). The inner
-faces were slightly hollowed out and the depression was nearly filled
-with wax, so as to leave merely a raised rim about the edges, much
-like the frame of an old-fashioned slate. Upon the wax the letters
-were traced with an ivory or metal tool (_stilus_, _graphium_) with
-one end pointed, like a pencil, for writing, and the other made broad
-and flat, like a paper cutter, for smoothing the wax (Fig. 187). With
-the flat end mistakes could be corrected or the whole letter erased
-and the tablets used again, often for the reply to the letter itself.
-For longer communications the Romans used a coarse paper (_papyrus_),
-the making of which will be described below. Upon it they wrote with
-pens made of split reeds and with a thick ink made of soot (lampblack)
-mixed with resinous gums. Paper, pens, and ink were so poor that the
-bulky and awkward tablets were used by preference for all but the
-longest letters. Parchment did not come into general use until the
-fourth or fifth century of our era.
-
-392. Sealing and Opening the Letters.--For sealing the letter thread
-(_linum_), wax (_cera_), and a seal (_signum_) were necessary. The
-seal (section 255) not only secured the letter against improper
-inspection, but also attested the genuineness of those written by the
-_librarii_, as autograph signatures seem not to have been thought of.
-The tablets having been put together face to face with the writing on
-the inside, the thread was passed around them and through small holes
-bored through them, and was then securely tied. Upon the knot softened
-wax was dropped and to this the seal was applied. Letters written on
-sheets of paper (_schedae_) were rolled longitudinally and then
-secured in the same way. On the outside was written the name of the
-person addressed with perhaps the place where he was to be found if
-the letter was not sent by a special messenger. When the letter was
-opened care was taken not to break the seal, the cutting of the thread
-giving access to the contents. If the letter was preserved the seal
-was kept attached to it in order to attest its authenticity. Cicero
-describes the opening of a letter in the tenth paragraph of the Third
-Oration against Catiline.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 188. FRAGMENT OF PAPYRUS ROLL FROM HERCULANEUM]
-
-393. Books.--Almost all the materials used by the ancients to receive
-writing were known to the Romans and used by them for one purpose or
-another, at one time or another. For the publication of works of
-literature, however, during the period when the great classics were
-produced, the only material was paper (_papyrus_), the only form the
-roll (_volumen_). The book of modern form (_codex_), written on
-parchment (_membranum_), played an important part in the preservation
-of the literature of Rome, but did not come into use for the purpose
-of publication until long after the canon of the classics had been
-completed and the great masters had passed away. The Romans adopted
-the papyrus roll from the Greeks; the Greeks had received it from the
-Egyptians. When the Egyptians first made use of it we do not know, but
-we have preserved to us Egyptian rolls that were written at least
-twenty-five hundred years before the Christian era. The oldest Roman
-books of this sort that have been preserved were found in Herculaneum,
-badly charred and broken. Those that have been deciphered contain no
-Latin author of any value. A specimen of the writing on one of these,
-a mere fragment by an unknown author, is shown in Fig. 188. At the
-time it was buried there were still to be seen rolls in the
-handwriting of the Gracchi, and autographs of Cicero, Vergil, and
-Horace must have been common enough. All these have since perished so
-far as we know.
-
-394. Manufacture of Paper.--The papyrus reed had a jointed stem,
-triangular in shape, and reached a maximum height of perhaps fourteen
-feet with a thickness of four or five inches. The stem contained a
-pith of which the paper was made by a process substantially as
-follows: The stem was cut through at the joints, the hard rind
-removed, and the pith cut into thin sections or strips as evenly as
-possible. The first cut seems to have been made from one of the angles
-to the middle of the opposite side, and the others parallel with it to
-the right and left. The strips were then assorted according to width,
-and enough of them were arranged side by side as closely as possible
-upon a board to make their combined width almost equal to the length
-of the single strip. Across these was laid another layer at right
-angles, with perhaps a coating of glue or paste between them. The
-mat-like sheet that resulted was then soaked in water and pressed or
-hammered into a substance not unlike our paper, called by the Romans
-_charta_. After the sheets (_schedae_) had been dried and bleached in
-the sun, they were rid by scraping of rough places and trimmed into
-uniform sizes, depending upon the length of the strips of pith. The
-fewer the strips that composed each sheet, or in other words the
-greater the width of each strip, the closer the texture of the
-_charta_ and the better its quality. It was possible, therefore, to
-grade the paper by its size, and the width of the sheet rather than
-its height was taken as the standard. The best quality seems to have
-been sold in sheets about ten inches wide, the poorest that could be
-used to write upon, about six. The height in each case was perhaps one
-inch to two inches greater. It has been calculated that a single
-papyrus plant would make about twenty sheets of the size proportioned
-to its height, and this number seems to have been made the commercial
-unit of measure (_scapus_), by which the paper was sold in the market,
-a unit corresponding roughly to our quire.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 189. INSTRUMENTS USED IN WRITING]
-
-395. Pens and Ink.--Only the upper surface of the sheet was commonly
-written upon, the one formed by the horizontal layer of strips, and
-these showing even after the process of manufacture served to guide
-the pen of the writer. In the case of books where it was important to
-keep the number of lines constant to the page, they were ruled with a
-circular piece of lead. The pen (_calamus_) was made of a reed brought
-to a point and cleft much as our quill pens are. For the black ink
-(_atramentum_, section 391) was occasionally substituted the liquid of
-the cuttlefish. Red ink was much used for headings, ornaments, and the
-like, and in pictures the inkstand is generally represented with two
-compartments (Fig. 189). The ink was more like paint than modern ink,
-and could be wiped off when fresh with a damp sponge and washed off
-even when it had become dry and hard. To wash sheets in order to use
-them a second time was a mark of poverty or niggardliness, but the
-reverse side of _schedae_ that had served their purpose was often used
-for scratch paper, especially in the schools (section 110).
-
-396. Making the Roll.--A single sheet might serve for a letter or
-other brief document, but for literary purposes many sheets would be
-required. These were not fastened side by side in a back, as are the
-separate sheets in our books, or numbered and laid loosely together,
-as we arrange them in our letters and manuscripts, but after the
-writing was done they were glued together at the sides (not at the
-tops) into a long unwieldy strip, with the lines on each sheet running
-parallel with the length of the strip, and with the writing on each
-sheet forming a column perpendicular to the length of the strip. On
-each side of the sheet, therefore, a margin was left as the writing
-was done, and these margins overlapping and glued together made a
-thick blank space, a double thickness of paper, between every two
-sheets in the strip. Very broad margins, too, were left at the top and
-bottom, where the paper would suffer from use a great deal more than
-in our books. When the sheets had been securely fastened together in
-the proper order a thin slip of wood was glued to the left (outer)
-margin of the first sheet, and a second slip (_umbilicus_) to the
-right (also outer) margin of the last sheet, much as a wall map is
-mounted to-day. When not in use the volume was kept tightly rolled
-about the _umbilicus_, and hence received its name (_volumen_).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 190. CAPSA]
-
-397. A roll intended for permanent preservation was finished with the
-greatest care. The top and bottom (_frontes_) were trimmed perfectly
-smooth, polished with pumice-stone, and often painted black. The back
-of the roll was rubbed with cedar oil to defend it from moths and
-mice. To the ends of the _umbilicus_ were added knobs (_cornua_),
-sometimes gilded or painted a bright color. The first sheet would be
-used for the dedication, if there was one, and on the back of it a few
-words were frequently written giving a clue to the contents of the
-roll; sometimes a portrait of the author graced this page. In many
-books the full title and the name of the author were written only at
-the end of the roll on the last sheet, but in any case to the top of
-this sheet was glued a strip of parchment (_titulus_) with the title
-and author's name upon it, which projected above the edge of the roll.
-For every roll a parchment cover was made, cylindrical in form, into
-which it was slipped from the top, the _titulus_ alone being visible.
-If a work was divided into several volumes (see below), the rolls were
-put together in a bundle (_fascis_) and kept in a wooden box (_capsa_,
-_scrinium_) like a modern hat box. When the cover was removed the
-_tituli_ were visible and the roll desired could be taken without
-disturbing the others (Fig. 190). The rolls were kept sometimes in
-cupboards (_armaria_, section 231), laid lengthwise on the shelves
-with the _tituli_ to the front, as shown in the figure in the next
-paragraph.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 191. READING A ROLL]
-
-398. Size of the Rolls.--When a volume was consulted the roll was held
-in both hands and unrolled column by column with the right hand, while
-with the left the reader rolled up the part he was done with on the
-slip of wood fastened to the margin of the first sheet (Fig. 191).
-When he had finished reading he rolled it back upon the _umbilicus_,
-usually holding it under the chin and turning the _cornua_ with both
-hands. In the case of a long roll this turning backward and forward
-took much time and patience and must have sadly soiled and damaged the
-roll itself. The early rolls were always long and heavy. There was
-theoretically no limit to the number of sheets that might be glued
-together, and consequently none to the size or length of the roll. It
-was made as long as was necessary to contain the given work. In
-ancient Egypt rolls were put together of more than fifty yards in
-length, and in early times rolls of approximate length were used in
-Greece and Rome. From the third century B.C., however, it had become
-customary to divide works of great length into two or more volumes,
-the division at first being purely arbitrary and made wherever it was
-convenient to end the roll, no matter how much the unity of thought
-was interrupted. A century later authors had begun to divide their
-works into convenient parts, each part having a unity of its own, such
-as the five "books" of Cicero's _De Finibus_, and to each of these
-parts or "books" was given a separate roll. An innovation so
-convenient and sensible quickly became the universal rule. It even
-worked backward, some ancient works being divided into books, which
-had not been so divided by their authors, e.g., Herodotus, Thucydides,
-and Naevius. About the same time, too, it became the custom to put the
-sheets upon the market already glued together, to the amount at least
-of the _scapus_ (section 394). It was, of course, much easier to glue
-two or three of these together, or to cut off the unused part of one,
-than to work with the separate sheets. The ready-made rolls, moreover,
-were put together in a most workmanlike manner. Even sheets of the
-same quality (section 394) would vary slightly in toughness or finish,
-and the manufacturers of the roll were careful to put the very best
-sheets at the beginning, where the wear was the most severe, and to
-keep for the end the less perfect sheets, which might sometimes be cut
-off altogether.
-
-399. Multiplication of Books.--The process of publishing the largest
-book at Rome differed in no important respect from that of writing the
-shortest letter. Every copy was made by itself, the hundredth or the
-thousandth taking just as much time and labor as the first had done.
-The author's copy would be distributed among a number of _librarii_,
-his own, if he were a man of wealth, a Caesar or a Sallust, his
-patron's, if he were a poor man, a Terence or a Vergil. Each of the
-_librarii_ would write and rewrite the portions assigned to him, until
-the required number of copies had been made. The sheets would then be
-arranged in the proper order and the rolls mounted as has been
-described. Finally the books had to be looked through to correct the
-errors that were sure to be made, a process much more tedious than the
-modern proofreading, because every copy had to be corrected
-separately, as no two copies would show precisely the same errors.
-Books made in this way were almost exclusively for gifts, though
-friends would exchange books with friends and a few might find their
-way into the market. Up to the last century of the Republic, however,
-there was no organized book trade, and no such thing as commercial
-publication. When a man wanted a book, instead of buying it at a
-bookstore he borrowed a copy from a friend and had his _librarii_ make
-him as many more as he desired. In this way Atticus made for himself
-and Cicero copies of all the Greek and Latin books on which he could
-lay his hands, and distributed Cicero's own writings everywhere.
-
-400. Commercial Publication.--The publication of books at Rome as a
-business began in the time of Cicero. There was no copyright law and
-no protection therefore for author or publisher. The author's
-pecuniary returns came in the form of gifts or grants from those whose
-favor he had won by his genius; the publisher depended, in the case of
-new books, upon meeting the demand before his rivals could market
-their editions, and, in the case of standard books, upon the accuracy,
-elegance, and cheapness of his copies. The process of commercial
-publication was essentially the same as that already described, except
-that larger numbers of _librarii_ would be employed and the copy would
-be read to all at once to save them the trouble of handling the
-awkward roll and keeping the place as they wrote. The publisher would
-estimate as closely as possible the demand for any new work that he
-had secured, would put as large a number of scribes upon it as
-possible, and would take care that no copies should leave his
-establishment until his whole edition was ready. After the copies were
-once on sale they could be reproduced by anyone. The best houses took
-all possible pains to have their books free from errors, having
-competent correctors to read them copy by copy, but in spite of their
-efforts blunders were legion. Authors sometimes corrected with their
-own hands the copies intended for their friends. In the case of
-standard works purchasers often hired scholars of reputation to revise
-their copies for them, and copies of known excellence were borrowed or
-hired at high prices for the purpose of comparison.
-
-401. Rapidity and Cost of Publication.--Cicero tells us of Roman
-senators who wrote fast enough to take evidence _verbatim_, and the
-trained scribes must have far surpassed them in speed. Martial tells
-us that his second book could be copied in an hour. It contains five
-hundred and forty verses, which would make the scribe equal to nine
-verses to the minute. It is evident that a small edition, no larger,
-for example, than twice or three times the number of the scribes,
-could be put upon the market more quickly than it could be furnished
-now. The cost of the books varied, of course, with their size and the
-style of their mounting. Martial's first book, containing eight
-hundred and twenty lines and covering twenty-nine pages in Teubner's
-text, sold at thirty cents, fifty cents, and one dollar; his _Xenia_,
-containing two hundred and seventy-four verses and covering fourteen
-pages in Teubner's text, sold at twenty cents, but cost the publisher
-less than ten. Such prices would hardly be considered excessive now.
-Much would depend upon the reputation of the author and the consequent
-demand, and high prices were put on certain books. Autograph
-copies--Gellius (died about 180 A.D.) says that one by Vergil cost the
-owner $100--and copies whose correctness was vouched for by some
-recognized authority commanded extraordinary prices.
-
-402. Libraries.--The gathering of books in large private collections
-began to be general only toward the end of the Republic. Cicero had
-considerable libraries not only in his house at Rome, but also at
-every one of his half-dozen country seats. Probably the bringing to
-Rome of whole libraries from the East and Greece by Lucullus and Sulla
-started the fashion of collecting books; at any rate collections were
-made by many persons who knew and cared nothing about the contents of
-the rolls, and every town house had its library (section 206) lined
-with volumes. In these libraries were often displayed busts of great
-writers and statues of the Muses. Public libraries date from the time
-of Augustus. The first to be opened in Rome was founded by Asinius
-Pollio (died 4 A.D.), and was housed in the _Atrium Libertatis_.
