WE are without well-certified records of the first period of Rome's
existence; it even appears very probable that most of the stories told
about it are fables; indeed, generally speaking, the most instructive
part of the history of peoples, that which deals with their foundation,
is what we have least of. Experience teaches us every day what causes
lead to the revolutions of empires; but, as no new peoples are now
formed, we have almost nothing beyond conjecture to go upon in
explaining how they were created.
The customs we find established show at least that these customs had an
origin. The traditions that go back to those origins, that have the
greatest authorities behind them, and that are confirmed by the
strongest proofs, should pass for the most certain. These are the rules
I have tried to follow in inquiring how the freest and most powerful
people on earth exercised its supreme power.
After the foundation of Rome, the new-born republic, that is, the army
of its founder, composed of Albans, Sabines and foreigners, was divided
into three classes, which, from this division, took the name of tribes.
Each of these tribes was subdivided into ten curię, and each curia into
decurię, headed by leaders called curiones and decuriones.
Besides this, out of each tribe was taken a body of one hundred Equites
or Knights, called a century, which shows that these divisions, being
unnecessary in a town, were at first merely military. But an instinct
for greatness seems to have led the little township of Rome to provide
itself in advance with a political system suitable for the capital of
the world.
Out of this original division an awkward situation soon arose. The
tribes of the Albans (Ramnenses) and the Sabines (Tatienses) remained
always in the same condition, while that of the foreigners (Luceres)
continually grew as more and more foreigners came to live at Rome, so
that it soon surpassed the others in strength. Servius remedied this
dangerous fault by changing the principle of cleavage, and substituting
for the racial division, which he abolished, a new one based on the
quarter of the town inhabited by each tribe. Instead of three tribes he
created four, each occupying and named after one of the hills of Rome.
Thus, while redressing the inequality of the moment, he also provided
for the future; and in order that the division might be one of persons
as well as localities, he forbade the inhabitants of one quarter to
migrate to another, and so prevented the mingling of the races.
He also doubled the three old centuries of Knights and added twelve
more, still keeping the old names, and by this simple and prudent
method, succeeded in making a distinction between the body of Knights,
and the people, without a murmur from the latter.
To the four urban tribes Servius added fifteen others called rural
tribes, because they consisted of those who lived in the country,
divided into fifteen cantons. Subsequently, fifteen more were created,
and the Roman people finally found itself divided into thirty-five
tribes, as it remained down to the end of the Republic.
The distinction between urban and rural tribes had one effect which is
worth mention, both because it is without parallel elsewhere, and
because to it Rome owed the preservation of her morality and the
enlargement of her empire. We should have expected that the urban tribes
would soon monopolise power and honours, and lose no time in bringing
the rural tribes into disrepute; but what happened was exactly the
reverse. The taste of the early Romans for country life is well known.
This taste they owed to their wise founder, who made rural and military
labours go along with liberty, and, so to speak, relegated to the town
arts, crafts, intrigue, fortune and slavery.
Since therefore all Rome's most illustrious citizens lived in the fields
and tilled the earth, men grew used to seeking there alone the mainstays
of the republic. This condition, being that of the best patricians, was
honoured by all men; the simple and laborious life of the villager was
preferred to the slothful and idle life of the bourgeoisie of Rome; and
he who, in the town, would have been but a wretched proletarian, became,
as a labourer in the fields, a respected citizen. Not without reason,
says Varro, did our great-souled ancestors establish in the village the
nursery of the sturdy and valiant men who defended them in time of war
and provided for their sustenance in time of peace. Pliny states
positively that the country tribes were honoured because of the men of
whom they were composed; while cowards men wished to dishonour were
transferred, as a public disgrace, to the town tribes. The Sabine Appius
Claudius, when he had come to settle in Rome, was loaded with honours
and enrolled in a rural tribe, which subsequently took his family name.
Lastly, freedmen always entered the urban, arid never the rural, tribes:
nor is there a single example, throughout the Republic, of a freedman,
though he had become a citizen, reaching any magistracy.
