Roman Africa

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ROMAN AFRICA

ROMAN AFRICA
AN OUTLINE OF THE

HISTORY OF THE ROMAN OCCUPATION


OF NORTH AFRICA
BASED CHIEFLY UPON
INSCRIPTIONS

AND MONUMENTAL REMAINS IN THAT COUNTRY

BY

ALEXANDER GRAHAM
F.S.A., F.R.I.B.A.

WITH THIRTY REPRODUCTIONS OF ORIGINAL DRAWINGS


BY THE AUTHOR, AND

TWO MAPS

LONGMANS, GREEN, AND


39

CO.

PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON NEW YORK AND BOMBAY


1902

All

rights

reserved

TO THE READER
The
inscriptions
in

the

following pages

have mostly been

published in various forms and at different periods, especially during the latter half of the last century. From the time of
travellers in

Shaw, whose volumes were first published in 1738, so many North Africa have recorded their interpretations of
it

inscribed lettering that


credit

is

difficult, in

some

cases, to assign

where credit is due. And since the French occupation of Algeria and Tunisia opportunities have been offered of publishing these interpretations in many noteworthy periodicals, such as the Revue Africaine, commenced in 1856, and the Annuaire de la Sociiti archMogique de la Province de Constantine, which was issued as far back as 1853. To collate and systematise the great mass of inscriptions" has been the laborious work of such well-known epigraphists as L6on Renier, Gustavus Wilmanns, and others, whose names appear in footnotes in the following pages. Most of them can be better studied in the volumes of inscriptions mentioned on pp. 32 and 33, and referred to Incompleteness of hereafter under the letters C.I.L. and I.R.A. lettering, arising either from exposure or destruction, has given rise to difference of opinion in filling up many omissions of importance, but it is satisfactory to note that a general agreement prevails on most of the inscriptions of historic value. Whenever an alternative reading is admissible, the titles of the books that may be referred to are given in the text or in one of the
footnotes.

PREFACE
For many
generations the interest attached to the progress of
civilisation in Central

and Southern Africa has diverted men's

minds from a somewhat analogous process which was being


evolved nearly 2000 years ago in the Northern regions of this
great Continent.

History very often repeats

itself in

an un-

accountable way.

The methods of
life,

civilisation

adopted in one

age

differ in

a marked degree from those of another, varying

with the habits of national

and governed by the insuperable But the outcome of

natural laws affecting climate or race.

human

progress

is

invariably the same, exhibiting respect for

and obedience to ruling authority, a mute recognition of the unwritten rules of social life, and greater regard for personal
preservation.

The gradual development


in

of North Africa as a

great

Roman

colony was spread over a period of more than

500 years, and culminated

an era of peace and prosperity to

a vast population enjoying the highest civilisation of the time.

Asia and Africa took rank as the greatest of Rome's colonial


possessions,

and

it is

a question whether the latter did not take

the lead, in the third


affecting

and fourth

centuries,

in

all

matters
general

the maintenance of the


its

Empire and

the

welfare of

citizens.

However

successful

Roman
in

rule

may

have proved

in the

Asiatic provinces,

we have

Africa in-

disputable testimony to the wealth and resources of this fair

appendage of the Empire, to the growth of municipal


spread of education, and the high attainments of
citizens
iii

life,

the
its

many

of

literature, philosophy,

and

art.

viii

Roman
offers

Africa
the world possesses
field

To

the archaeologist no country in a

greater attraction, or

more

useful

for

his

re-

searches, than this vast region on the southern shores of the

Mediterranean,
Africa.^
Its

known

to

the ancients

by the simple word


rise

long and chequered career, the


life,

and progress

of national

the spread of civilisation amongst hordes of


still

barbarians whose origin

remains an unsolved problem,


its

and the romantic


ruined

lives

of the chief actors in

eventful history

are mainly recorded on imperishable stone or exhibited in the

monuments which
to the

still

greet the traveller's eye on the

hillsides or deserted plains of

North Africa.

From

the borders

of

Egypt

Atlantic

Ocean, from the shores of the abundance, telling their own tale

Mediterranean to the trackless plains of the Great Desert,

marble and stone are there


of nations and

in

communities long passed away, of deeds of

heroism and benevolence, of thoughtful

men and

kindly women.

The

history of the country

may

truly be said to be written

on

stone.

The untameable Libyan,

the enterprising Phoenician,

the crafty Carthaginian, and the indomitable

Roman, followed
and the

by the
tion.

destructive Vandal, the half-civilised Byzantine,


all

wandering Arab, have

left

enduring marks of their occupapredominates everywhere.

But the mark of the

Roman

And

interwoven with the declining years of the greatest Empire

the world had yet seen

we have

records of the early career


in

and

struggles of the Christian

Church

North Africa.

For the

illustration of this period there is

abundant materiala period

when temples and


'

basilicas

were to become the home of a new

in the days of Homer, only knew of North Africa as Libya, and Herodotus would not believe that Africa had been circumnavigated by Phoenicians. The Persians, however, believed it, and it is recorded that Xerxes pardoned Sataspes, who was condemned to death, on condition that he made a voyage round Africa. Sataspes, we are told, returned quickly, ovring, as he said, to
in the time of

The Greeks,

fabulous obstacles that he encountered in the Straits of Gades.


to accept such excuses,

Xerxes declined

and ordered him to be beheaded. (L' Univers pittoresque.) The earliest mention of Africa is by the poet Ennius, B.C. 239-169, who styled himself the Homer of Latium. Suidas says that Alrica was the ancient name of
Carthage
itself.

Preface
Titual,

ix

when sculptured

deities

were to be overthrown, when

symbols of a despised creed were to be carved on post and lintel, and when the names of Tertullian, St. Cyprian, and
St.

Augustine were to add new lustre to a country entering


last stages of imperial

upon the

decay.
adventurers from the Syrian
of
the African

From

the time

when the

first

coast entered the sheltered

inlets

shore

remote period, even before Saul was made king of Israel and
while Priam sat on the throne of Troy

down to the seventh


it

century of the Christian

era,

when the Arabs passed over

like

a whirlwind,

this

fair

land has been the battle-field where

destinies of nations

have been sealed, and where heroes and

warriors have sought their last resting-place.

The myths
halo, of

that

surround

its

earlier
its

development and shed a


primitive races are

romance

over the career of

somewhat obscured by

the sterner facts of later times

by

wars innumerable, wars of

invasion and local disturbances, succeeded

piracy and power misused, and finally

by a long period of by neglect, abandonment,


hangs over Carthage
hill,

and decay.

The legend

of Dido

still

the spirit of Hannibal haunts the fateful Zama, and the banks

of the Medjerda hold in everlasting

memory
air is full

the story of

Regulus and
country in

his affrighted army.

The
;

of myths and

old-world stories which faithfully represent the traditions of the


its

varying fortunes

and

slight as

may

be their

connection with events in pre-historic times, yet they serve as


foundations
interest. for

an

historic

superstructure
are

of

never-failing

The

earlier

records

fragmentary, but

we

learn

that

the library of the Carthaginians, written in

Phoenician

characters,

Carthage, to the kings of Numidia

was presented by the Romans, after the fall of and that Sallust, as pro;

consul of that province in the time of Julius Caesar, borrowed


largely from
it

while writing his history of the Jugurthine war.


Sallust

In

all

probability

was unacquainted with either the


(the former being the language

Libyan or the Phoenician tongue

of the primitive inhabitants of the country), and consequently

X
obtained
over,

Roman
much
he must have

Africa
More-

of his information through interpreters.


felt little interest in

who had been Rome. Punic literature was probably limited, Greek being usually spoken by educated Carthaginians. Hannibal, we are told, wrote in
a people
for so

many

centuries

the sworn enemies of

Greek.
records

There

is little

doubt, however, that most of the earlier

passed to Alexandria, which

became the

rival

of

Athens as a seat of learning. With the burning of its library by fanatical Arabs in the seventh century many a link between
the old world and the

new was

severed,

and

reliable information

concerning the laws and traditions, and


the founders of commerce, was swept away.

the

manners and

customs of a people, who were the fathers of navigation and


Writers of antiquity

who have

recorded their impressions

of North Africa are numerous enough, but their statements are

not always accurate, and their descriptions of localities and

monumental remains too frequently untrustworthy. Many of them derived their knowledge from various sources, especially
from enterprising navigators, Phoenician or Greek,

who

sailed

to various commercial ports on the shores of the Mediterranean.

They wrote without


extent, and

personal knowledge of the country or

its

had limited acquaintance with its inhabitants or the Libyan tongue which then prevailed. Herodotus, Polybius,
Spanish geographer Pomponius Mela are the chief authorities down
to the close of the
Sallust, Strabo,

Pliny the Elder, Plutarch, and the

These were followed by Suetonius, the favoured secretary and friend of the Emperor
first

century.'

'

As an

Augustus, says

instance of looseness of statement, Strabo the geographer, in the time of it was the general impression that the sources of the Nile were not far
(lib. xvii. p.

off the confines of Mauritania, crocodiles

indigenous in the rivers of that country


'

and other animals found in the Nile being Dion Cassius also sa,ys 454).

rise
is

have taken particular care to inform myself about the Nile. It visibly takes its from Mount Atlas. This mountain, which is near the ocean on the west side,
higher than
all
it

infinitely

feign that

supported the heavens.

the rest upon earth, which gave the poets occasion to Never did anybody ascend to the top. The
Nile. '
ii.
(

foot of this hill is marshy,

and from these morasses proceeds the

Vide Dion

Cassius, abridged by Xiphilin, Manning's translation, 1704, vol.

p. 277.)

Preface

xi

Hadrian, Apuleius of Madaura, Ptolemy the renowned geo-

grapher

of

Alexandria,

Dion

Cassius

the

Bithynian,

and

Aurelius Victor, a
In later times
to the

Roman
;

biographer of the fourth century

we have

Procopius, the Greek secretary attached

army of

Belisarius
;

Leo

Africanus, an

Arab of Granada

in the sixteenth century

and numerous African authors, among

whom

El-Bekri and El-Edrisi,


centuries, are the

who

flourished in the eleventh

and twelfth

most conspicuous.
for

Then,

after a

long interval,

we have a

succession of European

travellers,

whose voluminous notes paved the way


research.

more systematic

The most
and

noticeable are Shaw, an Oxford divine


;

Peysonnel, a professor of botany


Algiers
;

Bruce, British consul at


officer.

Sir Grenville

Temple, a cavalry
in

It

seems

invidious to select a few

names

more recent times where so

many

are worthy of recognition, but the labours of those

who

have best served the cause of archaeology, and whose names are
inseparably associated with
the
literature

and monumental

remains of North Africa, cannot be passed over.


tributions of Berbrugger,

The

con-

De la Mare,

Gu6rin, Ravoisi^, PelHssier,

Cherbonneau, Leon Renier, and


century, supplemented in our

Charles Tissot in the last


array of

own days by a long

valuable notes

by our

late

Consul-General Sir Lambert Playfair,

have added largely to our knowledge of the topography and


antiquities of the country.
for

To De

la

Mare we

are indebted

an

illustrated,

though unfortunately incomplete, work on


;

monumental Algeria to Ravoisi^ we owe some careful measurements and restorations (on paper) of the principal remains in the northern regions and to Renier, Wilmanns, and
;

others a wealth of deciphered inscriptions which constitute in

themselves a
this

fair outline

of

great

Roman
'

colony.

many The
local

centuries of national

life

in

researches

also

of officers

attached to the

Bureau Arabe,' as well as the expert knowcurators of

ledge of

many

museums, have
of

filled

up

numerous gaps

in the general history

Roman

Africa.
'

And

in the present generation the

establishment of a

Commission

xii

Roman
Monuments
historiques
'

Africa

des

has not only resulted in more

intimate

acquaintance with matters of topography, but has


field

brought into the


of

of African literature

many French

authors
entire

known

repute.

Again, the bibliography of the

country, including Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Tripoli, has


also

been the subject of much thoughtful and enlightened

labour.

Some

idea of the extent of the literature associated

with North Africa

may

be gathered from the fact that the


its

five

English volumes devoted entirely to

bibliography comprise

no

less

than 1215 pages.'


rise

The
some of
B.C. 201,

and progress of

interwoven with the history of the


its

Roman Africa are necessarily Roman people, and form

most interesting chapters during the long period


of

which elapsed between the close of the second Punic war,

and the

fall

Rome,

A.D. 455.

Gibbon's scholarly

pages treating of
erudition,

this

branch of his subject are masterpieces of


diligent investigation of the

and are the outcome of

works of Greek and

Roman

authors.

But he wrote

at

a time

when

archaeological inquiry

was hardly recognised as a branch

of knowledge,
travellers,

when

little

assistance could be given

by observant

who

hesitated to explore a trackless region inhabited

by barbarian hordes, and when the historian had to rely on his own interpretation of many conflicting statements by authors of antiquity. Mommsen has lived in a more favoured age. He has had at his disposal the notes of a long array of modern
travellers

and

antiquaries,

and has been able to correct or

substantiate the statements of ancient authors

by the

light of

recent research.
It is difficult for

the traveller, as he journeys across the

now
:

'

John Murray.

Bibliography of Algeria. By Sir R. Lambert Playfair. Pp. 430. London 1888. A supplementary volume by the same author and publisher.

Pp. 321. 1898. A Bibliography of Tunisia. London: Dulau & Co. 1889.

By Henry Spencer Ashbee, F.S.A.


Cyrenaica.

Pp.

144.

A
58.

Bibliography of Tripoli

and the

By

Sir R.

Lambert

Playfair.

Pp.

London

1889.

Pp. 262.

By Sir R. Lambert Playfair and Dr. Robert Brown. Bibliography of Morocco. London; John Murray. 1892.

Preface

xiii

deserted plains of North Africa, to realise, in these far-off days,

the extent and completeness of


nation has
left

so

Roman colonisation. No other many enduring marks of its presence as the


Italy, is there

Roman, and

in

no other country, outside

such a

wealth of inscriptions as in North Africa.


bearing the impress of
land,

Stone and marble,


as

human

agency, are scattered over the


is

and the familiar

lettering

there

also

mute

memorial to widespread contentment and prosperity.


It is

not within the scope of this outline of historic inquiry

to trace the methods

by which the Romans achieved success

in

colonisation where other nations have failed.

This branch of
authors of high
still

the subject has proved attractive to

many

repute, especially in the present generation,

and

presents

an unexhausted

field

for

further critical

investigation.

Nor
in the

does the writer of the following pages claim originality


treatment of this
subject,

or

any

ability

to

impart special

information not open to students of


care to

Roman

history,

who may

pursue their inquiries in some of the more remote


Africa.

regions of Northern

Notes and observations during

frequent journeys in various parts of the country,' and a study

of the inscriptions and monumental remains of the

Roman

occupation, have supplied a large proportion of the material

embodied
of history.

in this

volume.

Archaeology

is

the willing handmaid

Without such help the history of the Romans in Africa would be less attractive, and our acquaintance with their progress and decline more fragmentary. Every week the spade
of the explorer contributes something to our knowledge
;

either

some undiscovered monument on the plains, or an inscribed stone to tell its own unvarnished tale of place or person long passed away. The chief aim of the present work is to trace as
far as possible the extent of the

Roman

occupation, the degree

of civilisation attained in the


to

first

four centuries of the Christian

show how conspicuous a part was played by North era, and Africa in the building up of a great Empire.
'

Travels in
:

Tunisia.

By Alexander Graham and Henry Spencer Ashbee.

London

1887.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I.

PAGE
b.c.

Carthage and Rome.

201-46
b.c.

II.

Africa under the C^sars. Africa under Trajan, Africa under Hadrian,

46-A.D. 96

19
55

III.

a.d. 97-117
a.d.

IV.

117-138
a.d.

103

V.

Africa under Antoninus Pius.

138-161

120
15s

VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius.


Africa under Septimius Severus.

a.d.
a.d.

161-180
193-21
i

196

Africa under Alexander Severus. Africa under the Gordians.


a.d.

a.d. 222-235.

209

236-244
a.d. 244-454

220
235

X.

Africa under the later Emperors,

Conclusion

297

APPENDICES.
I.

List of Abbreviations usually

found

in

Roman

Inscrip309

tions
II.

List of

the principal known To v^^ns in the African Provinces of the Roman Empire, or the Sites of others which have been identified by Inscriptions.

311

III.

Chronology OF the Principal Events in North Africa during the Roman Occupation and, subsequently, till the Invasion of the Country by Arabs
. .

316

INDEX

321

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
The Three Temples at Sufetula
FronHspiece (Sbeitla), restored View of Utica (Bou Chater) To face p. 22 Mosaic in the British Museum, representing the Walls of Roman Carthage ,,24

Tomb of Juba II Plan of Tomb of Juba II Entrance to Tomb of Juba

27

II

28

>,

29

Tombs of Numidian Kings, restored Plan of Basilica at Theveste (Tebessa) . The Quadrifrontal Arch of Caracalla at Theveste Temple of Minerva at Theveste, restored View of Bulla Regia (HammAm Darradji).
. . .

3 46
48
50
71

Trajan's Bridge at Simittu (Chemtou) Monument at Scillium (Kasserin)

72
81

Arch of Trajan at Thamugas Aqueduct of Carthage


Cisterns outside Kairouan Aqueduct of Carthage in

...,....
(Timegad), restored

96
109
iii

the Medjerda SHOWING Construction View of Mount Zaghouan Entrance to the Hieron at Sufetula The Bridge at Sufetula (Sbeitla) View of Sufetula (Sbeitla) The Capitol at Thugga (Dougga) The Pr^torium at Lamb^sis (Lambessa) Amphitheatre at Thvsdrus (El-Djem)
. .
. .

Plain,

,,114

.
.
.

116
122

,,127 ,,128 ,,171


.
.

186

j>

>)

**
.
.

228

230
234

The Four Principal Amphitheatres compared

232, 233

Amphitheatre at Uthina (Oudena) Front of a Marble Cippus in the Museum at PhilippeVILLE

,,296

Mosaic Slab in the Museum at Constantine (Byzantine


Period)
308

MAPS
North Africa North Africa at the Close qf the Third Century
.

To face p. 4 At end

ROMAN AFRICA
CHAPTER
I

CARTHAGE AND ROME

Errata
Page
lo, line i6, _/^ historian ra,/ historians

212, last line but one, /or Julia

Domna

yeaoT Bassianus

and dismay.
land mattered

Success to the
little

Romans on
in

the

first

encounter

oil

to a maritime people like the Carthaginians,

whose

fleets

were to be found

every port and inlet of the


career of these ancient rulers

Mediterranean, and

who

reigned supreme as the one commercial

people of the known world. of North


Africa,
illustrious

The

from their spirit of adventure, unflagging energy, and wondrous commerce, is a chapter of romance. Hemmed in originally between mountain and sea on the Syrian coast, a little colony of Phoenicians spread itself in a comparatively short period along the whole seaboard of the Mediterranean then passing the Pillars of Hercules it reached Sierra Leone in the south, eastward it touched the coast of Malabar, and northward skirted the inhospitable shores of the German Ocean. It seems strange that these Canaanites or Phcenicians, the scorn of Israel, and the people against whom Joshua bent all his powers, should have enjoyed such an
;

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
The Three Temples at Sufetula
(Sbeitla),

restored

Frontispiece

To face p. View of Utica (Bou Chater) Mosaic in the British Museum, representing the Walls of Roman Carthage

iz

,24
27

Tomb of Juba II Plan of Tomb of Juba II Entrance to Tomb of Juba


Tombs of Numidian Plan of Basilica at The Quadrifrontal Temple of Minerva

,,28
II

29

Kings, restored

,,30
.
. . .

Theveste (Tebessa)

46 48
50

Arch of Caracalla at Theveste


at Theveste, restored
. . ,

mz> uKiuiyir

AT aUFETULA (^SBEITLA)

127

View of Sufetula (Sbeitla) The Capitol at Thugga (Dougga)

The PrjEtorium at
)> )>

Lamb^esis (Lambessa)
.

,,128 ,,171 ,,186

ij

Amphitheatre at Thysdrus (El-Djem)


))
))

228

230
234 296 308

The Four Principal Amphitheatres compared

232, 233

Amphitheatre at Uthina (Oudena) Front of a Marble Cippus in the Museum at Philippeville

Mosaic Slab in the Museum at Constantine (Byzantine


Period)
>,

MAPS
North Africa North Africa
at the Close of the Third Century
.

To face p. 4 At end

ROMAN AFRICA
CHAPTER
B.C.
I

CARTHAGE AND ROME


201-46

The

history of

Roman

Africa

commences

at the close of the

second Punic war, B.C. 201. The fall of Pyrrhus, the adventurous king of Epirus, B.C. 272, whose ambition was to surpass Alexander the Great in warlike achievements, had made the Romans masters of Southern Italy, and brought them face to face with the Carthaginians in the fair island of Sicily. For
nearly two centuries and a half these rival nations had been watching each other's movements across the sea with jealousy and dismay. Success to the Romans on the first encounter oil land mattered little to a maritime people like the Carthaginians, whose fleets were to be found in every port and inlet of the Mediterranean, and who reigned supreme as the one commercial people of the known world. The career of these ancient rulers of North Africa, illustrious from their spirit of adventure, unflagging energy, and wondrous commerce, is a chapter of romance. Hemmed in originally between mountain and sea on the Syrian coast, a little colony of Phoenicians spread itself in a comparatively short period along the whole seaboard of the Mediterranean then passing the Pillars of Hercules it reached Sierra Leone in the south, eastward it touched the coast of Malabar, and northward skirted the inhospitable shores of the German Ocean. It seems strange that these Canaanites or Phoenicians, the scorn of Israel, and the people against whom Joshua bent all his powers, should have enjoyed such an B *.
;

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
The Three Temples at Sufetula
(Sbeitla),

restored

Frontispiece

View of Utica (Bou Chater) To face p. 22 Mosaic in the British Museum, representing the Walls of Roman Carthage ,,24

Tomb of Juba II Plan of Tomb of Juba II Entrance to Tomb of Juba


Tombs of Numidian Plan of Basilica at The Quadrifrontal Temple of Minerva

27 28

II

,,29
>,
. .

Kings, restored

3 46
48
50

Theveste (Tebessa) . Arch of Caracalla at Theveste at Theveste, restored


. .

.^-.^ uRiuv^E.

AT

3D'FEn3TrA""('SBETTE*A)"-

View of Sufetula (Sbeitla) The Capitol at Thugga (Dougga) The Pr^torium at Lamb^esis (Lambessa) Amphitheatre at Thvsdrus (El-Djem)

j J) >

....
.
.

...

The Four Principal Amphitheatres compared

Amphitheatre at Uthina (Oudena) Front of a Marble Cippus in the Museum at Philippe


VILLE

....

Mosaic Slab in the Museum at Constantine (Byzantine


Period)

ROMAN AFRICA
CHAPTER
B.C.

CARTHAGE AND ROME


201-46

The

history of

Roman

Africa

commences

at the close of the

second Punic war, B.C. 201. The fall of Pyrrhus, the adventurous king of Epirus, B.C. 272, whose ambition was to surpass

Alexander the Great in warlike achievements, had made the masters of Southern Italy, and brought them face to face with the Carthaginians in the fair island of Sicily. For nearly two centuries and a half these rival nations had been watching each other's movements across the sea with jealousy and dismay. Success to the Romans on the first encounter ori land mattered little to a maritime people like the Carthaginians, whose fleets were to be found in every port and inlet of the Mediterranean, and who reigned supreme as the one commercial

Romans

people of the known world.


of North
Africa,
illustrious

The

career of these ancient rulers

from their spirit of adventure, unflagging energy, and wondrous commerce, is a chapter of Hemmed in originally between mountain and sea romance. on the Syrian coast, a little colony of Phoenicians spread itself in a comparatively short period along the whole seaboard of the Mediterranean then passing the Pillars of Hercules it reached Sierra Leone in the south, eastward it touched the coast of Malabar, and northward skirted the inhospitable shores of the German Ocean. It seems strange that these Canaanites or Phoenicians, the scorn of Israel, and the people against whom Joshua bent all his powers, should have enjoyed such an B
; fe
.

Roman

Africa

unchecked career, making themselves sole navigators of every sea, and finally founding a city which stood unrivalled for more than 700 years. Through their hands, as Mommsen has observed, passed grain, ivory, and skins from Libya, slaves from the Soudan, purple and cedar from Tyre, frankincense from Arabia, copper from Cyprus, iron from Elba, tin from Cornwall, wine from Greece, silver from Spain, and gold and precious stones from Malabar. As a nation of traders and navigators they established themselves on the coast, and wherever they settled depots and factories of various kinds were erected. We do not find them in the interior of a country. Neither do we hear of alliances
with the people with whom they came into contact, nor of their impressing barbarian tribes with any notions of the advantages In the field of intellectual acquirements the of civilisation.
place,

as the descendant of the Phoenician, has no and his skill in the gentler arts of life has no recognition. We find no native architecture, nor do we hear of any industrial Carthage, it is true, became the metroart worth recording. polis of their widespread kingdom, and one of the wealthiest But this was due, in a great measure, to its cities of the world. central position, and its convenience as an outlet for the vast produce of North Africa. Temples and stately edifices adorned its streets, and the remains of great constructional works still But the architecture was attest the solid grandeur of the city. and the few the work of Greek, and not of Punic, artists sculptures of note, which may be assigned to a period anterior to the last Punic war, have nothing in common with the rude carvings which bear the impress of Carthaginian origin. On the other hand the art of navigation, the science of agriculture, the principles of trading, and a system of water supply combined with the construction of gigantic cisterns, which may still be seen at Carthage and on the outskirts of many towns in North Africa, became Rome's heritage from Phoenicia. The distinguish-

Carthaginian,

ing characteristic of Phoenician architecture, or rather of building construction, is its massive and imposing strength, singularly
deficient in fineness of detail, as

a general

M. Renan has observed, but with The few Phoenician buildings existing are constructed with immense blocks of stone,
effect

of power and grandeur.

such as the ramparts of Aradus, the foundations of the temple at Jerusalem, and the earlier portions of the great temple at Baalbec.

Carthage and
From

Rome

the day when the two nations crossed arms in the of Syracuse a kind of fatality hung over them. It seemed as if there were no room in the world for two such ambivicinity

and that, the struggle having once commenced, should continue till one or the other ceased to exist. The want of an efficient fleet to enable them to do battle with the Carthaginians in their own element preyed heavily upon the
tious rivals
it
;

Romans
couraged.
days,

in their

Sicilian

campaign.

With
are

that strength

But Rome was not disof will which always characto create a navy.

terised her people, she set to

work

In sixty

we

told,

forest

of timber was

cut down, and

140 galleys, fully manned and provisioned, sailed out under Attilius Regulus to attack the Carthaginian fleet on their own coasts.^ This intrepid general, inspired by the temporary success of Agathocles ^ the Sicilian, in his invasion of Carthaginian territory, contemplated a similar adventure. He captured more than 200 towns and villages and, landing Italian troops for the first time on African soil, paved the way for a more permanent occupation which was to take place after the lapse of nearly 100 years.^ Then came the close of the first Punic war. Carthage retreated. All Sicily, except the little kingdom of Syracuse, then wisely governed by the renowned Hiero II., was abandoned to the Romans. Sardinia, which the Cartha-

M.

'

Polybius,

i.

66.

The Romans began

to build ships (or rather coasting vessels)

B. c.

338, and seventy years later the maritime services had assumed such importance

that four quaestors of the fleet, stationed at different ports of Italy, were appointed.

This provoked the jealousy of Carthage, whose supremacy at sea had for so long a period remained undisputed. (Rawlinson's Manual of Ancient History.) The Romans occupied the old Phoenician ports on the coast of Africa, and did not
attempt,
^

till

much

later period, to

form any new ones.

Agathocles, an adventurous Sicilian and tyrant of Syracuse, invaded North

Africa B.C. 306 and nearly ruined Carthage, either destroying or taking possession of nearly all the towns. Recalled to Sicily, he left the war in the hands of his son

Archagathus,

who was

unsuccessful.

The

Carthaginians regained

all

The army

of Agathocles consisted

of 6,000 Greeks, about the

they had lost. same number of

European mercenaries, 10,000 Libyan allies, and 1,500 horse. [V Univers pittoresque.) ' There is nothing on record, to indicate that the Roman people, so little accustomed to maritime warfare and with a superstitious dread of the sea, encouraged so hazardous an undertaking. Regulus followed the banks of the Bagradas, laid siege to Uthina, and subsequently took Tunis. The Carthaginians engaged Greek mercenaries, led by Xantippus the Lacedemonian, who brought the war to a close. The Romans were defeated, and their fleet destroyed by a tempest. Polybius (i. 66) says that the Romans had 330 galleys and 140,000 men, and that the Carthaginian fleet consisted of 350 galleys and 115,000 men.
B 2

Roman

Africa

same fate. Peace was declared, or rather a respite was agreed upon by the two rivals, utterly wearied and worn out by continuous warfare of twenty years, preparatory only to a trial of strength on a more extended scale. The twenty-three years' interval of watchful unrest which preceded the outbreak of the second Punic war was among the most eventful in the whole history of the
ginians had held for 400 years, shared the
period, prior to the renewal of hostilities Carthage and her people was to be decided, which is peculiarly attractive, partly on account of the events that preceded the fall of a great nation, and partly from the dramatic career of the chief native rulers of Africa. In order to form an idea of the vast extent and litnits of Africa of the ancient world, it is necessary to glance at a map of the southern shores of the Mediterranean, to note how the country was then divided, and to sketch, as briefly as possible, the history of the tribes who contributed by their endless rivalries to hasten the Roman occupation of the entire region. Commencing westward of Cyrene (a Greek colony founded about B.C. 630, and though afterwards part of the Roman Empire yet never recognised as part of North Africa) we come to Africa
struggle.
It is this

when the

fate of

'

proper, the

little

corner afterwards

known

as Africa Provincia,

of which the capital was Carthage.^ Westward of this was the country of a people whom Greeks and Romans were accustomed
or Numidians, divided between the Massylians and the Masssesylians on the west. Beyond was the land of the Mauri, stretching round the shores of the, Atlantic. Now all this vast region, from Cyrene to the Atlantic, with a seaboard of not less than 2,000 miles, had been for many centuries under the control of Carthage, furnishing large bodies of troops in time of war and contributing to the preservation of the kingdom of their enterprising masters. to call

Nomades
east

on the

' Cyrene was founded by Greeks from the island of Thera, one of the Sporades group in the i^gean Sea, now called Santorin. It became the capital of the region known as Pentapolis, whose five cities were Cyrene, Apollonia, Ptolemais, Arsinoe,

and Berenice.
2

Sallust divides

the Syrtes, the

North Africa into four regions (l) Cyrenaica and the country of modern Barca Tripoli, with the Fezzan in the interior ; (2) the
:

territory of Carthage,

now known

as Tunisia

(3)

and (4) Mauritania, the modern Morocco. JVord de PAfrique dans I'antiquiti. )
Algeria
;

Numidia, now corresponding to Vide Vivien de Saint- Martin, (

Carthage and

Rome

The boundaries of Punic territory appear to have been determined at a very remote period, when the neighbouring country of Cyrene had attained power and prosperity, and when the tribes of North Africa had recognised the supremacy of the Phoenician colony settled at Carthage. The river Tusca, separating Carthage on the west from the land of the Massylii, formed a natural boundary. The borders of the Desert were also a natural boundary on the south, peopled at all times, even at the present day, by numerous tribes wandering from place
to place

and

living in incessant rivalry.^

But the

limitation of

the eastern frontier, separating the Carthaginians from the Greek

colony of Cyrene, did not admit of easy solution. watercourse was there to mark the line of territory.
ancient claims.

No river or No fortress

or earthwork had been raised in testimony of a settlement of

Nothing was there but shifting tracts of sand and an undefined coastline. Physical force was at last resorted

to for the purpose of deciding a long-pending controversy, not

the force of arms or skill with weapons, but strength of limb and endurance in a long and harassing journey. And this was the simple expedient.
athletes,

Two

deputies on either side, probably

were to leave at a given hour, and the spot where they met should be the boundary between the two States. The names of two brothers, deputies on the Carthaginian side, are recorded but those despatched from Cyrene have not been handed down. Neither have we any description of the race,
;

home

or circumstances attending the journey.


the spot where the race
charts

All

we know

is

that

terminated

of the

ancient world

most Arcz, and we Philcenorum as


is

designated in
a

are

told

that the

Cyrenians, having

covered but

small

distance compared with their opponents, accused


started

them of having

boy,

time agreed upon. Like many a schoolworsted in a youthful encounter, they endeavoured to account for their defeat by imputing to their adversaries that
before the
is

who

'

The country

in the south between

Mount

Niger, was inhabited by the Getuli and Melanogetuli, the

Atlas and the Sahara, as far as the Moslem Tuariks, or, as

they are

now

called, Touaregs.

(Niebuhr's Lectures.)

Pliny also speaks of the


in African ethnology.

inhabitants of the south as Getulians.

They are a distinct people

Owing

to their geographical position they

were not subject to external influences.

as Ghadames,

Their neighbours, the Garamantes, who occupied the country south of Tripoli as far may be classed with them. ( Vide Tissot, Geogr. comparh de VAfrique, The limits of the country occupied by either of them are not known. i. 447. )

6
they had not played
as
it

Roman
fair.

Africa

A
'

quarrel ensued, but the Philaeni

brothers, as the representatives of Carthage, stood firm, rooted,

were, to the spot.

To end

the dispute without resorting to

arms, the

men

of Cyrene said,

You

shall

be buried alive on the

spot which you claim as the boundary for your people, or we,

on the same condition, shall be allowed to proceed on our journey to whatever point we may think proper.' The Philaeni, it is said, accepted the terms imposed upon them, and, sacrificing themselves in the interest of their country, were forthwith buried alive. If we are to assume that the Carthaginians started from CarthUge and the Greeks from the city of Cyrene, the whole story may be regarded as a fable, for the two mounds that once marked the legendary spot are not midway, but about sevenninths the distance between the alleged starting-points. We may be permitted to suppose that the wind favoured the Philaeni, and that a sand-storm, such as is prevalent in those parts, blew into the faces of their opponents and retarded their progress. To give the tale an appearance of reality we may imagine that the Carthaginians started from Leptis ^ and not from Carthage, for the mounds or altars consecrated to these heroic brothers were nearly midway between that city and Cyrene. Now Leptis was, at that period, a city of wealth and magnitude, and took rank with Utica as one of the chief Founded by Sidonians in a prehistoric Phoenician colonies. age, it grew into importance long before Carthage had attained the climax of its prosperity, and was regarded by the CarWhether this thaginians as one of their choicest possessions. old-world story of the Philaeni is to be read in the light of a fable, or is based upon some incident in the settlement of a longdisputed boundary, matters little after a lapse of more than 2,500 years. The historian and the geographer have accepted the legend, and honoured it with a place in their records which time will never obliterate. But whether true or not we may receive the narrative in the form in which it has been handed

down.
'

It is

good

for us to think that the

spirit

of patriotism

inspired men, in the old world as in the new, in the exercise of


Leptis Magna,

now Lebda, was one

of the earliest Phoenician settlements in

and the inhabitants, under were allowed to retain their old laws and customs. Commercial intercourse and intermarriage with Numidians forced them to alter their language and to adopt the Numidian tongue. (Sallust, /^. Ixxviii.)
Africa.

The

fertility

of the soil favoured colonisation,

Roman

rule,

Carthage and

Rome

heroic deeds, and that self-sacrifice in a country's honour has never been found wanting in the hour of need.^

The

territory occupied

by Carthaginians formed only a small

portion of North Africa, as

we have already
which

observed.

At

the

time of the

Roman

invasion,

may be regarded

as the open-

ing of the last chapter in the history of the second Punic war, the country west of Carthage was under the rule of Gala, the tribes

beyond being governed by Syphax, the


African kings at that period.
tates

The

rivalry of these

most powerful of two poten-

wavering policy contributed largely to the success in the impending war. It was impossible for both these kings to form simultaneous alliances with either Roman or Carthaginian. Traditional policy seems to have inspired them with perpetual animosity and so soon as it was known that one favoured the invading Roman, the other immediately, without any settled line of action or forecast of the consequences, formed an alliance with the Carthaginian. Both were jealous of the supremacy of Carthage, and both awaited the coming of the Roman that they might eventually participate in
their

and

of the

Romans

spoiling the Carthaginians.

Syphax was

at

first

inimical to

But he changed sides again and made a treaty with Publius Scipio, who commanded the invading force. The conditions were the support and good will of the Roman Senate and people in exchange
for his assistance in the field of battle.

Carthage, and subsequently a friend in an hour of need.

small embassy, con-

sisting of three centurions,

was despatched from


till

instructions to remain in Africa

Rome with a formal treaty was conSyphax was


the ambassadors with

cluded with this potent but wayward Numidian.


flattered

by the

attention, entertained

princely hospitality, and requested that one of the centurions

should be allowed to instruct his soldiers in the Roman methods of warfare. Numidians,' he said, are only horsemen. They
' '

know nothing about

infantry.

Teach them.'

The request was

complied with, and bodies of Numidians, drilled after the manner of Roman infantry, were at once formed for the purpose of defeating Carthage in the plains when the next war broke
'

Strabo says that a tower called Euphrantas was the boundary between CjTene
territory.

and Carthaginian
this.

were a little to the east of These mounds or altars, if they ever existed, may have had some resemblance to the tombs of the two Horatii near Alba, erected These had s. podium or wall of stone surmounted by a cone of earth. B.C. 673-640.
altars of the Philseni

The

They

fell

to ruin about B.C. 350.

8
out.

Roman

Africa

Carthage was thunderstruck at these proceedings, and, nothing daunted, sent envoys to King Gala, who responded in
into an alliance, purpose of crushing his old antagonist Syphax than of maintaining the integrity of the Punic kingdom. Now Gala had a son who had just attained his seventeenth year when the embassy was despatched. This fearless youth, who lives in history as Masinissa, the hero of Numidia, was a warrior from his cradle. Without hesitation he seized the first opportunity of offering battle to Syphax. Not once only but twice he defeated him, but on the third occasion his rival was victorious. To commemorate his success over so redoubtable a warrior as Masinissa, Syphax vowed eternal friendship with Rome. Forthv/ith ambassadors were despatched to Italy, and in return officers of state were sent by the Roman Senate to his capital at Cirta, bearing costly presents of various kinds, including a toga, a purple tunic, an ivory throne, and a gold cup. But Syphax's happiness was of short duration. In an evil hour he fell in love with Sophonisba, the fair daughter of Hasdrubal, the Carthaginian general, and, to prove his affection for the country of his bride, thoughtlessly deserted the Roman alliance, and quartered his army in the opposing camp. This step was not lost on Masinissa, who immediately favoured the Rgman cause and encamped his troops with the army of Scipio. Such a powerful alliance laid the foundation of Masinissa's fortune, and to his credit it should be said that throughout a long career he never swerved from the attachment, but remained to

a spirit of friendship, and at once entered


offensive

and

defensive,

more

for the

the close of his active

life

a loyal friend to

Rome.

of Sophonisba

is

soon told.

On

the defeat of

The sad story Syphax by the

all-conquering Masinissa, the victor hastened to take posses-

and stronghold of his rival. At the met by the unfortunate queen, whose love and beauty had tempted the amorous Syphax to commit an act of the grossest perfidy. On bended knees and with tearful eye she imsion of Cirta, the capital

gates he was

plored the conqueror not to suffer her to

fall

into the

hands of the

Romans, dreading the fate that might befall her as a captive in the streets of Rome. Love and pity combined sealed her fate. Masinissa, we are told, was so struck with the beauty of
Sophonisba that he sent her to his camp, and, with that impetuosity which characterises Orientals in their relations with the

Carthage and
fair sex,

Rome

9
in this

married her forthwith.

But love and pity had,

Masinissa was summoned before Scipio for having taken to wife the daughter of their sworn enemy, the Carthaginian general. It may be that the Roman desired to claim Sophonisba for himself as part of the spoils of war, but history is silent on this point. All we know is that
case, a

direful termination.

Scipio, regarding her presence in the

to

success,

camp as a stumbling-block demanded her immediate dismissal. Such was

Masinissa's dread of the exercise of Roman authority that he dared not disobey. With a tearful face he entered Sophonisba's tent, and, telling her he was powerless to deliver her from the

jealousy of the
her,

Romans

or the dread captivity that might befall

pledge of his love for her and her person, to die in the manner worthy of the daughter of Hasdrubal. Silently and unmoved Sophonisba obeyed, and
this ill-fated bride, in

besought

swallowed the poison which Masinissa ordered to be conveyed


to her tent at the close of their interview.'

The success of Scipio, aided by his brilliant Numidian ally, had placed Carthage in sore distress. Syphax was taken prisoner to Italy, and soon closed his career ingloriously. The fleet, which had once reigned supreme, was of little service, and the army, largely composed of mercenaries, was sadly reduced in numbers and without a reliable commander. An armistice was agreed upon, and the conditions imposed by Scipio, heavy as they may seem to modern ideas, were accepted. Carthage had to surrender her territories in Spain and her island possessions in the Mediterranean, to hand over all her war vessels except twenty ships, to pay a money fine equivalent to nearly one million sterling, and finally to transfer to Masinissa the kingdom of his adversary Syphax. The events which followed, terminating on the fatal day when Scipio and Masinissa were to crush the Carthaginian army on the plain of Zama, and to close the career of one of the greatest generals in ancient or modern times,
'

Corneille's dramatised version of this tragic story

is

little

in accord with the

statements of ancient authors.

The Sophonisba

of the stage had been married

by

Hasdrubal her father to Masinissa, but the Carthaginians, ignoring this husband, married her afresh to Syphax. Such was her affection for him that she declined to forsake his cause, although he had been twice defeated, and was prepared to bury herself with him in the ruins of his capital, even if he had suffered defeat a third time. Her attachment to her country was no less sincere than her avowed hatred of

Rome.

lo

Roman

Africa

have been so ably described by historians of all ages from Livy to Mommsen that they need only brief recapitulation in these pages. But it should be observed that the rise of Numidia at this period, as a powerful nationality under such a potentate as
Masinissa, introduces a
Africa.

new

factor in the history of


is

Roman

For

fifty

years Numidia

destined to play a leading

part in the affairs of the country, and to contribute in a larger


historians are

measure to the ultimate success of wont to acknowledge.

Roman arms
It

than Latin

might be thought that

researches in recent years, coupled with the diligent investigations of so

many

learned archaeologists, would have thrown


in ancient records.

additional light on this period of African history, and cleared

up many doubtful points

But neither stone

nor marble has yet been unearthed to tell its own unvarnished tale, nor has any writer succeeded in refuting the descriptive account by our great Roman historian^of the last
pitched battle between Carthage and

Rome.

The

recall

of

Hannibal,
land,

who for thirty-six years had and who was then devastating

not set foot on his native


the plains of Italy and

threatening

Rome

with destruction, was the signal for


Scipio and his

Rome

and her

allies to

prepare for battle.

army were

then encamped in the valley of the Bagradas, not far from Hannibal, who had landed at Hadrumetum, was Carthage.
arranging his forces, and securing, by the magic of his name,
the aid of the tribes of Syphax.

who had recently fought under the banner The opposing armies met at Zama, which was then

a large city and stronghold of the king of Numidia, and continued to remain so at a later period. Sallust informs us that it was built on a plain, and was better fortified by art than by
nature.

The same

authority

tells

us that the city existed as the


after the battle,
laid siege to

bulwark of that part of the kingdom a century


for Metellus, the

it during the also read of it as Zama regia, the Jugurthine war. capital of Juba I. in the time of Julius Caesar. It is difficult,

Roman commander,

We

more than 2,000 years, to mark the exact site and neglect have left no tangible remains. The geography of Ptolemy, the chart of Peutinger, and the Itinerary of Antoninus where distances are given, form the
after a lapse of

of the

city, for

destruction

only clue to the position of the battlefield, which appears to

have been between the towns of El-Kef, Taoura, and Kalaat-es-

Carthage and

Rome

ii

Saan. Bruce, who traversed the country in 1766, says that in proceeding in a north-easterly direction after leaving Zanfour,

and traversing the plain a distance of twelve miles, we came to Djebel Mesaood, on the other side of which upon an eminence is a small town built from the fragments of a larger and ancient one, whose name is still called Zama, and was probably the ancient capital of Juba I.' So decisive a victory enabled the
'

Roman

general to

name

the conditions of peace.

Had

Scipio

been prompted to subject Carthage to the same fate that only a few years previously Hannibal had desired to inflict on Rome, there was nothing to prevent him. He granted peace, but on heavy conditions. Carthage was to pay, in addition to the
penalties previously enforced, a

sum

of

money

equivalent to

48,000/. sterling annually for a term of fifty years,

and not to

engage

in

arms with

Rome

or her

allies,

either in Africa or else-

where, without the permission of Rome. It was not without grave discussion in the Senate, or the expression of many conflicting opinions,

that these

conditions were agreed

to.

As

usual on such

momentous

occasions,

when the very

existence

of a nation trembles in the balance, there was a peace party and a war party. The former, headed by Scipio, whose valour was only equalled by his magnanimity, prevailed. Carthage was allowed to exist for another fifty years as a tributary of Rome. But the ill-fated city was doomed to a long period of unrest and disturbance as soon as the treaty was signed and the Roman army had been withdrawn. The adversary was no longer the Roman but the powerful Numidian, who had contributed so largely to her defeat on the decisive field of Zama. There is no name in African records which is so conspicuous, or exercised so extraordinary an influence on the career of Numidia and its people, as that of Masinissa. Fearless in action, a steadfast friend or a merciless foe, unscrupulous and of unbounded ambition, this powerful chieftain ruled for more than sixty years over a conglomeration of tribes who knew no will but his, and recogIn nised his authority as though he were a god from Olympus. the whole range of ancient history there was no one ever invested with kingly power who enjoyed such a career of unchequered good fortune as this remarkable man. Sober in habit and, after the manner of his race, never drinking anything but water, his Riding without saddle, physical powers were extraordinary.

12
sometimes

Roman

Africa
and jumping on

for twenty-four consecutive hours,

an athlete, even after he had atttained his ninetieth year, there is little wonder'that history should have claimed him as the hero of Numidia. Generous in disposition, a firm ruler, and skilled in the crafty statesmanship of his time, he was free Of his from crimes so common among uncivilised tribes. domestic life we have no record, but we are told that he had forty-four children, and at his death, when he had passed his But ninetieth year, his youngest son was only four years old. his boundless activity proved disastrous to Carthage, and in So later years contributed to the downfall of his own kingdom. restless a spirit could not remain satisfied with the large territory which Rome had transferred to him. The policy of Rome was to preserve antagonism between Carthage and Numidia and to give tacit encouragement to Masinissa in his encroachments upon Carthaginian territory. Not content with appropriating the rich lands which lay in the upper valley of the Bagradas, to which he had no legal claim, he must needs occupy the old Sidonian city of Leptis Magna in Tripoli, and ultimately hem in the Carthaginian within the tract of country now repreThere is little doubt that, if opportunity had sented by Tunisia. offered to shake off the Roman yoke without a disturbance of friendly relations, this enterprising Numidian would have occupied Carthage and made it the capital of an extended kingdom. So irritating a procedure, which continued for nearly forty years, became at last unbearable to a people who, in spite of all their shortcomings as a governing power, and their absence of respect for treaties with other countries, desired only to exist peacefully as a commercial nation, and to carry on unrestricted trade in every part of the world. An appeal to Rome was at first disregarded. Subsequently commissioners were despatched to Carthage by the Senate for the purpose of settling the longpending disputes, and to determine the boundaries of Carthage and Numidia, but without result. Carthage was exasperated, and, not being able to make terms with either friend or foe, took the field against Masinissa, and on the first encounter suffered defeat. This action, being in direct contravention of the treaty
his horse like

Romans a but just to the Carthaginians to observe that the sacrifices they were prepared to
entered into after the defeat of Hannibal, gave the
pretext for declaration of war.
It is

Carthage and
make
material of

Rome

13

war and personal weapons. But the decree of the Senate and people of Rome was irresistible. Carthage must be destroyed, and the city must cease to exist. The events which followed the issue of this terrible edict, terminating the third and last Punic war and erasing the metropolis of the Phoenician world from the book of nations, are too well known
all

to avert a conflict were unlimited in respect of ships,


kinds,

to need recapitulation.'

They form

the last chapters of African

history prior to the

Roman

occupation.
it was said that commences with the close of the

In the opening paragraph of this chapter


the history of

Roman

Africa
;

second Punic war, B.C. 201 and, in it may be fairly added that, till the recognition of Carthage and Numidia to the will of Rome, Africa held no as a country adapted either for the

support of this assertion,


fall

of Hannibal and the

as powerful States subject

place in the

Roman mind
population.

establishment of military
civil

strongholds or for the future settlement of a

Carthage in subjection, to destroy her fleet, and to force her to supply the Roman army with money and provisions, seem to have met the immediate requirements of the Senate. Continuous wars in other parts of the world had decimated the Italian army, and caused sad havoc in the ranks of the male population. Colonisation on any organised plan was not even contemplated, nor do we hear of any attempt, so far as African possessions were concerned, till Julius Caesar set the example.
It is true that inhabitants of Rome and of the Italian provinces, prompted by a love of change and adventure, had migrated to towns on the African coast, and had even located themselves But they were not the repreat Cirta, the capital of Numidia. All we know is, that sentatives of any organised system.

To keep

when Jugurtha

laid siege to the town, B.C. 107, he found it mainly defended by Italians, who were put to death by his orders on the surrender of the place.^ Indeed, after the destruction of Carthage, when the ploughshare had passed over the site, and merchants from Italy crossed the Mediterranean in search of new fields for commercial enterprise, we hear of little
'

To

fall,

perished from off the face of the earth.

use the words of Polybius, the Carthaginians, at the suddenness of their Their annihilation as a people made
treated in

them insensible of their misfortunes. The whole subject is admirably R. Bosworth Smith's Carthage and the Carthaginians, London, 1877.
'

Mr.

Sallust,y^. xxvi.

14
movement
in

Roman

Africa

the direction of permanent settlement in the


It satisfied

newly acquired country.

the

Roman

Senate to take

actual possession of the diminished territory of the Carthaginians,

extending from the river Tusca in the north (now known as the Oued-ez-Zan, River of Oak-trees, or Oued-el-Kebir, the Great River) to Thenae on the south-east (the modern Zina, not far from Sfax), and to appoint a Roman governor, whose headquarters were to be at Utica. In order to define the boundary of this territory, a ditch was cut round it on the land frontier, extending from Thabraca in the north to Thense on the coast. Towns and villages, which had shown loyalty to the Carthaginians, were razed to the ground, and the inhabitants sold as slaves. Confiscated lands were divided into three classes. The
inhabitants on

became the property of the State, who let it to the payment of rent, or to censors who farmed the revenues. The second was sold to adventurous individuals, giving rise to the formation of extensive latifundia, and laying
first

the foundation of a system of land-grabbing which excited the ire of Horace, Pliny, and other writers.' The third was at first

held by the State, but was subsequently apportioned to the It is stated on reliable authority^ colonists of Caius Gracchus.
that no less

than six thousand indigent persons, including were shipped to Carthage from Rome and the Italian provinces by this intrepid demagogue. So noble an enterprise, conducted at a time when colonisation was unknown,

women and

children,

name of Gracchus a place in history, for having on a proper basis the principles of emigration beyond the sea. This benevolent undertaking was not attended with immediate beneficial results, and gave little encouragement to a furtherance of the scheme on a larger scale. So slow, indeed, was the progress of colonisation that, as a recent writer has observed,' it was not seriously commenced till two years The idea was one which after the battle of Actium, B.C. 29. Caesar and his successors inherited from the democratic party, and of which the restoration of Carthage and Corinth by the The objections felt to any Such dictator were the first-fruits.
has given the
established
'

'

Horace, Carm.

i.

i,

10,

iii.

16, 31

Pliny, Hist. Nat. xviii.

Frontinus,

Geom. p. 53. " Appian, Bella Civil, i. 24 ; Plutarch, C. Gracchus, 10, ' Les Cith Romaines de la Tunisie, p. 27. J. Toutain,

14.

Carthage and

Rome
foolish jealousy

15
and a

scheme of colonisation were founded on

fear of creating possible rivals to the world-ruling

Romans.'

The

short period of rest, resulting from a


tribes,

tude of the native


line of frontier.

enabled the

Romans

more peaceful attito establish them-

selves securely at Utica,

and to construct fortified posts on the But it soon came to an end. The kingdom of Numidia, which had been powerful and united under the firm rule of the great Masinissa, was destined to crumble away almost as rapidly as it had been formed. Amongst his numerous family there were only three sons having legitimate claim to his Their names were Micipsa, Mastanabal, and possessions. The Gulussa. two last died, or were removed early in life, leaving Micipsa in sole possession. This potentate had two He also took under his charge sons, Adherbal and Hiempsal. brother Mastanabal, named Jugurtha, an illegitimate son of his trained in the arts of war, and subsewhom he educated and joint heir with his own children. making him quently adopted, immortalised has been by the pen of The name of Jugurtha Sallust, and figures largely in the early history of Roman Africa. A true Numidian, knowing neither fear nor fatigue, unscrupulous and cunning, and skilled in the arts of war and diplomacy, he stands conspicuously in the pages of the Roman historian, more on account of his heroism and endurance in the
field

country.

of battle than for his conduct as the prince of a great The skill and generalship of Quintus Metellus and

Caius Marius, combined with the treachery of his father-in-law Bocchus, king of Mauritania, brought about his downfall, after having carried on war against Rome uninterruptedly for nearly

There are few characters with which the schoolboy is taught to be more familiar, and which more readily excite The manly form transient admiration, than that of Jugurtha. his vigour and this Numidian prince, of countenance and fair council, his skill with weapons, and a in wisdom intelligence, his certain youthful modesty of demeanour, bearing out the statement of Sallust that he performed very much but spoke very little of himself,' gained for him the affection of his people and
six years.
'

the admiration of his adversaries.


It
is

at

this

period that

Mauritania, the land

of the

Moors, begins to occupy a place in


'

Roman

history.

At

the

Quarterly Review, 1879.

Roman

Africa

commencement
'

of the Jugurthine war, B.C. ii2, the country-

was governed by Bocchus, who (to use the words of Sallust) was ignorant of the Romans except by name, and who, prior to this time, was as httle known to us, either in peace or war.' ^ The immediate result of the war was that all Numidia. lay at the m.ercy of the Romans. So vast a territory could only be held by a large army and the establishment of fortified posts on the southern and western frontiers. Rome was not prepared for so great an undertaking, preferring to reduce the strength of the country by dividing the kingdom
of Masinissa into territories or provinces.
transferred
to

The western

portion

Bocchus as the reward of of Numidia was Tripoli and the adjacent parts, that his kinsman. treachery to to Carthage, were appropriated by the formerly belonged had Romans. The rest of the country, still retaining the title of Numidia, was placed under the rule of an imbecile prince named Gauda, the grandson of Masinissa and the rightful

At the close of his brief reign Numidia was divided between his two sons Hiempsal and Hierbas, whose joint career was one of lifelong war and interminable rivalry. In the civil wars of Sylla and Marius they took opposite sides. Hierbas joined the Marian party, was besieged in the city of Bulla by the combined forces of Sylla and Pompey, defeated and put to death B.C. 8i. Hiempsal, the ally of the victors, was thus established on the throne of Numidia, and had every prospect of preserving, by the exercise of tact and good
heir to the throne.

government, the splendid heritage of his great grandfather Masinissa. But ill-fortune tempted him in his later days into the wrong camp, and prompted him to oppose the invading army of the all-conquering Csesar. The sovereignty of the world was then in dispute between two noble Romans. At the outset the parties seemed fairly matched, the one, headed by Cneius Pompeius, upholding the maintenance of the authority the other, under the leadership of C. Julius of the Republic Caesar, advocating the principles of democracy and fore;

shadowing a revolution
'

in

Roman

policy.

During the

first

Bocchus died about B.C. 91. He left the western portion of his dominions to Bogud, and the newly annexed portions to his second son Bocchus. Fifteen years later the names of the kings were reversed, Bogud ruling in the east
his eldest son

and Bocchus

in the west.

(Vide Rev. Afr.

xiv. 45.

Carthage and
triumvirate,

Rome

17

provinces

when Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus divided the among themselves, Africa fell to the lot of Pompey.
the final rupture terminated in the signal defeat of

And when
Pompey
army
in

the plains of Pharsalus, Caesar crossed the Medi-

terranean and invaded Africa.


vented.

His

first

at Leptis Parva (Lemta), B.C. 47,

attempt to land an was successfully pre-

But in the following year, when the opposing forces met at Thapsus (Dimas), the army of Pompey, commanded by his father-in-law Metellus Scipio and Marcus Cato, acting in conjunction with the Numidian forces under Juba I., son of Hiempsal, was utterly routed. Scipio killed himself rather
'

than fall into the hands of Caesar. Cato fled to Utica, and on the approach of Caesar's army to lay siege to the city, perished by his own hand. Juba, attended by one companion, fled to Zama, where he had left his household and all his treasures. The gates of the city were closed against him by the terrified inhabitants, so the poor king, deserted and broken-hearted, fled Numidia thus fell to the woods and made away with himself. into the hands of the Romans, and became a province of the great Empire which was then being established by the first of
the Caesars.^

The

of African

affairs,

battle of Thapsus changed the whole aspect and enabled the conqueror to apportion the

country

in

the

manner

best adapted to serve the

Roman

cause.

For valuable assistance rendered during the campaign by Bogud,


king of Eastern Mauritania (afterwards designated Mauritania Csesariensis), the eastern boundary of his kingdom was extended and for the services of as far as the river Ampsaga (Roumel)
;

P.
'

Sittius

Nucerinus, whose valour was conspicuous on the


Portions of the old harbour can
history,
still

Shaw

says that Thapsus was the largest city on the coast south of Carthage,

judging by the extent of the ruins.

be traced,

and the

lines of the concrete retaining walls give indications of exceptionally massive

construction.

Thapsus has had a long

and was noted as a commercial port


in mystery.
fifty

in the earlier days of Carthaginian rule.


*

The

early history of
tells

Numidia

is

somewhat obscure and involved

Eusebius

us that Hercules, after his conquest of the giant Antaeus, about

years before the foundation of Utica and 287 years before that of Carthage, founded the town of Capsa
;

and that larbas, king of the nomadic Libyans or Numidians,

sought the hand of Dido at the time that Carthage became the capital of the State. The word Sallust describes the Numidians as a mixture of Persians and Getulians. Numidians is the same as Nomades, or wanderers, a term applied in ancient times to
pastoral nations without fixed abode.

When the Romans

they

made

it

into a province entitled Africa nova, to distinguish

took possession of Numidia it from Carthaginian

territory,

which was styled Africa vetus or Africa Pravincia.

Roman

Africa

and to whom the fall of Cirta (Constantine), the and stronghold of Numidia, was mainly due, Caesar allotted the towns of Milevum (Mila), Chullu (Collo), and Rusicada (Philippeville), as well as the capital itself and the adjacent country. In the same year the little kingdom of Cyrene, which had been subservient to Rome since B.C. 74, and had been regarded as a Roman province, was handed over by the ruling king, Ptolemy Apion. All North Africa, from the borders of Egypt to the Atlantic Ocean, was now under the control of the Romans. Mauritania was preserved as a separate kingdom, remaining for nearly a century in quasiindependence. With this new order of African affairs a form of government had to be inaugurated which should prove acceptable to the native tribes and their rulers, which should respect their ancient forms of religion, and should hold in
battle-field,

capital

check the turbulent

spirit

of the populous tribes of the south.

With
rule

the

fall

of the

Roman
fresh

Republic and the dawn of imperial

commences a

chapter in the history of

Roman

Africa.

In the foregoing pages an outline of the principal events which paved the way for Roman occupation gives a fair idea of the difficulties which had to be surmounted at each successive stage. They form a prelude to a long career of peace and prosperity, disturbed at intervals by harassing warfare with untameable tribes on the Desert frontier, of successful colonisation, of progress in civil life, of encouragement of the arts of peace, and of decline in later years when the great Empire was
tottering to
its fall.

19

CHAPTER
B.C.

II

AFRICA UNDER THE CiESARS


46-A.D. 96

The

long interval between the destruction of the capital of the Carthaginians and the building of Roman Carthage is frequently
lost sight

of

After the

fall

of Punic Carthage a century elapsed

before Julius Caesar landed on the shores of Africa, and another

century and a half passed before the reconstructed city became of sufficient importance to be recognised as the metropolis of the new colony. It is during the latter part of this interval that
the old Tyrian settlement at Utica, founded about
B.C.

1200,

played a prominent part in political and commercial life. At first an emporium on the coast, then a walled town with a large mercantile population, governed by a Senate and suffetes, it became the chief Phcenician colony in Africa long before the foundation of Carthage. Utica retained its independence as a free republic for many centuries, but at last, being dragged ununwillingly into the Sicilian wars which preceded the first encounter between Rome and Carthage, it closed an independent career by acknowledging the supremacy of its more powerful

countrymen.

Such was the strength of

its

walls and magnifi-

cent fortifications at the outbreak of the second Punic war that

not even the genius of Scipio nor the gallantry of his soldiers could effect an entry into the city till after four years' protracted
siege.

In the troublous times that preceded the last

Car-

thaginian war, Utica, forecasting the result of further opposition

Romans, threw open its gates to the invading army. This step was the commencement of nearly 200 years' revived prosperity. Utica became the residence of the Roman proconsul and the metropolis of Africa Provincia. Under Augustus it obtained the rank of a municipium, and had a population of 40,000 within the walls. The ruined monuments
to the

20

Roman

Africa

covering a large tract of land bear testimony to the wealth of the city in Roman times, even at a period subsequent to the recognition of Carthage as the metropolis of Africa at the end
first century. Under Hadrian it became a colonia. In its days it was an important centre of Christianity, and the bishop of Utica held a conspicuous position among the prelates of the African Church. One of the chief causes which contributed to its final extinction as a place of renown, and which any traveller can attest, were the vagaries of the Bagradas (Medjerda) which once skirted its walls. This remarkable river, which rises in the beautiful valley of Khamisa in Algeria, and winds in a devious way across the Medjerda plain for a length of about fifty miles, has altered its course more than once. After crossing a marsh it now falls into the sea south of the lake at Porto-Farina, which is a little to the north of Utica, and about eighteen miles farther in that direction than at the period when The wayward action of the stream, Carthage was destroyed. cutting through the banks at one place and depositing its slime at another, has been a source of wonderment to many gene-

of the
last

rations

of

men

inhabiting the

history, or rather tradition, asserts that

Bagradas the great combat Regulus and a monstrous serpent took place, B.C. 225. Pliny repeats the fable, and tells us that the Romans attacked the creature with balistcB and other weapons of war, laying siege to It was 120 feet long, and the skin it as though it were a city. and jaws were preserved in a temple at Rome till the outbreak of
the Numantian war, B.C. 133. To the vagaries of the river may at one time a sluggish be attributed this old-world legend stream easily traversed at any part, at another time a swollen torrent deluging the adjacent country and carrying with irresistible force sheep and oxen, houses and trees, and anything that happens to be on the verge of its troubled waters.^ The silting up of the Gulf of Utica, which is now four miles inland, may be assigned as another reason for the decline of the city. These geographical changes appear to have occurred in the
:

Medjerda plains. Legendary on the banks of the between the army of Attilius

'

Turbidus arentes lento pede sulcat arenas Bagrada, non ullo Libycis infinibus anine Victus limosas extendere latius undas Et stagnante vado patulos involvere campos.
Silius Italicus, vi. 141 et seq.

Africa under the Caesars


latter

21
Vandal

days of the Empire,

for

we

learn that Genseric, the

king, A.D. 440, used the harbour of Carthage for the purposes of the fleet with which he contemplated ravaging the coast of
Sicily.

One may

therefore suppose that the harbour of Utica,

which was so renowned for its facilities of access and so adapted for warlike purposes, was at that time useless. Again, we find no traces of Byzantine constructions, or reconstruction of Roman work so common throughout North Africa, clearly proving that Utica had lost its value as a mercantile town and a stronghold
for defence.

old world

the site of any city of the experienced in a marked degree when we contemplate and study the Phoenician and Roman remains of Utica. The
is

The melancholy interest attaching to

town was
other,

built

on a promontory, and appears to have been


sea,
life

divided into two parts, one occupying a series of heights, the

which was washed by the commercial centre. Plutarch, in his

being

probably the

of Cxsar, says that the

place was very strong and well defended, that Cato strengthened the fortifications considerably, raised the towers, and surrounded

the walls with a deep ditch.


in his

Hirtius,

who accompanied
feet thick,
feet.

Caesar

African campaign, also informs us that the fortifications

were magnificent, that the walls were twenty


height up
to

with a

the battlements of thirty-four

In

many

was similar to that of Punic Carthage, and was not disturbed by the Romans when There was a war-port of monumental they took possession. character, similar to the Cothon at Carthage and other coast towns, a palace for the admiral situated on an islet in the centre, a commercial harbour of great extent, a Byrsa or acropolis, and cisterns of vast dimensions. Among the buildings of Roman date were a hippodrome, a magnificent theatre, It is an amphitheatre and museum, temples and baths.
respects the arrangement of the city
'

difficult,

in

the present day, to trace the lines of


structures,

all

these

monumental

many

of

which

are

indicated

by

undulations of the ground rather than by masses of ruined masonry. According to M. Daux, the hippodrome or circus
'

The term

cothon

may be
it
'

regarded as of Phoenician origin.


as used

We

may

accept

the meaning attached to

by Latin commentators, and

by the Greek

historian

Appianus, a.d. 123: Cothones appellantur portus in mari arte et manu facti.' (M. J. Toutain, Les Citis Romain.es de la Tunisie, p. 150 ; also cf. Ch. Tissot, Ghgraphie comfarle de la Province Romaine d'Afrique, p. 603.

22
was
1

Roman
defined,

Africa

The amphitheatre, which was hollowed out of a plateau on the summit of a hill. The great cisterns are six in number, side by side, each measuring 135 feet by 20 feet, with a height to the crown of the vault of 24 feet. Three of these cisterns are in good condition, and are occupied as farm-stables. Their construc,730 feet long and 250 feet wide.
is clearly

tion
city

is

Phoenician, but the vaulting

is

Roman.

The streets of the


and they were
the idea of
is

were narrow, not exceeding fourteen


Servius says that the
the

feet,

paved.

Romans borrowed

street-paving from

Carthaginians

statement which
'

The borne out by Isidore of Seville and other writers. adjacent country,' says Caesar in his Commentaries, 'is of great fertility. The trees supply quantities of timber. The fields are covered with corn, and there is water in abundance.' To testify his appreciation of the commercial wealth of the inhabitants, Csesar, we are told, mulcted three hundred merchants of the city in a sum equivalent to one million sterling. Plutarch also informs us that, on his return from Africa after a campaign of three whole years, Csesar spoke of his triumph in magniloquent terms. He said that the country he had just conquered was so extensive that the Roman people might draw from it every year
two hundred thousand Attic bushels of corn and three million pounds of oil. The remains of Utica, as well as of other towns on the coast, present opportunities of comparing the Punic and Roman methods of building, in the use of stone and rubble, as well as
the application of concrete or
as pisi.
walls,

rammed
is

earth

At Utica

the distinction

very marked.

commonly known The earliest

which are massive, are entirely of rubble, but the stones being small and the lime being made from the same stone, they have the appearance of concrete construction. The vaulting of Punic times is with the same materials, but the art of constructing

by voussoirs, or of vaults on the same principle, was unknown to these Phoenician builders. The inner faces of walls
arches

appear to have been coated with thin lime, and from the absence
of cut stones, the bold rounding of angles, and the prevalence of

rounded forms, it would appear that implements for the dressing and squaring of stone were then unknown. The remains of the admiral's palace, which form a conspicuous mass among the ruins of Utica, are a good example of this kind of building with

S
u H

u D O

M < X

ii'jt-

-~-:.Mi^2.

X,

Africa under the Caesars


rubble.

23

At Thapsus (Dimas) the Punic sea-wall, nearly a quarter of a mile long, not yet quite destroyed, was built up in frames with small pebbles and mortar, like modern concrete construction.

To

use the words of Shaw, the traveller,

'

the walls are so well

cemented and knit together that a solid rock cannot be more hard or durable.' In walking over the ploughed fields and marshy lands of Bou-Chater, as Utica is now called, from which the sea has receded several miles, it is difficult to believe that some thirty or more feet under the surface lie the paved streets and foundations of one of the oldest known cities in the world. Although the plough literally turns up marble, it is the marble of the Roman city. Older Utica lies below. The investigations of the late M. Daux and of M. le Comte d'Herisson, and their researches into the origin and development of Phoenician emporia^ are of comparatively recent date.

tribute

of gratitude
difficulties

is

certainly
little

due to them

for having,

under great

and with

information at their

command, made

study of Utica and of the remains of other coast towns prior to the Roman occupation. Homeric Troy has been Perhaps unearthed, and Mycenae has given up its treasures.
a careful
old Utica, which flourished 3,000 years ago,
attention of a future Schliemann,

may engage the and throw additional light on

the history of an ancient people.

few words must suffice for the Carthage of the Romans, which has been ably described by so many writers of note. Built on the site of the older city but occupying a smaller area, it attained the climax of its prosperity early in the second Some idea of its magnificence can be obtained from century. the borrowed remains in marble and porphyry which still enrich the principal mosques and palaces in North Africa, which help
P Origins et P Emplacement des Emporia phiniciens Byzacium, faites par ordre de P Empereur, Paris, 1869 ; Le Comte d'Herisson, Relation d'une Mission archeologiqiie en Tunisie, Paris, 1881.
'

M. A. Daux,
le

Recherches stir

dans

Zeugis

et le

The tract of country designated the Emporia comprises the coast of the lesser Syrtes, with the towns located there. The principal city was Leptis Minor (Lemta), where there was a considerable mercantile population. Under Carthaginian rule Leptis paid tribute to Carthage amounting to one talent a day. Another important town and port was Tacape (Gabes). Zeugitania or Zeugis, so called by Pliny and other ancient geographers, is the old Phoenician territory, afterwards peopled by Carthaginians.

Triton, together with the emporia, on

Byzacium or Byzacena included the country between Zeugis and Lake Both these regions constitute the coast.

modem

Tunisia.

24
to

Roman

Africa

make Cordova one of the wonders of the Western worldj and to which the sumptuous beauty of Pisa is chiefly due. ElBekri, the Arab writer of the eleventh century, says Marble at Carthage is so abundant that, if all the inhabitants of Africa were to assemble to carry away the blocks, they could not accomplish the task and speaking of the columns of the amphitheatre he quaintly adds Two men could sit on one of
' :

'

'

the capitals cross-legged with plenty of the middle.

room

for

a table in

The

shafts are fluted, white as snow,

and shining

like crystal.' And now of all this monumental grandeur not one stone remains on another. But it is some satisfaction to know that, if the later Carthage with its wealth of marble and mosaic no longer exists, yet the paved streets of the Punic metropolis still await the spade of the explorer some forty feet below the present surface. The few sculptures and mosaics appertaining to Roman Carthage that may be seen in the local museum, as well as those deposited some years ago by the late Mr. Davis in the British Museum, represent only a small portion The majority have served to enrich of discovered remains.

Among the mosaics recovered by one which represents some dwelling-houses apparently built against or near the city walls. This mosaic, which is of the fourth century, is a portion of a large composition representing a hunting scene, the figures being nearly half life-size. Judging from the appearance of the roofs and the general scale, these houses could not have been less than We know that buildings in Rome were seven stories high. erected of an enormous height before the time of the Empire, that during the reign of Augustus a law was promulgated by the Senate which restricted the height of buildings in the streets of Rome to 60 feet, and that subsequently in Trajan's time a limit of 70 feet was allowed, without regard to the widths It is quite possible that the Augustan law of the streets. prevailed in the rebuilding of Carthage, which was commenced during his reign, and that the Senate was powerless to impose restrictions in later times, when building ground within the city walls was of abnormal value.'
many
private collections.
is

Mr. Davis

that the streets of

Appianus, the Greek historian, who flourished in the time of Hadrian, says Roman Carthage were narrow and irregular, and that they were paved with large flat stones. He also adds that some of the houses were six stories
'

MOSAIC IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM REPRESENTING THE WALLS OF ROMAN CARTHAGE.

Africa under the Caesars


The
the time

25

establishment of the principles of monarchy, dating fronl when Csesar and Pompey acted in unison to overthrow

the aristocratic constitution of


far

Caesar's decisive victory at Thapsus.

from interfering them undisturbed in nearly everything except a recognition of their dependence upon Rome. Numidia, the latest acquired territory, became a Roman province under the title of Africa nova to distinguish it from Africa Provincia, which was now called Africa vetus. And as a first step towards establishing a permanent form of government, a proconsul of Numidia was appointed to reside at Cirta, the old capital of Eastern Numidia and of Masinissa's kingdom. Caesar, in the exercise of his monarchical powers, appointed Sallust, the historian, to the post for one year, nominally,' says Dion, to govern it, but in reality His recall to Rome to answer the to ravage and plunder it.'
left
' '

Rome, became permanent after The new order of things, with the liberty enjoyed by the native races,

charges of extortion

made

against

followed almost immediately

him by Numidian chiefs was by the assassination of his imperial

patron. No successor was appointed. On the accession of Augustus Numidia was handed over to its rightful heir, the son of Juba I., and the direct descendant of Masinissa. This step was taken with a view to conciliating the people of the country,

will

but chiefly for the purpose of making their king subservient to the of Rome. The incidents in the life of this last native ruler

of the Numidian kingdom are very touching, and shed unusual This young prince, lustre on the closing pages of its history.

known as Juba II., was but a child when his father terminated his career so ingloriously after his defeat at Thapsus. Taken captive to Rome,'he followed the chariot wheels of Caesar
afterwards
in his triumphal entry into the city, and might have perished in a dungeon or met with that summary injustice which was too But a better fate was often meted out to the conquered in war. The comely looks of the lad and his marked in store for him. intelligence attracted Ihe attention of the great Augustus, who

committed him to the charge of his sister Octavia, the discarded Devoting himself to literature and wife of the ill-fated Antony.
high, especially in the oldest part of the town, and that the external walls, where

exposed to the sea, were coated with tar. According to Livy, Roman Carthage was twenty-three (Roman) miles Carthago in circuitu viginti tria millia passus fatens. (Liv. Epit. li.

in circuit.

26

Roman

Africa

the arts of peace, the young Juba became one of the most learned men of his time. On arriving at man's estate, Augustus

and bestowed on him Antony and his Egyptian queen. Shortly afterwards the Emperor, finding it necessary, mainly on military grounds, to occupy the eastern portion of the country as a Roman province, and to establish a seat of government at Cirta, transferred Juba to the western portion, the capital being the old Phoenician city of lol, and for a short period the capital of Mauritania.^ This was renamed Julia Caesarea, and is now known by its Arab name of Cherchel. Here, on this beautiful spot, washed by the shores of the Mediterranean, Juba II. reconstructed the city on a magnificent scale and embellished it with works of art from Greece and
seated
his ancestors,

him on the throne of

the hand of Cleopatra Selene, the daughter of

Rome.

Here, during a prosperous rule of nearly

fifty years,

he

gathered around him all the celebrities of his time and art, introducing into his kingdom elements of civilisation unknown to the unruly tribes of North Africa. His only
in literature

Pompey, who succeeded him, took up arms against Cssar, and paid the penalty of his rashness by the sacrifice of his kingdom. His daughter Drusilla, who died in a foreign
son
land,

married Felix, the governor of Judaea, before whom Paul was arraigned.^ Had Juba II. lived in other times, his career would have entitled him to a far more conspicuous position, but the dazzling rule of the Caesars and the stirring events in other parts of the world at the dawn of the Christian era cast into the shade the unobtrusive labours of so peaceful a monarch, affording but few materials for the historian. Such was his popularity throughout a long reign that the

Athenians raised a statue


'

in his

honour, and the tribes of the


having been made to asso-

The

origin of the

word

lol is uncertain, attempts

ciate the

word with
it

lola, the

Carthaginian port
as lol

name of one was well known but


;

of the reputed wives of Hercules. the town


itself,

As a

according to Pomponius

Mela, does not appear to have been of any importance in his time. He speaks of it ad mare aliquando ignobilis (P. Mela, iii. c. vi). At a later date Pliny refers to it as oppidum cekberrimum, and Procopius, in the sixth century, makes special
reference to the splendour of the city and
its

numerous population.

Vide

'

Life and

Writings of Juba,' by I'Abb^ Sevin, in the Mimoires de VAcadimie des Inscriptions,


iv.

457.
^

According

to Suetonius,

Felix

married two princesses bearing the name of

Drusilla, the first being the daughter of Juba,

and the second a Jewess, the daughter


xii. c.

of Agrippa.

(Suet, in CI. i8.

Tacit.

Ann.

14.)

Mir

Jt"

Africa under the Caesars


Desert worshipped him as a deity
est.
:

27

Et Juba, Mauris volentibus, numerous literary works fragments only remain. It is enough that Strabo, Pliny, and other less prolific writers bear testimony to the value of his researches, and quote freely from his histories of Rome and Arabia, as well as treatises on various subjects. And it is enough for us that the monumental edifice which he erected to contain the ashes of himself and his Egyptian queen is still standing, though in a ruined condition, on the summit of a lonely mountain some ten miles east of his capital an enduring memorial of the most learned,
deus

Of

his

not the greatest, of Numidians. The form of this tomb is polygonal, surmounted by a truncated cone composed of a series of steps each 22 inches high,
if

and terminating in a platform. The diameter of the polygon, which appears to be cylindrical, is 198 feet. It stands on a square stone platform measuring 210 feet each way. Around the polygon or podium of the structure are 60 engaged columns of the Ionic order, with Attic bases and capitals of a Greek type, and surmounted by a frieze and cornice which, as far as one can gather from the scattered fragments, had only a slight projection. The total height of the monument was originally about 1 30 feet, but the top courses of masonry having been thrown down it is

now about

no

feet.

At

four places in the colonnade, corre-

sponding to the cardinal points, are false stone doors about 14 inches thick and 20 feet high. The entrance to the tomb, which is under the eastern false door, was discovered by MM. Berbrugger and MacCarthy in 1866. The plan of the monument, shown on the accompanying illustration, with its spiral gallery and sepulchral chambers, is taken from the elaborate notices and measurements by those eminent Algerian scholars. After descending seven steps the gallery commences, averaging 6 feet 6 inches wide and 7 feet 10 inches high, with a total length of nearly 500 feet. The gallery terminates in two vaulted chambers 1 5 feet high. The first, measuring 1 3 feet by

4 feet 9 inches, is commonly known as The Chamber of Lions,' on account of a rudely sculptured lion and lioness on the doorThe second or central one measures 13 feet by 9 feet head.
'

6 inches. Stone doors formed of single stone slabs, fitting loosely and moving in grooves in the jambs, shut off the two There are niches at chambers as well as the gallery.

28
intervals in the walls
in the central

Roman

Africa

of the gallery to receive lamps, and chamber are two niches for similar purposes or for cinerary vases. Outside and about lO feet in front of the entrance are indications of a raised stone platform, where the ceremony of cremation was probably performed, and where the funeral urn or cinerarium was deposited. The external masonry of the

monument is of coarse hard limestone, but the interior filling is of tufa, solidly constructed. The courses of stone are laid with great regularity, breaking bond from top to bottom. They were
put together with metal cramps which have long since disappeared, though the mortices in the blocks to receive them are very conspicuous. The masonry of the gallery and the cham-

good preservation, having been constructed with and dressed limestone, and finely jointed. Mortar, if used at all, must have been very thin, and the gallery was apparently faced with thin plaster. The
bers
is still

in

large blocks

of squared

dilapidated condition of the


to

monument

externally

is

attributable

numerous unsuccessful attempts to penetrate the interior in search of treasure, more than once with the aid of artillery. So solid is the construction that, even in its exposed situation, it might have resisted the wear of nineteen centuries and remained fairly perfect to the present day if the destructive Arab had
never passed over the land. During a long period succeeding the Roman occupation of North Africa, when the country was overrun successively by Vandals, Byzantines, and Arabs, the traditions associated with
this gigantic

been forgotten.

tomb and the purposes of its erection seem to have So recently as the time of Shaw it was known by the Arab name of Maltapasi, or Treasure of the Sugarloaf. How it came to receive the absurd appellation by which it is now universally known, Le Tombeau de la Chr^tienne,' is not Hear what Dr. Judas, a learned Orientalist, difficult to explain. says on the subject. The term Kubr-er-Roumiah of the Arabs
'

is

the ancient Phoenician designation which, taken in


'

its

original

means Tombeau Royal.' The natives, instead of translating this foreign word Roumiah, as they ought to have done, have given it the same meaning as a similarly sounding word Strangers of Christian in their own language, Roumi, viz. And the French misorigin,' the feminine being Roumiah.
sense,
'

translation originated in a misinterpretation of a feature in the

E^
4!>?

-*

*^^

s.

V*.
)T|

fUN

Of

TO^B

Of

JOBA

1(

^===^

w
PPOIUNI Of 6UppO5e0 TON|B
Of

^^A551NI55\

Africa under the Caesars

29

architecture, the stiles of the four-panelled stone doors being

mistaken for crosses. Hence it was inferred that such a tomb must have been that of a Christian The name is preserved,' says Dr. Judas, but nevertheless we must protest against its absurdity.' Leaving this tangle of French and Arabic, we turn with satisfaction to the pages of Pomponius Mela, a geographer of the first century who had seen this monument, probably in the lifetime of Juba II., and we find it described in simple language as Monumentum commune regice gentis.' That it was intended as the common sepulchre of Juba and his descendants is clear enough but his dynasty, as we have said, was shortlived. It is worthy of mention, in concluding an account of this edifice, that vegetation is so luxuriant on its conical top that some years ago M. Jourdain, the naturalist, found ample matter for a pamphlet entitled Flore murale du Tombeau de la
' !

'

'

ChrMenne. Mention should here be made of a similar tomb about fifty-two miles south of Constantine, called by the Arabs the
Medrassen, probably after a tribe known as the Madres, who occupied a neighbouring territory on the northern slopes of the By some it has been thought to be the Aures mountains. sepulchre of Syphax, and there is a tradition that the monument was raised by the Emperor Pfobus in honour of the African chief Aradion, who fell bravely in his last struggle with the We may pass by these conjectures, for soldiers of the Empire.
tolerably certain that the edifice was built by Masinissa as a sepulchre for himself and his descendants, or by his son and Its situation in the centre of his kingdom, successor Micipsa.
it is

from his new capital Cirta, favours There is no sufficient ground for supposing it to have been built by Syphax, for it must be remembered that, till the last year of his reign, his capital was at Siga, on Moreover, Syphax was the western frontier of his dominions. led captive to Rome and died in prison. The form of the tomb is cylindrical, surmounted by a truncated cone composed of a series of steps, each being 21 inches

and

at a convenient distance

this supposition.

high.

The

cylinder, having a diameter of about 190 feet, is

ornamented by 60 engaged columns with a frieze and cornice, and stands on three steps forming a base to the entire monument.

The

material of the facework

is

a fine sandstone, but

30

Roman

Africa

the mass of the structure is formed of thin slabs of inferior stone in regular courses, having at a distance the "appearance of
bricks.

The columns and

cornice are Egyptian in character.

The

capitals are Greek.