-Augustus himself founded two others, and the number was brought up to
-twenty-eight by his successors. The most magnificent of these was the
-_Bibliotheca Ulpia_, founded by Trajan. Smaller cities had their
-libraries, too, and even the little town of Comum boasted one founded
-by the younger Pliny and supported by an endowment that produced
-thirty thousand sesterces annually. The public baths often had
-libraries and reading-rooms attached (section 365).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-SOURCES OF INCOME AND MEANS OF LIVING. THE ROMAN'S DAY
-
-
-403. It is evident from what has been said that abundant means were
-necessary to support the state in which every Roman of position lived.
-It will be of interest to see how the great mass of the people also
-earned the scantier living with which they were forced to be content.
-For the sake of this inquiry it will be convenient, if not very
-accurate, to divide the people of Rome into the three great classes of
-nobles, knights, and commons, into which political history has
-distributed them. At the same time it must be remembered that there
-was no hard and fixed line drawn between any two of these classes; a
-noble might if he pleased associate himself with the knights, provided
-only that he possessed the required sum of $20,000, and any freeborn
-citizen might aspire to the highest offices of the state, however mean
-the circumstances of his birth, however poor in pocket or in talent he
-might be.
-
-404. Careers of the Nobles.--The nobles inherited certain of the
-aristocratic notions of the old patriciate, which limited their
-business activities and had much to do with the corruption of public
-life in the last century of the Republic. Men in their position were
-held to be above all manner of work, with the hands or with the head,
-for the sake of sordid gain. Agriculture alone was free from debasing
-associations, as it has been in England within our own time, and
-statecraft and war were the only careers fit to engage their energies.
-Even as statesmen and generals, too, they served their fellow citizens
-without material reward, for no salaries were drawn by the senators,
-none were attached to the magistracies or to positions of military
-command. This theory had worked well enough in the time before the
-Punic wars, when every Roman was a farmer, when the farm produced all
-that he needed for his simple wants, when he left it only to serve as
-a soldier in his young manhood or as a senator in his old age, and
-returned to his fields, like Cincinnatus, when his services were no
-longer required by his country. Under the aristocracy that supplanted
-the pure democracy of the earlier time, it subverted every aim that it
-was intended to secure.
-
-405. Agriculture.--The farm life that Cicero has described so
-eloquently and praised so enthusiastically in his _Cato Maior_ would
-have scarcely been recognized by Cato himself and had become a memory
-or a dream long before Cicero wrote. The farmer no longer tilled his
-fields, even with the help of his slaves. The yeoman class had
-practically disappeared from Italy. The small holdings had been
-absorbed in the vast estates of the wealthy landowners, and the aims
-and methods of farming had wholly changed. Something has been said of
-this already (section 146 f.), and it will be sufficient here to
-recall the fact that grain was no longer raised for the market in
-Italy, simply because the market could be supplied more cheaply from
-over seas. The grape and the olive had become the chief sources of
-wealth, and for them Sallust and Horace complain that less and less
-space was being left by the parks and pleasure grounds (section 145).
-Still, the making of wine and oil under the direction of a careful
-steward (section 148) must have been very profitable in Italy and many
-of the nobles had plantations in the provinces as well, the revenues
-of which helped to maintain their state at Rome.
-
-406. Political Office.--Politics must have been profitable for those
-only who played the game to the end. No salaries were attached to the
-offices, and the indirect gains from one of the lower would hardly pay
-the expenses necessary to secure the next in order. The gain came
-always through positions in the provinces. The quaestorship might be
-spent in one, the praetorship and the consulship were sure to be
-followed by a year abroad. To honest men the places gave the
-opportunity to learn of profitable investments, and a good governor
-was often selected by a community to look after its interests in the
-capital, and this meant an honorarium in the form of valuable presents
-from time to time. Cicero's justice and moderation as quaestor in
-Sicily earned him a rich reward when he came to prosecute Verres for
-plundering that same province, and when he was in charge of the grain
-supply during his aedileship. To corrupt officials the provinces were
-gold mines. Every sort of robbery and extortion was practiced, and the
-governor was expected to enrich not merely himself but also the
-_cohors_ (section 118) that had accompanied him. Catullus bitterly
-complains of the selfishness of Memmius, who had kept for himself all
-the plunder of Bithynia. The story of Verres may be read in any
-history of Rome; it differs from that of the average governor only in
-the fate that overtook the offender.
-
-407. The Law.--Closely connected with the political career then as now
-was that of the law, but Rome knew of no class of professional
-advocates practicing for fees and living upon their practice. And
-there were no conditions imposed for practicing in the courts, not
-even the good moral character which is insisted upon in Indiana.
-Anyone could bring suit against anyone else on any charge that he
-pleased, and it was no uncommon thing for a young politician to use
-this license for the purpose of gaining notoriety, even when he knew
-there were no grounds for the charges he brought. On the other hand
-the lawyer was forbidden to accept pay for his services. In olden
-times the client had of his right gone to his patron for legal advice
-(section 179), and the lawyer of later times was theoretically at
-least at the service of all who applied to him. Men of the highest
-character made it a point of honor to put their technical knowledge
-freely at the disposal of their fellow citizens. At the same time the
-statutes against fees were easily evaded. Grateful clients could not
-be prevented from making valuable presents, and it was a very common
-thing for generous legacies to be left to successful advocates. Cicero
-had no other source of income, so far as we know, but while he was
-never a rich man, he owned a house on the Palatine (section 221, note)
-and half a dozen country seats, lived well, and spent money lavishly
-on works of art (section 227) that appealed to his tastes, and on
-books (section 402). Corrupt judges (_praetores_) could find other
-sources of income then as now, of course, but we hear more of this in
-relation to the jurors (_iudices_) than the judges, probably because
-with a province before him the _praetor_ did not think it fitting to
-stoop to petty bribetaking.
-
-408. The Army.--The spoils of war went nominally into the treasury of
-the state. Practically they passed first through the hands of the
-commanding general, who kept what he pleased for himself, his staff
-(section 118), and his soldiers and sent the rest to Rome. The
-opportunities were magnificent, and the Roman general understood how
-to use them all. Some of them were legitimate enough according to the
-usages of the time, the plunder of the towns and cities that were
-taken, the ransom exacted from those that were spared, the sale of
-captives as slaves (section 134). Entirely illegitimate, of course,
-were the fortunes made by furnishing supplies to the army at
-extravagant prices or diverting these supplies to private uses. The
-reconstruction of the conquered territory brought in returns equally
-rich; it is safe to say that the Aedui paid Caesar well for the
-supremacy in central Gaul that he assured them after his defeat of the
-Helvetii. The civil wars that cost the best blood of Italy made the
-victors immensely rich. Besides the looting of the public treasury,
-the estates of men in the opposing party were confiscated and sold to
-the highest bidder. The proceeds went nominally to the treasury of the
-new government, but the proceeds were infinitesimal in comparison with
-the profits. After Sulla had established himself in Rome the names of
-friends and foes alike were put on the proscription lists, and if
-powerful influence was not exerted in their behalf they lost lives and
-fortunes. For the influence they had to pay dearly. One example may be
-cited. The estate of one Roscius of Ameria, valued at $300,000, was
-bid in for $100 by Lucius Chrysogonus, a freedman of Sulla, because no
-one dared bid against the creature of the dictator. The settling of
-the soldiers on grants of land made good business for the three
-commissioners who superintended the distribution of the land. The
-grants were always of farms owned and occupied by adherents of the
-beaten party, and the bribes came from both sides.
-
-409. Careers of the Equites.--The name of knight had lost its original
-significance long before the time of Cicero. The equites had become
-the class of capitalists who found in financial transactions the
-excitement and the profit that the nobles found in politics and war.
-It was the immense scale of their operations that relieved them from
-the stigma that attached to working for gain, just as in modern times
-the wholesale dealer may have a social position entirely beyond the
-hopes of the small retailer. As a body the equites exerted
-considerable political influence, holding in fact the balance of power
-between the senatorial and the democratic parties. As a rule they
-exerted this influence only so far as was necessary to secure
-legislation favorable to them as a class, and to insure as governors
-for the provinces men that would not look too closely into their
-transactions there. For it was in the provinces that the knights as
-well as the nobles found their best opportunities. Their chief
-business was the farming of the revenues. For this purpose syndicates
-were formed, which paid into the public treasury a lump sum, fixed by
-the senate, and reimbursed themselves by collecting what they could
-from the province. The profits were beyond all reason, and the word
-publican became a synonym for sinner. Besides farming the revenues
-they "financed" the provinces and allied states, advancing money to
-meet the ordinary or extraordinary expenses. Sulla levied a
-contribution of 20,000 talents (about $20,000,000) on Asia. The money
-was advanced by a syndicate of Roman capitalists, and they had
-collected the amount six times over when Sulla interfered, for fear
-that there would be nothing left for him in case of further needs.
-More than one pretender was set upon a puppet throne in the East in
-order to secure the payment of sums previously loaned him by the
-capitalists. Their operations as individuals were only less extensive
-and profitable. The grain in the provinces, the wool, the products of
-mines and factories could be moved only with the money advanced by
-them. They ventured, too, to engage in commercial enterprises abroad
-that were barred against them at home, doing the buying and selling
-themselves, not merely supplying the means to others. They loaned
-money to individuals, too, though at Rome money lending was
-discreditable. The usual rate was twelve per cent, but Marcus Brutus
-was loaning money at forty-eight per cent in Cilicia, when Cicero went
-there as governor in 51 B.C., and expected Cicero to enforce his
-contracts for him.
-
-410. The Soldiers.--The freeborn citizens of Rome below the nobles and
-the knights may be roughly divided into two classes, the soldiers and
-the proletariate. The civil wars had driven them from their farms or
-had unfitted them for the work of farming, and the pride of race or
-the competition of slave labor had closed against them the other
-avenues of industry, numerous as these must have been in the world's
-capital. The best of this class turned to the army. This had long
-since ceased to be composed of citizen-soldiers, called out to meet a
-special emergency for a single campaign, and disbanded at its close.
-It was what we should call a regular army, the soldiers enlisting for
-a term of twenty years, receiving stated pay and certain privileges
-after an honorable discharge. In time of peace, when there was peace,
-they were employed on public works (section 385). The pay was small,
-perhaps forty or fifty dollars a year with rations in Caesar's time,
-but this was as much as a laborer could earn by the hardest kind of
-toil, and the soldier had the glory of war to set over against the
-stigma of work, and hopes of presents from his commander and the
-privilege of occasional pillage and plunder. After he had completed
-his time he might if he chose return to Rome, but many had formed
-connections in the communities where their posts were fixed and
-preferred to make their homes there on free grants of land, an
-important instrument in spreading Roman civilization.
-
-411. The Proletariate.--In addition to the idle and the profligate
-attracted to Rome by the free corn and by the other allurements that
-bring a like element into our cities now, large numbers of the
-industrious and the frugal had been forced into the city by the loss
-of their property during the civil wars and the failure to find
-employment elsewhere. No exact estimate of the number of these
-unemployed people can be given, but it is known that before Caesar's
-time it had passed the mark of 300,000. Relief was occasionally given
-by the establishing of colonies on the frontiers--in this way Caesar
-put as many as 80,000 in the way of earning their living again, short
-as was his administration of affairs at Rome--but it was the least
-harmful element that was willing to emigrate and the dregs were left
-behind. Aside from beggary and petty crimes their only source of
-income was the sale of their votes, and this made them a real menace
-to the Republic. Under the Empire their political influence was lost
-and the state found it necessary to make distributions of money
-occasionally to relieve their want. Some of them played client to the
-upstart rich (section 181), but the most were content to be fed by the
-state and amused by the constantly increasing shows and games (section
-322).
-
-412. Professions and Trades.--The professions and trades, between
-which the Romains made no distinction, in the last years of the
-Republic were practically given over to the _libertini_ (section 175)
-and to foreigners. Of some of these something has been said already.
-Teachers were poorly paid (section 121), and usually looked upon with
-contempt. Physicians were held in no higher esteem, but seem to have
-been well paid, if we may judge from those that were attached to the
-court. Two of these left a joint estate of $1,000,000, and another
-received from the Emperor Claudius a yearly stipend of $25,000. In
-knowledge and skill in both surgery and medicine they do not seem to
-have been much behind the practitioners of two centuries ago. Bankers
-united money changing with money loaning. The former was very
-necessary in a city into which came all the coins of the known world;
-the latter was never looked upon as entirely respectable for a Roman,
-but there can be no doubt that many a Roman of the highest
-respectability drew large profits from this business, carried on
-discreetly in the name of a freedman. The trades were early organized
-at Rome in guilds, but their only purpose seems to have been to hand
-down and perfect the technique of the crafts; at least there was no
-obstacle in the way of workmen not belonging to the guilds, and there
-were no such things known as patents or special privileges in the way
-of work. Eight of these guilds are older than history, those of the
-fullers, cobblers, carpenters, goldsmiths, coppersmiths, potters,
-dyers, and (oddly enough) the fluteblowers. Numerous others were
-formed as knowledge of the arts advanced or the division of labor
-proceeded. Special parts of the city seem to have been appropriated by
-special classes of workmen, as like businesses are apt to be carried
-on in the same neighborhood in our cities: Cicero speaks of a street
-of the Scythemakers.
-
-413. Business and Commerce.--The commerce of Rome covered all lands
-and seas. Pliny tells us that the trade with India and China took from
-Rome $5,000,000 yearly. The wholesale trade was to a large extent in
-the hands of the capitalist class, the retail business was conducted
-by freedmen and foreigners. How large these businesses were we have no
-means of telling. The supplying of the food to the city must have
-given employment to thousands; the clothing trade has been mentioned
-already (section 271). Building operations were carried on at an
-immense cost and on the largest scale. All the public buildings and
-many of the important private buildings were built by contract. There
-can be little doubt that the letting of the contracts for the public
-buildings was made very profitable for the officers who had it to do,
-but it must be admitted on the other hand that the work was well done.
-Crassus seems to have done a sort of salvage business. When buildings
-seemed certain to be destroyed by fire he would buy them with their
-contents at a nominal sum, and then fight the flames with gangs of
-slaves that he had trained for the purpose. The slave trade itself was
-very considerable and large fortunes were amassed in it (section 139).