This was an excellent rule; but it was carried so far that in the end it
led to a change and certainly to an abuse in the political system.
First the censors, after having for a long time claimed the right of
transferring citizens arbitrarily from one tribe to another, allowed
most persons to enrol themselves in whatever tribe they pleased. This
permission certainly did no good, and further robbed the censorship of
one of its greatest resources. Moreover, as the great and powerful all
got themselves enrolled in the country tribes, while the freedmen who
had become citizens remained with the populace in the town tribes, both
soon ceased to have any local or territorial meaning, and all were so
confused that the members of one could not be told from those of another
except by the registers; so that the idea of the word tribe became
personal instead of real, or rather came to be little more than a
chimera.
It happened in addition that the town tribes, being more on the spot,
were often the stronger in the comitia and sold the State to those who
stooped to buy the votes of the rabble composing them.
As the founder had set up ten curię in each tribe, the whole Roman
people, which was then contained within the walls, consisted of thirty
curię, each with its temples, its gods, its officers, its priests and
its festivals, which were called compitalia and corresponded to the
paganalia, held in later times by the rural tribes.
When Servius made his new division, as the thirty curię could not be
shared equally between his four tribes, and as he was unwilling to
interfere with them, they became a further division of the inhabitants
of Rome, quite independent of the tribes: but in the case of the rural
tribes and their members there was no question of curię, as the tribes
had then become a purely civil institution, and, a new system of levying
troops having been introduced, the military divisions of Romulus were
superfluous. Thus, although every citizen was enrolled in a tribe, there
were very many who were not members of a curia.
Servius made yet a third division, quite distinct from the two we have
mentioned, which became, in its effects, the most important of all. He
distributed the whole Roman people into six classes, distinguished
neither by place nor by person, but by wealth; the first classes
included the rich, the last the poor, and those between persons of
moderate means. These six classes were subdivided into one hundred and
ninety-three other bodies, called centuries, which were so divided that
the first class alone comprised more than half of them, while the last
comprised only one. Thus the class that had the smallest number of
members had the largest number of centuries, and the whole of the last
class only counted as a single subdivision, although it alone included
more than half the inhabitants of Rome.
In order that the people might have the less insight into the results of
this arrangement, Servius tried to give it a military tone: in the
second class he inserted two centuries of armourers, and in the fourth
two of makers of instruments of war: in each class, except the last, he
distinguished young and old, that is, those who were under an obligation
to bear arms and those whose age gave them legal exemption. It was this
distinction, rather than that of wealth, which required frequent
repetition of the census or counting. Lastly, he ordered that the
assembly should be held in the Campus Martius, and that all who were of
age to serve should come there armed.
The reason for his not making in the last class also the division of
young and old was that the populace, of whom it was composed, was not
given the right to bear arms for its country: a man had to possess a
hearth to acquire the right to defend it, and of all the troops of
beggars who to-day lend lustre to the armies of kings, there is perhaps
not one who would not have been driven with scorn out of a Roman cohort,
at a time when soldiers were the defenders of liberty.
In this last class, however, proletarians were distinguished from capite
censi. The former, not quite reduced to nothing, at least gave the State
citizens, and sometimes, when the need was pressing, even soldiers.
Those who had nothing at all, and could be numbered only by counting
heads, were regarded as of absolutely no account, and Marius was the
first who stooped to enrol them.
Without deciding now whether this third arrangement was good or bad in
itself, I think I may assert that it could have been made practicable
only by the simple morals, the disinterestedness, the liking for
agriculture and the scorn for commerce and for love of gain which
characterised the early Romans. Where is the modern people among whom
consuming greed, unrest, intrigue, continual removals, and perpetual
changes of fortune, could let such a system last for twenty years
without turning the State upside down? We must indeed observe that
morality and the censorship, being stronger than this institution,
corrected its defects at Rome, and that the rich man found himself
degraded to the class of the poor for making too much display of his
riches.