The monument,

in

fact,

is

one of

the few existing buildings in North Africa which


transition

mark the

the work of an architect

between Egyptian and Greek art, and was probably from the neighbouring colony of Alexandria towards the close of the second Punic war, B.C. 201. The entrance to the sepulchral chamber, which Is nearly in the centre of the monument, is above the cornice on the west side, and is approached by a series of steps and a straight narrow gallery. The tomb has been ransacked from time to time in search of treasure, and, from the charred appearance of some of the masonry, attempts must have been made to set it on fire. It was not till 1873 that the French engineers succeeded in finding and effecting an entry, and, after much patient labour, discovered the sepulchral chamber measuring 10 feet 3 inches by 4 feet 7 inches. Nothing of value is stated to have been The points of resemblance found during the exploration. between these two monuments, the Medrassen and the so-called Tombeau de la Chrdtienne, are very striking, leaving no room Their for doubt that one furnished the idea for the other. value must be estimated, not on the ground of any special
artistic

merit, but

as links in a long

chain of architectural
will

history,

and as memorials of two men whose names

be for

ever associated with that old-world country Numidia.' The remains of Juba's renowned capital, splendidissima
colonia Ccesariensis, as
inscriptions, are
it

is

designated in one of the numerous

Sacked by Firmus in the very extensive. fourth century, it was razed to the ground by the Vandals a century later. Under Barbarossa it regained something of its

by an earthquakesurprising to
'

former splendour, but the city was almost entirely overthrown After such vicissitudes it is not in 1738.
find
similar

the

remains in a fragmentary condition.


is

somewhat

monument

that of El Djedar in Oran.

And

in

Western

Algeria, not far from the village of Frenda, is a group of smaller tombs in the form The of low pyramids supported on square, instead of circular or polygonal, podiums.
largest is about forty-three feet high, the

podium being about ten feet. The entrance was from the top of the podium, descending by a flight of steps to a vaulted corridor communicating with the sepulchral chambers in the centre of the monument.

Tomb of Juba
RESTORED.)
Scale
of Feer

II.

Supposed Tomb of Massinissa.


(RESTORED.]

Africa under the Caesars


'

31

Nothing,' says

Shaw

in 1730,

'

could have been better contrived,

either for strength or beauty, than the situation of this city.

two miles along the


from the
sea.'

strong wall, forty feet high, buttressed, and winding nearly shore, secured it from all encroachments

choked with be traced in the middle of a ploughed field. Nearly all the steps have disappeared, and the blocks of stone and marble with which the edifice was constructed have been regarded as a quarry for many centuries past. The great cisterns, storing more than four million gallons, are still used as reservoirs, and in connection with the same The principal thermce, system of supply as the ancient city. the faade of which was more than 300 feet long, are scarcely traceable in outline, though the huge masses of solid walls still standing give a fair idea of the magnificence of the edifice. There were at one time two other palatial baths, the remains of one of them being still visible by the seashore. The hippodrome, which some seventy years ago was in fair preservation, with its portico and columns of marble and granite, is now a mere undulation of its surface. The blocks of stone have been removed, and the ddbris accumulated during this long interval has almost obliterated the outline. There is little doubt that Julia Caesarea remains to be unearthed. Whenever excavations have been made, architectural fragments have been brought to columns of black diorite, shafts of white marble, busts light and broken statuary, many of them replicas of Greek statuary ordered by Juba for the embellishment of his city. Some of
outlines of the amphitheatre,

The

some twelve

feet

of earth,

may

still

them

are

still

stored in the

little

museum

at Cherchel, suffi-

ciently attesting the splendour of Juba's capital

and his apwork of Greek artists. Outside the city are the remains of the aqueduct which conveyed the waters of Djebel Chennoua. Eighteen arches only remain. When Bruce
preciation of the
condition.

visited Cherchel in 1765

ing a triple

he found the aqueduct in much better drawing made by him has been preserved, showseries of arches, rising in one part to the height of

116 feet'
'

The
is

construction of this aqueduct, which

is

a conspicuous object in the land-

scape,

very irregular, and will not bear comparison with the great aqueduct of

Carthage.

The span

of the arches

is

about nineteen

feet,

and the thickness of the

piers averages fourteen feet.

32
The

Roman
administration

Africa
provinces

of

the

which constituted

Roman

Africa in the early days of the Empire presented

many

difficulties,

owing to the uncivilised and restless character of the natives in the interior, and the uncertain attitude of the tribes on the Desert frontier. Prior to the accession of Caligula,
A.D. 37, the general

commanding

the

Roman army

in Africa

was proconsul of Africa and Numidia, but that emperor separated the
civil

establishment from the military.

Under

his

successor Claudius the system of government was definitely the older province, Africa vetus, was admiby a proconsul nominated by the Senate and selected from that body. His functions were both civil and military. He was chosen for his merits as a ruler and for his high social position, much in the same way as the governor of a colony of
nistered

organised, and

the British Empire.

He

held office for one year, resided at

Carthage, and received a fixed salary equivalent to 8,000/. The newer province of Numidia, Africa nova, was sterling.

administered by a legatus, or lieutenant-general, selected from

and approved by the Emperor. He resided at had the command of the Roman troops permanently stationed in Africa, and was responsible for the security of both provinces, as well as the maintenance of order on the frontiers. He held command at the pleasure of the Emperor, and was called legatus A ugusti pro prcstore legionis III A ugustce, abbreBeyond viated generally to legatus Augusti pro prcstore}
the Senate
Cirta,

Numidia, extending from the river Ampsaga (Roumel), lay Mauritania, which was divided by Claudius (after the murder of Ptolemy, son of Juba H, by his predecessor) ihto two provinces, the eastern portion being called Mauritania Caesariensis, with Caesarea for its capital, and the western portion Mauritania Tingitana, deriving its name from the chief town in that region, Tingis (Tangiers). Each of these provinces was governed by a
Ann. de Const. 1858-59, p. 181. (C. /. L.) No. 10165. Corpus Inscripiionum Latinarum (C. /. Z.), vol. viii. part tiones Africa Latince, Gustavus Wilmanns, Berlin, 1881.
'

I,

entitled /bjc?-^-

A supplement
Vol.
Paris,
viii. 1 88 1.

entitled Inscriptiones

Africa Proconsularis Latince, Renatus Cagnat


Latince,

and Johannes Schmidt,


part 2,

Berlin, 1891.

entitled Inscriptiones Africce

Gustavus Wilmanns,

A supplement entitled Inscriptiones Provincia Numidia LatincB, Cagnat, Johannes Schmidt, and Hermannus Dessau, Berlin, 1894.

Renatus

Africa under the Caesars


procurator,^ who, according to
rank.^

33

Dion Cassius, was of equestrian

This continued till the third century, when the title procurator vfa.s superseded hy presses. These four Roman provinces of Africa constituted four gradations of civilisation, the first bidding fair to rival Rome and Alexandria in wealth, culture,

and general

prosperity,

and the

last

scarcely

removed from

barbarism, inhabited by tribes whose petty rivalries were the cause of constant disturbance.

The Roman occupation of Mauritania dates from the fall of Ptolemy, A.D. 39. In contrast with the career of his distinguished father, the short reign of this unworthy prince was marked by misgovernment and debauchery.
It is to be regretted that the name of Juba II does not appear on any inscribed stone yet discovered, but the name of the son is recorded on a slab of marble at Saldae (Bougie)
:

REGI

PTO

LEMAEO REG IVBAE


Another discovered
runs thus
at Algiers

and deciphered by Renier

Regi Ptolemceo, regis Juba filio, Lucius Cacilius Rufus, Agilis filius, honoribus omnibus patrice sua consummatis de sua pecunia faciendum, curavit
et consecravit.*

The earliest attempts at colonisation in Africa by C. Gracchus, after the destruction of Carthage, proved, as already remarked, unsuccessful, and Colonia Junonia, as it was called, was abandoned. To Julius Caesar and his successor must be accorded the honour of establishing on a permanent basis a
system of colonisation which soon spread through the
provinces.

Roman
were

By

imperial

order

3,000

Italian

colonists

located in Carthaginian territory, and under the protection of

Carthage throve with amazing rapidity. Utica, and principal commercial city in the province, had already received the privilege of Latin rights as some compensation for the favours shown to its distinguished competitor, and was in a position to reassert its claims as one of the chief ports of the Mediterranean.^ In Numidia an advance
hitherto the capital
'

Rome and

C. I. L. Nos. 9362, 9363.

Inscriptions

' C. I. L. No. 8927. Dion Cassius, Ix. 9. Romaines de PAlgirie (/. R. A.), par Leon Renier, Paris, 1858 ;
'^

/.

R. A. No. 4049.
=

Berbrugger, Rev. Afr.


iv.

i.

p. 57.

Mommsen's History of Rome,

544.

34

Roman

Africa

was made by conferring the rights and privileges attached to Roman military colonies upon Cirta the capital, as well as on other towns which had been assigned to Publius Sittius and his troops, for great services rendered to the State. Many towns in the interior, which the insane fury of Juba I had rendered
desolate,

were not revived

till

a later period, but the great

Julian colonies, Carthage and Cirta,

became

at once the centres

of Africano- Roman civilisation.


..-,

From

the date of the decisive battle of Actium, B.C. 31, to

the latter days of the reign of Tiberius, an interval of

more than

sixty years. North Africa enjoyed a period of rest which helped

forward the cause of civilisation. The gentle rule of Juba II in the western province, and the endearing regard with which he was held by turbulent tribes on the frontier, checked insur^scarcely

and spread the arts of peace among a lawless population removed from barbarism. But no sooner had his worthless son Pompey ascended the throne of Mauritania, and commenced a career of misgovernment and debauchery, than a revolution broke out. Tacfarinas, a Numidian and a deserter from the Roman army, where he held command of an auxiliary
rection
force

bandit rather than a warrior

raised

the standard of

and drew to his camp a motley herd of miscreants, adventurers, and cut-throats. Amongst them was a Moor named Mazippa, to whom Tacfarinas gave the command of the scum of his army, with permission to carry on the war with fire and sword, and to show no mercy to town or village in his march of destruction. Reserving for himself the better disciplined troops, whom he trained and armed after Roman methods, this daring Numidian drew the Roman legions after him, sometimes in the plains, at others on the hillsides, in the vain hope
revolt,

of tiring them out with the fatigue of constantly shifting their camp and countermarching in a difficult country. For seven

whole years Tacfarinas carried on this predatory warfare with varying success, and, in the words of Tacitus, sparsit bellum. Rome was alarmed for the safety of her African possessions, for

we are told

that the Emperor Tiberius, in addressing the Senate, implored them to select for proconsul a man of military experience, blessed with a vigorous constitution, and capable of

bringing this disastrous war to a close.

Tacfarinas was at last

taken by surprise near Tubusuptus (Tiklat) by the army of

Africa under the Caesars


p. Cornelius Dolabella, proconsul

35

of Africa

and, finding his

and no hope of retreat, he rushed fearlessly into the fight and died like a true Numidian. The war was over, and a cry of deliverance went through the land is demum annus populum Romanum longo adversum Numidam Tacfarinatem bello absolvit. To encourage growth of population and to promote assimilation of the Roman with native races, the first Emperors established on the old Carthaginian highways colonies of veterans, as they were called, all men of approved military experience. They were exempt from taxation and had many privileges, but held themselves in readiness to bear arms in times of war or local disturbance. Some of the native towns, which had been partly deserted after the overthrow of the Carthaginians, were peopled with Italians, and fortified villages were built at points of vantage near the frontiers. There are records of nearly fifty such towns at this period, many of which had been Punic or Numidian. These were renamed by order of the Emperors. It may be assumed that the principal ones were occupied by colonies of soldiers who had done good service in battle, or had lost their substance in the service of the Among the most noticeable were Uthina (Oudena), State. Maxula (Mascula), Thuburbo major (Tebourba), and Sicca Veneria (El-Kef). Their monumental remains bear ample testiforces decimated
:

remote period. and colonics has given rise to much controversy, and it is only by a comparison of the opinions expressed by able authorities that a clue can be found to a fairly accurate interpretation of these terms. Suetonius says that municipia were foreign towns which
to the prosperity they attained at this

mony

The

constitutional difference between municipia

had obtained the rights appertaining to Roman citizens. They were of different kinds. Some enjoyed all the rights of Roman citizens, except those which could not be held without residing in Rome, while others were invested with the right of serving in the Roman legions, but could not hold civil office, nor had The municipia had their own they the privilege of voting. laws and customs, and they were not obliged to accept Roman laws unless they chose. Gibbon is quite explicit on the subject. He tells us that a nation of Romans was gradually formed in the provinces, by the double expedient of introducing colonies,
'

36
vincials to the
districts

Roman

Africa
and deserving of the proThroughout the Empire

and of admitting the most


were reserved

faithful

freedom of Rome.
civil,

for the establishment of colonies,

some

and others of a military nature. In their manners and internal policy the colonies formed a perfect representation of their great parent and as they were soon endeared to the natives by the ties of friendship and alliance, they effectually diffused a reverence for the Roman name, and a desire, which was seldom disappointed, of sharing, in due time, its honours and advantages. The municipal cities insensibly equalled the rank and splendour of the colonies and in the reign of Hadrian it was disputed which was the preferable condition of those societies which had issued from, or those which had been received into, the bosom of Rome.'' Liddell,
; ;

of which were of a

another able authority, says that, in considering this question of colonice, we must dismiss from our minds those conceptions of colonisation which are familiar to us from the practice of ancient Greece or of the maritime States of modern Europe.

Roman

colonies were

venturers

who found

or their ambition.

not planted in new countries by adhomes too narrow for their wants The colonies of Roman citizens consisted
their old

300 men of approved military experience, who occupy conquered cities of no great magnitude, but important as military positions. The 300 families formed a sort of patrician caste, while the old inhabitants sank into the condition formerly occupied by the plebeians at Rome. The heads of these families retained all their rights as Roman citizens, and might repair to
usually of

went

forth with their families to

Rom to vote in the popular assemblies.^ The same author says with regard to municipia that 'they furnished certain contingents of troops, which they were obliged to provide with
pay and equipments while on service, provisions being found by the Romans. Their privileges consisted in freedom from all other taxes, and in possessing more or less completely the They were thus exempt from all right of self-government. They tribute or toll paid to Rome, except military service. They exercised the civil or administered their own laws.
private rights of
'

Roman

citizens

but

none, without special


vol.
i.

Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the


Liddell's History of Rome, vol.
i.

Roman Empire,
B. 3,
c.

p.

172.

27.

Africa under the Caesars


grant,

37

had any power of obtaining political or public rights. There was considerable diversity of condition among the 'municipia! Another writer defines a colony as part of the Roman State. There were Roman colonies and Latin colonies. The members of a Roman colony, colonia civium Romanorum, must have always had the same rights which, as citizens, they would have at Rome,' but the conquered people among whom the Romans sent their colonists were not Roman citizens. The power of Rome over her colonies was derived, says Niebuhr, from the supremacy of the parent State, to which the colonies of Rome, like sons in a Roman family, even after they had grown
'
'

'

to maturity, continued unalterably subject'

On

the subject of

municipia a well-known writer


after B.C. 90,

says they had a narrower import


'

and signified the civitates sociorum and colonicB which then became complete members of the Roman State. Thus there was really no difference between municipia and colonicB, except in their historic origin and in their original internal constitution. The Roman law prevailed in both.' M. J. Toutain, the most recent writer on the subject, says that the terms colonia and municipium, used as the official titles of several African cities, had each its own meaning, and that the conditions of the municipia were inferior to those of the colonics? But he adds that the words lost their respective significations at a later period of the Empire, and were employed
Latin(B,
indifferently.

The
in

colonies

sent out

by Augustus and

his

immediate

successors were essentially of a military character, and differed


respects from those referred to by Tacitus a century Whereas the former were composed of veterans commanded by military tribunes, the latter were chosen haphazard from the army, but not banded together by old associalater."*

many

tions or the ties of mutual interest.

Tacitus speaks deploringly

of

this class of colonics,

that designation.
'

We

and almost refuses to mention them by learn from Pliny, who speaks of colonies

'

' Ibid. Smith's Diet, of Class. Antiq. art. ' Colonia. Toutain, Les Citis Romaines de la Tunisie, Paris, 1895, P- 324It is worthy of mention that Londinium (London) was not even a colonia

when

C. Suetonius Paulinus, the general, and afterwards governor of Britain, A.D. 60, Richard of Cirencester marched through the town (Tacitus, Ann. lib. xiv. c. 33).

mentions nine colonia in Britain, of which Londinium was one

and two municipia,

\Eboracum (York) and Verolamium

(St.

Albans).

38

Roman

Africa

in the province of Africa as colonics, and municipia as oppida civium Romanorum, that classification extended still further.

There were oppida libera, which had the privilege of self-government, and there were oppida simply. These were probablyinhabited entirely by natives having their own laws and preserving their own language. Pliny also mentions one oppidum stipendiarium, which paid a fixed tribute to Rome one oppidum Latinum, which had only Latin rights and one oppidum immune, which was free from tribute. In short, colonics were communities founded by genuine colonists, municipia were towns in which all the inhabitants had rights of Roman citizenship, oppida Latina were towns enjoying the same privileges
;
;

as were formerly accorded to


tion,

and the

rest wei'e provincial

members of the Latin confederacommunities and towns with


life

varying privileges.

The

spread of colonisation and municipal

was

restricted
till

to towns on the coast or a few fortified cities in the interior,

about the time of Vespasian. Absence of roads, general ignorance of the country and its inhabitants, and the want of fortified outposts checked the enthusiasm of the Cassars in their eagerness
for the entire subjugation of Africa.

The

peculiar configuration

of Africa, from Tripoli westward to the Atlantic, and from the

Mediterranean southward to the Great Desert, has always been Until the arrival of the Romans no one of the native tribes, however successful in predatory warfare or distinguished for those daring qualities which were so conspicuous in Masinissa and Jugurtha, had ever contemplated the conquest of the inhabitants of mountainous regions. On the southern frontier it was as impossible then as it has proved, Looking southward from the to be after a lapse of 2,000 years. Mediterranean we have the coast country, known as the Tell of modern Algeria, a region of undulating fertile soil, v aryingin width from fifty to a hundred miles, intersected by ravines and attaining considerable altitude in those parts now occupied by Khabyles. Behind are the high plateaux, mostly lying between two long crests of mountain ranges, where the soil is variable, some highly productive, but hardened by a tropical sun, dotted
a bar to permanent civilisation.
with salt-marshes and rising in terraces till they attain an altiThese table-lands, which once tude of nearly 7,600 feet. contributed largely to the wheat supply of Rome, were in high

Africa under the Caesars


cultivation long before the arrival of the

39
The
general

Romans.

aspect must have been

much

the

same

as in the present day.

Road communication had been established by the Carthaginians along the coast and to a few towns in the interior, but it was not till the time of Trajan that impetus was given to any organised system of road construction. When the southern territory of the Carthaginians, extending from Thenae on the coast to the
borders of Tripoli, had been handed over to Masinissa by the Romans at the close of the second Punic war, that enterprising
settling

Numidian attempted to alter the nomadic lives of his people by them in small towns or villages, linked together by a chain of roads. We have no record of the success of his scheme.
All these roads formed part of a network of military highways which traversed the country in all directions early in the second century, and portions of which still unexpectedly greet the traveller's eye in journeying through regions which are apparently trackless.

From

Carthage, the

there were only two roads.


direction to Utica,

and then

new metropolis of Africa, One went in a north-westerly by way of Membro to Hippo-

Diarrhytus (Bizerta).

The

other, skirting the north side of the

had two branches. One went direct west to the banks of the Bagradas (Medjerda), and, crossing the river at a place called Djedeida, went to Teburbo minus (Tebourba), Bulla Regia (Henchir Hammam Darradji) and Simittu (Chemtou), terminating at Hippone (Bone). The other branch, after passing the salt lake of Tunis, now called Sebkha es-Sedjoumi, continued as far as Theveste on the southern frontier. From Czesarea (Cherchel) one road followed the shore, and another passed through the valley between the Great and Little Atlas. But the principal highway from this city traversed the banks of the Chelif and went by way of the plains to Sitifis (Setif) and Cirta (Constantine), the capital of Numidia. From Cirta there was a road to the coast at Rusicada (Philippeville), and from Kalama (Guelma) in the interior two roads one to Hippo Regius, and the other by way of Naragarra and Sicca Veneria (El-Kef) to Bulla Regia, and so on to Utica and Carthage. A southern road went through Zama to Hadrumetum (Susa) on the coast, continuing to Thysdrus (El-Djem) and Thenae whilst another highway of considerable importance linked together the well-known towns of Lambaesis (Lambessa),
(Tunis),

Lake of Tunes

40
and Telepte.

Roman
Still further south,

Africa
(Tebessa),

Thamugas (Timegad), Theveste

Ammaedara (Hydra), some few leagues north of Lake

Triton, there was a road from Capsa (Gafsa) binding together a long line of military outposts, and extending eastward as far as Cyrene. Hippo Regius was the starting-point of seven roads,

and Lambsesis, the great military centre of the country, was provided with three highways, one going north to Sitifis, another to Cirta, and a third to Theveste. This last town was the junction of not less than eight roads, and, during the first
century of the Christian era, took rank as one of the most important towns in North Africa. Of any highways in Mauritania west of Cassarea we have no mention till a later period. The Tabula Itineraria Peutingeriana, as it is termed, now in the library at Vienna, makes no reference to them, and the Itineraries of Antoninus, in the form handed down to us, throw no light upon the course of any military highways in the western provinces. dearth of inscriptions in the days of the Caesars leaves us in considerable doubt as to the actual course of many of the roads in more elevated regions, and the absence of milliary columns, so numerous in the time of Trajan and the Antonines, has made it difficult to ascertain the correctness of statements by ancient authors and geographers. Still there is sufficient evidence of

the thoughtfulness of the

Romans,

as

a great road-making

nation, in covering the country, wherever practicable, with a

network of roads, and constructing the chief military highways with such imperishable materials that portions of them remain Roman roads in North Africa were of two to the present day. The paved kinds, either paved with flat stones or macadamised. roads were constructed with stone slabs in squares, or laid diamond-wise. The others were made with broken rubble or gravel, differing from English roads of that type by being laid with cement, and having kerbs of cut stone at the sides. Although the rule of the Caesars may be regarded as experimental, yet it laid the foundations of a system of government which resulted in a long era of wealth and prosperity. *Few of the Caesars had personal acquaintance with this splendid appendage to the Empire. Carthage claims the distinction of having been the first Roman colony established out of Italy, and Hadrian was the first of the emperors to make a systematic tour through nearly every part of his dominions and, conse;

Africa under the Caesars


quently, personal acquaintance with the native races he
called

41
was

upon to govern contributed largely


mankind.
It is true that Julius

to his success as a

ruler of

Caesar spent three entire

years in Africa, but this was in


his successors, too,

the declining years of the

Republic, prior to his assumption of the dictatorship.

Many

of

were acquainted with Africa, having

filled

the office of proconsul in the earlier portion of their career.

The work

of Augustus consisted in maturing a system of governcivil

ment, both

and

military,

on the

lines laid

down by

his

predecessor, quelling disturbances on the frontier, and forming

an African army which was destined to play an important part


as the third
first

Augustan

legion.

We

are told that this legion

was

quartered in Asia, but, by the orders of Tiberius, was removed

to the neighbourhood of Theveste (Tebessa) at the time of the


insurrection of Tacfarinas.
It appears to have been encamped Theveste was rebuilt by Vespasian. Caligula's work in Africa seems to have been restricted to the murder of Ptolemy, the misguided son of Juba II., and the last of a line of Numidian kings. The only act of Claudius worth mentioning was the division of Mauritania into two provinces, but this was

there

till

an imperial necessity.
is

The

record of Galba, like that of Nero,


that, as

a blank, although

it

must be admitted

proconsul of

was distinguished for great activity, and by the exercise of sound judgment in the discharge of the duties of his high office. Vitellius also was proconsul in his earlier years, and, notwithstanding the ignominy attached to his name as an emperor, governed Africa with singular integrity for two years, acting in the latter year as deputy for his brother who succeeded him as proconsul. Vespasian's active career of ten years proved of great service in the cause of good government. During his reign the third Augustan legion was established at Theveste, and_, the town rebuilt and enlarged. Among the principal places associated with his name Icosium is worthy of passing mention, especially as its modern representative, the city of Algiers, has played so great a part in the life and progress of North Africa, A modest inscription on a stone built into the wall of a house in
Africa, his career

Algiers attests the existence of the old


this it
'

Roman

town.'

Beyond

has no value.
R. A. No. 4052.
Berbrugger, Notice sur
les

/.

Antiquites Romaines iT Alger,

fig.

H.

42
P

Roman
SITTIO

Africa

QVIR
Publio Sittio, Marci filio, Quirina Plocamiano, ordo Icositanor^m, Marcus Sittius, Publii filius, Quirina tribu, Cacilianus pro filio pientissimo honore recepto impeTisam remisit.
tribu,

PLOCAMIAN

ORDO
ICOSITANOR

SITTIVS

P F QVR CAECILIANVS

PRO

FILIO

PIENTISSIMO H R I R

The
and

short rule of Titus, which was conspicuous for propriety

restraint,

was followed by the

persistent cruelty of his

brother Domitian,
the twelve Caesars.
It

who brought

to a disgraceful

end the reign of

tions in

has been already observed that there is a dearth of inscripNorth Africa relating to the earlier emperors. Most of

those which have been discovered are so fractured as to be


scarcely legible, but mention

may be made of a slab found at Ain Khenchla, the ancient Mascula, on which is recorded a simple
Emperor Augustus by the Roman
city.'

dedication to the

colonists

and the natives of that

DIVO AVGVSTO

SACRVM CONVENTVS
CIVIVM

ROMANOR

ET NVMIDARVM QVI MASCVLAE HABITANT


same date was found near Zama, and is of special interest as a memorial of the celebrated Empress Livia, who exercised her powers of fascination over Augustus, and ultimately became his
Another
inscription of about the

the ruins of the supposed city of

third wife.^
six, it is

As Livia died A.D. 29 at the advanced age of eightyprobable that the dedication is of that year.
IVNONI LIVIAE AVGVSTI SACRVM L PASSIENO RVFO IMPERATORE

AFRICAM OBTINENTE CN CORNELIVS CN F COR RVFVS ET MARIA C F GALLA CN CONSERVATI VOTA L M SOLVONT

'

C. I. L.

No. 15775-

C. I. L. No. 16456.

The

proconsul L. Passienus Rufus was honoured with a


rule,

triumph on account of his successful

and the

title

of Imperator.

Africa under the Caesars

43

Further interest is attached to this, inscription, as it records name of Rufus Passienus, who achieved great success in the subjugation of Numidia. Tiberius also is represented in the form of a dedication by The C. Vibius Marsus, who was proconsul for the third time.^ slab bearing the inscription was discovered by M. Tissot on a The date bridge over the river Badja near Vicus Augusti.
the

would be

A.D. 29-30.

CAESAR DIVI F AVGVSTVS PONTIF MAX TRIE POTEST XXXI COS IIII DEDIT C VIBIVS MARSVS PRO COS III DEDIC
TI

AVG

Another dedication to this Emperor is on a milliarium at Tacape (Gabes) on the road to Capsa, the date, A.D. 14, being
the year of his accession on the death of Augustus.^

IMP CAES AVG


TIF AVGVSTVS TRI XVI POT L ASPRENAS COS

PROCOS

VII

VIR

EPVLONVM VIAM EX CASTR HIBER


NIS TACAPES MVNI

ENDAM CVRAVIT
LEG
CIX
III

AVG

A similar one has been brought to light on the same highway, some fifty miles beyond Gabes. The two dedications to the Emperor Claudius have no special interest, and the name of Nerva appears only on one inscription. Of the other Caesars, the names of Titus and Vespasian may be traced on a few muchworn milliaria, and a dedication to the latter by diflamen perpetuus
of Chusira, in the province of Byzacene, may still be read on the base of an altar, bearing the date A.D. 70-71.
'

C. I. L. No. I43!i6.

Sir Grenville C. I. L. No. 10018, deciphered by Temple and Wilmanns. Temple, Excursions in the Mediterranean, London, 1835, vii. p. 321.
^

44
I

Roman

Africa

.^

>

The history of Theveste is so associated with the Emperor Vespasian that it seems fitting, in this stage of inquiry, to give some little account of its progress and of its many interesting monumental remains. We have no record of its early career, texcept that it was not occupied by Carthaginians till the first Punic war but its situation, so well adapted for a commercial / centre as well as for a military station, induced the Emperor to make Theveste the head-quarters of the African legion.' The subjugation of this part of the country was attended with many difficulties, chiefly on account of the lawless character of adjacent tribes and consequently the presence of a large number of
i

was absolutely necessary for the security of its Neither Sallust, nor Tacitus, nor Pliny makes mention of Theveste, its name appearing for the first time in the geography of Ptolemy.^ The oldest inscriptions are of the reign of Vespasian, but, with the exception of its being for more than fifty years the chief military centre of Africa, Theveste was
disciplined troops

inhabitants.

of

little

importance

till

the close of the second century,

when

it

and most populous of Roman colonies. Among the ruined monuments of the city, none have attracted more attention than the Basilica. Built not later than the end of the first century, and probably commenced during the reign of Vespasian, it appears to have been almost destroyed, with the city itself, during the incursions of the Moors and wild tribes of the Aures in the sixth century. When Solomon, the successor of Belisarius, arrived at the gates of Theveste he found the whole place in ruins and we learn from an inscription on a triumphal

became one of the

richest

arch assigned to the third year of Justinian's reign, A.D. 539, that Theveste civitas a fundamentis (Bdificata est? The interpretation

by Renier fully attests the rebuilding of the Lambert Playfair has observed, this Byzantine
'

city,

and, as Sir
is

inscription

the

in the different provinces, consisted of

In the reign of Tiberius the imperial army, irrespective of native troops raised In the time of Trajan there were 25 legions.
32.

30,

and under Septimius Severus


full

Each

legion comprised 10 companies, the

first

company having a
soldiers

strength of 1,105 infantry

and 132

cavalry.

In each of the

nine other companies there were 555 infantry and 66 cavalr)', altogether 6,600 footEach legion was accompanied by 10 great military and 726 mounted.
engines,

and 55 catapults

for discharging stones

and arrows.

From Trajan
v.
,

to

Con-

stantine companies were divided.

(Duruy, Histoire Romaine, vol.

also Vegetius,

Mil. 4, 22.) M. Letronne,


'^

Ann.

de Const. 1858, p. 29.

'

I.

R. A. No. 3089.

Africa under the Cassars

45

only one yet found in Africa, which makes direct allusion to the expulsion of the Vandals.

Nutu

divino felicissimis temfioribus

piissimorum, dominorum nostrorum Justiniani et Theodora

Augustoruni post abscissos ex Africa Vandalos extinctamque ;per Solomonem gloriosissimo magistro militum ex consulte Prafecto Libya ac patricio universam Maurusiam gentem providentia ejusdem aminentissimi viri Theveste civitas a fundamentis
adificata
est.

This Roman Basilica stood on the north side of a forum, approached through two lofty gateways, one of which is still standing. A broad flight of thirteen steps, now partly destroyed, gave access to an open court, 65 feet by 60 feet, surrounded by an arcade. The Basilica had a nave and aisles separated by piers and engaged shafts in two superimposed orders, the whole being arcaded. The nave had an apsidal end, and the aisles had galleries. The material of the walls is a finely grained
limestone, in large stones of regular size, the courses being about 20 inches high, and the stones bedded in very little thin mortar. The columns were of granite and grey marble, not fluted, and the capitals of both stages were of the Corinthian order of pure white marble, the carving showing great delicacy of form

and execution. The simplicity of the arch construction is remarkable. There were no archivolts, and the faces of the voussoirs were polished like marble. The entire floor surfaces were covered with beautiful mosaics, portions of which are still
in fair preservation.
It

now

see

has been suggested that the Basilica of Theveste, as we it in ruined condition, was a work of the sixth century,

rebuilt it, as well as the city, a fundamentis. been the case, the stones of the older Roman work would have been re-used, and the facework, like other masonry at Theveste of the Byzantine period, would have been irregular. It should be observed that when Constantine removed the seat of empire to Byzantium, A.D. 328, the basilica form of plan, which had been adopted for the purposes of the early Christian Church, underwent many changes, the most noticeable being

and that Solomon

Had

this

46
ment under
Justinian,

Roman

Africa
its

the introduction of the cupola, which received

full
it

develop-

two centuries

later.

And

so happens

that the Byzantine restorations at Theveste were


Basilica of Sta. Sophia.

commenced

the same year that Justinian laid the foundations of the great

At Theveste

the Byzantine additions


different

are

clearly distinguishable, the

masonry being of a
its

character and not even attached to the old work.


foil

The

quatre-

chapel on the east side, with


aisle

adjoining chambers, and


basilica

approached from an

of the

Roman

by a descent
eight internal

of thirteen steps, was one of these additions.


shafts of the chapel were of green marble,

The

and the walls to a Large quantities of gilt and coloured tesserae having been found on the site favour the supposition that the vaulting, as well as the upper The entire parts of the walls, was decorated with mosaic. floor surface was of mosaic, large fragments still remaining in one of the apses. In the centre of the floor appears to have
considerable height were faced with marble.

been a tomb, the enclosing walls being constructed with stones South of the chapel is a large burialof the Roman period. chamber, in which several tombs were found, bearing inscriptions of the sixth and seventh centuries. Having restored the Basilica, Solomon surrounded it on three sides with shops or small dwellings, portions of which are still standing. He then enclosed the entire ranges of buildings with a wall about 25 feet high, strengthened with numerous towers. This wall of defence is irregularly built' with blocks and slabs of stone in great variety, and the presence of tombstones in the construction seems to indicate that the edifices round the forum had been recklessly destroyed and the materials used for building purposes, The object of Solomon's fortification is not quite

He had already enclosed a large portion of the city by a clear. high wall with ramparts, and in the centre had constructed a
citadel of great strength.

Most of these are still in existence. assume, therefore, that in time of siege this fortified Basilica and its surrounding buildings would serve as an additional

One may

refuge for the inhabitants of the adjacent settlements.


in his

work

entitled

'

War

Procopius, with the Vandals,' throws light upon


'

this subject.

He

tells

us that

inside the walls of

Carthage

is

church, under the charge of

whom we

call

monks.

men devoted to the service of God, Solomon, who had built this church a

Africa under the Caesars


little

47

time before, surrounded it with walls in order that, in case of necessity, it might serve as a fortress. Areobindas, governor of Africa, took refuge there, having previously sent his wife

and

his

sister.'

The work

at

Theveste fully bears out

this

description.

Among

other

monumental remains of
is

frontal arch of the time of Caracalla

this city the quadria conspicuous object,

and demands notice on account of the rarity of this form of It will compare favourably with the architectural composition. arch of Janus at Rome, but is in every way inferior to a similar From inscriptions we learn the complete edifice at Tripoli. history of the structure, how the youngest of three brothers, members of a wealthy family at Theveste, bequeathed all his property to his two brothers on condition of their erecting a triumphal arch in his native town, to be surmounted by two tetrastyles enclosing statues of the two Augusti. This Caius Cornelius Egrilianus, who commanded the 14th legion Gemina, quartered in Pannonia, must have been a man of considerable substance,
for
in

addition

to

this

brothers to place in

^^ forum

munificent bequest he enjoined his statues of Juno and Minerva, to

appropriate a

sum of 250,000 sesterces for the purpose of affording free baths to the inhabitants in the public Therinm, and lastly 170 pounds weight of silver and 14 pounds weight of
'

tetrastyle is

dome

or cupola {tholus).

a statue Constantine relating to the dedication of a tetrastyle with a tholus (Archceolog. vol. xxix. 1882)
:

edifice, adorned with four columns, surmounted by a was sometimes called adicula tetrastyla, and frequently of marble or bronze was placed within it. Here is an inscription found at

a square

It

Joum.

IVLIVS

F QVIR POTITVS

TETRASTV LVM ET

THOLVM D E D

The word

tholus

is

correct Latin, signifying a round roof or a cupola.

The word

cupola is of Arabic origin.


the same meaning

applicable to a building of circular form, having as SiKns, which was used with reference to the round chamber or
is

Tholus

rotunda at Athens, in which the Prytanes dined. Cupola, like alcove and the verb to cove,' is derived from the Arabic word gobba, which was originally applied to the hump on a camel's back, and afterwards to the cup-shaped tents of nomadic tribes.
'

This word is now pronounced koubba,' and is applied generally to native tombs The Italian language retains the word, in its primitive roofed with a cupola. signification, vagobbo, a hunchback.
'

48

Roman

Africa

gold were to be deposited in the Capitol for purposes that this

The rendering be read on the left side as one passes out of the modern town (Tebessa), has proved an attractive study to many eminent epigraphists, including Renier, Wilmanns, and Mommsen.' According to the last two the wording is as
of the inscription, that

much-worn inscription fails to enlighten us about.

may

still

follows

Ex testamento C. Cornell Egriliani, prafecti legionis XIIII Gemince quo testamento ex CCL millibus nummum arcum cmn statuis Augustorum in ietrastylis duobus cum statuis Junonis et Minerva, qua in foro fieri pracepit, prater alia HS CCL millia numm,tnn, qua rei pmblica ita ut certis diebus gymnasia populo publice in thertnis praberentur legavit, datasque ad Kapitolium argenti libras CLXX, id est lances IIII ef auri libras XIIII, id est pihalas (sic) III, scyphos IIfieri iussit; qua omnia diligenier secundum voluniatem eius in contione Cornell Fortunatus et Qulntus fratres et heredes conslgnaverunt et opus perfecerunt.

US

The reading by Renier varies in a few particulars, the most noteworthy being in the third line, cum statuis divi Severi et Minerva. The substitution of the goddess Juno for the Emperor Septimius Severus is immaterial, though it should be observed that the defaced portion of the stonework at this part of the inscription would admit the insertion of the words divi Severi. This monument is commonly known as the Arch of Caracalla, the two Augusti referred to in the testament being Caracalla and his brother Geta. It appears to have been built just after the murder of Geta by his brother, A.D. 2 1 2. The eastern fagade has an inscription dedicated to Severus, father of the Augusti,^ and on the keystone of the arch is the head of an emperor enclosed in a medallion and resting on the head of Medusa.

DIVO PIO SEVERO PATRI CAES M AVRELI SEVERI ANTONINI FELICIS AVG ARAB ADIAB PARTH MAX BRIT PII MAX GERM MAX PONT MAX TRIE POT XVII IMP II COS IIII PROCOS P P

IMP

On
Julia

the frieze of the west fagade

is

Domna,

wife of Severus and

a dedication in honour of mother of the Augusti.'

The

bust sculptured on the keystone, representing a young


'

C. I. L.
I.

No. 1858 ; R. A. No. 3087.

/.
.

R. A. No. 3085.
^

I.

R. A. No. 3088.

w H
in

>
a

H H
<:

<
1-1

<:

u <
<
fa

o o
X

u
pi

< <

H Z

O
si

Q w X H

Africa under the Caesars

49

female surmounting an eagle on a thunderbolt, cannot be intended for the Empress, who at the date of the erection of

monument had already passed middle age. It was probably a symbol of Theveste as a young and rising city.
this

IVLIAE

DOMNAE AVG MATRI


CASTRORVM
The
inscription

ET AVG ET ET PATRIAE

SEN
and on the

on the south fa9ade

is

illegible,

northern side no longer exists, this part of the edifice having

been restored in recent times. Both these inscriptions were probably in honour of Caracalla and Geta. The peculiarities of this architectural composition are the exceptional width of the a marked feature in triumphal frieze, and the absence of an attic arches. For the latter, two tetrastyles, as a crowning feature of It has been suggested that there the edifice, are substituted. were similar tetrastyles on each of the four facades, but there is no mention of that number on any inscription or document, nor is there any indication on the monument itself of there having been more than the two mentioned in the testament of Caius

Cornelius Egrilianus.

Triumphal arches form a class of monuments that is exRoman. The Greeks raised columns in honour of men distinguished in war and intellectual attainments, bearing out a statement by Pliny the Elder, Columnarum ratio erat attolli supra ceteros mortales, quod et arcus significant novitio invento. Arches came in with the Empire as permanent structures. In the days of the Republic they were made of wood, after the
clusively

manner of the Etruscans, and,


time, were taken

like similar erections of

our

own

down on completion of

a public ceremony.'

These monumental gateways, which generally served as ap'

It

may

which

is

generally accepted

be as well to quote the opinion expressed by Gibbon on Roman triumphs, ' A Roman triumph could only be obtained by the
:

conquerors of nations

who had

never previously acknowledged the authority of the

the reduction of a revolted province did not suffice ; the Senate took no account of victories which did not extend the frontiers of the Empire. This seems to have been the rule ; but when Titus and his father triumphed over the Jews, and

Romans

the Senate commemorated their victories by medals and that triumphal arch which has subsisted to the present day, they did nothing more than triumph over a revolted province, which had been subdued by the arms of Pompey, and governed by Roman magistrates for the space of fifty years.' (Gibbon, Miscellaneous Works,

when

Classical, vol. iv. p. 369.

5Q
proaches to
It
cities

Roman
safe to assert that

Africa

and towns, are very numerous in North Africa. one or more are to be found in every town, however remote or little known. At Lambaesis for instance, no less than forty arches were traced by Peysonnel 150 years ago, and fourteen were then still standing. There is no reason to suppose that they formed part of the enclosure of a walled town. Those that have been discovered in Africa are all isolated structures, though in some instances the defensive walls built during the Byzantine occupation have been brought close up to them on both sides. This remark is equally
would be
applicable to triumphal arches generally in the various provinces

of the Empire.
frayed

The

cost of their erection

by the

inhabitants of a town

who wished

was sometimes deto honour a

victorious emperor,

and sometimes by private individuals.


ruins, there are the

At

Seressitanum, for instance, a small town in the interior, long


forgotten

and now a mass of

remains of

four triumphal arches.

One

of these, according to an inscription

found some fifty years ago, was the gift of a citizen, the cost being borne by himself, his mother, and his sister and the edifice, when completed, was surmounted, as the two last lines inform us, by a quadriga at the public expense.'
;

TESTAMENTO
C

FELICIS ARMENIANI

EQVO

PVBLICO

ADLECTI

OPTIMAE

lAE CIVIS ARCVS AD CVIVS ORNAMENTA

ARMENIA AVGE MATER ET BEBINIA PAVLIANA SOROR LIBERALITATE SVA HS XXV MIL N EROGAVERVNT ET DIE DEDIC SPORTVLAS DECV RIONIS ET EPVLVM ET GVMNASIVM MVNICIPIB DEDERVNT ITEM MVNICIPIVM SERESSITANVM AD AMPLIANDA ORNAMENTA QVADRIGAM PVBLICA PEC FEC

Another

edifice at

Theveste worthy of a notice

is

little

tetrastyle temple, apparently dedicated to

date of its erection is about A.D. ruinous condition externally, its portico being kept standing by the aid of iron straps and rods, modern ingenuity has utilised the

The

Minerva or Jupiter. Although in a 300.

building for a variety of purposes never dreamt of by


>

its

pious

C. I. L.

No. 937.
vol.
ii.

Victor Guerin, Voyage archiologique dans la Rigence de


p. 354-

Tunis, Paris, 1862,

l^^^g^^^J^^g^^^^^^lj

V."

i
'

TEMPLE

Oh

MLNLRVA AT THEVESTE
(Resloreii).

Africa under the Caesars

51

founders. It was at one time a soap factory, then converted into a prison, and at a subsequent date did duty as a canteen. Lastly, as a bit of irony that could not be exceeded, this temple of the gods was converted into a parish church, and fitted up for that purpose in the worst possible taste. Little wonder that, after undergoing so many vicissitudes, a doubt has been expressed as to the name of the deity in whose honour this sanctuary was founded But it is an interesting edifice, and, like the triumphal arch of Caracalla, shows a departure from the recognised proportions and treatment of a Classic order. It stands on a podium, twelve feet high, and is approached by a broad flight of stone steps. Originally there was an enclosing wall, the space in front of the temple being about 80 feet and
!

at the sides 50 feet.

Like other large

Roman
The

towns, Theveste had a forum, civile


former, according to Vitruvius,

and a forum

venule.

was

usually surrounded by public buildings, such as the basilica, the


curia, the mint, or the prison.

At Theveste

the open court on

the south of the basilica, measuring about 180 feet by 165 feet, was undoubtedly the forum civile, but all traces of buildings at the southern

end have disappeared. The other forum was probably removed by Solomon, on account of its obstructing It occupied the open space, now planted his lines of defence.
trees, in front

with

of the

modern

citadel.

LThe

beneficent rule of the aged Nerva,

who

succeeded the

and worst of the twelve Caesars, was too short for the t But it was display of any activity in the African provinces. marked by the establishment of a colony of veterans in a town of old Numidia, which has retained to the present day its name The ancient Sitifis CSetif), as Ptolemy the and prosperity. geographer informs us, was an important mercantile town long Its admirable situation on before the arrival of the Romans.
high table-land, 3,570 feet above the sea-level, in the midst of fertile plains, with a soil capable of producing cereals and fruit and oil in abundance, and at the junction of no less than nine highways communicating with every part of the country, made The disSitifis a commercial centre at a very early period. the site of inscribed stones on the old more than 250 covery of its career of prosperity and insight into long an the town gives few memorials of The very soldiers inhabitants. or lives of its

52
their families

Roman

Africa

seem to indicate that the population was civil, and Roman occupation. From one of the inscriptions we learn that Nerva conferred on the town the title of Colonia Nerviana Augusta Martialis Veteranorum Sitifensium. There are inscriptions also relating to the erection of also the a theatre, an amphitheatre, and several temples dedication of statues of the Emperors Trajan, Hadrian, AnThe town was embellished toninus, M. Aurelius, and L. Verus. with noble monuments, and marble and mosaic were freely used Many of the votive tablets were enin its public buildings. riched with sculpture, and, from the character of the inscriptions generally, we may assume that a high tone of culture prevailed among the inhabitants. One memorial in the public gardens is worth noticing. It is a dedication by one Maurusius, apparently a Moor, to his two beloved children, Prsetorianus and Prima, a boy and a girl. The father indicates with precision and loving
not military, during the
;

care the exact time of their decease.

He educates his son for a notarius (secretary), and sends him to Rome, where he died, A.D. 225, at the age of seventeen.'

MEMORIAE

Africa under the Caesars


the

53
for the

name

of Mauritania Sitifensis to the eastern portion, with a capital, and retained the old
its

Sitifis for

name

western

But the separation must have been more nominal than real, for the two provinces had the same troops, and sometimes they were both administered by the same governor. Sitifis suffered during the insurrection of Firmus, the chief of a powerful Moorish tribe, A.D. 369, and was partly destroyed by an earthquake, A.D. 419. Like most of the cities and towns in North Africa, it fell a victim to the Vandal and Arab invasions, but recovered its position at a later period. In the Middle Ages it was still prosperous, for El Bekri speaks of Sitifis as in a flourishing condition and thickly populated. But in his time the city walls, which had been noted for great solidity and thoroughly restored during the Byzantine occupation, no longer existed. The history of the rise, progress, and decline of a people is generally divided into periods, sometimes dynastic, at other
portion, with Caesarea for
capital as heretofore.

times tribal or accidental.


Republic,
is

Roman

history, after the fall of the

We have the Empire under the Caesars, including the Flavian epoch, which covers twenty-seven years under the reigns of Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian. The line of the so-called twelve Caesars terminates with Domitian, but Nero, as the last representative of the Julian family, should be the sixth and last of the Caesars, his successors, Galba and Otho, who preceded the Flavian family, being created emperors for their services to the State, and not for dynastic or family reasons., After the twelve Caesars we have the rule of the Emperors Nerva, Trajan, and Hadrian, all raised to the
divisible into several periods.

purple for distinguished services,


Pius,

civil

or military,

f Then came

the age of the Antonines under the imperial rule

Marcus Aurelius, Lucius Verus,


the

ofAntoninus and Commodus. And

lastly a long line of emperors, selected

of distinction in

sometimes on the score Senate or on the field of battle, but generally as nominees of party factions. This last period covers more than 263 years, commencing with the death of Commodus
A.D. 439,

and terminating with the occupation of Carthage by Genseric, and the sacking of Rome, A.D. 455. In the first chapter of this outline of North African history, an attempt has been made to trace the causes which contributed to the invasion of the country and its occupation by the Romans.

54

Roman

Africa

Its progress under the Caesars, the successful establishment of a form of government adapted to the traditional habits of the native races, and the permanent settlement of a military force on the frontier, have been the subject of inquiry in this second chapter. We have now reached a period which demands more than one chapter for its special consideration a long era of peace and prosperity, of good government, and of a higher tone prevailing in municipal as well as in domestic life. Verily for Africa this was the Golden Age of Empire.

55

CHAPTER
A.D.

III

AFRICA UNDER TRAJAN


97-117

The

history of North Africa, during the eighty-three years that Trajan and his three successors sat on the throne of the Czesars, may truly be said to be written on stone. In nearly every province of the Empire, which extended almost to the gates of
India, the
illustrious rulers
figure, largely

names of these monuments in far especially the case. Were


ruined
frieze,

on
is

distant
it

lands.

In

Africa this

not for inscriptions on panel or on milliary stone or votive pedestal, we should have but

a poor record of Trajan's magnificence as a ruler, or of his solicitude for the welfare of his colonists and protection of native tribes. Nor should we have reliable information about the honours bestowed upon him by all classes of his subjects for deeds of thoughtfulness and beneficence. Among the first acts of Trajan's reign was the regulating the supply of corn from Africa, and framing edicts for the administration of justice to the producer and the merchant in their commercial transactions with Rome. For a long period not only Rome, but Italy also, had depended upon large shipments of corn from abroad, and had looked to Egypt and Africa for one third at least of their annual requirements, equivalent to about six million bushels. Italy and Spain provided the rest. The African provinces were called upon to deliver a certain amount of produce in the form of imperial tribute, under the superintendence of a high functionary who resided at Carthage. Some years ago M. Renier discovered at Kalama (Guelma) an inscription of the time of Trajan, which clearly showed that this important officer of state was charged with the control of the wheat supply to the metropolis. The small amount produced in Italy was only sufficient for the soldiers. War in Africa meant famine in Rome, and Historians this was an evil to be guarded against at all costs.

56

Roman

Africa

inform us of scarcity and distress in the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius. Under Claudius there was dearth of corn for three
parts of the

consecutive years, and famine caused great hardship in various Empire during the rule of Domitian and some of
his successors.

emperors there are records of several others, but one may reasonably suppose that the admirable system of corn storage in years of plenty, inaugurated by Trajan, lessened the evil in a time of need. During his struggles with Caesar Pompey stopped the export. Such was the distress in the capital that the populace implored Csesar to terminate his differences with his rival. A treaty was then arranged, the chief condition being that grain-ships were to be allowed to leave the African ports and to cross the Mediterranean unmolested. It is difficult in these days of abundant food supply, and with the control of so large a portion of the earth's surface to meet the growing requirements of mankind, to measure the anxiety of the Roman people when the days of harvesting were drawing near. Their very existence was at one period at the mercy of the waves, and tempestuous weather off the ports of Africa or on the coasts of Sicily and Spain was too often the cause of deep anxiety in the metropolis.' As far back as the time of Caius Gracchus, the socialist of his time and hero of the hour, poor citizens were allowed their doles of wheat at half the current prices in the market, and what were known as tessercB frumentaria, equivalent to modern soup and coal tickets, were
later

Under the

distributed freely

by civil So pauperising a measure


all

functionaries to

all

persons in need.

attracted to the capital the idle

and
evil

worthless from

parts of Italy,

and ultimately created an

which the earlier emperors had great difficulty in checking. It was not likely that the populace would remain satisfied till they had ultimately acquired the right of demanding bread unstinted and without payment, nor was it possible for the resources of the treasury to be equal to supplying a demand which was both arbitrary and impolitic. In the last days of the Republic no less than 320,000 persons claimed their weekly doles, and it required all the popularity of a Caesar and the combined efforts
'

Tacitus,

Ann.

iii.

54

Vita populi

Romani per

incerta maris et tempestatum

quotidie volvitur.

Africa under Trajan

57

of the Senate and the wealthier classes to reduce the number This number was increased to 200,000 by Augustus, who, according to Suetonius, was personally inclined to
to 150,000.

abolish for ever this objectionable custom.'

The

general fertility and capabilities of the

Africa are attested by numerous authors.

soil of North According to Plutarch,

the town of Leptis alone, after Caesar's decisive victory at Thapsus, was condemned to a fine of 2,500,000 pounds of oil
;

and

Hirtius,

who accompanied

Caesar on this expedition, tells

use of oil was For the latter purpose the consumption in the days of the Caesars was enormous, and the production of this article, imposed as a tax on Africa for the benefit of Rome, amounted annually to about 300,000 English gallons. Tacitus also mentions that Vespasian,

us that this was a very moderate demand.

The

indispensable for lamps as well as for baths.

throne with Vitellius, conceived the project of invading Africa by sea and land, and seizing the granaries. On the death of his rival he charged with wheat every ship of the Empire. At Rusicada (Philippeville) may still be seen the
in disputing the

remains of enormous granaries and we learn that when Caesar's in the neighbourhood of Leptis, an immense wheat supply stored at Thysdrus (El-Djem) was placed at the
;

army landed

service of the troops.

Pliny the Elder

is is

profuse in his praises of Africa, and

tells

us that the climate

so good, so kind, and so beneficial, that

after the seed is sown the land is not visited for nine months, and then the corn is cut down and laid on the threshing-floors the reason being that the drought keeps down all weeds, and the dews that fall by night are sufficient to refresh and nourish the corn. In another of his comments ^ he says that there is a city called Tacape (Gabes) in the midst of the sands, the neighbourhood of which is so fruitful that it passes wonder and is incredible. There may be seen a mighty date-tree under which grows an olive, under that a fig-tree, and that overspreads a pomegranate under the shade whereof is a vine, and under the compass thereof they sow corn and then herbs, all in one and the same year. The vines in the neighbourhood bear twice a year and yield ripe grapes for a double vintage. Once again,
Suetonius, Aug. 42.
Pliny, Hiit. Nat. xviii. 22.

'

''

58

Roman

Africa

Pliny refers to the land of Byzatium or Byzacene,' which was represented on Roman coins in the guise of a young girl with
full of wheatsheaves, and says that when the season is dry the strongest team of oxen cannot plough it, but that after one good shower one poor ass with the help of a silly old woman will be enough, as he has observed many a time and

her arms

often.

The Emperor Commodus, whose


for the grain supply.
fleet.

reign

was not remarkable

for acts of munificence or utility, built a fleet of ships especially

He had an African and an Alexandrian a ship of the latter, whose sign was Castor and Pollux, that St. Paul embarked from Malta when he was journeying to Syracuse. In the fourth century, especially during the reign of Constantine, wheat from Egypt was shipped
It

was

in

entirely to Constantinople,

and wheat from Africa supplied the

Roman

markets.
in

In the time of Caesar a

maximum

price of

wheat was fixed

Rome, and
it

certain ports were

named on

the

coast of Italy to which

should be exclusively shipped. This arbitrary measure, which appears to have been in force more than a century, was little in accord with the statesmanlike views

which characterised the Emperor Trajan

in all his public acts.

He

abolished restrictions, declined to fix a legal price for any

articles of production,

and allowed shippers and merchants to


in all

adopt their own methods

commercial transactions.

The

merits of this enlightened policy were put to a severe test on

one occasion during his reign. The waters of the Nile had refused to rise, and famine in the land of Egypt seemed imminent. But wheat from Africa and Sicily came of their abundance to the ports of Italy, and there was enough to spare for the distressed population of Alexandria. We cannot wonder at the interest taken in those days in the shipment of grain,
'

The

region called Byzacene was originally inhabited

Byzantes, and comprised the southern portion of Africa Provincia. became a distinct province, with the title of Provincia Byzacena.

by a Libyan people called At a later date it It was separated

from Tripolitana by the river Triton, and the marshes Palus Tritonis, with a stretch Hadrumetum of desert on the south and south-west, formed a natural boundary. Other important towns on the coast were AchoUa (no (Susa) was the capital. existing remains), Leptis minor (Lemta), Ruspina (Monastir), Thapsus (Ras Dimas), add Thense (Henchir Tina). In the interior of the country were Assuras (Zanfour), Capsa (Gafsa), Sufetula (Sbeitla), Terebintha (no existing remains), and Thysdrus (El-Djem). All these were flourishing towns till the fall of the Empire.

Africa under Trajan

59

nor can we be surprised at reading that the safe arrival of the a certain period of the year was a matter of grave anxiety to the people of Rome. From Seneca we have a
fleet at

graphic description of the arrival of the Alexandrian fleet in the port of Puteoli, how the population mounted the hill-tops

how they scanned the broad waters for the first glimpse of the convoy, and how great the rejoicing when the laden vessels were brought safely into harbour. Similar scenes occurred at the still more important port of Ostia at the mouth
in expectation,

Any one who has visited in recent times this almost deserted sand-choked region, with its silent waters and still more silent plains, experiences a difficulty in conjuring up from these mute surroundings a picture of Ostia of old times the port of Rome, and the pride of the Emperors. Undulations of the surface and fragments of marble and pottery upturned
of the Tiber.

by the plough or spade are the chief indication of the old city buried far below. The harbour which Claudius caused to be

made for his increasing fleet, and the splendid pentagonal basin of Trajan's time, may still be traced on the marshy land which
has swallowed up the Mediterranean on these inhospitable shores. And the foundations of the great granaries which
stored the wheat supply of Northern Africa are there to
their
tell

own

tale of a
activity.^

period of marked prosperity and great

commercial

From

the epistles of Pliny the Yoynger and his panegyric

on his noble patron we obtain an insight into the principles which actuated Trajan in his government of the provinces of the Empire. Africa and Asia were the two senatorial provinces of the first rank, and, as Roman colonies were more numerous in Africa, we may assume that this enlightened ruler adopted a large-minded policy in so important an adjunct of his dominions. Had Pliny been governor of a province of Mauritania in Africa instead of Bithynia in Asia, we should have been acquainted with many subjects which can only be in'

Ostia and

its

remains have been an attractive

field for archaeologists

of

many

countries.

The

intelligent labours of Visconti, Canina,

and Texier have thrown conharbours in the days of the

siderable light on the history and value of Ostia

and

its

Empire. And so eminent an authority on all questions of Roman archaeology as Signor Lanciani has cleared up many points in numerous papers on the subject, fully attesting the splendour of Ostia at the commencement of the second century. ( Vide
Lanciani, Ancient Rome, pp. 235-246.

6o
differently

Roman
explained

Africa
interpretation

by an

of

fragmentary

found in the country. Anyhow, the letters addressed to Trajan and the Emperor's replies to his dear
inscriptions
'

special interest, because they convey a faithimpression of the manners of the time and the honest attempts to do justice to every subject of the Empire. It must, however, be borne in mind that Pliny was not only the
'

Secundus are of

ful

governor or proconsul of Bithynia, but that he acted as the Emperor's own lieutenant with extraordinary powers, and was privileged to hold direct communication with his august master on all matters relating to his office. From the time of Augustus the proconsuls had ruled over the provinces more or less
despotically.

powers

in

When any of the Emperors Rome by exorbitant demands,


more prosperous

exercised arbitrary
or exacted heavy

tribute from the

colonies, the proconsuls, after

satisfying the needs of the imperial treasury, did not hesitate

to serve their

own interests. To plunder the towns seemed to be one of the duties of their high office, till at last the title of proconsul became identified with robbery and extortion. So long as the farmers of taxes throughout the Empire paid certain fixed sums into the treasury at Rome, and gave security for the payment, the proconsuls did not trouble themselves about the way in which taxes were collected. If the collector succeeded in enriching himself at the expense of the people, the proconsul expected to share the plunder. As a governor invested with almost despotic powers he could prevent extortion, but ultimately found it to his interest to promote it and as a senator he was not amenable to the ordinary laws, but was responsible to the Senate only for his actions. Tacitus tells us
;

that

in

the western

provinces of

Mauritania

Csesarea and

Tingitana, plunder and depredation were tacitly recognised.

Nero placed the former under the governorship of Albinus, who was master of a considerable body of troops, with numerous
lived
first

auxiliary companies raised in the country,

all

of

whom

to initiate a better order of things, but to Trajan credited the, establishment of a form of provincial be may which was honourable in the demands made upon government, progressive in its policy, and inimical to all kinds his subjects,
'

more or Emperor

less

by rapine and

depredation.^

Nerva was the

Tacitus, Hist.

ii.

58-59.

Africa under Trajan


of corruption and bribery.
the

6i

An
by

a provincial governor reached

its

outcry against the exactions of climax during his reign, when


his African subjects to bring to

Emperor was

petitioned

trial

Marius Priscus, the proconsul of Africa, and his lieutenant Hostilius Firmanus, on the ground of their cruel and extortionBoth Pliny and Tacitus held briefs for the ate demands. unfortunate provincials, and the hearing of the case, which lasted three days before the Senate in Rome, was under the presidency of the Emperor Trajan himself, as Consul. From Pliny we learn that his speech for the plaintiffs occupied five hours, and from the graphic description of the trial in two of his letters we may assume that he acted as his own special Anyhow, the petitioners won their case. M. Priscus reporter. and H. was mulcted in a heavy fine and was banished Firmanus was declared incapable of serving as a proconsul. To wind up the whole matter, Pliny tells us with pardonable pride that both he and Tacitus received the congratulations of the Senate for their successful impeachment of two such distinguished officers. The trial was remarkable on account of the high position of M. Priscus, who had been Consul, and was a person of great distinction. Similar proceedings, we are told, were taken against Julius Barrus, governor of Bithynia, and Rufus Varenus.' Such praiseworthy endeavours to administer justice to all
;

classes in every part of the

Empire

are fully corroborated in


his friend

the correspondence between Trajan and consul of Bithynia.

the

proto

When

Pliny petitioned the

Emperor

sanction the introduction of

ment
was

of local governirregular systems in operation in various to displace the


it

Roman methods

parts of the province, Trajan replied that


peculiar laws.

seemed

best,
its

and

even the safest way, to leave each city to exercise

own

another occasion when Pliny complained to the Emperor of the ruinous condition of the bath at Prusa (Broussa), and asked his approval of its being rebuilt, Yes,'
'

On

said Trajan,

provided no new nor any of those taken off which are appropriated to necessary Only once did the Emperor appear to show any services.' signs of irritation with his exacting correspondent. The
'

tax be levied for this purpose,

'

theatre

and gymnasium
'

in course of construction
in several letters.

at

Nicaea,'

Pliny.

These names appear

62
said Pliny,
'

Roman
are being built on

Africa
marshy ground, and the walls

are already cracked.

shape, but

it is

The gymnasium is not only of irregular badly planned. The present architect, who is a
first

rival of the

one

engaged on the work,

tells

me

that the

foundations, which are twenty feet thick and loosely built, are

unequal to support the superstructure. Send me some architects from Italy to advise me in the matter, which is urgent.' Trajan's reply was very brief. As to architects,' said the Emperor, there is no province which has not trained men of skill and ingenuity to do what you require. Such experts are not produced in Italy. We have several in Rome, but they come to us from Greece.'
' '

The confidence inspired by the just and beneficent rule of Trajan soon spread to the more distant parts of the Empire. The magic of his name, associated with unbounded success as a warrior, checked the turbulent tribes on the frontiers of his African provinces and the native races subject to the will of Rome were left to cultivate their fields in peace, or change a nomadic life for one of settlement in towns and villages. Public works were in progress everywhere, roads were multiplied With the or repaired, and harbours constructed or enlarged. aid of the renowned Apollodorus of Damascus, the great architect of his time, rivers were spanned by stately bridges far exceeding in magnificence anything the world had ever seen
;

triumphal arches tributes of gratitude to a wise and thoughtful Emperor graced the entry of provincial towns and temples and theatres, baths and aqueducts, rose, as if by magic, to do

But the name of Trajan, and a man of princely tastes, will for ever be associated with the great forum at Rome which bears his name, and with the stately column which has happily
honour to the Emperor
in his lifetime.

as a patron of architecture

defied the ravages of time.

made

his triumphal entry into

When the Emperor Constantius IL Rome A.D. 356, he stood amazed

and grandeur of the forum, with its splendid In despair of ever embellishments in marble and stone. doing anything that would rival such magnificence, he said, as he turned away, that he would be content to match the horse
at the beauty

which figured
'

in the equestrian

statue of Trajan.

'

You
art,

can
and

This

letter of Trajan's testifies to the

the indebtedness of the

Roman world

to the

widespread influence of Hellenic more cultured Greek.

Africa under Trajan


imitate the
horse,'

63
who
also
?

said the
'

Persian

prince Hormisdas,

accompanied him,
stated that
sion

but

how about

the stable
replied,

'

It

is

when

the Persian was asked on a subsequent occa'

what he thought of Rome, he

am

trying to

forget that

men

are but mortal.'

In his epitome of the history

of

cans, but

Eutropius speaks of Trajan as orbem terrarum cBdifihe might have coupled his name with that of Hadrian, his successor, as his equal in the encouragement given to the building of public monuments worthy of a great Empire. To the honour of Trajan it may be said that he raised these costly edifices for the people and not for himself, and that during the twenty years he sat on the throne of the Caesars not one single gallery or room of state was added to the imperial palace on the Palatine hill. But his name, inscribed on marble or stone, was so much in evidence everywhere that Constantine, two centuries later, humorously compared it to the pellitory on the Yet with all this magnificence Art in Trajan's time was wall. not the Art of the Augustan age. It had lost its vitality, and the high ideal inherited from the Greeks had departed. Human thought, said Plutarch, had descended from its throne Poetry did not hold the same place and had wings no longer. Eloin the Roman mind,' says an intelligent French author. quent prose was heard where song was once triumphant. The gods had departed, and mortals only remained. In art as in policy the era of Trajan was one of truth, but not of the ideal
'

Rome

'

of good sense, but not of genius.'

There were several

cities

and towns

in

Roman

Africa which

became associated with Trajan's name on account of some Leptis Magna, for public work or act of watchful benevolence. instance, was favoured by his notice, and coins were struck in
his

honour bearing the words Colonia Ulpia Traiana Leptis. Mention should also be made of Hippo Diarrhytus or Hippo Zarytus (Bizerta), which was founded by some Phoenician colonists from Tyre at an early date, and subsequently became a commercial port under the rule of Carthage. Its importance
for strategic

who invaded

purposes attracted the attention of Agathocles, Africa B.C. 309. He remained there long enough

to fortify the town and construct a harbour, of which the lines


Le Comte de Champagny, Les Antonins,
Paris, 1875, vol.

'

i.

p. 387.

64
can
still

Roman
be traced.
in his
:

Africa

According to Pliny, Hippo was a welltime est in Africa Hipponensis colonia he adds, Adjacet ei navigabile stagnum, ex

known colony
mari proxima.

And

quo in modum fluminis, czstuarium emergit quod, vice alterna, prout cBSius aut repressit aut impulit, nunc infertur mari, nunc
redditur stagno}

With

reference to this latter quotation,


is

M.

V. Gu^rin remarks that the statement

perfectly correct.

Any

one who has visited Bizerta must have noticed the currents spoken of by Pliny, as moving sometimes one way and sometimes the other. The sea enters the lake by two branches of a canal when the wind is westerly, and when it is in a contrary The monumental remains of direction the current is reversed. Hippo have entirely disappeared, the materials having been
re-used in the construction of the uninteresting
Bizerta.

Arab town of

Two

inscriptions were discovered here about forty years

ago by M. Gu6rin, one being on a milliary column dedicated to Marcus Aurelius, and the other on a block of marble from some edifice presented to the colony by the inhabitants of an adjacent colony styled Julia Carpitana, near Carthage.^

IMP

CAES AVRELIVS

ANTONINVS
FELIX AVG PARTHICVS MAX GERMAN I CVS MA X TRIE POT XVIII COS nil P P RESTITVIT XLIX
PIVS

COL IVLIAE DIARR SACR COLONI COL IVLIAE

GENIO
HIPP

CARPIT

GVLV
QVIS IVSTISSIMIS

This town still preserves its ancient name of Carpis, pronounced by the Arabs Kourbis. The city of Hippo received the affix of Zarytus to distinguish it from Hippo Regius (Bone), the word Zarytus being translated by the Greeks into SidppvTos (diarrhytus), on account of a canal which passed through the town. Hadrumetum (Susa) is another town of importance which bears testimony to the beneficence of Trajan and to its rank as
a colony,
Coloni Colonics
Concordice
Ulpics

Trajance Augustce
ii.

Pliny, Epist. ix. 33.

V. Gu&in,

vol.

pp. 22-23.

Africa under Trajan


FrugifercB Hadrumetince.

65
it

According to Sallust
its

existed as a

PhcEnician colony before Carthage, and

original

name

is

supposed to have been Adrymes or Adramytos. It was the capital of Byzacene and suffered terribly during the campaign of Julius Caesar. As a city of wealth it was condemned to pay Procopius speaks of a heavy fine at the close of the war. Hadrumetum in the sixth century as a large and populous town. It was destroyed by the Vandals, but rebuilt and fortified by the Byzantines. For a short period it changed its name to Justiniana in compliment to the Emperor, and in later times

became conspicuous
of a bishop.

as a seat of Christianity

and the residence

It is difficult, in

the present day, to trace the lines

of the Cothon or harbour mentioned by Hirtius, or the position of the eight gates described by El-Bekri, as well as of the immense tower at the entrance of the harbour called Dar-es-

Senaa (signifying arsenal, and from which our word is probably derived). M. Daux, who made a special study of Phoenician remains at Hadrumetum, as well as of other places and emporia on the coast already referred to, says that the Byzantine occupation was most destructive. The exactions of Justinian, under pretence that money was wanting for reconstructing the defences of the country, while it really went to swell the cofTers
of the insatiable Emperor at Byzantium, drove away the population. Procopius, the historian of the time, says that five millions
left

the country, but this

is

probably an exaggeration.

During
trouble.

the Byzantine occupation, which was purely military, the incursions of the

Moors proved a source of considerable

The

Christian population was roused to action, and for protec-

tion they constructed a class of buildings outside the towns,

answering the double purpose of convents and fortresses, of which mention has been already made. The occupants were soldiermonks, and the buildings, which were enclosed by surrounding walls of defence, were called Monasteria. Several of these still exist. There is one at Leptis Parva (Lemta) another at Ruspina (actually Monastir, to which it gave the name) and another at Hadrumetum called Kasr-er-Ribat, mentioned by El-Bekri. This was partly reconstructed by a prince of the Aghlabite dynasty A.D. 827, and converted by the disciples of Mahomet There are also into a place of retirement for marabouts. the remains of two other monasteria on the coast between
; ;

66
Hadrumetum and

Roman
Carthage.

Africa

The internal arrangement of these

buildings was similar, and for the most part consisted of a series

of vaulted chambers, which were originally occupied by foreign mercenaries in the pay of Carthage. These chambers were
afterwards converted into cells for monks.
tion

This hybrid

institu-

was the

origin of orders of a similar kind so celebrated in

the Middle Ages, and especially familiar to us under the names

of Templars and Knights of St. John.

which are associated with the encouragement from Trajan, In the days of the that of road-making stands pre-eminent. Republic the maintenance and repair of public highways and streets were under the charge of censors, the highest rank in the magistracy of Rome. From the time of Augustus roads were of three classes publicce, sometimes designated as consulares, militares, or pratorice ; privatcz, sometimes called agrarice ; and vicinales. The first were under the charge of men of praetorian To give additional rank, to whom two Hctors were assigned. Emperor high office, the appointed their them for life, weight to term of five years which had hitherto been the for a instead of men of senatorial or equestrian rank nominated rule, and importance of the roads committed to the relative according to of Seville, the kind According to Isidore of roads their care. supposed to have been borrowed from the Carthaginians were called vice munitce, which were paved with rectangular blocks of any hard local stone, or with polygonal blocks of lava.^ From Ulpian^ we learn that there were several different kinds of roads known to the Romans. There was the via terrena, which had an ordinary surface of levelled earth. A second kind was the via glareata, having a gravelled surface, referred to by Livy,'
arts

Among the many useful Roman name, and received

direct

who

contract for paving the streets of

speaks of the censors of his time as being the first to Rome with flint stones, for laying gravel on the roads outside the city, and for forming raised

footpaths at the sides.


in course of time
'

A third

became

identical in

kind was the via munita, which meaning with viapublica.^

Primum Pani dicuntur lapidibus vias stravisse ; postea Orig. XV. l6, 6. Romani per omnem pane urbem disposuerunt, propter rectitudinem itinerum et ne
plebs essetoHosa.
^
*

Ulpian, Dig. 43, ii, Smith's ZJjVA of Gr.

2.

Livy,

xli. c.

27.

ciani,

According to Signor LanVide Livy, ix. 29. munita means levelled, straightened, and macadamised.
art. 'Vise.'

and Rom. Antiq.

Africa under Trajan

67

During the Empire the office of superintendent of public roads was of such honour and distinction that it became the custom to confer it upon those who had been consuls. Julius Caesar is mentioned by Plutarch as curator or superintendent of the Appian Way, and we learn that he spent his own money on its maintenance. Augustus also, we are told, personally accepted
the office of curator in the vicinity of

Rome.

The

roads ex-

tended to a considerable distance from the capital, the length of the Appian Way being computed at 350 miles. A recent traveller, speaking of this great highway, remarks that though it is much broken in several places and travelling over it very uncomfortable, it is wonderfully well preserved. So hard indeed is the material that it may be said to be polished rather than worn, and in some parts the entire width appears to have been paved with single slabs.' Siculus Flaccus, who lived in the reign
of Trajan, designates the public roads as vice puhlicce regalesque,

under the charge of curatores, and says that they were repaired at the public expense by redemptores (contractors), a fixed contribution being levied from adjacent landowners. The use of the word corresponding to regales may be traced to Herodotus, who speaks of the oZol ^aa-lXsioi of the Persians, probably the first organisers of the system of public highways.
In the book of Numbers we read of the children of Israel asking permission to 'go by the king's highway,' ^ and in our own time we constantly use such expressions as the king's highway and the royal road. There is sufficient evidence from the Geography of Ptolemy, who lived in the reigns of Hadrian

and Antonine, and from the Itinerary of Antoninus, which was written in the form handed down to us prior to the time of Constantine, that extraordinary attention was bestowed on the
service of the public roads in the provinces of the Empire, as

well as in Italy.

Among

the inscriptions found in Africa relating to curatores

viarum, the following dedication on a pedestal at Tiddis* (Kheneg) of the time of Hadrian possesses some interest. It
gives an idea of the high distinction attached in those days to a seat on a highway board, quatuorviro viarum curandarum.
'

'

Smith's Diet, of Gr. and Rom. Antiq. art. 'Viae.' Vidi Annuaire de Constantine, l.R.A. No. 2322.

Numbers

xx. 17.

art.

by General

Creuilly,

1853, p. 87.

F2

68

Roman
Q LOLLIO M FIL QVIR VRBICO COS LEG AVG PROVING

Africa

GERM

INFERIORIS FETIALI LEGATO IMP HADRIANI IN EXPEDITION IVDAICA QVA DONATVS EST HASTA_- PVRA CORONA AVREA LEG

LEG X GEMINAE PRAET CANDIDAT CAES TRIB PLEB -CANDIDAT CAES LEG PROCOS ASIAE Q VAEST VRBIS TRIB LATICLAVIO LEG XXII PRIMIGENIAE nil VIRO VIARVM CVRAND

D-D

PATRONO
P
-

Quinto Lollio, Marci filio, Quirina tribu, Urbico, consuli,


legato

AugusH provincicB Germania

inferioris, fetiali, legato

Imperatoris Hadriani in expeditione Judaica, qua donatus est hastapura, corona aurea, legato legionis decima Gemina, prcetori candidato
Cmsaris, tribuno plebei candidato Cessans, legato proconsulis Asia, quastori Urbis, tribuno laticlavio legionis vicesimce secundce Primigenice,

quatuorviro viarum curandarum, patrono. Decreto decurionum. Pecunia publica

long score of indebtedness to the Roman world tempts us to ignore our obligations in such small matters as the placing of milliary columns or milestones on our highways, and to
forget that Caius Gracchus, 1 20 years before the Christian era, was the first to recognise their utility for civil as well as military

purposes.

The system which he adopted was

afterwards brought

by Augustus, and from his time no public road in the Empire was without them. The milliaria in general use
to perfection

were short columns, generally of marble, but sometimes of stone. The inscriptions upon them gave the distance from a capital or town expressed in paces, a thousand paces {inille passus) representing a Roman mile, equivalent to 4,854 English feet. SomeThe inscription times the initial letters M.P. were omitted.
further gave the

name of the constructor of the road, coupled with that of the emperor in whose honour it was dedicated.

Africa under Trajan

69

a central mark in Rome, Augustus set up a gilt bronze in the Forum, called the Milliarium Aureum, near a flight of steps which led up to the Temple of Saturn.' On this

As

column

column were inscribed the names and distances of the chief towns on the roads mentioned by Pliny as radiating through the thirty-seven gates of Rome.^ Outside the city walls the respective measurements were taken from the gates. It may be inferred that each city in the province had a similar milliarium., though not necessarily aureum. Ordinary milliaria abound in North Africa, and by many of them we obtain a clue to several lines of roads which would otherwise have been lost, the date of their construction, and a reliable means of correcting loosely written statements by ancient authors. Few milliary columns of the period of the Casars have been discovered, but those inscribed with the names of Trajan and his successors have been brought to light in nearly every part of the country occupied by
the Romans.
coast

The port of Thabraca (Tabarca), which lies on the midway between Utica and Hippo Regius, and

northern
the road

running direct south connecting the town with the main highway from Carthage, received the attention of Trajan in the Pliny speaks of Thabraca as a Roman early part of his reign. city on the river Tusca, which forms the eastern boundary of Numidia, and quaintly adds that besides Numidian marble The port and wild beasts 'there is nothing worth noting.'* was evidently used for the shipment of wild animals to Ostia for the service of the amphitheatre in Rome, for the export of the rich products of the Medjerda plains, and for the transport of timber for building purposes, and possibly firewood. The Roman remains at Tabarca are scattered over a large area, but, from the absence of refinement in any architectural or decorative work yet discovered, the town may be regarded as having been purely commercial. The chief interest of the place in rtiodern times is centred in a rocky island about half a mile from the mainland, crowned by a citadel of picturesque aspect and considerable strength, constructed by Charles V. on the
'

Middleton's Ancient

spirators

Rome in 1885, p. 166. Otho and who murdered Galba met ad Milliarium Aureum
iii.

the Praetorian con-

sub cede

Satumi.

(Plutarch, Galba, 24.)


^

Pliny, Hist. Nat.

5.

'

Ibid. v. 3.

70

Roman

Africa

The completion of his expedition against Tunis in 1535. edifice, with the walls of defence, has been partly built with the stones of old Thabraka, but no inscriptions relating to the occupation of the island

by the Romans have yet been


in

discovered.

When

1724 the castle was occupied by Genoese troops, and the fortifications were armed with bronze guns bearing the arms of the Lomellini, a noble family of Genoa. He speaks of the island as strong and safe, and in a condition neither to fear the Turk nor the Arabs of Barbary. The old road into the interior, which followed for a considerable distance the banks of the ancient river Tusca, now known as the Oued-el-Kebir (the Great River) or the Oued-es-Zan (the River of Oak-trees), appears to have been reconstructed by Trajan. Close to the southern boundary at Fernana, about 32 miles from Tabarca, is a milliary column, and 12 miles
Peysonnel visited the spot
further south, at the foot of the
existing.

mountains, another

is

still

This region lying between the Mediterranean and the Medjerda plains, occupying an area of about 480 square miles,
with a seaboard of less than 16 miles, has been known for a long period as the country of the Khomair (sing. Khomiri).
Prior to the French occupation, and dating back
it

many centuries,

an unknown country, avoided by travellers on account of the lawlessness of its inhabitants, and generally marked as a blank on maps of Northern Africa. A tribute in money was paid annually to the emissaries of the Bey of Tunis representing the Sultan of Turkey, but this was invariably done with the payment in one hand and the pistol in the other.^ In

was

practically

fact,

these uncivilised people refused to recognise the authority

of the

Bey on one

side of their territory, or that of the

Dey

of Algiers on the other, preferring independence and a lawless life coupled with poverty and hardship to the doubtful ad-

vantages of living under Turkish rule. The configuration of the country, and the capabilities of the soil to produce a sufficiency of food with the smallest amount of labour, were
all

' This historic spot, known as Fernana, where tribute was paid, derives its name from a gigantic cork oak, the branches of which spread considerably over 100 feet. It is a conspicuous object in the landscape, as there is no other tree within many miles. The story goes that, if any soldier of the Bey had attempted to advance beyond the tree, the taxes would have been paid in powder and shot.

r-'--^'

<

o
w

t
J-;
\

J*'

f#4

Africa under Trajan


in their favour,

71

and so they have

lived

on through countless

generations in penury and rags, without one thought of striving


for a higher life, or the slightest regard for the beauty of the country they called their own. No part of North Africa has been more favoured by nature than this little-known land of the Khomair. Hill and dale clothed with soft verdure succeed each other in pleasant variety mountain slopes rugged and picturesque forests of cork and olive an undergrowth of myrtle and juniper and wild rose a land thinly peopled, but a
; ; ; ;

landscape to charm the eye of poet or painter,^ Faint traces of the Roman road are apparent in traversing the country, and remains of farm establishments give sufficient indications of a civilised condition in the days of the Empire.
It is probable that this road of Trajan's followed the course of a road or track used in earlier times by the kings of Numidia, because it lay in a direct line between the coast and their

ancient capital Bulla Regia,


It
is

unfortunate that

now known as Hammam Darradji. we have so little knowledge of this


inscriptions.

old-world metropolis which has a history without records, and


ruined
feature

monuments without
on the
rising ground.

few years ago

a triumphal arch elaborately ornamented was a conspicuous

The

Thermce, judging from their

remains, were on a large scale and covered a considerable area

of land.

The

theatre, the walls of

which are

still

intact, built

with large blocks of finely dressed stone, was beautifully situated

on a spur of the mountain and as the time is on a level with the top of the may be formed of the alteration of the destruction and abandonment of Bulla
;

ground at the present proscenium, some idea


surface since the final

Regia by the Arabs in the seventh century. The amphitheatre is only indicated by undulations of the surface, and the entire site of the city, nearly a mile long, is so choked with weeds and undergrowth that
recognition of the different public buildings
is difficult.

The

Byzantines
of

in their turn contributed largely to the destruction

edifices here as elsewhere, and, as usual, paid no monumental buildings, whether Roman or Numidian, but used them as a kind of quarry for the erection of fortresses and walls of defence. In the centre of the city are the remains of a large Nymphceum, semicircular in plan, a favourite form

Roman

respect to

'

'

Umbriferos ubi pandit Tabraca saltus.'

(Juvenal, Sat. x. 194.)

72
with the Romans.

Roman
From

Africa

the appearance of the fragments this

was a work of great beauty, and was ornamented with colonnades, like other well-known examples in Italy and elsewhere. It is lamentable to add that an inexcusable concession of the
stones in this district, for the purposes of the Tunisian railway

completed some fifteen years ago, was followed by a destruction of numerous monuments, as well as of a number of inscribed stones which might have thrown some light on the early history of this royal city. According to M. Tissot,^ who made careful investigations of the site in recent years, Bulla Regia appears to have long preserved its Punico- Libyan character, and coins
discovered here bearing the crescent and the disc indicate the

worship of Baal joined to that of the great goddess of the Carthaginians, Tanith or Virgo Cselestis. The Numidian marble referred to by Pliny in his mention of Thabraka came from the quarries at Simittu (Chemtou), one Trajan's interest in the day's journey west of Bulla Regia. town and its beautiful products was marked by the erection of a colossal bridge ovpr the Medjerda, two arches of which and the remains of a quay are still standing. Two hundred feet distant are the ruins of a much older bridge, carrying us back
to the time of the

Numidian

kings.