-The heavy work of ordinary laborers was performed almost entirely by
-slaves (section 148), and it must be remembered that much work was
-then done by hand that is now done by machinery. The book business has
-been mentioned (section 400). Even the place of the modern newspaper
-was taken by letters written as a business by persons who collected
-all the news, gossip, and scandal of the city, had it copied by
-slaves, and sent it to persons away from the city who did not like to
-trouble their friends (section 379) and were willing to pay for
-intelligence.
-
-414. The Civil Service.--The free persons employed in the offices of
-the various magistrates were of the lowest class, mostly _libertini_.
-They were paid by the state, and while appointed nominally for a year
-only, they seem to have practically held their places during good
-behavior. This was largely due to the shortness of the term of the
-regular magistrates and the rarity of reelection. Having no experience
-themselves in conducting their offices the magistrates would have all
-the greater need of thoroughly trained and experienced assistants. The
-highest class of these officials formed an _ordo_, the _scribae_,
-whose name gives no adequate notion of the extent and importance of
-their duties. All that is now done by cabinet officers, secretaries,
-department heads, bureau chiefs, auditors, comptrollers, recorders,
-and accountants, down to the work of the ordinary clerks and copyists,
-was done by these "scribes." Below them came others almost equally
-necessary but not equally respected, the lictors, messengers, etc.
-These civil servants had special places at the theater and the circus.
-The positions seem to have been in great demand, as such places are
-now in France, for example. Horace is said to have been a department
-clerk.
-
-415. The Roman's Day.--The way in which a Roman spent his day
-depended, of course, upon his position and business, and varied
-greatly with individuals and with the particular day. The ordinary
-routine of a man of the higher class, the man of whom we read most
-frequently in Roman literature, was something like this: The Roman
-rose at a very early hour, his day beginning before sunrise, because
-it ended so early. After a hurried breakfast (section 302) he devoted
-such time as was necessary to his private business, looking over
-accounts, consulting with his managers, giving directions, etc. Cicero
-and Pliny found these early hours the best for their literary work.
-Horace tells of lawyers giving free advice at three in the morning.
-After his private business was despatched the Roman took his place in
-the _atrium_ (section 198) for the _salutatio_ (section 182), when his
-clients came to pay their respects, perhaps to ask for the help or
-advice that he was bound to furnish them (section 179). All this
-business of the early morning might have to be dispensed with,
-however, if the Roman was asked to a wedding (section 79), or to be
-present at the naming of a child (section 97), or to witness the
-coming of age (section 128) of the son of a friend, for all these
-semi-public functions took place in the early morning. But after them
-or after the levee the Roman went to the forum attended by his clients
-and carried in his litter (section 151) with his _nomenclator_ at his
-elbow. The business of the courts and of the senate began about the
-third hour, and might continue until the ninth or tenth, that of the
-senate was bound to stop at sunset. Except on extraordinary occasions
-all business was pretty sure to be over before eleven o'clock, and at
-this time the lunch was taken (section 302).
-
-416. Then came the midday siesta, so general that the streets were as
-deserted as at midnight, and one of the Roman writers fixes upon this
-as the proper time for a ghost story. Of course there were no sessions
-of the courts or meetings of the senate on the public holidays, and
-then the hours generally given to business might be spent at the
-theater or the circus or other games. As a matter of fact the Romans
-of the better class rather avoided these shows, unless they were
-officially connected with them, and many of them devoted the holidays
-to visiting their country estates. After the siesta, which lasted for
-an hour or more, the Roman was ready for his regular athletic exercise
-and bath, either in the Campus and the Tiber (section 317) or in one
-of the public bathing establishments (section 365). The bath proper
-(section 367) was followed by the lounge (section 377), perhaps a
-promenade in the court, which gave him a chance for a chat with a
-friend, or an opportunity to hear the latest news, to consult business
-associates, in short to talk over any of the things that men now
-discuss at their clubs. After this came the great event of the day,
-the dinner (section 303), at his own house or at that of some friend,
-followed immediately by retirement for the night. Even on the days
-spent in the country this programme would not be materially changed,
-and the Roman took with him into the provinces the customs of his home
-life so far as possible.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 192. ANCIENT CALENDAR]
-
-417. Hours of the Day.--The day itself was divided into twelve hours
-(_horae_), each being one-twelfth of the time between sunrise and
-sunset and varying therefore with the season of the year. The length
-of the day and hour at Rome in different times of the year is shown in
-the following table:
-
- Month Length Length | Month Length Length
- and Day of Day of Hour | and Day of Day of Hour
- Hr. Min. | Hr. Min.
- --------------------------------+--------------------------------
- Dec. 23 8 54' 44' 30" | June 25 15 6' 1 15' 30"
- Feb. 6 9 50' 49' 10" | Aug. 10 14 10' 1 10' 50"
- March 23 12 00' 1 00' 00" | Sept. 25 12 00' 1 00' 00"
- May 9 14 10' 1 10' 50" | Nov. 9 9 50' 49' 10"
-
-418. Taking the days of June 25 and December 23 as respectively the
-longest and shortest of the year, the following table gives the
-conclusion of each hour for summer and winter:
-
- Time Summer Winter
- -----------------------------------------
- Sunrise 4 27' 00" 7 33' 00"
- 1st Hour 5 42' 30" 8 17' 30"
- 2d Hour 6 58' 00" 9 02' 00"
- 3d Hour 8 13' 30" 9 46' 30"
- 4th Hour 9 29' 00" 10 31' 00"
- 5th Hour 10 44' 30" 11 15' 30"
- 6th Hour 12 00' 00" 12 00' 00"
- 7th Hour 1 15' 30" 12 44' 30"
- 8th Hour 2 31' 00" 1 29' 00"
- 9th Hour 3 46' 30" 2 13' 30"
- 10th Hour 5 02' 00" 2 58' 00"
- 11th Hour 6 17' 30" 3 42' 30"
- 12th Hour 7 33' 00" 4 27' 00"
-
-In the same way the hours may be calculated for any given day, the
-length of the day and the hour of sunrise being known, but for all
-practical purposes the old couplet will serve:
-
- The English hour you may fix,
- If to the Latin you add six.
-
-When the Latin hour is above six it will be more convenient to
-subtract than to add.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-BURIAL-PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES
-
-REFERENCES: Marquardt, 340-388; Voigt, 319-322, 396, 455; Goll,
-480-547; Guhl and Koner, 580-595, 857-863; Friedlander, III, 125-137;
-Ramsay, 479-482; Pauly-Wissowa, _cenotaphium_, _columbarium_; Smith,
-Harper, Rich, _columbarium_, _funus_, _sepulcrum_; Lubker,
-_Bestattung_, _sepulcrum_; Baumeister, 308-311, 604-609, 1520 f.;
-Mau-Kelsey, 399-428; Gusman, 44-54; Egbert, Latin Inscriptions,
-230-242; Lanciani, Ancient Rome, 64, 129 f.
-
-
-419. Importance of Burial.--The Romans' view of the future life
-explains the importance they attached to the ceremonial burial of the
-dead. The soul, they thought, could find rest only when the body had
-been duly laid in the grave; until this was done it haunted the home,
-unhappy itself and bringing unhappiness to others. To perform the
-funeral offices (_iusta facere_) was, therefore, a solemn religious
-duty, devolving upon the surviving members of the family (section 28),
-and the Latin words show that these marks of respect were looked upon
-as the right of the dead. In the case of a body lost at sea, or for
-any other reason unrecovered, the ceremonies were just as piously
-performed, an empty tomb (_cenotaphium_) being erected sometimes in
-honor of the dead. And these same rites the Roman was bound to
-perform, if he came anywhere upon the unburied corpse of a citizen,
-because all were members of the greater family of the commonwealth. In
-this case the scattering of three handfuls of dust over the body was
-sufficient for ceremonial burial and the happiness of the troubled
-spirit, if for any reason the body could not actually be interred.
-
-420. Interment and Cremation.--Burial was the way of disposing of the
-dead practiced most anciently by the Romans, and even after cremation
-came into very general use it was ceremonially necessary that some
-small part of the remains, usually the bone of a finger, should be
-buried in the earth. Burning was practiced before the time of the
-Twelve Tables, for it is mentioned together with burial in them, but
-we do not know how long before. Hygienic reasons had probably
-something to do with its general adoption, and this implies, of
-course, cities of considerable size. By the time of Augustus it was
-all but universal, but even in Rome the practice of burial was never
-entirely discontinued, for cremation was too costly for the very
-poorest classes, and some of the wealthiest and most aristocratic
-families held fast to the more ancient custom. The Cornelii, for
-example, always buried their dead until the dictator required his body
-to be burned for fear that his bones might be disinterred and
-dishonored by his enemies, as he had dishonored those of Marius.
-Children less than forty days old were always buried, and so, too,
-slaves whose funeral expenses were paid by their masters. After the
-introduction of Christianity burial came again to be the prevailing
-use, largely because of the increased expense of burning.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 193. TOMB OF PLANCUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 194. TOMB OF CESTIUS]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 195. STREET OF TOMBS AT POMPEII]
-
-421. Places of Burial.--The most ancient place of burial, at least for
-the head of the house, was beneath the hearthstone in the _atrium_ of
-his house, later in the garden behind his house, but this had ceased
-to be the custom long before history begins, and the Twelve Tables
-forbade the burial or even the burning of the dead within the walls of
-the city. For the very poor, places of burial were provided in remote
-localities outside the walls, corresponding in some degree to the
-Potter's Field of modern cities. The well-to-do made their burial-
-places as conspicuous as their means would permit, with the hope that
-the inscriptions upon the monuments would keep alive the names and
-virtues of the dead, and with the idea, perhaps, that they still had
-some part in the busy life around them. To this end they lined the
-great roads on either side for miles out of the cities with rows of
-tombs of the most elaborate and costly architecture. In the vicinity
-of Rome the Appian way as the oldest (section 385) showed the
-monuments of the noblest and most ancient families, but none of the
-roads lacked similar memorials. Many of these tombs were standing in
-the sixteenth century, a few still remain. The same custom was
-followed in the smaller towns, and an idea of the appearance of the
-monuments may be had from the so-called "Street of Tombs" in Pompeii
-(Fig. 195). There were other burial-places near the cities, of course,
-less conspicuous and less expensive, and on the farms and country
-estates like provision was made for persons of humbler station.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 196. EXTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII]
-
-422. The Tombs.--The tombs, whether intended to receive the bodies or
-merely the ashes, or both, differed widely in size and construction
-with the different purposes for which they were erected. Some were for
-individuals only, but these in most cases were strictly public
-memorials as distinguished from actual tombs intended to receive the
-remains of the dead. The larger number of those that lined the roads
-were family tombs, ample in size for whole generations of descendants
-and retainers of the family, including guest-friends (section 185),
-who had died away from their own homes, and freedmen (section 175).
-There were also the burial-places of the _gentes_ (section 21), in
-which provision was made for all, even the humblest and poorest, who
-claimed connection with the _gens_ and had had a place in its formal
-organization (section 22). Others were erected on a large scale by
-speculators who sold at low prices space enough for an urn or two to
-persons too poor to erect tombs of their own and without any claim on
-a family or gentile burying-place. In imitation of these structures
-others were erected on the same plan by burial societies formed by
-persons of the artisan class, and others still by benevolent men, as
-we have seen baths (section 373) and libraries (section 402) erected
-and maintained for the public good. Something will be said of the
-tombs of all these kinds after the public burying-places have been
-described.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 197. SECTIONS OF TOMB SHOWN IN FIGURE 196]
-
-423. The Potter's Field.--During the Republic the Esquiline Hill, or
-at least the eastern part of it, was the place to which was carted all
-the refuse of the city that the sewers would not carry away. Here,
-too, were the gravepits (_puticuli_) for the pauper class. They were
-merely holes in the ground, about twelve feet square, without lining
-of any kind. Into them were thrown the bodies of the friendless poor,
-and along with them and over them the carcasses of dead animals and
-the filth and scrapings of the streets. The pits were kept open,
-uncovered apparently even when filled, and the stench and the
-disease-breeding pollution made the hill absolutely uninhabitable.
-Under Augustus the danger to the health of the whole city became so
-great that the dumping grounds were moved to a greater distance, and
-the Esquiline, covered over pits and all with pure soil to the depth
-of twenty-five feet, was made a park, known as the _Horti Maecenatis_.
