Download Roman Soldiers Relationships in the Frontier (a bibliographic Essay)

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Food and dining in the Roman Empire wikipedia , lookup

Culture of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Education in ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Early Roman army wikipedia , lookup

Marriage in ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Switzerland in the Roman era wikipedia , lookup

Romanization of Hispania wikipedia , lookup

East Roman army wikipedia , lookup

Roman economy wikipedia , lookup

Slovakia in the Roman era wikipedia , lookup

Military of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Roman funerary practices wikipedia , lookup

Roman agriculture wikipedia , lookup

Roman army of the late Republic wikipedia , lookup

Centuriate Assembly wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
1
Roman Soldiers Relationships in the Frontier (a bibliographic Essay)
03/11/10
This example is generously supplied by Owen Hurst
Modern debates surrounding personal relationships developed between Roman soldiers in
military settlements and women in canabae and vici, civilian communities, in the frontier provinces in the
Imperial period, has received increased attention among scholars. Studies have attempted to explain how
personal relationships were viewed by citizen soldiers and how the state viewed their relationships, with
native women. Recent works on the relationships of low ranking soldiers explore literary and epigraphic
records left from the provinces to obtain a greater understanding of the soldiers and the familial relations
they developed on the periphery of the empire.
Soldiers in combat situations or stationed for long periods of time far from home developed close
relationships with fellow soldiers, and the Romans in the frontier were no exception. Research conducted
and presented by Ramsay MacMullen in “The Legion as a Society” reveal the strong ties that developed
among soldiers of the frontier Legions. MacMullen examines sources left by soldiers such as personal
letters, and tombstone inscriptions to determine that soldiers developed family-like bonds with their
contubernales, members of the standard eight men barrack blocks within military bases.1MacMullen
explains further using modern examples to demonstrate how close community networks among soldiers
enabled them to fulfill their individual potential as soldiers and enter into danger with thoughts for their
comrade’s lives as well as their own.2 His examination of troops under Brigadier General Marshal and
Veterans of the Lincoln Brigade reflect the same type of brotherhood that developed among Roman
soldiers; that honour and reputation among comrades and pride in their outfit makes better soldiers.3 The
1
MacMullen, Ramsay. “The Legion as a Society,” Historia: Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 33 (4) (1984): p. 442-444
Ibid., pp. 443-455
3
Ibid., pp. 447-448
2
2
development of strong bonds between soldiers served the dual purpose of developing a more reliable
fighting force and giving men a sense of identity among their peers.
The recent work by Valerie M. Hope which examines tombstones and trophies commemorating
Roman soldiers, reaches similar conclusions to MacMullen regarding soldiers’ relationships in military
settlements.4 Hope’s examination of military tombstones and trophies is essential when explaining the
relationships of frontier soldiers and how these relationships progressed after the formation of permanent
military settlements. Hope explains that tombstones represent a level of stability and permanence in
military settlements, and commemorations by soldiers reveal a supportive network of military comrades
who acted as a pseudo family.5 MacMullen and Hope agree that soldiers in military settlements formed
significant bonds; however this is brought into question by Adrian Goldsworthy who focuses on the daily
duties and assignments of individual soldiers. Goldsworthy examines surviving duty rosters of soldiers,
arguing that contubernium, the eight man divisions that slept together, would rarely have been together
because Romans duties were assigned to individuals and not contubernales, as well as the fact that it is
possible several soldiers from each contubernium would often be on patrol or leave outside the
settlement.6 The theory presented by Goldsworthy reveals that soldiers were busy and often on duty but
does not outweigh the literary sources and extensive number of inscriptions revealing that strong ties
developed between contubernales.
The bond developed between soldiers may have striking resemblance to modern soldiers but,
unlike most modern militaries relationships with women were regulated by the state. After Augustus
instituted permanent military settlements and lengthened the period of service soldiers began to form
alliances with women in the vici that formed near military settlements. With large numbers of men
4
Hope, Valerie M. “Trophies and Tombstones: Commemorating the Roman Soldier,” World Archaeology 35 (1)
(June 2003): pp. 79-97
5
Ibid., p. 86
6
Goldsworthy, Adrien Kieth. The Complete Roman Army. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2003: p. 90
3
permanently placed in a region far from Rome Augustus instituted a law that no soldier in active service
could legally marry. A recent and extensive look into the “marriage” of Roman soldiers has been released
by Sara Phang examining the marriage ban by Augustus and what was practiced in the distant military
settlements of the Empire.7 Conclusions by Susan Treggiari demonstrate that the soldiers’ marriage ban
was inconsistent with the current Roman marriage law`s aim of increasing civilian manpower, revealing
different laws for Roman enlisted men.8 It is possible to theorize, as Walter Scheidel does, soldiers’
attitude towards such a ban, which likely caused Claudius’ granting the legal privileges of married men to
soldiers in 44 CE.9 Oddly enough, men were granted the rights of a married man even though they were