From all this it is easy to understand why only five classes are almost
always mentioned, though there were really six. The sixth, as it
furnished neither soldiers to the army nor votes in the Campus
Martius,[36] and was almost without function in the State, was seldom
regarded as of any account.
These were the various ways in which the Roman people was divided. Let
us now see the effect on the assemblies. When lawfully summoned, these
were called comitia: they were usually held in the public square at Rome
or in the Campus Martius, and were distinguished as comitia curiata,
comitia centuriata, and comitia tributa, according to the form under
which they were convoked. The comitia curiata were founded by Romulus;
the centuriata by Servius; and the tributa by the tribunes of the
people. No law received its sanction and no magistrate was elected, save
in the comitia; and as every citizen was enrolled in a curia, a century,
or a tribe, it follows that no citizen was excluded from the right of
voting, and that the Roman people was truly sovereign both de jure and
de facto.
For the comitia to be lawfully assembled, and for their acts to have the
force of law, three conditions were necessary. First, the body or
magistrate convoking them had to possess the necessary authority;
secondly, the assembly had to be held on a day allowed by law; and
thirdly, the auguries had to be favourable.
The reason for the first regulation needs no explanation; the second is
a matter of policy. Thus, the comitia might not be held on festivals or
market-days, when the country-folk, coming to Rome on business, had not
time to spend the day in the public square. By means of the third, the
senate held in check the proud and restive people, and meetly restrained
the ardour of seditious tribunes, who, however, found more than one way
of escaping this hindrance.
Laws and the election of rulers were not the only questions submitted to
the judgment of the comitia: as the Roman people had taken on itself the
most important functions of government, it may be said that the lot of
Europe was regulated in its assemblies. The variety of their objects
gave rise to the various forms these took, according to the matters on
which they had to pronounce.
In order to judge of these various forms, it is enough to compare them.
Romulus, when he set up curia, had in view the checking of the senate by
the people, and of the people by the senate, while maintaining his
ascendancy over both alike. He therefore gave the people, by means of
this assembly, all the authority of numbers to balance that of power and
riches, which he left to the patricians. But, after the spirit of
monarchy, he left all the same a greater advantage to the patricians in
the influence of their clients on the majority of votes. This excellent
institution of patron and client was a masterpiece of statesmanship and
humanity without which the patriciate, being flagrantly in contradiction
to the republican spirit, could not have survived. Rome alone has the
honour of having given to the world this great example, which never led
to any abuse, and yet has never been followed.
As the assemblies by curię persisted under the kings till the time of
Servius, and the reign of the later Tarquin was not regarded as
legitimate, royal laws were called generally leges curiatę.
Under the Republic, the curię, still confined to the four urban tribes,
and including only the populace of Rome, suited neither the senate,
which led the patricians, nor the tribunes, who, though plebeians, were
at the head of the well-to-do citizens. They therefore fell into
disrepute, and their degradation was such, that thirty lictors used to
assemble and do what the comitia curiata should have done.
The division by centuries was so favourable to the aristocracy that it
is hard to see at first how the senate ever failed to carry the day in
the comitia bearing their name, by which the consuls, the censors and
the other curule magistrates were elected. Indeed, of the hundred and
ninety-three centuries into which the six classes of the whole Roman
people were divided, the first class contained ninety-eight; and, as
voting went solely by centuries, this class alone had a majority over
all the rest. When all these centuries were in agreement, the rest of
the votes were not even taken; the decision of the smallest number
passed for that of the multitude, and it may be said that, in the
comitia centuriata, decisions were regulated far more by depth of purses
than by the number of votes.
But this extreme authority was modified in two ways. First, the tribunes
as a rule, and always a great number of plebeians, belonged to the class
of the rich, and so counterbalanced the influence of the patricians in
the first class.
The second way was this. Instead of causing the centuries to vote
throughout in order, which would have meant beginning always with the
first, the Romans always chose one by lot which proceeded alone to the
election; after this all the centuries were summoned another day
according to their rank, and the same election was repeated, and as a
rule confirmed. Thus the authority of example was taken away from rank,
and given to the lot on a democratic principle.