-
-424. It is not to be understood, however, that the bodies of Roman
-citizens were ordinarily disposed of in this revolting way. Faithful
-freedmen were cared for by their patrons, the industrious poor made
-provision for themselves in cooperative societies mentioned above, and
-the proletariate class (section 411) was in general saved from such a
-fate by gentile relations, by patrons (section 181), or by the
-benevolence of individuals. Only in times of plague and pestilence, it
-is safe to say, were the bodies of known citizens cast into these
-pits, as under like circumstances bodies have been burned in heaps in
-our own cities. The uncounted thousands that peopled the Potter's
-Field of Rome were the riffraff from foreign lands, abandoned slaves
-(section 156), the victims that perished in the arena (section 362),
-outcasts of the criminal class, and the "unidentified" that are buried
-nowadays at public expense. Criminals put to death by authority were
-not buried at all; their carcasses were left to birds and beasts of
-prey at the place of execution near the Esquiline gate.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 198. INTERIOR OF TOMB AT POMPEII]
-
-425. Plan of Tombs and Grounds.--The utmost diversity prevails in the
-outward form and construction of the tombs, but those of the classical
-period seem to have been planned with the thought that the tomb was to
-be a home for the dead and that they were not altogether cut off from
-the living. The tomb, therefore, whether built for one person or for
-many, was ordinarily a building inclosing a room (_sepulcrum_), and
-this room was really the important thing. Attention has already been
-called (section 189) to the fact that even the urns had in ancient
-times the shape of the house of one room. The floor of the _sepulcrum_
-was quite commonly below the level of the surrounding grounds and was
-reached by a short flight of steps. Around the base of the walls ran a
-slightly elevated platform (_podium_, cf. sections 337, 357) on which
-were placed the coffins of those who were buried, while the urns were
-placed either on the platform or in niches in the wall. An altar or
-shrine is often found, at which offerings were made to the _manes_ of
-the departed. Lamps are very common and so are other simple articles
-of furniture, and the walls, floors, and ceilings are decorated in the
-same style as those of houses (section 220 f.). Things that the dead
-liked to have around them when living, especially things that they had
-used in their ordinary occupations, were placed in the tomb at the
-time of burial, or burned with them on the funeral pyre, and in
-general an effort was made to give an air of life to the chamber of
-rest. The interior of a tomb at Pompeii is shown in Fig. 198, and
-sections of another in Fig. 197, section 423.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 199. PLAN OF GROUNDS ABOUT TOMB]
-
-426. The monument itself was always built upon a plot of ground as
-spacious as the means of the builders would permit, sometimes several
-acres in extent. In it provision was made for the comfort of surviving
-members of the family, who were bound to visit the resting-place of
-their dead on certain regularly recurring festivals (section 438). If
-the grounds were small there would be at least a seat, perhaps a
-bench. On more extensive grounds there were places of shelter, arbors,
-or summer houses. Dining-rooms, too, in which were celebrated the
-anniversary feasts, and private _ustrinae_ (places for the burning of
-bodies) are frequently mentioned. Often the grounds were laid out as
-gardens or parks, with trees and flowers, wells, cisterns or
-fountains, and even a house, with other buildings perhaps, for the
-accommodation of the slaves or freedmen who were in charge. A plan of
-such a garden is shown in Fig. 199. In the middle of the garden is the
-_area_, the technical word for the plot of ground set aside for the
-tomb, with several buildings upon it, one of which is a storehouse or
-granary (_horreum_); around the tomb itself are beds of roses and
-violets, used in festivals (section 438), and around them in turn are
-grapes trained on trellises. In the front is a terrace (_solarium_,
-cf. section 207), and in the rear two pools (_piscinae_) connected
-with the _area_ by a little canal, while at the back is a thicket of
-shrubbery (_harundinetum_). The purpose of the granary is not clear as
-no grain seems to have been raised on the lot, but it may have been
-left where it stood before the ground was consecrated. A tomb
-surrounded by grounds of some extent was called a _cepotaphium_.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 200. RUINS OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA]
-
-427. Exterior of the Tombs.--An idea of the exterior appearance of
-monuments of the better sort may be had from Figs. 193-196. The forms
-are very many, those of the altar and temple are the most common,
-perhaps, but memorial arches and niches are often found, and at
-Pompeii the semicircular bench that was used for conversation out of
-doors occurs several times, covered and uncovered. Not all of the
-tombs have the sepulchral chamber, the remains being sometimes
-deposited in the earth beneath the monument. In such cases a tube or
-pipe of lead ran from the receptacle to the surface, through which
-offerings of wine and milk could be poured (sections 429, 438). In
-Fig. 193, section 420, is shown the round monument at Caieta of Lucius
-Munatius Plancus, one of Caesar's marshals (_legati_) in Gaul, the
-inscription[1] on which recounts the positions he had filled and the
-work he had done. In Fig. 194, section 420, is shown the pyramid
-erected at Rome in honor of Caius Cestius by his heirs, one of whom
-was Marcus Agrippa. According to the inscription on it the monument
-was completed in 330 days. The most imposing of all was the mausoleum
-of Hadrian (Fig. 205, section 438) at Rome, now the castle of St.
-Angelo. A less elaborate exterior is that of the "tomb with the marble
-door" at Pompeii, given in Fig. 196, section 422.
-
-[Footnote 1: Inscription on the tomb of Plancus: "Lucius Munatius
-Plancus, son, etc. (section 39), consul, censor, twice imperator,
-member of the board of seven in charge of sacrificial feasts. He
-celebrated a triumph over the people of Raetia. From the spoils of war
-he erected a temple to Saturn. In Italy he assigned lands about
-Beneventum. In Gaul he planted colonies at Lugdunum and Raurica."]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 201. GROUND PLAN OF COLUMBARIUM OF LIVIA]
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 202. SARCOPHAGUS OF SCIPIO]
-
-428. The Columbaria.--From the family tombs were developed the immense
-structures mentioned in section 422 intended to receive great numbers
-of urns. They began to be erected in the time of Augustus and seem to
-have been confined to Rome, where the high price of land made the
-purchase of private burial-grounds impossible for the poorer classes.
-An idea of their interior arrangements may be had from the ruins (Fig.
-200) of one erected on the Appian way for the freedmen of Livia, the
-wife of Augustus. From their resemblance to a dovecote or pigeon house
-they were called _columbaria_. They are usually partly underground,
-rectangular in form, with great numbers of the niches (also called
-_columbaria_) running in regular rows horizontally (_gradus_) and
-vertically (_ordines_). In the larger _columbaria_ provision was made
-for as many as a thousand urns. Around the walls at the base was a
-_podium_, on which were placed the sarcophagi of those whose remains
-had not been burned, and sometimes chambers were excavated beneath the
-floor for the same purpose. In the _podium_ were also niches that no
-space might be lost. If the height of the building was great enough to
-warrant it, wooden galleries ran around the walls. Access to the room
-was given by a stairway in which were niches, too; light was furnished
-by small windows near the ceiling, and walls and floors were
-handsomely finished and decorated.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 203. AEDICULA IN COLUMBARIUM]
-
-429. The niches were sometimes rectangular in form, but more commonly
-half round, as shown in Figs. 200 and 203. Some of the _columbaria_
-have the lower rows rectangular, those above arched. They contained
-ordinarily two urns (_ollae_, _ollae ossuariae_) each, arranged side
-by side, that they might be visible from the front. Occasionally the
-niches were made deep enough for two sets of urns, those behind being
-elevated a little over those in front. Above or below each niche was
-fastened to the wall a piece of marble (_titulus_) on which was cut
-the name of the owner. If a person required for his family a group of
-four or six niches, it was customary to mark them off from the others
-by wall decorations to show that they made a unit; a very common way
-was to erect pillars at the sides so as to give the appearance of the
-front of a temple (Fig. 203). Such groups were called _aediculae_. The
-value of the places depended upon their position, those in the higher
-rows (_gradus_) being less expensive than those near the floor, those
-under the stairway the least desirable of all. The urns themselves
-were of various materials (section 437) and usually cemented to the
-bottom of the niches. The tops could be removed, but they, too, were
-sealed after the ashes had been placed in them, small openings being
-left through which offerings of milk and wine could be poured. On the
-urns or their tops were painted the names of the dead with sometimes
-the day and the month of death. The year is almost never found. Over
-the door of such a _columbarium_ on the outside was cut an inscription
-giving the names of the owners, the date of erection, and other
-particulars.
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 204. CINERARY URNS]
-
-430. Burial Societies.--Early in the Empire associations were formed
-for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their members,
-whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the purpose
-of building _columbaria_, or for both. These cooperative associations
-(_collegia funeraticia_) started originally among members of the same
-guild (section 412) or among persons of the same occupation. They
-called themselves by many names, _cultores_ of this deity or that,
-_collegia salutaria_, _collegia iuvenum_, etc., but their objects and
-methods were practically the same. If the members had provided places
-for the disposal of their bodies after death they now provided for the
-necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a
-small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When
-a member died a stated sum was drawn for his funeral from the
-treasury, a committee saw that the rites were decently performed, and
-at the proper seasons (section 438) the society made corporate
-offerings to the dead. If the purpose of the society was the building
-of a _columbarium_, the cost was first determined and the sum total
-divided into what we should call shares (_sortes viriles_), each
-member taking as many as he could afford and paying their value into
-the treasury. Sometimes a benevolent person would contribute toward
-the expense of the undertaking, and then such a person would be made
-an honorary member of the society with the title of _patronus_ or
-_patrona_. The erection of the building was intrusted to a number of
-_curatores_, chosen by ballot, naturally the largest shareholders and
-most influential men. They let the contracts and superintended the
-construction, rendering account for all the money expended. The office
-of the curators was considered very honorable, especially as their
-names appeared on the inscription without the building, and they often
-showed their appreciation of the honor done them by providing at their
-own expense for the decoration of the interior, or by furnishing all
-or a part of the _tituli_, _ollae_, etc., or by erecting on the
-surrounding grounds places of shelter and dining-rooms for the use of
-the members, like those mentioned in section 426.
-
-431. After the completion of the building the _curatores_ allotted the
-niches to the individual members. The niches were either numbered
-consecutively throughout or their position was fixed by the number of
-the _ordo_ and _gradus_ (section 428) in which they were situated.
-Because they were not all equally desirable, as has been explained,
-the curators divided them into sections as fairly as possible and then
-assigned the sections (_loci_) by lot to the shareholders. If a man
-held several shares of stock he received a corresponding number of
-_loci_, though they might be in widely different parts of the
-building. The members were allowed freely to dispose of their holdings
-by exchange, sale, or gift, and many of the larger stockholders
-probably engaged in the enterprise for the sake of the profits to be
-made in this way. After the division was made the owners had their
-names cut upon the _tituli_, and might put up the columns to mark the
-_aediculae_, set up statues, etc., if they pleased. Some of the
-_tituli_ give besides the name of the owner the number and position of
-his _loci_ or _ollae_. Sometimes they record the purchase of _ollae_,
-giving the number bought and the name of the previous owner. Sometimes
-the names on the _ollae_ do not correspond with that over the niche,
-showing that the owner had sold a part only of his holdings, or that
-the purchaser had not taken the trouble to replace the _titulus_. The
-expenses of maintenance were probably paid from the weekly dues of the
-members, as were the funeral benefits.
-
- L . ABVCIVS . HERMES . IN . HOC
- ORDINE . AB . IMO . AD . SVMMVM
- COLVMBARIA . IX . OLLAE . XVIII
- SIBI . POSTERISQVE . SVIS[2]
-
-[Footnote 2: Titulus in Columbarium: "Lucius Abucius Hermes (has
-acquired) in this row, running from the ground to the top, nine niches
-with eighteen urns for (the ashes of) himself and his descendants."]
-
-432. Funeral Ceremonies.--The detailed accounts of funeral ceremonies
-that have come down to us relate almost exclusively to those of
-persons of high position, and the information gleaned from other
-sources (section 12) is so scattered that there is great danger of
-confusing usages of widely different times. It is quite certain,
-however, that very young children were buried at all times simply and
-quietly (_funus acerbum_), that no ceremonies at all attended the
-burial of slaves (section 420) when conducted by their masters
-(nothing is known of the forms used by the burial societies mentioned
-above), and that citizens of the lowest class were laid to rest
-without public parade (_funus plebeium_). It is also known that
-burials took place by night except during the last century of the
-Republic and the first two centuries of the Empire, and it is natural
-to suppose that, even in the case of persons of high position, there
-was ordinarily much less of pomp and parade than on occasions that the
-Roman writers thought it worth while to describe. This has been found
-true in the matter of wedding festivities (section 79). It will be
-convenient to take in order the proceedings at the house, the funeral
-procession, and the ceremonies at the place of burial.
-
-433. At the House.--When the Roman died at home surrounded by his
-family, it was the duty of his oldest son to bend over the body and
-call him by name, as if with the hope of recalling him to life. The
-formal performance of the act (_conclamatio_) he announced immediately
-with the words: _conclamatum est_. The eyes of the dead were then
-closed, the body was washed with warm water and anointed, the limbs
-were straightened, and if the deceased had held a curule office a wax
-impression of his features was taken. The body was then dressed in the
-toga (section 240) with all the insignia of rank that the dead had
-been entitled to wear in life, and was placed upon the funeral couch
-(_lectus funebris_) in the _atrium_ (section 198), with the feet to
-the door, to lie in state until the time of the funeral. The couch was
-surrounded with flowers, and incense was burned about it. Before the
-door of the house were set branches of pine or cypress as a warning
-that the house was polluted by death. The simple offices that have
-been described were performed in humble life by the relatives and
-servants, in other cases by professional undertakers (_libitinarii_),
-who also embalmed the body and superintended all the rest of the
-ceremonies. Reference is made occasionally to the kissing of the dying
-person as he breathed his last, as if this last breath was to be
-caught in the mouth of the living, and in very early and very late
-times it was undoubtedly the custom to put a small coin between the
-teeth of the dead with which to pay his passage across the Styx in
-Charon's boat. Neither of these formalities seems to have obtained
-generally in classical times.
-
-434. The Funeral Procession.--The funeral procession of the ordinary
-citizen was simple enough. Notice was given to neighbors and friends,
-and surrounded by them and by the family, carried on the shoulders of
-the sons or other near relatives, with perhaps a band of musicians in
-the lead, the body was borne to the tomb. The procession of one of the
-mighty, on the other hand, was marshaled with all possible display and
-ostentation. It occurred as soon after death as the necessary
-preparations could be made, there being no fixed intervening time.
-Notice was given by a public crier in the ancient words of style:
-_Ollus Quiris leto datus. Exsequias, quibus est commodum, ire iam
-tempus est. Ollus ex aedibus effertur._[3] Questions of order and
-precedence were settled by one of the undertakers (_designator_). At
-the head went a band of musicians, followed at least occasionally by
-persons singing dirges in praise of the dead, and by bands of buffoons
-and jesters, who made merry with the bystanders and imitated even the
-dead himself. Then came the imposing part of the display. The wax
-masks of the dead man's ancestors had been taken from their place in
-the _alae_ (section 200) and assumed by actors in the dress
-appropriate to the time and station of the worthies they represented.
-It must have seemed as if the ancient dead had returned to earth to
-guide their descendant to his place among them. Servius tells us that
-six hundred _imagines_ were displayed at the funeral of the young
-Marcellus, the nephew of Augustus. Then followed the memorials of the
-great deeds of the deceased, if he had been a general, as in a
-triumphal procession, and then the dead himself, carried with face
-uncovered on a lofty couch. Then came the family, including freedmen
-(especially those made free by the testament of their master) and
-slaves, and then the friends, all in mourning garb (sections 246,
-254), and all freely giving expression to the emotion that we try to
-suppress on such occasions. Torch-bearers attended the train, even by
-day, as a remembrance of the older custom of burial by night.
-
-[Footnote 3: "This citizen has been surrendered to death. For those
-who find it convenient it is now time to attend the funeral. He is
-being brought from his house."]
-
-435. The Funeral Oration.--The procession passed from the house
-directly to the place of interment, unless the deceased was a person
-of sufficient consequence to be honored by public authority with a
-funeral oration (_laudatio_) in the forum. In this case the funeral
-coach was placed before the _rostra_, the men in the masks took their
-places on curule chairs (section 225) around it, the general crowd was
-massed in a semicircle behind, and a son or other near relative
-delivered the address. It recited the virtues and achievements of the
-dead and recounted the history of the family to which he belonged.
-Like such addresses in more recent times it contained much that was
-false and more that was exaggerated. The honor of the _laudatio_ was
-freely given in later times, especially to members of the imperial
-family, including women. Under the Republic it was less common and
-more highly prized, and so far as we know the only women so honored
-belonged to the _gens Iulia_. It will be remembered that it was
-Caesar's address on the occasion of the funeral of his aunt, the widow
-of Marius, that pointed him out to the opponents of Sulla as a future
-leader. When the address in the forum was not authorized, one was
-sometimes given more privately at the grave or at the house.