An immense slab

oi giallo-

antico marble lying in an adjoining

relating to

erection

is

meadow bears an inscription Trajan's monumental structures.^ The date of its A.D. 112, when the Emperor was Consul for the
same year
at
in

sixth time, being the

was

raised in the

Forum

Rome

which the stately column in honour of his Dacian

victory.

CAESAR DIVI VAE F NERVA


AIANVS OPTIMVS GERM DACIC PONT X TR^B POT XVI IMP VI COS VI P P

TEM NOVVM A FVNDAMENTIS ERA MILITVM SVORVM ET

PECVNIA SVA ROVINCIAE AFRICAE FECIT


'

C. Tissot,

Le Bassin du Bagrada
Paris,

et la Vote

Romaine de Carthage h Hippone

par Bulla
2

Regia.

Imp. Nat. 1881.

C. Tissot, ibid.

o H w X o
H H H
<i

W O
Q

z
<

Africa under Trajan


Jinperator Ccesar Divi

73

Nerva filius Nerva


Trajanus Optimus, Augustus, Germanicus, Dacicus, Pontifex Maxtmus, Tribunitia Potestate XVI, Iwperator VJ Consul VI. Pater Patrice, Pontem Novum a Fundamentis Opera Militum suorum et Pecunia sua Provincia Africa fecit.

fecit

The words opera militum. suorum and provincics Africce show that the bridge was undertaken for the benefit of the provinces of Africa under the supervision of the Emperor as
chief of the army, and pecunid sud that the imperial treasury.
it

was paid

for

out of

The neighbouring town of Simittu became a colony in the reign of Augustus or one of the emperors of the Julian family, under the title of Colonia Julia Augusta Numidica Simittu, and
its citizens, like

those of Bulla Regia, were inscribed in the tribe

described as a town on the high road from Carthage to Hippo Regius (Bone), and four days' journey from the former. The complete destruction of the roads in the vicinity of Simittu, and difficulty of access to this part of the country, were the chief causes of its neglect, and of its remaining unknown and unthought of for so many centuries. Fortunately an inscribed milliary column fixes the site of the Roman town, and gives the date of the construction of a road from Simittu to Thabraca A.D. 129.
It is

of Quirina.

IMP
DIVI
DIVI

CAESAR

TRAIANI

PARTHIC

FIL

NERVAE

NEP

HADRIANVS AVG PONTIFEX MAX TRIE POT XIII

COS

III

VIAM A SIMITTV VSQ THABRACAM


I

The monumental remains

cover a large area, but, with the


to,

exception of the bridge referred

possess

little interest.

The

74

Roman
is

Africa
'

workmanship generally

coarse and unrefined, and there

is

an

absence of those decorative features in marble and stone which are generally to be found in the public buildings of prosperous
communities. It is probable that Simittu owed its existence to the proximity of the marble quarries, and that its inhabitants
valuable products.

were mostly connected with the working and transport of these The marbles were quarried from a number of small hills, about 800 feet above the sea- level, and covering an area of not less than 220 acres. They are of different kinds, principally giallo antico but there are many other varieties, especially of the breccia class, of a brownish hue and of beautiful shades of colour. There is no doubt that Simittu attained great celebrity under the Empire on account of the abundance of this rich material, which was worked here extensively and shipped to Rome. Hadrian, we know, valued these products very highly. An inscription informs us that he made the road to the coast to facilitate their transport, and used them freely in the embellishment of his villas at Tivoli and Antium. The employment of marble by the Romans as a decorative material cannot be traced farther back than the commencement of the first century B.C. It seems to have been disfavoured on its first introduction, mainly on the ground that it was a Greek luxury ill suited to the taste of the commonwealth. The quarries of Italy had not then been opened, and the only known marbles were the white varieties imported from Greece. Pliny the Elder expresses an opinion on the use of marble, especially in private houses, in a violent diatribe, and vents his indignation against Marcus Scaurus for having set up in front bf his house on Mount Palatine some lofty columns of black Lucullean marble.^ Considering, then, this bad example,' says Pliny, so prejudicial to all good manners and so hurtful to posterity, would it not be better for the city to disallow such superfluities by wholesome laws and edicts than thus to permit such huge and proud pillars to be raised in front of a private house, even under the nose of the gods, whose images were but of earth and their temples as Lucius Crassus also, who built himself a house of potter's clay ?
; '
' '

but

Middleton, p. 14. Lucullean marble was the product of an island on the Nile, position has not been identified, although mentioned by Pliny, Hist. Nat. It was so called because it was specially used in Rome by the Consul xxxvi. 2.
'

its

L. Lucullus about B.C. 74.

Africa under Trajan


Aon

75

Mount Palatine about B.C. 95, was condemned by Pliny for his extravagance in erecting in the atrium six pillars of ' outHymettus But the first Roman known to employ coloured Numidian marble was M. .(Emilius Lepidus during his year of consulate
landish marble, although they were but quarried on
hill'

with Q. Lutatius Catulus, B.C. 78.' Its use as a decorative material was probably encouraged by Sallust when governor of Numidia, B.C. 46. The term Numidian is, however, a misnomer, being applied to the products of Simittu near the eastern boundary of old Numidia, as well as those of Kleber in Algeria, about twenty-one miles north-east of Oran, in the ancient kingdom of Mauritania. Neither of these places has ever

been in Numidian territory, but the term may have originated from the shipment of marble at the port of Thabraka, near the mouth of the Tusca, which formed, as previously observed, the It is quite certain that eastern boundary of Numidia proper. what is known as Numidian marble was not found in Numidia, although some quarries at Filfila, near Philippeville, produce a white marble, but no coloured varieties. Seneca, in his Epistles,' refers to slabs of Numidian in conjunction with marble from Alexandria: Nisi Alexandrina mannora Numidicis crustis distincta sunt. And Suetonius makes passing mention of a column nearly twenty feet high, raised in the Forum at Rome in honour Postea solidam columnam of Caesar, in the following words
' :

prope viginti pedum lapidis

Numidid

in foro statuit scripsitque

Parenti Patrice.
as

A
for

later writer also

mentions these products


:

Numidicum marmor Numidia mittet, ad cutein succum dimittet croco similem. The quarries at Chemtou are much in the condition in which they were left by the Romans at the time of the Vandal invasion
distinguished

patches of saffron colour

of the country in the


side

fifth

century.

Half-quarried blocks

lie

yawning chasms of the rocks, with the mason's marks still legible, and far down the cavernous abyss can be seen the preparations for working one of those lordly monoliths, which still excite our admiration in Rome and elseside in the

by

where.^
'

One

thing very noticeable at the quarries of Simittu

is

Pliny, Hisf. Nat. xxxvi. 6.

The

excavations conducted systematically in

Rome

during recent years under


of the cele-

the able supervision of Signor Lanciani are continually bearing testimony to the
lavish use of African marble under the Empire.

In exploring the

site

76
the absence of

Roman

Africa

economy in the extraction and working of marble. ^ But it must be remembered that imperial edicts overruled laws of economy, and that, if an order were given for so many columns from any particular quarry, they had to be produced regardless of cost. Of the use of marble at Simittu there are no indications,

except in the construction of the aqueduct which conveyed the water to the town, a distance of about five miles, and this is Some mostly built with waste marble from the quarries. portions have been reconstructed, probably during the Byzantine occupation in the sixth century and it is lamentable to add that a number of inscribed stones with their faces inwards have been built into the piers. Some years ago these quarries were actively worked by a Belgian company, and operations were conducted on a large scale. It is a matter of regret that success did not attend their efforts, and that further proceedings were stopped. The increasing demand for coloured marbles as a The material will probably lead to a reopening of the works. products are unusually varied, bearing Italian names well known to marble merchants, such as marmor bianco, giallo avorio, giallo canarino, giallo paonazzo, rosa carnagione, breccia dorata, breccia sanguigna, bianco e nero antico. The other quarries at Kleber in Mauritania Caesariensis are far more extensive, comprising more than 1,500 acres at an altitude of nearly 2,000 feet above the sea. The products are varied. Breccias from dark brown to blood red giallo antico of different hues cipollino rosso, and more than one quality of white marble. One of the rose-tinted varieties is of so close a texture that trinkets resembling coral in appearance might be made of it, and the paonazzo variety, so called from its exquisite colouring after the manner of a peacock's plumage, is a reddish marble bearing a similarity to the far-famed variety known" as
; ; ;

rosso antico.
after the

Another beautiful product of Mauritania, discovered shortly French occupation of Algeria, is that variety of alabaster known as Algerian onyx. The main source of supply is from
of columns of this beautiful of the central hall or

brated Basilica Emilia, tons upon tons of remains


material were brought out by the workmen.

The pavement

nave was found to be composed of slabs of bigio and africano. This basilica, measuring 300 feet in length, was nearly as large as its rival monument the Basilica Julia, which excited the admiration of the poet Statins, describing this noble edifice
as sublimis regia Paulli.

Africa under Trajan

77

Ain Tekbalet, near Tlemcen. Any one who has visited that remarkable Moorish city, which rivalled Granada for its wealth and civilisation in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and took high rank as the capital of a great and powerful nation, could not fail to notice the abundant use of this beautiful material in The coloured marbles of the chief mosques of the city. Mauritania are not to be seen, but Algerian onyx is everywhere.^ With such abundance of coloured marble in North Africa, and so many indications of extensive and laborious quarrying during the Roman occupation, one might expect to find it used But this is not the in great profusion throughout the country. employment was mostly restricted to the towns on case, for its coast. The principal quarries were near the sea, or near the transmission from port to port was easy. Fragments of and marble are slabs of rarely met with in the monumental shafts or Roman remains in the interior of the country. There was abundance of good stone, some of the limestone varieties being almost equal to marble in textdre and appearance. One might be induced to believe that Numidian marble was so highly
prized in

Rome and
Roman

the chief cities of Italy that

almost forbidden
purposes.
city of marble.

in the

its use was African provinces, except for imperial

Carthage, according to Arab writers, was a But Carthage was the metropolis of Africa, and was rebuilt, by the order of Augustus, on a scale of great magThis is fully attested by El-Bekri and other authors. nificence. But the marble of Carthage is now elsewhere. It may be seen in the stately monoliths clustered in twos and threes in the

prayer-chamber of the great Mosque at Kairouan, with their capitals and bases of white and grey marble, Greek, Roman, and Byzantine in the court and gateway of the mosque and All these, noble as they are, pale in the palaces of the Beys.
; ; '

The

late Sir

R. Lambert

Playfair,

H.B.M. Consul-General

in

Algeria and
Africa,

Tunisia, contributed

many

interesting reports

on the marbles of North

and

In a strove to encourage the working and shipment of these beautiful products. paper read before the British Association in Aberdeen (1885), he adds : ' Were I a

might reasonably be distrusted, but as I am performing merely an official may be credited when I assert my belief that as regards quantity, beauty, and variety, the world contains nothing comparable to the treasures of Numidian marble in the mountain at Kleber. Every one who has visited it at my suggestion has admitted that, far from having exaggerated their importance, my
speculator
I

duty, I hope I

account

falls

short of the reality.'

78

Roman

Africa
Tradition

before two wondrous pillars which flank the mihrab.

when the Hassan, governor of Africa replacing Loheir, who succeeded Okhbar, founder of Kairouan, brought there from an ancient building two red shafts tinged with yellow, of incomparable beauty.' It is recorded that a Byzantine emperor offered to purchase them at a price equivalent to their weight in gold. The quarrying and shipment of Numidian marble, which had formed so important an industry during five centuries of Roman domination, may be said to have ceased when the Vandals passed like a firebrand over the land. The Byzantines, in their turn, were too much occupied with the erection of strongholds and works of defence to give a thought to works of embellishment. And their Arab successors, who brought with them a love of colour and a taste for Oriental splendour, found in Roman Carthage and other ruined cities such an abundance of marble already worked that the re-opening of the ancient quarries was not at any period a matter of necessity.
holds that they were brought to Carthage from Egypt
city

was being

rebuilt.

El-Bekri

tells

us that

'

worthy of note that the favour shown by the Romans known as the Composite Order, which towards the fall of the Empire showed great elasticity in its treatment, and considerable departure from so early an example as that familiar to us in the Arch of Titus, is apparent on examining the capitals Intermixed with them are several in the mosque at Kairouan. Corinthian capitals of the best type, both in form and ornamenThese would be the work of Sicilian Greeks, who were tation. Some few capitals largely employed in buildings at Carthage. are Byzantine, which must have been the spoil of other countries, for the occupation of Africa by Justinian and his successors was a short one, and was one long series of wars and feuds with the Desert tribes, Similar methods at Cordova produced similar results, Roman Hispania having to give up its treasures of marble to glorify a new creed. Twenty years of peace and prosperity in Africa, under the rule of Trajan, had made the name of the Emperor honoured throughout the country. And this was especially the case towards the close of his active career, attested by numerous Triumphal arches were inscriptions bearing the date A.D. 117. conspicuous everywhere, sometimes gracing the principal enIt is

to

what

is

Africa under Trajan

79

trance of a town, at others prominently placed in the centre. This was so at Mactar, or oppidum Mactaritanum (Mukther), a
large

and important agricultural town on the high road from Carthage to Sufetuta (Sbeitla). Of the town of Mactar and its history we have no record. Its position on a broad elevated plateau, bounded on one side by the river Melian, and on the other by the precipitous banks of the Oued Sabon, or River of Soap, rendered it a conspicuous object from the fertile plains in The principal remaining arch, dedicated to Trajan, its vicinity. is an architectural composition of some merit, presenting an order within an order. It exhibits a departure from the usual treatment of this class of edifice, and, although very simple in its features, has an aspect of nobility befitting its purpose. The inscription on the lesser frieze facing south is much worn, but when Bruce visited Mukther in 1765 it was quite legible. The date is fixed by the mention of the twentieth year of the tribunate of Trajan, which was A.D. 117.

IMP

CAES

DIVI

TRAIANO OPTIMO DACIO PARTHICO POTEST XX IMP

NERVAE F AVG GER


FAVSTIN

OS

TRIE XII COS VI DEDI DD PP


P

There are remains also of another triumphal arch, forming an approach to the town on the opposite side of the river, and giving indications of a monumental building of a very ornate
character.
It
is

now

in a

dilapidated condition, but, in the

absence of any inscription relating to it, one may assign it to the reign of Hadrian, who was honoured in this town a few The hillside of the ancient Mactar is covered with years later.' tombs, some of them having been structures of a decorative character, sufficient to show that the town and its neighbourhood must have been in a very prosperous condition in the second century. Among the inscriptions in the cemetery is a lengthy one in verse, relating to a successful farmer who resided in the
town, and
'

who

evidently desired that his

name and

his labours

Drawings of this Arch, which was more than forty-four feet high, are given by Lambert Playfair in his work entitled Travels in the Footsteps of Bruce (London, It is an ornate composition of the Corinthian order, but has no 1877), p. 201. special merit ; and as there are no remains of any inscription, the date of its erection is
Sir R.

uncertain.

8o
the son of a poor

Roman
man who
left

Africa

should be held in perpetual remembrance.

He

says

'

was

me

neither house nor money.

was active and had plenty of pluck, which makes up for I began life as a labourer in the fields. I worked early and late. When harvest commenced I was the first in the fields. Then I became the chief of the gang with whom I worked. I saved money and became owner of a house and farm that were wanting in nothing. I then became a towncouncillor, and finally I, having begun life as a working man, ended by taking my seat in the very middle of the assembly over which I presided as chief magistrate. Follow my example by living a blameless life, and meriting by virtuous conduct a Self-laudatory inscriptions were not uncommon peaceful death.'

But

everything.

in the

days of the Empire.

They may be regarded

in the light

of short memoirs or biographical notices of loyal citizens, who had played their part in the drama of life with benefit to others

much satisfaction to themselves. No other means of recording their labours was open to them. Journalism had not been created, and printer's ink had not been invented, but the
and
.

mason and his chisel were ready to hand. It is a question whether human ingenuity will ever succeed in devising so enduring a method of perpetuating the actions' of mankind as Another wellthat of incised letters on imperishable stone. known inscription of a similar kind, from a tomb in the outskirts ef Cirta(Constantine), was deciphered many years ago by M. L^on Renier. This monument, discovered in 1855 on the slopes of the cliff leading up to the city, was about 19 feet long and 10 feet Outside wide, and had two stories, both paved with mosaic. the tomb, extending along the fa9ade, was also a pavement of
mosaic.
skeleton.

In the interior are niches in the walls for receiving the

sarcophagi, one of which,

written in
It

when opened, contained a perfect one of the stone sides was a long inscription inelegant Latin, and somewhat difficult to decipher.

On

may

be read as follows

Hie ego qui taceo versibus mea{m) vita{m) demonstro Lucem clara{m) fntitus et tempora summa,
Pracilius, Cirtensi lare, argentariajn exibui artem. Fydes in me mirafuit semper et Veritas omnis.

Omnisbtis {sic) communis ego ; cui nan misertus ubique f Risus, luxuriaini) semper fruitus cum caris amicis,

^,

\S.r ^i
,1

ffl

"I

A
^\ ,f
;^'^

6(J

MONUMENT AT

SCILLIUM (KASSERIN).

Africa under Trajan


Talem post obiturn domina Valeria -non inveni pudica Vitam ; cum potui gratam, habui cum conjuge sanctam-. Natales honeste meos centum celebravi felices At venit pos trema dies, ut spiritus inania mempra {sic) reli{n)quat Titulos quos legis vivus mee (sic) morti paravi, Ut voluit Fortuna ; nunquam. me deseruit ipsa, Sequimini tales ; hie vos ex{s)pecto ; venita {sic).
'

8i

Here

lie

in

silence, describing

my

life

in verse.

have
is

enjoyed a good reputation and great prosperity.


Praecilius.
I

My

name

reside in Cirta,

and follow the

art of a silversmith
I

My honesty was extraordinary in everything, and


the truth.
I

always spoke

was known to everybody, and my sympathies were with others. I was merry, and always enjoyed entertainments in the company of my dear friends. After the decease
of the virtuous lady Valeria,
I

did not find


life

life

to be the same.
I

As
last

long as

my

wife lived

found

agreeable.

brated a hundred happy birthdays in a becoming way.

have celeBut the

The

day arrived when breath was to forsake this mortal body. epitaph which you read I prepared while waiting for my

death.

Good
I

fortune,

May
Here

fortune

accompany you

which has never deserted me, wills in a like manner through


!'

it

so.

life

await you.

Come

Another

inscription, too lengthy to repeat,

may be

read on

the faces of a mausoleum in very fair preservation at Scillium,

sometimes called Sctllitana Colonia, but now known as Kasrin. This town was on the southern frontier and on the high road between Sufetala and Theveste. The monument is a conspicuous object amidst a mass of stones and fallen buildings, and is three stories in height, erected on a pyramid of steps now mostly hidden under the surface of the ground. The lowermost story, which is quite plain, is twelve feet square, and has two entrances, each three feet square. The next story, slightly receding from the bottom one, is ornamented with four Corinthian fluted pilasters, of great delicacy of workmanship, on each face (the two central ones on the principal side being spaced a little
further apart in order to find

room

for a lengthy inscription).

top story consists at present of a large niche, square externally, and without any traces of ornamentation or of the The height of the mausoleum may be statue which filled it.

The

estimated at SO

feet.

At

the summit, surmounting a pyramid

82
common
to edifices
in

Roman
of this

Africa

kind, of which there are manywas a bronze cock, which, as the quaint inscription informs us, was placed above the clouds and so near to heaven that if nature had given it a voice it would have compelled all the gods by its morning song to get up

examples

Roman

Africa,

'

early.'

In summo tremulas galli non diximus alas Altior extreina qui puio nube volat, Cujus si membris vocem natura dedisset Cogeret hie omnes surgere majie decs.

The monument was


his

erected

parents and other

by Flavins Secundus, in honour of members of his family, who are fully

described in a lengthy inscription nearly covering one entire


face. In addition there are no less than ninety hexameters and twenty elegiacs in somewhat pretentious language, in which the charms of the city and the beauties of the neighbourhood are set forth in a graphic manner by a local poet. What constitutes the beauties of this remote spot, not easy of access in the present day, is difficult to discover. The city, delightfully situated on the verge of a plateau, and girt on three sides by the steep banks of a river, is a mass of ruins extending in one direction for nearly a mile and a half The land is bare and treeless, and human habitations, as far as the eye can compass, have long ceased to exist. Clumps of juniper bushes clothe the sides of the ravines, and the river that once ran freely round the city is now a comparatively small stream, bubbling over the rocks and soon lost in the plains, like so many of the rivers of North Africa.' Nearly sixty years ago an intelligent traveller, who visited Kasrin, took special notice of this tomb of the Secundus family, and remarked that if the monuments still standing in a country now desolate attest a former prosperity which confounds our imagination, these verses, composed in a remote town scarcely
'

known

in history,

prove

how

the civilising influence of

Rome

had awakened the intelligence and moral nature of a people once numerous and wealthy, but to-day without art or literature,
or even settled inhabitants.'
' Job vi. IS: 'My brethren have dealt deceitfully as a brook, and as the stream of brooks they pass away.' Also Jer. xv. 1 8. ' E. Pellissier de Reynaud, Description de la Regence de Tunis (Paris, 1853).

Africa under Trajan


The first few lines of the They refer to the founder
Flavia Urbana.
inscription are

83
his wife,

worthy of mention.'

of the

mausoleum and

FLAVIO SECUN PATRI PIO MIL AN XXXIII VIX AN CX H S E FLAVIAE VRBANAE MATRI PIAE VIX AN CV H S E

DO

From

this

we

learn that the founder lived to the age of

lo,

and

his wife 105.

Strange to say, other lines in the epitaph savour

of a complaint against the transitory nature of

human

life

LICET EXIGVAE FVGIENTIA TEMPORA VITAE PARVAQ RAPTORVM CITO TRANSEAT HORA DIERVM MERGAT ET ELYSIIS MORTALIA CORPORA TERRIS ADSIDVE RVPTO LACHESIS MALE CONSCIA PENSO.
SINT

'

To live to an advanced age was an ordinary occurrence, and extreme longevity was not exceptional in a country proverbial At Ammsedara (Hydra) a woman who had for its salubrity. lost her husband at the age of 82 years and 7 months inscribes on his tombstone, You died too soon. You ought to have lived And why didn't you?' Herodotus says that to a hundred. there are no people in the world so healthy as Africans,' and Sallust remarks that most of them die of old age {plerosque senectus dissolvW), except such as perish by the sword or beasts of prey; for disease finds but few victims.^ Epitaphs of cen'

'

'

tenarians, like those of the self-satisfied silversmith of Cirta or

the two worthies of Scillium, are numerous, but the extreme of longevity seems to have been reached in the neighbourhood of
Cirta (Constantine), where a citizen

named M.

Julius Abaeus

Close by we find an inscription closed his career at 131. recording the decease of Julius Gracililius, an old soldier, at the
Julius Pacatus lived as long, and Julia Gaetula age of 120. In the ruined village of Temda in has a record of 125 years. old Numidia we find the good life of the aged Sittia Helena still preserved in pleasant memory,^ and at a place called Sila
'

C.T.L. No. 211.


'

'

Sallust,

yw^.

xvii.

C.I.L. No. 20109.

84
in the

Roman
same
district

Africa
live

another lady had the good fortune to

to the age of iii.^

D-M

-S

D
C

SITTIA -HE

IVLIVS

FIL

QVIR
. . . .

LENA SPLEN DIDISSIMAE -ME MORIAE MATER V A cm H

BARVARVS V A LXXXV H S E O E B- Q ENNIVS CELLINIANVS SITTIA FORTVNVLA P FILIA QVIR V A CXI

H-S-E-0-T-B-Q.

One
priestess
Cirta.''

other inscription
at

is worth recording, in memory of a Signs (Ziganiah), about twenty-four miles from

IVLIA

VRBA

NA

SACER
'

MAG NA V A CI H S E
DOS

Of

the history of Sigus

we know

nothing, except that

it

was a place of renown long before the Roman occupation, and was the residence of many of the Numidian kings. So complete
has been
its

destruction that nothing has been

left

but founda-

tions of walls

for

and a few inscribed stones. Some parts of the country were evidently not so salubrious, there is an inscription at Auzia (Aumale) relating to a good
lived for twenty-six years without

woman who
fever
: . . .

an attack of
recorded as

piissima cultrix pudicitic^^famcz,

qua

vixit sine febribus


is

annis viginti sex?

Another excellent woman

having lived as long as she could, but without mentioning her Diis Manibus ^sckpice, Matri carissimai, leng"th of years Vixit annos quod potuit.^ Zablutius posuit. Among the many good qualities which marked Trajan's career as a ruler, thoughtfulness for the poor and distressed Sculptured memorials on the numerous stands pre-eminent. edifices raised to his honour are a striking testimony to that
:

^ C.I.L. No. 19136. C.I.L. No. 19204. I.K.A. No. 3648. * I.R.A. M. Tissot observes that the duration of life among the No. 1941. Touaregs averages 80 years. Centenarians are numerous, and instances are given of (Giographie de la Province persons living to the advanced age of 115 to 130 years.
'

cTAfrique,

p.

479.)

Africa under Trajan


spirit of

85

benevolence whicti contemporary writers freely acknowforce of example, which did not fail to reach the most remote of his subjects, is borne out by an inscription at Sicca Veneria (El-Kef) in the early part of the reign of Marcus Aurelius, setting forth the terms of a charitable endowment on the lines of similar ones on a larger scale originating with Trajan himself. The inscription informs us that P. Licinius, son of Marcus, of the tribe Quirina, surnamed Papirianus, procurator of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, left in trust to his very dear fellow-citizens a sum of money, the
ledge.

The

interest of which should be expended for ever from year to year in the maintenance of three hundred boys from three to fifteen years of age, and two hundred girls from three to thirteen

years of age.^

MVNICIPIBVS MEIS CIRTHENSIBVS SICCENSIBVS CARISSIMIS MIHI DARE VOLO HS (XIII| VESTRAE FIDEI COMMITTO MVNICIPES CARISSIMI VT EX VSVRIS EIVS SVMMAE QVINCVNCIBVS QVODAN NIS ALANTVR PVERI CCC ET PVELLAE CC PVERIS AB ANNIS TRIBVS AD ANNOS XV ET ACCIPIANT SINGVLI PVERI -)f IIS MENSTRVOS

PVELLAE AB ANNIS TRIBVS AD ANNOS


It is

XIII

pleasant to record the circumstances attending Trajan's


it

benefaction, mainly on the ground that


parts of the civilised world.

serves as a prototype
still

of unnumbered similar charitable institutions


in
all

increasing

In the latter days of the

Republic the poor-law question remained an unsolved problem,

and continued so under the Czesars. Many attempts were made to promote a more equal distribution of property, but without success. Rome had become a city of millionaires and mendicants. The former had established themselves by rapacity as an oligarchy of wealth, the latter had been gradually attracted to the metropolis by the corn doles, which had become, by long
usage, the established right of every

Roman
273.

burgess settled in

Rome.

No

emperor had dared to repeal so pernicious a regu'

Berbrugger, Revae Africame,

i.

86
lation.

Roman
far

Africa

Revolution and anarchy would have been the result. from even hinting at its suppression, many of them encouraged it from self-interest, and, with a view to checking

So

disorder in the streets, provided plenty of public entertainments


for a dissolute herd of idlers.

Public baths were at their service,


exhibitions
in

theatres

were enlarged, and

the

arena were

multiplied for their benefit.

was heard and answered. thrifty villager and the hard-working farmer were heavily taxed,

The outcry for panem et circenses To meet this costly expenditure the

with the result that children were too often turned adrift or neglected, and, as there was no law against infanticide, new-born babes were put out of the way or exposed, as a matter of cruel
necessity.

as

But the far-seeing Trajan came to their help, and, were with the stroke of a pen, gladdened the farmer's heart, and made every villager and every child rejoice in serving so benign a ruler. The form of charity which the Emperor established was novel in conception, and proved far-reaching in operation. Two instances have been handed down to us in the form of mortgage deeds, by which sums of money were lent by
it

the

Emperor

to

numbers of small

proprietors, bearing interest

The yearly at 5 per cent, in one case, and 2\ in the other. amount of interest was to be devoted without deductions to
the maintenance of poor boys and girls in the
fair to
district.

It is

assume that these two were not exceptional cases, but that throughout Italy at least similar endowments were made in accordance with the wants of the locality. The better known of the two instances relates to the district of Velleia, near Parma,' and from the descriptive account furnished by the inscribed stone we gather that Trajan advanced a sum of 23,619,580 sesterces (187,000/.) to fifty-one landowners, and the interest was deemed sufficient to support 300 children (264 boys and 36 The other, also on an inscribed slab found at Benegirls). ventum, relates to a sinking fund of 414,930 sesterces (3,300/.)
lent to sixty-seven proprietors at 2^ per cent, interest.

By

such

enlightened methods agriculture was promoted, labourers were


which the benefaction recorded in the inscription applies comParma, Placentia, and Libarna, equivalent to the entire duchy of Parma, and covering about one forty-seventh part of the kingdom of Italy. (Champagny, Lcs Aitlonim, i. 258. Vide J. C. von Orelli, Inscript. Lai. Coll. Turici, 828 -50.) J
'

The

distriot to

prises Velleia,

Africa under Trajan


in

87

demand

to

till

the

fields,

an impetus was given to trade and


little

manufacture
grateful

in the

smaller towns, and a generation of

children grew up bearing the additional

name

of Ulpiani in
It is gratifying

memory

of their imperial benefactor.


little

to

add that these

matters of
to

Roman

history, in Africa as

well as in Italy,
centuries.

come down

us unaffected by the lapse of

The

records are not on parchment, nor are they the

statements of contemporary authors, but inscriptions in indelible lettering on imperishable bronze or marble. This tablet, unearthed at Velleia in the middle of the last century, measures 10 feet by 6 feet, and weighs nearly four hundredweight. It

was thoughtlessly broken up as old metal, but, labour, was put together, and is now an object of
the

after infinite

attraction in

Museum

at

Parma, bearing the

title

of the Tabula Ali-

mentaria of Trajan.
properties

The

inscription,

one of the longest yet

names of the several on which money was advanced, with the amount in each case and the names of the owners. It also specified in detail how the interest was to be applied, and how it was to be
discovered, covers 670 lines, and gives the

apportioned
It

among a

given

number of poor

children.

was not long before Trajan was confronted with slight disturbances on the frontier, similar to those which had been Although they were recurrent under many of his predecessors. not of a nature to cause alarm, a feeling of unrest was created, and, consequently, the work of colonisation was retarded. The establishment of a permanent encampment at Theveste as the headquarters of a fully equipped Roman legion, and the erection of a line of fortified posts {castelld) on the northern slopes of the Aur^s mountains, had hitherto afforded sufficient protection in a thinly peopled district. But the feeling of security inspired by Trajan's name, and the many successes attending his earlier career, had tempted Roman farmers and small agriculturists to establish themselves in the more remote but fertile portions
of old Numidia. Long stretches of arable land, a beautiful climate unequalled in any part of North Africa, abundant

water supply, mineral wealth almost at their doors, and forests of cedar and oak, pine and juniper, which exist to the present day, offered attractions for permanent residences and the invest-

ment of capital. With this increase of population and local wealth came the demand for greater protection, and this was

88
not
difficult

Roman
to

Africa
road which connected

meet.

The

military

Theveste with
ing for the

Sitifis (p. 40), fortified at intervals,

and follow:

greater part of the distance the lower slopes of

the Aures, brought into communication the following towns

Tinfadi, Vegesela, Mascula, Claudi, Thamugas, and LambcBsis}

Of

these towns, or rather settlements, Mascula, which was regarded as the key to the Sahara, was the most important from a strategic point of view. We learn that a town was built there at the commencement of the second century, and that it was garrisoned by the 7th company of Lusitanians. At a

had been firmly established in had a brief era of prosperity. Numerous Christian ornaments have been found on the site, and the names of four bishops of Mascula have been preserved Clarus in the third century, Donatus in the fourth, Januarius at the close of the fifth, and a fourth bearing the same name early in the sixth century. It appears to have suffered terribly about the
later period,

when
it

Christianity

Roman

Africa,

middle of the fourth century from the incursions of barbarian


tribes

who banded

together for

its

destruction.

An

inscription

establishes the fact that Publilius Caecina Albinus rebuilt the

town about A.D. 370. Prp splendpre feliciunt scsculorum dominorum nostroruin Valentiniafii et Valentis semper Augustorum.
. .

aice

re

onpni MasculcB

a fundamentis con-

struxit {atque dedicavif) Ptiblilius Cceiontus Ccecina Albinus vir

clarissimus consularis sexfasculis provincice Numidics Constan-

During the Byzantine occupation Solomon the general converted Mascula into a garrison town with walls of defence,
tince.

and finally, when the Arabs swept over the land, its history as a town came to a close. The next station of importance on the southern frontier was

Thamugas (Timegad), which, at the time of Trajan's accession, appears to have been merely a fortified post. Its charming situation on rising ground more than 3,000 feet above the level
of the sea at the intersection of six roads, on the verge of a vast
tract of fertile country,

and presenting no

difficulties in the

way

of abundant water-supply, induced Trajan to build a town, or


rather a city, which should attract citizens of substance from

other parts of

Roman

Africa.

L. Munatius Gallus, in

The imperial legate pro-przetor, command of the third legion Augusta,


vol. xxi.

received the instructions of the Emperor, A.D. 100, to lay the


'

Revue Afrkaine,

Africa under Trajan


foundations, and to proceed with the

89

work

as rapidly as possible.

At

the close of Trajan's reign, A.D. 117, the principal buildings

were completed, the town and the neighbourhood adequatelypeopled, and general prosperity prevailed.
fortified,

Thamugas was not


it became conmonuments, and for

nor did

it

cover a very large area, but


its

spicuous for the decorative character of


the sumptuousness which
is

always associated with a

life

of ease

and prosperity. The town, better known by its modern name Timegad, was designated by the Romans as Colonia Marciana Trajana Thamugas or Colonia Ulpia Thamugas. The word Marciana commemorates the public and private virtues of the Emperor's amiable sister bearing that name. Her humanity and good offices to the poor and friendless are testified by all writers of every age, and her services to the Empire caused her

name

to be regarded with exceptional honour.

This excellent

died A.D. 113, was declared by the Emperor to be Augusta and Empress during his lifetime. The word Ulpia is
princess,

who

supposed by M. L6on Renier to


thirtieth legion 6^/^/(2 Victrix.

refer to the veterans of the

In recognition of their meritorious

services in the Parthian war, Trajan located

as a garrison for the protection of the

them at Thamugas, town and the neighbour-

hood.

The

inscription referring to this legion exists in duplicate

on two octagonal pedestals of white marble.

VICTORIAE PARTHICAE AVG SACR

EX

TESTAMENTO

M ANNI M MA RTIA LIS


|LEG~nT|

F QVIR
.

MIL

AVG DVPLC ALAE PAN N DEC AL EIVSDEM > |LEG III AVG ET XXX VLPIAE VICTRIC HONESTA MISSI MISSIONE AB IMP TRAIANO .... OPTIMO GER DAC PARTH AVG SING HS VIII XX PR MIN ANNI M LIB PROTVS HILARVS EROS ADIECTIS A BE HS III PONEND .... CVRAVER IDEM Q DEDICAVER D D

'

90
It will

Roman
lines are enclosed

Africa

be observed that the words LEG III on the seventh by deeply incised lines forming an oblong border. This is equivalent to effacement, although in many inscriptions found in Numidia the words have been entirely effaced. This act was done by the order of Gordian

and ninth

III., A.D. 238, as a punishment to the legion for their adhesion to the cause of his brutal rival Maximinus, and aiding the revolt

of Capellianus, at that time governor of Numidia and in command of the legion. Gordian not only disbanded the legion, but employed the troops in other services on the banks of the

Rhine.

There
Its history

is

no spot

in

North Africa which has deservedly

attracted so

much

attention as the site of this old

Roman

city.

and stone. Inscriptions relating to its municipal government, with the names of its magistrates faithfully recorded, votive offerings of worthy men and benevolent women, dedications to the emperors who brought peace and prosperity to their doors, and memorials of loyal citizens who desired to be buried on the hillsides which had been so pleasant to them in their lifetime, are all there, in
truly be said to be written on marble

may

more
quiet

or less mutilated condition, to

tell

their
till

own

tale of a

community long passed away, and,


Bruce the
to
traveller,

recently, almost

forgotten.

who

visited the spot in

1765,

was the

first

make

careful

drawings of some of the monu-

mental remains, and to decipher the leading inscriptions still standing above the surface. Many other explorers of a succeeding generation have furnished valuable notes as the result of personal investigation, which

may

be found in the pages of reviews

and other periodicals relating to Algeria and Tunisia. But it was not till Professor Masqueray published his official report in 1875-76 that an opinion could be given on the remarkable character of the remains, or on the importance of Thamugas as
a link
in

the long chain of

Roman

history in Africa.

The next

valuable contribution to the subject was from the pen of the


late Sir R.

Lambert

Playfair, for

many

years H.B.M.'s esteemed

in 1877, consisted for the most part in following Bruce's track, re-editing

Consul-General at Algiers.
'

His work, undertaken

his

Travels in Barbary,' and supplementing the author's notes


additional information acquired during long residence

by much

in the country.

The

result of

M. Masqueray's report was the

Africa under Trajan


placing the ruins of
des

91

Thamugas under
in 1880.

the control of the Service

Momcments

historiques,

and authorising a systematic exploOperations have been


in

ration,

which was commenced

progress almost uninterruptedly since that date, and have enabled the experts engaged on the work to publish from time to time
descriptive accounts of their discoveries.

From an
is
it

historical

point of view, our knowledge of the ancient city has not advanced

much

since the issue of the official report, nor

probable
light

that further investigations will throw

any additional

on

the history of a city which does not appear to have played

any

part in the political

life of the period. But students of history and archaeology gratefully recognise the patient, conscientious labours of a number of intellectual men, who have successfully

explored a spot of such exceptional interest as the Pompeii of North Africa.'


of
its

site

of the

Our knowledge of Thamugas during the first three centuries existence is based upon inscriptions, and although it became a centre of Christianity at an early period when
St.

written record of

Cyprian was bishop of Carthage, A.D. 236, there is little its activity till the end of the fourth century. The Church in North Africa was then split into factions, and
the seat of religious agitation, the bishop,
in

Thamugas became

Optatus, taking part

revolt

against

the

Emperor.

The

Vandal invasion was the prelude to its decline as a residential city, and when Solomon the general arrived there, A.D. 535, he
found the place in a ruinous condition. Procopius tells us that on the approach of the Byzantine army the inhabitants of the mountains destroyed the place to prevent its occupation by the invaders. Solomon made no attempt to restore the city, but made use of the materials for the construction of a large fortress on the outskirts, and for other works of defence. This huge rectangular fortress forms at the present day one of the most
conspicuous
Christianity
objects
in

the landscape.
at

We

also

learn

that

flourished

Thamugas

in

the seventh century

under the rule of Gregorius, governor of Africa, whose name appears on an inscription on the lintel of the entrance-door of a large church which he built there.^
'

MM.

Boeswillwald, Ballu , et Cagnat, Timgad,une

cite

Africaine sous P Empire


'

M. AXhert'SaWv., Les Jiuines Homain {zxis, 189S-98). Afrique Romaine (Paris, 1895). M, Gaston Boissier,

de TimgadCPaxis, \?:^y).

LR.A. No.

1518,

92
IN

Roman
FL

Africa

TEMPORIBVS CONSTANTINI IMPERATORIS GREGORIO PATRICIO JOANNES DVX DE TIGISI OFFERET DOMVM DEI + ARMENVS
This edifice is in a ruined condition, but we may fix the date at A.D. 641, during the short reign of Constantine III. There are also the remains of six other churches, one of which,

from its dimensions, was probably the cathedral. In all cases they are constructed with the materials of destroyed Roman buildings, put together with little thought or care, and designed to meet the present requirements of a new creed, rather than as public edifices for the embellishment of the city. There is reason to believe that after the overthrow of Gregorius by the Arabs, A.D. 647, Thamugas was deserted, and reduced by earthquakes ^ and centuries of neglect to its present ruined condition. The names of several bishops of Thamugas have been handed down Novatus in the third century, Sextus and
:

Faustinus in the fifth, and Secundus, who was driven out by the Vandals, in the sixth century. Like most towns in the country, Thamugas has apparently suffered more from neglect and abandonment than from any

Optatus

in the fourth,

other cause, although there are indications of attempts to destroy


it

terraces

It was built on a series of hills cut into broad oh the lower northern slopes of the Aures, and was traversed by the high road from Theveste to Lambaesis. The forum and public buildings were on the higher ground, but the The configuraprincipal part of the town was at a lower level. tion of the ground was favourable to the distribution of water, which appears to have followed the lines of the main streets running northwards. Some of the walls which confined the watercourse still exist, and conduits still perform their original functions but there are no remains of any aqueduct, or of

by

fire.

bridges over the ravines.

The north

fa5ade of the buildings

forming one side of the forum had a colonnade in its entire A length, intersected by a gateway of monumental character. flight of ten steps within the gateway formed the principal approach to the forum, which measured 162 feet by 14S feet, entirely paved and surrounded by a broad colonnade of the
'

An

earthquake occurred in Africa during the reign of Gallienus, A.D. 267,

and another of a more violent nature A,d. 560, during the Byzantine occupation.

Africa under Trajan


Corinthian order, raised two steps above the general area.

93
On

the east side was the basiHca, and on the south the theatre. On the west side was the curia or city hall, measuring about 50 feet hy ^2 feet, of which the substructure and parts of the walls are
still

standing.

steps, six of

and
front

' and approached by nine platform about 40 feet long 12 feet 6 inches wide, raised 6 feet 6 inches above the

In front of the curia


still

which

exist, is a

area of the forum.


of the

There was a balustrade or low wall in This platform was undoubtedly the tribunal,^ which held so prominent a place in the public life of Here, too, was the sei/a curulis, where the magisthe Romans.
platform.
trate sat

forum

is

when transacting public business. The area of the covered with pedestals and inscriptions which are quite
and there
is

legible,

reason

to

believe,

from the fragments

of statuary which have been discovered, as well as from the

nature of the inscriptions, that the entire forum was embellished

with statues and dedicatory pedestals to the glory of the emperors, or to perpetuate the good deeds of worthy citizens. The principal building was the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus
;

in other words, the Capitol.

south-west of the

city,

occupied a commanding position and stood within a large walled enclosure.


It

The

floor

of the temple was at a considerable altitude, as


side.

there was a stately flight of forty steps to the portico-entrance

on the north-east

The

edifice itself was, to use architec-

tural phraseology, hexastyle prostyle, having

columns

in front

and

at the

sides only.

They were

of the Corinthian order,

fluted,

and about 45 feet in height. The proportions of the order are similar to those of the temple of Jupiter Tonans in

When Bruce visited Timegad in December 1765, five columns and a portion of the entablature were great of the standing, but these have long since been overthrown. The
Rome.
were beautifully carved, and the cornices and other highly enriched. It is doubtful whether the inscripwere parts
capitals

Roman Senate was called the Curia, from the which Romulus was said to have divided the Populus, The Curia was an after an alliance had been made between the Latins and Sabines. inaugurated building, and therefore a templum, but not sanctum.'' (J. H. Middleton,
'
'

The

chief place of meeting of the

thirty tribes or Curiae into

Ancient Rome,
^

p.

149.

Vide also Varro, Ling. Lat.

vi.

10.)

Few

of these ancient trilmnalia are remaining.

The one

at

Thamugas deserves
forum was not

special notice, as all the parts are in fair preservation, although the
large, nor

remarkable for any display of architectural grandeur.

94

Roman

Africa
one

tion discovered here in four stones forming a panel, refers to

of the portico-entrances in the large walled enclosure, or to the great portico of the temple itself The date of the inscription
"^

would be

A.D. 364~375'

P'''o

inagnificentia sceculi

dominorum

nostrorum Valentiniani et Valentis semper Augustorum et perpetuorum, porticus Capitolii, series vetustatis absuniptus et usque

ad ima fundamenta
dedicavit Publilius

conlapsus, novo opere perfectus exornatusque

Cceionius

Ccecina Albinus vir clarissimus,

consularis, curantibus

^lio

Juliana, iteruni reipublicm curatore,

perpetuo, Antonio Januiariano flamine perpetuo.

Flavio Aquilino flamine perpetuo, Antonio Petroniano flaniine The magnilo-

quence of the inscription prompts the supposition that


shafts

it

refers

to the rebuilding of the front of the Capitol with the splendid

which adorned the

portico.

may be made of the on the east side of the forum. It was about 92 feet long and 48 feet wide internally, without aisles, divided into eight bays, and roofed in one span with a flat trabeated ceiling. At the north end are three niches, in which are the remains of In front of the pedestals, but the statues have disappeared. curia, on the west side of the forum, are two inscribed pedestals
other public buildings mention
Basilica,

Among

undisturbed.

One

of them

is

dedicated to Trajan, designated

as tribune for the twenty-third time,


year. Consul for the sixth time,

Emperor

for the eighteenth

and Pater Patrice. The other refers to the decurions or senators of Thamugas, in commemoration of the unanimity which characterised their deliberations, and
records the beneficence of C. Publius, son of Caius, of the tribe Papiria, who was raised to the high office of chief magistrate.

But the most valuable of the


light in the curia"^

inscriptions

was one brought to


It

many

years ago by M. Masqueray.

gives

the names and official titles of sixty-eight duumvirs, quaestors, The list was priests, and other functionaries at Thamugas.

continued on another slab found some years afterwards, but the

names
'

are scarcely legible.

The
'

plan and general arrangement of the Theatre on the

Copied by Renier, De la Mare, and others. means one of two men holding office as a'magistrate or commissioner either in Rome or in a town ranked as a colonia or municipium. One inscription (C.I.L. vi. No. 3732) uses the expression duo mr; while another It is a question, therefore, whether (C.I.L. vi. No. 1 196) refers to duo vtri. (Smith's Diet. vol. ii.) the word admits of being used in the plural as duumviri. I.R.A. No. 1520.

duumvir

literally

Africa under Trajan

95

south side of the forum, built into the side of the hill, and sepaby a broad paved street, are now easilytraced, although the enclosing walls of the superstructure have been overthrown. As usual in Roman theatres, the cavea was a complete semicircle, this one at Thamugas measuring in its
rated from the forum

extreme diameter 208 feet. comparison of this dimension with those of the rather smaller theatres at Pompeii and Herculaneum, with that at Orange in France, and the still larger one
in

more

perfect condition at Aries,

is

of some assistance in

computing the average population of Thamugas


its

prosperity.'

The

in the days of wall of the scena or stage appears to have

been embellished with columns and statuary, and lined with slabs of marble. Behind the proscenium was a broad loggia or colonnade about 130 feet in length, and here were found two inscriptions bearing dates A.D. 158 and A.D. 167, dedicatory to the Emperor Antoninus and his two successors, M. Aurelius and
L. Aurelius Verus.

At the intersection of three main roads on the south side of the town, at a distance of about 500 feet from the forum, are the remains of the ThermcB, which have been recently unearthed.
They
are of considerable extent, covering an area of

more than

half an acre, and bear traces of

work of a

palatial character.

The

walls of the substructure, the mosaic floors of the principal

apartments, the bases of numerous columns, and" openings in the walls above the ground-floor level are sufficient to enable

an expert to reconstruct on paper

this fine edifice.

These public

baths appear to have been built in the reign of Trajan, and a magnificent inscription^ informs us that they were enlarged
A.D. 198, in the time of Septimius

Severus,

by order of the

magistrates and at the expense of the State, Q. Amicius Faustus being the legatus proprcetor? Among other remains of public
'

Herculaneum

96
or general market.

Roman
An

Africa

buildings worthy of passing mention are those of the macellum


inscription informs us that a certain

wealthy citizen of Thamugas named Plotius Faustus Sertius, of


knightly order and in
district, settled

command

of the militia force in the

in his native

town on retirement from active

and was honoured by his fellow-citizens with the disFlamen perpetuus} We are further told that this honour conferred on the Sertian family was followed by the erection and presentation of this palatial market, paid for by Plotius Faustus and his wife, Cornelia Valentina.
service,

tinction of

The

ruined

monuments of Thamugas form a

pleasing study

to the antiquary, and the large assortment of half-legible inscriptions are a constant delight to the epigraphist.

But to

the ordinary visitor they impart only a transient interest

labyrinth of walls, an overthrown column, a fragment of sculp-

tured ornament, or a few sharply incised

initial

letters

have to

him but

meaning. And yet from these isolated masses of stone and marble an expert can often reconstruct, stone upon stone, the work as originally designed, and a few scattered letters Such is the will become the basis of a well-worded inscription.
little

case with the most interesting structure which time has spared
in this ruined city.

Although

in

a dilapidated condition, this

venerable
erect in
city.

edifice,

known

as the

honour of the

illustrious

Arch of Trajan, still stands Emperor and founder of the

exposed to eighteen centuries of wind and weather, its broken shafts and fallen attic, its arches half filled up for the purposes of preservation, and its niches which
Its battered face
the Senate, and engaged on
in

some diplomatic
But the

investigation, either in parts of Italy or

any of the

Roman

provinces.

title

was generally used

(especially in these

pages) to designate a lieutenant or deputy-governor attached to the governor of a


province.

Down
;

to the time of Diocletian

imperial provinces were governed by


legati

Augusti pro pratore W. T. Arnold The only exception known is that of Pliny when he was sent to (Oxford, 1879). Bithynia as legatus pro pratore consulari potestate (C.I.L. vol. v. No. 5262). Vide Mommsen and Marquardt, Manuel des Antiq. Rom. vol. iii. ' K flamen was a priest of any particular deity. Such priests were attached to municipal towns, and an emperor had frequently & flamen assigned to him. With the exception of the elder Faustina, who had more than one. flaminica during the lifetime of Antonine, no empress was allowed the privilege. The term perpetuus designated the appointment for life. Flaminica was the title originally given to the wife of a flamen Dialis (Duovis), said to have been established by Romulus, together with the flamen
/^a<8 of consular or prsetorian rank,

commonly designated

{vide p. 32)

vide

Roman

System of Provincial Administration,

Martialis.

Vide Plutarch.

o H S
<

I?
H
a

<

o
<

Africa under Trajan

97

were once graced with statues or busts of departed emperors, When Bruce visited give a piteous aspect to a noble structure. Timegad in 1765 the Arch was half buried on its east side by an accumulation of fallen masonry and a heap of soil formed by the alteration of the surface of the ground during many centuries of neglect and abandonment. In 1884 it was in a more dilapidated state, and by this time would probably have been a mass of ruins if the Societe des Monuments Historiques had not come to its rescue. Thoughtful care and patient labour have been eminently successful. The ruined monument is now in a stable condition, and the removal of the debris, together with the bpening up of the old Roman highway and its paved surfaces, places before us a bit of the Roman world not surpassed by anything that is seen among the ruins of Pompeii. The architectural treatment of the monument is original. Over the side arches are square recesses flanked by small columns of the Corinthian order, supported on decorative corbels, and surmounted by a projecting entablature breaking all round. The principal cornice and the cornices of the segmental pediments over the side arches are broken in the same way, producing altogether a very rich effect. Both fagades are similar, but the capitals vary in detail, quaint eagles and other devices being The attic, intended to receive the still visible on two of them. dedicatory inscription, appears to have extended over the whole of the edifice. The original inscription,' found in a fragmentary state many years ago near the forum, may be read as follows

IMPERATOR CAESAR DIVI NERVAE FILIVS NERVAE TRAIANVS AVGVSTVS GERMANICVS PONTIFEX MAXIMVS IMPERATOR III TRIBVNICIA POTESTATE IV CONSVL III PATER PATRIAE COLONIAM MARCIANVM TRAIANVM THA MVGADI PER LEGIONEM TERTIAM AVGVSTAM
FECIT LVCIVS MVNATIVS GALLVS LEGATVS AVGVSTI PRO PRAETORE DEDICAVIT.
'

I.R.A. No.

1479.

The
in

illustration,

showing a restoration of

this beautiful

monument, was prepared

1886.

Since that time a large number of blocks of

stone, then lying under the surface, have been brought to light,
possible, in the positions they originally occupied.

and placed, as

far as

This conjectural restoration

may

be regarded as correct, except in a few matters of

detail.

98
The

Roman

Africa

third consulate of Trajan fixes the date A.D. 100, being


city.

the year of the foundation of the

The mass

of the
all

monument

is

sandstone, but the principal columns and other

decorative features are of very fine white limestone, having

the appearance of marble.


niches are of coloured

The small columns flanking the marble. The weak point of the monuis

ment

as an architectural composition

the lowness of the attic.

In other respects the proportions are good, and the mouldings

and decorative

features of a high order. It appears to have been surrounded by statues and dedicatory pedestals, forming altogether a monumental group of which the citizens of Thamugas might well have been proud. Those who desire to study in detail these monumental ruins, as well as the remains on other portions of the site, are referred to the works already mentioned, as the most recent contribuThe arrangements of tions to our knowledge of Thamugas.

private

dwelling-houses of more or
streets,

less

pretensions,

shops,

and passages can now be traced, and a general conception of the extent of the town obtained. And in an angle of the forum will be found, in fair condition, the public
paved
latrines,

with portions of their

fittings in excellent preservation.^

One

Emperors paid special attention to providing these sanitary conveniences, and regarded them as a source of revenue, much in the same way as our municipal authorities regard the underground arrangements of modern times, though of a more luxurious character. If we are to believe Suetonius, the idea of putting a tax upon urine originated with Vespasian at a time when the imperial treasury was running dry. Suetonius adds that Titus blamed his father for imposing such an
at least of the
'

objectionable tax.

nose a piece of the

Whereupon Vespasian applied to his son's money received in the first payment, and
"

asked him

if it

smelt badly.

No

" said Titus.


'

"

And

yet,"

said the Emperor, " it comes from urine." Judging from fragmentary remains scattered over the site, a variety of marbles appear to have been used for internal decoThe building stone mostly in use was a sandstone from ration. It was easily worked and well adapted for the adjacent hills. blue limestone was also largely employed, A rubble walling. paving of the principal streets, and for slabs especially for the
'

Vide

M. Albert

Ballu, Les

Rubies de Timgad,

p.

112.

Africa under Trajan


or panels that were to receive inscriptions.
limestone, in texture

99

In addition a white

and appearance like white marble, was reserved for columns and decorative features of public and other buildings of an ornate character. This excellent material was quarried some twenty miles distant. The inscriptions found at Timegad have an interest quite apart from the architectural remains. It seems to have been the custom here from the time of Trajan till the reign of Gordian III., A.D. 238-244, to record on marble or stone the names and titles of citizen benefactors, and consequently an unusually large number of dedicatory pedestals and slabs have been brought to light during the systematic exploration of the city. Here, for instance, is a dedication on a stone found in the forum to a citizen of renown, who had filled several offices
of the highest distinction.'

V COS LEG AVG PR PR PROVINCIAE NVMIDIAE PROCOS PROVINCIAE MACEDONIAE PRAEF AERARI MI LITARIS CVRATORI VIAE CLODIAE PRAETORIAE TRIBVNO
P lULIO IVNIANO MARTIALINO C

PLEBEI

QVAESTORI PROVINCIAE ASIAE PATRONO COLONIAE ET MVNI CIPI RESPVBLICA COLONIAE THAMVGADENSIVM DE CRETO DECVRIONVM
was also not unusual throughout the Empire to record made by magistrates and others on their election The amounts of such payments were to posts of distinction. fixed beforehand by statute, but they were generally far exceeded by donations of various kinds, sometimes for the erection of some
It

the payments

public work, at other times to defray the cost of a statue to be

placed in the forum.


Silvanus,

For

instance, a citizen

named

L.

Germeus

upon

whom

the dignity of augur had been conferred,

paid to the municipality the sum of 21,200 sesterces (170/.), and, in addition, gave a statue of Mercury and defrayed the expenses of several performances at the theatre. Another inscription, still standing on the west side of the forum, narrates the dedication of a shrine to Fortuna Augusta costing 4,400 sesterces,

by two women Annia Cara and Annia, the daughters of two


'

C.I.L.

No. 2392, LR.A. 1505

copied and explained by

De

la

Mare and

Renier.

loo

Roman

Africa
;

freedmen named Annius Hilarus and Annius Protus

and the

placing therein a statue of the goddess, the cost of which was

borne by the two parents, Annius Protus having bequeathed the sum of 22,000 sesterces for that purpose. To celebrate the inauguration, these two sisters paid for an entertainment at the town-hall. In removing the ground a short time ago round the Arch of Trajan,^ an interesting inscription tells us that L. Licinius Optatianus, on being appointed flamen for life, had promised statues costing 20,000 sesterces, which was far in excess of the sum that could have been legally demanded that he had added largely to the amount, and altogether had spent In addition, he had made presents to all the 35,000 sesterces. senators of Thamugas, had given an entertainment at the town-hall, and defrayed the cost of performances at the theatre. Another worthy Roman, named P. Julius Liberalis, chief magistrate of the town of Thysdrus (El-Djem), on being appointed flamen of Thamugas for life, during the seventeenth tribuneship of Caracalla, built for the use of the citizens one of two large reservoirs bearing the name of Lacus, to distinguish it from the adjoining one named Fons? Among the inscriptions of special interest, one discovered in the forum many years ago is exIt is a list of the principal clerks employed in the ceptional.^ legal department of the establishment of the commander of the province. There is the Princeps, who was a sort of general secretary of the provincial government, and was chief of the The Cornicularius was a chief clerk, but with larger powers staff. than are accorded to a similar functionary in modern times. He had control over the Court, both lawyers and suitors, and was the guardian of order he wrote down all decisions and sentences, signed them, and was responsible for their execution. The Commentariensis had the control of the prisoners and kept a registry'. It was his duty to transmit every month to the judge a list of persons arrested, giving their rank, age, and the particulars of the crime with which they were charged. The Scholastici were lawyers who assisted litigants in the Court.
; ;

Their rapacity was well known. They plundered the suitors and did not hesitate to receive payment in kind as well as The Exceptores assisted at hearings, took notes of in money.
'

Les Ruines de Timgad,


'

' I.R.A. No. p. 109. 1527 and C.I.L. No. 2391. Annuaire de Constantine, 1883, xxii. 403. M. PouUe descrip.

Africa under Trajan


what

loi

The Chartularii had transpired, and kept the registers. charge of the records, the library, and the written judicial ordinances. The Libellensis is supposed to have been a functionary

who had charge

of the chest containing papers, summonses, and other official documents {scrinimn libelloruni), and received appeals and addresses to the Emperor. He does not appear, from the position he occupies in the inscription, to have been an officer of importance, his duties being strictly clerical. No doubt he received tips from persons who frequented the Court
'
'

All these functionaries received allowances of food and wheat in accordance with their rank. These few inscriptions, selected from a large number which are fortunately still legible, throw some light on the prosperous
for general information.

condition of this remote African city during the second and


third centuries,

and give some idea of the public spirit which Thamugas was essentially a Roman animated its citizens. city, founded by Roman colonists under the auspices of the greatest of Roman Emperors. The disposition of the city, the public buildings, the arrangements of dwelling-houses, and the municipal regulations were all based on the same methods which prevailed in the metropolis. Many thousands of names have been brought to light, and they are all Roman names. Standing amidst this scene of desolation at the end of the nineteenth century this wilderness of stone and marble one is inclined to ask why such a city, with so large an accumula-

tion of treasure attesting a high degree of prosperity, should

have been erected


presents so

treeless region, where nature overcome, and offers so little encouragement to the cultivation of those gentle arts whic
in this wild

and

many

difficulties to

must have flourished here for at least three centuries. You climb the hill above the forum, and, sitting upon the ruined Those ravines, wall of the old theatre, the problem is solved. east and west, where the mountain waters unchecked now rush wildly into the plains, were once water-conduits. You see how they were confined by stone walls, where they supplied the public baths, how they passed under the main streets, and then, descending into the plain, contributed by a proper system of
irrigation to that fertility which, to the

was only another word


forum at your
feet,

for
its

abundance.

Roman husbandman, You see the little


its

with

pretty colonnade,

ranges of

102

Roman

Africa
its

pedestals of stone and marble and alabaster,

statues

and

busts of

men and women honoured


its

in their lives, its inscriptions

recording the lives of

citizens clear

and imperishable.

On

your right you see where the Roman multitude thronged the basilica. On your left stands pre-eminent the magnificent peristyle of the lordly Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, and a little lower down the beautiful Arch with its attendant groups of pedestals and statuary, and the Lambsesis road winding gracefully through it up the hillside. These bare mountain slopes were once forests of oak and ash. Those spots on the adjacent hills were cultivated gardens, the delight of the magnates of Thamugas. Beyond were the olive woods covering the spurs of the mountain, and below was the great plain, a sea of Thamugas must have been fruitful verdure or abundant grain.
a pleasant dwelling-place seventeen centuries ago.

No other city of equal importance in North Africa yet unearthed is so intimately associated with the name of Trajan. But the spade and the pickaxe are constantly at work and persistent enthusiasm, which is the keynote of archaeology, may
;

one day bring to


of

light his

honoured name

in

many

other parts

Roman

Africa.

I03

CHAPTER
A.D. 117-138

IV

AFRICA UNDER HADRIAN

It

is

not within the range of this outline of

Romano- African

history to

comment upon

the public or private career of any

of the Emperors, except where they are intimately associated with or relevant to the present subject of inquiry. The Caesars,

up to the accession of Hadrian, had governed their African dominions with varying success, but with little personal knowledge of the country or the native races held in subjection.' Some of them entirely neglected this wealthy appendage to the Empire, while others gave it their fostering care, and encouraged the spread of colonisation by wise edicts and just administration. The active rule and firm policy adopted by Julius and Augustus were the prelude to the establishment of a system of government inaugurated by Vespasian, and continued with beneficial results under a long line of emperors. To Trajan's successful rule was due the era of prosperity which dawned upon Africa at the commencement of the second century, and it remained for Hadrian to follow in the steps of his wise predecessor. Historians and commentators upon the career of this remarkable ruler have often regretted that so little has been recorded of this stirring epoch in Roman history. Contemporary writers are conspicuous for their silence, but it is fair to assume that numerous treatises of the time emanating from Rome, or well-established schools of literature in Carthage or the chief cities of Africa, have been lost or thoughtlessly destroyed. Suetonius takes rank as an illustrious writer in the early part of the second century but, with the exception of the lives of the twelve Caesars and some fragments of other compositions of less interest, his works no longer exist. As the confidential friend and secretary of the Emperor Hadrian and
;
'

Julius Csesar

was Consul only, but not Imperator, during

his African

campaign.

104
his

Roman

Africa

companion on so many journeys, his writings would have thrown much light on this period of history. At a later date we have Dion Cassius, who devoted ten years to collecting materials for his history of Rome, written in Greek and published in eighty books. His scholarship was of high repute, and it is a matter of regret that fragments only of the last twenty books have been handed down to us, the remainder having been mutilated or lost. As governor of Roman Africa in the reign of Alexander Severus, a.d. 220-235, he had unusual opportunities of recording his impressions of the country and its inhabitants. Amongst later authors .iElius Spartianus and Julius Capitolinus, who flourished in the days of Diocletian, may be regarded as the most reliable authorities of their time, portions of their principal works being embodied in the volumes
entitled

Scriptores Historice Augustce.

The

life

of Hadrian,

written

by the former, covers, it should be observed, no more than a dozen pages, and cannot be definitely classed as either
history or biography, but, as a study of character, throws considerable light

These authors were followed


distinction
in

upon the career of this very remarkable Emperor. by Aurelius Victor in the time of Constantius, and at a later period by Zosimus, a man of high
lustre to a long line of

army of Theodosius, adding considerable Roman historians and commentators. The list may be closed with the name of Xiphilin, a learned monk of the eleventh century, who devoted some fifteen pages to a study of Hadrian's career in his compendium of the last forty-five books of Dion Cassius. Occasional notes by other authors of
the

Fortunately varying repute should also be acknowledged. archaeology comes to our aid where written records fail, and, with the further assistance rendered by inscriptions on the coins
of his reign, we are able to obtain a fair idea of the intellectual as well as personal character of the renowned Hadrian. No less

than fifty-three coins commemorative of his visits to the various provinces of the Empire were issued during the latter part of Those relating to his African visits are seven in his reign. number, with the following letters on the reverse Africa ; Resti:

Adventui Aug. Africm ; Mauretania S.C.; Adventui Aug. MauretanicB S. C. ; Exercitus Mauretanicus S. C. ; They indicate the countries Restitutori Mauretanice S.C}
tutori Ajricce ;
'

J.

H. von Eckhel, Traiti iUmmtaire de Numismatique

(Paris,

1825),

i.

486-501.

Africa under Hadrian

105

visited, but do not give the dates. Perhaps no historian of modern times has more fully realised the versatile character of this gifted Emperor, or has portrayed with more faithful colours the Hadrian we are familiar with in bronze and marble, than Merivale. As pictured by him, Hadrian stands before us 'in face and figure eminently handsome. He reminds us more than any Roman before him of what we proudly style the thorough English gentleman, with shapely limbs and well-set head.

Refined, intelligent, an administrator rather than a statesman,

man

of taste rather than a philosopher.''

For analytical
different points
is

studies of Hadrian's career, written from

two

of view, the more extensive work of Gregorovius*


interest,

full

of

and the scholarly pages of Le Comte de Champagny'

portray in vivid colouring the_

many

distinct phases of a re-

markable character.
cities

We

learn from Dion,*

who

lived in the

early part of the third

century, that Hadrian

'visited

more

than any other ruler, and to all he was beneficent. He gave them harbours and aqueducts, corn and gold, buildings and honours of many kinds.'* It is not quite clear whether

Hadrian made two separate journeys into the interior of Africa, but that he traversed the country A.D. 125 is quite certain, the first visit having been apparently to the coast towns three years
previously.^ He appears to have moved from town to town, grasping the most complicated matters of civil and military administration, paying a special regard to the habits and requirements of the native races, and adding to the number of colonice and municipia, in accordance with the needs of localities.^

His
'

artistic

perception and

cultured taste favoured the emvii.

Merivale,

History of the Romans under the Empire,

493.

'

Ferd.

Gregorovius,

The Emperor Hadrian,


ii.

translated

by Mary Robinson

(London, 1898).
'
'

Le Comte de Champagny, Les Antonins,


Dion
Cassius, Ixix. 5.
c.

et seq.

'

Spartianus,

13.

In Africam

transiit

ac

multum

beneficiorum provinciis

Africanis attribuit.

'

Orelli, Inscript. Lat. Coll. 3564.

Conspicuous among the towns raised to a higher

state

was old Utica, hence-

forth designated

Colonia Julia /Elia Hadriana Augusta Utika. According to Spartianus, c. 20, Thense and Zama were also raised to the dignity of colonics, and Carth^e was renamed Hadrianopolis. There are many other towns mentioned as
legible,

having been favoured by Hadrian, but many of the inscriptions are scarcely
and. the dates uncertain.

io6

Roman

Africa

belHshment of towns with noble edifices, and, like Trajan, he held that the promotion of Art in every form redounded to the glory of the Empire and the welfare of the State. Roman Africa had enjoyed the blessings of peace for so long a period under the firm rule of Trajan that the colonists were little prepared for an uprising on the frontier soon after Hadrian had ascended the throne. The southern boundaries were well protected by military posts and large well-organised
bodies of troops
;

but the western

frontier,

presenting a long

tract of country without adequate defences

by Italian settlers, Moors of western Mauritania.


ance

and thinly peopled became the scene of an insurrection by

The suddenness of the disturbhave been anticipated by the Emperor and the Senate in Rome, who were acquainted with the ambitious designs of some of Trajan's most trusted generals. Among them was Lusius Quietus, a Moorish chief, who had raised a band of mercenaries and assumed a Roman name. The sculptures on the column of Trajan show clearly enough the costume and general appearance of the Moorish cavalry under his command in the Dacian war. The troopers are mounted on little horses without bridles,, and the costume consists of a short tunic gathered up at the shoulders and fastened by a brooch. A somewhat similar garment is still worn by Arabs. The hair is Each trooper carefully curled and dressed round the head. carries a small shield, and, from the bend of the arm and hand we may assume that he was armed with a lance or similar weapon, but this is now effaced. The military success which had attended Quietus had gained for him the appreciation of the Roman legions, and his services to Trajan in the Dacian and Parthian

may

wars, as well as in suppressing a revolt of the Jews in Palestine,

had made him the recipient of many honours. But he was As a military over-ambitious and dreamt of sovereignty. leader he may have had some claim to nomination as Trajan's successor, but as a statesman and ruler of mankind he had no
Fortunately for the Roman people, this cunning half-civilised Moor was not at headquarters when Trajan was lying on his death-bed, with scarcely strength enough to whisper
qualifications.

of his immediate successor. When the intelligence reached Quietus that the lot had fallen upon Hadrian, his resolution was formed, and henceforth he bided his opportunity
the

name

Africa under Hadrian


to

107

throw off the Roman yoke. The Moor had not long to wait, Hadrian removed him from command in Syria and appointed him governor of Mauritania. Here he instigated an uprising of the Moors with partial success, and, subsequently being accused of conspiring to assassinate the Emperor, was put to death by order of the Senate. This Moorish insurrection was of long duration, but was finally quelled by the military skill of Marcius Turbo, combined with the enthusiasm aroused in the Roman legions by the presence of the Emperor. This was Hadrian's first appearance in Africa, and it was natural that the Senate should attribute the suppression of the rebellion and the success of Roman arms to the skill of their distinguished ruler. Festivals were ordered, and coins were struck in his honour as Restorer of Mauritania, and in gratitude for a revival
for

of security for the colonists of

Roman Africa. ADVENTVI AVG MAVRETANIAE EXERCITVS MAVRETANICVS RESTITVTORI MAVRETANIAE'

There
even
in

is

no town of importance
its

in Africa
;

which

is

intimately

associated with Hadrian as

founder

but the whole colony>

utility

the present day, bears numerous traces of works of and adornment carried out by his instructions for the

benefit

of

the

provinces.

An

inscription

informs us that
that he put

Hadrian
in order

visited the

camp

of the third Augustan legion, which

constituted the main

body of the African army, and

the military organisation of the country. The record of this visit has been preserved on two pedestals discovered at

Lambessa many years

ago.

One

inscription runs thus

^
:

IMP CAESA

TRAIANO HADRIANO AVG


FORTISSIMO LIBERALISSIMOQ

Imperatori Caesari,Traiano Hadriano Augusto,fortissimo liberalissimoque dedicante Publio Cassio Secundo legato Augusti pro pratore Veterani legionis tertice Augusta qui milttare casperunt.

DEDICANTE
P

CASSIO SECVNDO

LEG AVG PR PR VETERANI LEG ^ AVG QVI MILITAR

COEPERVN

On
'

the
vi.

faces of another pedestal bearing a


198
;

monumental
copied by Renier.

Eckhel,

an inscription on a coin.

''

I.R.A. No.

io8
column

Roman

Africa

is inscribed the Emperor's address to the legion, covering no less than sixty-three lines. After reviewing the

troops he alludes in eulogistic terms to the excellence of their mancEuvres and the handling of their weapons, and praises the

arrangements of the camp and the admirable construction of the entrenchments. Among the works of utility associated with his name, the maintenance and extension of the great highways deserve record. Upon a milliary column found in the neighbourhood of Carthage, we read that Hadrian ordered the soldiers of the third legion to pave the military road between Carthage and Theveste,^ and to construct a road from Rusicada
(Philippeville) to Cirta (Constantine).^

IMP CAESAR
DIVI NERVAE NEPOS DIVI TRAIANA PARTHICI F

EX AVCTORITATE
IMP CAESARIS TRAIANI HADRI

TRAIANVS HADRIANVS

AVG

PONT

MAX TRIE

AN AVG PONTES VIAE NOVAE RVSI


CADENSIS RP CIR

POT VII COS III VIAM A CARTHAGINE THEVESTEN STRAVIT PER LEG III AVG P METILIO SECVNDO LEG AVG PR PR The latter inscription gives

TENSIVM SVA PECV NIA FECIT SEX IVLIO MAI ORE LEG AVG LEG fll AVG PR PR
us to understand that the work
the

was paid
will

for out of the imperial treasury.

The one monumental work with which


be always associated
is

name of Hadrian
to the cities

the great aqueduct which brought


there
is any Empire

the waters of
of Carthage

Mount Zaghouan and Mount Djougar and Tunis.' It is a question whether


in so

Roman structure now standing within


which bears
line of piers
'

the vast area of the

high a degree the impress of imperial

will,

or

attests so visibly the strength of

Roman
'i

character, as this stately

and

arches.

'

The

waters flow to Carthage,' says


f
-

-'-^ Shaw's Travels in Barbary, p. S73f * I.R.A. No. 2296, copied by Renier. Vide De la Mare, Explor. de VAlgirie. Also Letrorme, J'ournal des Savants (1847), p. 624. ' According to Frontinus (de Aquad. Urb. Rom.), who was for some years curator aquarum in the time of Vespasian, A.D. 74, the first aqueduct constructed by the Romans in Italy was B.C. 231. The Aqtia Trajana, which supplied the Janiculum

in the Transtiberine region, bears the dates A.D.

10 and

1 1 1

on coins of gold,

silver,

and bronze.

The curator aquarum was an officer of great dignity and was appointed for life. The first was Marcus Agrippa (Front. 98-99), who held the office till his death, Middleton, Ancient Rome in 1885, p. 453.) B.C. 12. (J. H.

Africa under Hadrian


El-Bekri,
'

109

on ranges of arches placed one above the other, This stupendous work was conceived by Hadrian, and commenced, it is said, after his second visit to Africa. There is reason to believe that it was completed as far as Zaghouan during his reign, a length of about thirty-five miles, but the extension to Mount Djougar was not finished till the reign of Septimius Severus. A coin bearing his effigy was struck in the mint at Carthage, having on the reverse a figure of Astarte, as the tutelary genius of that city, seated on a lion in front of a spring of water issuing from a rock. The most of across the gigantic portion the aqueduct was that Oued Melian, El-Bekri. fair preservation mentioned by It was in some sixty years ago, but, a new bridge over the river being necessary in consequence of increasing traffic between Tunis and Zaghouan, the piers and superstructure were wantonly overthrown to provide materials for its foundation. The bridge might have been constructed a few hundred yards higher up, and this noble monument left intact. It need scarcely be stated that the modern bridge exhibits the usual combination of iron and stone, and has nothing in extenuation to recommend it. The great aqueduct, we are told, was a work of necessity. A cry of distress from Carthage had reached Rome. For five consecutive years no rain had fallen in that part of Africa. The cisterns were empty, the land was parched, the harvest was failing, and the grainships for Rome were lying idle in the harbours. There was an abundance of corn in African granaries to meet the immediate demands of Roman colonists and the native population but for years past Rome, as well as the chief towns in Italy, had looked to the other side of the Mediterranean for their principal supply, and, as the long wars under Trajan had withdrawn a large able-bodied population from
reaching even to the clouds.'
;

became a matter of grave consideration by the Senate at Rome. There is no need, therefore, to be surprised at Hadrian's desire for a continuance of good harvests in the African provinces. The gods favoured
agricultural pursuits, the failure of the crops

him, for
fell
'

we

are told

by Spartian that on the day when

the

Emperor

country the clouds gathered, the rain Little wonder in abundance, and men's hearts rejoiced.'
set foot in the
in Africam venit,
(Spart.

Quando

idea ab Africanis dileclus est.

ad adventum ejus, Had. xxii.)

post

quinquennium

pluit, atque

no
his sojourn in the land

Roman

Africa

then that the peasantry regarded Hadrian as a deity, and that was marked by unusual gladness
!

The system

of rain-water storage, which the Carthaginians

had inherited from the Phoenicians, and had brought to perfection, was continued by the Romans in rebuilding Carthage. The great reservoirs which El-Bekri calls the cisterns of the demons were restored for the service of the great aqueduct and another range of cisterns, called the smaller cisterns, of which there were eighteen, each measuring 93 feet by 19 feet 8 inches and 27 feet 6 inches to the crown of the vault, capable of holding upwards of four million gallons, were built for the storage of rain-water. These cisterns are built with rubble stone and remarkably hard mortar, and are coated internally with
' '

thin cement, apparently


cisterns

made with marble


preservation

dust.

Some

of these

are

still

in

fair

and are used by the

peasantry.
ruins.

sions

The larger cisterns of the Carthaginians are in Shaw says there were twenty in his time, the dimenbeing 350 feet by 2$ feet. They were supplied by an
'

aqueduct from Zaghouan, and the channel or duct was


wide.'

3 feet

At

the angles, as well as in the centre of their length,

filters domed over. Even in their present ruined condition the forms of these gigantic reservoirs are easily traced. For a long period the Romans adopted the methods of

there were circular

their predecessors, constructing their cisterns in long parallel

with very thick rubble walls and rubble vaulting. According to M. Daux and other investigators, there were covered galleries more than six feet wide on each side for the purpose of protecting from the sun the inhabitants who came to draw water. In the plains the cisterns were frequently of polygonal form, built with rubble and strengthened by counterforts within and without. Those of a large size were not covered. In some cases a second basin of rectangular shape was added, vaulted over, but with a flat roof externally, and with openings
basins
at intervals to facilitate the lowering of pitchers into the water.

A range of cisterns of this form may still be seen on the road between Susa and Kairouan. There is another, mentioned and illustrated by Daux, on the road to Aquse Regise, the celebrated warm baths frequented by the kings of Numidia, at the junction of the road leading by Avidus and Sarsura to Thysdrus. A reproduction of the drawing will be found in MM, Perrot and

Africa under Hadrian


Chipiez's History of

1 1

Art

in Phcenicia.

These authors ascribe

the two circular basins to the Carthaginians, and the square


filter

to their conquerors.

reservoir in North Africa is outside Here are two large basins of polygonal shape, the larger being 414 feet in diameter and 20 feet deep, having in the centre the substructure of a pavilion, which was probably of an ornate character and enriched with sculpture. Around the smaller basin is a series of niches. Communicating with the larger reservoir are two parallel basins or filters, formerly covered by galleries or arcades. The walls of the

The most remarkable

the walls of Kairouan.

great basin are constructed with rubble stones in


sides

alternate

courses of ten inches and four inches, and strengthened on both

by

counterforts symmetrically placed at intervals, semi-

circular

on plan and
is

at the top, like a niche reversed.

The
This

inner faces of the basins are coated with thin cement.

extraordinary work
Africa at the

attributed

by the Arabs, on

the sole

authority of El-Bekri, to the Aghlabites,

who

ruled over North

commencement

of the ninth century.

In

all

pro-

bability these reservoirs were built during a late period of the

Empire, and were subsequently restored by the Arabs. Shaw us that the cisterns built by Sultan ben Iglit in several parts of Tunisia are of equal solidity with the celebrated ones at Carthage, and continue firm to the present day. The plaster is made of the following proportions one part of sand, two parts of wood-ashes, and three of lime which, after being well mixed, is beaten incessantly for three days and three nights with wooden mallets, sprinkling a little oil and water alternately This is chiefly till the plaster becomes of equal consistency. used in making arches, cisterns, and the terraces or tops of houses. Their pipes were let into each other, and jointed with tow and lime beaten together with oil only and without water. Both these compositions quickly assume the hardness of stone, and are impervious to water.' There is little doubt that these constructive methods were traditional, and originated with the
tells
'
:

Phcenician
'

settlers.'
in the

The Romans
'mi-

time of the elder Pliny

knew

that water found

its

own

level

(Pliny,

II, xxxi. 57),

and were acquainted with the


is at

principle of the siphon.

these siphons one has been noted at Cirta (Constantine), others at Lyons and in
phylia.

Of Pam-

The finest and

the most daring

Alatri, B.C. 150, capable of supporting a

1 1

Roman

Africa
life,

Cisterns and wells play an important part in Oriental


especially in a dry and thirsty land, where the rainfall
is

less

regular than in more temperate zones, where the river beds are bare the greater part of the year, and where the waters of the lakes are more or less impregnated with salt. The storage of water thus became a science at a remote period, and the paving

of streets probably originated with the necessity of storing the


rainfall in as

pure a condition as possible.

Cisterns were con-

structed with great care under every house, and public reservoirs,
into which the street waters were conveyed, were built in every town and maintained by the municipalities. Under the Romans the reservoirs were kept free from impurities, and general regulations to ensure cleanliness were strictly enforced.

In later times,

under the irregular rule of both Moors and Arabs, these sanitary The custom of building traditions were wholly neglected. cisterns under ordinary dwelling-houses was still preserved, but public reservoirs, the pride of Carthaginian and Roman, were thoughtlessly abandoned. In their place we find throughout the country open ponds fouled by accumulation of mud, without any attempt at maintenance or purification. The Roman cisterns They are nearly all of in North Africa are a remarkable feature. the same type, consisting of a series of vaulted chambers side by side, the number of chambers varying with the sizes of the towns. Those at Sicca (El-Kef) are a good example of work of this kind, and, though used at present for other purposes, are fortunately in excellent preservation. There are no less than thirteen of these chambers, each about 90 feet long, 23 feet wide, and 20 feet high, and the original cement lining is in some parts quite smooth and perfect. From an inscription on a marble altar discovered near Lambessa in 1866,' we have a graphic account of the difficulties
"

experienced, A.D. 152, by the citizens of Saldae (Bougie) in obtaining a supply of water from a spring some fourteen miles
distant.

We

are introduced to the governor of the province,


;

the hydraulic engineer, and the contractor for the work


The Romans were unacquainted with

and

pressure of 10 atmospheres.

cast iron,

and no

pipe, except of cast iron, could have

supported the pressure of such volumes of

water.
'

(Sig. Lanciani,

Ancient Rome, p. S9-)

Translated by Signor Lanciani, Ancient Rome, p. 6r.

Africa under Hadrian

113
to the

we

learn that an expert

named Nonius Datus, attached


had
visited Saldse

third

Augustan legion

at Lambsesis,

by the

desire of Varius Clemens, governor of Mauritania,

and had pre-

We are pared the necessary plans for executing the work. further informed that the duct for conveying the water had to pass through an adjacent mountain by means of a tunnel. The
contractor,
it

appears,

commenced

his

borings at both ends,

and, whether through carelessness or neglect to follow the lines

and levels furnished by Nonius Datus, found that he was making two tunnels instead of one. The engineer was consequently sent for, and, on the fulfilment of his mission, presented After the following Report to the magistrates of Saldas leaving my quarters (at Lamb^sis) I met with brigands on my way, who robbed me even of clothes and wounded me severely. I succeeded, however, in reaching Saldae, where I was met by the governor, who, after allowing me some rest, took me to the tunnel. There I found everybody sad and despondent. They had given up all. hopes that the two opposite sections of the tunnel would meet, because each section had already been excavated beyond the middle of the mountain, and a junction had not been effected. As always happens in these cases, the fault was attributed to the engineer for not having taken all
:

'

precautions to secure the success of his work.