From this custom resulted a further advantage. The citizens from the
country had time, between the two elections, to inform themselves of the
merits of the candidate who had been provisionally nominated, and did
not have to vote without knowledge of the case. But, under the pretext
of hastening matters, the abolition of this custom was achieved, and
both elections were held on the same day.
The comitia tributa were properly the council of the Roman people. They
were convoked by the tribunes alone; at them the tribunes were elected
and passed their plebiscita. The senate not only had no standing in
them, but even no right to be present; and the senators, being forced to
obey laws on which they could not vote, were in this respect less free
than the meanest citizens. This injustice was altogether ill-conceived,
and was alone enough to invalidate the decrees of a body to which all
its members were not admitted. Had all the patricians attended the
comitia by virtue of the right they had as citizens, they would not, as
mere private individuals, have had any considerable influence on a vote
reckoned by counting heads, where the meanest proletarian was as good as
the princeps senatus.
It may be seen, therefore, that besides the order which was achieved by
these various ways of distributing so great a people and taking its
votes, the various methods were not reducible to forms indifferent in
themselves, but the results of each were relative to the objects which
caused it to be preferred.
Without going here into further details, we may gather from what has
been said above that the comitia tributa were the most favourable to
popular government, and the comitia centuriata to aristocracy. The
comitia curiata, in which the populace of Rome formed the majority,
being fitted only to further tyranny and evil designs, naturally fell
into disrepute, and even seditious persons abstained from using a method
which too clearly revealed their projects. It is indisputable that the
whole majesty of the Roman people lay solely in the comitia centuriata,
which alone included all; for the comitia curiata excluded the rural
tribes, and the comitia tributa the senate and the patricians.
As for the method of taking the vote, it was among the ancient Romans as
simple as their morals, although not so simple as at Sparta. Each man
declared his vote aloud, and a clerk duly wrote it down; the majority in
each tribe determined the vote of the tribe, the majority of the tribes
that of the people, and so with curię and centuries. This custom was
good as long as honesty was triumphant among the citizens, and each man
was ashamed to vote publicly in favour of an unjust proposal or an
unworthy subject; but, when the people grew corrupt and votes were
bought, it was fitting that voting should be secret in order that
purchasers might be restrained by mistrust, and rogues be given the
means of not being traitors.
I know that Cicero attacks this change, and attributes partly to it the
ruin of the Republic. But though I feel the weight Cicero's authority
must carry on such a point, I cannot agree with him; I hold, on the
contrary, that, for want of enough such changes, the destruction of the
State must be hastened. Just as the regimen of health does not suit the
sick, we should not wish to govern a people that has been corrupted by
the laws that a good people requires. There is no better proof of this
rule than the long life of the Republic of Venice, of which the shadow
still exists, solely because its laws are suitable only for men who are
wicked.
The citizens were provided, therefore, with tablets by means of which
each man could vote without any one knowing how he voted: new methods
were also introduced for collecting the tablets, for counting voices,
for comparing numbers, etc.; but all these precautions did not prevent
the good faith of the officers charged with these functions[37] from
being often suspect. Finally, to prevent intrigues and trafficking in
votes, edicts were issued; but their very number proves how useless they
were.
Towards the close of the Republic, it was often necessary to have
recourse to extraordinary expedients in order to supplement the
inadequacy of the laws. Sometimes miracles were supposed; but this
method, while it might impose on the people, could not impose on those
who governed. Sometimes an assembly was hastily called together, before
the candidates had time to form their factions: sometimes a whole
sitting was occupied with talk, when it was seen that the people had
been won over and was on the point of taking up a wrong position. But in
the end ambition eluded all attempts to check it; and the most
incredible fact of all is that, in the midst of all these abuses, the
vast people, thanks to its ancient regulations, never ceased to elect
magistrates, to pass laws, to judge cases, and to carry through business
both public and private, almost as easily as the senate itself could
have done.