-
-436. At the Tomb.--When the train reached the place of burial the
-proceedings varied according to the time, but all provided for the
-three things ceremonially necessary: the consecration of the
-resting-place, the casting of earth upon the remains, and the
-purification of all polluted by the death. In ancient times the body,
-if buried, was lowered into the grave either upon the couch on which
-it had been brought to the spot, or in a coffin of burnt clay or
-stone. If the body was to be burned a shallow grave was dug and filled
-with dry wood, upon which the couch and body were placed. The pile was
-then fired and when wood and body had been consumed, earth was heaped
-over the ashes into a mound (_tumulus_). Such a grave in which the
-body was burned was called _bustum_, and was consecrated as a regular
-_sepulcrum_ by the ceremonies mentioned below. In later times the
-body, if not to be burned, was placed in a sarcophagus (Fig. 203)
-already prepared in the tomb (section 425). If the remains were to be
-burned they were taken to the _ustrina_ (section 426), which was not
-regarded as a part of the _sepulcrum_, and placed upon the pile of
-wood (_rogus_). Spices and perfumes were thrown upon it, together with
-gifts (section 425) and tokens from the persons present. The pyre was
-then lighted with a torch by a relative, who kept his face averted
-during the act. After the fire had burned out the embers were
-extinguished with water or wine and those present called a last
-farewell to the dead. The water of purification was then thrice
-sprinkled over those present, and all except the immediate family left
-the place. The ashes were then collected in a cloth to be dried, and
-the ceremonial bone (section 420), called _os resectum_, was buried. A
-sacrifice of a pig was then made, by which the place of burial was
-made sacred ground, and food (_silicernium_) was eaten together by the
-mourners. They then returned to the house which was purified by an
-offering to the _Lares_, and the funeral rites were over.
-
-437. After Ceremonies.--With the day of the burial or burning of the
-remains began the Nine Days of Sorrow, solemnly observed by the
-immediate family. Some time during this period, when the ashes had had
-time to dry thoroughly, members of the family went privately to the
-_ustrina_, removed them from the cloth, placed them in an _olla_ (Fig.
-204) of earthenware, glass, alabaster, bronze, or other material, and
-with bare feet and loosened girdles carried them into the _sepulcrum_
-(section 425). At the end of the nine days the _sacrificium
-novendiale_ was offered to the dead and the _cena novendialis_ was
-celebrated at the house. On this day, too, the heirs formally entered
-upon their inheritance and the funeral games (section 344) were
-originally given. The period of mourning, however, was not concluded
-on the ninth day. For husband or wife, ascendants, and grown
-descendants mourning was worn for ten months, the ancient year; for
-other adult relatives, eight months; for children between the ages of
-three and ten years, for as many months as they were years old.
-
-438. Memorial Festivals.--The memory of the dead was kept alive by
-regularly recurring days of obligation of both public and private
-character. To the former belong the _parentalia_, or _dies parentales_
-(section 75), lasting from the 13th to the 21st of February, the final
-day being especially distinguished as the _feralia_. To the latter
-belong the annual celebration of the birthday (or the burial-day) of
-the person commemorated, and the festivals of violets and roses
-(_violaria_, _rosaria_), about the end of March and May respectively,
-when violets and roses were distributed among the relatives and laid
-upon the graves or heaped over the urns. On all these occasions
-offerings were made in the temples to the gods and at the tombs to the
-_manes_ of the dead, and the lamps were lighted in the tombs (section
-425), and at the tombs the relatives feasted together and offered food
-to their dead (section 426).
-
-[Illustration: FIGURE 205. HADRIAN'S TOMB]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-References are to Paragraphs. An asterisk denotes a cut.
-
-
-A
-
-a manu, 391.
-
-abacus, reckoning board, 111*;
- panels in wall decorations, 220;
- sideboard, 227, 307*.
-
-ABBREVIATIONS in names, 41.
-
-ab epistolis, 391.
-
-abolla, cloak, 249*.
-
-ab ovo ad mala, 308.
-
-ACTORS, slave, men only, 324.
-
-ad (malam) crucem, 174.
-
-ADDITIONAL names, 51.
-
-ADDRESS of letters, 392.
-
-adfines, blood relations, 26.
-
-ADJUSTABLE tables, 227*.
-
-adoptio, see ADOPTION.
-
-ADOPTION, two kinds, 29;
- of a filius familias, 30;
- of a pater familias, 30;
- name given adopted person, 52, 56.
-
-adrogatio, see ADOPTION.
-
-adversitores, 152.
-
-ADVERTISEMENTS of gladiators, 361*.
-
-aediculae, in columbaria, 429*.
-
-AFFECTION for nurses, 101;
- for pedagogues, 123.
-
-agger viae, 387.
-
-agitatores, drivers of chariots, 341. See aurigae.
-
-agnati, related through males, 23.
-
-AGRICULTURE, honorable occupation, 404.
-
-alae, in house, 191;
- later, 200.
-
-alieno iuri subiectus, 17.
-
-alveus, in bath, 369*.
-
-amictus, outer garments, 240*-249*.
-
-AMPHITHEATER, meaning of word, 351;
- early at Rome, 352;
- at Pompeii, 353*, 354*, 355*;
- the coliseum, 356*, 357*, 358*.
-
-amphitheatrum, see AMPHITHEATER.
-
-amphorae, for wine, 297.
-
-amurca, bitter fluid of olives, 291.
-
-AMUSEMENTS, Chap. IX. See Table of Contents.
-
-andabatae, blindfold gladiators, 359.
-
-andron, formerly called fauces, 192 note.
-
-Andronicus, 113.
-
-anteambulones, outriders, 151.
-
-antecena, appetizer, 308.
-
-ANTIQUITIES, public and private distinguished, 2;
- and history, 4;
- private defined, 1;
- in philology, 6, 7;
- recent interest, 8.
-
-apodyterium, 366;
- makeshift for, 367;
- usually unheated, 368;
- one heated, 378*;
- in thermae, 376*, 377*.
-
-APPIAN WAY, as burial-place, 421;
- construction, 385 f.
-
-APPRENTICESHIP in education, 117.
-
-arbiter bibendi, toast master, 313.
-
-arca, strong box, 188, 201, 230*.
-
-Archias, name explained, 60.
-
-area, ground for tomb, 426.
-
-arena, circus, 330*, 332;
- amphitheater (Pompeii), 354*, (Rome), 357*.
-
-ARITHMETIC, in the schools, 111*.
-
-armaria, cabinets, 231.
-
-ARMY, as a career, (for nobles), 408, (for commons), 410.
-
-ARRANGEMENT of hair, 263;
- of hair of bride, 78;
- of couches in dining-room, 304*.
-
-ATHENS, university of Rome, 116.
-
-ATHLETIC sports and games, 316*, 317*, 318*.
-
-atriensis, butler, 149.
-
-atrium, in primitive house, 188;
- meaning, 189;
- the developed atrium, 196, 197, 198*;
- burial-place of Head of House, 421.
-
-Atticus, 155, 300, 310, 399.
-
-auctorati, volunteer gladiators, 347.
-
-aulaea, portieres, 216.
-
-aurigae, chariot drivers, (Figs. 138, 142), 341*, 342.
-
-
-B
-
-BAKERIES, 286*.
-
-BAKERS, as a guild, 286.
-
-BALL, played by children, 102*;
- by men, 318*.
-
-balneae, meaning, 372. See BATHS.
-
-balneaticum, bath fee, 373.
-
-balneum, meaning, 372. See BATHS.
-
-BANKING, as profession, 412.
-
-BANQUETS, 315.
-
-BARBER shops, 253.
-
-BARRIERS, in circus, 330*, 333*.
-
-basterna, litter drawn by mules, 382.
-
-BATH, in early times, 365;
- public and private, 365;
- essentials for, 366;
- rooms combined, 367;
- heating, 368;
- caldarium, 369;
- frigidarium, 370;
- unctorium, 370;
- private bathhouse, 371*;
- public baths, 372;
- time opened, 374;
- fees, 373;
- for women, 375;
- thermae, 376*, 377*.
-
-BATHHOUSE, in Caerwent, 371*;
- in Pompeii, 376*;
- in Rome, 377*.
-
-BATHROOMS, in residences, 203, 367, 371*.
-
-BEANS, considered heavy food, 275.
-
-BEARDS, fashions in, 254.
-
-BEEF, rarely used, 277.
-
-Benoist, his definition of Philology, 6.
-
-BETROTHALS, 70.
-
-BEVERAGES, 298.
-
-bibliotheca, 206, 402.
-
-BILLS of fare, 308, 309.
-
-BOOKS, ancient forms, 393;
- materials, 394, 395;
- making, 396;
- finish of, 397;
- size, 398;
- publishing, 399, 400;
- cost, 401;
- libraries, 402.
-
-"BOOKS," divisions of literary work, 398.
-
-BOXES, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 334;
- in amphitheater, 353.
-
-BOY, named, 97;
- home training, 104, 106;
- athletics, 107;
- education, see SCHOOL;
- coming of age, 125;
- given citizenship, 128.
-
-bracatae, wearing trousers, 239.
-
-BRAZIERS, 218*.
-
-BREAD, 286 f.;
- making, 287;
- kinds of, 288.
-
-"Bread and the Games of the Circus," 322.
-
-BREAKFAST, 302.
-
-BREAKING promise of marriage, 71.
-
-BRICKS, 212*.
-
-bulla, 99*.
-
-BURIAL-places and ceremonies, Chapter XII. See Table of Contents.
-
-BURIAL SOCIETIES, 430.
-
-BUSINESS rooms added to houses, 193;
- interests at Rome, 413.
-
-BUTTER, not a food, 281.
-
-
-C
-
-CABINETS, 231.
-
-calamus (scriptorius), 395.
-
-calceator, 150.
-
-calcei, 251*, 262;
- senatorii, 251;
- patricii, 251.
-
-caldarium, 366;
- near furnace, 368;
- furniture, 369;
- other uses of, 369;
- in plans, 371*, 376*, 378*.
-
-caligae, half-boots, 251.
-
-calx, in circus, 331*.
-
-camillus, 82*.
-
-campus Martius, 317.
-
-candelabra, 229.
-
-CANDIDATES' dress, 235, 246.
-
-candidati, 246.
-
-CANDLES, ill made, 229.
-
-CAP, of liberty, 175*, 252.
-
-CAPITALISTS, their field, 409, 413.
-
-capsa, 397*.
-
-capsarius, 370.
-
-Caracalla, hall in baths of, 365*.
-
-cara cognatio, feast of, 25.
-
-carceres, in circus, 330*, 333*.
-
-carnifex, term of abuse, 174.
-
-carpentum, traveling carriage, 383*.
-
-CARRIAGES, for travel, 383*.
-
-caruca, sleeping car, 383.
-
-casa Romuli, 214*.
-
-cathedra, easy chair, 226*.
-
-catillus, outer part of mill, 284*.
-
-Cato (234-149), treatment of slaves, 159;
- opinion of cabbage, 275;
- word for dinner, 312.
-
-causia, hat, 252*.
-
-cavea, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater (Pompeii), 353*, (Rome), 358*.
-
-cavum aedium, 196.
-
-CEILINGS, construction, 213.
-
-cellae, servorum, 207;
- vinariae, 297*;
- oleariae, 292*.
-
-cena, in early times, 301;
- in the city, 303-311;
- hours, 303;
- importance in social life, 303;
- bills of fare, 308, 309;
- service, 310, 311;
- libera, 362;
- nuptialis, 85.
-
-cena, "dinner proper," 308.
-
-cenotaphium, empty tomb, 419.
-
-centenarius, winner of 100 races, 340.
-
-cepotaphium, tomb with grounds, 426.
-
-cera, for sealing letter, 392.
-
-cerasus, cherry, 274.
-
-CEREALS for food, 282.
-
-Cestius, tomb of, (420*), 427.
-
-CHAIRS, 225*, 226*.
-
-CHALKED FEET, 139.
-
-CHARIOT RACES, 330 f.;
- number of chariots, 333;
- racing syndicates, 339;
- teams, 340;
- drivers, 341.
-
-charta, paper, see papyrus.
-
-CHEESE, 281.
-
-CHESTS, 230*.
-
-CHILDHOOD, see CHILDREN;
- end of, 125.
-
-CHILDLESSNESS, a reproach, 28.
-
-CHILDREN, rights of, see potestas;
- property of, see peculium;
- civil position of, 69, 94;
- acknowledgment of, 95;
- exposure of, 96;
- maiming of, 96;
- games, etc., 102, 103;
- home training, 104;
- punishment of, 120*, 124;
- in the dining-room, 304;
- burial of young children, 420.
-
-Chrysogonus and Roscius, 408.
-
-CHURCH, like Roman house, 191.
-
-Cicero (106-43), number of his slaves, 155;
- names of his freedmen, 59;
- goodness to slaves, 158;
- his books, 399, 402;
- income, 407.
-
-CINERARY urns, 189*, 428, 437.
-
-ciniflones, hairdressers, 150.
-
-CIRCUS at Rome, 328 f.;
- plan, 330*;
- arena, 332*;
- carceres, 333*, 334*;
- spina, metae, 335*, 336*;
- seats, 337*;
- capacity, 338;
- races in, 339 f.
-
-circus Flaminius, 329.
-
-circus Maxentii, 329;
- plan of, 330*;
- arena, 332;
- obelisk in, 336;
- seating capacity, 338.
-
-circus Maximus, 328;
- missus in, 332;
- spina in, 336;
- obelisk in 336*;
- seats in, 337, 338*;
- reconstruction, 338*.
-
-cisium, two-wheeled cart, 384*.
-
-CIVIL SERVICE, 414.
-
-clepsydra, water-clock, 232.
-
-clientela, clientage, 177.
-
-CLIENTS, Chap. V. See Table of Contents.
-
-CLIMATE of Italy, 272.
-
-CLOCKS, 232.
-
-CLOTHING, Chap. VII. See Table of Contents;
- colors worn, 270;
- manufacture of, 271;
- cleaning, 271*.
-
-codicilli, set of writing tablets, 391*.
-
-coemptio, plebeian form of marriage, 63;
- implying manus, 66;
- ceremony of, 83.
-
-COFFINS, 425, 436.
-
-COGNATES, defined, 25;
- importance among plebeians, 65;
- degrees between, 25, 68.
-
-cognati, see COGNATES.
-
-cognatio, see COGNATES.