What

could

began by surveying and taking the levels of the mountain. I marked most carefully the axis of the tunnel I drew plans and sections of the whole work, across the ridges and handed them over to Petronius Celer, at that time governor of Mauritania. As an extra precaution, I summoned the contractor and his workmen, and began the excavations in their presence, with the help of two gangs of experienced veterans, viz. a detachment of marine infantry {classicos milites) and a detachment of Alpine troops {gtzsati). What more could I have done ? Well, during the four years I was absent at Lambaesis, expecting every day to hear the glad tidings of an abundant water supply at Saldse, the contractor and his assistant had committed blunder after blunder. In each section of the tunnel they had diverged from the straight line, each towards the right, and had I waited a little longer before coming, Saldse would have possessed two tunnels instead of one.' We learn that Nonius Datus, having discovered the mistake, caused the
have done better ?
I
;

114
two diverging arms

Roman

Africa

to be united by a transverse channel, and that the arrival of the waters of Ain-Seur was celebrated with

extraordinary rejoicings, in the presence of the governor, Varius Clemens, and of the engineer. This little episode is of special interest in our own days, when the earth is being tunnelled in
all

directions for the service of mankind.

aqueduct of Carthage has been actual duct or channel is 3 feet wide and 6 feet high, arched over, and with openings at intervals for inspection and ventilation. The springs from the two mountains were (and are still, I believe) capable of supplying 81 gallons per second, or upwards of eight millions of
total length of the

The

estimated at 54 miles.

The

gallons in twenty-four hours.


ferent portions.

The

construction varies in dif-

commenced, nearest to Zaghouan, in the plains of the Oued-Melian, is beautifully built with courses of finely cut stone, each course being 20 inches high. The sizes of the piers average 12 feet wide and 15 feet
first

That which was

and the spans of the arches average 15 feet. A roll moulding 20 inches thick forms the impost. The voussoirs of the arches are carefully cut, and the actual duct above these is formed entirely with rubble. The most interesting portion of
thick,

the aqueduct, as a building construction,

is

that

across the

Medjerda
is

plain, within 10 miles of Tunis.

It is

made of what

known

as pis^, being simply the clayey soil of the district,

mixed with a certain portion of lime, and built up in sections, after the manner of modern concrete construction. This method
of building
is

attributed to the Phoenicians.

Hannibal, during

his long sojourn in Spain, raised his fortifications in this way,

wherever the material was available. Pliny speaks of pise with rapture on account of its durability and the ease with which it can be put together, giving the name oi formacei to walls of this kind, as made in a forma or frame.' It is quite possible that the Carthaginians found this mode of building prevalent among the earlier inhabitants of North Africa and transmitted
it

to their successors.

The

piers in this portion of the aqueduct

' Quid? Non in Africa Hispaniaque ex terra parietes quos appellant formaceos, quoniam in forma circumdatis utritnque duabus tabulis inferciuntur verius quam
,

struuntur, avis durant,


firmiores ?

incorrupti imbribus,

ventis,

ignibus,

otnnique

ccEmento

Special etiamnunc speculas Hannibalis Hispania terrenasque turres jugis


(Pliny, Bist.

montium

impositas.

Nat. xxxv. 14.)

Africa under Hadrian

115

are 13 feet wide and nearly 15 feet thick, the spans of the arches being 1 5 feet. The foundations consist of several courses

of cut stone, and the superstructure


8 inches high.

is

built

up

in sections 3 feet

On

the upper surface of each section, channels


3 inches
five

6 inches square and 2 feet of a mould. There were

long are

left

by the

insertion

such channels on the faces, and In these were laid strips of three generally in the thickness. olive-wood i inch or more thick and 6 inches wide. When the material was well consolidated and dry, strong mortar 2^ inches
thick, containing a large

admixture of wood-ashes, was

laid

over the entire surface,

filling

up the channels.

Wooden pegs

were driven in at intervals in order to ascertain and secure a perfectly level bed for the next section, and so on up to the summit sixty or more feet from the ground. There is a course of cut stone at the springing of the arches, and the voussoirs are 2 feet on the face, but of two or more stones in depth. The stability of this form of construction is shown by the excellent condition of portions of the aqueduct now standing, although they have been subjected to repeated earthquakes. In some parts the Arabs, with their usual destructiveness, have removed more than half the stones forming the bases of these gigantic piers without affecting the superstructure, and in others whole piers have fallen or been thrown down, leaving the duct poised in mid-air without apparent support. In an article on Pis^^ written some years ago, it is stated that the walls of most of the houses on the banks of the Rhine were built of nothing but earth, with planks of wood laid at intervals in the body of the material, care being taken that the ends of the planks were not exposed to the air. In taking down old houses oi pise the wood has been found to be perfectly sound, and in some cases the original colour had been retained. The rich traders of Lyons, we are told, had no other way of
building their country-houses.

The entire aqueduct of Carthage, as the work of the infidel, would have been destroyed by the Arabs centuries ago if some Eastern story-teller had not woven a legend in its favour, and
attributed
its

construction to a true follower of the Prophet.

The

story says that, under the Carthaginian rule, a neighbour-

ing king,

who was

a good
'

Mohammedan,

fell

in love

with the
I

Rees's Cychfadia,

art. Pise.

ii6

Roman

Africa

daughter of a Carthaginian senator and demanded her in marriage. Consent was given on the condition that he brought the waters of Zaghouan and Djougar to Carthage. The work was long and tedious, and at the moment of completion the girl died. A younger sister stepped forward to take her place.

The work was finished and the marriage was celebrated. The source of the main supply from Mount Zaghouan
at a short distance from the

lies

modern town of Zaghouan, which

replaced a
tanus.

Roman
this

village or settlement probably called Zeugi-

But

is

purely conjectural, learned archaeologists

having given the name of Villa Magna to the old Roman town. There are the remains of a triumphal arch, which Shaw says was decorated with sculpture, but absence of inscriptions deprives

monument of any interest. The name of this town be synonymous with Zeugitania, the title by which Africa Provincia was known at the time of the Roman invasion. Shaw says that the boundary of the province was at the foot of the mountain now called Zaghouan, and adds that the Zygantes mentioned by Herodotus were the presumed inhabitants of this country. The waters of Zaghouan are not only renowned for their purity, but for certain properties useful in dyeing. At the present time a considerable industry has arisen in the dyeing of the red caps worn in Mohammedan countries, called chachias,
this ruined

may

in

Egypt

tarboosh,

and

in

Turkey

fez.

But the

special interest
is

in the place, in connection with the reign of Hadrian,


in the

centred

monumental remains of a small temple constructed under the spur of the mountain, to mark the source of the water supply and to commemorate the achievement of a magnificent undertaking. The temple is on a small scale, and is placed in
the centre of the arc of a semicircular colonnade, the entire

composition bearing some resemblance to a


seen from the proscenium, or recalling, on a

Roman
much
;

theatre as

smaller scale,

the portico of St. Peter's at Rome with its colonnades. The width of this colonnade at Zaghouan is 1 5 feet the columns in front were of the Corinthian order, the roof was vaulted, and the back wall resting against a lower slope of the mountain was In each alternate interbuilt with finely cut blocks of stone. columniation was a niche for a statue. The total number of intercolumniations was twenty-four, twelve on each side the The entire area in front, 94 feet wide and central temple.

'^'

^
"' c? *
!

III
*

"Z

-4

o X o < N

o
o

Africa under Hadrian

117

86 feet long, was paved with large flat stones. The spring flowed under this area, the water passing into a basin of the form of a double horseshoe, to which there was access by a
flight

of steps at each end.

which served to
great aqueduct.

irrigate the adjacent land

Here commenced the conduits and to supply the

This ruined structure, originally designed with its own apart from its charming position, and, like many other monumental remains in North Africa, is a pleasant memorial of a great people long since passed away. The columns are overthrown, the niches are empty, and the carved capitals have been removed. They may be found, as usual in this country, in some neighbouring mosque, misapplied, wedged up to support a flimsy Arab roof and coated with inevitable whitewash. Modern Tunis, it may be observed, is still supplied with water from the same source, but through a more prosaic channel than the stately duct which once led to

much

care,

has beauty of

Roman Carthage. Among other cities in North Africa favoured by the Emperor's notice was Leptis Magna. An inscription on a block of marble
discovered by Hebenstreit in 1732 records his
the expense of Q. Servilius Candidus.' A.D. 119 or 121.

name

in connec-

tion with an aqueduct to the city from the river Cinyphus, at

The date would be

IMP CAES DIVI TRAIANI PARTHICI FIL DIVI NERVAE

NEPOTE TRAIANO COS III AVG PONT MAX TRIE POT Q SERVILIVS CANDIDVS SVA IMPENSA AQVAM QVAESITAM ET ELEVATAM IN COLONIAM PERDVXIT

HADRIANO

bearing the

The comparative paucity of inscriptions in Roman name of Hadrian, is somewhat remarkable.

Africa,

With

the exception of Septimius Severus, an African by birth, no

emperor devoted so much personal attention to the needs of the Roman colonists, or strove by such peaceful methods to attract the native populations to the ways of civilisation, as
Hadrian.

And

yet the records of his active career in Africa

are few, and

numerous.

monumental remains bearing his name are not No period of the Empire was more favourable to
'

C.i.L. No.

1 1.

ii8

Roman

Africa

the promotion of art or the encouragement of the adornment

of

cities

than the later years of his reign.


arts, especially
it

Since the time of

Tiberius the

that of architecture, had been refor Trajan, as

trograding, and

remained

an imperial builder,

to give an impetus to the erection of public works both in

Rome and
of imperial

the provinces, which should express the magnificence

rule. Trajan cannot be regarded as a lover of art, but rather as a believer in art as an instrument of power and as an expression of grandeur and nobility and though he is
;

credited with having rebuilt half the


yield the

Roman

world, he

must

palm

to his successor as the greatest of building

The many-sided character of Hadrian's career has proved an interesting study to the commentators of his time. His success as a peaceful administrator was partly due to an inherent desire to govern by negotiation rather than by force but it may be attributed in a great measure to his intimate acquaintance with the habits and wants of the various races he was called to rule over. This was especially the case with the natives of his African provinces, who enjoyed a continuance of the
emperors.
prosperity secured to
that

them by Trajan.

It is to

Hadrian's credit

he lightened taxation, promoted education, maintained thirty legions in different parts of the Empire, and left to his successor a well-filled treasury. His career as an artist must be taken seriously, for he not only had artistic perception of a high order, but he made himself a master of the technicalities of the various forms of art. The indulgence of building propensities, which were displayed principally in Rome, in his country retreats, and on the outskirts of Athens, formed the chief enjoyment of Wherever the Emperor went he left .some conspicuous his life. mark of his taste in architectural art, and, consequently, whenever the spade of the explorer has brought to light the name of Hadrian on some inscribed slab, we may expect to find some ruined monumental building that had been raised in his honour. There are many stories handed down to us of his controversies with Apollodorus, the great architect of his time, and the designer of the chief public buildings of his predecessor, but they should be accepted with reserve. That Hadrian was vain of his intellectual and artistic powers, and that Apollodorus was

proud of his skill and of a long succession of imperial favours, is beyond controversy. But it is difficult to believe that blunt

Africa under Hadrian


criticism of the

119

Emperor's designs (probably justifiable from an be followed by an order of Hadrian to put Apollodorus to death, and that his instructions were carried out forthwith. This is the story as told by Dion, who gives no authority for the statement. Hadrian, we are told, submitted to Apollodorus his design for a Temple of Venus to be erected in Rome, and the architect sent word to the Emperor that the proposed edifice was not high enough nor large enough that in height it was not important enough for such a thoroughfare as the Via Sacra. The proposed statues were too large and not proportioned to the height of the building, and if the goddesses should feel inclined to rise from their sitting posture, the roof would hinder them.' Spartian makes no mention of this tale, nor does it find a place in the works of
architect's point of view) should
'

other Latin authors


It is satisfactory to
little

who

treat of this period of

Roman

history.'

note that so

many

writers of repute give

credence to it, regarding the legend as having originated with some court gossip. Or it might have been the invention of Suetonius, the Emperor's secretary, who was dismissed from
imperial service for disrespectful behaviour to the

Empress

Sabina.

Few empresses have left a slighter record than the wife of Hadrian. Her marriage was a matter of imperial policy, and does not appear to have been based on affection on either side
little we know of Sabina's public and private life gives evidence of amiability and benevolence. From the day that she entered the palace of the Caesars to her decease, some two

The

years before the death of the Emperor, her time passed uneventfully, taking little interest in Hadrian's incessant travels, and

bearing with equanimity a harshness of conduct to which she became accustomed with advancing years. Whether Sabina. ever accompanied the Emperor in either of his journeys through the African provinces is doubtful, but an inscription found many years ago on a marble pedestal at Saldae (Bougie) renders it
probable.

The

dedication
^
:

is

to the Empress,

and

is

thus inter-

preted by Hiibner

DivcB Sabina Augusta coloni colonia JuUcb Salditance decreto decurionum, pecunia publica fosuerunt
'

Vide Ferd. Gregorovius, The


iv.

Emperor Hadrian,

b.

ii.

c.

xxv.

Duruy, Histoire

des Somains,
^

395. Acad. Berlin, Societas Regia Scientiarum, /Emilius Hitbner, 1885.

I20

Roman

Africa

CHAPTER V
AFRICA UNDER ANTONINUS PIUS
A.D. 138-161

Antoninus during an uninterrupted His correct name was Titus Aurelius Fulvus Boionius Arrius Antoninus, which was changed on his assuming the purple to Titus ^lius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus.^ Rome was then at peace with the rest of the world, and the provinces were reaping the benefits arising from forty years of wise and beneficent government under Trajan and his successor. Slight disturbances arose on the Moorish
fortune favoured
reign

Good

of twenty-three years.

frontier at the

commencement of Antonine's

career, but they

do not appear to have affected general prosperity, nor to have retarded the work of colonisation in that direction. At subsequent periods of Roman history the Moors caused an infinity of trouble, and, on one occasion, succeeded in evading the Roman army and encamping for a short time before the walls of
Carthage. Pausanias, referring to this particular disturbance, says that the Moors form the largest population of the Libyans, who are nomads like the Scythians, and are very difficult to
'

overcome. They travel about on horseback accompanied by Antoninus chased their wives and families, and not in vehicles. them from all parts of Africa held by the Romans and drove them back to the Atlas Mountains.'^ The record of this Emperor's uneventful reign of twenty -three years is almost a Dion's manuscript is unfortunately lost, and Capitolinus blank. devotes only half a dozen pages to his career. Xiphilin, in his abridgment of Dion, has nothing but praise for this gentle peace-loving ruler, and Sextus Aurelius Victor, a reliable author
of the fourth century, closes his brief memoir by telling us that

Vide Guerin, Voyage en Tunisie, Paris, 1862, Inscript. No. 19, vol.
vol.

i.

p. 100,

and No. 183,


'

p.

411.
lib, viii.

Pausanias, Arcadia,

Africa under Antoninus Pius


'

121

without making any war at all Antoninus ruled the world for three-and-twenty years by his own authority, insomuch that all kings, nations, and people did stand in awe of him, loving him withal. They rather esteemed him to be their Father and Patron than their Lord and Emperor, and with one consent they
all
if

sought his decision in their controversies, looking on him as he had slid down from heaven.' Unlike Hadrian, whose life reads like one long day of incessant locomotion, Antonine scarcely travelled beyond the outskirts of Rome, dividing his time between duties in the Senate-house and homely pleasures at his country seat at Lorium, some ten miles distant from the capital on the Appian Way. It is true that such a career, undisturbed by wars abroad or the troubles of factious intrigues at home, has afforded few materials for biographers, but it has led historians to consider how far so uneventful a reign of three-and-twenty years contributed to the progress of the

Empire
is

in the

provinces as well

as in Italy.

In Africa there

little

to indicate the direct

influence of Antonine's rule.

Dedicatory inscriptions are not

wanting, and, strange to say, the most remote towns, whose


inhabitants were unacquainted with the Emperor's personality,

bear testimony to the present day of their goodwill towards so

benign a ruler. At CEa, for instance, the modern Tripoli, may be seen on a ruined arch of great magnificence a muchworn inscription recording the commencement of this monumental edifice in the reign of Antonine, and of its dedication when completed to his joint successors M. Aurelius and L. Verus, during the consulate of Scipio CEfritus.^ The grandeur of this arch, which is entirely of white marble and embellished with an unusual amount of sculpture, is specially noteworthy as indicating the high esteem in which the Emperor was held by his Such a work would occupy many years. It distant subjects. was evidently not completed at the |time of Antonine's death, and there was nothing unreasonable in dedicating the monument at a later date to the succeeding Emperors. In one of the defiles of the Aures mountains, known as Khanga-Tigaminin,
still

may
'

still

be seen the old familiar lettering cut

in the solid rock,

Sir R.

Lambert
it

Playfair, Travels in the Footsteps


fair

of Bruce,
its

p.

280.

A drawing

of this arch, as

appeared in 1766, gives a

idea of

magnificence.

122

Roman

Africa

recording the completion of an important public road during


his reign.^

IMP

CAES

AELIO

Imperatore Ccesare Tito

P P rm ET M AVRELIO CAESARE II COS PER PRASTINA MESSALINVM LEG AVG PR PR VEXIL LEG VI FERR VIA

.

HADRIANO AVG PIO

ANTON INO

^lio Hadriano Antonino Augusta, Pio, Pater patna quartum et Marco Aurelio
Casare secundum, consiilibus per Prastinam Messalinum legatum Augusti, proprcetore
vexillatio legionis Sextce Ferrates

FECIT
It will

viatn fecit.

be observed that the sixth legion Ferrata referred to

was employed in opening up communication across the Aures by means of a military road. This legion formed no part of the army of Africa, but was probably sent thither by the Emperor at a time when the third legion Augusta was engaged in defending the western frontiers against irruptions by the Moors. Some fifty years ago the late General St. Arnaud was conducting a column through this identical pass, and when he had reached the summit and looked down on the Great Desert stretched at his feet, he remarked in the enthusiasm of the moment, We
'

we are the first soldiers to pass through Strange error There by the mountain track, on the face of the imperishable rock, was the record of a nation long since passed away a memorial of a Roman legion who had bivouacked on that very spot more than seventeen centuries
flatter ourselves

may

this region.'

ago.

Among
made of an
as Sbeitla.

other dedications to Antonine mention should be


inscription

on the great gateway forming the approach

to the principal temples at Sufetula in the far south,

now known

This remote town has played an important part in the making of Roman Africa, and was the scene of the great heroic struggle at a later date between Christian and Moslem
obscurity,

supremacy in that country. Its early history is veiled in and its name is supposed by Bruce and other travellers to have been derived from the Sufetes, the title held by all magistrates in towns dependent upon Carthage.'' The modern
for
'

I.R.A. No. 4360. on


several

Henzen, Orelliana
inscriptions.

Collect, vol.

iii.

No. 6621.

'

The Roman duumvirs

called themselves sufetes in Punic towns, the

word

appearing

Vide Guerin,

vol.

i.

p.

429

also

C.I.L.

No. 797.

D H

<

o w
H K H

z;

O H W U
Is

<

H
W

Africa under Antoninus Pius

123

of the place, Sbeitla, is an Arab corruption. We learn from the Itinerary of Antonine that it is twenty-five miles from Sufes, changed by the Arabs into Sbiba a city of renown in pre-Roman times. We arrived at Sbiba,' says El-Bekri in the eleventh century, 'a town of great antiquity, built of stone, and containing a college and several baths. The whole country around is covered with gardens, and produces a saffron of the greatest excellence.' Sbiba is now a wilderness. The soil is covered with rough herbage, the once flourishing city is now

name

'

home of the jackal, and human habitations are not to be found within a radius of twenty miles. What a change from the lordly days when Sufes took high rank among the earlier Roman settlements, placed under the protection of Hercules, and described as splendidissimus et felicissimus ordo Coloni(2 SufetanceX In the Epistles of St. Augustine we learn something of its later career, when Paganism and Christianity were striving for the mastery, and there is a record of sixty inhabitants of the town suffering martyrdom for having overthrown a statue, of its protecting deity.^ But Sufes has long since passed away, and the few travellers who explore this trackless region must build up from their imagination the stonebuilt city with its pleasant gardens, and the hillsides clothed with timber and perennial verdure. Sufetula, on the contrary, still exists as one of the most interesting places in old Byzacene a city of ruins in a beautiful country, once remarkable for its abundant supply of water, the sweetness of its climate, and the wealth of its inhabitants. It was entirely surrounded by gardens and orchards, and the productiveness of the soil is apparent Sufetula appears to have been in a flourishin the present day. ing condition during the reigns of Antonine and Marcus Aurelius, and, judging by inscriptions of a later date that are still legible, it must have enjoyed great prosperity long after the fall of the Roman Empire. Of its earlier career we have no record, but its last days, tinged with the romance so dear to Arab writers, have furnished abundant material for the exercise of the From Ibri Khaldoun we learn that in the year imagination. A.D. 647 the Khalif Othman determined to effect the conquest of Africa, and that, having raised a large army in Egypt, he despatched it to Tripoli under the command of his brother,
the

'

This event

is still

recorded in the Romish calendar for the month of August.

124

Roman

Africa

Abdulla Ibn Saad. At that time Gregorius was governor of Africa, under the nominal suzerainty of the Emperor of the East but, finding his popularity increasing among the native races, he threw off the Byzantine yoke and proclaimed himself an independent sovereign. His dominions, according to the same authority, extended from Tripoli to Tangier and Sufetula, his capital, acquired increased renown from the presence of so powerful a ruler. It was not long before the Mohammedan general, with his well-trained army of some 40,000 men, roused to enthusiasm by victory after victory in their onward march from Cyrene and Tripoli, encamped in the near neighbourhood of Sufetula. The two armies met, and for two days were engaged in mortal combat. Such was the excitement in the Byzantine camp that the daughter of Gregorius, a maiden of rare beauty, did not hesitate to fight at her father's side, and to promise her hand and the sum of 100,000 dinars to any one who would slay Abdulla Ibn Saad. The challenge was taken up by the Arab leader, who offered the same money prize to any one who would slay the renowned Gregorius. We are told that the Byzantines were utterly defeated, that Gregorius was killed, and that the beautiful maid was handed over to Ibn ezZobeid, who had slain her father. Sufetula was then besieged, taken, and destroyed. The city was pillaged and the booty divided. So great, indeed, was the plunder, we are told, that every horseman of Othman's army received 3,000 dinars, and every foot soldier 1000 The records of Sufetula cease with this calamity, when one of the chief strongholds of the Christian creed was destroyed, and when Christianity in Africa may be said to have received its final blow. The factious spirit of many of the African bishops, their numerous heresies, and their sufferings at the time of the Vandal invasion and for a century afterwards, paved the way for the final overthrow of the Christian Church by the Arabs. And it was aptly remarked by Gibbon in the last century that 'the northern coast of Africa is the only land in which the light of the Gospel, after a long and perfect establishment, has been totally extinguished. The arts, which had been taught by Carthage and Rome, were involved in the cloud of ignorance, and the doctrines of Cyprian and St. Augustine ceased to be studied. Five hundred episcopal churches were overturned by the hostile fury of Donatists, Van; ;
!

Africa under Antoninus Pius

125

dais, and Moors. The zeal and number of the clergy declined, and the peoples, without discipline or knowledge or hope, submissively sank under the yoke of the Arabian prophet.' In
'

further testimony of the complete annihilation of Christianity in

a land where
tions,

its

influence

was paramount

for so

many

genera-

we may quote Victor Vitensis,

the historian of the

Vandal

invasion of North Africa,


fall

more than two

centuries before the

of Sufetula.

He

tells

us that during the persecution 4,976

and other clerics were taken to Sicca Veneria (El-Kef) and Lares, and handed over to the Moors, who conducted them into the Desert ^ To the architect the ruins of Sufetula are among the most From their valuable of the monumental remains in Tunisia. extent and variety, and the fair condition of many of the buildings, they take rank with those of Lambaesis and Thamugas, and offer to the student excellent examples of Roman archibishops, priests, deacons,
!

K.

tecture before

its final

decline.

The
238

principal ruin consists of a rectangular walled enclosure,

feet by 198 feet, to which access is obtained through a monumental gateway, nearly in the centre of one side, and through smaller openings on the three others. This enclosure, commonly known as the hieron, is at present so encumbered with fallen masonry that accurate measurements are hot easily

Moreover, a portion of the enclosure having evidently been rebuilt at a subsequent period (probably during the Byzantine occupation in the time of Gregorius), considerable study of the masonry is necessary to enable any one to give a reliable opinion upon the exact outline of the original walls, the height of the enclosure, and the general surroundings both within and without. The entrance gateway was dedicated to Antoninus Pius, as recorded in an inscription in the frieze, but the lettering, it will be observed, is very incomplete.*
taken.

IVI
. . .

HADRIANI

DIVI
.

INO

NERVAE PRONEP PONT MAX T


.

ANTONINI R n P P
.

'

Gibbon,

vol. vi. c. 51, p. 369.

is generally called a bishop of Vita, a town in the province The Memorable and Tragical History of the Persecutions in Africke under Gensericke and Httnericke, Arrian Kings of the Vandals, London, 1605.) ' V. Guerin, vol. Also Sir Grenville Temple, Excursions i. the p. 381. Mediterranean, Algiers, and Tunis, London, 1835, vol. ii. p. 339. ^

Victor Vitensis, as he
(

of Byzacene.

126

Roman

Africa

Facing the gateway and within the enclosure were three by side, the front and back walls of the cellcs being connected by open arches. The back wall of these temples formed one side of the enclosure, and behind ran one of the streets of the city. The central temple, which is of the Composite order, has a cella 44 feet long. The side temples, of
temples, side
the Corinthian order, are

somewhat

smaller.

The

porticoes of

the temples were


higher, but
similar
in

all

tetrastyle prostyle, the centre

one being
there

other respects the detached columns were of

design.

Taking the three

porticoes,

together,

were eighteen shafts, the height of those of the central order being 29 feet, and those of the side temples 25 feet 3 inches. They all stood on lofty stylobates constructed with huge blocks of stone. The side and back walls of the central structure were ornamented with engaged shafts projecting a full half-diameter. The walls of the side structures were ornamented with pilasters. All the porticoes are entirely overthrown. The broken shafts, which were all monoliths, the capitals, the fragments of cornices and other enrichments lie piled up one above the other, forming a majestic and imposing mass. So much material lies buried beneath the surface that it is impossible to say whether the pediments were embellished with sculpture. The decorative character of the cornices and other parts lying broken on the ground favours Jhe supposition that the central edifice, at least, was enriched with figure sculpture. The whole enclosure was paved with large stones, some of which are more than seven feet
long.

The

entrance gateway, already referred

to, consists

of a

and was decorated with four engaged Corinthian shafts on the outer face. Within the gateway was a portico communicating with a colonnade, which continued round the enclosure till it abutted -against the walls of the side temples. A range of shops stood against one of the side-walls, but these were evidently of a later erection. There is, however, sufficient evidence, after an examination of
large central arch

and two

side ones,

the details of these monumental buildings, that the temples and the enclosure were of the same date, and may be attributed
to the reign of Antonine.

The custom of

enclosing temples

within walls of defence may have originated at a time when a city's treasures were deposited in sacred edifices, and as a means
of affording sanctuary and shelter for

women and

children, like

< H W

O R

s H

Africa under Antoninus Pius


the citadels of primitive times.
.(Esculapius
citadel, the

127

For
in

(the

largest fane

instance, the temple of Carthage) stood within the

Parthenon at Athens was within the walls of the Temple of Jupiter at Rome was at one time within the Capitol. There is another example at Baalbec, where the enclosure, or so-called hieron, bears some resemblance, though on a larger scale, to the one at Sufetula. Among other remains scattered over the site a triumphal arch towards the south of the city deserves mention, although it does not exhibit any features of special merit. An inscription on the frieze tells us that it was dedicated to the Emperors Maximian and Constantine, and it appears to have been built A.D. 305-306 in memory of the latter.'
Acropolis, and the

D D D
ISTIC
.

INVICTIS LISSIMIS
.

N ER AVG ITEMQVE
. . . .

VIS
.
.

IMP

PE
.

CONSTANTIO MAXIMIANO CAESARIBVS ON AVGVSTO IN PROVINCIA SVA M TVTOS

The remote
protection of
its

position of the city has certainly been the best

there had been


facilities for

monuments, and there is little doubt that if any habitations within twenty miles, and ordinary

transport over a country difficult of access, the few

buildings

still

The

situation

standing would long since have been overthrown. is admirable, on elevated ground at the foot of

a range of hills, and on the banks of a river bearing the same name, which has its source some few miles higher up. The water, always tepid, comes bubbling over the rocks, and, rushing towards the plain in whirling eddies, is soon lost in the region
of sand. In nearly
first all

the inscriptions of this reign the appropriate


P. P., are introduced, for the

words Pater patria, abbreviated to


time, in conjunction with the

more revered

title

of Pius.

This word has a far-reaching significance. It may be said to comprise the higher moral qualities of manhood, and to bring within the range of its application a reverence for the gods as well as a faithful discharge of duty to the State and to every The direct indications of Antonine's citizen of the Empire. work in most parts of Africa are difficult to trace, but his name as the pious father of his country remained a pleasant memory
'

Sir R. L. Playfair, Travels, p. 182.

128
for

Roman

Africa

less

succeeding generations. Capitolinus reckons that no than eight emperors, however unworthy of the distinction, assumed the name of Antonine, and we find that Alexander
Severus,
it

many

who would have honoured the title, modestly refused on the ground of personal unworthiness, although pressed by the Senate to assume the name. The indirect influence of Antonine's career may rather be sought for in the chief cities and towns of Roman Africa, which at this period had attained a high degree of civilisation, and took rank with Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch as centres of enlightenment and intellectual activity. A century and a half had elapsed since Juba 11. had introduced into his remote capital at Caesarea the elements of Hellenic culture, of which so many traces remain to the present day. During that long interval Carthage, rebuilt almost by enchantment at the will of Augustus, had
gradually attained the position of metropolis of

Roman

Africa,

Athens and Corinth, never failed to attract ambitious youths from all parts of Mauritania and Numidia. Hadrumetum, Cirta, Theveste, and other towns had also well-established schools, whose reputation was celebrated throughout the Empire in the age of the Antonines and though we have no actual record of the course of study prevailing at that period, the testimony of contemporary writers is indisputable as to the high esteem in which they were held, confirmed in later times by such reliable authorities as St. Augustine, Lactantius, and Salvian.^ It is quite certain, however, that the curriculum included philosophy and rhetoric, law and medicine, mathematics and natural philosophy. Natural history was not forgotten, and painting and architecture were
its

and

schools, modelled after those at

taught by distinguished professors.^

From

St.

Augustine,

who

received his elementary education at Thagaste (Souk-Ahras),


'

Illic (i.e.

Carthage) artium liberalium scholm.

Illic

philosophorum

cuncta denique vel linguarum gymnasia vel moruni.

Salvian (5th century), De Gub.


It

officince,

Dei,
'

vii.

67.

Inscriptions in honour of professors are not wanting.

may be

said that in

the African provinces were the elements of a great national university, where the

higher branches of science were liberally taught, and where young


of the country obtained superior education.

men from

all parts

The
;

university existed from the age of

and owing to the influence exercised and the abundance of students, the schools of Carthage (Paul Monceaux, Les scarcely yielded the palm to those of Athens or Rome.
the Antonines to the time of the Vandal kings

by many of the

teachers,

Africains, Paris, 1894, p. 61.)

H H

O >

Africa under Antoninus Pius

129

we
for
us,

obtain a glimpse of the course of complete study desirable youths who were natives of Africa. From Thagaste, he tells

he was removed to Madaura

in

at that time were in high repute,

where the collegiate system was in of the highest class. But in many instances education did not stop there. The Latin of Africa was not the Latin of Rome. It therefore became necessary for any one who was ambitious
of high office
in

Numidia, where the schools and afterwards to Carthage, operation, and the teaching

public or professional

life

to

make

himself

acquainted with the Latin tongue as spoken by the educated classes in Rome. Apuleius tells us that when he left Carthage
to study law in

Rome

he found himself quite out of his element,

and, learned as he then was as a Greek scholar and a master of

African Latin, had to devote himself to the study of Roman African students in Rome were numerous, especially at Latin."^ a later period of the Empire, for we learn from an edict in the
reign of Valentinian that, complaints having been lodged of
their dissipated habits, they

were ordered not to frequent theatres

too often, nor indulge in festive entertainments at late hours.


Failing obedience, they would be put on board ship and sent

back home.

Numerous

inscriptions in

North Africa bear testimony to

the eagerness displayed by scholars in the acquisition of knowledge, as well as in putting on record their proficiency in the

higher branches of intellectual study.

D
L

BALBIVS

D M S M DAMATIVS

BARBARVS STVDENS KAR THAGINI DE FVNCTVS V A XX M VII H S E


. .
.

VRBANVS

SVMMARVM ARTI VM LIBERALIVM

'

LITTERARVM STVDIIS VTRIVSQ LINGVAE PERFECTE ERVDITVS OPTIMA FACVNDIA PRAEDITVS V A XXII D VII H S E VIII K OCTOBR A P CLXXXX M. DAMAT FELIX PATER PIVS

FECIT
'

Apuleius, Meiamorph.

I.

i.

Also Codex Theod.

xiv. 9, i.

130
The
first

Roman
inscription
'

Africa

simply records that the deceased was The second ^ is to the memory of a learned scholar at Cirta, a master of Greek and Latin {utriusque lingua), and a renowned orator, aged twentya foreigner and a student at Carthage.

two years seven days.


Fuit suorum amator et patrit2; IcEsit nefninein ; clarissimum virorum et equitum Romanorum ^ropinguus ; adfuit eloquentia et indusiria z>z agendo ornatus multis; dictamine facilis extemporali volumina(f) dialogorutn et
epistolarum
et

edyliorum conscripsit.

This last-mentioned inscription from Announa covers twentyIt tells us of an amiable lines, but eleven only are legible.^ student of high social position, noted for his eloquence as well as application to many branches of study, in all of which he was distinguished. With pardonable pride the family of this distinguished youth wish posterity to know that the deceased

two

could compose dialogues, idylls, and epistles, and could extemporise on any given subject. The name, age, and parentage

of this

ill-fated
lost.

scholar

whose career was cut short are un-

fortunately

D.M.S. Caledius Rufus Parca quos tribuerunt ter quinos his singulos peregi annos; ingenio non humili quo gratus apud magistros fid; qui dixi scribi pincsi bene ; puer doctrina CBque dedidi mentem ; nam bis septenos

cum

agerem. annos, notas grcecas quis in commatibus

Here we have a rriemorial by the deceased himself,* but the date of the drafting of this singular inscription is not given on the lines which have been preserved. There are eight addiIn the above we are told tional lines, but they are not legible.
was held in high esteem by his masters that from childhood he had devoted himself to study that he could speak well, write well, and paint well and that when he was a useful 14 years old he could write Greek shorthand accomplishment in those days. It was not unusual in this country for a man to write his own epitaph, nor was it regarded as a breach of good manners on the part of educated men to
that this youth
:

use self-laudatory expressions in regard to their


'

own

merits or

"

^ C.I.L. No. 8500. C.LL. No. 12,152. C.LL. No. 5530 (Wilmanns descrip.). C.L.L. No. 724 (Wilmanns descrip. summo labore).

I.R.A. No. 3338.

Africa under Antoninus Pius


accomplishments.
already referred to
class of inscriptions.

131

The memorial of
is

the goldsmith of Cirta


this

still

more noteworthy example of

Carthage held
Africa
till

its

own

as

the chief intellectual centre of

university,

its renowned completed under the reign of Alexander Severus, A.D. 222-235, sent forth into the civilised world enlightened men, trained in the varied schools of literature, science, and art. Rhetoric or oratory appears to have been held in much esteem at Carthage and in other African cities, for Juvenal, who flourished in the time of Trajan, exhorts the Italian professors

the fatal invasion of the Vandals, and

of the

art,

who

are desirous of

making a

fortune, to cross the

sea to Africa.^

But

all

the higher branches of learning seem to

have been equally encouraged, and their disciples held in honour by the citizens. An instance may be recorded in the case of Apuleius, whose services in the cause of literature and philosophy had reflected distinction upon the university of Carthage. It was resolved to erect a statue in the city to his honour. And this is an extract from the philosopher's reply to the official communication he received on the subject, sufficient to show the estimation in which the African metropolis was The grandeur held at that period by the educated classes philosopher w^orthy that even a shall sue to it for of Carthage is honour, where all your citizens are learned amongst w^hom boys learn all they know, adults display their knowledge, and
:

'

old

men
:

teach

it.

Carthage, the venerable mistress of our


:

Muse of Africa Carthage, ^ the toga The remarkable those who wear Camena of the
Province
Carthage, the celestial
! '
'

Juv. Sat.
is

vii.

147, 148.

Terence, a native of Carthage and of obscure parent-

age,

an exceptional instance.

He appears

to

have been taken to

Rome by

a slave-

dealer and freed by the senator Terentius Lucanus in the days of his youth.

His
his

introduction to Scipio Africanus and his colleague C. La;lius was the chief cause of
his social success.

There

is

little

to indicate African

life

or

manners

in

any of

writings.
^

Apul. Flor. XX.

The

toga

was of various kinds.

Its

assumption distinguished

the civilian from the soldier. There was the toga virilis assumed by Roman youths on The toga their coming of age, celebrated on the feast of the Liberalia, March 17.

purpurea or picta took the highest rank, being a purple mantle with gold embroidery. The toga alluded to by Apuleius was the toga pratexta, which was white with a purple hem, worn by magistrates in the colonias and municipia, and was regarded as
a robe of distinction.
bk. xxxiv.
c.

Vide Smith's Diet, of Gr. and

Kom, Antiq.

also Livy,

7.

132

Roman
principal

Africa

career of this eminent though erratic philosopher and romancist,

works associated with his name, throw a good life in the age of the Antonines. In his Metamorphoses Apuleius intentionally introduces his own personality as the hero of his story, and, with a touch of pardonable vanity, represents himself as an elegant youth. Is it not permissible,' he said, even for a philosopher to be of graceful appearance? Was not Zeno, as Plato affirms, remarkable for the graces of his person, and was not Pythagoras the handsomest man of his time ? Apuleius was born towards the close of Trajan's reign at Madaura in Numidia (now called by the Arabs Mdaourouch), near the southern frontier separating the Roman province from the land of the Getulians. He calls himself half Numidian, half Getulian, and proudly proclaims himself a native of Africa. Among the monumental remains of Madaura which lie scattered over the plain, indicated more by undulations of the ground than by connected masses of masonry, there is nothing left in the present day to attest the importance it held in the second century, but the inscriptions give sufficient evidence of the existence at one time of a large residential population, and of Among the votive its having been essentially a Roman town. tablets are many relating to priests and priestesses of the various temples, Saturn being held, as elsewhere in Roman As late as the time of Africa, in the highest veneration. Theodosius (A.D. 379-395), Madaura was known as a strongdeal of light on African social
'
'

and the

'

hold of paganism, but the part it played in the movements of Christianity was not conspicuous. The names of several martyrs are recorded, and mention is also made of bishops of

Madaura.

But Christianity evidently made

little

progress in

Numidia, for St. Augustine informs us that Apuleius was paganism predominated there in his time. His father was in affluent circumfortunate in his parentage. stances, and his position as one of the chief magistrates, duumviri, at Madaura enabled his son to pursue his studies at Carthage, and afterwards at Athens, with exceptional advanOn the completion of his university career Apuleius tages. went to Rome, where he studied law and Latin ^ and then, after
this wild part of
;

a brief sojourn at Carthage, indulged his erratic propensities


'

by

Apul. Flor. 16-18.

Africa under Antoninus Pius


taking ship for Alexandria.
at

133

CEa

(the

with his

Falling ill by the way, he landed modern Tripoli), where an old fellow-student lived widowed mother, named Pudentilla, who was destined
colonia in the second century,

to exercise so potent an influence on his career.

which became a

is little

This town, mentioned

by historians. It took rank with Leptis Magna and Sabrata, and the three together constituted a federal union under the
of Tripoli.^ long era of prosperity came suddenly to an end in the middle of the fourth century, when the territory of the union was invaded by the savages of Getulia. Leptis and Sabrata suffered from the corrupt and vicious rule of Romanus, the military governor of Africa, and subsequently from the Vandal invasion. Their fortifications were destroyed, and the citizens left unprotected against the incursions of the Moors. Procopius ^ tells us that Justinian rebuilt the walls of both cities, and that he succeeded in repeopling Leptis by inducing the inhabitants of the surrounding district to embrace
Christianity

name

and

settle there.

With the Mohammedan

invasion

the history of the federal union comes to a close, and now, after

a lapse of 1,200 years, modern Tripoli, which has risen on the


outskirts of ancient Qia, takes rank as a commercial port of

great importance on the shores of the Mediterranean, and the


capital of the pashalik of the

same name.

After a residence of some months in CEa, Apuleius found favour with Pudentilla, a person of wealth, who had been attracted by the wit and elegance of the young philosopher.

We

are

informed that their

marriage took place at some

distance from the town, with a view, perhaps, of avoiding the

payment of a heavy honorarium, which was customary on such occasions when the principals were in affluent circumstances. The widow had experienced this form of expenditure a few years previously, for we are told that when her eldest son came of age she presented to the town the sum of 50,000 sesterces The family approved of the match in spite of the (400/.).
difference of years between
alas
!

the bridegroom and bride.


to an

But,

end when the heirs-at-law found that the husband's influence over his enamoured spouse
family rejoicings

came

For an account of the provinces and the city of Tripoli consult Leo Africanus, a Moor, De totius Africa Descriptione., Leyden, 1682.
'

Procopius,

De

/,dific. vi. c. 4.

134
had many admirers

Roman
in

Africa
in his favour.

extended to the transfer of her property

Apuleius

the city of his adoption, but he had


wit, his versatile talent

many

and excephad secured for him a high reputation as a scholar and an orator, and his philosophic discourses had gained the approval of the disciples of the
His ready
tional brilliancy as a public speaker,

enemies.

school

of Plato.

But, as a lover of occult science, deeply

versed in the mysteries of various creeds, and fascinated by a

study of things unseen and unknown, his practices aroused suspicion, and prompted his adversaries to charge him with the exercise of magic in gaining the affection of Pudentilla. The indictment was carefully drafted and comprised the following
separate charges
1.
^
:

The defendant Apuleius purchased

fish

of very rare

them up in his laboratory and concocted a liquid by which he was enabled to cast a spell over a woman. A slave in his employ named Themison is to be questioned
kinds.

He

cut

on

this matter.
2.

When Apuleius lived with Pontianus (the son of Pudenhe was in the habit of secreting himself in the library, where he kept, carefully hidden, a mysterious talisman in a handkerchief There is an irreproachable witness of this in the person of the librarian himself, a freedman of Pontianus. 3. Apuleius had a little wood skeleton made, upon which he performed experiments in magic. The artist who received the instructions and executed the work is Saturninus of CEa. He is here now. 4. Apuleius was in the habit of offering up sacrifices at night-time in the lodgings occupied by his friend, Appius Shortly afterwards Quintianus left, and in one of Quintianus. the rooms, the walls of which were blackened by smoke, feathers of birds were found. Junius Crassus, the owner of the
tilla)

house, will give evidence on this matter.

Apuleius bewitched a young slave named Thallus in a little altar under the glimmering light of a lantern. As soon as the words of incantation were pronounced
5.

lonely spot near a

the youth
'

fell

to

the ground senseless.

Then

the operator
is

tion

This tabulated statement of charges brought against Apuleius from M. Paul Mouceaux's Les Africains, pp. 292-293.

partly a transla-

Africa under Antoninus Pius

135

brought him back to Hfe. Fourteen slaves in the service of Thallus will confirm this process, and among them Sicinius Pudens, who was an eye-witness. Moreover, several other young people have been similarly bewitched. 6. Apuleius undertook to heal a sick woman who was brought to his house by a doctor. As soon as the woman entered his room his first glance caused her to fall on the floor senseless. The doctor is to be questioned on this matter. 7. Apuleius forced Pudentilla by the exercise of magic to marry him. They were no sooner married than he made her
assign to
wife's

him a considerable part of her property. With his money he purchased a splendid estate. Everybody in GEa knows this, and in a letter which we produce Pudentilla
'Apuleius bewitched by him.'
is

herself declares

a magician and

have been

Such grave charges, apparently supported by facts, would have disconcerted an ordinary man, but Apuleius was cast in a different mould, and any one who reads between the lines of his remarkable defence will note the skilful way in which he fenced the main issues, and how he succeeded in turning the tables upon his calumniators, conciliating the judges, and eventually leaving the court as the hero of the hour. The trial took place at the end of Antonine's reign in the neighbouring city of Sabrata, where the Roman proconsul Claudius Maximus was holding the assizes and if the whole proceedings were proportionate to the lengthy character of the defence, which has been handed down to us intact in the form of the Apologia, the trial must have occupied many days. The practice of magic had long been under the ban of Roman law, and continued so till the fall of the Empire. Experts in occult science were regarded as a grave danger to the State, and as far back as the reign of Tiberius special laws were framed with a view to their suppression. But the severe penalties attached to the exercise of various forms of the sorcerer's art did not deter those who regarded sorcery as a means of livelihood, nor that class of enchanter or wizard who ipay still be found in North Africa, exercising the healing art
:

by the

aid of incantations, philters, or gesticulations.

principal towns such

men were

to

In the be found attracting the

136
ignorant, exciting

Roman

Africa
amusing the

the curious, and

mob by

display of homely wit, sometimes coarse, but always good-

humoured, and rarely failing to promote merriment. But it was not the ignorant only who became the prey of the magician. Pliny the Elder tells us of the innate powers of some
of the natives of Africa in casting a spell over children, as well
as trees

and herds of cattle. Wherever the charm took effect death or decay ensued.^ And what is still more remarkable is Pliny's belief in the performance of miracles by human agency.
'

day.

woman transformed into a man on her weddingThe name of the man is Lucius Cossitius, a native of Thysdrus, who was alive when I Was telling the story.''' It is
I

have seen a

a pity that so enthusiastic a scholar as Pliny did not carry his


researches a
little

further.

An

account of the experiences of

this bisexous individual

as instructive to

would have been entertaining as well mankind. In the reign of Marcus Aurelius so

distinguished a person as Septimius Severus, a native of Leptis

Magna, was tried as a magician, and we learn from Spartian that when he was Emperor the proconsul Apronianus was tried for the same offence, condemned and put to death. Under Valentinian a proconsul of Carthage was put to torture for having consulted sorcerers ' and in the time of Constantine a philosopher named Sopater, a friend of the Emperor's, was actually condemned to death on the plea that he had cast a spell over the winds and prevented the grain-ships from
;

reaching Byzantium.

There
student,

is

believer in occult science, but that he practised

no doubt that Apuleius was not only an ardent magic as a


for personal gain.

Apologia.

He admits as much in the acquainted with the methods and operations of the Christian Church, which afforded him a subject and it may be reasonable to suppose that he for raillery attributed the miracles wrought by Divine power in a neighbourand not

He was

also

ing land to the same

own

philosophic teaching.

human agency which formed the basis of his At a later period, when Paganism and
in

Christianity were striving for the mastery, the miracles wrought

by Apuleius * were compared with those recorded


'

the

New

Pliny, Hist. Nat,

vii. 2.

'

'

Apuleius, Metamorph.

ix.
;

14.

Pliny, Hist. Nat.

vii. 4.

Codex Theod.

ix. 16,

Laclantius, Inst.

4-6 Annmianus Marcellinus, Divin. v. 3, 7.

xxviii. I,

7.

Africa under Antoninus Pius

137

Testament, and Pagan and Christian were found fighting in opposite camps, both doing battle in the cause of the supernatural. Apuleius was fortunate in living under the rule of so amiable an Emperor as Antonine, when the conscience of every citizen was respected, and freedom of opinion in matters of
religion

was

tolerated, as far as possible, in every part of the

Empire. He was fortunate also in being on terms of intimacy with the proconsul who presided at the assizes. According to the account given in the Apologia, our philosopher entered the court with a light heart, and made merry of the whole proceedings. He tells us how he descanted upon natural philosophy,
history,

and medicine, as well as the mysteries of science how he evaded every point which related to the exercise of his powers as a magician how he aroused enthusiasm in the court, and even promoted merriment among the judges. As for the charges made against him, serious as they looked at first sight, they could easily be disposed of The fish he had purchased from time to time were ordinary fish, for the purpose of experiments in anatomy. The talisman kept in his library was an emblem of religion, only to be shown to those who had been initiated into the mysteries of his faith. The skeleton referred to was a charming statuette of Mercury, modelled by Cornelius Saturninus, which he was delighted to bring into court and show to the
;

judges.

As

for the alleged secret sacrifices at night, the evidence

rested solely on the statement of a drunken man,

paid for bearing false witness against him.

who had been Then this man

Thallus and his wife,


to practise magic.
his wife Pudentilla.
'

who

fell

speechless in his presence, were


it

unfortunate epileptics, upon


'

whom

would have been ridiculous

Then comes
It

the grave charge of bewitching

be called witchery,' said Apuleius, ? The gods bestowed looks, and on him good him great talents. given had undue charged with regard for his personal had been He It is true,' he added, that I have not been negligent appearance. I have combed my hair, and person. I have used a mirror of my guilty of cleaning been my teeth What more I have actually woman of homely features, not particularly natural than that a beautiful, and certainly no longer young, should feel the power of such attractions as his, and seize the opportunity of obtaining If it was magic, it was nothing more than a good husband
or anything you please, but what were the facts
' ' '
;
!

may

'

138
As

Roman

Africa

the employment of gifts which the gods had bestowed on him.

he had not touched it, and if he died would revert to her family. The estate in the country which had been talked about was only a small domain purchased in Pudentilla's name. It was doubtful whether the citizens of CEa could regard with favour any one, however talented, who had been suspected of sorcery, and who had openly admitted an intimate acfor his wife's fortune,
it

without issue

quaintance with the mysteries of magic.


too.

Apuleius thought so

trial, and settled permanently in Carthage, where honours of many kinds were showered upon him, far more than on any other philosopher born in Africa. However great the merits of this remarkable Apologia, the reputation of Apuleius as a scholar and romancist will always be associated with his better-known work entitled The MetamorpJtoses, or the Golden Ass. It appears, on good authority, to have been written during the latter portion of his career in Carthage, and, according to a recent writer on the subject, was first mentioned by Capitolinus in his life of Albinus at the time when Septimius Severus and Albinus, both natives of Carthage, were disputing the throne. Severus rallied his competitor for wasting his time in reading old women's tales, and getting old in the company of the Punic fables of Apuleius and literary diversions. The story, as narrated in the Metamorphoses, is a fanciful legend of Greek origin, and, in the words of its author, is made up of a series of fables after the manner of the Milesians.' These fabulous tales, so popular among the Romans, were distinguished both for humour and wantonness, and have formed the groundwork of many a fanciful story in more recent times. Lucius, the imaginary hero of the Metamorphoses, may be accepted as a portraiture of Apuleius himself, a student of magic

He

quitted

CEa

at

the close of the

and a

diligent inquirer

into the mysteries of occult science.

Seeing a sorceress at work one day in her laboratory transforming herself into a bird with the aid of some mysterious But by some ointment, Lucius at once resolved to imitate her. mishap he took up the wrong mixture and was changed into an
'

The

raillery of the

Emperor was thus expressed

Qutim ilk naniis quibtisdam


et

anilibus occupatus inter Milesias Punicas Apuleii std,


ceret.

ludicra litteraria consenes-

(Capitolinus, Clod. Albiti. 12.)

Africa under Antoninus Pius


ass, retaining

139

the spirit of a man.

The

goddess,

who wrought
human

this direful spell, so far


it

favoured the unfortunate ass as to inform


rose-leaves, transformation to

that, after

munching some

shape would immediately ensue. The adventures of the animal in search of flowers to break the spell form a large portion of the romance, and its experiences in the ways of mankind, sometimes humorous, sometimes doleful, read like a satire on the habits of certain classes of African society in the second century. But the patience of the ass was at last rewarded. The goddess Isis appeared at Corinth one night and annouriced the end of
its

troubles.

In short, on the morrow a procession issued from


its

the city on

way

to the harbour at Cenchrea to inaugurate

the launching of a

new

ship.
in

At
his

the head of the procession

was a

priest,

who

carried

Surreptitiously the ass approached and,

hand a chaplet of roses. munching a few leaves,

resumed
are a

his

Interspersed
species of

human form. among the pages of this remarkable composition

number of tales or episodes, as they are called, full of that humour which is so conspicuous in the writings of

Cervantes, and, in a lesser degree,

may
as

be found

in the spirited
'

pages of
Psyche,'

'

Gil Bias.'

The

fifth

episode, entitled

Cupid and
allegory,

which

may be

classed

a philosophic

stands pre-eminent, and has had the distinction of attracting

more notice from literary disputants than any other of the works of this author. A correspondent of Notes and Queries
'

(ii.

429,

first

series;,

says

'

This

is

probably an old folk-tale

perhaps an antique philosophic temple-allegory. Apuleius appears only to have dressed it up in a new shape. The tale is still current, but in a form not derived from him, among Swedes, Norwegians, Danes, Scots, Germans, French, Wallachians, Hindoos, and Italians.' And another writer says This fable is a representation of the destiny of the human soul. The soul, which is of divine origin, is here
originally,
:

'

below subjected to error trials and purifications are


loves

in

its

prison,
it,

the body.
that
it

Hence

set before

may become

capable of a higher order of things, and of true desire.

meet
;

the earthly a deceiver, who drags


who

Two

it

down

to earthly

things

the heavenly,

directs its view to the originally fair


his rival, leads

and

divine,

and who, gaining the victory over

off the soul as his bride.'

I40

Roman

Africa

The position which Apuleius adorned as philosopher and romancist in the Antonine age, and the influence exercised by his genius and personality on African literature, both pagan
and Christian, are universally recognised. Tertullian, a native of Carthage and an eminent Christian writer at the end of the second century, may be accepted as a representative of the style of Apuleius. In a later age St. Augustine, who had to

combat with his doctrines as a professor of magic, was fain to acknowledge that Apuleius was the most popular of African writers and I.actantius remarks that the early pagan controversialists used to rank Apuleius with ApoUonius of Tyana as a thaumaturgist, citing various miracles performed by him as
;

equal or superior to those of Christ.


celebrities.

Carthage was not the only city to send forth literary Sicca Veneria (El-Kef) produced the grammarian Eutychius Proculus, one of the tutors of Marcus Aurelius, and

renowned for his work entitled De Regionibus. Leptis Magna was the birthplace of Septimius Severus, grandfather of the Emperor of that name. He obtained repute at Rome as an orator, and his talents excited the admiration of Statins the

Who could ever believe,' he said, that a man gifted with such eloquence should come from such a place as Leptis, far away in the region of the Syrtes ? Hippone (Bone) was the
poet.
'

'

'

native town of Servilius Silanus, and Cirta was the birthplace

of Festus Postumius, both of whom achieved reputation by their writings. Carthage also produced the renowned grammarian Sulpicius Apollinaris, whose school attracted scholars from all
parts of the country.

Aulus

Gellius, Celsinus,

and Pertinax

took rank
of

among the most eminent of his pupils. Of the career Celsinus we know little, but it is probable that he acquired

renown as a schoolmaster and grammarian. Gellius, on the other hand, held so prominent a position as philosopher and rhetorician that he figures largely in the history of the Antonine age. There is good reason for supposing that he was a native of Africa, for his name appears on an inscription discovered at
Cherchel a few years ago.^ His lifelong attachment to his master Apollinaris, and his intimacy with Herodes Atticus, one of the tutors of Marcus Aurelius, and renowned for his munificence
'

Waille, Lettre sur

les fouilles

de

Carthage {C. R. de fAcad. des

Itiscript.

Jan.

Africa under Antoninus Pius


to his adopted city, chief cities

141

made him

a conspicuous character in the

and

universities of the

Empire.

the Nodes Africa, a series of notes jotted

The publication of down from day to day

on a variety of subjects and penned by a master hand, formed


the climax of his popularity, and provided a fund of original
material from which contemporary authors did not
fail

to borrow.

Both Lactantius and

Augustine did not hesitate to acknowledge their indebtedness to Aulus Gellius, whom the latter calls vir elegantissimi eloquii et mulice ac facundcB scientice} But
St.

among

the pupils of ApoUinaris, Publius Helvius Pertinax achieved the highest honours, beginning life in his father's trade
as a small dealer in charcoal, and terminating a remarkable
career on the throne of the Cssars.
his school, Pertinax succeeded

When

him

for a short time, but,

ApoUinaris gave up not

abandoned teaching and followed the army Step by step, in a civil as well as military capacity, he filled various offices, and became proconsul of Africa. Finally, on the death of Commodus, he was chosen Emperor by acclamation, and for the short period of eightyseven days ruled his subjects with wisdom and benevolence. Patriotic administration and honesty in all his actions gained him the affection of every right-minded person in the Empire, and the hatred and distrust of those who were living on the
finding
it

lucrative,

in various

campaigns.

plunder acquired during the reign of his contemptible predecessor. When Pertinax attempted to correct the grave abuses that had crept into the administration of the army, the Praetorian guard,

always a powerful body, and occasionally overruling the decisions


of the Senate, rose against him, and openly murdered him in

was fortunate that the gentle schoolmaster of his distinguished pupil, was not Mention present when this atrocious crime was perpetrated. must also be made of P. Annaeus Florus, whose birthplace is not
the light of day.
It

of Carthage,

who was proud

known

but there

is little

doubt, from his frequent allusions to

Africa and the knowledge he displayed in his descriptions of events that had occurred there, that he was a native of one of

the African provinces.

His epitome of

Roman

history, entitled
libri duo,

EpitonicB de T. Livio bellorum oinnium

annorum DCC.

on which
'

his reputation as a writer depends, has

been described

as rather a panegyric on the


'

Romans
De

than an accurate history


ix.

St.

Augustine,

Civitaie Dei,

4.

142
of their actions.'

Roman

Africa

During his studies in Rome in the reign of Domitian, Florus was a competitor for a prize of distinction, and in the opinion of the public as well as of the judges was entitled to the first place. But the Emperor refused to accept their decision, on the ground that citizens of Rome should not be held inferior to provincials. Poor Florus was in despair at losing this coveted honour, and he tells us in his own words that he fled from the capital in horror, so crushed by resentment that he forgot the claims of his country and of his dear relatives at home, and like a madman rushed about the world from one place to another. He travelled about for many years, seeking rest and finding none, and at last, by accident rather than from any definite cause, he found himself at Tarraco in Spain. Here he settled, establishing a high reputation for rhetoric, and honoured by the patronage and friendship of the Emperor
Hadrian.

On
of

in Africa

taking a general survey of the representatives of literature during the latter half of the second century, Apuleius
to share the chief honours with

Madaura has

Fronto, a native of Cirta, the capital of Numidia.

M. Cornelius Dion Cassius

says that Fronto was renowned as an orator in the time of Hadrian, and that, at the close of his reign, he was regarded as
first advocate and pleader of his time. Between this Emperor and the youthful orator there does not appear to have been any intimate friendship respect for talent on the part of Hadrian and loyal veneration on the part of the scholar. Indeed, Fronto himself says of Hadrian that he was not at ease in his presence, but regarded him rather as a deity to be propitiated than a man It was not till Antonine had ascended the throne to be loved.' and had nominated the young princes Lucius Verus and Marcus Aurelius as his successors that we recognise the sweet and gentle nature of Fronto's disposition. The high esteem in which he was held by Antonine, as much for personal character and charm of manner as for literary attainments, caused his nomination as preceptor to the young princes. And this was the turning-point in Fronto's career, marred only by constant ill-health in advancing years, and the troubles and anxieties of a large family. None of his principal works have been handed down unmutilated, leaving us only fragments of history, treatises on various subjects,

the

'

and voluminous correspondence with

his pupils, either as princes

Africa under Antoninus Pius


or emperors.

143
some

In the early part of this century, Monsignor Mai,

librarian of the Vatican,

had the good fortune

to discover

of the lost correspondence on palimpsests stored in the Ambrosian


Library, and after patient labour succeeded in deciphering them.

The

first

edition

was published

in

Milan
all

in 1815, followed

by

others in 1823 and 1832, containing additional correspondence.

Since then a

critical edition,

embracing

the discovered docu-

ments, was issued at Leipzig in 1867 by M. S. A. Naber. The letters comprised in this correspondence have no claim to literary
merit, nor can they be regarded as compositions of a high order.

And

yet they have exceptional interest.

No

one can read those

homely lines without feeling touched by the expressions of love and sympathy which knit together two such kindred spirits as Marcus Aurelius and his tutor, Cornelius Fronto. We get a glimpse of family life in the imperial circle, and a sketch of the sunny boyhood of a sedate and philosophic ruler. In nearly all the letters there is exaggeration of expression, and
genial

constant use of superlative epithets, which sound to us unnecessary and unfamiliar in these more prosaic days.

But this was an age of exaggerated phraseology, pardonable as indicating in a measure the joyousness of a people who lived in the brightest epoch of Roman history. Dedicatory inscriptions and vqtive memorials of the time bear testimony to a free employment of high-sounding adjectives. When a municipium was raised to the rank of colonia, the title of splendidissima expressed the disWhen a parent lost a wife tinction conferred upon its citizens. or daughter, carissima, piisshna, dulcissima, were the epithets the memory of students who had been cut off frequently used in their youth was preserved in such expressive words as diligenand a citizen of renown amongst his tissimus or rarissinius fellows bore the title of obsequentissimus or koizestissimus, sometimes both. Such being the custom of the time, we read without surprise the conclusion of a letter from M. Aurelius, the prince (at that time about twenty years of age), to his dear Farewell, most eloquent, most learned, master, Fronto.^ most dear, most sweet, most preferred preceptor, most desired
; ;
'

friend.'

A
M.

subsequent

letter

concludes thus
I

' :

Farewell,

my

dearest master.
'

My

mother salutes you.

am

so wearied that

The

following letters are taken from a selection of correspondence translated and


J.

edited by

McQuige, Rome, 1824.

144

Roman

Africa

I hardly exist.' The prince went out hunting one morning with the Emperor, and on his return, he says in a letter to Fronto, I betook myself to my books. Therefore, having taken
'

off

my

shoes and laid aside


I

my

clothes,

remained
I

two hours.
fore,
I

read two orations of Cato.

think

cold, perhaps because


will

I walked in sandals this pour oil on my head and go to sleep. Farewell, my dearest and sweetest master, whom I love better than Rome itself.' On another occasion M. Aurelius attended the Emperor at a sacrifice, and in the evening wrote to Fronto as follows Afterwards I went to take some refreshment. And
:

in bed for have taken morning. ThereI

'

what do you think


that

ate

little

morsel of bread, while

saw-

others devouring boiled beans, and onions, and pilchards.


ourselves.
little,

After

we went to the vineyard, where we laboured and amused At the sixth hour we returned home. I studied a
but without
profit.

Afterward, sitting with

my

dear

mother on a couch, I prattled of many things. I said, " What do you think my Fronto is doing now?" She replied, " But what do you think my Gratia is doing ? " Then I said, " No. What While we were is our dear sweet little darling Gratia doing ? " talking and disputing which loved you most, the discus sounded. We supped. And now before I turn on my side and snore I give an account of the day to my dear master, whom I could not love

Amongst the correspondence is a letter from I do.' Fronto to Lucius Verus, on his return from a successful campaign Although illness has long made me against the Parthians weary of my life, yet I do not think that I have lived in vain, nor shall I continue to live with reluctance, since I have seen you return with so much glory obtained by your valour. FareSalute your mother-in-law and your well, my dearest lord.
more than
:

'

children.'

But the day came when the favoured prince became Emperor and received by letter the congratulations of his old master. As I am convinced of the This is the reply of M. Aurelius
:

'

sincerity of your affection for me,


difficult to

my

dearest Fronto,
it

persuade

me

that this day, on which

it is not has pleased

the gods to call


truly

me to this station, is by you above all others and religiously celebrated.' Good fortune seems to have attended Fronto's career in Antonine everything except health and domestic anxieties.

Africa under Antoninus Pius


raised

145
when

him

to the dignity of Consul,

and

at a later period,

the proconsulships of Asia and Africa were vacant, the former

was offered for his acceptance. These were the only provinces of the Empire having senatorial rank, both taking a position somewhat similar to that enjoyed by the Governor-General of India in our own days. But Fronto was dissatisfied. As a native of Africa he had been looking forward to holding high office in his own land and amongst his own people but on hearing that the African appointment had been definitely settled with the approval of the Emperor, he declined the proconsulship of Asia on the ground of failing health. Amongst Africans Fronto was deservedly popular on account of his good name, recognised As an acknowledgment of talents, and high social position. the services he had rendered to his countrymen he was made patron of his native city, as well as of the rising town of Kalama (Guelma), on the highway between Hippone on the coast and Cirta, the capital of Numidia. He was also selected by the citizens
;

of Carthage to write a congratulatory address to the Emperor for favours conferred upon their city. Among the vast number of inscriptions discovered at Cirta, there is not one relating to his name or his career, but there is a letter of his extant, addressed to the triumvirs and decurions of the city, acknowledging the benefits conceded to him.^ On the wall of a house at

Kalama (Guelma),
official notification

built into the

masonry,

may

still

be read the

of Fronto as patron of Kalama, at a time


as a municipium?

when the town ranked only

M CORNELIO
T

m VIR
Q.

F QUIR FRONTONI

CAPITAL

PROVING SICIL AEDIL PL PRAETORI MVNICIPES KALAMENSI

VM PATRONO
'

Ad Amicos,

ii.

lo, p. 200.

Triumvirs were magistrates

who

acted as judges

in

the colonia and viunicipia.

They were

originally three in

sometimes increased to four to meet the necessities of a town.


only two.

number, but were Sometimes there were

C.I.L. No. S3S0, copied by

M. Aubin.

I.R.A. No. 2717.

146

Roman
it

Africa

In a subsequent reign ordo splendidissimus

bore the honoured designation of

Kalamensium, or, according to Kalamensium. There was a group of towns and villages in the neighbourhood of Kalama which, at a later period of the Empire, became thickly populated, and, although of no political importColonia

De

la

Mare,

civitas splendidissima

ance, they bear testimony to the success of


in the interior of the

Roman

colonisation

century.

There

is

country towards the close of the second nothing remarkable about the monumental

remains of Kalama, or of the neighbouring town of Tibilis, now known as Announa. They are not in the best style of Roman art, and are indicative of prosperity rather than culture among In both cases they cover a large tract of land, the inhabitants. and inscriptions, both dedicatory and votive, are numerous. healthy climate, fertile soil, charming scenery, and sheltered woods must have proved attractive to a good class of citizens. In addition, the proximity of the Aquce Tibilitance, held in high repute for their healing powers in rheumatic affections and cutaneous complaints, may have induced many families to take up their residence in some neighbouring town. The appearance of these waters, heavily charged with carbonate of lime, is extra"^

ordinary.

As

they bubble up from the surface of the sloping

a well-wooded glen, they fall into a series of cascades and leave behind them in their ilow a deposit of carbonate of lime, which soon hardens and assumes the appearance of white

rock

in

marble.
Fahr.,

The temperature
if

of the water, never varying,

is

203

and

the elevation of the source above the sea-level be

taken into account, it will be above the boiling-point of water. In some parts cones of deposit have been formed nearly forty feet high, and where the boiling stream has forced its way through crevices in the rock, small islands of evergreens and

herbage stand out conspicuously

in

their cinctures of white.

Some

baths cut out of the rock are still in use, while others have been partly or wholly submerged by an accumulated deposit of at least 1,500 years. The Arabs renamed these waters under the designation of Hammam Meskoutin, or

of the

Roman

the Accursed Baths, and, as usual,


'

wove a legendary
Announa
in

tale

about

Charles,

Comte de Peysonnel, who

visited

1724, says that 'the

numerous ruins show that it must have been a large and beautiful city.' The monuments existing in the present day may be assigned to a late period of the Empire.

Africa under Antoninus Pius


them,
in

147

order to account for this extraordinary natural phe: '

nomenon. According to M. Piesse it runs thus An Arab, I'ich and powerful, had a sister whom he thought too beautiful to be married to any one but himself. He determined to marry her in spite of the prohibition of the Mohammedan law and the remonstrances and supplications of the elders of his tribe, whose heads he cut off in front of his tent. After the marriage ceremony, when the accursed couple were about to retire, the elements were set in motion. Fire came out of the earth, the water left its bed, and the thunder pealed forth in a fearful manner. When tranquillity was restored, the Arab and his sister and every one connected with the feast were found petrified,
the white cone
still

representing the actors in this drama.'

Many

other towns shared with

Kalama
is

the advantages of a

long era of quietude, but their record

a blank.

They

rose

gradually under the civilising rule of the Romans, attained a


position in the commercial or agricultural
life

of the country,
into a

and when the Empire came


distressful condition,

to an end

fell

by degrees
extinction.

preluding their

final

Such,

no doubt, was the fate of the ancient Verecunda, now known as Markouna. The site is about two miles from Lambessa, and it was probably a suburb of that city. An inscription on a pedestal
found among the remains of the ancient forum relates to the water-supply in the reign of Antonine ^
:

DIVO

ANTON
AVG EX CVI AQVA VIC AVGVSTOR VERECVNDENS PERDVCTA EST DEDIC D FONTEIO LEG AVG PR -PR

Divo Antonino Augusta, ex cujus indulgcntia aqua vici Atigustorum


Verecundensis perducta
est,

dedicante

Decimo Fonteio Frontiniano, legato Augustorum pro pratore, decreto


decurionum, pecunia publica.

D-D

P
all

Inscriptions in

cases afford

some

clue to the period of


climate,

greatest

prosperity,

the

healthiness

of the

and the

domestic

happiness

of
'

the

inhabitants.

Both

at

Kalama

I.R.A. No. 1413.

148
(Guelma) and
tions, the

Roman
Tibilis

Africa

(Announa), which

may

be regarded as

representative towns inhabited


in the reigns of Valentinian

by

large middle-class popula-

words beatissimis temporibus are of frequent recurrence and Valens, Theodosius the Great, and Theodosius the younger. The rule of these emperors extended from A.D. 363 to A.D. 450. Among the inscriptions at Kalama there are two relating to the erection and adornment of the theatre, the remains of which are still an attractive object on the outskirts of the pretty little town of Guelma.^ The one relating to the embellishment of the building runs thus ^
:

ANNIAE AELI
AE AE
P

FIL

RESTIT
AnnicB

FLAM AVGG OB EGREGIAM IN

^lia

L.

fil.

Restitutce

VOS CIVES LIBERA THEATRO ITATEM PECVNIA SVA EXOR


. .
.

flaminiccB Augustorum perpetucz, ob egregiam in suos cives libera-

NANDA .... RIAE

ESSO SPONTE P AD REFERENDAM GR TIAM ORDO VNIVER QVINQ SVS STATV. DE PVBL FACIEND DECREVIT
. .

Utatem, theatro pecunia sua exornando patricB sponte permisso ad referendam gratiam, ordo universus statuas niimero quin-

que de publico faciendas decrevit.

It will be observed that the munificent donor was the daughter of a flaminica, but there is no date on the inscribed slab to enable us to state definitely under whose reign this public work, including the erection of the five statues, was carried out. There It was probably much later than the time of Antonine. Kalama which inscriptions at have some little other two are One of them informs us that in the very happy historic interest. times of Valentinian and Valens, A.D. 363-375, during the proconsulate of the most illustrious P. Ampelius, and by the foresight of the most illustrious Fabius Fabianus, the water-supply to the town, which had been very indifferent, was now abundant, rushing into the public reservoirs with great noise and that
;

Q. Basilius Flaccianus, perpetual flamen, augur, and controller, kept the reservoir in good condition. The other, equally profuse
'

work by M. Amable
2

Restorations of the theatre and baths of Kalama are shown in an interesting Ravoisi^, Explor. Scientif. de VAlgirie, Paris, 1846. I.R.A. No. 2765. De la Mare, Explor. cCAlgSrie, Archiolog. pi. clxxxiii.

Africa under Antoninus Pius


in its wording, tells us that in the

149

most happy reign {beatissiniis temporibus) of Honorius and Theodosius the younger, who shared the throne A.D. 408-423, and with the approval of the

two imperial functionaries, both described as viri clarissimi, and one of them amplissimus also, the town, which had been allowed for some time to get into a iilthy state, was put into good condition and made pleasant for visitors at the expense of a worthy man named Valentinus, who had the management of the town revenues, and is appropriately styled
honestissimus}

dominorum nostrorum Honori et Theodosi semper vincentiwm administrante Pomp viro clarissim.o amplissimoque proconsule et Thersio Crispino Megethio viro clarissimo legato .... Valentinus vir honestissimus curator rei publicce locum ruinis obsitum., qui antea squalore et sordibus fcedabatur, ad necessarium usum et ad peregrinorum, hospitalitatem in meliorem. siatuin ad usum et aspectum propria pecunia reformavit feliciter.
Beatissimis temporibus
et ubique
.

The
peace at

record of Antonine's career

is

one of almost unbroken

it was and to avoid the sacrifice of a single life in extending its borders, was the political creed of this tranquil ruler of mankind. I would rather," said the Emperor, save the life of a single citizen than slay a thousand

home and
him by

abroad.

To

defend the Empire as

handed

to

his predecessor,

'

'

enemies.'

tender regard for the welfare of his subjects

showed itself at the close of Antonine's career. When the last hour had come and the officer on guard was waiting in the antechamber for the watchword of the day, the word ^quanimitas was muttered by the Emperor with his last breath and so he passed away as he had lived, even-minded in all things, loving empire for the sake of doing good, and secure in the esteem and affections of his people. This excessive amiability was severely strained on several occasions by the conduct of the Empress Annia Gallia Faustina,
;

called Faustina the elder to distinguish her from her daughter

Faustina, the wife of Marcus Aurelius.

the evil things said


justice

If we are to accept all by Latin authors about the wife of Antonine,

to her memory compels also the acceptance of the I would rather,' said AntoEmperor's testimony to her worth.
'
'

C.I.L. No. 5341.

150
'

Roman

Africa
'

nine, live with her in the island of Gyaris than without her in the palace of the Caesars.' Capitolinus at a later date attributed

to

Faustina a loose tongue and loose manners,^ while more

recent authors do not hesitate to accept the rumours current at

the time, without troubling themselves to arrive at the truth.

The

for good or evil in the two centuries of Empire was considerable, and court scandal and gossip were consequently notorious. Allowance should be made for looseness of anecdote at a period when intrigue and place-hunting found favour in the courts of the palace, and when the rivalry created bitterness of speech and suspicion of motive. When the founder of the Empire said that the wife of Cffisar should be above suspicion, the words may have been prompted by some idle tale of court intrigue that may have reached his ears unexpectedly. Few of the Empresses have left a record untarnished by suspicion some of them have been charged with the most heinous offences, without

influence

exercised by

women

imperial circle during the

first

corroborative evidence

while others,

among whom

Plotina, the

noble wife of the Emperor Trajan, stands conspicuous for public benevolence and the exercise of private virtues, have not escaped
the malevolence of idle tongues.
faults of Faustina,
it

Whatever may have been the

stands to the credit of Antonine that he

declined to tarnish the character of his wife.

He honoured her accordance with the superstition of the times, by ranking her among the deities, and associating her name with his own in an inscription on a temple still forming an attractive The name of Faustina does not appear ruin in the Via Sacra.
memory,
in
in

any inscription yet discovered in mentioned by contemporary authors

Roman

Africa, nor

is

it

in connection with

any

public

work or ceremonial.
in far-distant

But court intrigues

Rome and

domestic

differ-

ences in the imperial circle possessed little interest to peaceloving, contented citizens in the North African provinces, and
'

Gyatis or Gyara is an island in the Archipelago,


thither,

now known
:

as Joura.

Criminals

were sent

(Tacit.

Ann.

iii.

68, 69. )

Juvenal says

Atide aliquid brevibus Gyaris et carcere digntim.

Si vis
(Juv.

esse aliquid.

Sat.

I.)

According

to Strabo, the resident population consisted of

a few poor

fishermen.
-

De

(Strabo, x. v. 3.) hujus vxore multa dicta sunt ob

nimiam

lihertalein et
c.

Vivendi faci'iitalem,

qua. iste

cum

aniini dolon coinpressit.

(Capitolinus, Anton,

3.)

Africa under Antoninus Pius

151

the daily life of an Empress, unknown to them in person except on the coins of the time, had nothing in common with the pursuits of a hard-working industrial population. The reign just drawn to a close, uneventful in comparison with the more stirring days of Trajan or the restless activity of Hadrian, has left its mark in the form of unnumbered memorials of private rather than of public life. These records of the time, either on stone or marble, bear ample testimony to a long period of ease and quietude enjoyed by loyal citizens in all parts of North Africa. They tell the old story of human affections, of undying love and tender regard, expressed in a tongue which modern languages fail to equal either in strength or terseness, and in

What epitaph written in English could such simple words and in a few short lines the lovable qualities of Geminia Ingenua, so good a mother and so kind a friend, ready to assist any one in need and when her
brevity
inimitable.
in

set forth

hour had come and her remains were laid to rest in the necropolis at Cirta, her sorrowing relatives placed on record that this worthy woman, who lived to the age of eighty-one, tristem fecit neminem ?
last
'

D M GEMINIA INGE NVA VNIVIRA CONSE RVATRIX DVLCISSIM



Diis Manibus. Geminia Ingenua,


univira, conseruatrix, dulcissima

mater, omniuTn hominum. parens, obnibus {sic) subveniens, innocens,


carissima,
prcestans,

MATER OMNIVM HOMINVM PARENS

rarissima,
Tris-

OBNI

vixit annis oUaginta uno.

BVS SVBVENIENS INNOCE NS CASTISSIM PRAESTA NS RARISSIMA V A LXXXI TRISTEM FECIT NEMINE

tem fecit neminem. Oro ut bene quiescat

Q
these simple epitaphs
is

The wording of
Caesarea (Cherchel)

very varied.

At

we

find the virtues of an excellent wife


:

recorded in a different form of phraseology ^ cum qua vita jucunda, conversatio religiosa, frugalitas honesta, fides cum
disciplina exacta
est.

Sometimes the memorial takes the form

of an imaginary conversation between a deceased husband and wife, indicating that the epitaph was prepared during their

and afterwards inscribed on the slab. The following example may still be studied in the museum at Tebessa ^
lifetime
:

'

C.I.L. No. 7384.

C.I.L. No. 9520.

C.r.L. No. 1954.

Wilmanns.

152

Roman

Africa

D M S IVLIA FORTVNATA PIE VIXIT ANNIS LXII CASTA BONA INVIOLANS RARVM HOC A CONIVGE MVNVS FORTVNATA TIBI SIC PLACET HARDALIO NOMINE DIGNA MEO QVOD TU MIHI KARE SVPERSTES NATORVM NATIS TE INCOLVMI VIGVI
Loquitur Hardalius
:

rarum hoc a conjuge munus. Fortunaia, tibi ; sic placet Hardalio. Respondet Fortunata Nomine digna meo, quod tu mihi, care, superstes,
Casta, bona, inviolans,
:

Natorum

natis te incolumi vigui.

Numidia, now known as Ziganiah, some t.wentyman laments the loss of his wife in the following expressive words ^ conj'ux uno animo, uno consilio, semper fruita mecum. So enviable a spouse is scarcely excelled in worth by the good woman of Madaura (Mdaou-

At Sigus

in

four miles from Constantine, a

rouch),

who

is

described as a conj'ux rarissima, omni pietate,

inorum fecunda, tecusa, karissima? And Capsa (Gafsa) in the far south, where the sites of old Roman towns are naught but oases in a region of sand, domestic happiness and filial affection have left a pleasant record on imperishable stone in the memorial of a woman of many virtues named Domitia Caesia.^
innocentia, gravitate

at

D
DOMITIA

CAESIA

OPTIMA

IN VITA PVDICISSIMA FEMINA RARISSIMAE FRVGALITA

TIS

'

ET

TRONA

INDULGENTISSIMA MA VIXIT ANNIS LXVIII


MONVMENTVM AGENDVM

CVRAVIT

IVLIVS SENTEANVS FILIVS EIVS O T B Q


'

"

' C./.L. No. 4692 [tecusa rarely used, Wilmanns). C.I.L. No. 5798. Capsa has had a long history and, according to Sallust, was C.I.L. No. 134.

Its remote a town of great importance at the termination of the Punic wars. position on the Desert border, forming an oasis of beauty and productiveness, did not prevent the army of Caius Marius from encamping under its walls and destroying the town. But, owing to the fertility of the soil, abundance of water, and direct communication with the coast, Capsa soon recovered its old position and continued in It is built almost enprosperity long after the Arabs had swept over the land.
'

tirely,'

says El-Bekri, the


;
'

Arab

writer of

the eleventh century,

'

with galleries of
to

marble

and he adds

'

that the ramparts

were constructed by Chentian, page

Africa under Antoninus Pius

153

The frequent repetition of superlative epithets becomes somewhat monotonous, and difficult to appreciate in our more prosaic times. But it must be remembered that these old-world citizens had no other means of giving public expression to their grief in the hour of bereavement, and that the wording of these homely memorials, sometimes extending to twenty lines, was often prompted by the hope that the Dii Manes would not forget the good deeds of those who had passed away from this world. As an example of a thoroughly homely epitaph, one noted by Orelli^ is worthy of mention here, principally on account of the unusual epithets lanifica and domiseda. It speaks well for this beautiful lady Amymone that she was skilled at the spinning-wheel but what shall we say of a remarkable
;

qualification expressed in the last

word that
?

she stopped at

home and minded

the affairs of the house

HIC SITA EST AMYMONE MARCI OPTIMA ET PVLCHERRIMA LANIFICA PIA PVDICA FRUG CASTA DOMISEDA

The

private lives of

good

fathers

also their full share of imperishable record

and estimable sons have and of superlative

epithets. An eminent citizen of Lambsesis is described as omnibus virtutibus abundatis vir, and a resident of Ammsedara (Hydra) is inscribed as koino bonus rebus hominibusque pernecesAnother sarius, quern qucBrit patrice maximus hie populus. dedication on a stone found on the road between Theveste and Cirta is to an excellent father in the following simple words cujus exiniiam bonitatem et prudentiam non solum parentes, veruni etiam finitimi doluerunt, quam ob rem filii dulcissimi

patri rarissimo sestertium


parentes.

nmnmum

quinque millibus, incolum.es


is

At Hippo Regius (Bone)

an inscription of nineteen

Imes^ to Lucius Postumius Felix Celerinus, who was not only pontifex and duumvir, but was honoured with the distincFurther lines speak of his tion oi flamen Augusti perpetuus.
innocentiam splendoremque et in patriam

suam incomparabilem

amorem.
It Nimrod, whose name is still preserved in an inscription that is quite legible.' need scarcely be said that the walls are mostly destroyed, and that nothing remains of

the grandeur of the ancient Capsa.


'

Jnscript. Lat. ColUctio, J. Caspar

von

Orelli, 1828-56, Turici,

No. 4639,

vol.

ii.

P-

3192

/.i7.^.

No. 2871.

154
Such epitaphs

Roman
as these

Africa

be found in nearly all parts Roman Africa, but any list would be incomplete without reference to a remarkable example of a compact inscription found by Dr. Leclerc on an altar on the site of the Roman
of
station Tingurtia,

may

now known

as

Tiaret (a

modern town

in

Algeria, on the lower slopes of Djebel Guezzoul).'

DISMAN
IBVSTE RRISQVI

CVMQVE
VIATOR TRANSIE
RISET DI XERIS^^VI
Diis Manibus.
Terris quicumque viator
transieris et dixeris huic

^TVMVLO
RVIIII^f

tumulo : Rufine, have, sit tibi terra levis, et post obitum Vixit item tuum sit tibi terra levis !
annis septuaginta duobus.

VESITTI

BITERLE VISETPOS TOBITVM ITETVVMSIT TIBITERR ALE VIS


VALXXII

The wording recalls the less gracious couplet attributed to Horace Walpole on the death of Sir John Vanbrugh
Lie heavy on him, earth, for he Laid many a heavy load on thee.

