Page:Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1827) Vol 1.djvu/67

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OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
43

CHAP. II.
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puted which was the preferable condition, of those societies which had issued from, or those which had been received into the bosom of Rome[1]. The risht of Latium, as it was called, conferred on the cities to which it had been granted, a more partial favour. The magistrates only, at the expiration of their office, assumed the quality of Roman citizens ; but as those offices were annual, in a few years they circulated round the principal families[2]. Those of the provincials who were permitted to bear arms in the legions[3]; those who exercised any civil employment; all, in a word, who performed any public service, or displayed any personal talents, were rewarded with a present, whose value was continually diminished by the hicreasing hberality of the emperors. Yet even in the age of the Antonines, when the freedom of the city had been bestowed on the greater number of their subjects, it was still accompanied with very solid advantages. The bulk of the people acquired, with that title, the benefit of the Roman laws, particularly in the interesting articles of marriage, testaments, and inheritances; and the road of fortune was open to those whose pretensions were seconded by favour or merit. The grandsons of the Gauls who had besieged Julius Caesar in Alesia, commanded legions, governed provinces, and were admitted into the senate of Rome[4]. Their ambition, instead of disturbing the tranquillity of the state, was intimately connected with its safety and greatness.

Division of the Latin and the Greek provinces.So sensible were the Romans of the influence of language over national manners, that it was their most serious care to extend, with the progress of their arms,
  1. Aul. Gell. Noctes Atticae, xvi. 13. The emperor Hadrian expressed his surprise, that the cities of Utica, Gades, and Itatica, which already enjo)?ed the rights oi municipia, should solicit the title of colonies. Their example, however, became fashionable, and the empire was filled with honorary colonies. See Spanheim, de Usu Numismatum, Dissertat. xiii.
  2. Spanheim, Orbis Roman, c. 8. p. 62.
  3. Aristid. in Romae Encomio, torn. i. p. 218. edit. Jebb.
  4. Tacit. Annal. xi. 23, 24. Hist. iv. 74.