-
-cognomen, before nomen, 40;
- marking family, 48;
- age of, 49;
- nickname, 49;
- indication of lineage, 50;
- ex virtute, 53;
- differing in same family, 55;
- as fourth element in name, 55.
-
-COLISEUM, date of, 352;
- plan, 356*;
- arena, 357*;
- seats, 358*.
-
-collegia, funeraticia, iuvenum, salutaria, 430.
-
-COLONIES, 411.
-
-COLORS, of articles of dress, 270;
- of racing syndicates, 339.
-
-columbaria, 428*-431*.
-
-COMIC OPERAS, 323.
-
-COMMERCE, 413.
-
-comissatio, drinking bout, 312*, 313.
-
-COMMON PEOPLE, employments of, 410 f.
-
-compluvium, 188, 191, 196, 198.
-
-compotatio, drinking bout, 312*.
-
-conclamatio, cry of farewell, 433.
-
-CONCRETE, extensive use, 146;
- method of making, 211*;
- in roads, 387.
-
-conductor, manager of baths, 373.
-
-confarreatio, 61;
- religious aspect, 64;
- implying manus, 66;
- ceremony of, 81.
-
-CONFISCATION of property, 408.
-
-CONFUSION of names, 55.
-
-CONSENT necessary to marriage, 74.
-
-Constantius (Emperor 337-361 A.D.), 338.
-
-CONSTRUCTION of house, 210* f.;
- mill, 284*;
- roads, 387*.
-
-contubernia, unions of slaves, 138, 156.
-
-conventio in manum, 35;
- cum conventione, 61;
- sine conventione, 62.
-
-convivia, dinners, 312;
- convivia tempestiva, 310.
-
-COOKS, hired in early times, 299.
-
-Cornelii, buried their dead, 420.
-
-coronae convivales, 313.
-
-CORRESPONDENCE, 391.
-
-COST, of baths, 373;
- books, 401;
- meals (inns), 388;
- slaves, 140;
- tables, 227;
- wines, 298.
-
-COTTON goods, 269.
-
-COUCHES, sofas or beds, 224*;
- dining, 304*.
-
-COVERINGS for the head, men, 252*;
- women, 263.
-
-covinus, two-wheeled cart, 384.
-
-Crassus, in salvage business, 413.
-
-crater, mixing bowl, 314*.
-
-CREMATION, introduced at Rome, 420.
-
-crepundia, child's rattle, 98*.
-
-Crescens, famous driver, 342.
-
-CRIMSON or purple, 270.
-
-CRUCIFIXION of slaves, 173.
-
-cubicula, bedrooms, 205.
-
-cucullus, hood, 247, 248, 252.
-
-culina, kitchen, 203*.
-
-cumerus, 82*.
-
-cunei, in theater, 327;
- circus, 337.
-
-curatores, of burial societies, 430.
-
-Curius and his dinner, 299.
-
-curriculum, lap in race, 331.
-
-CURTAIN in later theater, 327.
-
-CURULE chair, 225*.
-
-cyathus, ladle, 314*.
-
-CYPHER correspondence, 390.
-
-CYPRESS, as emblem of death, 433.
-
-
-D
-
-DAIRY products, 281.
-
-DANCERS, 153.
-
-dator ludorum, giver of games, 334.
-
-DAY, a Roman's, 415.
-
-declamatio, public speaking, 115.
-
-DECORATION of houses, 220 f.;
- walls, 220*;
- doors, 221*;
- floors, 221*;
- of tombs, 425*, 428*, 430*.
-
-decuriae, of slaves, 133.
-
-defrutum, grape jelly, 296.
-
-delphica (mensa), 227*.
-
-designator, funeral director, 434.
-
-destrictarium, in baths, 367, 376*.
-
-desultores, circus riders, 343.
-
-DEVELOPMENT of the house, 188*.
-
-dextrarum iunctio, in marriage, 81*.
-
-DICE, gaming with, 321*.
-
-dies, lustricus, 97;
- parentales, 75, 438;
- religiosi, 75.
-
-dimachaeri, gladiators with two swords, 359.
-
-DINING-ROOM, 204, 304*.
-
-DINNER, in the city, 303-311;
- early times, 301;
- hour, 310;
- bill of fare, 309;
- order of courses, 308;
- places of honor, 306.
-
-Diocletian (Emperor 284-305 A.D.) baths of, 378*.
-
-discus, throwing the, 316*.
-
-dispensator, steward, 149.
-
-diurna cubicula, 205.
-
-DIVORCE, 72, 93.
-
-DOG, as pet, 103;
- in hallway, 195*.
-
-dolia, for oil, 292*;
- for wine, 297.
-
-dominica potestas, 37.
-
-dominus gregis, head actor, 324.
-
-Domitian (Emperor 81-96 A.D.), 339.
-
-domus, 186;
- see HOUSE.
-
-DOORS, construction, 215* f.;
- names, 216.
-
-dormitoria, 205.
-
-dorsum, top course in road, 387.
-
-dos, dowry, 72.
-
-DOWRY, 72.
-
-DRAMATIC performances, 323 f.
-
-DRESS, Chap. VII. See Table of Contents.
-
-DRINKING bouts, 312*.
-
-DRIVERS, chariot races, 341*.
-
-ducenarius, horse of 200 victories, 340.
-
-DWARFS, kept for amusement, 153.
-
-
-E
-
-"EARLY DINNERS," 310.
-
-EARLY FORMS, of marriage, 61;
- of names, 38, 57, 58;
- of table customs, 299;
- of toga, 245;
- of theater, 325;
- of baths, 365;
- of gladiatorial shows, 345.
-
-EARLY HOURS at Rome, 79, 415.
-
-EARS of slaves bored, 139.
-
-EDUCATION, Chap. IV. See Table of Contents.
-
-ELM TREE, for grapes, 295;
- for switches, 167;
- "essence of elm," 168.
-
-editor munerum, giver of gladiatorial show, 362.
-
-ELOCUTION in schools, 114.
-
-EMANCIPATION, of a son, 18;
- of a slave, 175.
-
-endormis, bath robe, 249.
-
-ENGAGEMENTS, marriage, 71.
-
-EPIGRAPHIC sources, 10.
-
-epityrum, olive salad, 290.
-
-equites, career of, 409.
-
-ERRORS in manuscript books, 399.
-
-Esquiline Hill, as burial-place, 423.
-
-essedarii, chariot fighters, 359;
- spelled assidarii, 362.
-
-ESSENTIALS for the bath, 366;
- for burial, 436.
-
-EXAGGERATION in satire, 93.
-
-ex cathedra, official utterance, 226.
-
-exedrae, reception halls, 207.
-
-exponere, "expose," of children, 95.
-
-EXPOSURE of children, 32, 95;
- slaves, 157.
-
-exta, of the sacrifices, 277.
-
-EXTINCTION of the potestas, 34;
- of a family, 30.
- See ADOPTION.
-
-
-F
-
-f., abbreviation in names, 39, 57;
- for fugitivus, 172.
-
-fabulae palliatae, 323.
-
-faces, torches kept in doorways, 229.
-
-factiones, racing syndicates, 339.
-
-familia, meanings, 17, 21;
- =stirps, 22;
- gladiatoria, 349;
- rustica, 142, 145;
- urbana, 149.
-
-FAMILY, Chap. I. See Table of Contents;
- defined, 17;
- splitting up of, 19;
- cult, 27.
-
-FANS, 266*.
-
-far, early sort of grain, 282.
-
-FARMING of revenues, 409.
-
-FARM slaves, see familia rustica;
- work, 148.
-
-fasciae, wrappings of cloth, 239.
-
-fascinatio, evil eye, 98, 99.
-
-fascis, a set of books, 397.
-
-FASTENINGS for doors, 216.
-
-FATHER, see pater familias;
- as companion of his sons, 106.
-
-fauces, in a house, 192, note.
-
-FEES, in schools, 109, 119;
- baths, 373.
-
-feliciter, in congratulations, 82.
-
-feminalia, wrappings for legs, 239.
-
-fenestrae, windows, 217*.
-
-feralia, 438.
-
-Fescinnini versus, 87.
-
-FESTIVALS, cara cognatio, 25;
- feralia, 438;
- matronalia, 91;
- liberalia, 127;
- rosaria, 438;
- Saturnalia, 319;
- vinalia rustica, 296;
- violaria, 438.
-
-FESTIVITIES, wedding, 80, 85, 86, 89;
- coming of age, 127.
-
-FIREMEN, slaves as, 141.
-
-FISH, as food, 280.
-
-fistuca, heavy rammer, 213.
-
-flabellum, fan, 266*.
-
-flagrum, scourge, 167*.
-
-flammeum, bridal veil, 77*.
-
-Flavium amphitheatrum, see COLISEUM.
-
-FLOORS, construction, 213.
-
-FLOWERS, at feasts, 313;
- at tombs, 438.
-
-focalia, wrappings for throat, 239.
-
-foculi, heating stoves, 218*.
-
-folles, balls filled with air, 318*.
-
-FOOD, Chap. VIII. See Table of Contents.
-
-FORBIDDEN DEGREES of kinship, 25, 68.
-
-fores, double doors, 195, 216.
-
-FORKS, not used, 299.
-
-forum, place of early shows, 351.
-
-FOUNDLINGS, fate of, 96.
-
-FOWLS, domestic, 279.
-
-FREEDMAN, name, 59;
- relation to patron, 175.
-
-frigidarium, 366;
- other uses, 367;
- position, 368;
- furnishings, 370;
- shown on plans, 371*, 376*, 377*.
-
-fritillus, dice box, 321.
-
-frontes, of papyrus rolls, 397.
-
-FRUITS, known to Romans, 274.
-
-frumentum, grain, 282, and note.
-
-fugitivi, 172.
-
-fullones, as cleaners, 271*.
-
-FUNERAL games, 344, 345;
- ceremonies, Chap. XII. See Table of Contents.
-
-funus, acerbum, plebeium, 432.
-
-furca, as punishment, 169.
-
-FURNACE for houses, 218;
- for baths, 368.
-
-FURNITURE, 222 f.;
- modern lacking, 223;
- couches, 224*;
- chairs, 225*;
- tables, 227*;
- lamps, 228*;
- chests and cabinets, 230*;
- other articles, 232.
-
-
-G
-
-Gaius, meaning, 44, 81;
- as a nomen, 55, 81;
- in the marriage ceremony, 81, 88.
-
-GAME, wild, for table, 279.
-
-GAMES, of children, 103, 320*;
- public and private, see AMUSEMENTS. Chap. IX;
- of ball for men, 318*;
- of chance, 319*, 320*, 321*;
- funeral, 344, 345.
-
-GARDEN, behind the peristyle, 202;
- produce, 275, 276.
-
-GARLANDS worn by slaves, 134;
- by bride and groom, 78;
- by women, 264;
- at feasts by men, 313.
-
-GEESE as pets, 103*.
-
-gens, theory of, 22;
- marked by nomen, 38;
- burial-places of, 422.
-
-gentiles, 22;
- at the confarreate ceremony, 81*.
-
-"GENTLEMEN'S DINNERS," 310 f.
-
-GIRL, named, 97;
- home training, 104, 105;
- married at early age, 67, 105;
- admitted to schools, 109.
-
-GLADIATORS, 344 f.;
- in Etruria and Campania, 344;
- first shows at Rome, 344;
- in theory private shows, 345;
- numbers exhibited, 346;
- whence obtained, 347;
- innocent and guilty, 348;
- training, 349;
- fashions and tactics, 359;
- armor, 360;
- the fight, 362;
- rewards, 363;
- bravos and bullies, 346.
-
-GLASS, for windows, 217;
- balls for hands, 266.
-
-gradus, rows of seats, 337;
- of urns, 428.
-
-GRAMMAR schools, 112.
-
-grammaticus, of a teacher, 112.
-
-GRAPES, 293;
- where grown, 294;
- how grown, 295;
- jelly, 296.
-
-GREEK, place in schools, 112;
- nurses, 101;
- teachers, 115;
- taught to children, 101, 116, 123.
-
-GROUNDS, about tombs, 426*.
-
-GUARDIANS, of women, 19, 70;
- of children, 22.
-
-gustus, first course at dinner, 308.
-
-
-H
-
-Hadrian (Emperor 117-138 A.D.), tomb, 427, 438*.
-
-HAIR, arrangement, men, 254;
- women, 263;
- of a bride, 78.
-
-HANDBALL, 318.
-
-HANDKERCHIEFS, 266.
-
-HARD LABOR, as punishment, 170.
-
-hasta, sign of auction, 134.
-
-HATS, 252.
-
-HEAD of the House, see pater familias.
-
-HEATING houses, 218;
- baths, 368*, 369.
-
-HINGES of doors, 215*.
-
-HISTORY, and antiquities, 4;
- not taught systematically in schools, 112.
-
-HOLIDAYS, numerous, 322;
- school, 122;
- avoided as wedding days, 75;
- spent in country, 416.
-
-HOME training, 104.
-
-HONEY, used for sugar, 281.
-
-hoplomachi, later name for "Samnites," 360, 344*.
-
-Horace, (65-8 B.C.), his slaves, 133.
-
-HORSES, in chariot races, 339, 340;
- in other shows, 343.
-
-Horti Maecenatis, 423.
-
-hospites, 183 f.
-
-hospitium, 184.
-
-HOURS, of the day, 417, 418;
- for meals, 301;
- for baths, 374;
- all semi-public functions, 415.
-
-HOUSE, dwelling, Chap. VI. See Table of Contents;
- =familia, see FAMILY;
- Head of House, see pater familias;
- house slaves, 149.
-
-HOUSE of Pansa, 208*;
- of Sallust, court, 204*;
- of the poet, ruins, 199*.
-
-HOUSEHOLD, translation of familia, 17.
-
-HUMAN sacrifices, 344.
-
-HUT, of Romulus, 214*;
- early Romans, 189*.
-
-hymenaeus, marriage hymn, 86.
-
-
-I
-
-ianitor, chained to post, 150, 195.
-
-iantaculum, breakfast, 302.
-
-ianua, distinguished from ostium, 216.
-
-ientaculum, breakfast, 302.
-
-imagines, kept in alae, 200;
- in funeral processions, 434.
-
-imbrices, tiles for roof, 214*.
-
-imperium paternum, 31.
-
-impluvium, 188, 191, 196*.
-
-INCOME, sources of, Chap. XI. See Table of Contents.
-
-INDUSTRIAL employment of slaves, 143.
-
-indutus, clothing, 234.
-
-INK, INKSTANDS, etc., 395*.
-
-INNS, 388*.