But

here, in

this

gentle epitaph in

memory

of Rufinus, the

appeal to the passer-by is accompanied by the hope that, when he too passes away, the earth may rest as lightly on his remains
as on those of the lamented Rufinus.
'

J.R.A. No. 3712.

Vide Rev. arch. 1852, p. 442.

155

CHAPTER
A.D.

VI

AFRICA UNDER MARCUS AURELIUS


161-180

No Emperor

ever acceded to a throne under more favourable

Adopted by Antonine at the age of seventeen, when he bore the name of Marcus ^lius Varus, and renamed (according to Capitolinus) ^lius Aurelius Antoninus Pius Cassar in compliment to the Emperor, this fortunate prince enjoyed, till the age of forty, a sunny existence unruffled by political dissensions, the clash of arms, or domestic anxieties. Beloved by his adoptive father, surrounded by friends, with a wife whom he trusted and children whom he adored, Marcus Aui'elius had everything which life could offer to make it one long day of reasonable enjoyment. His affectionate intimacy with the Emperor is amply attested by correspondence and the wording of inscriptions discovered intact in various parts of the Empire. So endearing an epithet as Verissimus, which Antonine added to his name when he was a mere child, conveys an idea of extreme sincerity of character and an earnest desire to probe the truth for truth's sake. His philosophic tendencies were conspicuous in his early years, due as much to temperament as to the guidance of his instructors, selected by Antonine himself Rusticus and Apollonius the Stoic were his masters in rhetoric Eutychius Proculus, a native of Cirta, and
;

auspices than Marcus Aurelius.

Frontinius

Cornelius

his

tutors

for

Latin

while

Cornelius

Fronto and Herodes the munificent Athenian roused his enAll these men were his intimate thusiasm for philosophy. friends as well as teachers, and to them we are indebted for having brought to light those gentle qualities which are so conspicuous in the correspondence between the young prince
.and his attached friend of African birth, Cornelius Fronto.

On

the death of Antonine, A.D. 161, Marcus Aurelius was

free to take undivided possession of the throne

and

to grasp the

156
reins of empire,
years.

Roman

Africa

which had been within his reach for so manyBut the prince was cast in a different mould from other men, and the bare idea of depriving any one, whose claims to exercise imperial authority, however slight, were recognised by the Senate or the people, would have been distasteful to so just and thoughtful a man. In his earlier days' he had adopted as
his future colleague, at the express desire of Hadrian, a little

boy named Lucius Ceionius Commodus, whose father had been similarly adopted by that Emperor. To make the connection still more binding, Marcus Aurelius gave him the name of Verus, and a few years afterwards made him his son-in-law. For eight years and a few months the Empire was ruled by these two men conjointly, the one judicious in all his actions, governing with wisdom and with the trained mind of a student and philosopher the other, of depraved tastes and dissolute habits, effeminate and extravagant, passing away at the age of thirty-five, the victim of debauchery and riotous living. The name of Verus would long ago have been almost forgotten had it not been for inscriptions in which he figures as joint Emperor with Marcus Aurelius. The monumental remains in Africa,
;

bearing so dishonoured a name, are fortunately few in number, the most remarkable being the ruined triumphal arch at Tripoli,
referred to on

page

121.
^
:

The

inscription,

still

unmutilated and

easily legible, runs thus


IMP CAES AVRELIO ANTONIN AVG P P ET IMP CAES

L AVRELIO

SER

VERO ARMENICO AVG OEFRITVS PROCOS CVM VTTEDIO MARCELLO


LEG SVO DEDICAVIT C CALPVRNIVS CELSIVS CVRATOR MVNERIS PVB MVNERARIVS II VIR Q Q FLAMEN PERPETVVS ARCVS MARMORE SOLIDO FECIT.

This dedication to the two Emperors appears to have been about A.D. 163, at the close of a successful expedition against the Armenians under the conduct of Verus. A traveller who visited Tripoli more than two centuries ago was enraptured with He says the beauty of this monument and its sculptures.

There are four gates (referring to this quadrifrontal arch) upon which is a triumphal car with a figure of Alexander drawn by
'
'

Travels itithe Footsteps of

Bnice,

p. 281.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


two sphinxes.

157

Below are the heads of

slaves.

are Latin inscriptions.

The

vaulting

is in

Over the gates good condition, with

very fine sculpture in high relief. It is all built without mortar or cement. The blocks of marble are from four to five feet
thick,

and are
It is

laid

on sheets of lead and held together with

cramps.'

a matter of doubt whether Verus took any active

part in securing a victorj' for the

Roman arms. His pleasure was not in the battle-field, and his ambition was to obtain the honour of a warrior at the expense of such trusted generals as Avidius Cassius, a Syrian by birth, Statius Priscus, or Pontius Lselianus. The delights of Antioch as a city of revelry, and the voluptuous amusements in the far-famed laurel groves of Daphne, were more to the taste of such a dissolute and worthless ruler of mankind. And yet a triumph was awarded to him by the Senate in Rome for distinguished services Similar expeditions to suppress disturbances in Media and Parthia were afterwards undertaken under his command, and with similar results. According to Fronto, Marcus Aurelius was invited by his colleague to share the honour of a triumph A.D. i66, but, as a conscientious man, he unhesitatingly declined to accept reward for services in which he had taken no personal part. The above inscription at Tripoli is of some interest. It clearly tells us that Marcus Aurelius was recognised as Augustus and Pater patria, and that Verus was Augustus also and honoured with the title of Armeniacus. The words marmore solido are
!

unusual.

They

give indications of the magnificence of this

commenced in the reign of Antonine, and intended as a perpetual memorial of his benign rule. According to Capitolinus, the title of Pater patrim was refused by
quadrifrontal arch,

Marcus Aurelius till the return of Verus after his successful expedition against the Parthians, and on the death of Verus he assumed the title of Armeniacus as well as Germanicus. It is quite possible that the letters P. P. on the Tripoli arch were not cut till after the Parthian campaign. The omission
last of these titles is shown on an inscription at Verecunda (Markouna) bearing the date A.D. 163, the second year of the joint rule of these two Emperors.^

of the

'

I.R.A. No. 1415.

158

Eoman

Africa

IMP CAES M AVRELIO ANT TRIE POT XVIII COS II I P P ET IMP ARMENIACO AVG IMP Tl TRIE POT

.......

. .

im

Imperatari Ccesari Marco Aurelio Antonino Augusta, Pantifici Maximo, Imperatori II. tribunicia patestate XVIII. Consuli III. patri patria, et Imperatori Ccesari Lucia Aurelio Vera Armeniaco Augusta, Imperatori II., tribunicia potestate IIIL, consuli II. Respublica Verecundensium decreto decurionum, pecunia publica.

Another inscription bearing the full title, but somewhat illegible, may be seen on the attic of a triumphal arch also at Verecunda, and runs as follows, according to L^on Renier's
interpretation
:

RELIO ANTONINO AVG THIC GERM MAX P


TRIE POT XXVI


DIVO VERO ROCOS DIVI VERI PART MAX FRATRI AVG AN NEPOTI DIVI TRAIAN PARTHIC PRO NEP DIVI NERY AB NEP MACER SATVRNINVS LEG AVG PR PR PATRON DEDICAVIT D D P P.

Imperatori

CcBsari

Parthico, Germanico,

Marco Aurelio Antonino Augusta Armeniaco, Maximo, Pontifici Maximo, tribunicia potestate XXVI.

Imperatori VI., Consuli III, Proconsuli, divi Veri Parthici Maximi fratri, divi Antonini Pii filio, divi Hadriani nepoti, divi Traiani Parthici pronepoti, divi NervcB abnepati, Respublica Verecundensitcm, Marcus JEmilius Macer Saturninus, legatus Augusti pro pratore, paironus, dedicavit decreto decurionum, pecunia publica.

Among

other inscriptions worthy of notice there


It

is

one

still

to be seen on the frieze stones of a temple at Lambaesis

(Lam:

bessa) dedicated to ^sculapius and Health.

runs thus

IMP
IMP

CAES

M
L

AESCVLAPIO ET SALVTI ANTONINVS AVRELIVS

AVG

PONT

MAX ET

CAES

AVRELIVS

VERVS

AVGVSTVS

This temple appears to have been commenced in the time of Hadrian, and was built, as another inscription informs us, by the third Augustan legion quartered in that town. It is fair
'

I.R.A. No. 1419.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


to assume, from the absence of
titles,

159
two

that the above inscription

was added

at the beginning of the joint reign of these

Emperors.' Fifty years ago this temple of the Doric order, with its lateral chapels and surroundings, formed an interesting group
of monumental buildings.

The

four columns of the tetrastyle

portico of the central edifice, sketched

by De

la

Mare

in

1846,

have long since been overthrown, and now there is little remaining except the lower parts of the walls of the cella, and a confused mass of stone slabs, both moulded and plain. Fortunately, the inscriptions in the subsidiary chapels are
still

legible,

that on the

being dedicated to Jupiter Valens, and the one on the right to Silvanus. In front of the buildings was a large paved court of semicircular form, which still remains in good condition. Each temple was approached by a flight of steps, and a curved colonnade bound together the side-chapels with the central sanctuary. The approach was by a broad avenue,
left

bordered at a later date by a number of shrines dedicated to various deities, many of them being faced with slabs of marble and paved with mosaics. Some of the mosaic patterns are
interesting, especially

one seen and described by L^on Renier,


:

bearing the following inscription

BONVS

INTRA

MELIOR

EXI

Strange to say, the slab of mosaic bearing these words has been lost. The remains of other memorials are better studied on
the spot, and the sculptures and other remains, including fine statues of ^sculapius and his daughter Hygeia, are attractive
objects in the local

very popular in

museum. The worship of .^Esculapius was North Africa, and, according to Pausanias, sick

persons desirous of supplicating the deity or his daughter were required to spend one or more nights in his sanctuary for the

purpose of observing certain rites ordained by the priests attached to the temple. The remedies were usually revealed At Lambaesis special provision to supplicants in a dream. made for such visitors, there being clear appears to have been indications of a series of buildings grouped round the temples
'

M. R. Cagnat

says that the date of this edifice

is

a.d. 162,

and that the

lateral

chapels were added successively during the reigns of the Emperors M. Aurelius Commodus and Septiraius Severus. Everything appears to have been completed
A.D. 211.

i6o
and
fitted

Roman

Africa
Whether they formed

with baths and hypocausts.

parts of a large thermal establishment where bodily treatment

was practised is not quite apparent. But it is reasonable to suppose that, with the decline of Paganism at a later period, such places were resorted to by wealthy colonists, who held the worship of .iEsculapius as a matter of secondary importance. It is worthy of mention that, at a place now called El Gara in North Africa, within the old province of Mauritania Sitifensis, an inscription still exists bearing the dedication of a shrine to Fortune, Health, and .^Esculapius.^ Here, it will be observed, the old Pagan deity comes last, Fortune holding the first place
in public estimation.

In

some

inscriptions

we

find the

name

of Verus appearing

as sole Emperor.

At
is

a town called Uzappa, in the province of

Byzacene, there

a dedication to Verus by the inhabitants,

in gratitude for alleged services in suppressing the revolt in

Armenia, the date being A.D. 163-165. The name of Avidius Cassius, whose generalship contributed so largely to the success of the Roman arms, has no place in this inscription, which is one long string of self-laudatory expressions in honour of a man utterly incapable of any generous act.^

IMP

CAES

AVRELI

VERO

AVG

ARME

DIVI ANTO NINI FIL DIVI HA DRIANI NEP DIVI

NIACO

TRAIANI
CI

PARTHI

PRONEP DIVI NERVAE ABNEP


P P

IMP
P

II

TRIE POT COS II


P
bit of irony.

The

lettering in the last line

may

be read as a

It accords the highest distinction of Pater patriai to an Emperor Of Uzappa we know in every way unworthy of the honour.

nothing, except that

it

was raised to the position of a muniIt

cipium towards the end of the third century.


'

need scarcely

C.I.L. No. 8782.


C.I.L. No.
a.
1

1927.

Cagnat.

Vide Esp^randieu,

Comptes-rendus de VAcad.

d'Hipp.

1883.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

i6i

be said that the town has long since been swept away and its existence almost forgotten. It is a matter of regret that the chief authorities for this period of African history, embracing the career of such a remarkable Emperor as Marcus Aurelius, should have written so little about his eventful reign. Capitolinus has placed much ill-assorted material at the disposal of biographers, and Dion Cassius has supplied some fragmentary notes, strung together without much forethought and with no attempt at methodical arrangement. Where written records fail, inscriptions and coins are the sure guide and whether they relate to the Emperor's achievements in the defence of a vast Empire, or are expressive of the good will shown to him by his subjects for wise administration and just rule, they are for all purposes to be depended
;

upon

as faithful memorials.
earlier

The
troubled
part.

years of the reign of Marcus Aurelius were

by incessant wars, in which the Emperor took no active But on the death of Verus the philosopher turned warrior

from duty rather than choice, and conducted various campaigns with considerable success. Like most of his predecessors, the thought of crossing the Mediterranean the mare scFvum., as the Romans called it was distasteful, partly on account of a

somewhat

fragile constitution

and

susceptibility of taking cold

after the slightest exposure.

To Marcus

Aurelius Africa was

personally an

unknown

country, but his regard for this magnifi-

cent appendage of the Empire is attested by the vast number of dedicatory inscriptions throughout the provinces. At the time of his accession the turbulent disposition of the Moors in the extreme west, which had caused Antonine some little

anxiety at the close of his reign, had been successfully checked,

With that spirit of but had never been entirely repressed. impetuosity which characterises southern races, these restless inhabitants of Western Mauritania were not content with
making continual
raids into the less protected parts of

Roman

advantage of disturbances in other parts of the Empire, crossed the Mediterranean with the intention of forcing the Romans to surrender their hard-won possessions But this adventurous expedition was not in Southern Spain. attended with success. The rapid spread of colonisation westward in the African
territory, but, taking

62

Roman

Africa
demanded increased
It

provinces during the last three reigns


security

and better military organisation.

was

to

these

points that the


increased,

Emperor

directed his attention.

Outposts were

established there

and Lambaesis, the headquarters of a Roman legion by Hadrian, was no longer a mere entrenched camp, such as he had inaugurated, but was assuming the appearance of a permanently constructed and well-ordered town. The history of Lambaesis is the key to the history of the Roman

in Africa. In the third century, under the firm rule of Septimius Severus, it became one of the most attractive cities in the country and even now, after the lapse of seventeen centuries, its monumental remains and the wealth of inscriptions discovered on the site bear ample testimony to its importance and prosperity, and to the loyal allegiance of a large population, both civil and military. The Roman army, at the time of the accession of Marcus Aurelius, consisted of thirty legions, distributed in various parts of the Empire. list is given by Marquardt, inscribed on a column of this period, now preserved in the Vatican Museum.^
;

army

Place.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

163

' In the days of Augustus and his successor, the legion quartered in Africa, with the auxiliary troops employed to defend the frontiers of the provinces, was under the control of

the proconsul.
uncertain,

But Caligula, whose disposition was wild and was led to suspect Marcus Silanus, at that time governor of Africa. To settle any doubts on the matter, the Emperor transferred the command of the legion to an imperial lieutenant, whom he despatched from Rome for that purpose. The result was that, the power of granting preferment being divided between them, dissension arose and a spirit of rivalry aggravated the evil.' ^ But the African legion was supplemented by many others drafted into the country in the time of need for, in the index to the volumes of the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum relating to the African provinces, Wilmanns and others mention
;

the following legions noted


in different districts
:

in

inscriptions as having served

Apollinaris, Claudia, Cyrenaica, Ferrata,

Flavia, Fretensis, Fulminata, Gallica, Hispana, Italica,

Mace-

donica, Parthica, Primigenia, Scythica, Severiana, Ulpia, Valeria,


alcB, and cohortes auxiliarice. Twenty-six of these legions were formed before the reign of Trajan, who added the II Trajana and the III Ulpia Victrix. Marcus Aurelius subsequently added the II Italica and the III Italica. In the time of Septimius Severus the list was increased by the addition of the I Parthica, II Parthica, and III Parthica. The names given to the legions originated from various sources, mostly from the countries or provinces where they were raised, or in honour of successful campaigns. For instance, Gemina appears to have been adopted where two bodies of troops levied in the same country formed one legion. The little Fulminata had its origin under peculiar circumstances, which have not been disputed. According to Capitolinus, the Roman army under Marcus Aurelius was sore pressed in the war against the Quadi,^ on account of a long continuance of hot weather and scarcity of water arising from a long period of

Victrix, besides various vexillationes,

'

Tacitus, Hist.

iv.

48.

as Bohemia.

what is now knowri end of the fourth Ammianus Marcellinus (xvii. 12) refers to their methods of warfare, which century. He bear a strong resemblance to the tactics of the Boers in the South African war. says that they had generally three swift horses for every man, and that they were more
'

The Quadi were

a powerful tribe located in the south-east of


iii.

(Tacit. Hist.

5.

21.)

They ceased

to exist at the

skilled in skirmishing than at close quarters in a battlefield.

164
drought.
It

Roman

Africa

legions had been formed at Maltha, where the population

was represented to the Emperor that one of the was mostly Christian, and that, such was the power of the gods they served, they could obtain by prayer and invocation anything

they required from heaven. By imperial command prayers were offered by this legion on behalf of the distressed army, and immediately the clouds gathered, the thunder pealed forth,
the lightning flashed, and the welcome rain not only gave life and strength to the parched troops, but contributed largely to

subsequent victory and the successful termination of an anxious campaign. This view of the story is supported by Xiphilin the monk, but Dion Cassius has placed on record that the appeal was made, by order of the Emperor, to an Egyptian magician named Arnuphius, who was serving in the Roman army.

Mercury and other demons that preside in the air were invoked, and the desired rain fell. The former version is probably the true one, as well as a further statement by Capitolinus that the Emperor, in gratitude for such remarkable services, issued an edict in favour of the Christians, and bestowed on their religion
'
'

the

title

of Fulminans.

After the time of Caracalla legions

usually took their distinguishing

names from that of the


fix

reign-

ing Emperor, thus making


tion.

it

easy to

the date of their forma-

first Emperor to raise standing armies some of the provinces. Before his time bodies of troops were raised for each expedition, and were disbanded at the close of the campaign. This action by Augus-

Augustus was the

in Italy as well as in

tus gave rise to an increased taxation, which pressed heavily

on
all

the people in the earlier days of the Empire, but the


legacies

Emperor

met the annual charge by an imposition of one-twentieth on


and
in

inheritances.

This continued

till

the time of Trajan,


for its entire

who

lightened the burden

and paved the way

removal
after
its

the reign of Antonine.

The

legion allotted for the

defence of Numidia received the

title

of the third Augusta, and,

permanent settlement at Lambaesis in the time of Hadrian, does not appear to have quitted Africa. It became

the representative legion of the African army.


accession of Diocletian, A.D. 283,
legions of the

As

late as the

when an

entirely

new system
of the old

of military organisation was introduced and

many

Empire ceased

to exist, this time-honoured

body

continued undisturbed in

its

old

headquarters.

Its

services

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

165

were only interrupted for a short period during the struggle for empire between Gordian and his brutal rival Maximinus. This legion paid the penalty of siding with the latter, and was disbanded by order of the former when he ascended the throne. After a lapse of fifteen years it was reconstituted by Valerian and re-established at Lambaesis. No camp in any part of the world has left so many indications of its existence, or so many memorials of military life and
administration, as the

camp of

scriptions already discovered


2,500,

this Numidian legion. The inand interpreted number more than


is

and continued systematic exploration

constantly bring-

ing others to light of more or less value to the historian as well


as to the epigraphist.
soldiers of all ranks

They are in the form of memorials of who have faithfully discharged their duty,

of "dedications to emperors for just and benevolent rule, and of

by residents of wealth and renown. One and all they bear testimony to a long period of tranquil enjoyment of life in a pleasant and fertile country, to the prevalence of respect paid by soldiers to their superiors, and to loyal
acts of munificence

obedience to imperial authority. The commander-in-chief of the army occupying Numidia, or rather Africa, was at first a proconsul called proconsul provincicB Numidice. He was of senatorial rank, and was selected from among those who had done good service to the State. When Mauritania became a Roman province in the time of Caligula, A.D. 37, a change in military administration, consequent upon the acquisition of so large an increase of territory, became necessary. Supreme military control was then centred in the Emperor's selected legate, who in other respects was not independent of the proconsul, and whose title was Legatus Augustipro prcetore} Towards the end of the second century, when the African legion had been established at Lambaesis, the military authority of this legate was restricted to that portion of Africa which was regarded as a military province, the title of this high functionary being Legatus Augusti provincia Africa dioceseos NumidicB. And towards the middle of the third century the title was again altered \.o pro prcBtore provincice Numidice, according to two inscriptions found on the sites of Thamugas and Lambaesis. The
'

Vide Smith's Diet. Class. Antiq. vol.

ii.

p. 26.

This subject

is fully

explained

in an article

by

W. W.

F.

66

Roman
may be

Africa
assigned to the reign of Alex-

former reads thus,^ and ander Severus

V COS LEG AVG PR PROVINCIAE NVMIDIAE PROCOS PROVINCIAE MACEDONIAE PRAEF AERARI MI LITARIS CVRATORI VIAE CLODIAE PRAETORIAE TRIBVNO
P

IVLIO IVNIANO MARTIALINO C

PR

PLEBEI

QVAESTORI PROVINCIAE ASIAE PATRONO COLONIAE ET MVNI CIPI RESPVBLICA COLONIAE THAMVGADENSIVM DE CRETO DECVRIONVM
seen on an inon a stone slab found on the east side of the forum at Thamugas.^ It is a dedication to si Roman of high distinction, who had served his country in many capacities, the exception appearing on the eighth line, where the words fro frcetore exercitus provincice Africce occur. The inscription is supposed to be of the time of Hadrian.
scription

The only exception worth noting may be

A LARCIO A FILIO QVIRINA PRISCO VI VIR EQVITUM ROMANOR X VIR STLITIB IVDICAND QVAESTOR PROVINCIAE ASIAE LEG AVG LEG Till SCYTHICAE PED LEG CONSVLARE PROVINCIAE SYRIAE TRIB PLEB PRAETORI PRAEF FRVMENTI DANDI EX S C LEG PRO VINCIAE BAETICAE HISPANIAE PROCOS PROVIN CIAE GALLIAE NARBON LEG AVG LEG II AVG LEG AVG PR PR EXERCITVS PROVINCIAE AFRIC VII VIR EPLONVM COS DESIG PATRONO COL D D P P

castrum, and its diminutive the castellum, or played an important part in the subjugation of Africa by the Romans. The castrum, of which so notable an example exists at Lambessa to the present day, was formed in accordance with the traditional rules which had prevailed from an early period. Polybius,' the earliest and perhaps the only
fortified post,
Vide Descrip. Wilmanns, also De la Mare and Renier. C.I.L. No. 2392. I.R.A. No. 1505. " C.I.L. No. Vide PouUe, Rec. de Const, xxii. Dessau and Cagnat. 1 789 1. Pallu de Lessen, Les Pastes de la Numidie, 1888, p. 60. p. 355. - Polybius, the Greek historian, was a native of Megalopolis in Peloponnesus, and served his country during the war in Macedonia, which became a Roman province
'

The Roman

B c. 148. He was taken to Rome as a prisoner of war, but his high attainments and amiable disposition gained him the friendship of Scipio and other distinguished

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


Greek
historian

167
with
the

who was
left

intimately acquainted

military operations of his time,

and who was present

at the fall

of Carthage, has

us accurate information about the form

and arrangements of a Roman camp. He says that it was an exact square, measuring 2,222 feet each way, and accommodated two legions. Hyginus, an equally reliable authority, describes

camp enclosure of the third century as of oblong form, measuring 2,320 feet by 1,620 feet. The castrum at Lambaesis may be estimated at 1,670 feet by 1,330 feet. It was fortified by a strong wall rounded at the angles and flanked by towers, but without a ditch. Some fifty years ago portions of this wall were standing to a considerable height, but they have since been entirely overthrown. The arrangements of the camp were similar to those described by Hyginus, and the form of the enclosing wall agrees with the particulars set forth in his work on the subject.^ There was a gateway in or near the centre of each of the four sides, and broad roads ran across the enclosures from gate to gate. The principal gate, which was of ornate character, was called Prcetoria, the one in the opposite wall being called Decumana, and those in the side-walls designated respectively as Principia, dextra and sinistra? At the intersection of these four roads was a large open space where the headquarters of the legion, termed the Prcztorium, was placed. In permanent encampments, such as at Lambaesis, this edifice had considerable architectural pretensions. Facing the principal entrance was a large open space, commonly known as Principia, or headquarters, used by the commanding officer
the
Romans. He accompanied Scipio to Carthage, and subsequently retired to his native where he wiote a universal history, beginning with the first outbreak of hostilities between Carthage and Rome, and terminating with an account of the Mace-

city,

donian war. Of the forty books comprising the entire work, the first five only are extant, and fragments only of the remainder have been preserved. The twelfth book, treating of the geography of Africa, is unfortunately lost. Polybius was the first
author to mention the Moors as Moupoi)jio(, this term being subsequently applied

by the Romans
'

to the inhabitants

of the whole country

first

given to Juba II., ex-

tending from the river

Ampsaga

to the Atlantic in the

Ocean.

Hyginus was a land surveyor

time of Trajan.

He

appears to have been

expert in forming military camps, of which he had

made

special study.

His work
titles,

De Castrametatione has gone through several editions, but as De Castris Romanis and De Munitionibus Castrortim,
^

with different

such

Ad

quatuor portas exercitum instruxit,


(Livy, b.
xl, c.

ut,

signo data, ex omnibus fortubus

erupt io Item facerent,

27.)

68

Roman

Africa

as the place for addressing the troops, corresponding to our


It was also available for pitching tents for the general and his staff at certain seasons. Near the centre of this open space an altar was erected. The location of the

parade-grounds.'

various bodies of troops belonging to


service

all branches of militaryaccordance with a recognised system, one castrum being almost the exact counterpart of another, although the dimensions may have varied.^

was

in

was a fortified and entrenched outpost, either mountain passes, or to preserve the line of communication with towns and villages in the interior of the
castelium
for the defence of the

The

country.

The

castella

were generally rectangular enclosures

with gates like those of the castra. closures known in North Africa

The
is

largest of these en-

El-Kesbat, which measures 780 feet by 460 feet. There is another at Tamesida measuring 300 feet by 184 feet, while that at Ksar Rhelan is of moderate dimensions, being only 100 feet by 81 feet. These fortified strongholds served many purposes. They were not only permanent habitations for small bodies of troops, but they were used as military stores and, in times of disturbance caused by an uprising of any of the frontier tribes, became places of refuge for unprotected colonists and their families.
at
It is

not surprising to find that in nearly

all

the castella yet

discovered in this country there are indications of water supply

from wells sunk within the enclosures, showing the care and
foresight of

Roman

generals in the selection of fortified posts.


castella

At

intervals

between the

signalling in case of necessity.

hended a fire was visible by night and the smoke by day. In some cases beams of timber were employed, being raised or lowered
in

were small watch-towers for danger was apprewas lighted on the summit, the flame of which

When any

accordance

with a pre-arranged system of signalling


scientific wireless

primitive form of aerial signalling probably as useful in those

days as the highly


times.*

telegraphy in our

own

Ann. b. iv. c. 3. Vide also L'Armee Romaine cCAfrique, p. 675. Such was the value attached to obedience to authority in a Roman camp that altars have been found bearing this simple dedication Discipline Militari. (C.I.L. Nos. 9832 and 10657.) ' Si divisa sunt copies, per noctem Jlammis, per diem fumo significant sociis quod
'

Tacitus,

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


Another kind of
feature in
fortification,

169
Remains

which

for a

long period was a

Roman

Africa, consisted of fortified farms.

of these buildings, as well as similar ones on a larger scale in

connection with imperial estates which bore the title of saltus} may still be studied in the less frequented parts of the country. Among the inscriptions relating to this class of building there
is

one at a farm about eleven miles from


Mellul.
It is

Setif,

now known
its

as

Ain

dedicated to Diana, the date of

construc-

tion being, according to

Wilmanns,

A.D. 234, the last year of

the reign of Alexander Severus.^

IMP CAES M AVRELIVS SEVERVS

ALEXANDER INVICTVS AVG MVROS KASTELLI DIANENSIS EX


PIVS FELIX

TRVXIT PER COLONOS EIVSDE M KASTELLI


P
It

CLXXXXV

protection.

appears to have been built by the colonists for their own Inscriptions relating to fortifications for the pro-

tection of larger holdings are not numerous, but the

annexed

dedication during the short rule of Pertinax, A.D. 192, gives some idea of the wording usually employed ^
:

PRO SALVTE
IMP CAESARIS
P

HEL PERTINA
PO

CIS TRIBVNICIE

TESTATIS COS II P P COLONI DOMINI N CAPVT SALTVS HOR

REOR PARDALARI HA NC ARAM POSVERVNT ET D D

aliter
trabes,

non potest nuntiari.


quibus
iii.

Aliquanti in castellorum out urbium turribus appendunt


erectis,

aliquando
It is best

aliquando

depositis,

indicant

qua geruntur.
titles,

(Veg.

5.)

Flavius Vegetius Renatus dedicated his work on military institutions to

Valentinian.
Institutortim
'

known

as

De Re

militari, but
jnilitaris.

it

has other

Epitoma

Rei

niilitaris,

and Epitotna Rei

For

definition of saltus, vide p. 189.

C.I.L. No. 8701.

Rec. de Const. 1875, p. 338.

Some

travellers

have noted

that the
'

name

of the

Emperor had been erased

in the usual

way.

C.I.L. No. 8425.

Poulle, Rec. de Const. 1873-74, p. 363.

lyo
There
runs thus
:

Roman
is

Africa

another of the time of Aurelian, A.D. 213, which Coloni caput saltus horreorum et Kalefacelenses Par-

dalarienses

aram pro

salute eius consecraverunt et

nomen

castello

quern, constituerunt.

A study of
camp

the vast

number of

inscriptions relating to the


in

at Lambassis

and the town which sprang up

the

immediate vicinity, bearing the title of Respublica Lambcesitanorum and made a inunicipiuni by Marcus Aurelius, aided by some valuable notes furnished by the authors of the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, reveals the whole system of military administration by the Romans from the second to the fourth century. And further than this, we get an insight into the domestic life of the troops and their families, and a record of
their

work

in a civil as well as military capacity.

In the earlier days of the

Empire no encouragement was

given to soldiers of the legions serving in the provinces to contract matrimony, and consequently a state of concubinage,

approved by the Senate, was found to exist in the chief A married soldier could retain his wife, but he was not allowed to keep her in the camp. Similar restrictions were imposed upon magistrates and other high functionaries, who were not allowed to be accompanied by their wives whenever they accepted foreign appointments. Suetonius, however, in his life of Augustus, says that the Emperor very reluctantly permitted the legates to visit their wives and families during the winter months.' From Tacitus we have a graphic account of a heated debate in the Senate during the reign of Tiberius, when the question of removing such restrictions
tacitly

garrison towns.

was proposed.

He

tells

us

that

a senator

named

Caecina

Severus moved, as a counter proposition, that no magistrate holding office in any province should be accompanied by his wife.^ train of women,' he added, introduced habits of luxury in time of peace, and whenever war broke out or
'

'

disturbances arose they retarded operations by their fears and expostulations, making a Roman army resemble in its inarch
the motley assemblage of a barbarian horde.

Such was the power of women that they ruled all things, not only their families but courts of justice, and ultimately they would even
'

Suetonius, Augustus,

c.

24.

'

Tacitus,"b.

iii.

c.

33.

o o t) o Q O
"

ii

o H

"

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


control
their

171

restriction

armies.' But this senator was overruled, the was withdrawn, and it was not long before minor

functionaries, as well as officers, found


settled with their wives

themselves peacefully

and

families in

some town or

village

close to the

camp.

At Lambaesis

the immediate result was

a considerable extension of the town extra muros, and the establishment of a large settled population enjoying a high degree of prosperity. Veterans of the third Augustan legion,
as well as of the auxiliary forces under the
officers,

command

of

Roman
had
left

became attached

to the neighbourhood where they

happily passed so
it.

many

years of active service, and never

by votive offerings scattered over the ground, they removed to the adjacent towns of Mascula, Verecunda, or Thamugas. All the inscriptions, as we read them in the present day, whether in the museum at Lambessa or some other local depository, or even in the
In
instances, borne out
galleries of the Louvre,

some

may

be regarded as

faithful registers

of

daily

life

and daily work

in the service of the

Empire.

The

activity of the

Roman

soldier,

wherever he was quartered, was

made those magnificent highways, portions of which still greet the traveller's eye and excite his admiration as he journeys across the silent plains of North Africa. He constructed fortifications which would have endured to the present day, if they could have escaped the ravages of the
unbounded.
In times of peace he

Vandals or the wanton neglect of the Arabs. He built bridges and aqueducts in a manner that no other nation has surpassed. Temples and triumphal arches, fountains and baths, theatres and colonnades arose at the bidding of an Emperor, while works of utility and adornment were raised by loyal citizens as enduring memorials of affection for their country. Inscriptions inform us that the building of the city of Thamugas was almost entirely the work of the third legion, and such was the skill of the designers and artificers in their ranks that we find their Soldiers under the Empire, services employed elsewhere. especially in the second and third centuries, appear to have been well cared for and well paid.^ As a single man a soldier
could live in the
'

camp

or in the neighbouring town.

He

could

Et non saxum

erat ut antehac cubile, sed

pluma

et flexiles lectuli.

(Ammianus

This indicates that soldiers were provided with pillows and mattresses, which they took with them in their campaigns.
Marcellinus, b.
xii. c. 4.)

172
save
fort.

Roman

Africa

money and, on retirement, could live with ease and comThe pay varied at different periods, but it was more than sufficient for ordinary requirements. The allowances on retirement varied also, but it may be reckoned at a sum equivalent to 100/. Some of the soldiers were duplicarii, receiving double
pay and exceptional privileges, while others were sesquiplicarii, receiving pay in the same proportion. No inscriptions have, I
been found in Africa relating to the latter, but there are several quite legible relating to the former, such as the annexed one found at Tipasa, extending to eighteen lines,
believe, yet

now

deposited in the

museum

at Algiers.

DVPLICARIVS

EX NVMERVM SINGULARI VM QVI AT MONTE ZELEL INTERCEPTVS EST VI ANS XXXVI Mini DIES X MA TER DVLCISSIO FILIOMFE
CIT
It is

the dedication by a mother to her very dear son,


in a select

who

was a duplicarius

body of

troops,

and was

killed at

Mount Zelel, aged 37 years. On the accession of an Emperor and on special occasions, when it was desirable to secure the good will of the legions in any imperial undertaking, a donative was presented to each soldier.^ Suetonius says that Domitian limited the amount but whatever was the sum granted to each man, the moiety was deposited in a savings bank under the
;

control of the
signiferi,

s*:andard-bearers bearing the military title of


assisted

who were

by men

in the

ranks called librarii

depositorum, in other words, savings-bank clerks.

The money

was called peculium tastrense? The annexed inscription on a stone in the cemetery at Lambsesis is a record of filial affection for a signifer of the Augustan legion.^
deposited
'

Capitolinus states that on the accession of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Venis each

soldier received 20,000 sesterces, equal to 156/.

dus on a

Lampridius mentions that Comraogave large donatives to the army. And we learn from Herodian that Caracalla on ascending the throne gave every soldier 2500 Attic drachms, representing 78/. 2s. dd. To use the words of Spartianus on one occasion, this
like occasion

Emperor enormitate
'

stipendii militibus, ut solei, placuii.

Dig.

xlix. 17, II.

C.I.L. No. 18280.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

173

D
L

AELIVS

VICT
III
.
.

OR

SIG

LEG

AVG
. .

VIX- ANIS -XL AELIVS FELIX PATRI KARISSIM FECIT

In the PrcBtorium was found a dedication to two signiferi,


father

and

son, during the reign of Septimius Severus

and on
raised

an

altar in the

camp was

a somewhat similar one, worth men-

tioning,' the

two

signiferi

by whom the memorial was

having charge of the public market.

-O -M -DOL FLAVI STVDI OSI SABINIVS


I

Publii

Flavii
et
leg.

INGENVVS ET AVRELIVS SED ATVS SIG LEG III AVG AGENTES CVRA MACELLI V L A S CVM A

Ingenuus
Signiferi

Studiosi Sabinus Aurelius Sedatus Ill Augtista agentes

curam
suis.

macelli

votum

libentes

animis solverunt cum azutoribus

ZVTORIBVS SVIS

Of The

higher rank than the standard-bearer was the eagle-

bearer or aquilifer, one only being attached to each legion.


following memorial of an aquilifer who was buried in the cemetery at Lambaesis, and whose name was perpetuated by his uncle, is worth recording ^
:

ICTVRIO FELICI VIXIT ANOS XXV MESSES II DIES XVI DISCENS AQVILIFER

LEG

III

AVG MEMORIAE

EIVS POSVIT ISBON CIVS SECVNDVS

AVVNCVLO
of slaves was not forbidden in any rank of and from two inscriptions found near the camp it would seem that when soldiers were prosperous they had The wording of both of slaves or freedmen in their service.

The keeping
society,

Roman

'

C.I.L. No. 18224. C.I.L. No. 18302.

Bull, Bull,

du Com. iSgo, du Com. 1887,

p. 455.

(Masqueray descrip.)

p. 74.

174

Roman

Africa

them is equally clear. Victori Juli Marciani mil. frum. servo, and D. M. Victoris, natione Mauruni, annoruin XX, libertus Numeriani equitis ala I Asturium.
at Lambsesis

no branch of military service that is not represented and the neighbourhood. Hundreds of inscriptions attesting the labours of officers and soldiers of the legion, and auxiliaries raised in other countries, form an unerring record of more than two centuries of loyal attachment to the Empire.
There
is

As

the eye traces the long line of familiar lettering, imagination


little

depicts a

world of contented Roman colonists in this farsome engaged in the purely military duties of the camp, others actively employed on works of utility or adornment in the town or its vicinity, while not a few, exempt
off settlement,

from services of every kind, tilled the soil or cultivated their gardens in the fertile plain or on the hillsides in the neighbourhood of the camp. So many of the memorial slabs have been removed from the spots where they were discovered that their exact location cannot be easily determined but from the fact that the lettering leg. Ill Aug. occurs on most of them, there is no reason to doubt their genuineness as memorials of residents
;

of old Lambsesis.

The
in

principal

inscriptions of this

nature
are

may

be studied

the local

museum, while some few

imbedded in the walls of more recent structures. All ranks of Among military and civil life are fairly well represented. them are several relating to speculatores of the legion, corresponding to modern aides-de-camp or adjutants, of which the following may be taken as an example
'
:

GENIO SCHOLAE SVAE P AVREL FELIX SPECVLATOR LEG III AVG

speculator, leg.

Genio schola sua, P. Aurelius Felix, Ill Augusta domo

Thamugada, donum

dedit.

DOMO THAMVGA DONVM DEDIT


Another found near the camp preserves the memory of the
wife of an imperial legate, the

monument having been


beneficiarii of the legion.^

raised

by

number of speculatores and


were a
class

The

latter

commanding

of soldiers exempted, by the favour of officers, from the performance of heavy duties,
2

C.I.L. No. 2603; I.R.A. No. 132.

I.R.A. No. 44.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


and are mentioned by Julius Caesar as
exercituum.

175
superiorum

beneficiarii

STATIAE AGRIPPINAE CONIVGIS MODI IVSTI LEG AVG PR PR CONSVLIS SPECVLATORES ET BENEFICIARI

Another

class of soldiers
all

parently freed from


in the vicinity of the

military services,

camp.
:

were the immunes, who were apand had settled down A pleasing memorial in the follow-

ing dedication to a wife, described as conjugi rarissinicB,

may

still

be studied on the spot

D M Diis Manibus. Flavia Victoria FLAVIAE VICTORIAE CONIVGI conjugi rarissima, vixitannis RARISSIMAE VIXIT AN XXXIII XXXIII, Julius Extricatus, IVLIVS EXTRICATVS IMMUN LEG immunis legionis III AugusIII AVG P V EX PRECEPTO PIVS tee. Pirn vindicis, ex precepto PARENTIBVS FECIT ejus, parentibus fecit.

munis of the same legion was found


Lambeesis
^
:

very similar dedication to a matri carissimcB by an imin the necropolis at

D M S RESTVTAE DONATAE A LXXX HOMVLLIVS lANVARIVS IMM LEG III AVG MATRI CARISSIME FECIT H S E

Diis Manibus sacris, Restutce Donata vixii annis octagiiita, Homullius Januarius, immunis legionis teriice Augusta, matri carissitnce fecit. Hie
sita est.

Prominent among soldiers of the legion were the cornicularii, who took rank as assistant officers or subalterns. They were men who had received the adornment of a corniculum for military This device was in services, and were held in much esteem.
It was fastened the form of a little horn attached to the helmet. In the cemetery at on, but did not form part of the helmet. Lambaesis a slab bearing the following dedication by a sorrowing

stepson,

and a centurion of the


'

legion,
^
:

is

interesting, the de-

ceased being a veteran of that class


I.R.A. No. 743.
^

'

I.R.A. No. 704.

I.R.A. No. 771.

176

Roman

Africa

D M POMPONI O MAXIMO VET EX COR


C

NICVLARIO VIX ANN LXXXI

IVL

LONGINIANVS> LEG

VITRICO

MAER
all

The

frumentarii, too, were important functionaries in

Although their duties were chiefly in connection with the supply and distribution of corn, they acted in other capacities, such as might be performed by letterprovinces of the Empire.
carriers
;

and, according to
as spies.'

Spartian, they

were occasionally

employed

The

principal inscriptions relating to these

officials have been found in the Appian Way between Rome and the coast at Puteoli, where their headquarters were established.

any military

Their attachment to a legion does not appear to have entailed service, the duties being essentially of a civil kind.
affectionate
fifth
:

The following
is

attached to the

memorial to the wife of a frumentarius Macedonian legion, and buried at Lambsesis,


'^

clearly expressed

VLPIAE

PRiS

CAE

HO

MVL

CON

Ulpice Prisca, honestcE mulieri

IVGI

CARISSIME FLAVI CAECI

conjugi carissimcs,

M. Flavius
FruquintcB

Ccecilius Telesphorianus,

LIVS

TELESPHORI ANVS FVM LEG V MACEDONIC

meniarius
Macedonicce.

legionis

Among

soldiers of a lower rank the tesserarii held a con-

spicuous position, and as there was one in each

company

or

century of one hundred men, according to a statement by Vegetius,' they formed a numerous body in so large a military
establishment as that at Lambjesis. The origin of this system of communication by means of tessercB small tablets of wood

bearing the watchword for the night throughout a


-

Roman camp

is

not traced by any ancient author.

But we learn that the

soldiers selected for their distribution repaired every evening at

a fixed hour to the tent or headquarters of the military tribune, and received from him a tessera bearing some mark or inscrip'

Spart.

Hadrian,

ii.

4.

"

Qui

tesseras per contubernia

I.R.A. No. 622. Also C.I.L. No. 2867. militum nuntiarunt, Vegetius, ii. 7.
'
'^

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


tion

177

which constituted the watchword for the night. This was passed on silently to each company or squadron in rotation, and was finally returned to the tribune. The tesserce were then examined and counted, and if any of them failed to be presented

an inquiry was made immediately, and punishment inflicted for Frequent mention of tesserce who speaks taciturn signuni of a Roman is made by Livy,^ of the camp. The following inscription relating to a tesserarius may be seen in the public prison close to the ruins of Lambaesis.
the slightest breach of regulations.

The

last lines

are almost illegible, but there

is

sufficient

to

indicate that the memorial

was dedicated by

a custos

armorum,

whose military duties seem C

to be clearly defined

by

this title.*

D M S TERENTIVS SECVND OPITER TESSERARIVS LEG III AVG

VIX AN XLII L FVRNASIDIVS

AS

ARMORVM
H

Among
tertice

the memorials at Lambaesis the following inscription


:

has been found


fecit?

Caius Cornelius Pietas, armorum custos legionis

Augustce, vixit annos quadraginta quinque.

Pius
the

frater

Even the trumpeter

is

not forgotten,

following

memorial to a tubicen legionis by his mother and his wife Rufina being as legible on the stone slab as though it had been the work of yesterday *
:

D
C

IVLIVS

TVB

LEG

EMERITVS III AVG VIX

AN
ET
The
and
'

XXXV

VIII

RVFI

COIVX

MAT FECERVNT

civil staff

attached to the legion preserve their names

their functions in a variety of inscriptions


Livy, xxvii. 46, xxxix. 30.
'

which

may

still

I.R.A. No. 1213.

=
'

I.R.A. No. 556. I.R.A. No. 737.

tubicen (tuba-cano) blew the straight trumpet, in contra-

distinction to a liticen (Htuus-cano),

who blew

the curved trumpet or clarion.


i.

Then

there

was the comicen, the horn-blower.

Vide Livy,

64

Cornicines tubicinesque

canere jubet,

178

Roman

Africa

be studied in the museum at Lambessa. Among these officials were the inensores, who may be regarded as land-surveyors, though the term is equally applicable to those who measured
corn or other kinds of produce
adificiorum,
;

and when written mensores


officials

may

designate a class of

known

in

modern

times as clerks of works. The memorial at Lambaesis to Modius Felix shows how the term was applied
:

MODIVS

FELIX

MENSOR LEG III AVG VIX AN LX ARRANI

SATVRNIN
Then
steward.

FE
who had
of a
after the

there were the dispensatores, usually slaves,

charge of accounts and

made payments

manner

Their opportunities of enriching themselves at the expense of others are attested by a statement made by Suetonius in his life of Otho, who obtained from a slave whom he had recommended to the Emperor Galba for the office of a dispensator the sum of one million sesterces (8,072/.).^ The following dedicatory inscription to one who had been born in servitude

and had
legion,
is

faithfully served his master, a retired dispensator of the

worth recording

^
:

D M S HYGINO SER
FIDELISSIMO
Diis Manibus sacrum Hygino^ servo fidelissimo, vixit annis viginti tribus, Advenius

V A XXIII ADVENTVS AVG VERN EX DISP LEG III AVG


Augusti verna exdispensator

legionis tertice

Augusta

still

more
It is

interesting one,

and

in perfect condition,

on an

altar in the plains


Renier.''

of Batna, near Lambessa, was copied by

old friend the dispensator,

a dedication by an arcarius of the legion to his who died in his iiith year.

S
Cassia AugustorutnnostrorumiriumvertKS,
dispensatori legionis tertia

C ASSIO AVGGG NNNVERN DISP LEG III AVG P V QVI VIXIT ANN CX MVII

Augusta Pia

Vindias, qui vixit annis centum et decern,

DXXI VRSINVS ARK LEG EIVSDEM FECIT


B
'

mensibus septem, diebus viginti uno.


sinus,

Uf
fecit

arcarius

legionis

ejusdem,

bene merenti.
^
*

'

I.R.A. No. 1003. C.I.L. No. 3291.

Suetonius, Otho,

c.

J.

I.R.A. No. 493.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


The

179

loyal services of liberti, freedmen, are recorded on memorial slabs found in the necropolis, such as the annexed dedication by a Roman lady, who laments the death of a freedman named Eutychianus.' Another of equal interest is a dedication to an excellent master by his two freedmen and
several
heirs,

Euhodus and Fortunatus.*

D D M S EVTYCHIA

PVBLICIO

VICTORINO

NO LIBERTO IVLIA CANDIDA PATRON A BENE MERENTI


FECIT

PATRONO OPTVMO
PVBLICII

EVHODVS ET FORTVNATVS
LIBERTI ET

HEREDES EIVS
The
architect

was an

officer

of high importance in the work


fulfilled

of the legion.
civil buildings,

He was

entrusted with designing military and

bridges and aqueducts, and

such other

duties

as

are

now performed by
expressed
:

military engineers.
at the

The
age of

annexed memorial of Cornelius Festus, who died


thirty, is clearly

M CORNELIVS
MIL

FESTVS LEG III AVG ARCHITECTVS VIC SIT ANNIS XXX

The

medici, doctors, figure largely

on memorial

slabs.

The

following dedication medico conjugi dignissimo is rendered interesting from the fact that the deceased, who lived to the

age of 85 years, 7 months, and


ordinarius
*
:

15

days,

is

styled

medicus

D
C

AELIAN O MEDICO ORDINA RIO LEG III AVG VIX ANNIS LXXXV M VII D XV PAPIRIA VITAL CONIVGI DIGNISSIMO IS
PAPIRIO

.

'

De

* I.X.A. No. H15. C./.L. No. 3598; /.R.A. No. 851. la Mare and Renier, /./?.A. No. 547 ; C./.L. No. 2850. PouUe, /?ec. de Const, xxii. 1882. C./.L. No. 18314.

N 2

i8o

Roman
company
ofificer

Africa

According to Mommsen, an ordinarius was attached to a


cohors or
in contradistinction to a medicus,

who was

the medical
Inscriptions

of the legion.

But Marquardt

is

of opinion

that the ordinarius should be classed as an assistant physician.


to medici are

numerous

at Lambassis.

following examples, one from the necropolis and the other

The two now


the

deposited in the Praetorium, are

sufficient

to

indicate

phraseology usually adopted

D
T

FLAVIVS ITA LVS MED LEG

III

AVG A X

D M T FL ONE SIPHORO MED LEG III AVG AEMILIVS FE


.

LIX
Conjugal
the subject of

.... SCRI

felicity is

many

touching memorials,

bearing ample testimony to the existence of a contented, wellordered community in this thickly populated region of North
Africa.

What

can be more charmingly expressed in one short

sentence than the following memorial found near Lambaesis on


the road to Diana Veteranorum
Ziora,
? ^ It is a dedication by Julia widow of a centurion of the third legion, and her son, Rufinus Vitalis. The words conjugi incomparabili and patri dul-

cissimo need
last

no

translation.

And

the last line expresses the

wish of

many

sorrowing relatives
S

RVFI RVFI

NI>LEG III AVG IVLIA ZI ORA COIVGI


INCOMPARABILI ET RVFINVS VI TALIS PATRI DVLCISSI

Diis

Manibus sacrum Rufi Rufini, centurioni legionis terticE Augusta,

Julia Ziora conjugiincomparabili, et Rufinus Vitalis patri dulcissimo, Vixit annis guinguaginta feceiunt.
guinque.
terra levis!

MO FECERVNT

VI

Qui

legis die:

sit

tibi

XITANNISLV QVILE
GIS Die SITTIBITER RA LVIS

Not less interesting is another inscription found, north of the forum, in honour of an illustrious wife of an illustrious governor.*
>

I.R.A. Nos. 637 and 641. I.R.A. No. 49.

'

l.R.A. No. 1130.

Also

De

la

Mare.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


It will

i8i

by

initials,

be noted that the epithets in both cases are represented and that the memorial was raised during the short

rule of the

two Augusti, Caracalla and Geta, sons of Septimius

Severus, A.D. 211-212.

AELIAE

PROSPERAE

C F CONIVGI C POMPONII MAGN


jEHce Prospers, darissima femince, conjugi Caii Pomponii Magni, legati

Augustonctn diiorutn propratore


rissimi viri, prasidis, stratores.

cla-

LEG AVGG PRPR C V PRAESIDIS STRATORES


This brief notice of the long array of memorial slabs brought may be fitly concluded by the following inscription built into the ruined wall of a Byzantine edifice near the city. Imagination depicts the loving care of this soldier of the Empire, who traversed land and sea with the mortal remains of his beloved wife, and raised this stone to her memory in the pleasant land of his adoption
to light in the neighbourhood of Lambaesis
:

IVLIOSAE CONIVGI VIX AN XXVII FORTVNATVS A MILITIIS QVI PER MARIA ET TERRAS RETVLIT RELIQVIAS CONIVGIS EX

FLAVIAE

SERVILIVS

PROVINCIA DACIA
The custom
of recording on stone or marble the completion
authority, or, as

of any public work, whether executed by imperial command, or

by the exercise of municipal

it

so frequently

happened, through the munificence of private individuals, extended to bridges, aqueducts, reservoirs, public roads, and other works of utility. These were undoubtedly the work of the legions. The construction and maintenance of vice publiccB was always a marked feature of Roman civilisation, and created an amount of interest and enthusiasm that would be difficult to In all the provinces of the arouse in our more prosaic age. Empire may be found innumerable inscriptions relating to the care of highways, and nowhere are they more abundant than in

North

Africa.
in

Many

are mutilated or destroyed, while others,

lettered

imperishable limestone, are as legible as on the

day when the simple abbreviated words were traced by the


'

C.I.L. No, 2772.

Renier and

De

la

Mare

descrip.

82
chisel.
'
:

Roman

Africa
relate to the

mason's

Those which have been preserved

following

Theveste to Tacape, iemp. Tiberios, A.D. 14. vide C.I.L. Theveste to Hippo Regius, temp. Titus, A.D. 75 C.I.L. Theveste to Leptis Magna, temp. Nerva {restit.) C.I.L. Theveste to Thamugas, /'^w/. Trajan, A.D. 100 C./.L. Ad Piscinam to Ad Majores, ifewz/.Trajan, A.D. 104-5 Rusicadato Cirta, temp. Hadrian I.R.A. Theveste to Carthage, temp. Hadrian C.I.L. Sitifis to Auzia, temp. Hadrian and Sept. Severus C.I.L. Lambsesis to Ad Piscinam, temp. Antonine C.I.L. Auzia to Rapidi and further, temp. Antonine,
. . .

10,023

10,119
10,016
10,186

m.A

178
2,296
10,048 10,363

10,230

A.D. 155

C.I.L. 10,439

Lambsesis to

Ad

Piscinam per El-Kantara, PertiC.I.L. 10,238


.

nax
Sitifis

restit.

A.D. 193

Usinaz to Temet-el-Had, temp. Sept. Severus


to

Eph. Epig.

vii.

66

Mons, temp.
2,a.xii\,

Sept.

Severus, Severus,

rejicit

A.D. 195
Sitifis

C.I.L. 10,351

to

temp.

Sept.

reficit
.

A.D. 195

C.I.L. 10,361

Numerus Syrorum
Alex. Severus

to Altava

and

further, temp.

C.I.L. 10,470

The importance of the road between Theveste and Carthage borne out by many inscriptions relating to it, one of which has already been given on p. 108. They mostly bear the date
is

The extension of this great military highway to 123. Thamugas and Lambaesis was probably honoured in a similar way. So general, indeed, was the sustom of placing on record
A.D.

any operations connected with road construction that even works


left unnoticed. On a stone pillar about eight brought to light many years ago by Duveyrier, near the track between the old towns of Tacape and Capsa, an inscription records the construction and maintenance of a road

of repair were not


feet high,

third legion in this far-off corner of Roman Africa. And another inscription mentioned by several travellers tells us that they restored viam a Karthagine usque adfines NumidiceprovincKZ

by the

longa incuria corruptam. atque dilapsain?

Mention has already been made of the mountain road across by the sixth legion Ferrata. There is reason to believe that similar work was performed by other
the Aures, constructed
'

This
:

list

of roads

is

mostly borrowed from


'

M. Cagnat,

VArmh

Romaine

cCAfrique

vide p. 687 et stq.

C.I.L. No. 10047. Renier, Temple, and others.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


legions temporarily stationed in the

183

tion informs us that the legion raised in

attained notoriety during the reign


for a considerable period.

same locality. An inscripPalmyra a city which of Aurelian was located here

Among

several memorials of this

legion

encamped

at that delightful spot called Calceus Herculis,


is

now known

as El-Kantara, the following


in

the best preserved/

and as a dedication

honour of Caracalla

PRO

MERCVRIO AVG SALVTE IMP CAESARIS M AVRE LI ANTONIN AVG PII M ANNIVS VALENS LEG III AVG N PALMYRENORUM PRO SALUTE SVA ET SVORUM V S L A

may SACR

be noticed here

MALAGBELO AVG SANCTO SACR T FL MANSVE TVS LEG III AVG V S L L M


stone panel close

by records the dedication of a temple or


of the deities worshipped at
this

altar to Malagbelus,

who was one

Palmyra.^
is

The

toleration

granted, at

period of

Roman
Empire
soldiers

history to the creeds of other countries included in the

indicated

by a few dedicatory

inscriptions,

more

especially at

Lambsesis, which became the permanent


recruited from all parts of the Empire.

home

of

The
in

following memorial
is

found near the temple of ^sculapius

that city,

somewhat

remarkable, being the dedication of a temple to Isis and Serapis by a legatus proprcetor and his wife and daughter. It appears
to have been embellished

by a portico with columns, the


:

gift

of

the soldiers of the third Augustan legion, in A.D. 158, towards

the close of Antonine's reign

ET SERAPI FVSCINVS LEG AVG PR PR AEDEM CVM VOLTEIA CORNIFICIA VXORE ET MATVCCIA FVSCINA FILIA AB ANTECESSORIBVS SVIS INSTITVTAM EXVLTATAM ET ADIECTO
ISIDI

MATVCCIVS

'

PRONAO
COLVMNIS
'

SVA

PER LEG III AVG PECVNIA POSITIS EXORNAVIT

C./.L. No. 2486.


C.I.L. No. 2497.

Between Biskra and


I.R.A. No. 1634.

Hammam.
'

Jiec.

de Const.

1871-72,

p. 425.
^

r.R.A, No. 23

184

Roman

Africa

other provinces of the Empire.


their

Auxiliary troops doing duty in Africa were mostly from In the early days of Roman

colonisation the enrolment of natives of Africa for service in

own country was regarded as a source of danger, mainly on account of the frequent uprising of tribes on the frontier. But, with the spread of civilisation, order and good government were secured, and at the commencement of the third century no danger was apprehended from the enrolment of natives both as cavalry and infantry. There appears, however, to be a record of only three bodies of native troops in any of the African proThese were designated respectively as the cohors vinces.
Maurorum, the
ala

Numidarum, and the

cohors

Musulamiorum}

The

a slab found by M. Tissot at Ksar Gurai, in the neighbourhood of Theveste. The reading of
last

are mentioned on

the four last words, according to Wilmanns,


tatis

is

privilegii vetus-

sectam abolevisse.

EX AVCTORITATE
IMP CAES TRAIANI AVG GER DACICI MVNATIVS GALLVS LEG PRO PR .... FINIBVS MVSVLAMIOR .... LEG II VETVSTATIS

.... TAM

ABOLEVIT

Of

the foreign auxiliary troops, such as the legions Gemina,

Cyrenaica, Italica, and others,

two

inscriptions will suffice as

me-

morials of their presence in Africa during some period or other of the Roman occupation. The first relates to a distinguished

Roman, who had served his country in many capacities, and was lieutenant-general of the third legion Gemina.^ As this slab was discovered in a house in a modern village, which has replaced the once important town of Milevum, it is probable that he was a native of that place. Q CAECILIO C V QVIR
C V PROCOS PROVINCIAE BAE TICAE SODALI AVGVSTALI LEG LEG III GEMINAE CVRATORI COL PISAVRENTIVM CVRATO RI COL FORMIANORVM PRAE
' The Musulami occapied land in the vicinity of Saltus C.I.L. No. 10667. Vide Gu^rin, i. p. 391. Beguensis, between Sufetula and Ammaedara.

'

C.I.L. No. 8207.

Ravoisie, Explor. lab. 27.

Also Wilmanns.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

185

Qidnto CcBcilio, Caii Jilio, Quirina tribu, clarissimo viro, froconsuli provincia BceHccb, sodali Augtisiali, legato legionis tertics decimcB Gemince, curatori colonics Pisaurensium, curatori colonia Formianorum, prcetori

....

The other, found at Lambessa, is a memorial of a soldier of the second legion Parthica, which was formed in the time of
Septimius Severus.

According to the inscription

this

Aurelius

Victorinus was a centurion of the fourth pilus posterior^ and a soldier of merit.

D M AVRELIO VICTO RINO MILLEG II PARTH SEVE RIANAE P FI AE

Diis Manibus, Aurelio Victorino, militi


Parthicce Severiancs aterna, centurioni quarto pilo posteriori, qui vixit annos XXX,
legionis

secundce

pif^i

fidelis,

TERNAE>IIII PIL POST QVI BIXIT {sic) ANNOS XXX MIL

militavit annos

VIII

ANNOS

VIII.

The name of ^primus


It is

pilus

is

preserved in an inscription

discovered near Lambessa on the road to Diana Veteranorum.


a dedication,

by a

soldier of that rank serving in the third

Augustan

legion, to a

freedman named Zosimus, whose good


Diis Manibus, Zosimo, liberto

memory he

desired to perpetuate.^

D M ZOSIMO LIBERTO MATIVS QVARTVS P P LEG III AVG BENE MERENTI FECIT

Matius Quartus, primus pilus


legionis tertia Augustce, bene

merenti fecit.

The monumental remains of Lambsesis


military establishment, and of the

as a permanent town which sprang up in the

immediate vicinity, are not conspicuous for architectural merit, and give little evidence of magnificence of conception or prevaIt must be borne in lence of good taste in general design. mind that they were mostly constructed at a late period of the Empire, when Roman art was rapidly declining, and that the
'

De

Urbe Lambase

et de

Legione tertia Augusta,


so

p. 49.

G. Boisssiere, Paris,
they

1877.

pilus was a company of Triarii,

called

because

took

the

any formation, the first or front company being termed hastati, the second being composed of principes. There was a primus pilus, sometimes written The primipilarii, sometimes called pilani, were the first centurions primipilus.
third place in

of each legion.
'

C.I.L. No. 2768.

Vide Renier, No. 983.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


long since been overthrown and most of the materials

187
re-

moved.

Marcus Aurelius and his unworthy son and furnished numerous inscriptions in North Africa bearing the names of these two Caesars. Although neither of them ever visited this populous and thriving colony, dedications in their honour are not wanting in any of the African provinces and it is somewhat gratifying to find that attempts were made in succeeding generations to erase from marble and
joint rule of

The

successor,

Commodus, has

stone the

name

of

Commodus
life,

as a contemptible character in
ruler.

public and private

and an infamous

As an example

of a spoilt child with natural depraved tastes, Commodus stands pre-eminent. To be saluted as Augustus at the age of five, to

be conveyed in triumph as imperator through the streets of Rome when he had scarcely turned his sixteenth year, and to take part in the government of a great Empire at the age of nineteen, were sufficient to turn the head of a less giddy and depraved youth. But Marcus Aurelius was either neglectful or over-indulgent, and, with his philosophic training, austere habits of life, and stoical methods of thought, had nothing in common with a youth who regarded life as the arena for incessant folly and unchecked dissipation In the many inscriptions bearing the name of Commodus, there is nothing to indicate that this prince was favoured by the goodwill or respect of the subjects of the Empire, and the presence of chiselled marks against his

name

in

several inscriptions, or total erasure, testifies to the


in

which his memory was held when a tyrannical rule of twelve years came to an end. What good could be expected from an Emperor whose vanity and arrogance were only exceeded by

contempt

his depravity his brief

In addressing the Senate, says Dion Cassius in

Aurelius, Commodus glorifies his own personality in the following terms as joint Emperor The Emperor Csesar, Lucius ^lius Aurelius Commodus,

memoir of Marcus

'

Augustus, Pius, Felix, Sarmaticus, Germanicus, Britannicus, the Great Controller of the World, Invincible, the Roman Hercules, High Priest, eighteen times Tribune, eight times Emperor, seven times Consul, Pater Patriae, to the Consuls, Praetors, Tribunes of the People, and to the Commodian happy Senate Greeting.' Among the dedicatory inscriptions, in which an attempt has
;

been made to erase the name of

Commodus

in

a somewhat

i88

Roman

Africa

unusual form, mention may be made of a large panel discovered at El Outhaia,' in a mass of ruins that are probably the remains
of the amphitheatre referred
to.

IMP CAESARES M AVRELIVS ANTONINVS ET L AVRELIVS COMMODVS AVG GERMANICI SARMATICI FORTISSIMI AMPHITHEATRVM VETVSTAE CORRVPTVM A SOLO RESTI

TVERVNT PER coh vi commag A IVLIO POMPILIO PISONE LAEVILLO LEG AVG PR PR CVRANTE AELIO SERENO PRAEF
I-:-:::::-::::-

From

this

we

learn

that

the joint

Emperors

rebuilt

the

amphitheatre, and that the work was done by the sixth cohort

of the Commageni,^ an auxiliary force quartered in that locality. The usual form of erasure, similar to the method adopted with
the third
legion

during the period of

its

disgrace,

may
first

be

exemplified in the two following inscriptions.


in the proconsular province.

The

was

discovered at Henchir Ain Zaga,' and the other at Vallis,* both

IMP
iC

CAES M AVRELIVS OMMODVS xxxxxxxx


SERAPI AVG SACR PRO SALVTE IMP CAES

ANTONINVS AVG SARMATI CVS GERMANICVS MAXIMUS

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Some
'

M AVRELI COMMODIJ ANTO NINI PIIxxxxxxxxxx

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
called,
is

years ago an interesting inscription bearing the


El Outhaia, as
it is

name

C.I.L. No. 2488. of the

now

an Arab village on the

site

Roman town
At
a
is

of Mesarfalta, lying on the highway between El-Kantara

and Biskra.

importance, and

late period of the Empire it must have been a place of some mentioned as the seat of a Christian bishopric. ^ The word Commageni ireqtiently occurs in Roman military history, and refers to the auxiliary troops raised in Commagena, a district in Syria lying between Mt. Taurus and the Euphrates, and forming part of the kingdom of Antiochus. The last of that name was deposed by Pompey, B.C. 6g, Syria becoming a Roman province, and the name of Antiochus, which had been associated with the rulers of

Syria for about 250 years, becoming extinct.


c.

According to Tacitus (Hist.

b.

ii.

81), Antiochus IV. of

Commagena was

the richest of all the kings

who

submitted to

Rome. There were no less than thirteen successive kings bearing that name, the last of them alluded to by Tacitus being sometimes called king of CommaHis career was an eventful one. Dethroned by Caligula gena, and not of Syria. and reinstated by Claudius, he was ultimately deposed by Titus, after a reign of thirtyHis army rendered great four years, for alleged conspiracy against the Romans.
the authority of
service to
its

new

masters, especially during the reign of Vespasian.

At a

later period

detachments were quartered in North Africa.

C./.L. No. 14451.

C.I.L. No. 14792.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius


of

189

unearthed at a place called Souk-el-Kmis, and described by M. Tissot There are four columns of letters, each of thirty lines, the first column being unfortunately broken and the words illegible. An interpretation of the three legible columns has been given by Mommsen, from which it appears that the colonists on a certain estate named Saltus Buritanus, had cause to complain to the Emperor of the exorbitant demands of a Roman
east of Bulla Regia,

Commodus was

tax-collector

written

In accordance with a were bound to provide six days' labour per head of the male population in the course of the year two for ordinary labour, two for weeding and cleaning The demands of the the land, and two in time of harvest. government agent being in excess of this stipulation, the coloAccording nists petitioned the Emperor Commodus for redress. to the inscription this petition was favourably considered, with the result that the agent and his subordinate officers were restrained from demanding more than the law permitted. There is a tone of piteousness in the wording of the memorial which We are only poor peasants,' say the petiis very touching. We earn our living by tioners in their address to the Emperor. Have pity on us poor sons of the soil, the sweat of our brows. and let us not be molested by the tax-gatherers on the estate.'
law, the
colonists
:

named ^lius Maximus.

'

'

Whether
doubtful.

this petition ever reached the

Emperor

in person is

From

his general line of conduct, utter indifference

to the wants and aspirations of the people in Rome, and total neglect of his enterprising colonists in all parts of the Empire, we may assume that this grievance was redressed by the governor

of the province in the Emperor's name. The word saltus as applied to a large domain or estate, such
as the Saltus Buritanus above mentioned, is of frequent occurrence in inscriptions in North Africa. In its restricted sense

means a large tract of grazing land for cattle, combined with ranges of woodland for shelter. In course of time, when pastoral life gave place to the permanent settlement of colonists
the word

on

estates possessing these combined advantages, village communities sprang up, and in some instances small towns were included in any tract of land that had been recognised as a
saltus.

The

history of
'

some of these

estates has

special

C. Tissot,

Le Bassin du Bagrada.

190
interest in our

Roman

Africa

own times ; one of them, known as the Enfida estate or saltus, in the beylik of Tunisia, having been the subject
French protectorate of that country and
its

of a dispute which contributed more than anything else to the


ultimate submission
to the rule of France.

causes of this long-pending controversy between Kheir-el-Din, the prime minister of Tunis in

The

known to need repetition. and a round of diplomatic correspondence, this magnificent estate, comprising more than 300,000 acres, and with a population of about 7,000 settled occupants, was finally handed over in perpetuity to the Soci6t6 Franco-Africaine. The traveller going south from Tunis passes through the middle of this domain, which in form may roughly be described as a parallelogram, lying between the towns of Susa and Hammamet on the coast, and Kairouan and Zaghouan in the
1879, and

the Bey, are too well


litigation

After

much

interior.

The
earlier

origin of these

vast estates
colonisation,
in

may
when

be traced to the
successful settlers

days of

Roman

found themselves involved


tyrannical emperors.

dispute with exacting governors or

The result was that confiscation ensued, and territory after territory became the private property of the Emperor himself, or of some member of the imperial family. Nero stands conspicuous for his arbitrary conduct and cruel exactions of lands and herds, merely to gratify the whim of a passing hour or the rapacity of some greedy court official. Such was the growth of these estates that, in the time of Trajan, one half of Roman Africa, according to Pliny, was in the hands of six proprietors, the Emperor being by inheritance the largest owner. Fronto, in one of his letters to Marcus Aurelius, refers to the great African domain held by Matidia, niece of Trajan, known as the saltus Matidia, and tells us that the Emperor, prompted by delicacy of feeling, refused to accept it at her decease, but was afterwards forced to do so at the instigation of his wife Faustina, whose personal influence over this philosophic An interesting ruler of mankind is generally acknowledged. inscription relating to this estate was brought to light nearly forty years ago in the district of Bou-Areridj in that portion of the Medjerda plains which lies in the province of of Mauritania
Sitifensis.'
'

Some

dispute appears to have arisen


p. loi.

during the
descrip.

C.l.L. No. 8812.

Vide Rec. de Const. 1864,

Payen and Renier

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

191

reign of Alexander Severus as to the boundaries of this property,

and we learn from the wording of the inscription that Axius ^lianus, the steward of the estate, engaged the services of
Caelius Martialis, a land measurer, to

perty and define the boundaries.

seem

to

indicate

that the

make a survey of the proThe words' rationis privatcB steward had his own reasons for
and the dedication to the Emperor

ascertaining the exact area of the property committed to his

charge, but this

is

conjectural,

by

the inhabitants of Kasturrensis was a fitting conclusion to

the whole matter.

M
Domino nosiro Imperatori Ccesare M. Aicrelio Severe Alexandra
Pio Felice Augusto terminationes agrorum definitionis Matidicz adsignantur colonis Kasturrensibus jussu viri egregii Axi ^liani
procuratoris
privatce

IMP C M AV RELIO SEVERO ALE XANDRO PIO FELICE

AVG TERMINAC GRORVM DEFE

CIONIS MATIDIAE A SIGNATVR COLO NIS KASTVRRE IVSSV VE AXI AEL AN PROC AVG PER CAE MARTIA AGRIMES ....
. . .

AugusH
Ccelium

rationis

per

Martialem

agrimesorem.

Another

inscription realating to a saltus

Pellissier at a place

now

called

was discovered by Henchir-el-Hammam, near the

western frontier of Tunisia.^ The name Saltus Massipianus has been preserved on the frieze of a ruined triumphal arch, and if we may judge from the use still made of the hot and

by native Arabs, we may reasonably assume that resorted to in Roman times as a thermal estawas this spot wording of the inscription, deciphered by The blishment.
cold springs
Pellissier, is sufficiently clear,

being a dedication to Caracalla

by the inhabitants on the estate, on the occasion of a reinstatement of several public buildings that had become dilapidated.

PRO

SALVTE

BERORVMQ
CONLAPSA
CIALE
'

IMP CAES M AVRELI ANTONINI EIVS COLONI SALTVS MASSIPIANI AEDIFICIA VETVSTATE P R ITEM ARCVVS DVOS A S F S

LI

AVG

IVBENTE PROVIN LIB PROC EODEMQVE

DEDICANTE
i.

Pellissier,

Description de la Tujtisie, p. 294.

Guerin, vol.

p.

344.

192

Roman

Africa

The public influence of women in imperial circles, so conspicuous in the reign of Antonine, asserted itself in an equal degree under the rule of Marcus Aurelius. The Empress,
commonly known
as Annia Faustina the younger, to distinguish her from Annia Galeria Faustina the elder, figures prominently
It has been remarked on a previous page that the name of the latter does not appear in a single inscription on stone or marble yet brought to light in the country, although medals and coins bearing her effigy abound

in African inscriptions.

in

a variety of types.
little

The

imperial society and a prime

daughter's career, as a Ifeader of mover in the court intrigues of

the period, differs


love of

movement and
prompted

interest in the

from that of her mother, except that conduct of military camto

paigns

her

accompany the Emperor Marcus

Aurelius in his various expeditions. Latin historians make little mention of the virtues or vices of this remarkable woman, who was honoured during life by the proud title of Mother of
'

the Army,' and whose

and dedicatory There is nothing remarkable in the wording of any of these memorials, of which the following, found on the site of Colonia Bisica Lucana, is an example ^
:

memory was long preserved by statues inscriptions in many towns of the Empire.

FAVSTINAE

AVG
IMP

CAES

AVRELI

ANTONI AVG PONT MAX TRIE POT XV COS III D D P P



If

we

are to credit the statements of Dion Cassius, Marcus

Aurelius declined to

make

strict

inquiry into the conduct of his

wife, nor did he act harshly towards those


'

who were

said to

Bisica

Lucana has been

identified with the

modern town

of Testour, situated on

the right bank of the Medjerda, and on the old highway between Carthage and Sicca Veneria. Two milliary columns of the time of Marcus Aurelius were discovered

here

many

years ago

memorates the
of Bisica
is

successful
(

his divided rule.

and an inscription relating to Colonia Bisica Lucana comcampaigns of the Emperor Licinius in the earlier portion of Vide Shaw, vol. i. p. 215 ; also Guerin, vol. ii. p. 165.) The town
;

supposed to have been the Visica referred to at a later period as the seat of a bishopric, mentioned by Morcelli, Africa Christiana, vol. i. p. 357, in reference
to an episcofus Visicensis.

Of

the

Roman town

of Bisica

Lucana there

is

no

record.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius

193

have been associated with the Empress in attempts at usurpation. But he tells us that on her death the Senate was ordered set to up two statues of silver within the temple of Venus in Rome, one in honour of Marcus Aurelius and the other of Faustina. And as a further mark of honour to the memory of that princess it was ordained that, whenever the Emperor went to the theatre, the golden statue of Faustina was to be set up in the place where she had been wont to sit when alive, and that the ladies of the court should reverence the effigy as though it were the living princess. As marks of personal honour, Marcus Aurelius erected a column in the village of Hallala at the foot of Mount Taurus, where Faustina died, and augmented by
a large subsidy the

endowment of a

charitable

institution,

founded

in

honour of her mother, and known as the

puell(B

Faustinian<z.

The name of the mother of Marcus Aurelius does not appear on any slab or stone or marble yet discovered in North Africa, but it is recorded on a piece of broken pottery brought
to
light

at

Hadrumetum

(Susa).^

It

is

inscribed

in

full,

Domitia
scant

Lucilla.

Emperor and his wife Faustina we have two memorials of their daughter, Vibia Aurelia, were found at Kalama, and may be seen in the museum One of them is here given.^ in the modern town of Guelma.
family of the
record,

Of the

but

VIBIAE AV

RELIAE DI
VI

F DIVI

SEVERI SOR SABINAE

PATRONAE
MVNICIPII

DECVRIO
With the
chapters in

close of this reign terminates one of the leading


history,

Roman

marking an era

in the

development

of North Africa. The old order of things was passing away, and unconsciously the seeds of decline were being imperceptibly sown. The great Latin families, tracing their descent far back
'

C.I.L. No. 10475.


C.I.L. No. 5328.

Ann.

de Const. 1854-55, p. 163.

194

Roman

Africa
and furnishing emperors

into the glorious days of the Republic,


for a period of

more than two centuries, had ceased to exist. The Julian line became extinct with the death of Nero. The Flavian family, which had contributed so largely to the extension of empire, had lost its authority, and the Antonines came to an end when the wretched Commodus fell by the hands of an assassin. The accession of Marcus Aurelius, whose early career as a prince of the Empire had been conspicuous for popularity, was thought to presage a long run of peace and
His eleven successful years of independent rule had encouraged the notion that a form of government, based on the creed of some ancient school of philosophy, was preferable to the stirring administration favoured by more active emperors. The world was henceforth to be governed in accordance with the principles enunciated in the groves of Athens and the dictum of Plato, that an era of happiness for mankind would be the immediate result, seemed likely to ensue when the Emperor assumed the rdle of a disciple of the school of Zeno. To his
prosperity.
;

credit it may be said that he loyally fulfilled his mission, upheld the doctrines of his youth, and passed away unconscious of the coming storm which taxed the energy and resources of later emperors to dispel. Any further notice of his depraved son and successor Commodus is unnecessary, nor would it throw any light on African history. Everything in connection with this Emperor appears to have been treated with contempt by a later generation, and his name erased from public memorials. But his wife, Brutia Crispina, daughter of Brutus Prsesens, was happily saved from the same indignity, clearly indicated on the annexed inscription at Thamugas, found nearly fifty years ago between the Byzantine fort and the remains of the Roman

theatre

^
:

CRISPINAE

AVG
IMP CAES L AELI AV RELI COM

MODI

AVG

D-D
'

CONIVGI
P
]

I.R.A, No. 1496, noted by

De

la

Mare and CreuUy.

Africa under Marcus Aurelius The


two
history
fall

195

of

Commodus was

successors, Julian

followed by the short rule of his and Pertinax, whose place in African

The name of the former is not is almost a blank. recorded in a single inscription, although he had rendered himself conspicuous for an active career of about seven months. But Pertinax occupies a position of high distinction, and, notwithstanding his short rule of scarcely three months, adorned
the throne of the Caesars with the nobility of a true

Roman.

An

African by birth, a native of Hadrumetum, but probably of

Latin descent, he was deservedly honoured by his countrymen for patriotic conduct and a blameless career, and, as Dion
Cassius informs us, his statue of gold was set up in the Circus

Maximus

as a

permanent testimony of public esteem.

Among

the inscriptions in North Africa in which the


appears, there
is

name

of Pertinax

banks of the
baesis.^

river

one on a milliariurn at Sba-Meghata, on the El-Kantara, and on the high road from Lam-

The

other, bearing the

dedication of an altar to the

same date, Emperor by the

A.D. 192,

is

the

colonists

on one

of the African estates."

PRO SALVTE
IMP CAES P HE LVIO PERTINA CE AVG P P TRIB P COS II L NAEVIO
IMP CAESARIS
P

HEL PERTINA
PO

CIS TRIBVNICIE

QVADRATIAN O LEG AVG P-R PR A LAMBESE

TESTATIS COS II PP COLONI DOMINI N CAPVT SALTVS HOR

M
'

P LVIIII

REOR PARDALARI HA NC ARAM POSVERVNT ET D D


v. il, p.

I.R.A. No. 4305. C.I.L. No. 8425.

L. Renier, Archives des Missions,

446.

PouUe, Rec. de Const. 1873-74,

p. 363.

196

Roman

Africa

CHAPTER
A.D. 193-21

VII

AFRICA UNDER SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS

world had hitherto been governed by Emperors of European descent. Some were military commanders, others were statesmen or administrators of the highest rank, while not a few were invested with the purple at the bidding of a turbulent populace or to meet the exacting demands of a dissatisfied
soldiery. There had been a time when the watchword Senatus populusque Romaniis represented in all its potency the revered

The Roman

authority of the Senate in

Rome and

the will and determination

was broken. The rank and authority of the Senators so distinguished in the brighter days of the Republic, and once described by the minister of a foreign potentate as a venerable assembly of kings, ceased to As a matter of exist under the despotic rule of the Emperors. courtesy the Senate was appealed to whenever the throne of the Caesars became vacant, but it was powerless to take independent action, and ultimately became subservient to the will of the army established in various parts of the Empire. It was this assertion of military authority which altered the character of imperial government, and was the chief cause of the internal troubles and dissensions which threatened to destroy the Empire
of the
people.

Roman

But the

spell

towards the close of the third century. On the death of Pertinax there were four claimants to the Didius Julianus, Pescennius Niger, Clodius Albinus, throne and Septimius Severus. The first, whose mother was a native of Africa and of good family, was brought up under the care of
:

Domitia

Lucilla,

mother of Marcus Aurelius.

He was nominated

by

the Senate, and had purchased the support of the Praetorian


offers of large gifts of

guard by
followed

part in African history.

by a

refusal

money. Julianus plays no His assumption of the purple was to pay the promised donatives, and after

Africa under Septimius Severus

197

an uneventful reign of about seven months he was put to death by his own soldiers. Of Pescennius Niger we have no record, and his place in Africa is a blank. But of the two remaining claimants, Albinus and Severus, both of them natives of Africa, there is abundant evidence of their struggle for supremacy in the records of contemporary writers. Albinus, we know, was born at Hadrumetum (Susa), his father's name being Cejonius Postumius. The extreme whiteness of his skin procured for him the name by which he is generally known. Military success in early life during the reign of Commodus entitled him to high rank in the Roman army, and consequently, when the governorship of Great Britain was vacant, the Emperor nominated him to this distinguished appointment. It is said that when the title of Caesar was offered to him by Commodus he refused, but that subsequently, on the death of Pertinax, being pressed by the Senate and with the concurrence of Septimius Severus, he acquiesced. The pretended friendship of Severus
for his powerful rival
is

clearly expressed in a letter written

by

It ran thus: Severus A.D. 197, and quoted by Capitolinus. Severus Augustus to Clodius Albinus The Emperor Caesar, his dearly beloved and most valued brother. Greeting. After our conquest of Pescennius we sent a letter to the Senate at Rome, which, full of good will towards us, was graciously received.
'

beg you will display towards the government the same temper of mind which makes you the dear brother of my heart, the brother of the Empire. Bassianus and Geta (his two sons) salute
I

Domna, wife of Severus) salutes send to your little boy Pescennius you and your sister. of his rank and yours.' worthy This Prineus some presents few trusted companions, to a Severus who letter was confided by
you.

Our dear

Julia (Julia

We

were instructed to induce Albinus to leave the palace, with a view to his being murdered in some little-frequented spot. Albinus suspected that a snare was being laid for him, and, He having put the messengers to torture, learnt the truth. in plains antagonist the met his and then assembled a big army of Gaul. The following year Albinus was defeated and his head His name carried in triumph through the streets of Rome. (Ain Hedjah) bearing Agbia at appears on a broken slab found a stone near on Khenrecorded the date A.D. 194, and is also
'
'

C.I.L. No. '549.

Temple,

ii.

p.

30S.

198
chela,

Roman
where some

Africa

Roman baths named Aquse Flavianse had been

established.

