Page:Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire vol 1 (1897).djvu/233

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OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
159

ancients as have accidently turned aside from the splendid to of Asia the more useful parts of history. We are informed that, by the conquests of Pompey, the tributes of Asia were raised from fifty to one hundred and thirty-five millions of drachms, or about of Egypt four millions and a half sterling.[1] Under the last and most indolent of the Ptolemies, the revenue of Egypt is said to have amounted to twelve thousand five hundred talents; a sum equivalent to more than two millions and a half of our money, but which was afterwards considerably improved by the more exact economy of the Romans, and the increase of the trade of of Gaul Ethiopia and India.[2] Gaul was enriched by rapine, as Egypt was by commerce, and the tributes of those two great provinces of Africa have been compared as nearly equal to each other in value.[3] The ten thousand Euboic or Phoenician talents, about four millions sterling,[4] which vanquished Carthage was condemned to pay within the term of fifty years, were a slight acknowledgment of the superiority of Rome,[5] and cannot bear the least proportion with the taxes afterwards raised both on the lands and on the persons of the inhabitants, when the fertile coast of Africa was reduced into a province.[6]

of Spain Spain, by a very singular fatality, was the Peru and Mexico of Spain of the old world. The discovery of the rich western continent by the Phœnicians, and the oppression of the simple natives, who were compelled to labour in their own mines for the benefit of strangers, form an exact type of the more recent history of Spanish America.[7] The Phœnicians were acquainted only with the sea coast of Spain; avarice as well as ambition carried the arms of Rome and Carthage into the heart of the country, and almost every part of the soil was found pregnant with copper, silver, and gold. Mention is made of a mine near Carthagena which yielded every day twenty-five thousand drachms of silver, or about three hundred thousand pounds a
  1. Plutarch, in Pompeio, p. 642 [45. There is little doubt that Plutarch means they were raised to eighty-five millions.]
  2. Strabo, 1. xvii. p. 798.
  3. Velleius Paterculus, 1. ii. c. 30. He seems to give the preference to the revenue of Gaul.
  4. The Euboic, the Phœnician, and Alexandrian talents, were double in weight to the Attic. See Hooper on ancient weights and measures, p. iv. c. 5. It is very probable that the same talent was carried from Tyre to Carthage. [The ratio of the Euboic to the Attic talent after the time of Solon was about 4 to 3.]
  5. Polyb. 1. xv. c. 2.
  6. Appian in Punicis, p. 84.
  7. Diodorus Siculus, 1. v. [37]. Cadiz was built by the Phœnicians a little more than a thousand years before Christ. See Veil. Patercul. i. 2.