-
-INSCRIPTIONS, importance of, 10;
- of a fugitivus, 172;
- of Crescens, 342;
- gladiatorial show, 361;
- of Hylas, 362;
- milestone, 386;
- in columbaria, 431;
- of Plancus, 427, note, 420*.
-
-instita, flounce of stola, 260.
-
-INSURRECTIONS of slaves, 132.
-
-INTERMENT, see BURIAL.
-
-iudicium domesticum, 32.
-
--ius, original in nomen, 46;
- in other names, 55.
-
-ius conubii, 64;
- osculi, 25;
- patrium, 31.
-
-iusti liberi, rightful children, 69.
-
-
-J
-
-JACKSTONES, 103, 320*.
-
-JESTERS, 153.
-
-JEWELRY worn by men, 255;
- women, 267.
-
-JOINING hands in marriage ceremony, 74.
-
-Juvenal (about 67-127 A.D.), on the toga, 244;
- "bread and games," 322.
-
-
-K
-
-KITCHEN, 203.
-
-KNIGHTS, income of, 409.
-
-KNIVES and forks, 299.
-
-KNUCKLE-BONES, 320*.
-
-
-L
-
-l., abbreviation for libertus, 59.
-
-labrum, basin in bath, 369, 376, 377.
-
-lacerna, cloak, 247.
-
-laconicum, dry sweat bath, 367, 371*.
-
-laena, woolen cloak, 249.
-
-LAMPS, 228, 229*.
-
-LAND, travel by, 381.
-
-lanista, trainer of gladiators, 349.
-
-laqueatores, gladiators with lassos, 359.
-
-lares, compitales, gods of crossroads, 87;
- of the house, 199.
-
-LATER theater, 326 f.
-
-lateres cocti, 212*;
- crudi, 210.
-
-LATIN in schools, 113;
- best spoken by women, 92.
-
-latrina, toilet room, 203*.
-
-laudatio funebris, funeral address, 435.
-
-LAW, practice of, 407.
-
-lectica, and bearers, 151*;
- on journeys, 382.
-
-lectus, see COUCHES;
- adversus, 199.
-
-LEGAL status of children, 94;
- slaves, 156;
- women, 35, 36, 90.
-
-lenones, 139.
-
-LETTERS, writing of, 391;
- sending, 390;
- speed, 389;
- sealing and opening, 392;
- the address, 392.
-
-libera cena, feast for gladiators, 362.
-
-Liberalia, 127.
-
-libertini, in business, 412 f.
-
-libertus, opposed to libertinus, 175;
- relation to patron, 175.
-
-LIBERTY, cap of, 175*.
-
-libitinarii, undertakers, 433.
-
-LIBRARIES, 206, 402.
-
-librarii, copyists, 391, 399, 401.
-
-limen, threshold, 195, 215;
- superum, 215.
-
-LIMITATIONS of patria poteatas, 32, 33;
- of manus, 36;
- of dominica potestas, 156, 157.
-
-LINEN goods, 269.
-
-linum, 392.
-
-LITERARY sources, 9.
-
-litterae, see LETTERS;
- eodem exemplo, 390.
-
-Livia, columbarium of, 428*.
-
-LOAVES of bread, 288*.
-
-locus, consularis, 306;
- in columbarium, 431.
-
-lorarius, executioner, 174.
-
-lucerna, lamp, 228*, 229*.
-
-ludi, circenses, 328 f.;
- scenici, 323 f.;
- gladiatorii (schools), 349*, 350.
-
-ludus, see SCHOOLS;
- ludus Troiae, 343.
-
-LUNCHEON, 302.
-
-lunula, ornament, 98;
- for shoe, 251.
-
-
-M
-
-M. and M', in names, 41.
-
-m., for missus, of pardoned gladiator, 361.
-
-Maecenas, gardens of, 423.
-
-maeniana, sections of seats, 337, 358.
-
-maenianum, projecting second story, 233*.
-
-magister bibendi, master of revels, 313.
-
-maiestas patria, 31.
-
-malum, Armeniacum, granatum, Persicum, Punicum, 274.
-
-mamillare, 257*.
-
-mangones, 135.
-
-MANHOOD, when reached, 126.
-
-MANUFACTURE of clothing, 271.
-
-MANUMISSION of slaves, 175.
-
-manus, defined, 35;
- limited, 36;
- unpopular, 65, 66;
- when necessary, 66.
-
-Marcellus, theater of, 327*.
-
-MARRIAGE, Chap. III. See Table Of Contents;
- by capture, 78, 86, 88;
- hymn, 86;
- cry, 87;
- torch, 86, 89;
- religious duty, 28.
-
-Martial (43-101 A.D.) and the toga, 244;
- and cost of books, 401.
-
-MASTER, heir of his slaves, 164.
-
-MATERIALS for clothing, 269.
-
-MATCHED PAIRS of slaves, 140.
-
-matrimonium, motherhood, 64;
- iniustum, 69.
-
-matrimus, with a living mother, 82.
-
-matronalia, 91.
-
-MEALS, Chap. VIII. See Table of Contents.
-
-MEANINGS of names, 44.
-
-MEAT, early food of Italians, 273;
- various kinds, 277.
-
-MEMORIAL festivals, 438.
-
-mensa, table in general, 227;
- dining, 307.
-
-mensa prima, first course, 308.
-
-mensa secunda, dessert, 308, 309, 311.
-
-MENU, of dinner, 309.
-
-merenda, irregular meal, 302.
-
-meridiatio, noonday rest, 302.
-
-meta, of a grain mill, 284*.
-
-metae, in a circus, 331*, 335.
-
-MILESTONES, 386*.
-
-MILL, for grain, 284*;
- for olives, 292*;
- as a punishment, 148, 171.
-
-missus, seven laps in a race, 331;
- "spared," of a gladiator, 361.
-
-MIXING BOWLS, 314*;
- three thousand of Pompeius, 326;
- mixing wine, 314.
-
-mola, mill, 284*, 285*.
-
-monopodium, table with one support, 227*.
-
-MONUMENTAL sources, 11.
-
-"Morituri te salutant," 362.
-
-MOSAICS, 221.
-
-MOTHER, as nurse, 100;
- as teacher, 104, 105.
-
-MOURNING, signs of, 246, 253;
- periods of, 437.
-
-mulleus, patrician shoe, 251.
-
-mulsa, water and honey, 298.
-
-mulsum, wine and honey, 298.
-
-munera, opposed to ludi, 345;
- gladiatoria, Chap. IX. See Table of Contents.
-
-munire viam, of road building, 387.
-
-murmillones, class of gladiators, 360.
-
-mustaceum, wedding cake, 85.
-
-mustum, new wine, 296.
-
-MUTUAL obligations, of patron and freedman, 175;
- patrician patron and client, 179;
- later patron and client, 182;
- of hospites, 185.
-
-
-N
-
-NAME, Chap. II. See Table of Contents.
- See also praenomen, nomen, cognomen.
-
-narratio, narration, taught in schools, 115.
-
-NATURALIZED citizens, names of, 60.
-
-naumachiae, naval battles, 364.
-
-NETS, for the hair, 264.
-
-NEW clients, 181.
-
-NEWSPAPER, substitute for, 413.
-
-NICKNAMES, 54;
- See also cognomen.
-
-NIGHT for burial, 432.
-
-NOBLES, debarred from business careers, 404;
- funerals of, 433 f.
-
-nodus Herculaneus, 77.
-
-nomen, before and after cognomen, 40;
- endings of, 46;
- sign of gens, 21, 47;
- two or more in one name, 55;
- used as praenomen, 55.
-
-nomenclator, 151, 415.
-
-nominalia, 97.
-
-novendiale, 437.
-
-nubere, meaning, 77.
-
-nucleus, in roads, 387.
-
-NUMERALS as praenomina, 44;
- as names of women, 57.
-
-nuptiae iustae, 67;
- iniustae, 69.
-
-NURSERY stories, 100.
-
-NURSES, 100;
- Greek preferred, 101.
-
-NUTS, in wedding festivities, 87;
- for marbles, 103;
- grown in Italy, 274.
-
-
-O
-
-OBELISKS in the circuses, 336*.
-
-OCCUPATIONS of slaves, 143.
-
-oeci, rooms in house, 207.
-
-OLD and new clients, 176 f.
-
-oleum olivum, olive oil, 291.
-
-OLIVE, uses, 289 f.;
- preserved, 290;
- oil, uses, 291;
- manufacture, 292.
-
-ollae, urns for ashes of dead, 428, 429, 430*, 431, 437.
-
-ollus quiris leto datus, 434.
-
-ONION, unrefined, 275.
-
-oppidum, in circus, 330*.
-
-opus, caementicium, 210, 211*;
- incertum, 212*;
- quadratum, 210*;
- reticulatum, 212*.
-
-Orange, theater at, 327*.
-
-ORANGE, not grown in Italy, 274.
-
-ordo, in columbarium, 428, 431;
- scribarum, 414.
-
-ornamenta, theatrical properties, 324.
-
-ornator, valet, 150.
-
-ornatrix, ladies' maid, 150, 265.
-
-os resectum, bone for burial, 436.
-
-ostium, door, 195.
-
-ova, in the circus, 336.
-
-OVEN, for bread, 287*.
-
-
-P
-
-p., for periit, of gladiators, 361.
-
-paedagogus, 123*.
-
-paenula, cloak, 248*.
-
-palaestra, exercise ground, 367, 376*.
-
-palla, woman's robe, 261.
-
-paludamentum, general's cloak, 247.
-
-palus, with primus or secundus, 363.
-
-papyrus, manufacture, 394;
- rolls, 396.
-
-PARASOL, 266*.
-
-parentalia, festival of, 438.
-
-paries, house wall, 210.
-
-pater and derivatives, 26.
-
-pater familias, defined, 17;
- powers, see potestas;
- adopted into another family, 30.
-
-patria potestas, see potestas.
-
-patricii, sons of fathers, 64.
-
-patrimonium profundere, 33.
-
-patrimus, with a living father, 82.
-
-patronus, derivation of word, 26;
- and libertus, 175;
- patrician and client, 179;
- and client of later times, 182.
-
-PAUPERS, burial of, 423.
-
-PAVEMENT, construction, 387.
-
-pavimentum, floor, 213.
-
-PAY of teachers, 121;
- of chariot drivers, 342;
- of soldiers, 410.
-
-peculium, defined, 33;
- of slaves, 162.
-
-pecunia, meaning, 273.
-
-pedisequi, lackeys, 123, 150.
-
-PENS, 395.
-
-peregrinus, foreigner, 69.
-
-PERFUMES at feasts, 313.
-
-PERISTYLE, 192, 202*;
- perhaps a kitchen garden originally, 197.
-
-pero, shoe of untanned leather, 251.
-
-Persius (34-62 A.D.) as a schoolboy, 124.
-
-pessuli, bolts for doors, 216.
-
-petasus, hat, 252*.
-
-petoritum, baggage wagon, 383.
-
-PETS for children, 103.
-
-PHILOLOGY, defined, 6.
-
-PHYSICIANS, income and attainments, 412.
-
-pietas, affection, 73.
-
-pilentum, state carriage, 383.
-
-pilleus, cap of liberty, 175*, 252.
-
-piscina, plunge bath, 367, 370, 376*, 377*.
-
-pistores, millers and bakers, 283.
-
-PLACES, of honor at dinner, 305*;
- in the theater, 326;
- in the circus, 337;
- in the amphitheater (Pompeii), 355, (Rome), 358;
- where gladiators were shown, 356;
- of burial, 421.
-
-PLAN, of theater after Vitruvius, 327;
- circus of Maxentius, 330;
- of gladiatorial school at Pompeii, 349;
- of houses, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193;
- of house of Pansa, 208;
- of baths, 371, 376, 378;
- of inn, 388;
- of tombs and grounds, 425, 426.
-
-Plancus, tomb of, 420*, 427.
-
-Plautus (died 184 B.C.) on puls, 283.
-
-PLAYTHINGS for children, 102*.
-
-PLEBEIANS, marriages of, 62;
- importance of cognates, 65;
- gain right of marriage, 64;
- old plebeians, 177;
- new, 178.
-
-plebs, see PLEBEIANS.
-
-Pliny, the elder (died 79 A.D.), 352.
-
-pocula, goblets, 314*.
-
-podium, in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater, 357;
- in tombs, 425.
-
-POLITICS, as a career, 406.
-
-Pollio, Vedius, cruelty of, 158.
-
-POLYGAMY unknown at Rome, 61.
-
-pompa circensis, parade in circus, 343.
-
-Pompeii, importance of discoveries at, 11, 12;
- house plans, 187 f.;
- business rooms in private house, 194;
- small house at, 197*;
- house of poet, 199*;
- of Pansa, 208*;
- smaller theater at, 327*;
- ludi gladiatorii, 350*;
- amphitheater, 353*;
- thermae, 376*;
- street of tombs, 421*;
- tomb with marble door, 427*.
-
-pondera, stepping-stones, 233*.
-
-pontifex maximus, in marriage ceremony, 82.
-
-POOR, burial of, 428.
-
-por, for puer in names, 58.
-
-PORK, favorite meat, 278.
-
-PORRIDGE, 283, 286, 299.
-
-porta triumphalis in circus, 330;
- pompae, 330;
- Libitinensis, 354.
-
-POSITION of women, 90.
-
-POSTAL service, 389.
-
-posticum, garden door, 216.
-
-potestas, patria, 31;
- limitations, 32, 73;
- extinguished, 34;
- suspension of, 34;
- dominica, 37.
-
-POTTER's FIELD at Rome, 423.
-
-praecinctio, in theater, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in coliseum, 358.
-
-praenomen, first name, 41;
- number, 41;
- abbreviations, 41, 45;
- limited in certain families, 42;
- given to firstborn son, 43;
- meanings of, 44;
- two in one name, 55.
-
-prandium, luncheon, 302.
-
-PRICES, of baths, 373;
- books, 401;
- houses, 221, note;
- meals, 388;
- slaves, 140;
- tables, 227;
- wines, 298.
-
-PRIMITIVE house, 188.
-
-primus palus, title of honor, 363.
-
-PRIVATE, antiquities, 2;
- slaves, 142 f.;
- bathhouse at Caerwent, 371*;
- games, 322;
- rooms in house, 203.
-
-PROCESSION, bridal, 86;
- in circus, 343;
- in the amphitheater, 362.
-
-procurator, steward, 149.
-
-PROFESSIONS in hands of freedmen and foreigners, 412;
- even of slaves, 143.
-
-PROLETARIATE, 411.