not allowed to legally form marriages. Scheidel clarifies that soldiers were not prevented from forming
relationships with women or even raising children, but the conjugal family had no legal status and
therefore recommends that “non-recognition” of marriage is a more precise term than “ban.”10 The theory
that marriage was not recognized as opposed to being banned is supported by the tombstone
commemorations which became extensive from the first century CE on. Sheidel reveals that husbands and
wives, as we will call them, commemorated each other on tombstones, revealing that both parties believed
in the marriage regardless of Roman law; inscriptions examined by Phang and Hope reach similar
conclusions about soldiers’ marriage based on tombstone commemorations.11 Clearly soldiers in
permanent military settlements developed marital relations and raised children, though the state viewed
the relationship as concubinage with illegitimate children.
As shown, soldiers and women believed their relationship was a marriage, however ancient and
modern sources debate whether these women achieved the status of wife or were simply concubines. This
question has been taken far too lightly in the past by scholars like Harold Mattingly, who stated briefly
7
Phang, Sara Elise. The Marriage of Roman Soldiers (13 B.C – A.D. 235). Brill: Leiden; Boston; Koln, 2001: p. 116
Ibid., p. 116-117
9
Walter Sheidel, Marriage, Families, and Survival: Demographic Aspects, in A Companion to the Roman Army, ed.
by Paul Erdkamp (Malden: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2007), p. 418
10
Scheidel, p. 418
11
Scheidel, p. 420; Phang, p. 152; Hope, p. 87
8
4
that soldiers had concubines and marriage was not permitted or engaged in before Septimius Severus.12
More recent historians have explained the issue in much greater detail. Phang explains in extreme detail
the misconceptions about Herodian’s statement that Septimius Severus granted soldiers legal marriage in
197 BCE.13 The translation of the Greek term used by Herodian to describe marriage has been greatly
debated and often referred to as concubinage. This argument is suppressed by Phang who rationalizes that
concubinage had been in practice for centuries and the privilege granted by Septimius did constitute legal
marriage leading to the probability that soldiers weren’t permitted to legally marry prior to 197 BCE.14
The argument for concubinage is also reviewed by Phang in relation to how concubinage was viewed and
practiced within Rome.15 In Rome concubinage was primarily practiced by young men before marriage or
by older widows to avoid a new marriage and production of legitimate children that would upset
inheritance arrangements, rarely was concubinage related to the formation of a family.16 The provincial
relationships do not conform to the Roman perception of concubinage and marital terms are increasingly
common in the evidence from the provinces, validating that marriage was practiced by soldiers regardless
of legitimacy.17
We are now able to assume with a degree of surety that marital relations were practiced by
soldiers before 197 BCE, and can attempt to comprehend the parameters of the relationship. As shown
above Scheidel revealed that soldiers were not prevented from cohabitating with women or raising the
children born from such relations.18 This point is agreed upon by Mattingly who states that men could live
with their (what he calls concubines) and raise children, and that soldiers were at times able to live in the
vici with their family and not in the barracks of the base.19 The question of whether soldiers lived outside
the base with their family or the family was brought inside the base is discussed by Goldsworthy who
12
Mattingly, Harold. Roman Imperial Civilization. London: W.W. Norton and Co, 1971: p.143
Phang, p.16-20
14
Ibid., p.21
15
Ibid., p.199
16
Ibid., p.198-199
17
Ibid., p.199
18
Scheidel, p.418
19
Mattingly, p.143
13
5
acknowledges the debate over controversial archaeological finds within the excavations of Roman
barracks.20 The issues discussed by Goldsworthy reveal that artefacts and clothing associated with women
and children have been found in barracks suggesting that soldiers may have brought their families within
the walls of the base, though it is expressed that this would have been unlikely in such confined living
quarters.21 It could be argued that families were brought into the base during times of threat, which could
reveal the soldiers commitment to a family that was as yet recognized by the state. However, scant
evidence makes it difficult for scholars to reach a consensus on whether soldiers were permitted to live
with their family in or out of the base.
One main issue that has caused controversy among scholars regarding the inscriptions pertaining
to soldiers’ wives are the Romanized names of the women, which according to Sheidel make up 90% of
all epigraphic evidence.22 Several theories have been expressed as to how these wives, who would have
primarily been native, assumed Roman names. Once again Phang is the authority promoting first that
wives could have Roman names because some soldiers married their freedwoman, who upon
manumission adopted their husband or future husband’s name.23 Both Scheidel and Goldsworthy attest to
the likelihood that many soldiers’ wives using Roman names were likely freedwomen who were married,
however the high number of inscriptions present this as only probable in some cases. It is presented as
more likely that even though legal marriage was prohibited, soldiers held to Roman marriage practice and
would have preferred Romanized wives, resulting in women adopting Roman names to better assimilate
into the culture of their husbands.24 Scheidel goes further by stating that non-assimilation was not an
option for soldiers’ wives who had no choice but to take necessary measures to fit in with their husbands
and with state.25 Adoption of Roman names by wives is still debatable to some degree but cannot be
20
Goldsworthy, p.103