CLODI

SEPTIMI

ALBINI

CAES

The

date

is

also A.D. 194, but the chief interest attached to


is

this dedication

the recognition of these joint Emperors, one

Caesar.^ The name of the latter has been subject to the usual erasure, probably by the order of Severus.

as Augustus,

and the other as

ET VICTORIA DOM-INI N IMP L SEPTIMI SEVERI PERTINACIS AVG ET CLODI ALBIN I CAES AESCVLAPEM ET HYGI AM DEDICANTE LEPIDO TERTVLLO LEG AVG PR PR C V M OPPIVS ANTIOCHIANVS LEG III AVG II ... E VINDICIS POSVIT ET V S

PRO SALVTE

For the

first

time in

Roman

history an

Emperor of

foreign

extraction was to take high rank in the long line of Caesars, and the obscure town of Leptis in Africa was to become prominent
as

Septimius Severus.

the birthplace of that remarkable ruler of men, Lucius His association with the progress and

development of North Africa, second to none other at that period of the possessions of the Empire, is marked by innumerable During his reign of inscriptions in most parts of the country. eighteen years colonisation spread to the extreme west bordering on the Atlantic villages became towns, protection was afforded to settlers on the Desert frontier, and the uprising of turbulent native tribes was almost unknown. This was the climax of Roman Africa. The patronage of the Court was extended to its citizens, and for the first time the African and the Italian shared alike the patronage of the Palace and the favours of the Emperor. The stern rule of Severus and his activity as a soldier had nothing in common with the gentle sway of Antonine or the calm dignity of Aurelius. Tranquillity of life and the pleasures of the metropolis had no charms for his restless intriguing disWe hear of him everywhere. From the banks of the position. Euphrates to the borders of Scotland there was scarcely a province of the great Empire which had not shared the favour of
;

his presence, or participated in the benefits of his strong personality.

Of distinguished parentage,

attaining success early in

life

in various
'

branches of literature and philosophy, and exhibiting


Comptes rendus de P Academic d'Hifpo,
a.

C.I.L. No. 17726.

1888, pp. 7-64.

Africa under Septimius Severus


in

199

military capacity, there is little wonder that countrymen should have honoured the name Severus in most parts of his African possessions. It must be admitted, on the authority of so reliable an authority as Justinus, that Severus was cruel by nature and despotic in administration. And even later writers such as Spartianus and Capitolinus hesitate to attribute to the Emperor one single incident in his career which bears the stamp of clemency or magnanimity. The facts that he caused divine honours to be bestowed on the wretched Commodus, and that a revengeful spirit prompted him to expose in the streets of Rome the heads of his rivals, Niger and Albinus, are sufficient testimony to a savage disposition. But to his credit it may be said that strength of will and force of character secured the regard of his subjects, and gave him the command of the world during the greater part of his imperial career. The increasing power of the army, which had been gradually asserting itself, from the time of the accession of Marcus Aurelius, as a great political factor in Rome and the garrison towns, was not lost on so astute a ruler as Severus. He purchased their goodwill and adhesion to his cause by large annual donations, and on his deathbed is alleged to have said to his sons, Live peaceably together, enrich the soldiers, and take no account of the rest of your subjects.' And we are told, on the authority of Justinus, that when he entered Rome in triumph after the final defeat of Albinus, his first public act gave indications of a determination to be' ruler of the army as well as of the Senate and people. Summoning the all-powerful Praetorian guard to appear unarmed outside the city walls, he encompassed them with troops upon whom he could rely. Then, reproaching them for their treachery to his predecessor ' Pertinax, he disbanded them and forbade their settling within a hundred miles of Rome.' The large number of dedicatory inscriptions in honour of Severus are in many ways remarkable. In most of them the name of the Emperor 4s associated with his two sons, Caracalla and Geta, invariably termed the Augusti, and in many instances with Julia Domna, his second wife, bearing the proud title of
his
'

manhood a high

Mater Castrorum.
Gibbon, vol. i. chap. and other Latin authors.
'

The
v.

political influence exercised

by women

The subject is referred to by Herodian, Dion Cassius, The dismissal of the Guard was probably witnessed by

Dion

himself.

200

Roman

Africa

of family at this period is attested by numerous writers, and no name appears more frequently in the inscriptions handed down to us than that of this celebrated Empress. Of the mother of

Severus there
Leptis.

that, like her

the

title

nothing to record, but it is reasonable to assume husband, she was an African and a native of Her memory, as the mother of an Emperor and bearing of Augusta, is preserved on a slab of stone built into a
is

wall at Constantine.'

VICTOR MATRI IMP CAES L SEPTI MI SEV VII PERTINACI AVGG ET


IVLIAE

TOTIVS

QVE DOMVS SEVERIANAE D D P

Concerning Marciana, the


there
is

first

wife of Severus,

whom

he

married at Leptis in his early youth and deserted


;

in later years,

no record for, in all probability, she took no part in and was content to pass her days in retirement. Fortunately her name may still be read in an inscription in the public gardens at Constantine.^ The word quondam seems to indicate that the tablet was erected during her lifetime when There is a touch of Julia Domna had been declared Empress. sympathy in the wording of this simple memorial to a deserted princess, whom the inhabitants of the renowned city of Cirta
public
life

desired to honour.

PACCIAE MAR CIANAE QVON DAM CONIVGI IMP SEVERIAVG PIISSIMI MAXI MI PRINCIPIS RES PVBL TTTI COL CIRTA DD PP
C.I.L. No. 10868.
=

C.I.L. No. 19494.

Africa under Septimius Severus

201

Female influence in public affairs was developed during the two Faustinas, but it reached its climax when The prominent part Julia Domna was raised to the throne. played in political life by this remarkable personage is almost unique. A Phoenician by birth and daughter of a priest of the temple of the Sun at Emesa in Syria, she emerged from comparative obscurity in a remote town to become the most concareer of the

Her mental powers were only by personal charms, and her influence in imperial matters was second only to that of the Emperor himself. But her conduct in private life was notorious and can only be measured by the loose tone of morality which then prevailed in
spicuous figure of her time.
excelled

government appear to have been so on the death of Severus, Julia Domna did not hesitate to marry his son and successor Caracalla, although he was her stepson. There is much conflicting evidence as to the truth of this statement. Dion Cassius, a person in high authority during this reign, is silent on this subject, but Justinus, who was also a contemporary, endorses the statement, and Spartianus, Aurelius Victor, and others give it their support. The words used by Spartianus are quemadmodum novercam suam Juliam uxorein duxisse dicatur and in his account of her marriage v/ith Caracalla he says, in words that will scarcely bear translation Quce quurn esset pulckerrima, et quasi per negligentiam
court society.
reins of

The

essential to her existence that,

se

maxima corporis parte

nudasset, dixissetque
'

A ntoninus
An

'

Vellem,

peratorem

imnon accipere? The name of Domna is peculiar. According to Suidas it was a Syrian proper name, but some commentators regard the word as an abbreviation of domina nostra, the Emperor Severus
si liceret;' respondisse fertur,
esse, et leges dare,
libet, licet.

Si

nescis te

being dominus noster. Among the numerous dedications to the Empress, one at Castellum near Sicca Veneria (El-Kef) possesses some interest, clearly indicating the unusual titles of distinction
country.'

accorded to her as Mother of the Army, the Senate, and the And another found at Thagaste (Souk-Ahras) gives

name of the Empress followed by that of the Emperor, as though Septimius Severus were a secondary person in public
the
estimation.^

The date

of this inscription

is

A.D. 198, the year

'

C.I.L. No. 15722.

C.I.L. No. 17214.

202

Roman

Africa

of his defeat of Albinus and the undisputed assumption of imperial power.

IVLIAE

DOMNAE

IVLIAE AVG PIAE FELICI


AVGVSTAE MATRI CASTRO

RVM
IMP CAES E SEPTI MI SEVERI PII PER TINACIS AVG ARA BICI ADIABENICI PART MAX TRIE POT VI IMP XI COS

MATRI AVGVS TI ET CASTRO RVM ET SENA TVS ET PATRIAE SENIORES KAST POS ET DEDIC

PROCOS P P PACIS PVBL RESTITVTORIS -D-D


II

should be
in the

As an example of a fine inscription of the time, mention made of one discovered on a magnificent slab of stone
temple of ^sculapius at Lambaesis, being a dedication to

Emperor Severus and his family by thirty-six cornicines of the third Augustan legion, all the names being given in full. The interpretation by Renier is as follows
the
:

Pro felicitate

et incolumitate saculi

dominorum nostrorum Augustorum

trium, Lucit Septimii Sever i Pit Pertinacis Augusti, et Marci Aurelii Antonini Augusti,, et Lucii Sepiimii Geta Casaris Augusti, et Julia

Augusta matris Augustorum duorutn


Augusta, Antonini Augusti nostri

et castrorum, et

Fulvia Plautilla

conjugis.

Cornicines legionis tertia

Augusta Pia

Vindicis.

the Emperor, his two sons and his wife are be observed, by that of Plautilla, the unfortunate wife of Caracalla. So numerous are inscriptions bearing the name of Julia Domna that its omission in imperial dedications The few relating to the Emperor alone are conis exceptional. spicuous for their length, and for the long array of ancestors whom Severus pompously associated with himself in the line of Caesars, as far back as a fourth generation. Throughout his reign he never seems to have forgotten that he was an African and we are told by Spartianus that, though the Emperor was greeds litteris eruditissimus, he spoke with a native accent till the later His regard for his countrymen is shown in the years of his life. arrangements of his magnificent palace in Rome, a part of which called the Septizonium was distinguished for its grandeur and is
followed,
it will
:
'

The names of

C.I.L. No. 2557

I.R.A. No. 70.

Renier and

De

la

Mare.

Africa under Septimius Severus


alleged to have been seven stories in height.'
It

203

was placed as

a conspicuous object near the road by which travellers from Africa approached the city, and was intended by the Emperor to impress his countrymen with the magnificence of their ruler.

The monumental remains in the African provinces, which may be assigned to his reign, are not remarkable for grandeur of conception, with the exception of a triumphal arch at Zanfour, the ancient Assuras. When Bruce visited this spot in 1765 the monument was in fair condition, but since that time the Corinthian columns which adorned the archway have been overthrown, and the structure generally has a ruinous aspect. It had only one arch, the width being 17 feet 5 inches. The height of the
edifice,

be estimated at 41 feet. tory inscription reads thus ^


:
. . .

may

which was surmounted by an attic bearing an inscription, According to Gu^rin the dedica-

SEVERO PIO AVG ARAB lAB PART MAX DIVO OPTIMO ET IMP CAES M AVRELIO ANTONINO PIO AVG FELICI PART MAX

BRIT MA.X GERM MAX PONT MAX FIL TRIB XVIII IMP III COS IIII P P PROCOS OPTIMO MAXIMOQVE PRINCIPI ET MATRI AVG ET IVLIAE DOMNAE PIAE FELICI AVG

CASTRORVM
ET SENATVS ET PATRIAE VXORI DIVI SEVERI AVG COL IVL ASSVRAS DEVOTA NVMINI EORVM D-D P P

PI I

The records of Assuras,


It is

Colonia Julia Assuras, are very scanty.

mentioned by Pliny as Oppidum Azuritanum, and is noted For many in the Itinerary of Antoninus as well as by Ptolemy. generations it was a stronghold of Christianity, and was the seat of a bishopric mentioned by St. Cyprian, who addressed one of his epistles to the episcopum et plebem Assuritanorum. The situation of Assuras had much to commend it as a residential town, favoured by charming scenery, surrounded by country of great fertility, and with a river of pure water that never failed.

A view
is

century,

of the remains of the Septizonium, as they appeared in the sixteenth reproduced by Signer Lanciani, Ancient Rome, p. 126, from a drawing

in the Uffizi Palace, Florence.

arch as

of Bruce, p. 208. A drawing is given of this appeared in Bruce's time. The inscription has been noted by Bruce Temple, ii. p. 266 and Guerin, ii. p. 90.
'

Playfair, Travels in the Footsteps


it

204
It

Roman
girt

Africa

was

by a

wall of defence of which the foundations remain

to the present day,

and was approached by two bridges which

crossed the river at considerable altitude.

Conspicuous amQijgthe very few good qualities which history has associated with Septimius Severus was a studious regard for an abundant supply of corn and oil. And so largely did he value the African supply that, when his great rival Pescennius
Niger, the governor of Syria, contemplated

the invasion of

Africa

by transporting his army through Egypt and Libya, the Emperor despatched his legions across the Mediterranean to guard the grain stores and prevent their falling into the hands of his enemy. On his death he left corn enough to last seven As a working Emperor, Severus years, and oil in abundance. held his own against any of his predecessors, and when he felt that his last hour had come, he gave as the watchword of the day Laboremus.' Associated with him during his latter days were his two sons, Caracalla and Geta, the elder created Augustus by the army, and the younger at the instigation of his mother
'

Julia Dot^na.

The

following inscription from Gigthis, an almost

forgotten

town

in the province of Tripoli,

mentions the three


is

Augusti

in connection with the

conquest of Britain, but there


special

no clue

to the date nor

any

commanded

in person this ill-fated assigned to A.D. 213, the year after the death of the Emperor at Eboracum (York).

mention of Severus, who expedition.' It may be

VICTORIAE BRITANNICAE IMPP L SEPTIMI SEVRI PERTINACISET M AVRELII ANTONIN ET P SEPTIMI GETAE AVGGG GIGTHENSES PVBLICE

PII

Inscriptions relating to Geta alone,


his brother A.D. 212, within twelve

who was murdered by


after the
is

months

death of

Severus, are few in number, but his


slab in the

memory

preserved on a

museum

at

Aumale

(the ancient Auzia) bearing the

date A.D. 205, when this prince had attained his sixteenth year. The dedication is to L. Septimio Getcz, Pontifici maximo,
nobilissimo CcBsari Principi juventutis, sufficiently indicating his

popularity in his

father's

animosity

if

his elder brother.

with the necessity of his


'

and the ground for the was Caracalla impressed removal that, on his assumption of
lifetime,

So

far

C.I.L. No. lioiS.

Bull,

du Comite, 1886,

p. 46.

Africa under Septimius Severus


supreme authority, Geta was declared a public enemy,
Spartianus says, Geta hostis est adjudicatus
to allaying the anxiety of the
it
;

205
or,

as

artd,

with a view

Empress mother for his safety, was arranged to divide the Empire between the two Augusti. Geta was to take up his residence either at Alexandria or Antioch, both of them being great cities scarcely yielding to Rome in magnificence, and was to govern all Africa and Asia east of Libya, while Caracalla was to reside in Rome and take
over the remainder, including
all

the African provinces.

The name
called) figures

of Caracalla (as this


largely
in

Emperor was commonly


titles

African inscriptions during the six

years of an unusually active reign, and the long array of

and distinctions which he assumed were not exceeded by those of any other Emperor. The cruelty inherent in his native race, combined with an utter disregard for human sufferings, seems to have reached its limits in the person of this depraved ruler. No contemporary writer, nor any of the few reliable authorities of a later age, place to his credit a single redeeming quality. And yet the inscriptions (if we are governed by mere words) bear testimony to a magnificence of rule and -the apparent respect of Roman citizens of wealth and renown who had settled permanently in the African provinces.
tion to the slab of white marble which
at Philippeville.^

Take, for instance, a dedicastill

Emperor by a family named Granius, preserved on a

may

be studied

in the

museum

than nineteen lines set forth the praises of Caracalla, as though he were an Augustus or a Trajan. To the invictissimo Augusta the inhabitants of Rusicada are
less

No

called

upon

to

bow

the knee.

And

at

Constantine

may

be
is

read another equally long inscription in which the Emperor


felicissmius, et super onines prindpes indulgentissimus.

described as maximus, invictissinius, sanctissimus, fortissimus,

of this rhapsodic memorial

is,

The date according to Wilmanns, A.D. 216.^

There is also a milliarium, which formerly stood on one of the highways out of Cirta, giving Caracalla the distinguishing titles of nobilissimus omnium and felidssimus prindpum. Perhaps the earliest inscription bearing his name was discovered a few years ago in the forum at Thamugas, the date being A.D. 197, according to Wilmanns.^ Its value lies in the exceptional
'

C.I.L. No. 7973. C.I.L. No. 10305.

Vide ChahormeaxL, Ann. de Constantine, 1860-61,

p. 334.

Ann.

de Const. 1858-59, p. 121.

'

C.I.L. No. 17870.

2o6
wording of the
destinatus,
first

Roman
line,

Africa
figures as

where Caracalla

Imperator

the dedicator being Q. Anicius Faustus, legatus Augtistorum proprcztor. And there is no mention of his younger

brother Geta,

who had not then

acquired any distinctive

titles.

AVRELIO ANTONINO CAESARI IMPERATORI DESTINATO IMPERATORIS CAES SEVERI PII PERTINACIS AVG SEPTIMI L ARABICI ADIABENCI VINDICIS ET CONDITORIS ROMANAE DISCIPLINAE FILIO DIVI M ANTONINI PII GERM SARM NEPOTI DIVI ANTONINI PII PRONEPOTI DIVI HADRIANI ABNEPOTI DIVI TRAIANI PAR THICI ET DIVI NERVAE ABNEPOT DECRETO DECVRIONVM PECVNIA PVBLICA Q ANICIVS FAVSTVS LEG AVGVSTORVM PRO PRAETORE PATR COL DEDICAVIT

Prominent among other inscriptions is one on a milliary column near the well-known tomb of Flavius outside the walls of
Lambsesis.'

The date
is

is

A.D. 215.

In this instance the

name

of Julia

Domna

associated with that of the Emperor, but on

another military column of the same date, at a place now called Henchir-el-Bidr, the name of the Emperor stands alone.^

M AVREL SEV ANTON AVG PL FEL PARTH MAX BRI MAX GER MAX PONT MAX TRIB POT
IMP CAES

IMP CAES M AVRELIO SE

VERO ANTO
NINO PIO FE LICI AVG PAR
TICO MAXIMO BRITANICO MA XIMO PONTIFI CI MAXIMO TRIB POT XVIII IMP III COS nil PR

XVIII IMP nil COS IV P P PROCOS ET


AVG MAT AVG ET CAS ET SEN AC PATRI A E


IVL

III

OCOS

AL

AMBAESE
The
similarity

MI

LIA- XIIII
of wording in these
latter.

two

inscriptions

is

noticeable, with the exception of the omission of the

name

of

the Empress-Mother in the


'

Among

the

dedications

C.I.L. No. 10263. C.I.L. No. 10236.

Wilmanns.
Also

'

De

la

Mare and Foy, and I.R.A. No. 4303.

Africa under Septimius Severus

207

conspicuous for a self-laudatory array of titles and a reference to a line of ancestral Csesars extending to the fifth generation, an inscription discovered at Siaga, near the modern town of

Hammamet
of Caracalla,

in Tunisia,
is

and taking rank as a civitas in the time very complete ^


:

IMP CAES DIVI SEPTIMI SEVERI PARTH ARABICI ADIABENICI MAX BRIT MAX FIL DIVI

M ANTONINI

PII

GERMANICI

SARMAT NEPOT DIVI ANTONINI PRO NEPOTI DIVI AELI HADRIANI ABNEPOT DIVI TRAIANI PAR ET DIVI NERVAE ADNEPOTI M AVRELIO ANTONINO PIO FEL PAR MAX BRIT MAX GERM

MAX IMP III COS III P P CIVITAS SIAGITANORVM D D P P


And

this

project of killing his

was the Emperor who formed the monstrous own father, who murdered his brother,

married his stepmother, forced his lawful wife into obscurity, and terminated an infamous career by murdering both wife and father-in-law for the sole reason that they stood in the way of
his ambitious projects!

Caracalla does not appear on any inscriptions or This word or nickname signifies, according to Aurelius Victor in his short history of the Emperor, a large flowing garment hanging down to the ankles, worn by the people of Gallia Lugdunensis (Lyons) where this prince was born and passed the earlier years of his life. His proper surname was Bassianus, after his grandfather, but on assuming the title of Augustus
coins.

The word

he became henceforth known as Marcus Aurelius Antoninus


Severus Augustus.
this.

All the inscriptions of his time confirm

The

exceptional influence exercised by Julia

Domna

in all

imperial matters was shared towards the latter days of Caracalla's

reign by her younger sister Julia Msesa. The career of these two daughters of Phoenicia, whose father Bassianus was an obscure priest at Emesa, and without any claim to nobility or hereditary rank, is truly remarkable and it is not surprising to
;
'

Shaw, Travels in Barbary.

2o8

Roman

Africa

learn from contemporary writ.ers that they contributed in a large measure to lower the tone of public morality, and to promote a system of corruption baneful to the Empire. The little

we learn from the pages of Herodian about the younger sister, who took up her quarters in the Imperial Court by the favour of the Emperor Septimius Severus, portrays a strong-minded, self-willed, unscrupulous woman, tactful in her operations, and
power without regard for the interests of others. Such was the weight of her authority that Severus gave her the distinguished title of Augusta, and when she died peacefully in old age and one of
the wealthiest
seizing her opportunities of acquiring wealth or

women

memory

divine honours.

of her time, the Senate bestowed on her The riame of Julia Massa appears in

a few inscriptions in North Africa. At the camp at Lambaesis she is described as Augusta avia domini nostri and Mater Castrorum et Senatus. This dedication may be assigned to the
Julia Sosemias, sometimes written Soemis

Her daughter, according to Dion Cassius, was another Empress conspicuous for activity and
reign, of her

grandson Elagabalus,

A.D. 218-222.

intrigue during the last days of the reign of her husband Caracalla and their son Elagabalus. But her record in Africa is restricted to one inscription found at Lambaesis, where she is styled Julia Socsmias Augusta mater Augusti nostri. Far more noteworthy and deserving honourable recognition was the career of Julia Mammaea, the younger sister of Soaemias, and the distinguished mother of the renowned Emperor Alexander Severus. The story of her life, handed down to us by Herodian and other
writers,

reveals

woman

of indomitable

will,

ambitious of

supreme power, and of unbounded avarice. For a space of fiveand-twenty years these four women, in their relations as grandmothers, aunts, or mothers of Emperors, may be said to have In the Senate-house, the camp, or public ruled the world. ceremonials, they were present to share the honours and privileges In the palace their authority was paramount, and of empire. the will of a woman became the will of a submissive Emperor.
Julia
at

Domna

did not hesitate to take a seat in the Senate-house

niece Soaemias founded and presided over a female parliament in the Quirinal, to regulate what we should call in modern life the social and moral habits of a female
aristocracy.

Rome, and her

209

CHAPTER

VIII

AFRICA UNDER ALEXANDER SEVERUS


A.D. 222-235

When Caracalla, the legitimate son of Septimius Severus, succeeded his father as joint Emperor with his brother Geta, there was every prospect of a continuance of an African dynasty bearing the title of Bassianus, and of giving increased notoriety to the name of an obscure priest of a Syrian temple of the Sun, as father and grandfather of two generations of Emperors. The Julian and Flavian dynasties had passed away with the efHux of time the Ulpian family, so called, which had exhausted its energies under the magnificent reign of Trajan, and had contributed so largely to the extension and consolidation of the Empire, had almost been lost sight of; and the families which, for the sake of abbreviation, are commonly known as the Antonines, came to an end when the wretched Commodus fell by the hands of an assassin. Hereditary succession had long since been disregarded. For more than two centuries Rome had looked to Italy and Spain to fill the imperial throne, and the approval of the subjects of the Empire
;

had followed the


fall

will of the

of the last of the Antonines a

been established. The will regarded as a factor in political life, but the will of the army was to be paramount, and the Caesar of the future was to be any ambitious adventurer who bid high for their services. The power of the soldiery openly asserted itself when Pertinax fell a victim to the greed of the Prstorian guards, followed a few

But with the things had of the people was no longer to be

Senate in Rome.

new order of

Emperor Julianas. But their assumption of supreme power reached its climax when it added to the death-roll the name of so estimable a ruler as Alexander Severus. The fall of Caracalla was an opportunity Wherever the Roman legions were for military adventurers.
years later by their deliberate murder of the
P

2IO

Roman

Africa

encamped in any part of the wide-spread Empire, a successful general with daring equal to the occasion, and with a promise of large donatives to the soldiers, might claim the right of
succession without consulting the wishes of the Senate. Such a man, distinguished for his prowess in many a field of battle, was Marcus Opilius Severus Macrinus (as he is commonly

Julia Casarea, the old capital of Juba II. This ambitious soldier was a Moor by birth as well as in habit, for, in common with the fashion of his race, he had an ear pierced to mark his nationality. He had risen from obscurity till he had attained the high distinction of prefect of the Praetorian guard. His short rule of only two months and three days is marked in North Africa by several inscriptions, showing that his son Diadumenianus shared with him the title of Caesar. Like their predecessors, Pertinax and Julianus, these two African Emperors paid the penalty of purchasing imperial power at the hands of a grasping and corrupt army. According to Justinus, both father and son were disposed of, as soon as it was discovered that Macrinus endeavoured to reduce their pay and attempted to suppress the luxurious habits which prevailed in the Praetorian camp. The following dedication by the citizens of Diana is recorded on a ruined triumphal arch, and was first deciphered by Peysonnel. It is also noted by Shaw, as well as by Renier and Wilmanns.^

called), a native oi

IMP CAES

FELICI

COS

M OPELLIO SEVERO MACRINO PIO AVG PONT MAX TRIB POTEST DESIG P P PROCOS PROVIDENTISSIMO

ET SANCTISSIMO PRINCIPI ET M OPELLIO ANTONINO

DIADVMENIANO

NOBILISSIMO CAESARI IVVENTVTIS RESPVBLICA PRINCIPI SIVM DEC EX DEC

DIANEN-

is unusual, and combined with comprehend. It is fair to assume that this monumental arch was erected by the citizens of Diana at the commencement of the Emperor's reign, which was marked at first by toleration, and by the abolition of several taxes that had been imposed by Septimius Severus and his But such epithets were wholly inapplicable to the successor.

The

epithet providentissimus
is

sanctissimus

difficult to

'

I.R.A. No. 1731.

Renier, Milanges d'Epigraphie, p. 198.

Africa under Alexander Severus


rule

211

of Macrinus, which was conspicuous for


for

cruelty and an utter disregard

the value of

many acts of human life.

Another inscription found on a milliarium discovered at Turris (Telmina) mentions both father and son in connection with a new highway.' But their record is very slight, the name of Macrinus not being associated with any movement that had the slightest influence on the progress and civilisation of North
Africa.

IMP CAES

M OPEL

MACRI NVS PIVS FELIX AVG COS ET M OPELLIVS ANTONINVS DIADVME NIANVS NOS CAES VIA
LIVS

SEVERVS

M STRATAM NOV

INSTITVERVNT-

mix
Of known
some
.

their

successor Aurelius Antoninus Varius,

commonly commend-

as Heliogabalus,^ the less said the better about a loath-

career that did not betray one single quality

able in mankind.

As

a link in the chain of African history,

who

apart from the disgusting personality of this half-African youth disgraced the Empire for a space of nearly four years, it

brings into unusual

prominence the extraordinary influence

exercised by his mother Sosemias and his grandmother Julia Both these women were ambitious and greedy of Msesa.

power.
latter

By

the intrigues of the former and the wealth of the


his

Macrinus and
first

son were got rid

of,

and

this stripling

just entering his fourteenth year, a legitimate son of Sojemias

husband, Varius Marcellus, was declared to be the legitimate son of Caracalla by Soaemias, and consequently the Historians of this period have rightful heir to the throne.' dealt leniently with this depraved ill-trained youth, and contemporary records on stone or marble are almost a blank. It is some satisfaction to find, in turning over the long pages of

by her

published inscriptions which have been brought to light in


'

C.I.L. No. 10056.

Tissot descrip.

The name

is

written in various ways.

Lampridius writes

it

Heliogabalus, which

is is

the direct pronunciation of the Greek


spelt Elagabalus.
^

word employed by Herodian.

On

coins

it

English writers usually accept the authority of Lampridius.


life

Justinus, in his

of this

his cousin-german Sotemias,

Emperor, says that he was the son. of Caracalla by and that he was privately begotten in adultery.
p 2

212
North
Africa, that

Roman
the

Africa
Aurelius Antoninus Varius

name of

rarely appears,

and that the few

tablets referring to

him

are in
is

one found many years ago in a ruined Byzantine fortress at Lambessa, much defaced and almost illegible, but with the aid of so expert an epigraphist as L6on Renier the stones were put
less

a more or

fragmentary condition.

Among them

together and the record


the

made

complete.

It is a

dedication to

Emperor by the

duplarii of the third legion

Augusta on the

occasion of the return of the African

a successful expedition

in the East.

army to headquarters after The chief value of the

inscription lies in the inclusion of the

two Empresses, grandmother and mother of Heliogabalus, thus perpetuating the career of these two women as sharing imperial power with Caesar himself The wording as interpreted by Renier runs
thus:

Pro

salute

domini nostri Im^eratoris Casaris, Marci Aurelii Antonini,

Pit Felicis Augusti, pontificis maxim.i,patris patrice , tribunicia potestate,


consiilis,proconsuUs, divi
et JulicB

Magni Antonini filii, Divi Pit Severi nepotis, Augusta, avim Augusti nostri, matris castrorum et Senatus, et Julia Soamiadis Bassiana Augusta, matris Augusti nostri.

Masa

of the Emperor's reputed This omission is noteworthy and helps to bear testimony to the statements of most writers that Heliogabalus had no hereditary claim to the throne. The
It

may be

observed that the


is

name

father Caracalla

not mentioned.

suppression

Empresses,

may be reasonably attributed to the two who virtually ruled the Empire during

intriguing
his reign.

The very few


Severus,

other inscriptions are open to doubt, inasmuch

as they are equally applicable to Caracalla

and to Alexander

who was

recognised by the Senate as his successor on

the throne.

The career of Alexander Severus is a pleasant chapter of African history, recalling the brightest days of the Empire under Augustus, Trajan, and Antoninus Pius. His father's name, Genesius Marcianus (supposed to have been a native of
Phoenicia), has been almost forgotten, but the

memory

of his

mother, JuHa

Mammaea, the

sister

of Julia Sosemias and the

granddaughter of JttUa-JDeama,

'No one

will be retained to all time. can read the biographical notices of the two Emperors
'

l.K.A. No. 90.

Africa under Alexander Severus

213

Heliogabalus and Alexander Severus without being struck with


the extraordinary difference in their mental and moral qualities.

Both of them were of African descent, with little trace of Italian them passed their early youth as priests in the gorgeous temple of the Sun at Emesa in Syria,' where their great-grandfather Bassianus had ministered during a long life. It has been said that Sosemias and her son represented the genius of evil, while Julia Mammsea and her son impersonated the genius of good.^ This is scarcely borne out by contemporary writers, and although neither of these remarkable women stands forth as an exponent of those higher qualities which command the respect of mankind in our more civilised times, yet the name of Alexander Severus is as conspicuous for everything that was good as that of his predecessor is for all that was bad. His reign of fourteen years was marked by justice to all subjects of the Empire, honesty in all his transactions, and such regard for the welfare of his people that not one single life was sacrificed by his orders in any part of his dominions. Mother and son, sharing the burdens of state and the desire to ameliorate the condition of the people in the provinces as well as in Rome, participated also in the honour of numerous dedicatory inscripMore than sixty tions which time has fortunately preserved. already discovered in North Africa bear ample testimony to the work of this amiable ruler, whose merits entitle him to the
blood, and both of

long array of superlative epithets attached to his name. The full title of Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander Pius Felix

Augustus

is

sometimes accompanied by dominus

noster,

and

such terms as sanctissimus, fortissimus, and super omnes indulgentissimus may still be read on several slabs in the local museums of North Africa.^ According to Lampridius, in his
city in Syria, renowned for its magnificent temple of the Sun. Ptolemy the geographer, it stood on the eastern bank of the river Not far from here the memorable battle took place when the army of Orontes. Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra, was completely routed by the Emperor AureUan. Emesa was made a colonia by Caracalla in honour of his mother's family, and at a Vide Eckhel for coins of Caralater date became the capital of Phoenicia Libanesia.
'

Emesa was a
to

According

with the temple on the reverse. Les Antonins, vol. iii. liv. 7, p. 342. ' Herodian says that Alexander Severus was named Alexianus, afterwards changed to Alexander. Lampridius calls this Emperor Aurelius Alexander, and adds that he was a native of Arka in Phoenicia, and called Alexander because he was
calla,
2

214
life

Roman

Africa

of this Emperor, the modesty and unassuming character of Alexander Severus were never more apparent than on the occasion when the Senate offered to confer upon him the title of Antonine in memory of his great predecessor. In declining the proposed honour the Emperor, according to the account given in the pages of Lampridius, is stated to have said 'If I
:

accept the

title

of Antonine,
?
'

why

not those of Trajan, of Titus,


' :

and of Vespasian
our eyes the On another
the

And

the conscript fathers answered


is

In

name

of Antonine the

equal to that of Augustus.'

occasion

Senate
title

expressed a desire that

Alexander should accept the

of Magnus, but once again

Emperor declined. The ordinary wording of a large number of simple inscriptions may be illustrated by the accompanying dedication on a milliary column, the name of the Emperor having the usual wording, Marcus Aurelius Severus
Alexander Pius Felix Augustus.

IMP CAE SAR M AV RELIVS SEVE RVS ALEXAN DER-PIVS FEL DIVI SEVERI NEP

PONT

MAXIM

TRIE POT COS P RESTITVIT XVI

A
bessa

far

more

interesting inscription

is

many

years ago on the Via Septimiana


It is

one discovered at Lamnot far from the


'

amphitheatre.
their family,

a dedication of an altar to Jupiter, as the

preserver of the Emperor, and his mother Julia

Mammsea and
Cres-

by a

chief magistrate
tablet,

named Lucius Marius


in

centianus.

This

which

be seen
local

in the

praetorium at

good condition, may still Lambessa, which has become a


is

museum

of considerable interest.^

Renier's interpretation,

which varies

slightly

from the

text,

is

also given.

born either in a temple sacred to Alexander the Great, or perhaps on the birthday of the great Macedonian. The Via Septimiana at Lambsesis was the principal road between the camp and
'

the town.

According
still

to

an inscription (C.I.L. No. 27o5)it was made by the

soldiers

of the third legion Augusta in the time of Septimius Severus.


slabs are
2

Some

of the paving

in existence

vide Renier, Arch, des Missions Scient. 1851, p. 173.

C.I.L. No. 2620.

I.R.A. No. 1406.

Africa under Alexander Severus

215

O M CONSERVATORI IMP CAES M AVRELI SE VERI ALEXANDRI INVIC TI PII FELICIS AVG ET IVLIAE MAMEAE MATRIS D N AVG TOTIVSQ DOMVS DIVINAE L MARIVS CRESCENTI ANVS Q AEDIL II VIRA DEVOT NVMINI EORVM A RAM QVAM DEVOVIT SVA PECVNIA POSVIT.
I

Tovi Optimo maximo, conservatori imperatoris Casaris Marci Aicreli Severi Alexandri Invicti, Pit, Felicis Augusti,et Julice Mainmcecz Augusta, matris Augusti, totiusque doinus divince. Lucius Marius Crescentianus, qucBstorius, adilicius, duumviralicius, devotus numini eorum, aram, quam devovit, sud pecunid posuit.

At Ain Tunga, formerly known


town
in Africa Provincia
is

as Thignica} an important
at the present

and marked
is

extensive ruins, there

a dedication to the
styled as
et patricB.

mother

in et

which the
castrorum
in

latter

A ugusti

et senatus

day by Emperor and his Augusta and mater The inscription is


the re-

on six stones
construction

a fragmentary

condition, recording

market A.D. 229.^ This date may be assigned as the climax of his estimable reign, when he had
of the
Imperatori Casari divi magni A ntonini, pii, fetici, divi Severi pii nepoii, Marco Aurelio Severe Alexandra, pio, felici Augusta, pontifici 7naximo, tribunicia potestate VIII, consuli III, pater patrice, et Julice MammcecB augustce matri Augusti et castrorum et senatus et patrice, maceUiim. vetustate collapsum municipiufn Septimium Aurelium Antoninianum. Alexandrianum Herculeum, frugiferum Thignica devotuin numini majestatique earum pecunia publica a sola refecit, itemqice dedicavii.

attained his 21st year.

Although

this

Emperor was acclaimed

Caesar in the four-

teenth year of his age and terminated his career before he had

reached his twenty-eighth birthday, yet he was married,


told, three times.

we

are

There are no inscriptions relating to one of


Sulpicia

his wives

named

man
'

of consular rank.

Memmia, daughter of Sulpicius, a Unlike her mother-in-law, Julia Mam-

The

four towns, Thignica, Thugga, Agbia,


in the third

district,
*

and

and Thubursicum, were in the same and fourth centuries were in a flourishing condition.
Vide Gu^rin, vol.
ii.

C.I.L. No. 1406.

p.

152.

2j6

Roman

Africa

mzea, whose activity and intrigue were unbounded, this quietgoing princess appears to have taken no part in public life, nor to have exhibited any interest in proceedings outside the court
circle.

Her

career

is

therefore a blank.

And

little

more

is

known

of another of the Emperor's wives

named

Sallustia

Barbia Orbiana, whose memory has been preserved in an inscription at Csesarea, which may still be seen in the little

museum at Cherchel.^ As the wife of the Emperor she was bound, in accordance with custom, to assume the title of Empress, and probably did so. But Herodian informs us that Julia Mammsea raised her objections to this assumption mainly on the ground that she alone, as Empress-Mother, wished to be called Empress. The same author adds that, in spite of Alexander's resistance to his mother's wishes, Orbiana was banished from Rome and ordered to pass the rest of her days in obscurity
in a city in

North Africa.
'

GNEAE

HIERENNIAE SALLVSTIAE ORBIANAE SANCTISSIMAE AVGVSTAE CONIVGI AVG NOSTRI EQQ SINGVLARES DEVOTI NVMINI MAJESTATIQVE EIVS CVRANTE LICINIO HIEROCLETE PROG AVG PRAESIDE PROVINCIAE
SEIAE

BARBIAE

Orbiana,

it

will

be noted,

is

proclaimed to be sanctissima

and augusta, but the name of the Emperor is not mentioned. As a simple record of one who might, under other circumstances, have played an important part in imperial matters, this dedication by the equites singulares is of value. It is a memorial of an ill-starred princess, whom destiny removed from the gaieties of Rome to gratify the ambition and avarice of the Emperor's
mother.
Julia Caesarea were

Perhaps the quieter delights of a provincial city like more to her taste than the intrigue and corruption then prevailing in the metropolis, and daily life was There is attended by untold pleasures in so sweet a spot. no more enticing locality in North Africa than the surroundings
of this ruined capital of the enlightened Juba II. The air is sweet and invigorating, the hills are clothed with timber, and the blue waters of the
'

Mediterranean break lightly on


B.evue A/ricaine, i860, p. 156.

its

C.I.L. No. 935S-

Africa under Alexander Severus


picturesque headland.

217

In the third century Csesarea contained

a large population of wealthy citizens, descendants of Roman families who had settled there in the days of Claudius to do

honour to so kingly a dependent as Juba II. Every traveller has visited Cherchel can bear testimony to the extent of The the ruins of the ancient city and its extensive suburbs. undulations on the hillsides mark the sites of Roman villas, and it is within the range of probability that the lordly dwelling which became the home of the banished princess may some day be unearthed, and some memorials of her career brought to

who

light.

The

fate

of Orbiana as a dweller in such a 5pot as

Cherchel needs
It is

little

commiseration.

a reproach against Alexander Severus that excessive amiability often caused much injury to others, and that abject deference to his mother's will was a blot in a career which, in other respects, was almost blameless.
decessors,
in the

Like so many of his prewho had attempted to correct long-standing abuses army and to restore discipline in the garrison towns, his

career also was terminated by the hands of a soldier assassin.

The
rule

decree of the Prstorian guard was omnipotent, and the

of the sword irresistible. Alexander, as a reforming Emperor, was condemned, and, almost simultaneously, mother and son fell together. If we are to credit Herodian, who shows no favour to Julia Mammsa, Alexander was a victim to the greed and sordid avarice of his mother. To gratify her desire for wealth she forced the Emperor to reduce the pay of the
soldiers for the sole purpose of personal aggrandisement.

In testimony of inherent vitality in the

Roman

people,

the progress of colonisation in the African provinces was not materially affected by these frequent attempts to undermine

the constitution and place the Empire at the mercy of the sword. The reign of Alexander, which happily lasted for nearly fourteen years, had been specially favourable to an increase of

population in the towns of North Africa,' to the advance of agriculture in the interior of the country, and to the establish-

and other works of defence for the For instance, a stone found on the plains of Setif bears an inscription relating
castella

ment of numerous

protection of the frontiers from tribal attacks.

to the construction of a castellum Dianense during his reign.'


'

C.I.L. No. 8701.

Rec. de Const. 1875, p. 338.

2i8

Roman

Africa

IMP CAESAR M AVRELIVS SEVERVS

ALEXANDER
PIVS

INVICTVS FELIX AVG MVROS KASTELLI DIANESIS EX TRVXIT PER COLONOS ; EIVSDE M KASTELLI

CLXXXXV

And in the extreme west two other slabs record the presence of a body of troops designated as Numerus Alexandrianus Severianus Syroruni} the last word indicating a tribe of that name
referred to in the

Geography of Ptolemy.
two
inscriptions in

M. Edouard

Cat, in his notice of these

his erudite treatise

on the

Roman

province of Mauritania Ccesa-

riensis^ suggests that the original title

was abbreviated into

Castra Severiana at some later date, partly on the ground that there was a bishop residing there in the fifth century (according
to Victor de Vite),

who bore

the

title

of Castraseberianensis.

The

government of Alexander throughout the African provinces, and a sense of security against disturbances, had attracted citizens from various parts of the Empire. We hear of no political agitation since the fall of Macrinus the Moor and inscriptions, which form the best testimony to the general
just

condition of the people, evince a spirit of contentment, respect

and undisguised reverence for an amiable Emperor. It would have been well for the Roman world if Alexander had been permitted to reign for the full term of his natural life and to continue his popular and beneficent rule. Excessive goodwill towards his subjects may be ascribed as one of the causes of his untimely end, together with a spirit of forbearance rarely to be met with in potentates of Syrian origin. We are told by Lampridius, his biographer, that on one occasion both his mother Julia Mammsea and his third wife Memmia upbraided him for his actions in the following words Molliorem
for imperial authority,
:

tibi

potestatem et contemptibiliorem

imperii fecisti.

slight

study of the career of Alexander Severus confirms the opinion


Rev. Afr. i, p. 103. Macarthy descrip. C.I.L. No. 10469. This military post occupied an important position west of Pomaria (Tlemcen), and is now represented by extensive ruins, upon which the Arab town of Lalla (Edouard Cat, Essai sur la Province Romaine de Maghnia has been built.
'

Maurelanie CSsarienne,

Paris, i8gi.)

Africa under Alexander Severus


aptly expressed

219

by Gibbon,

that

'

this

amiable prince was

hardly equal to the difficulties of his situation, and the firmness of his conduct was inferior to the purity of his intentions.'

The

period of nearly
is

fifty

years which followed the death of

marked by constantly recurring internal strife and conspicuous action by the legions in Africa in the cause of order and good government. From A.D. 235 to A.D. 284 no fewer
Alexander
than sixteen emperors ascended the throne in rapid succession, six of them reigning for a few months, the three generations of Gordians for eight years, and Aurelian and Probus being allowed, by favour of the army, to rule respectively for the unusually long periods of 'five and eight years. With the exception of the Gordians, who made Africa the battle-field of the Empire and contributed largely towards the close of their career to promote the welfare of its citizens, no one of these emperors appears to have taken an active part in any great movement in that country, nor, if we are to judge fi-om the numerous inscriptions which have been fortunately preserved, to have aroused the enthusiasm which characterised the rule of Trajan and the Antonines, and, in a lesser degree, of Alexander Severus. That the Roman world should have been governed for a period of thirty-eight years by a Syro-Phoenician dynasty, and that the names of five emperors and four empresses, some
of them born on African of the
soil,

should have

left

their

mark

in

the history of the Empire, are facts worth recording in treating

Roman occupation of North Africa. This dynasty may be briefly tabulated in the manner set forth in Smith's Dictionary of Gr. and Rom. Biog. and MythoL, art. Caracalla.'
'

Bassianus, a Phc^nician.

Julia Domna Augusta and wife of Sept. Sev. Aug.

Julia Mgesa Augusta, wife of Julius Avitus.


I

M.

Aurelius Antoninus

L. Sept. Geta

Julia Soeemias Augusta,

Augusrus, commonly
called Caracalla.

Augustus.

wifeofVarius Marcellus (a Syrian?)


I

Julia Mammaea Augusta, wife of Genesius

Marcianus (a
?)
1

Phoenician

M.

Aurelius Antoninus Augustus, commonly called Heliogabalus.

M.

Severus Alexander Augustus.


Aurelius

The name

of Bassianus was specially honoured

descendants, for

we

find

it

by on a dedicatory inscription to
Velitrae,

his his

granddaughter Julia Soaemias, found at Latium, on the Alban Hills, in 1765.

a city of

220

Roman

Africa

CHAPTER
A.D. 236

IX

AFRICA UNDER THE GORDIANS

244

The termination of the Syro- Phoenician dynasty (as it may be termed) by the death of Alexander Severus, who had no issue,
left the Empire at the mercy of any unscrupulous adventurer with a reputation for success in the field of battle. few years previously Macrinus the Moor had ascended the throne for a

by the aid of a liberal display of these qualities combined with the cruelty and cunning of his native race. It was now the turn of Maximinus, a Goth, a man of low extraction, to play a similar part in the drama of imperial progress. A shepherd in his earlier days, he had learnt the rude art of attack and defence in protecting sheep and cattle on his native plains from the hands of the marauder. A soldier in middle life, he rose, step by step, till he obtained the command of a legion and then, by the promise of large donatives and the employment of various forms of corruption, gained the
brief period
;

adherence of his troops in his daring bid for the throne of the Caesars. When the opportune moment arrived for declaring himself Imperator, he unfurled the standard of revolt, in defiance of the will of the Senate, and announced his intention of marching to Rome to claim imperial power. Success, though sometimes temporary in its achievements, invariably follows daring and promptitude, independently of the justice or iniquity of a cause. Maximinus had little else to depend upon. With a dash of heroism about him, he led his troops undaunted in the
direction of the capital, and with the assistance of Capellianus, governor of Mauritania, in stirring up the native races of North

Africa against the

Roman

legions established in the country,

seemed to be on the point of attaining the full measure of his ambition. Cruelty and extortion marked his footsteps, and the destructive qualities of a barbarian unaccustomed to civilised

Africa under the Gordians


life

221

showed themselves by his utter contempt for the monumental buildings of the great Empire. Whatever may have been his real name, we only know him as Caius Julius Verus Maximinus and his son, whom he created Caesar simultaneously with his assumption of the purple, bears the same name as the father. A few inscriptions in North Africa designate Maximinus Imperator CcBsar Julius Verus Maximinus Pius Felix Augustus, and his son Maximinus as Caius Julius Verus Maxinius Nobilissimus Ccesar. The most complete and legible record of their joint names may be read on a milliary column near the entrance to an old mosque in Tunis, bearing the date
;

A.D. 237.'

C IVLIVS IMP CAES IVERVS-MAXIMINVS-PIVS FELIX AVG GERM MAX SAR MAT MAX DACICVS PONT MAX TRIE POTEST III IMP VI

IVLIVS

VERVS

MAXIMUS

NO|

BILISSI MVS

CAES IPRINCEPS IVVENTVTIS GERM MAX SAR MAT MAX DACICVS MAX VI AM A CARTHAGINE VS QVE AD FINES NVMIDIAE PROVINCIAE LONGA INCVRIA CORRVPTAM AD QVE DILAP

SAM RESTITVERVNT LXX

In
are
similar

this

inscription

the

names of

both

these

Caesars

erased in the usual


in

way by marginal

lines.

Somewhat

ones of the same year

may

be seen on two milliary

columns

the neighbourhood of Agbia, one on the road to Thubursicum, and the other to Musti. All of them seem to

indicate that

Maximinus was engaged

in repairing the principal

highways

in Africa, in order to facilitate military operations for

One other inscripa revolt in the spring of the following year. tion worth noting was found at Gales in the proconsular province
of Africa, and

domus

ejus.

is a dedication to Maximinus only et divines This had been erased by Gordian I., but was

afterwards restored.

Three

years' rule
'

under such an Emperor, who remained a


Vi^^ Guerin, vol.
i.

C.I.L. No. 10047.

p. 27.

222

Roman

Africa

barbarian to the end of his career, and whose motto was Nisi crudelitate imperiuni non teneri, was productive of infinite harm,

and contributed more to promote the decline of the Empire


than the infamous conduct of Caracalla and Heliogabalus. Like so many of their predecessors, Maximinus and his son

became the victims of the same men who had


power.

raised

them

to

The dagger

of the soldier said the last word, and, after

a short interval of a few weeks, the statues raised in honour of


these two Augusti were overthrown
father and son held in contempt.
;

and the names of both in North Africa is a blank for, with the exception of the milliary stones above referred to, there are no inscriptions indicating one single act of
Their record
munificence or thought for the welfare of the vast population

No words can better express the growth of this great colony. of decay at this period of the Roman Empire than the following
In the decline of paragraph penned by our great historian.^ Empire, A.D. 200-250, the form was still the same, but the animating vigour and health were fled. The industry of the people was discouraged and exhausted by a long period of The discipline of the legions, which alone, after oppression. the extinction of every other virtue, had propped the greatness
'

of the State, was corrupted by the ambition, or relaxed by the weakness, of the Emperors. The strength of the frontiers, which had always consisted in arms rather than in fortifications,

was insensibly undermined and the fairest provinces were left exposed to the rapaciousness or ambition of the barbarians,
;

who soon

discovered the decline of the

Roman

Empire.'

There are few names more intimately associated with the history of Roman Africa than those of the three Gordian Emperors, whose figures pass too rapidly across the stage at and there is no one in the long roll of Emperors this period whose actions were so repulsive to the citizens of Rome and the provinces as those of the savage Maximinus. With a rabble army he was spreading devastation everywhere in his course, and seemed to be on the point of assured success when the
;

At that time the prolegions of Africa declared against him. consul of Africa was a noble Roman of distinguished family, a man of high attainments and commanding universal respect.
It

was during the reign of Septimius Severus that the Senate


'

Gibbon,

vol.

i.

p. 329.

Africa under the Gordians

223

conferred upon Antoninus Gordianus this coveted distinction,

and we are told by Capitolinus that as soon as the Emperor heard of the appointment he wrote to the conscript fathers, You could not do anything more agreeable or more pleasant to me than to send to Africa as proconsul so good a man, noble, just, enlightened, and temperate in all things.' Such was the reputation of the man who saved the Empire in a day of peril, and, with some little hesitation excusable in a veteran then
'

entering upon his eightieth year, gave up the quiet enjoyments

of provincial

life

at the call of his country.

It

appears that

Gordian was residing at some country retreat near Thysdrus in Africa Provincia at the time when Capellianus, as the ally of Maxim inus, was inciting the native races to revolt, and we learn from contemporary writers that Gordian was proclaimed Csesar Imperator by the army of Africa in that remote town.^ Gordian then proceeded to Carthage in state to receive the congratulations of its citizens, and from thence despatched messengers to Rome announcing his acceptance of imperial power. But the joy of the Senate at the prospect of relief from the cruelties of Maximinus was short-lived, for the troops of Gordian were vanquished by the irregular army under Capellianus, and the eldest son of the Emperor, associated with him as Caesar, was killed. The shock was greater than the aged Gordian could endure. His brain became affected, and in a fit of despair he committed suicide. Great was the consternation of the Senate, presided over by Flavins Valens, who was subsequently created Emperor with his brother Valentinian. Maximinus was at that time encamped at Aquileia with a large army, making preparations for a triumphal entry into Rome, and in a few weeks the fate of the Empire might be sealed, and a reign of military despotism begun. To meet the urgency of the situation, two senators of consular rank and mature years were selected to guard the national interests. One of them, named Marcus Clodius Pupienus Maximus, who had considerable military experience, was sent to Aquileia to give battle to
'

Maximinus
binus, a
tive affairs,

the other,

named Decimus
in

Caelius Calvinus Bal-

man

of noble birth and of tried capacity in administra-

was

to

remain

Rome

as the guardian of the


at

' Gordian I. received the title of Africanus when he was saluted as Emperor Thysdrus and taken in triumph to Carthage to be formally proclaimed.

224
people.

Roman

Africa

And with a view to securing a continuance of the Gordian dynasty, a grandson of the elder Gordian, at that time a youth about twelve years old, was to be associated with both of them as the Caesar Imperator of the future. An interesting inscription on a milliary stone found nearly a mile from Bouhira, in the province of Mauritania Sitifensis, on the slope of a hill covered with ruins, records the names of all three Caesars.'
IMP CAES

M CLODIO PVPIENI O MAXIMO PIO FELICI AVG PONT MAX TRIE POT COS II PROCOS P P ET IMP CAES D CAELIO CALVINO BALBINO PIO FELICI AVG PONT MAX TRIB POT COS II PROCOS P P ET M ANTONIO GORDIANO NO
BILISSIMO CAES PI AVG

NEPOTI DIVORVM GOR DIANORVM RES P COL NERV AVG SITIF


MVIIII

be observed that the citizens of Sitifis, in their dedication two Emperors and the youthful Gordian, designate each of the former as pontifex maximus. This was a departure from an ancient rule of the constitution, which made the high office of chief pontiff indivisible, and thus established a precedent which ultimately tended to bring the title into disfavour.^ In
It will

to the

C.I.L. No. 10365.


*

Vide PouUe, Rec. de Const. 1873-4, p. 366.

The

origin of so distinguished a title as Pontifex

maximus

is

veiled in con-

siderable obscurity,

and has been the subject of a variety of statements, which may

be classed as conjectural. Among ancient authors who have assisted in throwing light on the matter, Zosimus the historian, during the reign of Theodosius, may
claim a hearing.
period

He

tells

us that

'

the origin of Pontifices

when mankind was unacquainted with

the

form of statues. Images of the deities were first no temples in those days (for the use of such edifices was unknown), they set up figures of their gods on a bridge over the river Peneus, and called those who sacrificed to these images Gefhyrcei, Priests of the Bridge (Gr. ycpvpa, a bridge). Hence the Romans, deriving it from the Greeks, called their own priests Pontifices, and enacted a law that kings, for the sake of dignity, should be considered of the number. The first king to enjoy this distinction was Numa Pompilius. After him it was conferred not only on kings, but on Augustus and his successors in the Roman Empire. Upon the elevation of any one to the imperial dignity, the Pontifices brought him the priestly habit, and he was immediately styled Pontifex

may be traced to a remote mode of worshipping gods in the made in'Thessaly. As there were

Africa under the Gordians

225

the earlier days of the Republic a pontifex maxinius, as head of the college of priests, was not permitted to set foot out of Italy,

but as soon as the Emperors assumed a right to the title this restriction was withdrawn. Julius Cffisar set the example by making an expedition into the province of Gaul after his acceptance from the Senate of this high office. It may be observed that Valentinian II., at the close of the fourth century,

was the last of the Emperors to retain the dignity of chief pontiff, and that it remained in abeyance till its assumption by the Christian Bishops of Rome. The few months' rule of these two high-minded senators, who succeeded in ridding the world of the tyrant Maximinus and securing tranquil succession to the youthful Gordian, is marked by several incidents affecting the interests of Roman

army despatched Emperor in Maximinus was slain by his his march towards the capital. own rebellious soldiers, and the troubles of the Empire seem to have terminated. Had Maximinus been successful in his
Africa.

Fortune

for the

moment

favoured the

from

Rome

to arrest the progress of the usurping

campaign, all Africa would country to a long course inseparable from irregular Republic, and under the

have been in arms, subjecting the


of barbarity and the
warfare.

many

evils

In the days of the great


till

Csesars

the time

of

Septimius

Severus, the authority of the Senate representing the interests

of the Empire vk^ould have asserted itself whenever dissensions But the old order of at home or abroad endangered the State.
things had passed away.

The army was no


its

longer the loyal


;

servant of the Senate, but

exacting master

the Prsetorians, prepared

for

and the will of any emergency, was irresistible.

The

citizens of

Rome

and ultimately

disputed their authority, troubles ensued, Pupienus and Balbinus were sacrificed to the

fury of the soldiers.

The names

of both these Emperors are

now almost
century
;

forgotten in the long array of Caesars of the third

but the part they played in the Gordian drama, and

their loyalty to their country in the

hour of

distress, entitled

them to a more honourable place than time has accorded them. Such was the state of affairs when Gord;ian III., at the age Possessing all the charms of sixteen, was raised to the purple.
maximus.
title.
(')

According

to

Orelli, Gratian

was the

last

of the Emperors to use this

226

Roman

Africa

an honoured name, he soon endeared himself to his subjects in all parts of the Empire. For a time the Praetorians were quiet, waiting their opportunity to test the military capacity and moral courage of the youthful Caesar. Scarcely had Gordian been seated on the throne when insurrection broke out in Africa. But the Emperor was equal
of youth, an amiable disposition, and
to

the occasion.

early days, aided

The military qualities he had exhibited in by the loyalty of his supporters, nipped the
and peace and prosperity blossomed once Numerous inscriptions in North honoured name, during this brief period,
popularity.

rebellion in the bud,

more under
attest

his amiable rule.

Africa, bearing his

a well-merited

In nearly

all

parts of the

Empire dedications were made expressing satisfaction and contentment, many of them referring to acts of munificence and to
encouragement given to the arts of peace in Rome as well as in In North Africa the titles of the Emperor vary considerably. At Verecunda, for instance, there is a dedication in which he is styled Gordiani nepoti et divi Gordiani sororis
the provinces.
Jilio}

At Lambaesis we find that the soldiers of Julia Cassarea were not unmindful of their Emperor;^ and on the road between Mostaganem and Mascara a milliarium was found on which the The date will be A.D. 239. full titles are briefly given.^
IMP

CAES

M
DOMINO
IMP CAES

ANTONIO GORDI ANO PIO FELICI IN VICTO AVG VEXIL


LATIO MILITVM

MAVRORVM
CAESARIENS IVM GORDIA

NORVM DEVO TORVM NVM


MAIEST ATIQVE
INI

ANTONIO GOR DINO INVIC TO PIO FELICI AVG PONT MAXI MO TRIE POT BIS PRO CON P P COS

SVLI

NEPOTI

DI

VORVM GORDIA NORVM M P

EIVS
But the most interesting
inscriptions are those bearing the

rame
'

of his wife Sabinia Tranquillina conjointly with his own,

I.R.A. No. 1431. C.J.L. No. 10460.

I.R.A. No. 99, copied by Renier and Rec. de Const. 1875, p. 438.
''

De

la

Mare^

Africa under the Gordians


of which the following, found at a place Adjedj in the neighbourhood of Theveste,

227
Henchir example ^
:

now
is

called

fair

IMP CAES

M ANTONIO
GORDIANO PIO
FEL AVG ET TRANQVILLI NAE SABINAE

AVG EIVS

far

more important dedication

is

on a slab discovered at

Bir Haddada, the site of a

Roman
O

castellum in the province of

Mauritania

Sitifensis
I

CETERISQ

DIS

DEABVSQ PRO SA LVTE ADQ INCO LVMITATE VIC TORIISQ D N SAN

CTISSIMI

IMP

ANTONI

GORDIA

NI INVICTI PII FE LICIS AVG ET SABI

NIAE TRANQVILL INAE AVG CON IVGI EIVS AVG N TO TAQVE DOMO DIVINA EO

RVM -K-B-D-D-S-P
Here we have in a few lines an invocation to Jupiter and all the gods to protect the Emperor and Empress and their divine family.'' In some instances the dedications are to the Empress
only, as in the following at Sigus in
A.D. 242.^

Numidia, the date being

We

know

little

of the career of Sabinia, except that

she was the daughter of a noble Roman named Misitheus (sometimes called Timesicles on account of his Greek extraction), or Timasitheus, who was entrusted by his youthful son-in-law with the highest duties of the State, and as prefect of the
Prstorians endeavoured to effect much-needed reforms in that powerful body.
'

C.I.L. No. 10695. C.I.L. No. 8710. C.I.L. No. 5701.

^''-

* Const.

1878,

p. 32.

' '

Rev. Afriq. 1861, p. 448. De la Mare, Explor., tab. 53,

n. 3.

I.R.A. No. 2467.

228

Roman

Africa

SABINIAE TRANQVIL LINAE AVG CONIVGI DOMINI NOSTRI IMP CAES M ANTONI

GORDIANI PII FELICIS INVICTI AVG PONT MAX TRIE POT V IMP VI COS II P P PROCOS RESPVBLI CA SIGVITANORVM
that corrupt age,

But honourable conduct seems to have been little valued in and reform in any branch of military service was resisted to the utmost. Misitheus was succeeded in the prefecture by Philip the Arab, and ultimately was sacrificed to make way for his ambitious projects. Although the name of
Sabinia has been almost forgotten,
it

is

pleasant to find so

many

remote places in North Africa. It is, therefore, reasonable to assume that this Empress had established a good reputation and a degree of popularity
dedications in her

honour

in

among Roman
Capitolinus,

citizens.

in

his

lives

of the

Gordians,
art,

tells

us

that

Gordian

III.

did

much

to

promote

and mentions as an

instance of his regard for beautiful surroundings that he adorned

the peristyle of the family villa in the Prenestine Way with 200 columns of marble 50 of marble of Carystea, 50 of

Claudian, 50 of Synnada, and 50 of marble from Numidia the last probably coming from the quarries at Simittu already
referred to.

But the name of

this

Emperor, linked with those

of his grandfather and his uncle, will be for ever associated with the remote town of Thysdrus, where Gordian I. was drawn

from a peaceful

life

to raise the standard of resistance against

Maximinus the tyrant, and where a monument was raised in their honour, whose magnificent remains still excite the wonder The and admiration of every traveller in modern Tunisia.

name Arab

of Thysdrus sounds unfamiliar in speaking of the present village of El-Djem and the colossal amphitheatre there
title.

bearing the same

Indeed, were

it

not for the presence of


of Thysdrus would

this structure, the site of the

Roman town
;

have been
inscriptions
theatre,
its

diflficult

to identify

and, owing to the absence of

and records of any kind relating to the amphiruined surroundings might have remained an un-

'"^^?Wr-*^53S?5*^

Africa under the Gordians


solved problem.
writings

229

As to the town itself, we know from the of Hirtius that Julius Caesar levied a fine on its inhabitants after the battle of Thapsus, a coast town some

twenty miles distant, where the issue proved fatal to the party of Scipio. Thysdrus cannot be said to exist at the present day, but the site is clearly indicated by the disturbed surface of the ground near the amphitheatre, and by the discovery in recent It could not have been a years of a number of tombstones. town of great size or importance at the commencement of the Christian era, for Hirtius tells us that Caesar mitigated the fine on account of the wretched condition of the inhabitants propter humilitatem civitatis certo nuinero frumenti multat. The exact date of the erection of the amphitheatre is a matter of conIt is scarcely possible that jecture, and is likely to remain so.
:

so gigantic a structure, demanding considerable forethought in

design and beset with many difficulties in its execution, could have been planned and commenced during the six weeks' reign of the first of the Gordians. Rather let us assume that when the third of the Gordians found himself securely seated on the
throne, with every prospect of enjoying a peaceful reign, his

thoughts
It

may have

reverted to the

his distinguished grandfather

little town in Africa where had been raised to the purple.

principal towns

was the custom to mark the accession of an Emperor in the by a course of several weeks' festivities, defrayed
imperial treasury.

by the

Perhaps the cost of the amphitheatre,

needful for repeated exhibitions of the games of the arena, was defrayed from the same source on the accession of Gordian III.

a matter of conjecture, and the whole subject is Capitolinus, writing in the reigns of mystery. Diocletian and Constantine, makes no mention of the amphitheatre. He alludes to the proclamation at Thysdrus of the

But

this

is

involved in

first

Gordian, and adds in a subsequent paragraph that great

festivities

were

in preparation

by Gordian

III. for celebrating

the thousandth anniversary of the foundation of Rome, commemorated a few years later by Philip his successor. It seems strange that such a monumental edifice of architectural pretensions, covering \\ acres of ground, rising to a height of

about

120

feet,

and

capable of

seating

persons, should have been passed over without


so careful a biographer as Capitolinus.

more than 30,000 comment by


coins struck in

The

230

Roman

Africa

the reigns of the Gordians throw

little light on the subject. According to Shaw there is one giving a representation of an amphitheatre not hitherto accounted for by medallists. But there is another well-known coin of this era with a somewhat similar representation of an amphitheatre, which undoubtedly refers to the repairing or completing the Flavian amphitheatre at Rome during the reign of Gordian III. The inscription Munificentia Gordiani Aug. is conclusive. In both coins the amphitheatre is shown with three stories of arcades surmounted by an attic, a colossus on one side and a portico on the other. It is quite possible that one coin was struck at Rome, and the other in the mint at Carthage, but they both refer to the edifice at Rome, and the colossus represented is none other than the

so-called Colossus of Nero.

The comparative

silence of Latin

authors, and of Arab writers of the eleventh

and twelfth centuries,

such as El-Bekri and Edrisi, on any matter relating to Thysdrus, renders a solution of this question somewhat difficult. Justus
Lipsius, the author Qi Admiranda, sive de

written in 1630, gives a

list

of

all

the

but makes no mention of the one at father, Josephe Gius, who wrote an elaborate description of
Aries and other similar edifices, is quite silent on the point, and the Marquis Scipio Maffei,^ when comparing the amphitheatre at Verona with those at Rome and Capua, boldly
asserts that these

Magnitudine Romana, known amphitheatres, Thysdrus. The Jesuit

the Romans.

were the only amphitheatres ever built by rest, including those whose remains may still be seen at Aries, Nimes, Pompeii, and Pola (not mentioning Thysdrus), he describes as theatres, and not intended for gladiatorial exhibitions. Shaw, who travelled through Barbary 1730-38,^ was the first to draw attention to this great monument at Thysdrus, and Bruce, some thirty years later, was probably the first traveller who made a drawing of it. Gibbon the historian gives no clue as to its origin, and accepts the statements of Capitolinus as the groundwork for this period of Roman history. Our own encyclopsedias are also silent, and

The

Marquis Francesco Scipione Maffei, A compleat History of the Ancient AmphiLondon 1730. 8vo. Another writer on the subject was Justus Lipsius, Admiranda, sive de Magnitudine Romana, Lib. IV. Editio ultima, Antverpise.
'

theatres.

MDCXXX.
*

No
p.

mention
206.

is

made of Thj'sdiiis.

Shaw,

m
f
fcxT.:--:

>.

'<
'

\n

a
'!'

P
...

<

H H W
H
<!

W X H

Africa under the Gordians


some of them ignore the monument
doubt, however, that
altogether.

231

many

inscribed stones,

There is little removed from the

amphitheatre from time to time, are built into the walls of Arab huts in the adjacent village of El-Djem, and that a systematic exploration of the site of the ancient town would
bring to light some record of the building of this gigantic
history,

For the present we must be content with traditional and assume (there is reasonable ground for the assumption) that the building was planned and nearly completed under the Gordian dynasty. The coming celebration of the tenth centenary of the foundation of Rome, for which the Gordians were preparing, would promote the building of amphitheatres and the completion of those that were in progress, not
structure.

only in Rome, but


tells

in

every province of the Empire.

Capitolinus

us plainly that the preparations of Gordian III. were on the


scale,

most extensive
the

and that

his munificence in

encouraging

games of

the arena was not surpassed

by any one of the

Roman

Emperors. Like the aqueduct of Carthage, this monument at Thysdrus is a standing testimony to the force of imperial will, and to the strength and determination so conspicuous in the Roman character. It mattered little to the Emperor whether stone or marble were at hand or transport of materials difficult. In the quarries at Sullectum, some twenty miles distant, stone of excellent quality was abundant, and to all appearances this stone and no other was used. What were the appliances for conveying tens of thousands of huge blocks of chiselled stone so long a distance, or how many thousands of forced labourers were employed on the work, we have no means of knowing. It is sufficient for us to regard with amazement the audacity of an undertaking which, in the present day and in the actual condition of the country, would be stamped with impossibility Like all the other great amphitheatres of the Empire, the divisions and arrangements of the one at Tkysdrus present no distinctive features, having externally the usual open arcades, each presenting a complete Order. In this one the first and third are of Corinthian Order, and the second Composite. Whether the attic was Corinthian or not we have no means of judging, as only a portion of the inner wall of the top story remains. There were two principal entrances, one of which

232
is

Roman

Africa

The interior has suffered more than the owing partly to its having been used as a fortress, but principally to the wantonness of Arabs, who have been accustomed for centuries to regard the entire edifice as a very cheap and convenient stone quarry. When El-Bekri saw the
entirely destroyed.
exterior,
.

amphitheatre
Bruce's visit

in the

eleventh century, he described the interior

as being arranged in steps from top to bottom,

and

as late as

been

iniact.

some portions of the There is every reason

seats

and

inclines

must have

to suppose that the structure

was never completed.


associated,

The

short rule of the Gordians, scarcely

extending over six years, with whose

memory it was intimately was followed by a line of Emperors who had no interest in this obscure town in Africa, so far from the coast. This fact might help to account for so great a monument having
been
left

unfinished.
it

As

for the structure itself, there are

many

was built with great rapidity with a view to its being used for some special occasion. Nearly every stone has a triangular- shaped lewis-hole on the external face, showing that the raising of the blocks into position was of more conindications that
sideration than the appearance of the work.

Again, the arch-

stones are not


arches,

all

carefully

cut

to

suit

the extrados of the

and several of the modillions which adorn the cornices left uncut. There are indications of an intention to carve the keystones of the bottom arcade, but only two of them have been worked (perhaps by way of experiment), one representing the head of a lion and the other the bust of a female, the dressing of the head being in the fashion of the period. The three tiers of arcades appear to have been comof the three stories are
pleted, with the exception perhaps of the cornice, but there
is

no indication whatever of any of the facing blocks of the attic There is one peculiarity story having been fixed in position. about the structure which is very noticeable. Nearly every course of masonry is of the same height, being within a fraction of 20 inches, the length of the stones averaging 38 inches. In each Order the entablatures are similar, the architrave, frieze, and cornice being each one stone in height. The bases of the engaged columns are in one stone, and the surbases also. The
superficial area of this amphitheatre
is

almost identical with

that of the incomplete amphitheatre at Verona, which ranks

with that at Capua as one of the largest of provincial edifices

7U

Pi

W
ft;

H <
Pd
Pi -<

< w
Pi <;

W H

w K H

Africa under the Gordians


of this description.
there
is

233

Comparing

it

with the Colosseum at Rome,

nnarked variation in the dimensions of repeated features, especially in the proportions of wall spaces and the open arches

of the arcades. The extreme major axis 489 feet, and the minor axis at 403 feet.
first

may

be estimated at
height of the

The

Order is 26 feet 6 inches, of the second Order 32 feet 10 inches, and of the third Order 29 feet 8 inches. Assuming that the attic was intended to be of the same proportionate
height as
wall,
its

prototype in Rome, the total height of the external


feet

measured from the ground, would have been 124

6 inches.

The

construction itself possesses considerable merit.

when quarried, but exposure presenting a golden hue, is very beautiful when the sun is low on the horizon, but it did not admit of very fine workmanship. The surface of the stone is excellent, and the vaulting throughout, which is in smaller blocks, is well worthy of study. The stones have not in all cases been well fitted, owing probably to the rapid execution of the work, and consequently the mortar joints, especially in the corridors, are thicker than one generally meets with in the best class of Roman masonry. The proportions of the openings and wall spaces are very pleasing, and the mouldings generally, though simple and frequently repeated, have been well considered. The history of this amphitheatre has been a stirring one in Its form and solidity made it useful as a fortress, later times. and we learn that, at the time of the Arab invasion of North Africa, a female chieftain named El-Kahina resisted their approach, taking shelter within the building and sustaining a long
stone, a shelly limestone, quite white
after long
siege.

The

annual tribute to the


Artillery

In 1697 the tribes of the district refused payment of the Bey and sought refuge within its walls.

was brought

to bear

upon the

edifice,

and a breach

equal to one-fourth of the perimeter prevented its ever being used again for a similar purpose. Since that time many of the
dislodged blocks of stone have been carried off and the breach made larger. The miserable dwellings of Arabs now clustered round the walls, and even within the lower arcades, present a
striking

and piteous contrast


subject

to the noble

workmanship of

their

predecessors.

The whole
chapter
in

of amphitheatres

forms an important

Roman

history.

They

are a type of public buildings

234
essentially

Roman

Africa

Roman, and are unknown in any country unsubdued by Roman arms. They may be divided into three classes. Those at Capua, El-Djem, Verona, Aries, Nimes, and Pola, all modelled after the Colosseum at Rome, may represent the first class those of which we have examples at Psstum, Pompeii, Italica, Caerleon, as well as at Bou-Chater, Oudena, and numerous other towns in North Africa, partly excavated and
;

partly embellished with masonry,


class
;

be assigned to the second which the one at Dorchester may be recognised as a typical example, being excavations of elliptical form with cut benches of turf, belong to the third class. These are rightly called Castrensian amphitheatres, and probably no Roman castruin in any province, however remote, was unprovided with one of these rough constructions. Montfaucon says that every Roman city had its amphitheatre, and certainly in North Africa there is scarcely a town where the lines of one cannot be traced. Gordian III., the last survivor of a short-lived dynasty, shares with Alexander Severus the sympathetic regard of all lawabiding citizens of every age. Like so many of his predecessors, he paid the penalty for honourable conduct. The PrEtorians, at

may

and others

still

traceable, of

the instigation of their prefect,

demanded

his removal.

The

youthful Emperor, just entering his twentieth year, was murdered,

and Philip the Arab reigned in his stead. The name of Gordian must have continued a pleasant memory in after generations, for we are told by Capitolinus that, by a decree of the Senate, their descendants were to be free for ever, as citizens of Rome, from all the heavy taxes and burdens of the State. It is to be regretted that no Latin inscriptions have been brought to light in North Africa bearing the names of Gordian I. and his son.

At Djemila
Greek,^ and

(the ancient Cuiculum) a fragmentary slab has been


difficult to decipher, but the characters are few words that are legible do not convey

found somewhat
the

information of any value.


'

C.i.L. No. 10895.

<

M:;:...

.,^M^

235

CHAPTER X
AFRICA UNDER THE LATER EMPERORS
A.D. 244-254

In the long
succession

list

of Emperors

who

crossed the stage in rapid

towards the decline of the Empire, many may be regarded as puppets in the hands of a faction others were invested with the purple by accident rather than by the deliberate will of the people, while a few were mere implements at the
;

disposal of a corrupt and undisciplined army.

The

short rule

of a few months accorded to of

many

of them prevented their


affairs outside

taking an active part in administrative

the walls

any of the great provinces of the Empire. Although Africa was an unknown country to some, yet their names, honoured or dishonoured,
finding opportunities for visiting

Rome, or

be found recorded on stone or marble in nearly every part of this great colony. To some of the Emperors are accorded a long array of superlative epithets, which the greatest of the Csesars in the better days of the Empire would have hesitated to while to others are given the customary titles that accept In testimony tradition had assigned to the Csesar of the day. of the change which had taken place since the days of Augustus, a comparison may be made between the titles accorded to that great Emperor and those adopted by such an unworthy representative of the line of Caesars as Philip the Arab, who treacherously murdered Gordian III., and ruled for five years more as a military adventurer than as guardian of the interests But fortune favoured his career far beyond of a great Empire. The thousandth anniversary of tfie foundation of his deserts. Rome A.C. 753 was commemorated shortly after he came to the throne, and consequently festivities on an unusual scale were held in every city and town of the Empire. This is partly
;

may

shown by the

large

number

of inscriptions

of

that

period

dedicated to the Emperor and his wife, as well as to his son

236
Philip,

Roman
who
soil,

Africa

shared the imperial dignities, although he was only

a child of eight years.

Among

those brought to light on

African

the following, selected from a large number, will

serve to indicate the tone of national feeling which prevailed on

such a memorable occasion. In this instance the immediate cause of rejoicing was the reconstruction of the waterworks at a

remote place in Mauritania Sitifensis, now known as Kharbet Zembia, but the dedication is complete, even to the bestowal of invictus on the little boy Caesar.'

FELICISSIMIS

TEMPORIBVS

IMP

CAES IMP

PHILIPPI INVICTI PII FELICIS ET CAES'-M'-TVLi'- PHILIPPI INVICTI PII FELI

IVLI

AVG ET MARCIAE OTACILIAE SEVERAE AVG AQVAE FONTIS QVAE MVLTO TEMPORE DEPERIERAT ET CIVES INOPIA AQVAE LABORABANT INSTANTIAM AVRELII ATHONIS MARCELLI V E PROC AVGG
CIS

RARISSIMI PRAESIDIS N PATRONI INNOVATO OPERE AQVAE DVCTVS IN FONTE EST PERDVCTA.

MVNCIPII

ABVNDANS

Sometimes the dedication was to the Empress, shown

in

an

interesting inscription found at Djemila, the ancient Cuiculum,

where the designations of wife and mother are clearly expressed, and the full titles of Roman Empresses at this period are set
forth.2

MARCIAE OTACILIAE SEVERAE AVG CONIVGI D N IMP CAES M IVLI PHILIPPI PII FELIC AVG PONT MAX TRIB POT V COS III PROCOS P P MAT IMP CAES M IVLI PHILIPPI AVG F PII FELICIS PONT MAX TRIB POT II COS II PROCOS P P PRINCIPIS IV VENTVTIS AVG ET CASTRO RVM ET SENATVS ET PATRIAE RES P CVICVLITANOR DEVOTA NVMINI MAIESTATIQ EORVM P P D D
The prominence
given to her

name

leads one to suppose


affairs.

that Marcia played a conspicuous part in public


'

Of

C.I.L. No. 8809.


p. 226.

Some

attempts at erasure are apparent


'

vide

Ann.

de Const.

1860-61,

C.I.L. No. 20139.

Africa under the later Emperors

237

Philip's career we know but little. As an African he might have been expected to associate his name with some city in his

native country, or with


trained in the rough
to

welfare of his African subjects.

some great movement affecting the But the habits of his youth,

ways of the Desert, did not lend themselves any of the gentler arts of civilisation. During the five years of his reign the excitements of the battle-field and the pleasures of the camp proved more congenial to his tastes than the discharge of civil and administrative duties. Like his immediate predecessors, he shared a similar fate at the hands of his own soldiers, and the favourite of the hour reigned in his stead. Little information can be gathered from contemporary historians about the progress of civilisation in North Africa during the reigns of the short-lived Emperors in the latter half
of the third century.
Flavius Vopiscus, as a writer,
reliable,

may

be

regarded as the most


subject.

but he

is

almost silent on the

Inscriptions also give

little aid,

though the wording

of a large number of votive memorials and dedications to honoured citizens is sufficient evidence of a spread of content-

ment and

prosperity, of municipalities increasing in influence

and population, and of citizens in the full enjoyment of national security. There were no disturbances to cause disquietude, frontier towns were well protected by numerous castella, and the great central garrison at LambcBsis was strengthened from time to time by the addition of troops drawn from other parts of the Empire.

The

accession

of Decius, a

native

of Bubalia in

Lower

Pannonia, after the murder of Philip, was favoured by the army and approved by the Senate. His reign for about two years was marked by an incident which affected the welfare of North
Africa for at least a generation.
this

Prompted by Pagan

fanatics,

Emperor was induced

tion of Christians in

an edict encouraging persecuevery part of the Empire, with the result


to issue

that

sacrificed,

settled in Africa were and the progress of flourishing law-abiding communities was checked in their civilising career. Beyond this
little

the lives of numerous citizens

we know

of Decius, but from Aurelius Victor,


later,

who wrote

about a century
brave soldier

we

learn that this

Emperor was highly

educated, well trained in


;

all the arts, addicted to virtue, and a and from the pages of Vopiscus we gather some

238

Roman

Africa

insight into the character of Decius from the following expression,

Emperors generally and to the few who could be called good princes Quam pauci sint principes boni. And then, in his mention of Decius, he says Decium excerpere debeani, cujus et vita et mors veteribus comparanda est. The following inscription on a milliariwm found between the modern villages
referring to the
:

of Gastonville and

Robertville

gives
:

the

full

titles

of

this

Emperor,' the date being A.D. 250

IMP CAES C MESSIVS QVINTVS TRAIANVS DECIVS INICTVS PIVS F ELIX AVG PONTIFEX MA XIMVS TRIBVNICIAE PO TESTATIS CONSVL II PA TER PATRIAE PROCONSVL VIAM IMBRIBVS ET VETVS TATE CONLABSAM CVM PONTIBVS RESTITVIT
Another interesting inscription on a milliarium discovered North Africa, bearing the same date, includes the name of his son Herennius, as well as of Hostilianus, both of whom were associated with him in imperial dignity.^ Neither of these
in

Caesars acceded

to the throne.
is

In this latter inscription the


failing in

name

of Decius

misspelt, a

common
in

Roman lettering.

There are about seven inscriptions

name

of Decius.
in

and Hostilianus

North Africa bearing the Decius filius is mentioned in two of them, one only, as above recorded.

IMP CAES C MESSIVS Q TRAIANVS DECCIVS


INVICTVS PIVS FELIX- AVG P M TRIB P COS II P P PROCOS ET Q HERENNIVS ETRVSCVS MESSIVS DECCIVS CAESAR ET C VALENS HOSTILIANVS MESSIVS QVINTVS

There

is little

need to make more than passing mention of

the Emperors between the death of Decius, A.D. 251, and the
accession of Diocletian, A.D. 283.

Although

their

names

in-

scribed in marble or stone have been found in so


'

many

parts

C.I.L. No. 10318. C.I.L. No. 1005 1.

'

Arch, des Miss. Scieni. 1875, p. 412. A milliarium formerly to be seen in the ducal palace
Vide Orelli, No. 992.

at

Florence, but

now

lost.

Africa under the later Emperors

239

of North Africa, the wording of most of the memorials throws In nearly all cases we are little light on contemporary history. confronted with the usual magniloquent titles peculiar to the

Emperors of the third century, lacking that dignity of expression and pride of lineage which graced the names of the Csesars till
the time of Septimius Severus.
Gallus, the successor of Decius,

and his rival ^milianus the Moor, who aspired to the purple, might be passed by without comment, were it not for several dedications in their honour on milliary columns. With Gallus was associated his son Volussianus, who shared with his father, after a reign of about two years, the usual fate reserved for Emperors of this period. A column recording their joint names was found at a place called Ngaous in the Hodna, but is

now

serving as 'a pillar in a neighbouring mosque.

ing was copied by

MM. De
^
:

la

The letterMare and CoUineau, and is thus

rendered by these experts

IMPP

DD NN
CVIBIO TR EBON 10 GA

LLO ET C VIBI O A FINIO G ALLO VALD

Imferatoribus dominis nostris Caio Vibio Trebonio Gallo et Caio Vibio Afinio Gallo

Valdumiano

Volussiano,

invictissimis

principibus,pontificibusmaxim.is,Augustis
nostris, bis consuUbus, patribus patricB.

VMIAN VOL
VSSIANO INVI CTISSIMIS PR
CIPIB PP

MA
II

AVGG NN
COSS PP

Of

yEmilianus, their successor,

we only know

that his claim

was acknowledged by the Senate, and that he


his soldiers after

fell

a victim to

an imaginary reign of a few months. In North Africa the name of this almost forgotten Csesar is recorded on a milliary stone found on the road between Lambsesis and
Diana.'

,JMP CAES

M AEMI
LIVS

AE

MILIANV S PIVS FE
LIX AVG
'

I.K.A. No. 1672.

'

I.R.A. No. 4338.

240
The
nor
is

Roman
there

Africa

reign of Gallus had no influence on African progress,

a single monument in that country associated with his name. We are told by Aurelius Victor that he was
raised to the purple in the island of Meninx, immortalised

by
in

Homer

as the island of the Lotophagi,^ but better

known

modern times by the name of Djerba.