-
-prolusio, sham fight, 362.
-
-promulsis, appetizer, 308.
-
-pronuba, matron of honor, 81.
-
-PROVINCES, corruption in, 406, 409.
-
-PUBLIC, antiquities, 2;
- baths, 372 f., 376*, 377*;
- fountains, 233*;
- games, 322;
- opinion, in case of children, 32, 33;
- in case of slaves, 156.
-
-"PUBLICANS and sinners," 409.
-
-PUBLICATION of books, 400.
-
-puer, for servus, 58;
- written por, 58.
-
-pugillares, writing tablets in sets, 391*.
-
-puls, ancient national diet, 283.
-
-pultiphagonidae, 299.
-
-PUNISHMENTS of schoolboys, 120*, 124;
- of slaves, 166 f.
-
-pup(us), of unnamed child, 55.
-
-PURPLE or crimson, 270.
-
-puticuli, gravepits, 423.
-
-
-Q
-
-quadrans, regular bath charge, 373.
-
-quadrigae, in races, 340.
-
-
-R
-
-RACEHORSES, 339 f.
-
-RACES in circus, 339 f.;
- teams, 340;
- drivers, 341;
- syndicates, 339.
-
-RACING syndicates, 339.
-
-RAPE of the Sabines, 86, 87.
-
-READING, how taught, 110.
-
-reda, carriage, 384.
-
-REFERENCE books, 13.
-
-RELATIONSHIPS, agnati, 23;
- cognati, 25;
- adfines, 26.
-
-renuntiare, break an engagement to marry, 71.
-
-repotia, 85, 89.
-
-repudium renuntiare, see renuntiare.
-
-retiarii, gladiators with nets, 359, 360*.
-
-reticula, nets for the hair, 264.
-
-REWARDS of aurigae, 341;
- of gladiators, 363.
-
-rex bibendi, lord of the feast, 313.
-
-RICE in modern wedding festivities, 87.
-
-RINGS, engagement, 71;
- men's, 255;
- women's, 267;
- worn on joint, 256.
-
-ROADS, 385*-387*.
-
-Romulus, legislation of, 32, 95;
- wall of, 210*;
- hut of, 214*.
-
-ROOF, of peristyle, 202*;
- construction of, 214*.
-
-rosaria, feast of roses, 438.
-
-rudes, fencing swords, 349;
- with prima or secunda, 363.
-
-rudus, in roads, 387*.
-
-RUNAWAY slaves, 161, 172*.
-
-
-S
-
-sacra gentilicia, 22.
-
-sacrarium, private chapel, 207*.
-
-SADDLES, not used by Romans, 381.
-
-sagina gladiatoria, training food, 349.
-
-sagum, military cloak, 247.
-
-SALADS, 276.
-
-SALES of captives, 134;
- of slaves, 139.
-
-SALTCELLAR of silver, 299;
- always on table, 307.
-
-salutatio, morning levee, 182.
-
-"Samnites," name for gladiators, 359, 360*;
- later called secutores or hoplomachi, 360.
-
-SANDALS, see SLIPPERS.
-
-sarcophagus 436*, 428.
-
-SAVINGS of slaves, 162-164.
-
-SCALES, in marriage ceremony, 83.
-
-scapus, fixed quantity of paper, 394, 398.
-
-schedae, sheets of paper, 395.
-
-SCHOOLS, Chap. IV. See Table of Contents.
-
-SCHOOLS for gladiators, 349*.
-
-scribae, in civil service, 414;
- as copyists, see librarii.
-
-scrinium, case for books, 397*.
-
-SEALS, 255*, 392.
-
-SEATS, in theater, of classes, 326;
- arrangement, 327;
- in circus, 337;
- in amphitheater (Pompeii), 355, (Rome), 358.
-
-secunda mensa, 308, 309, 311.
-
-secutores, later name for "Samnites," 360.
-
-SEDAN CHAIRS, in travel, 382.
-
-sella curulis, 225*.
-
-semitae, sidewalks, 387.
-
-sepulcrum, 425, 436.
-
-serae, bars, 216.
-
-Servius and Sergius, derivation, 41.
-
-Servius, grammarian (4th cent. A.D.), 434.
-
-SEVENTEEN, time of coming of age, 126.
-
-SHIPS, travel by, 380.
-
-SHOES, 251*, 262*.
-
-SHOWS of gladiators. See munera.
-
-SHUTTERS for windows, 217.
-
-SIDEWALKS, 233.
-
-SIGNS of mercy in amphitheater, 362.
-
-silicernium, funeral feast, 436.
-
-SILK goods, 269.
-
-sine missione, "to the death," 362.
-
-SIZE of books, 398.
-
-SLAVEHUNTERS, 161.
-
-SLAVERY and clientage, 180.
-
-SLAVES, Chap. V. See Table of Contents.
-
-SLEEPING rooms, 205.
-
-SLIPPERS, 250*, 262*.
-
-SMOKE to ripen wine, 297.
-
-solarium, place to take the sun, 207, 426;
- sun-dial, 232.
-
-SOLDIERS, career, 410.
-
-soleae, 250*, 262*;
- soleas poscere, "to take leave," 250.
-
-solium, chair, 226*;
- basin in bath, 369.
-
-solum, floor, 213.
-
-sordidati, in mourning garb, 246.
-
-sortes virilis, a shareholder's part, 430.
-
-SOURCES of philological knowledge, literary, 9;
- epigraphic, 10;
- monumental, 11.
-
-Sp., abbreviation for Spurius, 41.
-
-sp., abbreviation for spectavit populus, 363.
-
-Spartacus, 132, 172.
-
-spatium, lap in circus, 331.
-
-SPEED, in travel, 389;
- in writing, 401.
-
-spina in circus, 331*, 336*.
-
-spina alba, of wedding torch, 86.
-
-SPINNING wheel, 199.
-
-SPLITTING up of a house, 19.
-
-spondeo, technical word in contract, 71.
-
-sponsa, of a girl betrothed, 71.
-
-sponsalia, ceremony of betrothal, 70.
-
-SPORT, Roman idea of, 316.
-
-SPORTS of the campus, 317;
- of children, 102, 103.
-
-sportula, the clients' dole, 182.
-
-STAGE, early, 325;
- later, 326 f.;
- of Vitruvius, 327*.
-
-STAGING a play, 324.
-
-statumen in roads, 387.
-
-STEPPING-STONES in streets, 233*.
-
-stilus, for writing, 391.
-
-stola, 259, 260*;
- matronalis, 91.
-
-STOOLS, 225*.
-
-STOVE, for cooking, 203*;
- for heating, 218*.
-
-STREET, appearance, 233*;
- construction, 387;
- closed to vehicles, 382;
- of tombs at Pompeii, 421*.
-
-strigiles, flesh scrapers, 367*, 370.
-
-strophium, girdle, 258.
-
-STUCCO, as finish for exterior wall, 212.
-
-STYLE of living, 299;
- of bathing, 367.
-
-Styx, passage of, 433.
-
-suasoria, debates in schools, 115.
-
-sub hasta venire, auction sale, 134.
-
-SUBJECTS taught in schools, Chap. IV.
-
-subligaculum, loin cloth, 235, 257.
-
-subucula, under-tunic, 237.
-
-sudaria, handkerchiefs, 266.
-
-Suetonius (about 75-160), 390.
-
-SUICIDE of captives and slaves, 140*, 161.
-
-sui iuris, independent, 17.
-
-Sulla and Sura, derivation, 55.
-
-SUPPLY of gladiators, 347;
- of slaves, 134;
- of horses for racing, 339.
-
-Sura, derivation, 55.
-
-susceptio, acknowledgment of children, 95.
-
-SUSPENSION of potestas, 34.
-
-suspensura, elevated floor of bath room, 368*.
-
-SWEAT bath, dry, 367;
- moist, 369.
-
-synthesis, dinner dress, 249.
-
-
-T
-
-tabellae, for writing, 110*, 391*.
-
-tabellarii, letter carriers, 389.
-
-TABLE knives and forks unknown, 299.
-
-TABLES, cost, kinds, materials, 227*.
-
-tablinum, in early house, 190;
- in later house, 201;
- meaning of word, 201.
-
-Tacitus (about 55-117) on the toga, 133.
-
-Talassio, marriage cry, 87.
-
-tali, knuckle-bones, 320*.
-
-TEACHERS, 121.
-
-tecta, roofs, 214.
-
-tegulae, tiles, 214*.
-
-tepidarium, purpose, 366;
- other uses, 367;
- position, 368;
- unusual size, 371*;
- several in one bath, 376*;
- in the large thermae, 377;
- with cold bath, 370.
-
-tessera gladiatoria, 363*;
- hospitalis, 185.
-
-THEATER, early, 325;
- later, 326;
- of Vitruvius, 327*;
- at Pompeii, 327*;
- at Orange, 327*;
- of Pompeius, 326.
-
-thermae, meaning, 372;
- plan of small, 376*;
- of large, 378*.
-
-THIRD FINGER for engagement ring, 71.
-
-"Thracians," gladiators, 360*, 361.
-
-"THUMBS down," signal for death, 362.
-
-Tiberius (Emperor, 14-37 A.D.), 274.
-
-tibialia, wrappings for the legs, 239.
-
-TILES, for roofs, etc., 214*.
-
-tirocinium fori, 117;
- militiae, 118.
-
-tirones, of untrained gladiators, 118.
-
-titulus, description of slave, 139;
- in columbaria, 429, 431*.
-
-TOAST-MASTER, 313.
-
-TOASTS, 314.
-
-TOGA, material and use, 240;
- appearance, 241*;
- in literature, 242*;
- on the monuments, 243*;
- cumbrous and uncomfortable, 244;
- earlier toga, 245*;
- kinds of, 246;
- see also the Latin word below.
-
-toga, see the English word above;
- candida, 246;
- libera, 127;
- picta, 246;
- pulla, 246;
- pura, 246;
- praetexta, 76, 125, 246;
- splendens, 246;
- virilis, 125.
-
-TOILET articles, 265*.
-
-tollere, acknowledge a child, 44, 95.
-
-TOMBS, 422 f.
-
-tonsor, barber and barber-shop, 254.
-
-TORCHES, at funerals, 434;
- weddings, 86, 89.
-
-"To the lions," 364.
-
-TOWN-SLAVES, 159.
-
-trabea, cloak for men, 247.
-
-TRADES, 412.
-
-TRAINERS of gladiators, 349, 363.
-
-TRAVEL, Chap. X. See Table of Contents.
-
-TRAVELING cloak, 248.
-
-TREADING grapes for wine, 296*.
-
-TREATMENT of slaves, 158.
-
-triclinium, dining-room, 204, 304*;
- in court, 204*.
-
-trigon, three handed ball, 318.
-
-TRIPLE name, 38;
- expanded, 39;
- shortened, 40.
-
-Tullus, meaning, 44.
-
-TUNIC, 236*.
-
-tunica, 236*;
- angusti clavi, 238;
- lati clavi, 238;
- exterior (men's), 237;
- (women's), 259*;
- interior, 237, 258;
- manicata, 237;
- talaris, 239;
- recta, 76;
- regilla, 76.
-
-Tuscanicum atrium, 196.
-
-tutor, guardian, 19, 70.
-
-TWELVE TABLES (450 B.C.), in the schools, 111;
- mention both burial and burning of dead, 420.
-
-tyrotarichus, a dish of cheese and salt fish, 280.
-
-
-U
-
-umbella, parasol, 266*.
-
-umbilicus, of a papyrus roll, 397.
-
-umbones, of a road, 387.
-
-umbraculum, parasol, 266*.
-
-umbrae, unexpected guests, 304.
-
-unctorium, use, 366;
- makeshift for, 367.
-
-UNLUCKY days, 75.
-
-URNS, for ashes of dead, see ollae.
-
-ustrina, place for private cremation, 426.
-
-usus, of marriage, definition, 62;
- ceremony of, 84.
-
-
-V
-
-v., for vicit, of gladiators, 361.
-
-vappa, term of reproach, 297, note.
-
-Varro (116-28 B.C.), 253.
-
-VEGETABLES grown by Romans, 275.
-
-VEGETARIANS, early Romans, 299.
-
-VEHICLES, used for travel, 382 f.
-
-vela, portieres, 216;
- awnings, 358, 361.
-
-venationes, hunts in circus and amphitheater, 343, 364.
-
-ventralia, wrappings for the body, 239.
-
-Venus, the high throw, 320.
-
-vernae, slaves born in the house, 138;
- of Atticus, 155.
-
-Verres, as a nomen, 46;
- the governor of Sicily, 406.
-
-vesperna, evening meal in country, 302.
-
-Vestales, special seats in theater, 327;
- in amphitheater, 357;
- allowed carriages in the city, 382.
-
-vestibulum, space before the door, 194.
-
-via Appia, 385*, 387*.
-
-vicarius, a slave's slave, 164.
-
-vilicus, overseer, 145, 148;
- cheats slaves, 160.
-
-VILLAS of the rich, 145, 379, 416.
-
-vinalia rustica, festival, 296.
-
-VINEGAR, 281, 297, note.
-
-VINEYARD, 295.
-
-vinum, fermented wine, 297.
-
-violaria, feast of violets, 438.
-
-VITICULTURE, 293, 294.
-
-Vitruvius, architect of the first century, 187, 327, 366, 387.
-
-volumen, papyrus roll, 396. See BOOKS.
-
-VULTURE, the lowest throw, 320.
-
-
-W
-
-WALL, of house, 210 f.;
- facing for, 212*;
- around arena, 354*, 357*.
-
-WATER, supply for houses, 219;
- for baths, 368;
- traveling by, 380.
-
-WAX masks, of the dead, 433.
-
-WEDDING, see MARRIAGE;
- day, 75;
- feast, 85;
- garments, 76;
- torch, 86, 89;
- procession, 86.
-
-Whitney (1827-1894), definition of Philology, 6.
-
-WINDOWS, 217*.
-
-WINE, in Italy, 293;
- districts, 294;
- making, 296*;
- vaults, 297*;
- jars, 297 (Fig. 116);
- drunk diluted, 298;
- cost, 298.
-
-WOMEN, names of, 57;
- position of, 90;
- education of, 92;
- dress of, 257 f.;
- at table, 302, 304*;
- at amphitheater, 353, 358;
- at baths, 375.
-
-WOOL for clothing, 269.
-
-WORDS of style in contracts, 70;
- at funerals, 434.
-
-WRITING, how taught, 110;
- of books, 398.
-
-
-Z
-
-zona, girdle, 260*.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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