Goldsworthy, p.103
22
Scheidel, p.423
23
Phang, p.193
24
Sheidel, p.423-425; Phang p.190-195
25
Scheidel, p.424
21
6
denied when viewed in relation to the abundance of epigraphic evidence attesting to it; however questions
arise whether this was an attempt by the family to legitimize children from the relationship.
Children born out of soldiers’ marriages provide an interesting study with the understanding that
Roman marriage focused on providing legitimate heirs for inheritance. Romans also had strict family
structures with all members under the patria potestas of the father, which is called into question when
regarding illegitimate children born in the frontier. The inscription pertaining to children on funerary
epitaphs and laws that developed in response to the growing number of soldiers’ marriages producing
children provide the fullest understanding of the status of soldiers’ children. Mattingly discusses the
importance of soldiers’ children and their value to recruitment in the frontier, a recruitment which gained
them citizenship.26 Gaining citizenship through military service as adults however does not recognize
inheritance issues of illegitimate children or the high regard for legitimate heirs in Roman society.
Scheidel exposes several legal cases that left children born during their father’s military service
illegitimate, consequently having no claim on their father’s estate unless named heir’s in their fathers
will.27 The issue of illegitimate children being soldiers’ heirs received enough attention that the emperor
Hadrian decreed that soldiers’ children could inherit as cognate relatives if no legitimate heir or relative
could be found.28 Scheidel points out that this would have caused issues for children attempting to
establish descent from men not formally regarded as their father, but that issue itself demonstrates how
abundant the conjugal family was in the military settlements of the frontier.29
The high number of children in the frontier is also demonstrated by Phang who reveals several
interesting circumstances regarding soldiers’ children. As it has been shown above Roman men preferred
Roman ways of life in their family and several accounts examined by Phang record petitions to the Senate
26
Mattingly, p.143
Scheidel, pp.418-419
28
Ibid., p.418
29
Ibid., p.418
27
7
to legitimize their children, primarily to gain patria potestas over them.30 It is shown that this did not
cause large scale legitimacy but was a route for Roman soldiers to pursue, again revealing that children
born to soldiers in the frontier were regarded as an issue by the Roman Senate.31 Like soldiers’ wives the
use of Roman names also presents difficulties when discussing the legitimacy of soldiers’ children. Phang
demonstrates that in soldiers’ family epitaphs, children usually have the paternal nomen as if they were
legitimate, though they could not all have been procreated prior to enlistment or after their fathers’
discharge.32 It is suggested by Phang that the legitimate nomenclature for children could reveal that some
children were legitimized by adrogation, though adrogation was cumbersome and cannot account for the
high number of epitaphs recording children with the paternal nomen.33 It appears much more likely, and
the opinion of Phang that “soldiers gave their children their nomina because their children were not
“bastards” but their acknowledged progeny of socially existent marriages.”34 Much like soldier’s wives’
nomenclature blurred legal status and makes defining the status of women and children difficult, though
understanding the need to assimilate to Roman ways of life presents a better understanding of
Romanization in the frontier provinces.
The bonds of fellowship and marital relationships were essential social aspects of a Roman
soldier’s life in the frontier. The relationships comforted and gave a sense of belonging to soldiers living
far from home and for long periods of time. Marital relations were beneficial for soldiers and the empire,
regardless of the states attempt to suppress soldiers’ marriage. Children procreated by soldiers often
joined the military - strengthening frontier forces - and marriage acted as a cultural exchange between
natives and Romans, advancing Romanization and the understanding of “barbarian” culture. The
professional armies after Augustus were primarily unpropertied men, whose occupation for most of their
30
Phang, pp.310-311
Phang, pp.316-319
32
Ibid., p.312
33
Ibid., p.312
34
Ibid., p.312
31
8
adult life was soldiering, leaving little choice for soldiers but to form family bonds among themselves and
native women.
9
Bibliography
Campbell, Brian “The Marriage of Soldiers under the Empire,” The Journal of Roman Studies 68 (1978):
pp. 153-166
Gardner, Jane F. Women in Roman Law and Society. Bloomington and Idianapolis: Idianapolis University
Press, 1991
Goldsworthy, Adrien Kieth. The Complete Roman Army. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2003
Hope, Valerie M. “Trophies and Tombstones: Commemorating the Roman Soldier,” World Archaeology
35 (1) (June 2003): pp. 79-97
MacMullen, Ramsay. “The Legion as a Society,” Historia: Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 33 (4) (1984): pp.
440-456
Mattingly, Harold. Roman Imperial Civilization. London: W.W. Norton and Co, 1971
Phang, Sara Elise. The Marriage of Roman Soldiers (13 B.C – A.D. 235). Brill: Leiden; Boston; Koln, 2001
Rawson, Beryl “Roman Concubinage and other De Facto Marriages,” Transactions of the American
Philological Association 104 (1974): pp. 279-305
Saller, Richard P. and Shaw, Brent D. “Tombstones and Roman Family Relations in the Principate:
Civilians, Soldiers, and Slaves,” The Journal of Roman Studies 74 (1984): pp. 124-156
Scheidel, Walter. Marriage, Families, and Survival: Demographic Aspects. In A Companion to the Roman
Army, edited by Paul Erdkamp, 417-434. Malden: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2007
Treggiari, Susan. Roman Marriage: Iusti Coniuges From the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1991