The

quotation from this

author, Creati in insula Meninge, quce nunc Girba dicitur, implies

that both Gallus and his son attained imperial dignity at the

same

time.

Archaeological

research

has

not hitherto been

any monumental memorial of their reign in that far-off island. There is little in the present day to indicate the character of the buildings which once covered a large area at El-Kantara overlooking the straits which separate Djerba from the mainland, but the wealth of marble and sculptured stones scattered over the surface bears testimony to the existence, at that period of Roman history, of a city of renown, probably the capital of the island, and bearing the name of Meninx. The short rule of Gallus, conspicuous for cruelty and indifference to the welfare of the State, was followed by the comparatively long and active reign of Valerianus and his son Inscriptions relating to these Emperors are numerous Gal-lienus. enough in all parts of the Empire, and in no country are the dedications more clearly worded than in North Africa. Sometimes the names of father and son appear together, as in the following inscription of eight lines on a column at Cirta, now built into the wall of a house at Constantine ^
successful in bringing to light the remains of
edifices or other
:

IMP

CAES P LICINIO

VALERIANO INVICTO PIO FEL AVG PONT MAX


'

Casari Puhlio Licinio Valeriana tnvicto pio felici Augusto pontifici inaximo tribunicicE potesiatis,
Imperatori
to in the Odyssey has not

It

seems strange that the lotus referred

been

satis-

factorily identified.

Shaw speaks

of the seedra or lotus, in appearance not unlike a

blackthorn.

bears a

fruit

hardly eatable in
this

This has been recognised as the zizyphus lotus or jujube tree, which its wild state, but when cultivated is somewhat better.
agree with the passage in

But how does


sweet
fruit

Homer? 'Whosoever

did eat the honeyforgetful of the

of the lotus had no longer any desire to bring tidings nor to return, but

to abide with the lotus-eating

men, ever feeding on the lotus and

homeward way.'
Sir R.

Rather

let

us search for this delectable food, observed the late

Lambert

Playfair, in the island of

lotus of the ancient world the

Djerba of our own times, and claim as the most beneficent fruit which Providence ever bestowed

on man
'

the honey-sweet date of the modern Arab. I.R.A. No. 1842.

Africa under the later Emperors

241

TRB PPPPROC ET
IMP CAES P LICINIO GALLIENO INVICTO PIO FELICE AVG PONT

fiatri patrice, proconsuli, et imperatori

Ccesari Publio Licinio

GalUeno invicto

pio

felici

Augusto

pontifici fnaximo,

tribunicicB potestatis,

patri patria.

MAX TRB

P P P
inscription, in
still

Another interesting
are linked together,
Setif.

may

which many of the words be seen in the public gardens at


Sitifis to

It is

a dedication by the veterans residing at

the family of Valerian, and bears the

and of

his

names of his son Gallienus, two grandsons Valerianus and Saloninus. This
Creully,

inscription has attracted the attention of several epigraphists,

and has been deciphered by Wilmanns, Berbrugger,


others
:

and

Divo

CcBsari Publio

Cornelio Licinio

Valeriana^ nepoti imperatoris

Valeriani AugusH, filio imperatoris Ccesaris Publii Licinii Gallieni Augusti, fratri Publii Cornelii Licinii Salonini
CcEsaris Publii Licinii

colonia Nerviana Augusta Martialis veteranorum Sitifensium, deerdo decurionuni, pecitnia publica.

nobilissimi CcEsaris Augusti,

Of still

greater interest

is

the inscription on a broken milliary

column found n^ar Khenschela (the ancient Mascula), being a dedication by its citizens to the three Emperors, father, son, and grandson, coupling with their names Cornelia Salonina, the
illustrious wife of Gallienus
^
:

IMPPP

DDD NNN
'

P LICINIO VALERIANO ET P LICINIO EGNATIO

GALLIENO PUS FELI AV GVSTIS ET P CORNELIO LICINIO VALERIANO NO


BILISSIMO CAESARI

(jzV)

ET CORNELIAE SALO NINAE AVG R-P M -M

The

last line

may

be read, according to Wilmanns, Respublica


It is gratifying to find the

municipii Masculatani.
excellent princess,

name

of this

who was

distinguished for her virtues, her

tender regard for the welfare of the people, and her liberal patronage of the arts of peace, recorded on a pedestal in a remote corner of the proconsular province of Africa, not far

from the city of Tunis.


'

This stone was unearthed about forty


2

LR.A. No.

3282.

C.I.L. No. 17680.

242
years ago by
is

Roman

Africa
to his interpretation,

M. Gu6rin, and, according

clearly worded.'

CORNELIAE SALONINAE
PIAE CONIVGI D N IMP CAES P LICINI EGNATI GALLIENI PII

FEL AVG MVNIC AVREL VINA DEVOT NVMINI MAIESTATIQVE EIVS

A
now

special value

is

attached to this discovery, for

it

proves

that the scattered remains where this slab was found, at a place
called Henchir-el-Khanga, are those of the old

Aurelia

Vina, the existence of which

Municipimn had hitherto been un-

known. It is probable that the inhabitants of this municipium had good cause for raising this memorial to so worthy an Empress as Cornelia Salonina. It was during the reigns of Valerianus and Gallienus that the edict issued by their predecessor Decius for the suppression of Christianity throughout the Empire came into full operation, and was followed by such lamentable results in the chief cities of North Africa. The progress of the Christian Church in any
of the

Roman

provinces

is

too large a subject to be dealt with

in this slight outline of the history of the

Roman

occupation of
life

this country,

but

it is
it

so intimately interwoven with the

of

the people that

merits

more than passing mention.

From
first

the time of Nero, whose

memory

is

associated with the

Rome, down to the proclamation of the edict of Decius, the Church had been subject at intervals to the attacks of Pagan fanatics, and had more than recovered its ground on each occasion. But its existence as a Church, or organised form of a distinct religion, had not been
imperial persecution of Christians in

regarded as
edict for
its

illegal till

Trajan found himself forced to issue an

suppression in order to soothe the growing animosity

between votaries of the old and the new cult. During his reign Christian communities were becoming a source of disquietude to provincial governors on account of their extended operations and the social position of many Roman citizens who had embraced the new creed. From Pliny, the governor of Bithynia and friendly correspondent of the Emperor Trajan, we gather
'

Vide Gu^rin, Voyage en Tunisie, vol.

ii.

p. 264.

Africa under the later Emperors


some idea of the anxiety
whicli troubled

243

recalcitrants in his far-distant province.

him in dealing with So rapidly, he tells us,

was Christianity spreading that the ancient temples were being deserted, and votive offerings to the gods he was taught to reverence were daily becoming matters of indifference. If such
importance,

a state of things prevailed in a country of such secondary how much more potent in its results would be the

working of a similar movement in so renowned a centre of intellectual thought, and the home of so vast a population, as the city of Carthage The schools of rhetoric and philosophy, which had been firmly established there during the rule of the Antonines, had attracted men of eminence from all parts cf the Empire, and had made Carthage inferior only to Rome as a
!

seat of learning in the second century.

As

a stronghold of

Christianity

it

had asserted

its

authority in the time of Septimius

Severus,

when

Tertullian, a native of that city

and the

first

in

point of date of the Latin Fathers, stands forth pre-eminently as

the pioneer of the Church in Africa.

The

gentle rule of the

Antonines had been tolerant of all forms of religion, and had given more tacit encouragement to freedom of thought than was accorded at any later period .of the Empire. For more than eighty years, dating from the accession of Hadrian to the firm establishment of imperial government under Septimius Severus, Christian communities had enjoyed almost unrestrained liberty of action, and had extended the sphere of their operations into remote parts of the Empire. But their labours received a severe check when Tertullian of Carthage, a master of rhetoric, openly preached the new doctrine to not unwilling ears, and helped to provoke an edict by Severus for the suppression of all forms of Some thirty years later Alexander Severus, Christian worship. instigated by his ministers rather than from personal inclination,
but it was not till the reign of Decius, A.D. 249-251, that Pagan zealots found in the African Church a field for systematic persecution, and invoked the
issued a similar proclamation
;

Senate at
tection to

Rome and
any

the governors of provinces to refuse pro-

followers of the

new

creed.

It is in

this stage

of the history of the Church that

we

are brought face to face

became the

was through Africa that Christianity Tertullian and Cyprian were from Carthage, Arnobius from Sicca Veneria, Lactantius and
with the fact that
'it

religion of the world.

244

Roman

Africa

probably in like manner Minucius Felix were, in spite of their Latin names, natives of Africa, and not less so Augustine. In Africa the Church found its most zealous confessors of the faith

and

its

most
It

gifted defenders.'^

Cyprian, too, passes across


at the height of its

the stage at a period

when Carthage was

was within the city walls that he pleaded the cause of Christianity, and it was on the summit of the citadel hill, where now stands the cathedral of St. Louis, that Cyprian convened a great Council of the Church, when no less than eighty-seven bishops from the provinces of Africa, Numidia, and Mauritania obeyed his summons. We may pass over the minor persecutions suffered by Christians in Africa during the
renown.
latter half of the third century, for they all pale in their cruelty

before the forcible edict of Diocletian, A.D.

303,

which was

than a determination on the part of that powerful Emperor to extirpate the Church for ever from his dominions. For ten years the battle of rival religions raged with terrible

nothing

less

severity,

and the slumbering passions of Pagan

fanatics

awoke

to deeds of tyranny in every part of the Empire.

But the

when Christianity was a factor in national life, too deeply rooted to be overthrown by the force of an imperial edict, was the cause of Like all revolutionary measures, animated by its ill-success.
violence of the movement, encouraged at a time
in Africa

the uncontrolled passions of a people, it caused a reaction which, in this case, culminated in the overthrow of the temples of the
gods, and the unfurling the banner of the Cross in Italy and the The rising generation of citizens, who witnessed provinces.

the cruelty and destruction of


Decius, lived to see

life

resulting from the edict of

some

thirty years later the religion of Christ

preached in basilica and forum in every city and town in the Empire. Nowhere in Africa was this reactionary movement more conspicuous than in Carthage, the metropolis of Africa, and Cirta, the capital of old Numidia. Unnumbered inscriptions brought to light in the latter city and its neighbourhood testify
to the weight of authority exercised there
in the time of Constantine,

by

Christian writers

and to the affectionate regard in which the first of the Christian Emperors was held by citizens With the fall of Paganism Cirta ceased in every rank of life.
'

T.

Mommsen, The African

Provinces, vol.

ii.

p. 345.

Africa under the later Emperors


to
exist,

245
of

and the

city

of Constantine

as

stronghold

Christianity rose triumphantly in

its place.

The activity of the Church in Africa may be said to have come to a close with the Vandal invasion of the country under
Genseric A.D. 429, and its last days may truly be associated with the undying memory of the venerable St. Augustine and his revered mother, the saintly Monnica. There are few spots in North Africa more reverenced by travellers, or more endeared
to student^ of history, than the site of Hippo Regius, the

Ubba

of the Carthaginians, the Hippone of the Romans, and the scene of the lifelong labours of St. Augustine. What the Vandals did not reduce to ashes in the fifth century the Arabs did two

and with the stones of the Roman city the modern town of Bone, one mile and a half distant, was concenturies later,

Nature has dealt very kindly with this hallowed spot. where Roman citizens were wont to throng are now clothed with perennial verdure, while above the soft covering, grey fragments of Roman wall still rear their heads into the blue air sweet with perfume, for nowhere in all Algeria do the trees put forth their leaves in wilder luxuriance, the olive and the aloe, the acanthus and the pomegranate. And this peaceful shaded spot was once the capital of Eastern Numidia, a seat of commerce and prosperity, and the home of the chief Father of the Church in Africa. This is nature's memorial to one who combined the courage of the Roman with the devotional spirit
structed.

The

hills

of a true Christian.

Among the leading incidents affecting the African provinces during the reigns of Valerianus and Gallienus, mention should be made of the rising of the Quinquegentians, or, as it is commonly called, the Feud of the Five Peoples.^ These five tribes are said to have occupied the region between Sald^ and
Cissi,

and to have had great


(i)

reputation

for

their

warlike

qualities,
'

The Masinissenses wQxe

evidently the descendants

military skill of Maximianus, and his success

This invasion of Numidia by the Quinquegentians taxed to the utmost the was the cause of unusual rejoicing. At
vi.

the close of the campaign Mamertinus {Paneg. Vet.

18) addressed the conqueror in


inaccessis

the following words;


et

Tu

ferocissimos

Mauretanim populos,

montiutn jugis
of these five

naturali munitionefidentes, expugnasti, recefisti, transiulistil


called the Fraxinenses,

One

tribes,

were the ancestors, according to M. Berbrugger, of


as

that branch of the Kabyles


Afric.
i.

now known

the

Beni-Fraoucen.

(Bull, de Corr.

p.

257.)

246

Roman

Africa

of followers of the hero of Numidia, and are still to be traced on the right bank of the Oued Sahel. (2) The Jubaleni may be

claimed as descendants of the scattered army of the unfortunate

Juba

I.

(3)

The
still

haflenses,

now known
passes

as the Flissa.

(4)

The

Tyndenses,

occupying

of

the

Djurdjura

under

another name.
is

And

(5) the Fraxinenses,

probably named after

their chief Faraxen.

The

origin of the rising of certain tribes

not stated either by Eutropius or Aurelius Victor, but it is on record that it was not easily suppressed, and that some twenty years later the Emperor Maximianus went personally to Fortunately Africa for the purpose of quelling the insurrection. an inscription found in the temple of ^sculapius at Lambessa comes to our aid, and throws considerable light on a subject about which contemporary authors are almost silent.' The date, according to Wilmanns, is A.D. 260.
I O M CETERISQ DIIS DEABVSQVE IMMORTALIB C MACRINIVS DECIANVS V C LEG AVGG PR PR PROV NVMIDIAE ET NO RICI BAVARIBVS QVI ADVNATIS IIII REGIBVS IN PROV NVMIDIAM IN

RVPERANT PRIMVM IN REGIONE MILLEVITANA ITERATO IN CONFI NIO MAVRETANIAE ET NVMIDI AE TERTIO QVINQVEGENTANEIS GENTILIBVS MAVRETANIAE CAE SARIENSIS ITEM GENTILIBVS FRA XINENSIBVS QVI PROVINCIAM NVMIDIAM VASTABANT CAP TO FAMOSISSIMO DVCE EORVM CAESIS FVGATISQVE
Jovi Optimo maxima
ceterisque diis deabusque immortalibus, C. Macrinius Decianus, vir clarissimus, legatus Augustorum duorum, pro prcetore provinciarum Numidice et Norici, Bavaribus, qui adunatis IIII regibus

Numidiatn inruperant, primum in regione Millevitana, Mauretania et NumidicB, tertio Quinquegentaneis gentilibiis Mauretania Ccesariensis, item gentilibus Fraxinensibus, qui provinciam Numidiam vastabant, capto famosissimo duce eorum,
in provinciam
iterato

in

confinio

ccBsis fugatisque.

The two August! referred to are Valerianus and Gallienus, and the dux famosissimus eorum appears to have been, according
'

C.I.L. No. 2615.

Rev. arch. 1861,

p. 55.

Africa under the later Emperors


to Wilmanns's interpretation of the inscription, Faraxen,

247
who
There

may

have given his name to the tribe of Fraxinenses.

are three other inscriptions in

disturbance, but
subject.

North Africa relating to this none of them throw any additional light on the
to Claudius

Whatever may have been the merits attributed


the Dalmatian,

who succeeded

Gallienus on the throne of the

Caesars, there is nothing to indicate that he took any part in African affairs during a short reign of two years. Undaunted bravery combined with administrative ability and great bene-

volence of character secured the affection of his subjects, and

prompted the Senate on one


as

special occasion to address


tu pater, tu

him

Claudi Auguste, tu

frater,

amicus, tu

bonus

His successful campaign against the Goths justified his acceptance of the new title of Gothicus, and it was probably on his return from this expedition that the citizens of Thubursicum Numidarum, now known as Khamisa, raised a statue or other memorial in his honour with the
senator, tu vere princeps.

following inscription

^
:

M AVRELIO CLAVDIO M GOTHICO M PARTHICO M TRIE P III COS II P


IMP

CAES

PIO

FELICI AVG P

PROCOS RESPVB COLONIAE THVBVRS NVMIDARVM

The mention
value, because
it

of the city
settles

itself

happens to be of considerable

the site of the ancient Thubursicum,

which up till that time had been a matter of doubt. Although only partly explored, there is ample evidence, from the extent of the remains, of the existence of a city of great importance The ruined theatre at and the seat of a large population. Thubursicum, for instance, among other monumental ruins, may still be seen, with its stone seats sparsely covered with vegetation, its entrances clearly defined, and a series of rooms grouped around, indicating by its dimensions and arrangements that it was designed to meet the requirements of a populous
city.

In the short space of eleven years following the death of Claudian, no fewer than eight emperors ascended the throne,
'

C.I.L. No. 4876.

Rec. de Const. 1866, p. 134.

248
two of them

Roman
only, Aurelian

Africa

paratively long period

and Probus, reigning for a comand six years respectively. Florian, a name almost forgotten, had a career of sixty days, and Tacitus, who merited a long run of imperial power as a reward for his excellent rule, fell a victim to disease or the dagger after a reign of two hundred days. With the exception of Florus their names are all faithfully recorded on column or pedestal in many parts of North Africa, in some instances
of
five

being simply dedications to the Emperor of the day, while in others the wording employed is of more laudatory character.
Aurelian appears to have taken no personal interest in his African possessions, but his brilliant successes in other parts of the world, notably his expedition against the celebrated Zenobia, made his name an honoured one. As an example of

a dedication, which may be assigned to A.D. 274, the following, in the form of a milliary column, found near Thamugas, gives
the usual
titles

linked with his

name

^
:

PERPETVO VICTORI OSISSIMO INDVL


GENTISSIMO IMP RESTITVTORI OR BIS L-DOMITIO AVRELIANO PIO

FELICI

AVG PONT

MAX TRIE POT V


COS II P P PROCOS RES P COL THA

MVG
Villi

Aurelian may fairly lay claim to the title restitutor orbis, for during his active career he is said to have delivered the Empire from all her enemies. It is also stated that, on the occasion of
train the people of

one of his triumphal entries into Rome, he exhibited in his no less than fifteen different nations whom The name of his successor, Tacitus, is he had subdued. recorded on several milliaria in the following words ^ and we learn from Vopiscus that, during his short reign, the Senate recovered its ancient dignity and long-lost privileges
;
:

>

C.I.L. No. 10217.

c.l.L. No. 10072.

Africa under the later


FORTISSI

Emperors

249

MO IMPET
PACATORI ORBIS M CLA VDIO TACI

TO PIO FEL AVG


In testimony of this beneficial change in the administration of the affairs of the Empire, both civil and military, the same author

quotes a circular letter on the subject which was addressed to the Curia at Carthage, similar letters being subsequently sent to Alexandria, Antioch, Corinth, Milan, Athens, Thessalonica,

and

to the Curia

Trevij^orum.

It

ran thus

'
:

The

right

of

bestowing the Empire and of nominating the rulers of the State has returned to the Senate. This precious right should contribute to the glory, the permanency, and the security of the Empire and the world. It is to us, then, you must refer on all
matters of importance.
appeals must come
anticipate for
It
is

to the prefect at

Rome

that

all

those

at least which

emanate from the

proconsuls and the ordinary tribunals.

In taking this step


;

we

you
It

also a return to

your ancient dignity

for, in

recovering

its

old supremacy, the Senate can guarantee the rights


is

of every one.'

interesting to note that Tacitus, in his

desire to beautify the city of Ostia, which had been ennobled

by Trajan and other emperors, despatched from the Numidian quarries no less than loo marble columns 23 feet high for the and, learning that the roofs of adornment of its porticoes Rome were the Capitol at in bad condition, this beneficent Emperor sold his estates in Mauritania to provide the funds
;

necessary for the purpose.

So

little is

known

of the other Caesars prior to the accession

of Diocletian, that their names might be passed by without comment. Inscriptions in Africa are not numerous, and their

wording throws little light on the history of this period. Even Probus, whose career between A.D. 276 and 282 was conspicuous for unvarying success, has left few memorials of his activity. From Vopiscus we learn that this Emperor carried his arms into the remote region of Marmarica, lying between Cyrene and Egypt, and stretching far into the great Libyan Desert. Having subdued the tribes which harassed the Roman frontiers

250

Roman

Africa

of Tripoli, he passed on to Carthage and successfully quelled a disturbance which had broken out among the native population.

We

then find him doing battle with Aradion, an African


rebelled

chief,

who had
fight,

against

Roman

authority.

To mark

his

appreciation of the daring of his

rival,

the

Emperor

raised a lordly

who was monument in

slain in the

his honour,

which Vopiscus describes as being nearly 200 feet in height.

From

the brief mention of this tomb, which existed as a


it

mound
as the

for a long period,

was probably of the

same type

For Medrassen, and the tomb of Juba II. inscriptions only six African soil all these achievements on bearing the name of Probus have as yet been discovered. None of them have any special character, either in the form of
already referred
to.

dedication

The following the titles of the Emperor. Agbia, is Ain-Hedjah, the ancient a milliarium at memorial on
or
:

worth noting

IMP CAESARI

M AVRELIO

PROEO PIO FELICI -AVG

PONTIF MA

XIMO TRIE

The only The

variation

noticeable

in

other

inscriptions

is

the

addition of the words et tota divina domus.


career of Probus's successor, Carus, was too brief to

exercise any influence on


provinces, but
Africa, in
it

Roman

progress either in Italy or in the

proved attractive to Roman citizens in North spite of the Emperor's unpopularity with the Senate.
in

There are many dedications


generally bearing the

his his

honour, the inscriptions

two sons, Carinus and Numerianus, who were conjointly created Caesars. The following inscription on a column at Ain-Amara, near Tibilis, is a fair

names of

example.''
qualities

Carinus, his

successor, a

man

devoid of

all

the

held in
'

which should adorn an Emperor, appears to have been honour by African citizens.

For a description of Agbia or municipium Agbiensium, An inscription at Chidibbia, C.I.L. No. 1329, and another at Testour, C.I.L. No. 1358, are dedications to Probus et tota divina domus. ' C.I.L. No. 10157. Vide Poulle, Rec. de Const. 1876-7, p. 538.
C.I.L. No. looSj.
ii.

vide Gu^rin, vol.

p. 144.

Africa under the later Emperors


IMP CAES AVRELIO CARO IN

251

VICTO- PIO -FELICI

AVG ET M AVREL

CARINO ET M AV RELIO NVMERIA NO NOBILISSIMIS CAE


10

SARIBVS

The

following interpretation of an inscription on a pedestal

at Guelma, the ancient

Kalama, would have been applicable


:

to

a Trajan or an Alexander Severus rather than to so base and worthless a ruler.^ Thus say the citizens of Kalama Marco Aurelio Carina, nobilissimo Ccesari Augusta, prindpi j'uventuiis, consuli, filii Imperatoris Ccesaris Marci Aurelii Cari, Invicti, Pit
Felicis Augusti, patris patrice, tribunicice potestatis II. pontificis

viaximi, cansulis, praconsulis, fratri


nabilissimi
colonicB

Marci Aurelii Numeriani,


Respublica

Ccesaris Augusti, principis juventutis.

Kalamensium, curante Macrinio Sossiana, clarissimo viro, curatare reipublicce. The name of the Empress Urbica, wife of Carinus, is wellnigh forgotten, but here on the outskirts of the ruined city of Thamugas, on an octagonal pedestal now built
into the enclosing wall of a sewer, a record of her existence
still

may

be read in imperishable lettering.^

MAGNIAE
VRBICAE

AVG MA

TRI CAS

TRORVM
SENATVS AC PATRI AE CONIV GI D N CA
RINI IN VICTI

Magnice Urbica Augustce, matri castrorum, senatus ac patrice, conjugi domini


nostri Carini invicti Augusti.

AVG
The names
ancient
of Carinus and Numerianus occur on an inscribed
It

slab found on the north side of the necropolis at Marcouna, the

Verecunda.
'

is

a dedication by Marcus Aurelius

I.R.A. No. 2726, copied by Gen. CreuUy. I.R.A. No. 1512.

252

Roman
is

Africa

Decimus, vir perfectissimus, presses provincice Numidics.


date
A.D. 284, the year of their accession.^

The

PRO SALVTE IMPP FF DD NN CARINI ET NVMERIANI EORVM TEMPLVM A FVNDA MENTIS R P MVN VERECVNDENSIVM CONSTITVIT DEDICANTE M AVRELIO UECIMO VPPPN
DIVI CARI GENITORIS

A
in

very similar inscription of the same date was discovered

another part of the ancient Verecunda, but the dedication is In one into these joint Emperors as pontificibus maximis.
stance, a milliarium at

Ksar Kalaba, the ancient Gibba, the name

of Numerian stands alone.^

IMP D NOSTR O M AVRELIO N

VMERIO NVM ERIANO NOB


ILISSIMO CAESA
RI

CONSVLI DE
SIG

The

history of

all

nations

is

marked by

certain

epochs,

establishing periods of either rise or decline.

The

great Latin

families, who had stocked the throne of the Caesars for more than two centuries, had long since ceased to assert their claim to power through any collateral branches. For more than a hundred years after the death of the contemptible Com modus the throne was open to any one who combined military expe-

Rank and fortune were totally disregarded by the Senate as well as by the army and, in many instances, the man of the hour who seized his opportunities when a vacancy was declared or expected was
rience with the daring of an adventurer.
;

considered equal to the task of ruling over the then


world.
It is

known

a far step from Julius and Augustus, Trajan and Antonine, to Philip the obscure, or Probus the gardener's son.

And

yet the

successor of Carinus, a

man sprung from

the

commencing life in the lower ranks of the army, succeeded by the mere force of genius in creating an epoch in Roman history conspicuous for the display of some of
labouring classes, and
'

'

I.R.A. 1433, copied and deciphered by Renier. C.I.L. No. 10283. ^''i^ Payen, Ann. dc Const. 1860-61,

p. 125.

Africa under the later


the highest qualities of statesmanship.

Emperors
The

253

reign of Diocletian,

extending over a period of twenty-one years, is remarkable for an entire change in the administration of the Empire, and for a movement which, in the succeeding century, hastened its collapse. Attempts had been made by previous emperors, notably Marcus Aurelius with Verus as joint Csesar, and still

more so
It

in the case of the Gordians, to divide imperial authority.

cannot be said that this initiatory movement was attended with success. But Diocletian was a man of broad views and great determination. He found the Empire to vrhich he succeeded too vast in extent and peopled by too many nationalities, many of them still on the verge of barbarism, to be controlled by a Grasping the situation with a more enlarged mind single ruler. than most of his predecessors, he determined, as a preliminary step, to create two divisions of the Empire, the ruler of each division being clothed with absolute authority over the provinces committed to his charge. To Maximian, a man of obscure origin, sprung from the peasant class, who had been his loyal colleague in many campaigns, he ceded the command of Italy, Spain, Africa, and the western dominions, reserving for himself the rest of the Empire. Their joint rule is recorded on a slab at Lambaesis dedicated to Jupiter and Hercules as guardians of the two Emperors who zx^ pontifices maximi, to which are added the names of Constantius Chlorus and Galerius Valerius Maximianus, who were acclaimed Cassars at the same time
:

lOVI ET HERCVLI COMITIBVS IMPPM DIOCLETIANI ET

MAXIM IAN AVGG


I

CONSTANTI ET MAXIMIANI
In less than four years after his accession Diocletian again divided the Empire, giving Maximian rule over Spain, Africa,

ceding Pannonia and Moesia to Galerius, Gaul and Britain to Constantius, the eastern part of the Empire, including Egypt, being reserved for himself. There are several inscriptions in North Africa recording the names of these four Augusti,

and

Italy,

the words pontifices maximi being in

all

cases omitted.

The

following inscription, brought to light some years ago


'

in the city

c.i.L. No. 18230.

254
of Kairouan,

Roman
when some
is

Africa

Great Mosque,
sacred to Pluto

repairs were in progress outside the an example of a dedication to the four Emperors on the occasion of the reconstruction of a temple
:

DEO PLVTONI SACK PRO SALV TE DDDD NNNN DIOCLETIA


ET MAXIMIANI ET CONSTANTI ET MAXIMIANI NOBILISSIMI CAESSSS CO TEMPLVM PLVTONIS LABSVM ET DEDICATVM PER INSTANTIA FELICI C AELI FORTVNATI ET L C ANTONI NARSVA TIS MAGG FD IVB L ET FORTVNATVS ALIQVA TIS ARCARIVS ET IV HIN POET MAIEST CVRA
NI

not very legible, is, according to potestatem et majestatem curantes}


is

The rendering of the concluding words in the last line, which Mommsen, etiam hi numinis

A subdivision of the great provinces of the Empire was one Africa comprised seven of Diocletian's early undertakings. sections, one only, (i) Mauritania Tingitana, being attached to the province of Spain, the others being (2) Zeugitania and (3)
Byzacena, which had proconsular rank (4) Numidia Cirtensis, governed by a consul and (S) Numidia Militiana, (6) Mauritania Sitifensis, and (7) Mauritania Csesariensis, under the
;

control

of a prasses.

Among
is

the dedicatory inscriptions to


in

Diocletian alone, there

one

the public gardens at


:

Setif

which

may

be assigned to A.D. 288

D N IMP CAES C VALERIO AVRE LIO DIOCLETIANO INVIC PiO" FEL AVG

PONTIF MAX TRIE P V CONS III P P PROCOS FLAVIVS PECV ARIVS V P PRAE
SES PROV

MAVR

CAES DEVOTVS NVMINI MAIES TATIQVE EIVS


' C.I.L. No. 11217. Descr. Broadley, Tunis, Past and Present, vol, ii. p. 164. Another dedication to the four Emperors was found at Tipasa (about sixty miles west of Algiers), vide S. Gsell, De Tipasa, Mauretania Ctssariensis urbe, p. 102, and a third between Macomades and Sigus in the province of Algerii, 1894
;

Numidia, Rec. de Const. 1867,

p.

238.

Africa under the later Emperors

255

According to Wilmanns, the name of the Emperor in the third line has been erased in the usual way, but the interest lies in the recognition of the title presses as president or governor of the province of Mauritania Ccesariensis} It is generally assumed that this title originated with Diocletian in connection with his new system of provincial administration, and that a separation of the civil from the military
authority necessitated the use of a distinct
sentative of civil government.
title for

the repre-

But inscriptions fortunately come to our aid, and give clear indication that the word had long been in common use without any express definition of its meaning. So far back as the joint reign of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus we find this word prmses on a memorial slab, which may still be
studied in the

museum at Algiers.

It is

a dedication to the wife of


vir, presses
:

a legatus Augustorum duorum proprator^ clarissimus

AELIAE

PROSPERAE C F

CONIVGI C

POMPONI MAGNI LEG AVGG PR PR STRATORES

the term vir clarissimus indicating, as usual, that the legatus


presses

was of senatorial rank. At a still had a significance not easy to


time of Vespasian & procurator
well expressed
'

earlier

period the word

define, for

we

find in the

et presses provincice SardinicB,z.vA

a presses provincies Tingitanes. The exact meaning has been by a recent author in the following words ^
:

The word

prases, as a technical and legal term, designates a

governor of equestrian rank. The title of presses, in its proper sense, signifies a governor who is not a senator, i.e. a procurator, and is the sole title of a knight, as a procurator of a province,

who

is

qualified to govern. Presses, in short,

is

sometimes invested

with supreme civil authority in the government of a province. But it is also a general term, and, like the Greek word fj'^sixmv, may be applicable to magistrates of the first rank.' In its more extended
use the
title

may

even be given to governors of senatorial rank.

Pressidis ndmen, says


'

Macer (Dig.
De
la

i.

8,

i ),

generale
87, also

est,

eoque et
Const.

C.I.L. No. 8474.


p.

Vide

Mare, Explor.

tab.

Ann. de

1862,
*

173et

Romaines dans

Gustave Boissiere, Esquisse d'une Histoire de la Conqulte Paris, 1878. !e Nord de rAfrique, p. 293.

de

P Administration

256

Roman

Africa
omnes provincias
regentes, licet

proconsules, et legati Casaris, et

senatores sint, prcssides appellantur.

From

this

we may

infer

that the meaning was not strictly defined till the time of Carinus, exemplified in the inscription (p. 252) where Marcus Aurelius

Decimus, governor of Numidia, A.D. 283-285, is designated as p. N. And as one of the last discovered inscriptions relating to a governor of Numidia, who bore the title of legatus and vir clarissimus, the one given by Renier, attributed to the reignof Gallienus, A.D. 260, is the most notable.^ The division of Numidia into two parts, Numidia Cirtensis and Numidia Militiana, appears to have been of short duration. In the camp at Lambessa an inscription, A.D. 286 or 287, records the name of M. Aurelius Diogenes, who was at that time governor of the undivided province of Numidia, and in the citadel at Constantine another inscription, probably A.D. 313, is of a similar character. It is during this interval of about twenty-seven years that may be found on some of the monumental remains the letters
V. p. p.

V. p. p. p. N. M., vir perfectissimus presses provincice

Numidia

Militianm ; and on others a reference to the existence of the two Numidias under the government oi ox\e. prczses.

AELIVS AELIA

NVS V P DIARVM RET


all

NVMI

Several instances have been furnished by M. Poulle, but in It is sufficient to cases the inscriptions are fragmentary.

state that for a short period there

Cirta for its capital,


its its

was a Numidia Cirtensis with and Numidia Militiana with Lambaesis for

headquarters, deriving

its title from the military character of population and as the acknowledged centre of military

activity in

North Africa.

Inscriptions relating to the divisions

of Mauritania as African provinces are numerous enough, some of them indicating divided control, while others bear record to the appointment of one governor or presses for the two divisions. An inscription at Bougie, the ancient Saldse, is a good example, being a dedication by a prases of the two divisions in honour of
the
'

Emperor Constantius
C.I.L. No. 2615.
in the

II.

^
;

while another found by Feraud

found
'

A long inscription of sixteen lines on the base of an altar temple of jEsculapius at Lambsesis, already referred to on p. 246. Ann. de Const. 1858-59, p. 120. C.I.L. No. 8932.

Africa under the later Emperors


at a place called

257
is

Bou

Grara, in the province of Tripoli,

worthy

of mention on account of the letters


clearly

in the ninth line,

meaning provincicB

Tripolitance.

FELICISSIMO AC BEATISSIMO PRIN CIPI D N FLAVIO

DIVINA STIRPE

PROGENITO D N VALENTINIA

CONSTANTINO NOBI LISSIMO CAESARI FLAVIVS TERENTIA NVS VP PRAESES PROV MAVR CAE ET SITIFENSIS
IVLIO

NO AVG
FORTISSIMO PRINCIPI FL
VIVIVS

BENE

DEVOTVS NVMINI MAIESTATIQVE


EIVS

DICTVS VP PRAESES P T NV MINI MAIESTA TIQ EIVS SEM

PER DEVOTVS
The
dedication
is

to Valentinian

I.

and

his

heirs,

and was

probably made,

like others of his reign, at the close of a successful

campaign

for the suppression of the

inscription

was found

at

Leptis
^
:

Quadi. A somewhat similar Magna, the words provincice

Tripolitance appearing in full

DIVINA STIRPE PROGENITO D N FORTISSIMO


PRINCIPI VALENTIANI VICTORI PIO FELICI A

TRIVMFATORE SEMPER AVGVSTO FLAVIVS BENEDICTVS V P PRAESES PROVINCIAE TRIPO


LITANAE NVMINI MAIESTATIQVE EIVS

SEMPER DEVOTVS
and Maximian, the one possessan unlettered soldier and coarse in habit, was not only conspicuous for great changes in administration, but for marked activity in protecting the frontiers of the Empire from tribal invasions. As governor of Africa, and invested with absolute power, Maximian found ample opportunities for the exercise of his military qualities on
joint rule of Diocletian

The

ing extraordinary qualities as a statesman, the other

the frontier of Mauritania.

The

rising of the Quinquegentians,

had not yet been suppressed. A new leader named Aurelius Julianus headed the revolt and proclaimed himself Emperor. After several desperate engagements he was defeated by Maximian, who personally
A.D. 260,
'

which Decianus was governor of Numidia,


originated in the reign

of Gallienus,

when

C. Macrinius

C.I.L. No. 12.

258
commanded
that
it

Roman
the

Africa
So
decisive

Roman

legions.

was the victory

gave

rise to

general rejoicing and the dedication of statues

and

altars

to both Emperors.

inscription found in the

At Lambessa, for instance, an camp behind the Prsetorium refers to


by was discovered another somewhat

Maximian

alone,'

and

close

similar dedication to this Emperor.

PIISSIMO IMP

MAXIMIANO INVICTO AVG


AC SVPER OMNES

RETRO PRINCIPES
FORTISSIMO PR IN CIPI SVO AVRELIVS DIOGENES VPPPN NVMINI EIVS DI CATISSIMVS

Piissimo Imperatori Maximiano, invicto, Augusta, ac super omnes retro principes fortissii7io,principisuo, Aurelius Diogenes, vir perfectissimus, prceses provhuia Numidice numitii eius dicatissimus.

The date of this memorial


of these two Emperors.

is

probably before the joint abdication

The

settlement of these frontier troubles and the restoration

of peace throughout North Africa involved a readjustment of

by Roman With this end in view, Diocletian subdivided the provinces, making many of them much smaller and consequently more numerous and as a further step he divided the whole Empire into dioceses^ each diocese comprising several provinces. To ensure more direct personal control, the Emperor created a new order of state officials, called vicai-ii or vice agentes? These
control over this vast additional territory acquired

arms.

functionaries were to act directly under the Emperor,

and were

placed

in

authority over provincial governors of

all

grades.

The

whole Empire was divided into twelve dioceses, the largest, Oriens, comprising sixteen provinces, and the smallest, Britannia, with
four provinces.

Altogether there were, during his reign, loi

provinces of different grades throughout the Empire.


at the

glance

of Africa in the year 297, clearly indicated by M. Champlouis in his excellent chart, shows how the country was

map

divided into dioceses.


'

Commencing

at the eastern

boundary we
in reference to

r.S.A. No. no.

The word

'

diocese,'

now applied

to a bishop's province,

was used

a number of provinces forming a diocese.

Egypt there were ten provinces. ' Vicarius may be accepted in its literal meaning, a deputy acting directly between the Emperor and the provincial governors.
instance, in the diocese of

For

Africa under the later Emperors

259

find Cyrene, divided into

the diocese of Oriens.


constituted

Upper and Lower Libya, attached to Then we come to the six provinces which
:

the diocese of Africa proper

Tripoli,

Byzacene,

Zeugitania, Numidia, and the two Mauritanias.

Westward was

Mauritania Tingitana, which was attached to Spain, as heretoThese subdivisions of North Africa were undoubtedly attended with beneficial results under the autocratic rule of so
fore.

great a potentate as Diocletian, and


that, after the restoration of

it is reasonable to suppose peace from one end of the country to the other consequent upon the defeat of Julian, the citizens of

Roman colonists, forming a vast agriand industrial population, delighted to do honour to so successful an Emperor. This is attested by a large number of dedicatory inscriptions. But the day was not far distant when the hand of the master was to be withdrawn, and the throne of the Caisars was to be once more at the mercy of the army and military adventurers. In the revolutionary scheme of administration affecting every branch of national service, nothing tended more to weaken the Empire than the establishment of four C^sars in different centres. The Senate, as a controlling authority in Rome, ceased to exist, except in name, and Rome was no longer regarded as the metropolis of the Roman world. The Praetorian guard, which had made and unmade Cassars for so many generations, was reconstituted, without authority or the means of exercising it. It had had its day a long day of luxury and corruption, of authority abused and discipline
the great towns and the
cultural

And the prefect of that powerful body, hitherto chosen from senatorial ranks, became an ordinary functionary with very limited authority. On the accession of Constantine the Great the Praetorian guard became little more than a police force, exercising its functions as a body-guard at the different centres of government. The. prcefectus prtztorio wdiS not
neglected.

an inscription found as Henchir Ain-Fournu. Its ancient name was Furnitanum, evidently a town of some importance, as one of the gates of Carthage was
abolished, for
find this official referred to in

we

by M. Tissot

at a spot near Carthager,

now known

named

after

it.

The date

of the inscription

is
is

A.D. 366, during

the reign of Valentinian.


'

The

interpretation

by M.

Tissot.^.

C.I.L. No. 10609.


later date it

At a

Fumis or Furnitanum was situated on the slopes of a hill. became the seat of a bishop, and was included in the list of towns
s 2

26o
CLEMENTISSIMO PRINCIPI AC TO
TIVS
. .

Roman

Africa

VALENTINI

Clementissimo principi ac totius orhis restitutori

-NO PRO CONS FESTI VC SE

CVM ANTONIO DRA


CONTIO VC AGVPP ORDO FVRNITA NVS CONSECRAVIT

domini nostri Valentiniano proconsulatu Festi viri darissimi, secum Antonio Dracontio viro clarissimo agente vices prafectorium pratorio, ordo Furnitanus consecravit.

Additional interest is attached to this dedication in the use of the words vice agentes, implying that Antonius Dracontius was exercising the duties of vicarius.
In looking back at this period of the provinces as well as for
ing, in the

Roman
'

history, eventful for

Rome, one cannot help acknowledgwriter, that

words of a recent

Diocletian accomplished

a great social change on principles not before recognised in the Western world, and which, to this day, exercise no small in-

upon the political condition of Europe.' ^ What Diocleand what he succeeded in accomplishing during his reign of twenty-one years, as ruler of the Empire, has commanded the admiration of statesmen in more recent times, but his failure to establish a permanent form of government that would
fluence
tian undertook,

be acceptable to so

many

nationalities

may

be attributed to a

variety of circumstances far

beyond the grasp of human agency.


'

Mr. Arnold has referred to the

and

his successors laboured,

taken an impossible task,

difficulties under which Diocletian and adds that Rome had underthat of ruling an immense Empire

without federation and without a representative system, when the only sources of her power were the supreme central govern-

ment and the army.


for not

It would be puerile, however, to blame her having grasped and applied ideas which were foreign to antiquity, and which have only been worked out by the slow experience of centuries. We should rather wonder at what

Rome
private

achieved.'^
life,

With the retirement of Diocletian

into

A.D. 305,

and the simultaneous forced abdication of

mentioned by Victor Vitensis as having sent a representative to the Council at Carthage, A.1). 411. The Festus referred to in the inscription was proconsul of
Africa A.I>. 366.
'

Smith's Class. Diet.,

art. 'Diocletian.'

W.

T. Arnold,

Roman System

of Provincial Administration, Oxford,

879,

Africa under the later Emperors


his colleague

261

Maximian, commenced once again the struggle for supremacy, and for a period of seven years battle after battle was fought without decisive issue, till Constantine the Great brought back peace on earth and goodwill amongst men of all
countries

and

all religions.

a of the Empire between the two Augusti nominated by Diocletian Flavius Valerius Constantius (or Constantius Chlorus, as he is commonly called), and Galerius Armentarius the provinces of Africa were allotted to the former. The following inscription from Tibilis, the modern Announa, seems to testify to the supremacy of Constantius,^ A.D. 306.
In
division

pantifici

Jmperatari Casari Flavio Valeria Canstantia. inmcto, pia,felici Augusta, maxima, iribunicicB patestatis XIIIJ., Imperatari II., Consult VI.,

patri patrite P. Valerius Antoninus prases pravincia Numidice Cirtensis, num.ini majestaiique ejus devotus, pecunia publica pasuit.

There

is

Muzaiaville, supposed

another inscription on a milliary stone found at to have been the Tanarainusa of the

as Augusti.^

Romans, where the two names are associated as Caesars and not The former of these two dedications was probably

to honour the

memory

of Constantius

immediately after his


title

decease, A.D. 306, and the latter records the simple

of these

two subordinate Emperors


A.D. 304,

prior to the abdication of Diocletian,

FLAVIVS VALERI VS CONSTAN


TIVS ET GALE RIVS VALERIVS

MAXIMIANVS
NOBILISS CAESS

MP
XVIII

joint

The .short rule of fifteen months enjoyed by Constantius as Emperor with Galerius, and his earlier career under the
Diocletian,

sway of
humanity.

were

conspicuous for benevolence and

As

the husband of the saintly Helena and the father

of Constantine the Great, Constantius merits a high place

the later Emperors, but he was unfortunate in his colleague.


'

among As

C.I.L. No. 5526.

'

C.I.L. No. 10445.

R^v. Afr.

x. p.

359.

262
a

Roman

Africa

man

of good breeding and liberal education, as well as trained

to the exercise of authority, he could have

had

little in

common

with so rough and unpolished a man as Galerius. It was equallyunfortunate that, on his elevation to the dignity of Csesar, he was compelled, for political reasons, to renounce his wife

Helena, and to accept in her place a spouse nominated by But his happy relationship with the former appears to have governed his actions in later life, and the teachings of a woman, who passed all the days of a long career in endeavours
Diocletian.

to ameliorate the condition of the Christian populations of the

Empire and to further the cause of Christianity, were not lost upon so benevolent and thoughtful an Emperor. Inscriptions It is therefore gratifyrelating to Helena are rarely met with.

name recorded on a pedestal of white marble found at El-Kef, the ancient Sicca Veneria, at one period renowned for its Pagan ceremonials, and in later years the adopted home of some of the early fathers of the Christian Church. The dedication is probably the date of her decease, A.D. 326, and is in other respects interesting on account of the unusual wording
ing to find her

of the eighth

line,

curator reipublicce et duovir}

DOMINAE NOSTRAE
FLAVIAE

HELENAE AVG M VALER

GVPASIVS V C CVR REIP ET D V DE VOT -NVMINI MA lESTATIQVE EIVS


Both
tion,

in

Gaul and

Britain,

which also

fell

to the share of

Constantius, the Christians suffered neither

harm nor

persecu-

although the edict issued by Diocletian


It

for the suppression

of Christianity applied equally to

Empire.
to the

all the provinces of the has been stated, but needs more confirmation, that

the violent action of Diocletian towards anti-paganism was due

mother of Galerius, who was known as a rabid supporter some of the strangest and most revolting rites of Eastern worship. Whether this victim of superstition lived through the
of
'

C.I.L. No. 1633.

Vide V. Guerin, vol.

ii.

p. 65.

Africa under the later Emperors


'age of Constantine
is

263

not recorded, nor do contemporary his-

torians

tell

us whether this upholder of Paganism survived her

imperial son to witness the temples of her gods overthrown and


car;<l^ed on post and lintel in most parts of the Empire. There is considerable doubt whether. Diocletian personally approved of the persecution of the adherents to the new creed. He was no ardent believer in the gods of any section of Pagan worshippers, nor was he addicted during a long reign to the

the symbols of a despised creed

shedding of blood.
secretly
at their

It

has been stated that his wife Prisca

respected the creed of the Christians, and not only worshipped


gatherings,

but

encouraged

her

daughter

Valeria, the wife of Galerius, to uphold the

new

faith

by

dis-

seminating
it

its

doctrines.

As

a matter of justice to Diocletian,

may

fairly

be presumed that his edict of repression was a

and not the outcome of personal animosity. His revolutionary changes in administration had spread discontent throughout his dominions, and more especially in Italy. Rome had ceased to be the capital of the world, and the Senate, no longer able to exercise authority as a political body or to assert its rights, as of old, in the selection of an emperor, had become little more than an assemblage of citizens discharging the ordinary municipal functions. Diocletian, moreover, had no personal interest in the welfare of Rome, but regarded Nicomedia, his newly chosen capital in Bithynia, and Milan, the selected residence of his colleague Maximinian, as better located for a dual form of imperial government. His Oriental tastes and sumptuous surroundings gave encouragement to ways of extravagance hitherto unknown in provincial life and the burden of taxation, essential to the support of a large army of court officials, pressed heavily upon all classes of citizens. Local resources were drained to fill the coffers of the imperial treasury agriculture, unequal to the demands of pitiless collectors, was and industrial arts, fostered by Trajan and his neglected successors, received a check from which they never recovered. This assumption of monarchical authority, so little in harmony
political necessity
; ;
;

with the traditions associated with the Empire of the Caesars,

proved a death-blow to municipal life, and henceforth the vitality which was so conspicuous in the remote towns of Northern Africa imperceptibly dwindled away into nothingness.

264
Face to face with

Roman

Africa

decay of national life was the progress of and Eusebius, both of them Africans, and the latter as bishop of Csesarea (Cherchel) on terms of intimacy with the succeecJjng Emperor Constantius, have much It may be that some of their to say on these eventful times. statements present a one-sidfd view of the many problems which were then exciting the niinds of men, both Pagan and Christian but there is httle doubl; that such thoughtful men
this

Christianity.

Lactantit\s

anticipated the

fall

of the great Eispire,


its

when the

'gods

who

had protected

Rome and

dependencies for nigh a thou-

sand years were being deserted, their effigies overthrown, and their temples becoming the home of a new creed. The short reign of Constantius is not associated with administrative changes, nor with

any memorable events

in the progress

of

Roman
to

Africa, but

the close of his career at Eboracum.

(York), on an expedition against the Picts, gives


interest
all

him

especial

Englishmen.
is

And

to

all

students of

Roman

history Constantius

a pleasant memory, although his short-

lived labours in the cause of

by the magnificent
the Great.

rule of his son

humanity were cast into the shade and successor, Constantine

During the six years that intervened between the death of


Constantius and the enthronement of Constantine the Great as

Emperor, a number of Caesars pass across the stage whose names are now almost forgotten. Their record is little more
sole

than a series of struggles for supremacy, sometimes successful, but ultimately terminating in defeat on the field of battle or abject submission to an all-conquering rival. Contemporary
historians pass

by these minor

Caesars without

comment, and

inscriptions unfortunately render little assistance in elucidating

an obscure chapter in Roman history. But their names are there, as usual, on imperishable stone, sufficient to indicate that citizens in the provinces were not unmindful of benefits conferred upon them by an aspiring Caesar at the head of a legion. Among them may be noted Flavins Severus, who was associated with Galerius for a few months. Their joint names are recorded on two milliary stones in North Africa. The reading of the eighth line, according to Wilmanns, is Respublica Romanis
restituta}
'

C.I.L. No. 10293.

^^'^ Cherbonneau,

Ann.

de Const. 1860-61, p. 148.

Africa under the later Emperors

265

D D NN
CAESS FLAVIO VA LERIO SEVE RO ET GALERI O VALERIO

MAXIMINO
R PB

JRS VIII

RTA

Another milliarium on the road from Thamugas to Theveste records the name of Severus only, the reading of the last two lines being Pius Felix Augustus, Respublica colonics LambcBsitance}

IMP CAES FL VAL

SEVERO PF AVG RPCL


Another claimant to imperial power was a Phrygian named Lucius Domitius Alexander, who was at one time governor of Africa, but fearing destruction at the hands of Maxentius, son of Maximianus, raised the standard of revolt at Carthage, and proclaimed himself Emperor of Rome. His brief uneventful career merits passing notice on account of an interesting inscription found at Cirta, which may still be seen in the museum of the new city named after Constantine the Great. The date of the inscription is A.D. 308-310, the governor of Numidia at
that period being Scironius Pasicrates, whose

name and

office

are clearly defined.^

RESTITVTORI PVBLICAE LIBER TATIS AC PROPA GATORI TOTIVS GENERIS HVMANI

RestitutoripubliccBlibertatisacpropagatoritotius

generis

humani nominisque Romani, Domino

NOMINISQVE ROMANI DNL DO MITIO ALEXAN DRO PF INV AVG


SCIRONIVS PA SICRATES VP
P P NVMIDIAE
'

nosiro L. Domitio Alexandra pio felici invicto

Augusto,Scironius Pasicrates,virperfectissimus,
prceses provincice

Numidia.

'

I.R.A. No. 4368. C.I.L. No. 7004, now

in the

museum

at Constantine.

Vide PouUe, Rec. de

266

Roman

Africa

The partition of the Empire into four divisions by Diocletian, proclaiming himself and his colleague Maximianus as Augusti, and bestowing upon the two subordinate Emperors the title of Csesar, was not favoured by later rulers, nor was any attempt made by his immediate successor (till forced to do so as matter
of policy) to divide imperial authority.
eldest son of Constantius

Constantine, as the

became Emperor on the death of his father, but his claims were disputed by the three most prominent and successful men In order to assert his supremacy he had a more of the time.
by
his divorced wife Helena,

the rightful

task to accomplish than had befallen any previous Emperor. For a period of eighteen years Licinius, his brotherin-law and an acclaimed Emperor, was regarded as a sworn enemy, although his services in war were utilised by Constantine
difficult

for the

attainment of his
his
fire

Maximianus,
carrying

For more than four years and a retired Emperor, was and destruction into distant parts of the Empire
eirds.

own

father-in-law

and for a period of eleven years Maxentius, his brother-in-law and son of Maximianus, was raising the standard of revolt in Africa and other provinces of the Empire. There are no inscriptions, yet discovered in North Africa, bearing the joint names of these four Caesars, nor of any two of them, and those which have been brought to light give little information about an obscure period of Roman history. Party spirit must have
run high in those turbulent times, when all these four determined men were striving for the mastery, and employing the
legions under their

command

in their several spheres of action

to gain the ascendency

by some decisive engagement. The favour shown to Christian communities by Constantine in the earlier days of his rule, long before his public acknowledgment of Christianity, stirred the antagonism of a rough unpolished man like Licinius, who was a stern upholder of Pagan rites. But personal animosity was compelled to yield to the necessities of the hour, and these two strong men, watching each other's movements in the senate-house and the battle-field, were linked together by a bond of mutual interest to rid themselves of Maximianus and his brutal son Maxentius. Success attended their arms. The former came to a miserable end.
Const.

1876-77,

p.

464.

308, a JSlaxentio descivit et Carthagine purpuram sunipsit.'

'Alexander vicarius prafecti praiorio in Africa, AD. (Wilmauus.

Africa under the later Emperors


A.D. 310,
in

267

and two years later the son was drowned in the Tiber a hurried retreat before the victorious Constantine. duel for supremacy between two such ambitious and successful rivals

was unavoidable, and

for twelve years

the struggle was con-

tinued, resulting in the overthrow of Licinius

and the

establish-

ment of undivided empire under Constantine the Great. Among the dedications in North Africa to the Emperor Licinius, one found at Testour, the ancient Bisica Lucana, is the most complete, the date

probably being A.D. 316, three years after his marriage with Constantia, the sister of Constantine.

IMP

VALERIO LICINI

ANO

LICINIO

AVG .... MAX

GERMA SARMATICO MAX NICO MAX -TRIBVNICIA POTES TATE X CONS V IMP X PATER PATRIAE PRO CONS COL BISICA LVCANA DEVOTA NVMEN MAIESTATIQVE EIVS

Various readings of
phering of certain
dedication.^

this

inscription

have been given by

experts, but the controversy has turned rather


letters

than the direct

upon the decimeaning of the

The family of Licinius was involved in his ruin. only son by Constantia, and bearing the same name, was put out of the way by order of his uncle Constantine, for fear This unfortunate little that he might cause trouble hereafter.

An

who was honoured with the title of Caesar when scarcely twenty months old was not forgotten by his father s friends in Africa. A milliarium found at Equizetum, about a mile east of Bordj Medjana, records his existence as nobilissimus Ccesar?
boy,

VALERIO LICI NIANO LI


CINIO IVN NOBILISSIMO CAES

M
It

XII

imperial dignity

could scarcely be expected that the re-assumption of by Maximianus, after he had only a few years

all claims to power, would be regarded either by Constantine or Licinius as anything more

previously solemnly renounced

'

C.I.L. No. 1357.

Vide Shaw,

p. 169.

Ximenez, Hist, de Carth,

p. 260.

C.I.L. No. 10429.

Rec. de Const. 1876-77, p. 629.

268

Roman
who had married

Africa

the former,

His treacherous conduct towards his daughter Fausta, and his ungrateful treatment of his son Maxentius, brought him to an untimely end. With the abdication of Diocletian the career of Maximianus had virtually closed. This seems to be borne out
than the action of a usurper.

by

inscriptions.

As

usurping Emperor in his later


is

life,

the

name
tor,

of Maximianus

not recorded in any part of North

Africa, the only

known

inscription bearing his

name

as Impera-

given on page 258, being probably a dedication prior to his abdication, A.D. 305. So long as the master spirit of Diocletian
controlled the

army and the Senate, this turbulent colleague of was held in restraint, and his passing into forced retirement was a mere cloak for more ambitious projects. In these he was aided by an uprising in favour of his son Maxentius, and by the revolt of L. Domitius Alexander already referred to. Seizing his opportunities Maximianus passed into Africa, subdued the
his

pretender Alexander, and, giving free play to his


pensities, subjected the beautiful city of

pitiless pro-

Carthage to fire and rapine. It may be said that Roman Carthage, second only to Rome at the commencement of the fourth century in its splendour and importance, never recovered from the havoc perpetrated
during this merciless war.
tius,

The six years' nominal rule in Africa and Italy by Maxenknown as Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maxentius, scarcely

merits notice. His claim to the throne rested on his connection with the Emperor Galerius, whose daughter he married, rather than as the son of an unpopular Emperor like Maximianus. Like other ambitious adventurers, he took every advantage of
his opportunities,

and finding a spread of discontent with the

new system of
restitution

administration inaugurated by Diocletian, he


imperial

placed himself at the head of a movement, with a view to a

of the old order of

government.

The

favours he showered upon the legions attached to his standard

gave him the command of a considerable army, and it required the strategy of Constantine and his generals to destroy the power of such a formidable foe. The decisive battle on the banks of the Cremera, when the retreating forces of Maxentius were drowned through the failure of the Milvian bridge, takes rank with other memorable engagements in the world's history, and has afforded both poet and painter a fitting subject for the
all

Africa under the later Emperors


exercise of their imaginative powers.
is

269

The

record of Maxentius

a long array of evil-doings, without one single public act of

benevolence or humanity. In Africa, where his militarj'- expedition was for some time crowned with success, his name is handed down to us in only one inscription on a milliary stone found between Diana and Seriana, now known as Kherbet-

adds nothing to our scant information about his Maxentius was acknowledged as Augustus only, not as hnperator.
Ta^a.^
It

career, but the lettering clearly indicates that

DMINOS TRO MAX ENTIO AV GVSTO NO


BILISSIM

O VIRO CONSVLI
Constantine was proclaimed Emperor on the death of he was then nearly forty years of age, and when the followers of Licinius, the last of the rival claimants, were finally subdued, A.D. 324, Constantius had attained the age of fiftyseven. The last thirteen years of his career as sole Imperator were the most eventful for mankind, and were marked by the greatest administrative change that had occurred since the time of Augustus. It was during these peaceful years that Constantine conceived the idea of founding a second metropolis of the Roman Empire, making Rome the capital of the Western dominions, and Byzantium, the capital of Thrace, the reconhis father

When

structed capital of the Eastern dominions, bearing the

Constantinopolis.

The Emperor had


life,

name of the gratification, during

the last six years of his


nificence of this rival

of watching the growth and mag-

of the East, and of leaving to his sons and successors an Empire at peace within itself, both at
abroad.

Rome

home and

So numerous
it is

are the dedications in honour


difficult to

of this great monarch that

make
It

a selection,
suffice to

even from those recorded in North Africa.

may

state that the gratitude of the citizens for his magnificent rule

the employment of words and phrases dedicatory memorials, and that provincial towns seem to have vied with each other in the free use of terms

found expression

in

hitherto

unknown

in

C.I.L. No. 10382.

270

Roman

Africa

of the most flattering kind. The following inscription from Ain-Rua, near Setif, bearing the date A.D. 319, at a period of his reign when the Emperor was publicly recognising ChrisThe tianity with favour, gives a full list of his achievements.
dedication, on behalf of the province of Mauritania Sitifensis,

bears the

name

of the presses, Flavius

Terentianus, vir per-

fectissiinus}

IMP

CAES FLAVI CONSTANTINO



MAXIMO PIO FELICI IN VICTO AVG PONT MAX GER MAXIMO III SARM MAX BRIT MAX CARP MAX ARAB MAX MED MAX ARMEN MAX GOTH MAX TRIE PO TEST XVIII IMP XIII CON

SVL IIII PATRI PATRIAE FLAVIVS TERENTIA NVS V P PRAESES PROVINCIAE MAV

RETANIAE SITIF NVMINI MAIES TATIQVE EIVS SEM PER DICATISSI MVS

Another interesting

inscription discovered at
at

Cirta,

which

may

be seen

in the

museum

Constantine, probably records


fall

the gratitude of the citizens after the

of Maxentius, the

words

tenebris servitutis oppressam clearly indicating relief


ruler.

from

the oppression of a tyrannical


prasses of the province of

The

dedication

is

by the

functionary thus
:

is illegible.

Numidia, but the name of this high The wording, according to Renier, runs

Triumphatori omnium gentium ac domitori universarum factionum qui nova luce illuminavit et revocavit, domino nostra Flavio Valerio Constantino Maximo^ Pio, Felici, Invicto, Augusto.
libertatem, tenebris servitutis oppressam, sua felici victoria

Another inscription found at Utica on a slab of marble, that appears to have been attached to a wall or pedestal by bronze pins, eulogises Constantine as conditor adque amplificator totius
>

C.I.L. No. 8412. I.R.A. No. 1846.

Vide Leclerc, Rev. arch.

vii.

1850, p. 310.

Africa under the later Emperors


orlis,

271

and in a dedication found at Thamugas the Emperor is spoken of as pietate prcecipuus, semper et ubique victor. Another variation in wording appears in an inscription which may be studied in the museum at Constantine, the expression being equally significant, fundator pads, virtute felicitate pietate prceThe great military colony of Lambaesis stans, doniinus noster. showed their esteem for such a magnificent ruler in the following inscription, copied many years ago by Renier, and interpreted

by him

^
:

PROVIDEN
TISSIMO ET

CVM ORBE SVO REDD

TA LI BERT A TE TRIVMFANT

DN PERP IMP FL VAL


CONSTANTINO INVIC P F AVG
VICTOR!

Providentissimo et cum orbe suo reddita libertate triumphanti domino nostra perpetuo imporatori Flavio Valeria Constantina,invictopiafelici Augusto,victari. Respublica colonice Lambasitanotum
fecit.

RES P C L F
.

patricB

be observed that the honourable distinction pater This variation is very noticeable during the reign of Constantine. As an example of an abbreviated inscription the following dedication to the Emperor has proved attractive to students of epigraphy. This is probably another memorial of the defeat of Maxentius, A.D. 312, the date of the inscription being the following year.^
It

will
is

omitted, and dominus noster is substituted.

IMP CAESARI FLAVIO VALERIO

CONSTANTINO

AVG

INVICTO PIO FELICI P M T P VIII CONS III IMP VII PPP


VAL PAVLVS VPPPN DNMQ EORVM D D PPP


It

was found

at

Announa, the ancient

Tibilis,

which was at

that period a town of considerable pretensions, of great


cial

commer-

importance, and the resort of a large population attracted


'

by

I.R.A. No. 218.


C.I.L. No. 18905.
Vide PouIIe, Rec. de Const, xxvi. p. 334.

272

Roman

Africa

the marvellous hot springs in the neighbourhood. These have been already referred to as Hammam Meskoutin, or the Accursed Baths, but known to the Romans as AquE Tibilitanas. The reading of this inscription, according to Wilmanns, is as
follows
:

Tmperatori Casari Flavio Valeria Constantino, invicto pio felici Augusta, maxima, tribunicia potestatis VIII., canstili III, Imperatari VII., patri patriiE, proconsuli, Valerius Paulus, vir perfectissimus, prases provincicB NumidicB, devatus numini majesiatique eorum, decurionum decreta, pecunia publica pasuit.
pontifici

One
is

other dedication to the

Emperor deserves
fatal

notice, as

it

the only one in North Africa referring in direct words to the

Milvian bridge, which


retreating army.

proved

to

Maxentius

and

his

The

slab of marble bearing the inscription

was found

at Caesarea, but unfortunately a portion only of the

lettering has been preserved.'

PONS MVLVI EXPEDITIO IMPERATORIS CONSTANTINI

We are told by Aurelius Victor that Constantine made his son Crispus by his concubine Minervina, and his son Constantine the younger, born about the same time, Caesars, adding a third
in the person of the infant Licinius, already

mentioned, son of
that his

his old colleague

and

rival.

Of

Crispus

we only know

existence could not be tolerated by Fausta, the wife of Constantine

and mother of Constantine the younger, Constantius, and Constans. Pressure was brought to bear upon the Emperor

to put the unfortunate Crispus out of the way, with the result

This is another instance of the cruel abuse of power exercised by Roman Empresses in furtherance of ambitious views for themselves and their families. There are two imperfect inscriptions in North Africa, which may possibly be intended to preserve the name of this ill-begotten Caesar, but neither Renier nor other experts have decided whether they Coins of the refer to Crispus or his half-brother Constantius. period are, however, explicit on this point, as there are many extant bearing the name of Crispus. His removal led to the
'

that he was murdered.

C.I.L. No. 9356.

Rev. Afr.

iv. p.

221.

Africa under the later

Emperors

273

absolute recognition of Fausta's sons as Cssars A.D. 333-337, clearly indicated in the following inscription found at Cirta,

which has an imperial ring about it harmonising with the close of the Great Constantine's splendid reign.'

PERPETVAE VICTORIAE DDD NNN CONSTANTINI MAXIMI TRIVMPHATORIS SEMPER AVG ET CONSTANTI ET CONSTANTI ET CONSTANTIS NOBILISSI MORVM AC FLORENTISSI MORVM CAESARVM CLODIVS CELSINVSV'C CONS P N DEVOTVS SEMPER NVMINI MAIESTATI OVE EGRVM
. . .

Perpetua Victoria trium dominorum nostrorum Constantini Maritni, triumphatoris semper Augusti, et Cortstaittini, et Constantii, et Constantis,

nobilissimorum ac florentissimonim Ccesanim, Clodius Celsinus, vir clarissimus, consularis provincim Ntimidice,devoius sempernumini majestatique eorum.

In the division of the Empire


stantine the younger
Italy, Africa,

among

these three Czesars,

the countries of Spain, Gaul, and Britain were allotted to Con-

and Illyria fell to the share dominions came under the rule of Constantius. The career of Constantine the younger came to an end before he had reigned three years, owing to an unfortunate dispute which had arisen between two of the brothers on
;

of Constans

and the

rest of the

the subject of limitations of boundaries, especially in the African

how so trivial a matter have roused the passions of these hot-headed, inexperienced youths, bearing in mind that from the time of Diocletian the country known as Bsetica, comprising nearly half the Spanish peninsula, had always been incorporated with Mauritania Tingitana, comprising the western half of Mauritania. The boundaries had not been clearly defined even in the time of Constantine, and it is doubtful whether, even in the present day, the boundaries of Morocco and Algeria, which represented the two divisions of Mauritania in Roman times, have been definitely fixed. Still these two youthful Csesars were foolish enough to dispute over a question of boundaries, their armies met to settle the matter, and Constantine the younger was defeated and slain. There
provinces.

One

can easily understand

may

are several inscriptions in North Africa recording the names of the two surviving Caesars, many of them remarkable for the
'

C.I.L. No.

7on.

I.R.A. No. 1848.

Ann. de

Const. 1853, p. 62.

274
introduction
flattering to the

Roman
Emperors and

Africa

of words and phrases not previously employed,


to the distinguished functionaries

to

whom

at Cirta,

they were dedicated. The following inscription, found is a fair example of the wording of the time. It is a

dedication

by the

citizens of Cirta, styled colonia Consta7ttince,

and the inhabitants of the province of Numidia to their excellent governor Caeionius Italicus, who appears to have been endowed with all the virtues that should adorn the holder of high office.'
Largifate Dominorum nostrormn piorum

A ugustorum duorum Constantii

eximio ac singulari virtiitu7n oninmin, ob merita erga se et provindam contmeniice, pafientice, Jortitudinis^ Kberalitatis et mnoris in omnes precipiii. Ordofelicis colonia Co7ista7ttince et provincia Numidia patrono posuit.
et Constaniis, Ceionio Italico clarissimo atque constilari viro

Constans survived his brother Constantine ten years, ruling over Africa with justice and moderation, and promoting the prosperity of the country. The following dedication in an inscription at Cirta bears testimony to the gratitude of his
subjects
^
:

Beatiiiidine

domini nostri Constaniis

victoris ac triumphatoris

semper

Augusti, provisa copia

qua

horreis deerat posteaqitam condendis horrea deesse

c<perunt^ hcBC Vtilcacius Rufiniis^ vir ciarissitmis, prcsfectus pratorio,per se cccpla in securitatein perpetuam annonarice dedicavit.

His career came to a close by the hand of an assassin named Magnentius, whose ambition prompted him to assume the
brother, Constantius

purple and claim joint rights of empire with the last surviving II. This occurred A.D. 350. For about

Roman governed Africa, more in the capacity of a military adventurer than as an administrator. As a follower of Christianity Magnentius has the unenviable
three years this despicable

notoriety of being the


his very

first

Christian to

kill

an Emperor.

But

name

is

now

inscriptions that
for instance, in

may

wellnigh forgotten, kept alive by a few still be seen bearing his name. At Tipasa,

renown

till

Mauritania Cassariensis, a colonia of wealth and a late period of the Empire, and whose monumental
is

remains are scattered over a large extent of ground, there


'

an

C.I.L. No. 7012.


C.I.L.

Rev. Afr. 1859, p. 135.


Vol. V.

No. 4180.

Les Pastes de

&

Numidie, par M. Pallu de

Lessen, 1888, p. 199.

Africa under the later Emperors

275

imperfect inscription recording the names of three Augusti, the


third being that of Magnentius.'-

CONSTANTINO CONSTANTIO A MAGNENTI INVICTIS SEMPER


AVGVSTIS
erased,

But there is little doubt that the name of Constans had been and that of his murderer substituted. Tipasa was one
if

of the strongholds of Christianity in the time of Constantine the


Great, and continued to be so,

one

number of
spot.

Christian memorials that

may judge may still be

from the large studied on the

There are other inscriptions bearing the name of this as Augustus, but they shed no light on the history or progress of North Africa. By the death of his two brothers Constantius II. became sole Emperor, ruling for ten years without distinction. An inscription at Lambaesis implies that he was brought into the world for the benefit of mankind,^ and another at Caasarea refers to

man Magnentius

Constantine as Restitutor

libertatis

ac triumphator

orbis.

BONO GENERIS HVMANI PROGE


NITO D N FLAV
10

CONSTAN

TIO NOB AC

FLORENTIS SIMO CAES ORDO COL

LAMB FECIT
to indicate any
his

Beyond these and other similar dedications there is nothing marked activity in the African provinces during Indeed, it may be said that there is no monumental reign.
North Africa, whether a triumphal arch or a
associated with the
utility,

edifice existing in

work of public

names of these three

sons of Constantine the Great, nor is there any evidence of material progress during the twenty-three years of joint and
separate
'

rule.

De Tipasa, par M. Stephanus Gsell, Algiers, 1894, p. 106. This work contains an interesting account of the remains of Tipasa, and is fully illustrated. ^ C.I.L. No. 2720, copied by De la Mare and Renier.
T 2

276
The Age

Roman
of Constantine, as
it

Africa

may

be termed, comprising a

period of about sixty years, received additional lustre from the

exemplary high-minded conduct of Helena, the wife of ConI., and mother of Constantine the Great. She was born A.D. 248, and, we are told, favoured Christianity from her early youth. In the course of a long life Helena suffered many vicissistantius tudes, but strength of will, coupled with devotion to the cause she advocated, enabled her to overcome the difficulties attendant

upon her Through


Christ,

peculiar position as the divorced wife of an Emperor.


all

the troublous times which preceded the

fall

of

Licentius,

this saintly

woman

fearlessly pleaded the cause of

the
to

and when Constantino ascended the throne she beheld triumphant acknowledgment of the new creed under the auspices of an all-powerful ruler. Although Helena did not live
see

the dedication

by a

Christian

Emperor of the new

metropolis of the East on the shores of the Bosphorus, yet her


last

years must have been

sweetened by daily thoughts of


lifelong
efforts.

the success which had attended her


features of

The
in

Helena are familiar to us through coins struck

her honour, but inscriptions bearing her

name

are not numerous.

In reference to the one discovered at Sicca Veneria, already

mentioned,

it

seems opportune to record that there are few

places in North Africa of greater interest than the site of this

ancient stronghold, whose history dates back, to pre-Roman times when an important Phoenician colony settled here. It acquired notoriety at a remote period from the performances of

voluptuousness.

honour of Venus Astarte as the goddess of This is proved by a passage in the writings of Valerius Maximus, who lived in the time of Tiberius SicccB enim fanum est Veneris, in quo se matrona conferebant atque
obscene
rites

in

inde procedenies

ad

qucBstum, dotes corporis injuria contrahebant,

honesta nimirum

tarn inhonesto vinculo conjugia junctures.


is

Of
there

the temple dedicated to Venus there are no traces, nor


a single inscription referring to
it.

have had many votaries

here, judging

Hercules appears also to from the remains of a

temple of that deity of large proportions. But the construction of this building may be assigned, like many others in this ruined city, to the time of Diocletian, certain architectural features peculiar to that period being plainly discernible. Outside the walls once stood a Christian basilica of considerable pretensions.

Africa under the later Emperors

277

The

foundations of the external walls, a portion of the sub-

structure of the apse, and fragments of marble shafts constitute

the sole remains of a monumental edifice which was probablyerected in the time of Constantine.
that
It is

a matter of regret
its

we know

so

little

of Sicca, which had a history of

own

long before the

Roman

occupation, and obtained notoriety in

the Jugurthine war as one of the last of Numidian strongholds.


to

Under its Roman name Colonia Julia Cirta Nova, or, according some inscriptions, Cirtha Sicca, it grew into a large residential

and received favours and benefactions from successive Under Diocletian Sicca became a centre of religious controversy and the home of the distinguished philosopher Arnobius. It was within its walls that he wrote his celebrated
city,

Caesars.^

treatise

in

favour of

Christianity,

treating

the

gods of his

ancestors with ridicule, and

pioneering a

movement which

placed Sicca
till

among

the leading centres of Christianity in Africa

the time of the

Arab

invasion.

the link of attachment between the divorced

and the citizens of Sicca, there is union was strengthened by the teaching of Arnobius. Her quiet unobtrusive life was no less remarkable for mental activity in every part of the Empire where Christianity was
publicly preached.

Whatever may have been Empress Helena little doubt that the bond of

better

The successor of Constantius II., Flavius Claudius Julianus, known as Julian the Apostate, was a nephew of Constan-

and grandson of Constantius I. This Emperor, clothed with full honours as Imperator and Dominus noster at the age of thirty, has received a larger share of attention than his achievements merited, on account of his secession from the Christian Church. But, apart from his predilections for the gods of his ancestors, there is nothing in his short rule of three
tine the Great,

years,

marked by unusual
and amiable
in

activity, that

does not

commend

itself

to the respect of mankind.


in habits,

He was

merciful in war, temperate

disposition.

He may
in

be blamed for
court, his

his apostasy, but as a ruler of

men, both

camp and

name has been


Africa there
'

held in honour.

Among the dedications in

North

is

one at Thamugas on an
Sicca
p. 129.
is

altar of octagonal form,

C./.Z. No. 1632.

here called Colonia JuliceVenerice Cirtce Ncruce Sicca.

Vide Rev. arch. 1857,

278
which gives the

Roman

Africa

full titles of the Emperor, commencing with domitor hostium, and omitting the time-honoured distinction of pater patricB, which no longer appears in imperial memorials.'

There

is no clue to the date of this inscription, but it may be assigned to A.D. 360, the year when Julian received the purple at the hands of the army.

DOMITORI HOSTI

VM

INVICTO IMP INDVLGEN TISSIMO PRINCIPI D N FL CL IVLIANO INVICTO PIO FE

LICI

SEMPER AVG

RESP ET ORDO CO LONIAE THAMVG CVRANTE FL AQVILINO FL P

CVRATORE

REI

PVB POSVIT DEDI CAVITQVE


Another inscription at Csesareais worth recording, on account
of
its

direct allusion to this


"^

Emperor

as the

'

restorer of the

religion of the

very

legible,

Romans.' The lettering is incomplete and not but was deciphered and described by M. Poulle

many

years ago.

D N FLV CLAV
DIO IVLIANO
PIO FELICI ....

OMN
.

FE POLLE NTI VIRTV


. . .
.

IE

Domino

nosiro Flavio Claudio Juli-

ano, Pio, Felici, Augusio,

omnium

TVM INVICTO
PRINCIPI RES TITVTORI LI BERTATIS ET RO

perfectione pollente virtutum, invicio


principi, restiUitori Ubertatis et Ro7nancB religionis ac triumphatori orbis.

MANAE RE
LIGIONIS AC TRI VMFATORI OR
BIS

C.I.L. No. 1519. C.I.L. No. 4326.


Vidi Poulle, Rec. de Const. 1869, p. 652,

Africa under the later Emperors

279

Julian has no record in North Africa.

But beyond these and a few other similar dedications With him the rule of the Constantine family came to an end. Of his successor Jovian, who reigned for about seven months and was a true supporter of
Christianity,

bearing his

we know very little. The few inscriptions in Africa name refer to this Emperor as Domino nostra Joviano
Europe
called Pannonia,

triuniphatori semper Augusta.

The
divided

tract of country in Eastern

into

Upper and Lower,

furnished
all

many Emperors.

Decius, Probus, and Jovian were

natives of that province,

and Gratian, the

I., was born, it is said, at Sirmium, the capital of Pannonia. Of Gratian and his achievements we have little knowledge, but his memory is pleasantly

father of Valentinian

preserved in several inscriptions.


find

On
.

a milliarium at Cirta

we
;

the following

MemoricB felicissima vir adque per omnia


.
.

scBcula celebrandus Gratius pater

Valentiniam

et Valentis

and a stone
two ruling
et

built into the wall of the

Kasbah

in the

same

city

records the dedication of a statue to the respected father of the

Emperors.'

Gratiana, patri
Valentis,
. . .

Atque per omnia scecida celebrando dominarum principunique nostrorum Valentitiiani


.

juxta c

nabilium ac triumphatorum semper Augustoi'um. Dracontius, vir clarissimus, statuam dedicavit vicarius prmfecti per Africanas provincias, curante Valeria
.
.

viro egregia, sacerdatale.

but

it

tells

somewhat imperfect us that Dracontius, a man of senatorial rank, was


inscription
is

The

the vicarius prcefecti of

the

African

provinces

under

the

regulations introduced A.D. 297 for the division of the whole

country into dioceses controlled by vicarii. When Valentinian I. was proclaimed Emperor at the age of 43, on the ground of long and distinguished services both as a soldier and a statesman, he took his younger brother Valens as his colleague on the throne, and a few years later caused his
infant
division of the

In the son Gratian to be acknowledged as Caesar. Empire the provinces of Africa were retained

rising that

by Valentinian, probably in consequence of rumours of a tribal would need suppression by a strong and experienced

hand.

The

insurrection, however, did not take


it

place

till

the

close of his reign, but


/.i?.^. No. 1S51.

taxed the

skill

of Valentinian and his

'

VideDsl&M.d.re, ExpIor.de FA/gn-ie. Also Atimiaire, iS^^.

28o

Roman

Africa

generals to cope with one of the most formidable disturbances that had occurred since the Roman occupation. The frequency

of these frontier uprisings, dating back from the earlier days of the Caesars, had rendered the establishment of a long line of military outposts an absolute necessity. The ruins of these

he wends his way along some of the little-frequented passes of the Aures mountains. The disturbances were mostly tribal, arising out of some petty feud between natives and colonists, and took little trouble to suppress. But such a rising
little

forts still await the traveller as

the Desert fringe, or

essays

as that of Tacfarinas in the reign of Tiberius,

and the revolt of Firmus, when Valentinian was firmly established on the throne,

were too formidable to be quelled by the ordinary troops stationed at the various outposts. We know that it took Tiberius and his legions seven long years to subdue so formidable a leader as Tacfarinas, and now Valentinian found himself, at the close of a successful career, face to face with a foe as determined and even more powerful. Between these two native leaders there was a marked difference. Tacfarinas was essentially an African, skilled in the art of war after the manner of the Numidians, an intrepid warrior, fearless in battle, and the recognised figure-head of the tribes of the Desert and the mountain fastnesses of Mauritania. Tacfarinas, we know, was subdued by the more scientific strategy of the Romans and fittingly closed his career on the battle-field. Firmus, the antagonist of Valentinian, was a different type of warrior. Although a native of Mauritania, his name betrays Roman descent. Moreover, he lived after the manner of the Romans and adopted their military tactics and at the commencement of his revolutionary campaign assumed the purple with all the attributes of a Caesar. The movement was initiated by Firmus with the sole object of wresting Numidia and Mauritania from the Romans and proclaiming himself sole Emperor of those countries. With a large army, supplemented by welldisciplined and experienced mercenaries, Firmus had fair pro;

spect of success, but fortune favoured the legions of Valentinian.

The bold adventurer


dispersed,

fell by his own hand, his army was and the land of Africa entered upon a career of peace

which continued for nearly fifty years. The campaigns undertaken by Valentinian

in

Gaul and

Africa under the later Emperors

281

Britain, as well as in Africa, were the outcome of necessity as defensive measures rather than as attempts to extend the frontiers of the huge Empire committed to his charge. Anyhow they

^proved a useful field for the display of military


into prominence several

skill,

and brought
contributed
time,

men

of distinction

who

largely to the Emperor's unvarying success.

Conspicuous among

them was Theodosius, the most distinguished general of his


though
his skill
his

name and achievements were overshadowed by


But to

those of his more eminent son Theodosius the Great.

be attributed the defeat of Firmus and the signal overthrow of the usurper's army. Strange to say, this great revolutionary movement, which had aroused a spirit of independence among native tribes, was held in remembrance for many a long day after. The idea of uprooting the Roman power, especially in the western provinces, passed on through succeeding generations, resulting in the formation of several
petty kingdoms which combined subsequent to the Vandal invasion of Africa and were not finally suppressed till the Arab occupation. The most noticeable of these small independent

may

Moor named Masuna, whose memory is preserved an inscription discovered at Altava, in the province of Mauritania Csesariensis, and bearing the date A.D. 468-9.'kings was a
in

PRO SAL -.ET INCOL REG MASVNAE GENT MAVR ET ROMANOR CASTRVM EDIFIC A MAS

PREF DE SAFAR IIDIR PROG CAST RA SEVERIN QVEM MASVNA ALTAVA POSVIT ET MAXIM PR C ALT PERFEC P P CCCCLXVIIII
GIVINI

Masunce gentium Maurorum et Masgivini prcefecto de Safari idir{?) procuratore castra Severiaiia, quern Masuna Altava ppsuit, et Maximus procurator Altava perfecit. Positum {?) provincia cccclxviiii.

Pro

salute

et

incolumitate

regis

Romanorum castrum

cedificatum a

junction with Ortaia, incited

named Masuna who, in conSolomon, the Byzantine general, This to go to war with the King of the Moors A.D. 534. mentioned the one in descendant of Masuna may have been a
Procopius mentions a king

the inscription.
C.I.L. No. 983s, deciphered by Wilmanns.

'

Rev. Afr. 1878, p. 355.

282
If the

Roman

Africa
offers
fair

wording of inscriptions

evidence of the

popularity of an Emperor, the claims of Valentinian cannot be disregarded. gather from Marcellinus, the most reliable

We

mankind was not of a lovable disposition, and that he was hot-tempered and impetuous. And we may infer that his success during a very active career of twelve years was due to strength of will and
authority of this period, that this successful ruler of

conspicuous ability in the conduct of military affairs. From the time Valentinian ascended the throne till the close of his life he had to contend with insurrections in various parts of his
in

dominions, and nowhere did he achieve greater success than North Africa. The troubles that arose from the rising of

Mauritania were preceded by a state of affairs in was gradually reducing that province to a condition of anarchy. The governor of Africa at that time was

Firmus

in

Tripoli which

Romanus, a man of feeble disposition, inert and rapacious. Taking advantage of his incapacity, the Asturians, who were settled on the frontiers, laid siege to the walled city of Leptis, ravaged the surrounding country, and murdered the agricultural
population.
for assistance.

The citizens in their distress appealed to Carthage Romanus declined, unless the people of Leptis sent him food for his army and 4,000 camels for transport. Such a demand could not be complied with by a starving
population undergoing a state of siege.
quartered in Carthage, did nothing.

As

Romanus, comfortably a last resource two

ambassadors named Severus and Flaccianus were despatched to the Emperor, taking with them golden images of Victory in honour of Valentinian's recent accession to the throne. Their petition was heard, and Palladius was sent to Africa to redress But the grievance and restore order on the frontiers of Tripoli. Palladius the troubles of the citizens of Leptis were not over. conspired with Romanus to deceive the Emperor and to report Two that the Roman population had no cause for complaint. more ambassadors were accordingly sent by the disheartened citizens, and at last the truth came out. The Roman legions were ordered to Tripoli, the siege was raised, Romanus was Gratitude for cast into prison and Palladius put to death. bearing the several inscriptions abundant relief is shown in younger with his Valentinian alone, or associated name of his heirs on the former and brother Valens. The dedication to

Africa under the later Emperors


a slab discovered at Bou Grara^ (given on p. 257) quoted as an example and may be read as follows
:

283
may
be

stirpe progenito domino nostro Vah7ttinia7io, Augusto, fortissimo principi. Flavins Vivius Benedictus vir perfectissim.us, prases provinciiz Tripolitancz, numini majestatique ejus semper devotus.

Divina

Valens, the coadjutor and survivor of Valentinian, has no


place in African history.

As

ruler of the eastern division of

Empire, his headquarters were at Constantinople, and consequently he had no special claim for recognition by the citizens of Roman Africa. His name, however, appears on a slab discovered at Apisa Maius, now known as Henchir Ain
the
Tarf, in the proconsular province.^

D
IMP

N AVG

EL

VALENTI PIO FELICI VICTORI AC

TRIVMFATORI PER PETVO DEVOTVS ORDO MCP APISEN


SIVM MAIORVM CVM VALERIC MARINO

CVR

RP

The chief value of the inscription lies in the identification of the site of the municipium Apisensiorum majoruin, but nothing
is

known of the curator reipubliccz named Valerius Marinus. The names of the joint Emperors are found in numerous
for

inscriptions, all varying in their expressions of gratitude

benefits received.
invictissinii,

The wording on one

stone

is

Domini

nostri

et

fortissimi,

ioto orbe victores?

et gloriosissimi, and on another, Perhaps the following from Rusicada, which

may be

still

studied
^
:

in the

museum

at Philippeville, is

the

most complete
'

C.I.L. No. 10489. C.I.L. No. 780. C.I.L. No. 2722.

Vide Rev. Afr. xx. 1876, p. 508.

^ '
*

Wilmanns

descrip.

I.R.A. No. 119, copied by Renier and

De

la

Mare.

C.I.L. No. 19852, descrip. Villefosse.

Vide Bull. Spigr. de la Gaule, 1881,

p. 167 et seq.

284

Roman

Africa

PRO MAGNIFICENTIA TEMPORVM PRINCIPVM MAXIMORVM DOMI NORVM ORBIS VALENTINIANI ET VALENTIS SEMPER AVGG HORREA AD SECVRITATEM POPVLI ROMAN I PARITER AC PROVINCIALIVM CON STRVCTA OMNI MATVRITATE DEDICAVIT PVBLILIVS CAEIONIVS CAECINA ALBINVS V C CONS SEXF P N CONS

There

is

another at

Thamugas

relating to the rebuilding of

the portico of the Capitol, fully described on p. 93. And at Cuiculum was found an inscription referring to the dedication

of a basilica vestiarium to Valentinian


Caeionius Caecina Albinus.

and Valens
is

by

P.

No

further explanation

given,

although some doubt has been expressed about the correctness of the reading of the letters basili. Whether the edifice was a basilica or an apotheca is of little consequence. It was certainly a public building of some importance, and, to adopt the explanation offered

by Wilmanns, was

negotiatoribus vestiariis inaxime

destinatam.

Partial explorations of the site of Cuiculum,

now

known

as Djemila, in the old province of Mauritania Sitifensis,

have revealed the existence of a city of undoubted magnificence. Of its history and of the part it played in the progress of Roman colonisation we have no record, but the principal inscriptions scattered among the monumental remains being dedicatory to Marcus Aurelius and Caracalla, there is ample evidence that Cuiculum was a city of wealth and renown at the commencement of the third century. It is within the range of possibility that the remains of the stately edifice where clothes merchants were wont to congregate in the days of Valentinian may some day be identified. In most of the dedicatory inscriptions yet discovered in the newly named province of Nuinidia Constantiniana, bearing the names of this Emperor and his brother Valens, we are made familiar with the name of the governor of that province, A.D. He was of 364-367, Publilius Caeionius Caecina Albinus. senatorial rank and bore the distinguishing title of sexfascalis}
This title of distinction seems C.I.L. No. 7975. Ann. de Const. 1862, p. 144. have been first bestowed on Ulpius Mariscianus in the reign of Julian, A.D. 361, vho v/a.s Consularis Sexfascalis provincia Nu7nidii:E. (Dig. \. 16.) It was conferred
'

to

only on governors of senaioria/ piovinzes.

{Les Fasl&s de la Nwiiidie, p. 204.)

Africa under the later Emperors


as will be observed in the last-quoted inscription.

285

His munifi-

cence

by a lavish expenditure on public buildings or the restoration of monumental edifices that had fallen into decay. Whether Valentinian had issued an edict drawing attention to the necessity of repairing ancient monuments in different parts of the Empire we have no means of ascertaining. But the wholesale restoration of public buildings during his reign and those of his immediate successors seems to indicate that many of the edifices erected by the great building Emperors, Trajan and Hadrian, needed thorough repair after a
is

attested

lapse of nearly 250 years.

It is possible, also, that in this part

of the world, where slight earthquakes were not unknown,

disturbance
there
is

may have

affected public edifices

no record of any violent earthquake in we have ample evidence of a terrific disturbance in Eastern Europe only two years before Valentinian ascended From Marcellinus we learn that it spread through the throne. Asia Minor, Pontus, and Macedonia, and that Nicomedia, the capital of Bithynia, was entirely ruined. The names of the three Emperors Valentinian, Valens, and Gratian, who reigned conjointly from A.D. 367 till the close of
this period,

some and although North Africa at


;

375, when Valentinian died, are recorded in many parts of the Gratian, the son of Valentinian, was created Caesar at country.

the age of eight, and eight years after was proclaimed hnperator. His elevation to the throne was evidently the cause of great

and of many congratulatory dedications. The following jubilant inscription at Constantine may be assigned to that date, when the popularity of Valentinian as a ruler was everyrejoicing,

where acknowledged

Aureo saculo trium dominorum nostro'ntm invictissimonem principum


Valentiniani, Valentis et Gratiani, porticum a fundamentis cceptam et conminus, vir clarissimus, considaris sexfascalis prostrnctam, Annius
.
. .

vincicE

Numidia Constantina
curante

dedicavit et domini tiostri Gratiani principis

nomine nuncupavit,
diano

ac

sua pecunia perficiente Nevio ISIumi-

A.D. 367-375,

Annius was governor of the province at some date between and it may be assumed that his acceptance of the high office seemed a fitting occasion for dedicating a public

C.I.L. No. 7015.

Vide

De

la VLsxe,

Explor. tab. 125.

Also given by Renier,

I.H.A. No. 1852.

286

Roman

Africa
inscription

edifice to the youthful Caesar.

Another very similar

of the same reign was found

modern Djemila, and may


a
lintel in

among the ruins of Cuiculum, the still be read on a slab doing duty as
modern
fountain.^

the construction of a

PRO BEATVDINE PRINCIPVM MAXIMORVM DDD NNN VALENTINIANI VALENTIS ADQ GRATIANI
PL SIMPLICIVS VC CONSVLARIS SEXFASCALIS PN CONSTANTINAE NVMINI MAIESTATIQ EORVM SEMPER DICATVS BASI LICAM DEDICAVIT RVTILIVS VERO SATVRNINVS VC PRO EDITIONE MV NERIS DEBITI A SOLO FACIENDAM EXAEDIFICANDAM Q CVRAVIT

PERPETV SEMPER AVGGG

The

exact date

is

a matter of conjecture, but

it is

possibly

of the year 375, when the elevation of Gratian to the throne at dedicathe age of sixteen was the cause of general rejoicing.

honour of the three Emperors on such an On the death of occasion was, therefore, extremely probable. his father, Gratian became sole Emperor of the West, and three years later, when Valens came to an untimely end, found himIn the short interval self in sole possession of the Empire. between the death of Valentinian and of his brother Valens, A.D. 375-378, another infant Caesar appears on the stage in the
tion of a basilica in

person of Valentinian II., the son of Valentinian I., thus In testimony sharing the throne with his uncle and brother. of their joint rule we have an interesting inscription at Cella,
south of
Sitifis

and

in the province of

Mauritania Sitifensis

'^
:

SALVIS

DDD NNN IMPERATORIBVS

INVICTIS PRINCIBVS

VALENTE GRATIANO ET VALENTINIANO PERPETVIS MAXIMIS

VICTORIBVS AC TRIVMFATORIBVS SEMPER AVGVSTIS FLA VICTORIANVS VC PRIM ORDINIS COMES AFRICAE SEMPER VESTRO NVMINI DEVOTVS CASTRAM DEDICAVIT

The date is probably A.D. 378, in honour of who was raised to the purple a few days after
'

Valentinian

II.,

the death of his

C.I.L. No. 8324. C.I.L. No. 10937.

This inscription

is

in excellent condition.
Villefosse.

Seen and translated by

Africa under the later Emperors


father.

287

as an early

The words prinii ordinis comes Africcs example of a new form of title.

should be noted

The
little

merits of Gratian as a soldier and an administrator claim

notice

a learned man but a bad


noster,

ruler,

says Aurelius Victor.

An

inscription at Carpis, near Carthage, records his

name

a.s

faci-

ficus dominus

but this epithet pacificus

is

little in

accord

His violent antagonism Pagan worship, even in those parts of his dominions where Christianity had hitherto made little progress, roused the animosity of many of his subjects, and led to the desertion of his soldiers during his last campaign against the
with the general tcnour of his career.
to the revival of

Goths.

Strong nations need strong

rulers.

This

is

clearly

shown in many instances Empire was tottering to


the
accidental

accession

when the Roman its fall and was saved for a time by of a statesman or soldier of mark
in this later period

supreme power. This was the case during the last four troubled years of Gratian's career, when necessity enforced the co-operation of the most distinguished soldier of his time, and the son of Valentinian's most successful general. It was a.d. 379, one year after the death of Valens, that Gratian raised to the purple this Spanish warrior, whose Byzantine name of Theodosius seems to indicate Greek parentFour years later another Spaniard named Maximus, of age. whose ancestry we have no knowledge, raised the standard of revolt in Spain and Africa and besought Theodosius to recognise his claim to the western dominions of the Empire. The situation was a critical one, as Maximus, the upholder of Paganism, had the support of many of the provinces and the
called suddenly to exercise

of a trained army. With the adroitness of a true statesman Theodosius lured the impatient Maximus to act on

command

the offensive.

defeated

and

his

The rivals met at army dispersed.


place in

Aquileia.

Maximus was

Although
history,

Emperor has
This
is

little

Roman

this usurping he appears to have

secured the regard of his subjects in Africa as well as in Spain.


attested

by an

interesting inscription found at Gigthis,

in the province of Tripoli,

where

his

name

is

associated with

that of Valentinian II., Theodosius the Great, and Arcadius, the The date of the inscription is infant son of Theodosius.^
A.D.

383-3S8, and the dedication


'

is

in

commemoration of an
i.

C.I.L. No. 27.

Vide Guerin, vol.

p. 228.

288
name

Roman
of

Africa
It will

embassy to that distant province.

be observed that the

Maximus has been

erased in the usual way.


QVINTO FL P SAC PROV SALVIS AC TOTO ORBE VINTIBVS

DDDD NNNN FFFF LLLL VALENTINIANO THEODOSIO ARCADIO ET MAXIMO SEMP AVGVST OB MERITVM MAG'NIFICE LEGATI ONIS QVAM PRO VOTO TOTIVS PROVINCIAE EXECVTVS EST ET IT QVINTVS VIR LAVDABILIS SACERDOTALIS HVIC CVPIENS COMPETENTIBVS MERITIS RESPONDERE TOTIVS PRO
.
. .

VINCIAE CONSILIO AD DECRETO ORDI


NIS

Of
it

probably existed

the town of Gigthis we have little record. As a seaport in Phoenician times. Under the Romans it

maintained its position as a thriving municipium till the close of the Empire, and when Christianity flourished in this remote corner Gigthis became the seat of a bishop. The Vandal invasion in the
fifth

century does not seem to have affected

its

prosperity, nor did the Byzantine occupation at a later date.


It

was not

till

the Arabs swept over the land from east to west of Valentinian
II.,

that the fate of this old-world town was sealed.

The death

A.D. 392, placed the

Empire

in

the hands of Theodosius and his son, and in the following year a younger son named Honorius was raised to full honours, although he had only attained his ninth year. It is strange to
find a scarcity of memorials in North Africa relating to so distinguished a ruler as Theodosius, whose exploits fully justified the surname of Magnus. The only explanation that can be

offered

is

that Theodosius was probably

unknown

personally to

his African subjects.

An

inscription at

Kalama,

in the

form of a dedication by

the citizens of this prosperous colonia, bears his honoured name.' And another found at a place called Henchir-el-Chrib, not far from Bizerta, may fairly be ascribed to his reign, the Emperor

being called T\\&oAos\vls perpetuus Augustus


'

Ctzsar.

C.I.L. No. 5340.

I.R.A. No. 2735.

Vide

De

la

Mare, ExJ>lor. de VAlgirie.

Africa under the later Emperors

289

D N FL THEODOSIO PER PETVO AC VICTO RI SEMPER AVG ORDO


SPLENDIDISSIMVS COL KALAMENSIVM LOCAVIT DEDICAVIT

According to a statement by Aurelius Victor, this distinguished prince was blessed with many virtues and debased He died at Milan at the close by no vicious propensities. of an eventful reign of sixteen years a good ruler, a tender

father, a loving

husband.

In the division of the Empire between Arcadius and Honorius, the elder brother acquired the Eastern dominions and the younger the Western. This was in accordance with the policy initiated the

Great and his successors.

by Diocletian and accepted by Constantine The capital of Arcadius was

the newly erected city of Constantine,


national

now

rising

in all

its

splendour, and destined to play a larger part in the


life

drama of

than its great founder ever contemplated. The Honorius was to be once again the Roman metropolis, which Diocletian and his successors had neglected in favour of Milan as a more convenient military centre. Italy, Spain, Africa, and Gaul were thus placed under the rule of Honorius. Britain, hitherto regarded as an important appendage of the Empire of the West, played no part in its history at the close of the fourth century. Its remoteness by land and sea had checked the enthusiasm which prompted so many Emperors,
capital of

from Julius Csesar to Constantius, to convert the island into Under Honorius Roman Britain almost a Roman province. ceased to exist, and the last of the legions which had preserved England from the barbarism of the northern tribes was preparing to cross the Channel into the fair land of the Gauls.

The

rule of

history of Africa during the twenty-seven years' effeminate Honorius is almost a blank, relieved only by an insur-

rection which caused great anxiety to so timid a potentate. Gildon, a Moor of distinction and a brother of Firmus, raised

the standard of revolt soon after the Emperor ascended the throne, and with an army of 70,000 men was making preparations for a decisive encounter with the
ill-success

attended his

efforts.

Roman legions. But His troops were routed, and


U

290

Roman

Africa made away with himself


at

Gildon, finding his cause was the coast town of Tabarca.


five years,

lost,

Africa then had peace for twentyinterval reaped the benefits

and during that long

arising from undisturbed interchange of commercial products.

The
trial

lull

preceded the storm.

The semi-barbarous

nations of

the North, Goths, Vandals, and Huns, were preparing for a


of strength with the masters of the world, and lay waiting

on the frontiers of Southern Europe ready to swoop down upon Rome and the sunny lands of Italy and Spain and then, gathering into their ranks irregular troops in their onward march, to cross the seas to spread havoc and desolation among
;

the peace-loving citizens of

Roman

Africa.

So

inert a ruler

as Honorius, thoughtful only of his

own

personal safety and

regardless of the gathering clouds on the political horizon, has


little

place in the records of the country.

One

inscription only,

Altava in Mauritania Caesariensis, a simple complimentary memorial by a citizen of that town, bears his name. Although imperfect and not very easy to decipher, Wilmanns has succeeded in shaping the letters into legible form.^
at

PRO SALVTE CIVI TATIS ALTAVAE ET INCOLVMITATE AVG HONORIO FECER CREP VICTORIVS VE (?) RVS ET GIVES ALTAV
The names
of the
joint

(.?)

inscription yet discovered in

Emperors appear in only one North Africa, but they are rein the

corded on a slab found


in Africa.

in

Rome

form of a congratulatory

dedication to the two brothers for the suppression of a revolt

No

explanation of this inscription has been given


it

by expert

epigraphists, but

is

sufficiently

noteworthy to find

a place here.^

IMPERATORIBVS INVICTISSIMIS FELICISSIMISQVE

DD NN ARCADIO ET HONORIO FRATRIBVS SENATVS POPVLVSQVE ROMANVS VINDICATA REBELLIONE


.

ET AFRICAE RESTITVTIONE LAETVS


'

C.I.L. No. 9834.


Orelli, Inscript.

Gruter, 287, 3. This dedication was probably A.D. 398, when Gildon the Moor was defeated in a pitched battle near Theveste and the insurrection brouKht to a close.
'

W.lmanns. Lai Coll. No. 1132.

Africa under the later Emperors

291

The single inscription in Africa bearing the joint names was found on a pedestal at Nebeul, a small Arab town on the coast, not far from Hammamet in Africa Provincia, constructed with

Roman town of Neapolis. There are no records of this ruined settlement, which appears to have been in existence long before the Roman occupation, and to have established in primitive times a reputation for its pottery. Fragments of earthenware, red, yellow, and green, turned up by the plough from year to year, give a colouring to the landscape, and the enduring glazes used by these old-world potters flash in the sunlight and illuminate the surface in all directions. It is gratifying to know that the industry which prospered more than two thousand years ago is still the staple manufacture of the modern town. The date of the inscription is A.D. 400^ 401, and the rendering by Wilmanns is as follows
the materials of the old
:

SAL VIS

DD NN

ARCADIO ET HONORIO INCLYTIS SEMPER AVGG ADMINISTRANTE DM GABINIO BARBARO POMPEIANO VC PROC COELIVS TITIANVS P A V S VH EX T ET NAV EX MVN ET EXCVRATORE R CVM COELIO RES TITVTO VH FILIO SVO SVMPTV PROPRIO INSTANTIA SVA DEDICAVIT ADMINISTRANTE PVBLIANO V H F P CVRAT R P

Salvis dominis nosiris Arcadia et Honorio indytis semper Augustis, adndnistrante divino mandaiu if) Gabinio Barbara Pompeiano viro clarissima praconsuli provincia Africce vice sacra judicante. Coelius Titianusvir honestus ex transvecturario et naviculario, ex munerario, et ex ciiratore reipuhliccE, cum Ccelio Restituto, viro honesto, filio suo sutnptu propria instantia stia dedicavit, administrante Publiano, viro honesto, flamine perpetua, curaiore reipublica.

The

chief point of interest in this lengthy inscription will

be found in the fifth and sixth lines, recording the name of G. Barbarus Pompeianus, the governor of Africa, a.d. 400-401.
'

C.I.L, No. 969.

Vicls

Guerin, vol.

ii.

p. 249.

292
This with were were
distinguished

Roman
Roman

Africa

has been identified, in recent years,

the owner of a princely establishment the remains of which

brought to light in 1878 by some chance excavations that being made near the village of Oued-Atmenia, on the old Roman road between Setif and Constantine.^ At a depth of between five and seven feet from the surface, the walls of an extensive range of buildings, with detached pavilions and numerous enclosures, were revealed. So clearly were the buildings defined, and so perfect was the mosaic flooring, that M. Martin, an architect, was deputed to measure the ruins and After careful examination prepare drawings of the mosaics. it was found that these were the remains of the Baths attached to the country seat of Pompeianus, whose official residence was The arrangement of the Baths does not need at Carthage. any special description. The apartments were not large, but the fittings were of a sumptuous character, coloured marbles and mosaics being freely used. The mosaic floors deserve special notice on account of their pictorial character, two of them representing the stables and racehorses of this princely
governor, while others depict in a realistic
life

and amusements of

their

manner the daily owner and the costume of the

period.

The

position of the stables represented in mosaic has

been ascertained at a distance of 130 yards from the Baths. The breeding and training of Numidian horses were much encouraged by the Emperors, perhaps in painful recognition of the wonderful exploit's of the wild cavalry, unbridled and unsaddled, that more than once secured victory to Hannibal during the second Punic war. To the Carthaginians, or rather to her Numidian mercenaries, Rome was indebted for all her knowledge of the horse and its rider and the institution of various kinds of chariot races, not only in Rome but in every large town of the Empire, drew the attention of such wealthy men as Pompeianus to the pecuniary and other advantages of a breeding establishment. Some thirty years ago an inscribed It was stone bearing on this subject was unearthed in Rome. deciphered by M. Renan, and was the subject of a paper read
;

Ann. de Const. 1878-80 for a graphic description of these remarkable mosaics by M. A. PouUe. The four drawings, prepared under the direction of M. Martin, have been admirably reproduced in chromolithography. These can be purchased in Paris and are well worthy of study.
"

Africa under the later Emperors


by him
in

293

Rome

before the Society des Inscriptions et Belles-

November 1878. It commemorates the victories in the hippodrome at Rome, A.D. 115-124, of one Crescens, a Moor
Lettres in

aged twenty-two, and how during a period of ten years he


succeeded, with four horses

named

Circus, Acceptus, Delicatus,

and Cotynus,
equal to

in gaining prizes of the value of 1,556,346 sesterces,

I2,5CX)/.

Crescens, the charioteer, was evidently the

favourite of the day, occupying a position in the racing world

by so many successful jockeys of our and running the horses of some great proprietor like Pompeianus of Oued-Atmenia. Were it not for the date of the inscription, one might be tempted to suggest that the charioteer referred to on the inscribed stone was identical with the personage represented in the pictorial mosaic. We have in the latter one Cresconius as the chief charioteer, and we have also the horse Delicatus tethered by himself as a favourite animal. The mosaic
similar to that acquired

own

time,

in the Calidarium is divided into four parts representing the horses and stables. In the first there is a pavilion within an enclosure there are the stables and apartments for grooms
;

name of the proprietor being written above and below, in two divisions, are six horses covered with horsecloths and attached to four separate mangers.
charioteers, the
;

and

the central edifice

Alius, unequalled for strength,

who can

leap as high as the


as Pullentianus, the
;

mountains,
stallion
;

is

tethered to the

same manger

then comes Delicatus, the elegant one and below are Polydoxus, the glorious one, who, whether he wins or loses, is
still beloved, tethered with Titas, the giant and in the corner stands Scholasticus, the learned one, apart and by himself as a philosopher should be. In the doorway leading to the Suda;

torium

is

an inscription which

is difficult

to translate
is

Incredula

Venila Benefica.

In this latter chamber

a mosaic in two

In the upper one three pavilions are repreand in the foreground a lady is seated in a high-backed chair under a palm-tree, a fan in her right hand and a pet dog

compartments.
sented,

beside her, in charge of a servant who protects his mistress from the rays of the sun by an umbrella in his left hand. Above is
written Filoso Filolocus, probably from filum, a thread, this part of the garden being reserved for ladies as a place for sewing. In the lower compartment is a representation of a park enclosed

with a hedge and a fence supported by strong stakes.

This

is

294

Roman

Africa

the Septum Venationis, as it is written, and, consequently, two hounds are represented giving chase to three gazelles. In the angles are circular basins in which are fish and aquatic plants,

and

a corner appears the word Pecuarilocus^ showing that Pompeianus, much as he loved horses and hunting, had tastes
in

also for cattle


floor of the

and the products of the


is

soil.

The mosaic on

the

divided into three compartments by a rich framework of flowers, the central one giving a view of the house,

atrium

Attached to having several stories and numerous windows. the house is a tower surmounted by a balcony or awning, designated in the mosaic as Saltuarii Janus. The roofs of the buildings are covered with square red tiles in patterns, and There are indichimneys or pipes appear above the ridge cations also of chimneys above the parapet of the principal pavilion. In the lower divisions Pompeianus himself is depicted as directing a stag-hunt, and the huntsmen, Cresconius, Argentium, Cessonius, and Neambas the first mounted on the horse Vernacel with lances in hand, are in full pursuit, preceded by the dogs Fidelis and Castus. In attendance are Liber and Diaz, the latter from Iberia, but both having their mantles thrown back, Spanish fashion, over the left shoulder. The two end compartments of the design seem to indicate a representa-

tion of the close of the day's sport.

The chase

is

over,

and

the huntsmen are invited to repose, conjuring up

visions of

attendant houris clothed in gorgeous raiment.

Such might

have been the intention of the artist in delineating the forms and features of six Asiatic ladies with bejewelled arms and necks, quaintly attired, and with an extravagance of head-dress According to that would puzzle a coiffeur of our own times. pictorial Tissot, these indescribable have been M. females may remarkable This representations of Numidian female divinities. series of mosaics gives some insight into Roman life and customs in North Africa at the close of the fourth century, and bears striking testimony to the peaceful condition of the country in the declining years of the Empire. Sixteen centuries have passed since Pompeianus presided over this lordly retreat, as a patron of the turf and a lover of sport in all its aspects. A few years after his decease the disturbing influence of the invading Vandals must have rendered the maintenance of such an establishment an absolute impossibility, and one can picture

Africa under the later Emperors


the lifework of this distinguished

295

Roman

neglected, abandoned,
for

and

finally

becoming a mere hunting-ground

Vandal or

Byzantine,

Arab

or Moor.

Honorius takes rank as a long-ruling Emperor, sharing the Augustus and Constantine. For the last fourteen years of his reign he was associated with the youthful son of his brother Arcadius, bearing the name of Theodosius II. Their joint rule was not marked by any disturbing events in North Africa, except the slight rising already referred to, and consequently the inscriptions bearing their names are mostly of a complimentary character. At Kalama, for instance, a dedication commences with the customary phraseology, Beatissimis temporibus doniinormn nostroruni Honori et Theodosi semper et ubique vincentimn^ and at Bisica the wording of an inscription bears testimony to a sense of tranquillity and contentment
distinction with

during their reign.^

POLLENTES IN FINE IMPERIO D-D N-N HONORI ET THEODOSI PPS IMP AVG ADMINISTRANTE FELICE INNODIO VC AMP PROC PAVSICVM FIRMO VC LEG SVO PERMI HILARIO VA SUA VETVSTAS CVM SIRA

perpetuorum

Pollente sine fine imperio dominoruTu nostroriun Honori et Theodosi semper imperatorum Augustorum administrante feliciter
clarissimo,

Innodio, viro

amplissi7no proconsule provincice

Apricce vice

sacra judicante

cum Firmo

viro clarissimo legato

siio

permittente Hilario

vices agente prcztorio Africce

.... cum

straturis.

Theodosius
aifairs,

II.,

as the successor of his father,

who

ruled over

the Eastern provinces of the Empire, took no part in African

be credited with the postponement of This was effected by When the former failed and the latter bribes and promises. had no prospect of fulfilment, Theodosius was powerless. The invaders crossed the Straits, crept along the southern shores of the Mediterranean, and before twelve years had passed by, Genseric their king was firmly established on the throne at Carthage. With Valentinian III., son-in-law of Theodosius, the
although he
the invasion of the country by Vandals.

may

family of Theodosius
'

came
la

to an end,

and with the


The

fall

of the

C.I.L. No. 5341.

De

Mare, Explor.
is

tab. i8i.

C.I.L. No. 1358.


is

This inscription
Vide Davis,

not very legible.

interpretation

given

by Wilmanns.

Ruined

Cities in Africa, p. 388.

296
dynasty the Empire
career of this last of

Roman
fell too.

Africa

North Africa has no record of the


princes, although his

Roman

name appears

on two imperfect inscriptions in the form of dedications to the joint Emperors. Inscriptions terminate also, bringing to a close the series of historic memorials which had .continued uninterruptedly to mark the development and success of the colony of North Africa during a period of nearly 600 years. A century
life begin to appear again in somewhat consecutive form. In the interval the Vandals have been swept away, leaving behind them nothing but marks of ruin and destruction. Petty kings, or rather chiefs of the more powerful native tribes, aided by bands of mercenary adventurers, have established themselves in the mountain strongholds, much in the same way as the Kabyles of our own day have acquired a semblance of authority over large tracts of fertile country not easy of access. These little kings have left a record of their presence on several slabs that have been brought to light. The inscription given on page 281, relating to Masuna rex gentium Maurorum et Romanorum, may be cited as the most perfect, the date being A.D. 468. Any reference to later memorials is beyond the scope of this outline of Roman African history, but inscriptions commence once more in the renowned days of Justinian and Theodora (A.D. 534-565), when the Byzantine dynasty was asserting its supremacy,, and they terminate for ever under Constans II., who closed an uneventful career A.D. 668. The last of the imperial dedications in Africa appears on a large block of white marble, which served as a lintel to the entrance-door of a Christian basilica at Thamugas, and is of the reign of Heraclius II. or Constans II. The wording runs thus: In temporibus Constantini {i.e. Heraclii II. or Constantis II.) Imperatoris Bel

elapses before these faithful records of national

Gregorio patricio, Joannis, dux de Tigisi, offeret domum Dei Armcnus} Gregorius was the exarch or governor of Africa, whose remarkable career has been already referred to in the
description of Sufetula on page 124.
' C. I.L. No. 2389. Some doubt has been expressed as to the meaning of the word Bel. Wilmanns is of opinion that it is an abbreviation of Bellicio. Renier and others read the letters Fl. (Flavio), I.R.A. No. 15 18. Tigisis was on the slopes of the Aures mountains, not far from Lambaesis and Thamugas.

^1
"^\
'

q\
/
"
I

g ^
-^

n
E
J!

S
<

/>-

:rR i^

H ^ ^ E O S

<.

^#>rx

a:(P
X>

297

CONCLUSION
No
country ever occupied by the

Romans

possesses,

at

the

commencement of this monumental remains or North Africa. They are


progress of a
ci\ilising

twentieth century,
there to
their

more remarkable
tale of national

a greater wealth of inscriptions than


tell

own

Emperors good and bad, of munificent citizens, of scholars eminent in philosophy and skilled in rhetoric, of men and women in all ranks of life obedient to the laws, loyal to their rulers, and leaving behind them a
people, of

pleasant
stone.

memory

to

If the popularity of

be faithfully recorded on imperishable any one of the Emperors can be


in his honour,

tested

by the number of dedications


list

some two or
;

three will head the


others,

without fear of contradiction

while of

who were

raised to the throne at the will of the legions

and passed rapidly across the stage as mere adventurers, it will be seen that inscriptions are but few, and in some cases their very names have been erased by an aggrieved or dissatisfied
populace.

The

difficulties

which beset the Romans

in their career

of

conquest, at the close of the second Punic war, arose in a great

measure from the general configuration of the country, which seemed fatal also to the native races in their attempts to expel

The three zones of country, separated by high mountains, never impassable, but presenting natural difficulties in the transport of large bodies of disciplined troops, may be
the invader.
said to represent three distinct regions.

broad stretch of sea


rations,

and

the mare scEvum which, so many geneinsuperable barrier to Roman advancement, proved an on the south the sea of sand the mysterious desert
for

On

the north was the

stretching

across

the

Equator, and

unfit

for

habitation

by

298
European

Roman

Africa

may

races.' To these peculiar features of North Africa be attributed the partial success which attended the rising
all

of frontier and desert tribes at


pation, fully sufficient

periods of the

Roman

occu-

to

account for

difficulties

experienced

by the Roman
revolts.

legions in suppressing a long series of tribal

Till the

time of Trajan, colonisation by the Latin race


to the

was confined mostly


ginians
or

towns already peopled by CarthaPhoenician traders.

the descendants of old

The

accession of this princely ruler marks a starting-point in the


history of

Roman

Africa.

Under

the twelve Csesars progress

had been checked by the almost insuperable difficulties attending the invasion of an unknown country, peopled by races whose habits of life and methods of warfare had nothing in common with the more advanced civilisation of the people of Trajan seems Italy, and the islands under Roman domination. His noble bearing and to have been born at the right time.
distinguished generalship, coupled with administrative abilities

of a high order, roused the enthusiasm of his subjects to a

degree unknown since the days of Augustus. The African provinces reaped a full share of benefits from the career of such a
ruler.

Colonisation was attended with


at the

marked

success.

Cities

and towns sprang up

Emperor's bidding. Native tribesmen found themselves unmolested, their forms of religion and habits of life undisturbed, and encouragement given to a free interchange of commercial products. Under the Antonines the good work still progressed, was checked for a time under the rule of the worthless Com modus, and reached its climax in the Inscriptions innumerable strong hands of Septimius Severus. bear ample testimony to the condition of the African population at this period, and monumental remains, which still greet the traveller in some of the less trodden parts of this fair land, bear ample evidence of the presence of large communities
'

It

is

nearly twenty-five years since Captain Roudaire published his report on

the Chotts or lakes forming a large portion of the southern boundary of North Africa.

(Etude
to

relative

au Projet de Mer Intirieure,

Paris, 1877.)

show

that the Palus Tritonitis of the ancients, into

His investigations seemed which Ulysses sailed, is the

stretch of water separating

the Oasis of Gabes,

marked Palus

Djerba from the mainland, rather than the inner lake behind Tritonitis on every map and chart, both ancient

and modern, and that in prehistoric times all these chotts were united and formed of Also Sir R. L. Vide G. Boissiere, p. 25 et seq. themselves an inland sea. (
Playfair, Travels, p. 271.)

Conclusion
enjoying the
polis of the
full benefits
;

299
Carthage, the metro-

of civilised

life.

East

Caesarea, the enlightened capital of the


;

West

Hadrumetum,
beautiful city

the flourishing city of the Byzacene


hills
;

Saldae, the

on the

Syrtes, took high rank

among
;

and Leptis, on the shores of the Great the commercial ports on the

borders of the Mediterranean.


capital of old

And

in

the interior, Cirta, the

Numidia

Sitins, the

seat of
;

commerce

at the
its

crossing of the great

Roman highways
;

Lambaesis, with

vast

military papulation, presenting scenes of activity in times of

Thamugas, the city of delight, and to make their last resting-place when life's work was over Calama, Uthina, Thugga, Sufes, and Sufetula each and all compared favourably with similar cities and towns in Italy, Spain, and Gaul, and have left equally enduring marks of a long career of wealth and prosperity.
peace or frontier disturbances

where

Roman

citizens loved to congregate

If

we

turn to inscriptions relating to municipal

life,

we
in

find

that obedience to ruling authority and loyalty to the

Emperor are

seldom wanting.
till

The

discipline

which was maintained

Rome

the

fall

of the Western Empire was equally potent in the

We find the same degrees of magistracy, the same laws so adjusted as not to press too heavily on the old-world
provinces.

same gods and ranks of priesthood, and the same public-minded spirit which prompted Roman citizens in all parts of the Empire to ennoble the country of their adoption by works of munificence or general utility. And memorials of men and women in every walk of life are with us
traditions of native races, the
also, bearing unmistakable testimony to the existence of contented and well-ordered communities. The expressions may

seem to us exaggerated in these prosaic times, but any one accustomed to read the well-known lettering will not fail to note that the ties of family and friendship were rarely forgotten, and that the employment of superlative expressions of endearment and regret was but the utterance of the heart in the hour of grief or bereavement.
often

who

is

ascertain,

it may be desirable to on the basis of monumental remains and inscriptions, whether the achievements of Roman citizens in these African

In this closing stage of our inquiry

provinces, either in literature or art in their various branches,

may be

classed as of African growth,

and how

far the

sub-

300

Roman

Africa

jugation of the country may, at any period of the occupation, be said to have been complete.'

Roman

In previous chapters allusion has been made to Carthage and Cirta as the great centres of scholarship, proving as attractive to students in literature and philosophy as the university towns of our own day in Great Britain or other European countries. A long roll of names, mostly bearing the stamp of Italian origin, has been transmitted to us by various contem-

porary writers.

Some

of these distinguished African scholars

were descendants of

settlers in the early

days of colonisation,
;

and may fairly lay claim to be classed as Africans while others were of a rambling order, passing from Athens or Corinth, Alexandria or Rome, to take part in some educational movement, or to exhibit their skill in some school of rhetoric or
philosophy.

The

intimate commercial relations between Carthaginians


prior to
in

and Greeks,

the

Roman

occupation, tended to the


;

spread of Hellenism

the coast towns of North Africa

while

the establishment of Greek merchants in the chief cities of Numidia gave an impetus to the general use of Greek among

the better educated classes.


islands

Micipsa, the Numidian, favoured

the intercourse with Greeks, and induced merchants from the

dominions.

of the Mediterranean to settle permanently in his Juba II., again, gave exceptional encouragement to
reign,

the literature and arts of Greece, and, in the course of his long

and prosperous

made

Caesarea, his capital, a

centre of culture and refinement.

At

still

later period,

renowned under

the Antonines, Greek was the accepted language of the coast towns.

Latin had
Aurelius

largely prevailed

From

made little progress, and the Punic tongue among the peasantry and labouring classes. Victor we learn that the Emperor Septimius
Punic and Greek.
in the Desert.

Severus, a native of Leptis, spoke


'

He

The Romans

certainly occupied

some of the oases


parallel as

At

G^ryville

El-Aghuoat, are traces of Roman occupation ; also at Besseriani (ad Majores), not far from Chott Molghigh, where (Duniy, Histqire des Romains, a stone bearing the name of Trajan was found.
in south-western Algeria,

the

same

vol. V. p. 478.)

Paulinus Suetonius, familiar to us as


Vitellius, crossed

Roman

governor of Britain in the time of

in south-east
fasc. 3

Mount Atlas with an army and encamped near the desert-river Ger Morocco. The name of Ger is still preserved. Eph. Epigr. vol. v.
No. 1043.)

and

4,

Conclusion

301

expressed himself easily in the latter, but his knowledge of Latin was slight. This spread of Hellenism continued till about
the middle of the third century, absolute necessity

when Roman

colonisation

had

so far advanced as to render the use of the Latin tongue an

and in the age of St. Augustine the use of Greek must have been exceptional, the language awaiting a revival under the Byzantine Emperors after a lapse of 150
;

years.

It

is

reasonable, therefore, to
this

find

the literature of

North Africa bearing


authors of the
first

stamp of Hellenism, and the chief

three centuries of the Christian era trans-

mitting their thoughts in Greek characters.

Apuleius of
of thought,

Madaura, Fronto

Carthage, representing different

King Juba II., and Tertullian of periods and different schools


of
Cirta,
list

may

be selected from the long

of African writers

who

preferred to express themselves in Greek rather than in

And at a later period we find such eminent authors as Lactantius and Julius Africanus writing their compositions also in Greek, at a time when Latin had asserted itself as the general
Latin.

language

in every provincial town.

But

in the great

teaching

Hadrumetum, Cirta, and Leptis, which were largely frequented by students of African origin, the arts of writing and declamation were taught in Latin and Punic as The result was the well as in Greek, Punic largely prevailing.^
centres at Carthage,

formation of a literary style of heterogeneous kind, with Greek as a basis, a large admixture of Punic and Libyan expressions,

and the

free use of Latin

words and idioms transported from

the other side of the Mediterranean. But the Greek was not the Greek of ^schylus or Sophocles, nor was the Latin the

language spoken by Virgil or Horace. In a word, it was essentially of African growth, and, to use the words of an eminent modern writer, it possessed an originality that was remarkable. Perhaps the writings of Apuleius are more familiar to us, even in their translated form, than those of any other
African author, and if they have aroused a larger share of critical enthusiasm than has fallen to the lot of any other literary genius of that time, it is due to the versatile talents which made Apuleius pre-eminent among Africans. Whether as romancer, philosopher, orator, writer, or dreamer, Apuleius stands alone, and, as the author of T/te Golden Ass, will always
>

Vide

J.

Toutain, p. 168; also G. Boissier, Le Journal des Savants, Jan. iSgj.

302

Roman

Africa

take rank as one of the fathers of romance. Among other African writers who assisted in creating an African literature,
Apollinaris of Carthage, the learned grammarian of world-wide

reputation

Fronto of

Cirta, skilled

in

rhetoric

and debate
;

Aulus

Gellius, the

renowned author of Noctes

Atticce; Severus

Emperor Septimius Florus, the poet and rhetorician, and Aurelius Victor, the historian stand out conspicuously in the ranks of Roman literature. Maof Leptis, the grandfather of the
crobius also, a contemporary of St. Augustine, and Capella, a poet and romancer and a native of Madaura, merit a place in

Mention should also be made the records of African literature. of Terentianus, the Moor, whose works in prose and verse are still extant, and his rival compatriot Juba, whose work on the
metric art established a high reputation among authors at the beginning of the third century.' The stamp of originality impressed upon so many literary creations in North Africa is conspicuous by its absence in all
that relates to the artistic products of the country.
painting, sculpture, architecture, nor
arts

Neither in

any branch of the decorative there any indications of the influence exercised by are
life,

climate, habits of

or national sentiment.

Religion in

its

many

aspects, with a long array of deities attached to Various

forms of almost forgotten creeds, and legendary history, with its many links of association with the primitive inhabitants of the world, failed to arouse the imaginative faculty. The ideal
played no part in the arts of Africa. Monumental remains fragments of sculpture are numerous enough, but the art and

was not of

Africa.
life

There

is

nothing to remind us of the

soil

There is nothing, in fact, of African growth and, to quote the words of an intelligent writer on this subject,^ there is abundant proof of sterility of
or the daily

of an ancient people.

imagination

the artistic products of a great testimony of this assertion, the Punic sculptors failed to originate anything in human form to represent their conception of their most ancient divinities.
in all that relates to

and prosperous people.

In

'

When
'

the Latin

name
B.

of Baal, and

name of Saturn was substituted for the Punic when the custom of modelling human reprede

Ten Ymv^, Juba Maurusii


Toutain,
p.

Re Metrica

Reliquia.

Utrecht, 1854.

Also

Paul Monceaux, Les Africains,


-

p. 390.
p. 97.

J.

113

also

Melanges de PEcole Francaise de Rome, 1892,

Conclusion
sentations of deities

303

became recognised in the country, it was Graeco-Roman art which suppHed the ideas. But the Cronos of Greece and the Saturn of Italy had few attributes in common with the Phoenician Baal. The first two were symbolised by the scythe and the serpent, and the last by the crescent and the
disc.

Instead of conceiving a

new

type, such as Alexandrian

art

had produced in its representations of Zeus-Ammon, of Serapis and Isis, African art was content with adding to the bust of Saturn figures of Helios and Selene, personifying the Sun and Moon. In their language the deity was spoken of as one, though in their art it was triune.' The reason for this
absence of
artistic

proclivities

is

not far to seek.


but
artistic.

which preceded the

Roman was anything

The race The fine

arts never flourished at Carthage,

either on the site of the city itself or of the

and certainly every exploration, numerous emporia on

As a tributary of Egypt for a long period the Carthaginians, in spite of their wealth and power, were satisfied with borrowing from their master the skilled prothe coast, favours this statement.

ducts of a neighbouring country.

And

in

later years,

when

Carthage had to contend with Greeks in the fair island of Sicily, resplendent with temples and palaces, embellished with sculpture of Ihe best period of Greek art, and rich in works of jewellery and specimens of the plastic art, Hellenism exercised an irresistible attraction, testified in a measure by Carthaginian coins which have been transmitted to us almost as perfect as on the day when they were minted. These two consecutive influences, Egyptian and Greek, have left their mark on the numerous remains which may still be studied in the galleries of the Louvre or in the museum on Carthage hill, where decorative forms associated with Egyptian and Hellenic art may be seen side by side It is reasonable to assume that Punic Carthage, at the time of the second Punic war, presented to the Romans an aspect somewhat similar to that of other towns bordering on the Mediterranean colonised by Greeks, and that the temples and public
buildings which adorned the streets of the great metropolis were

the works of Greek artists encouraged to settle in this prosperous The appearance of other towns on the corner of North Africa.
coast, peopled

by Carthaginians and Greeks and


is

the descendants

of old Phoenician trading families,


conjecture.

also a matter of pleasant

Nor can any

reliable opinion

be formed of the

304

Roman

Africa

appearance of the walled city of Carthage of Roman times, although there is abundant evidence to prove that, at the close of the second century, Carthage was second only to Rome and Alexandria in its external display of wealth and magnificence. Fortunately we can speak with absolute certainty of the condi-

and grandeur of many of the chief towns already mentioned and can compare their public edifices and adornments with those of other countries peopled by Romans. But originality is wanting. Graeco-Roman art, rooted in the golden days of the Republic and in full flower in the active reign of Augustus, became the servant of the Roman in every country of North Africa presented no exception to this order his adoption. of things. Moulded to his own ends and infused with the dominating spirit which characterised his race, the arts of Rome were transplanted to the most distant provinces of the Empire, bearing the same impress of change, progress, and decline as in
tion
in these pages,

whether in sculpforms of mosaic, or in architectural design, the same monumental remains await our coming, the basilica, the amphitheatre, the triumphal arch the aqueduct and the fountain the bridge, the temple, and the tomb.
the metropolis itself
In every branch of
art,

ture, painting as displayed in the decorative

They

stand before us as examples of dignity of conception,


line,

unerringness of

justness of proportion, fitness of purpose,

and soundness of construction. Purity of style is too often wanting. But as memorials of a great people they bear the impress of that strength of character and unswerving purpose which made the Roman name so conspicuous among nations It may be said of the of earlier as well as later times. triumphal arch, the glory of the Empire, symbol of power and progress, that it is a mere monument of the past, for triumphing Czesar with his spoil-laden legions needs it no longer of the great Therm(2, which in the later Empire became part of the
;

national

life,

the club and the caf6 for

all

classes of citizens, that

their value departed with the people

who

originated

them

of

the aqueduct, that

its

stately aspect has for ever given place to

more prosaic forms. The Basilica has been superseded by the Mart, the Exchange, the Court of Justice. Even the colonnade and the portico, which the Roman made his own, and which
are
still

amongst the beautiful of

architectural forms, have

had

their day, though, let

us hope, to return again in the cycle of

Conclusion

305

recurrent change. Granted that the fashion of all these things has passed away, we must admit that the spirit which prompted them is with us still. The growth of nations, the revolutions in
life during a period of wellnigh fifteen cenhave failed to dim the Roman name, or to break the spell of his compelling genius. His laws, his language, his literature, his festivals, even his calendar, keep their ground. And in architectural forms do not the Christian cathedrals, or even the simple village church with its nave and aisles, its arcaded lines and its apsidal choir, remind us daily of their Roman prototype,

public and social

turies,

the basilica of the Caesars


steps towards

The

student goes forth to realise

the dream of his youth, the world of antiquity.

He

bends his

Rome, not

the

Rome

of the Pope, but the


the spirit of the

Rome

of imperial Caesar, for therein

lies

Roman.

The

antiquary, in these far-off isles of Britain, unearths and


pottery,

brings to light a pavement of mosaic, a stretch of wall, a frag-

ment of
land
is

and the

interest of a

county

is

in a blaze

kindled by the
wayside.

spirit of the

Roman,

The

traveller in a distant

attracted

by some
its

chiselled stone lying neglected

by the

He marks

familiar letters, and, forgetful of aught


;

else, strives to

decipher the time-worn sentences

for

on him

likewise the genius of


all

Rome

has laid a

spell.

that the

Roman

originated, or adapted to

The vital force in his own ends, has

mankind. from the latest Latin authors, or It Arab writers, whether the boundaries of and Byzantine from Roman administration were definitely fixed, and whether the subjugation of the country was ever regarded as complete.

no

parallel in the history of


is

difficult to ascertain

Fortunately, archaeology comes to our aid, and, as the useful handmaid of history, elucidates many points arising out of these
questions.

The remains

of a clearly defined line of fortresses

and
Tell,

military posts stretching across the mountain ranges of the

and along the desert frontier from Cyrene to the confines of Western Mauritania, bear ample testimony to the nature of the defensive measures adopted by the Romans against invasion from the west and south, and to a feeling of insecurity in the
presence of native races so little desirous of cultivating more Till the close of the Empire these frontier civilised ways of life. strongholds were mostly occupied by veterans, whose services to
the State in times of raid or insurrection are recorded in several

*x

3o6
inscriptions
still

Roman
extant.

Africa

the time of their first encounter country or the rude warriors from the Desert, the Romans must have recognised the almost insuperable difficulties in waging irregular warfare with un-

From

with the Berbers of the

hill

organised tribes, having no seat of government and no settled habitations here to-day and gone to-morrow, the hillsman
secure in

some

inaccessible

mountain

retreat, the

man

of the

Desert lost to sight in a whirlwind of sand as he scampered This sense of insecurity seems to across his trackless domain. have been never absent from the Roman mind, and was particularly apparent at a late period of the Empire, when Diocletian attached the province of Mauritania Tingitana to the diocese of Spain, as a means of checking the piratical raids of Moorish

corsairs

on both shores of the Mediterranean.

It

was

also

indicated

by

the unusual authority given to the

commander

his orders direct from the

of the legion in Africa, who, from the time of Caligula, received Emperor, and exercised more power

than the governor of the province.

Exceptional circumstances
defensive

demanded exceptional forms of government, and the

measures found necessary for the protection of large communities enjoying all the privileges of civilised life redound to the credit of the Roman world yet, looking back at the six centuries of work accomplished by the Romans in their attempt to make North Africa a prolongation of Italy, one is forced to admit
;

that the subjugation of the country

was never complete, and

that the native races were never conquered.

and the general aspect of the country occupation were much as they are in our own time, except, perhaps, on the southern frontiers overlooking the great Desert. But with the development of Roman civilisation a new order of things changed the face of the land. Recognising the value of natural resources, and bending the elements to his indomitable will in the service of mankind, the
climatic condition
in the early

The

days of

Roman

Roman colonist
reservoirs to

controlled the watercourses, constructed gigantic


necessities of a thirsty soil,

encouraged forestry, and converted a region of desolation into a garden of cultivation. And this is amply borne out in the statements of

meet the

Arab authors of the seventh

century,

who

are profuse in their

praise of the fair land which had fallen into their hands.

From

Carthage to Tangier, stretching a thousand miles from east to

Conclusion
west, the

307

whole country was clothed with timber, and in many woods were so dense that you could travel from village to village under a roof of foliage.' It may be asserted, with an equal show of truth, that the condition of North Africa as a colony in the present day, and in
parts of the south olive

recognition of the enlightened policy df. the French, as masters of the larger portion, bears a strong resertiblance to that which prevailed under the broad but sterner rule of the Roman
full

Emperors.

We

the frontiers, the

same

difficulties

hear of the same occasional disturbances on same forced submission of the hill tribes, the in guarding the outposts from the dangers of
racial

tribal revolt,

and the same

antagonism to the methods and


place to the Phcenician

habits of civilisation.

The Libyan gave

as a commercial necessity, and surrendered

the

command

of

the coast without appeal to arms or the sacrifice of human life. The Carthaginian, in his turn, converted the factories and store-

houses of his ancestors into temples and palaces, and a country of traders became the most formidable nation of the old world. The achievements of the Romans are a landmark in the history Then came the of mankind, and can never be ignored. destructive Vandals, followed by the hybrid Byzantines, and
final expulsion by Arabs the history of antiquity may be said to have come to a close. To-day is but the yesterday The Arab has replaced the of sixteen hundred years ago. (as M. Paul Monceaux has observed),^ and the Phoenician Frenchman has replaced the Roman. But that is all.' The the ancient Berbers of the Desert or the mounprimitive races

with their

'

'

'

tain ranges, are

still in

possession, preserving their old traditions

of tribal and social


'

life,

and speaking almost the same tongue


now forming
the southern portion of Tunisia,

The

region

known

as Byzacena,

was covered with olive woods. The prosperity of the country was largely due to the enormous quantity of oil shipped to Italy and other countries. As an instance of the value of this product it is stated that when Sufetula, under the rule of Gregorius, was captured by Arabs, the general commanding the victorious army was amazed at the Whence comes this enormous amount of treasure that had fallen into his hands. Looking about him as though in search of some hidden object, wealth?' he asked. a citizen picked up an olive and, laying it before the general, told him that this little fruit was the cause of all their prosperity, adding that the Byzantines, who had no
'

olives in their country,

des Berbires,

transl.

were their best customers. ( Vide Ibn Abd el Hakem, Histoire by De Slane, i. p. 306 ; also Paul Bourde, Les Cultures
p. 3.

Frutiiires, T^anis, 1893.)

Paul Monceaux, Les Africains,

APPENDICES
APPENDIX
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
I

USUALLY FOUND IN ROMAN

INSCRIPTIONS AND NOTICED ON MEMORIAL STONES IN NORTH AFRICA.


A. C. armorutn custos. A. P. anno provincicB. A. P. C. ager publicus Cirtensium.
B. B. bonis bene.
B. B.

E. V. egregius vir.
F. C.
fieri curavit
;

faciendum
filia dulcis-

curavit.
F.

D.

filio dulcissimo
;

M. M.

bonis bene, malis male.

simcB

fecit dedicavit.

B. B.

M. M.

bene merenti.
P. boncB

F. K. f. filio carissimo fecit.


F. P. D.

memoria picella.

M. V

filius patri dulcissimo


;

B. M.' V. boncE jnemorice vir. B. Q. bene quiescat.


C. A.

matri piissimce
de meo posuit.

filiies

parentibus

curam

agente.

G. P. R.

F. genio populi

Romani

C. F. F. carissimce filia; fecit.

feliciter.

C. C.

J.

C. Colonia Julia Carthago.


clarissimcB memorice vir.

M. V.

C. S. F. P.

N. C. consularis sexfascalis
;

provincice Numidice Constantino;.

D. depositus

dedit

designatus

domo ;

duplarius.

D. D. decreto decurionum ; dedit dedicavit ; donicm dedit. D. D. P. P. decreto decurionum pecunia publica. D. M. E. devotus majestatigue ejus. D. M. S. Diis manibus sacrum. D. N. dominus noster. D. N. M. Q. E. devotus numini m,ajestatique ejus.

Q. B. hie quiescat bene. I. O. M. Jovi Optimo maximo. L. A. P. libens animo posuit. L. D. D. D. loco dato decurionum.
decreto.

H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H.

B.

homo

bonus.

E. hie

est.

E. B. Q. hie est bene quiescat. E. F. hares ejus fecit. E. S. hie est situs.

M. F. honesta memoria femina. M. M. honesta missione missus.


O. B. Q. hie ossa bene quiescant.
P.

hares posuit.

L. L. V.
L. P.

S,

latus libens vottem solvit.


P.

D. D.

S. F. S. P.

de suo fecit.
de suo posuit.

P.

loco

publico pecunia

publica.

E. O. B. Q. ei ossa bene quiescant.

M.

B. malis bene.

310
M. D. M.
Idaa.
I.

Roman
Maier deum vtagna

Africa
S. C. F. C.

senatus consulto facien-

dum
SEX.

curaverunt.

M. F. memoriam fecit. M. K. mater castrorum. M. L. miles legionis. M. V. P. P. maritus iixori piissimce posiiit ; uxori pia posuit. N. M. Q. E. D. nwnini majestatique
ejus dicatissimus.

F. P. N. sexfascalis provincice Numidice. S. P. sua pecunia ; sumptu propria ;

sumptu publico.
S. P.

D. D. D. sua pecunia dono dedit


F. C. suci

dedicavit.
S. P.

pecunia faciendum.

O. B. Q. T. OSS a bene quiescant P. A. provincia Africa.

tibi.

curavit.
S. S.

PA.
P.

ET MA. pater et mater.

sumptu suo ; suis sumptibus supra scripta.

P. 'H. presses noster; Numidice.

S. T. L. sit terra levis. S. T. T. Lj sit tibi terra levis.

D. D. P. P. posuerunt decreto decurionum pecunia publica.

S.V.se

vivo.

pater filio carissimo fecit. P. N. C. presses Numidice ConstantincE.

P. F. K. F.

T. F. I. testamento fieri jussit. V. A. vixit annis. V. C. vir clarissimus.

P. P.
P.

primus pilus. P.M. S. presses provincice Mauri-

V. E. vir egregius. V. H. vir honestus. V. L. A. S. votum libens animo solvit. V. O. vir optimus. V. P. vir perfecfissimus ; votum
posuit.

tanice Sitifensis, P. P. '^ . prceses provincia Numidice.

P. P. P. S.

parentes pa posuerunt.
'^.

D.

pro

salute domini nostri.

Q. QucEstor.

Q. M. C. qui militare cceperunt. Q. Q, quinquennalis. Q. R. Q. T. I. T. E. Q. N. A. LE. fecit. The concluding lines of a dedication to a virgo sancta, age 1 8, found near Hydra. The meaning of these initial letters has not yet been ascertained.
S.

V. P. A. vixit piis annis. V. P. A. V. P. vir perfectissimus

agens vicem prcesidis. V. P. F. uxor piissima fecit. V. P. P. P. N. vir perfectissimus

prases provincia Numidice.


V. V.
S. S.
I.

vice sacra judicans.


solvit libens

F. votum animo feliciter.


L. A.

A.

S.

Saiumo augusto

sacrum.

V. V. V. vale, vale, vale.

3"

APPENDIX
LIST

II

OF THE PRINCIPAL KNOWN TOWNS IN THE AFRICAN PROVINCES OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, OR THE SITES OF OTHERS WHICH HAVE BEEN IDEN TIFIED BY INSCRIPTIONS.
Provincia

312
Roman Name

Roman

Africa

Appendix
Roman Name

II

314
Roman Name

Roman

Africa

Appendix
Roman Name

II

315

3i6

Roman

Africa

APPENDIX

III

CHE.ONOLOGY OF THE PRINCIPAL EVENTS IN NORTH AFRICA DURING THE ROMAN OCCUPATION, AND, SUBSEQUENTLY, TILL THE INVASION ^ OF THE OM'^^V'-", ^.e* 9.t;.f,r, o< COUNTRY BY ARABS.
Battle of

Zama and

defeat of Hannibal

by

P. Cornelius Scipio
B.C.

Africanus

202
148

Extraordinary career of Masinissa, the greatest of Numidian kings, commencing B.C. 212, and terminating Commencement of the third Punic War and the siege of Carthage estruction of Carthage by the Romans under P. Cornelius Scipio

.....

B.C. B.C.

149 146

^milianus
Caius Gracchus sent from Italy 6,000 persons to colonise North Africa and to found the city of Junonia on the site of Punic Carthage Rise of Jugurtha, grandson of Masinissa, his seizure of the kingdom of Numidia, and commencement of the Jugurthine War Defeat of Jugurtha by C. Marius and close of the war Death of Jugurtha and subsequent division of the kingdom of
. . .
. .

B.C.

B.C.

122

B.C. B.C.

1 1

106

Numidia Kingdom of Cyrene bequeathed

B.C.

104

to the

Romans by Ptolemy Apion


. . .

B.C.

Export of Numidian marbles to Rome first recorded Rivalries of Julius Csesar and Pompey brought into the

97 B.C. 78

field

Juba

I.,

t>

King of Numidia and great-grandson of Masinissa, who embraced the cause of Pompey in Africa, about Julius Caesar landed in Africa to subdue the Pompeian faction and fought a decisive battle at Thapsus, when the armies of Metellus Scipio, Cato, and Juba were defeated North Africa from the borders of Egypt to the Atlantic Ocean "^ -became-subject to the3dll-of.Rome Sallust, the historian, appointed Roman governor of Numidia Juba II., son of Juba I., made subservient King of Mauritania by the order of Augustus Commencement of the rebuilding of Carthage by the order of Augustus, who sent out 3,000 colonists to assist the natives
.

....
. .

B.C.

50

B.C.

46 46
45

B.C. B.C.

B.C. 25

in their

work
.

B.C. 19

/
[

Rise of Tacfarinas, the Numidian, who wages destructive war a.d. 17 . against the Romans, which continues for seven years.

Appendix III
Death of Tacfarinas,
native tribes
close of the rebellion,

317

and submission of

Mauritania

made a Roman
II.,

province by Caligula

son of Juba I., closes the line of recognised native kings of Mauritania Galba, afterwards Emperor, proconsul of Africa Vitellius, afterwards Emperor, proconsul of Africa Vespasian established the third legion Augusta at Theveste
. .

Death of Juba

Nerva established a colony of veterans


Foundation of the
Insurrection of
city of

at Sitifis

.... .... .... ....


. . . .

a.d. 24
a.d. 37 a.d.

40

a.d. 46

a.d. 49 a.d. 72 a.d. 97


a.d. 100

Thamugas under

Trajan,

and great
a.d. 117

spread of colonisation in North Africa Moors under Q. Lusius Quietus suppressed Hadrian's first visit to the African provinces, and supposed date of the commencement of the aqueduct of Carthage . Alleged second visit to Africa Permanent establishment of the third legion Augusta at Lambsesis

a.d. 122
a.d. 125

Moors invade Numidia, but are suppressed Spread of education in Africa, and rise of Carthage,
other cities as great teaching centres

.....
Cirta,

A.D. 125 a.d. 138


A.D. 140

and

under whose rule of twenty-three years the provinces of Africa enjoyed great prosperity a.d. 161 a.d. 161-169 Joint rule of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus
Pius,
.

Death of Antoninus

Moors

cross the Straits of Gibraltar

and invade

Bastica
.

a.d. 170 a.d. 192

The

rule of

Commodus

uneventful in North Africa

a.d. 180-192
.

a.d. 200 Severus persecutes Christian communities in Africa and suffers Perpetua and others to be delivered to wild beasts in the A.D. 203 amphitheatre at Carthage Caracalla raises to the rank of citizens all free inhabitants of a.d. 216 the Empire The rise of Macrinus, a native of Africa, his assumption of the
.

Hadrumetum, proclaimed Emperor Septimius Severus, a native of Africa, bom at Leptis, subdues rivals and ascends the throne as sole Emperor Great prosperity in North Africa and spread of colonisation
Pertinax, a native of
.

....
-

all

a.d. 198

a.d. 217 purple, and his death the following year Heliogabalus, a great-grandson of Bassianus, high priest of the

Temple of

the

Sun

at

Emesa

in Syria,

proclaimed Augustus
a.d. 218

at the age of fourteen

Alexander Severus, a native of Phoenicia, born in the Temple a.d. 222 of Alexander the Great at Arka, proclaimed Emperor Maximinus, a Goth, with the assistance of Capellianus, Roman governor of Mauritania, assumes the purple and ravages A.D. 235 North Africa Popular rising against the tyranny of Maximinus, and proclama.

tion of Gordian as Csesar Imperator Death of Gordian I. and ofhis son Gordian II The great amphitheatre at Thysdrus probably commenced

A.D. 236
A.D. 238
.

a.d.

239

3i8
Gordian
III. quillity in Africa.

Roman

Africa

reigned successfully for six years and restored tranAssassinated by orders of Philip the Arab, who proclaimed himself Emperor a.d. 244 The thousandth anniversary of the foundation of Rome celebrated with great rejoicing throughout the Empire, and by the construction of many pubHc works in Africa A.D. 247 Philip the Arab murdered by his own soldiers A.D. 249
Persecution of Christians in Africa under Decius
.(Emilianus, a

....
.

A.D. 250

Moor, alleged to have been raised to the purple in the Isle of Djerba, and acknowledged Emperor by the Senate after the death of Decius Continued persecution under Valerianus and his son Gallienus The rising of the Quinquegentians, or Feud of the Five Peoples, causes great devastation in North Africa Successful campaign of the Emperor Probus against the Marmarides on the eastern borders of Roman Africa

a.d. 25 A.D. 256 A.D. 260

.....
. . .
. . ,

A.D. 280

Diocletian divides the


to

Maximianus

..........
Empire and
allots
.
. .

the African provinces


A.D. 284

Final suppression of the rebellion of the Quinquegentians a.d. 303 Abdication of Diocletian and temporary abdication of Maxi-

mianus A.D. 304 Rapid spread of Christianity throughout North Africa A.D. 305 Commencement of the Donatist schism, which was political as well
as religious, in the reign of Constantius

A.D 305
A.D. 323

The

city of

Thamugas, as

well as other large towns in Numidia,

suffered from the Donatist heresy Constantine the Great convoked the Council of Nicsa in Bithynia, when 318 bishops attended and condemned the doctrines of

the Donatists Constantine the Great laid the foundations of Constantinople Julianus, the Apostate, receives the submission of the African

A.D. 325
.

A.D. 330

provinces on the death of Constantius A.D. 361 Rebellion of Moors under Firmus, who was defeated by Theodosius, father

.....
....
,

Restoration of

of Theodosius the Great, about A.D. 370 many public buildings in North Africa in the reign
.

of Valentinian and Valens A.D. 364-375 Rapid spread of Christianity in Africa under Theodosius the Great,

who died A.D. 395 Rising of Gildon, a Moor and brother of Firmus, at that time mili. a.d. 397 tary governor of Africa in the reign of Honorius Defeat of Gildon by Stilicho, a Vandal captain a.d. 398 a.d. 395 St. Augustine created bishop of Hippo St. Augustine convenes a Council at Carthage, when 566 bishops

.... ......
.
. .

were present
Bonifacius appointed governor of Africa

a.d. 411

A.D. 422
till

The

African provinces enjoyed peace and prosperity

of Honorius

...
.
.

the death
a.d. 423 a.d. 429

Invasion of Africa by Vandals under Genseric

Appendix III

319

a.d. 431 Bontfacius defeated by the Vandals at Hippone Carthage taken by surprise by the army of Genseric and the Vandal a.d. 439 kingdom founded in North Africa Valentinian III. abandons to the Vandals the Proconsular Pro-

......
.... ....

....

and a portion of Numidia Vandals African Council convened by Himeric, king of the Vandals.
vince, Byzacena,

a.d. 442 a.d. 476

All

North Africa

in the possession of the

474
a.d. 484
a.d.

sees sent representatives.


Hilderic, the

The

bishops suffered terribly and

were deprived of all their possessions Vandal king, favours Christianity, recalls the bishops, and recognises Boniface as Primate of Africa Belisarius, the Byzantine general, lands at Capoudia (Caput Vadia), not far from Thysdrus, and defeats Gelimer and the Vandal army Solomon, his successor, chases the Vandals from Africa Destruction of Thamugas by Moors

....
.

524

a.d. 533
a.d. 534 A.D. 535 a.d. 539 a.d. 641 a.d.

Solomon constructs fortifications outside all the principal towns, but destroys the pubUc buildings of the Romans Heraclius I. proclaimed Emperor 610, died North Africa overrun by Arabs Gregorius, governor of Africa, resisted the Arabs, and was defeated
near Tripoli.
invaders
Sufetula, his capital,
fell

....

646

into the

hands of the

a.d. 647 a.d. 698 Destruction of Carthage by Hassan Queen Kahina, the Joan of Arc of Numidia, resists the Arabs, and a.d. 703 defeats them near Thamugas She entrenched her army in the amphitheatre at Thysdrus and

.......
.....

subsequently engaged Hassan in a decisive battle at the foot of a.d. 705 the Aurfes mountains, and was defeated All North Africa submits to the followers of Mahomet, and Islamism
is

firmly established

a.d. 750

A-

j:

V M
oJJinTT^hyixis

V
t
"RthuguLptus

jimjB Ihxnjvlhaljis
SxdLecbjjTv

^^~-'-'' !EjhunxLi

^J

X
JV

V
4^

r
f
\^
i?

NORTH AFRICA
ai,^e close of&e Third, Oeixtuiy;
SCAEE
Jfifes

^
Jjonffrrujyre, Greeru

50 so 30 20TD O

50

lOO
f^^dajKLLa

'W!iA3LJcilrastaQjajiiiteA.E4Bdnirgh.AI

&

Cb.-,Z,(yT\^jm\J^l^&^

^rrk> ^IBarnbat^.

X'

INDEX
/Emilianus, the Moor,
his short reign. Inscriptions relating to him, 239 iEsculapius, Temple of, at Lambsesis,

C/!ESAR, Julius, victory at Thapsus, 17 Capellianus, Roman governor of Mauritania,


incites

the

natives

to

revolt,

and its remains, 159 African legion first located at Theveste, 44 ; removed to LambjEsis, 162 Agathocles, the Sicilian, invades North
Africa, 3

223
Caracalla, his arch at Theveste, 47 ; his rule in Africa, 205 ; inscriptions relat-

Albinus, Clodius, memorial of, 198 Algerian onyx, its varieties and where found, 76 Amphitheatre at Thysdrus, its construction and arrangement, 231 ; its use as a fortress, 233 ; the principal ones

ing to him, 207 Carinus, Emperor, memorials of, 251 Carpitana, name of a town recorded in

an

inscription,

64

compared, 234 ApoUodorus, the architect, 62


of his disgrace, 119 Apuleius of Madaura,

the story career

132

his

and remarkable gifts, 1 34 ; notice of his principal works and account of his trial, 135-I39 Aquse Tibilitanae, a remarkable spring ;
legend relating to
struction,
1

Aqueduct of Carthage,
14
;

146 its con109 legend relating to it,


it,
;

Carthage, Punic, destroyed, 13 ; magnificence of Roman Carthage, 24 heights of buildings in the city, 24 ; the aqueduct, 109 ; its construction, 114 ; a great intellectual centre, 131 ; its renowned scholars, 141 Carthaginians store their rain-water, system adopted, no Carus, Emperor, memorials of, 251 Castella, described, in various parts of North Africa, 168 Castrum at Lambsesis described, 166 Christianity, rise of in Africa, 242
leaders of, 243
Cirta, capital

"5
in the time of Marcus Aurelius, 162 Assuras, monumental remains of, 203 Augustine, St., Bishop of Hippo, 245 Augustus, dedication to, at Mascula, 42 Emperor, memorial of as Aurelian, Restitutor Orbis, 248

seat of

Army, the Roman,

of Numidia, 8 ; made a government by Augustus, 26 tomb of the silversmith, 80 ; the birthplace of Pronto, 142
;

its

schools, 128

renamed by Constantine, 274


Cisterns,

Bagradas,

river, its pecuharities

legend

of Regulus and his army, 20 Bassianus, the founder of a dynasty, 207 ; his pedigree, 219 Bocchus, king of Mauritania, and his treacherous conduct, 15 Boundaries of Roman Africa difficult to
define,

Punic, at Carthage, 112; Roman and others in the country, Claudius, M. Aurelius, Emperor, his short reign, memorial of, 247 Cleopatra Selene, wife of Juba II. , 26 Colonise explained, 36 Colonisation of North Africa, first attempted by C. Gracchus, 33 Commagena, an auxiliary force raised in that country employed in Africa, 188 Commodus, Emperor, his worthless rule,

no

305

Bulla Regia, its remains, 71 Byzacene, the region so called, 58

187 ; his name erased, 189 Concrete construction explained, 22 ; its application, 114 Configuration of North Africa, a bar to complete occupation, 297

322

Roman

Africa
Gallienus, son of Valentinian, memorial
of,

Constans, son of Constantine the Great,


his rule in Africa, inscriptions relating to him, 274

241

Constantine the Great, he defeats Licinius and becomes sole emperor, 267 ;
inscriptions
relating to

him and

his

sons,

270-273

Gallus, Emperor, successor of Decius, inscriptions relating to, 239 Genseric, invasion of North Africa, 245 Geta, inscription relating to him, 204 Getulians, 5

Constantius Chlorus, Emperor, merits of, his rule influenced by his wife Helena, 261 Constantius, son of Constantine the Great, memorials of, 275 Cornelia, Salonina, wife of Gallienus, Emperor, memorial of, 241 Cothon, meaning of the word, 21 Crispina, wife of Commodus, memorial

proclaimed Emperor at Thyshis defeat by Capellianus and suicide, 223 Gordian II., his short career, 223 Gordian III., several memorials in his honour, 224-227 ; a promoter of art,

Gordian
drus,

I.

223

228
Gracchus, Caius, his attempts at colonisation unsuccessful, 14, 33 Gratianus, Emperor, inscriptions relating
to

Thamugas, 194 Cyrene, its foundation, 4 ; transferred the Romans by Ptolemy Apion, 18
of, at

to

him, 286

Gregorius, governor of Africa, 91 ; his defeat by the Arabs, 124 ; inscription


relating to him,

Decius, persecution of Christians in Africa, 237 ; inscriptions relating to him, 238 Dioceses explained, 258 Diocletian, his remarkable rise, 253 ; inscriptions relating to him, 259
persecution of Christians in Africa, 263 ; division of the Empire, 266 Domitius, L. Alexander, governor of Africa, proclaims himself Emperor,

Gyaris, island

of,

296 150

26;

Education, spread

of,

in Africa in the

second century, 128


Egrilianus, C. Cornelius, his munificence

his first visit to Africa, 105 ; second visit, inspection of the camp at Lambsesis, 107 Hadrumetum, an ancient port, 65 Helena, mother of Constantine the Great, memorial of, 262 Heliogabalu s, his contemptible reign, 211; inscription bearing his name, 212 Herennius and Hostilianus, sons of Decius, memorials of, 238 Hippo Diarrhytus, its rise as a colony peculiarity of its currents, 64

Hadrian,

48 El-Kahina, the Joan of Arc of North Africa, 233 Emesa in Syria and its Temple of the Sun, 213 Epitaphs of worthy men and women,
_

at Theveste,

Historians, the principal ancient authorities on North Africa, 103

Honorius, his weak rule, 289 ; memorials


of,

290

IcosiUM, the ancient Algiers, an inscription mentioning it, 42 Inscriptions, self-laudatory, 80, 82, 130; the last Roman one, 296

Faustina

the younger, memorials in her honour, 192 Fertility of the soil of North Africa attested by Pliny the Elder, 57 Firmus, a distinguished Moor, heads a against Valentinian and is revolt
defeated, 280 Fronto of Cirta, his
friendly
relations
;

JOL, afterwards Julia Csesarea, a Phoenician port, 26 Juba I., his sad end, 17

Juba
26 27
;

II., his

his patronage of literature

distinguished career, 25 ; and the arts, his existing sepulchre described,

with
career,

Marcus
145
;

Aureliu';,

143

his

memorial at

Kalama,

14s

Jugurtha, his remarkable career, 15 Julia Csesarea, capital of Juba II.,

its

monumental remains, 31

Galea, afterwards Emperor, proconsul


of Africa, 41

Julia Domna, fluence, 201

49 ; her extraordinary inmemorials in her honour, ;

202, 203

Index
Julia Msesa, her distinguished position,

323
;

208
Julia

her influence over her son, Alexander Severus, 217 Julianus, the Apostate, memorial of, 278
;

Mammsea, 208

Maxentius, son of Maximianus, raises the standard of revolt in Africa, 266 defeated by Constantine, 269 Maximianus, his joint rule with Diocletian, 257 inscriptions relating to him,
;

Kalama and

its

Khomair country and


Kleber near Oran, 76

remains, 146 its people, 70


its

marble quarries,

258 ; his abdication, 260 ; his reassumption of power, 266 Maximinus, his revolt and defeat, 220225 Maximus, an upholder of Paganism,
raises the standard of revolt in Africa and is defeated by Theodosius, 287 Medjerda, vagaries of the, 20 Medrassen, the tomb of Numidian kings, described, 30 Memmia, second wife of Septimius Severus, 218 Memorials of good women, 151; and of students, 130

at, 166 its arrangements, 167 ; inscriptions both military and civil, 172-181 Latifundia explained, 14 Legion, the third Augustan, its services, 165, 171 ; its temporary disgrace, 90 ; reconstituted, 165 Leptis Magna, its antiquity, 6 ; birthplace of Septimius Severus, 140 ; a place of renown, 198 Licinius, Emperor and supporter of Paganism, opposes Constantine the
;

LamB/ESIS, the camp

Meninx, island

of, its celebrity,

240

Milliaria, their origin,

68

the Milliarium

Great and is defeated, 267 Livia, wife of Augustus, dedication to, at

Aureum, 69 Milvian bridge, an inscription relating to it, 272 Monasteria, meaning of, 65 Municipia explained, 35

Zama, 42
Longevity, many examples of, 83 Lucius Domitius Alexander, governor of Africa, incites a revolt ; inscription relating to him, 265

Native

troops in the Roman army in Africa, 184 North Africa, division of, 32 ; configuration of the country, 38

Macrinus, the Moor, assumes the purple,


210
Mactar, ruins
of, 79 Madaura, the birthplace of Apuleius, 132 Magistrates, gifts and money payments on their election, 99 Magnentius, the usurper, a memorial of,

Numerianus, son of Carus, memorials 251

of,

Numidia contributes to the success of the Romans, 10 Numidian marble, when first used, its
transport, 75

CEa,
133

its

27S

Magnia Urbica, wife of the Emperor


Carinus, memorial of, 25 Marble quarries in North Africa, 72,
76, 77
75,

remains,

prosperity and monumental its associations with Apuleius,

Marcia Otacilia, wife of Philip the Arab, memorial of, 236 Marciana, wife of Septimius Severus, a memorial of, 200 Marcius Turbo, the general, his victory
over Lusius Quietus, 107 Mascula, a seat of Christianity, 88 Masinissa, his remarkable career and foundation of a powerful kingdom, 12 ; his supposed sepulchre, 29 Masuna, a Moorish king, memorial of, 281 Mauritania, its frontier undefined, 273 ; divisions of under Claudius, 32 and under Diocletian, 53
;

Onyx, Algerian, 76 Orbiana, wife of Alexander Severus, her banishment to Csesarea memorial of, 216 Ostia, its importance under the Empire, and present condition, 59
;

Paccia

Marciana, wife of Septimius Severus, memorial of, 200 Pertinax, Emperor, memorials relating
to him, 195
Philaeni,

legend of the, 6 Philsenorum Arse, site of, 5 Philip, the Arab, murders Gordian IIL, 235 his rule, inscription relating to him, 236
;

324
Pisi,

Roman
described, Caracalla, mentioned
fertility

Africa
Scipio Africanus and the close of the second Punic war, 1 Septimiana explained, 214 Septizonium explained, 203 Severus, Alexander, 213 ; inscriptions relating to him, 214 ; subject to his

method of building with,

114
Plautilla, wife of

an inscription, 202 Pliny the Elder in praise of


in
soil of

of

North Africa, 57 Pliny the Younger, his intimacy with Marcus Aurelius, 60 Pompeianus, a governor of Africa, his country seat, and its interesting remains, 292 ; inscription recording his name, 291 Pontifex Maximus, origin of the title explained, 224 Praecilius of Cirta, his tomb and remarkable epitaph, 81 Prseses explained, 255 ; inscription rePraetorian

Severus,

mother's influence, 217 Septimius, his powerful rule, 199; inscriptions, 200-203

Sexfascales, inscription relating to, 284 Sicca Veneria in the time of Constantine,

276
Sigus, an old Numidian city, 84 Simittu : Trajan's bridge, 72 ; its renowned marble quarries, 74 Sitifis, its rise and prosperity, 5 Sittius, Publius, his services, 34 Sosemias, Julia, mother of Heliogabalus,

cording the use of the title, 257 guard : temporary disbandment, 199 ; their despotism and cruelty,
at

208

memorial

of,

212
of,
1 70;
5

Soldiers,

privileges

their

LambjEsis described, 186 Prefect of the Prastorian guard, a man of high distinction, 259 Priscus, Marius, proconsul of Africa,
tried for corrupt practices, 61 Probus, Emperor, memorial of, 250 Proconsuls, corrupt practices, 60

225 Pr^torium

services in times of peace, 171

me-

morials of, 173-185 Solomon, the Byzantine general, 46 Sophonisba, story of, 8 Students, memorials of, 130 Sufes, a noted town, 123 Sufetula, its rise and prosperity, 123 its last days, 1 24 ; monumental remains and inscriptions, 126 Syphax, his wayward career, 7 ; his
defeat,

QuADi, and

their tactics, 163 Quietus, Ijusius, governor of Mauritania,

107 Quinquegentians, their rebellion, defeated by Maximian, 258

245

Tacfarinas,

Regulus, M.

Attilius,

his

attack
:

on

the Carthaginian fleet, 3 Reservoirs in North Africa Kairouan described. III

one near

the Numidian : his struggles with the Romans, 34 ; his defeat after seven years' war, 35 Tacitus, Emperor, merits of, 249 Temple at Theveste converted into a canteen, 51 Thabraca, its position and remains, 69 ; island of, 70

classes of, super40, 66 ; intendents of, 67 ; principal roads at end of second century, 182 Romans, our indebtedness to them, 305 Romanus, governor of Africa, brought to
trial

Roads,

Thamugas,
history,

its

foundation,
;

88

later

91

monumental

remains,

and condemned, 282

92 ; inscriptions, 100 Theodosius, the general, his successful campaigns, 287 Theodosius the Great, memorials of,

the thousandth anniversary in time of Philip the Arab, 235 Rufus, L. Passienus, honoured with a triumph, 42

Rome,

289 Theodosius
Theveste,

II.,

295

its

history,

45 ; 46-51

other

44 ; the basilica, monumental remains,

Sabina, wife of Hadrian, 119


Sabinia Tranquillina, wife of Gordian
III. Saldae,
Salltis,
:

Tholus, meaning of, 47 Thysdrus, the town of, 229


theatre
history,

its

amphi-

described,

230

subsequent

and

Sallust,

memorials of, 227 its water supply, 112 proconsul of Africa, 25 meaning of, 189 ; the principal

233

ones, 191 Scillium, its

monumental remains, 82

Tiberius, dedication to, 43 Tibilis, its extensive remains, 146 Trajan, his interest in the provinces of the Empire, regulates the corn supply from Africa, 55 ; his benevolence, 85

Index
Tripoli, monumental remains of, 156 Triumph, explained by Gibbon umphal arches, their origin, 49
:

325

tri-

Uthina, remains
Utica,
its
:

mains

of its theatre, 234 19 ; structural recauses of its decay, 20


antiquity, his rule in Africa,

Valentinian,

280

;
:

its inscriptions, 147 Verus, the Emperor, and his joint rule with Marcus Aurelius, 156 Vespasian establishes third Augustan legion at Theveste, 41, 44 Veterans, establishment of, 35 Vicarius, the term explained, 258 Vitellius, proconsul of Africa, 41 Volussianus, son of Gallus, memorial of,

Verecunda,

the Emperor's joint rule with Valens

239

inscriptions relating thereto, 284 ; restores public buildings in Africa, 285

Zaghouan,

description of
its

its

monu-

Valerianus, memorial of, 241 Vandals, record of their expulsion from


Africa, 45

mental remains, 116

Zama
10

Regia,

position,

and

battle of,

PRINTED BV

SPOTTISWOODE AND

CO. LTD.,

NEW-STREET SQUARE

Classifieb

Catalogue

OF WORKS IN

GENERAL LITERATURE
PUBLISHED BY
39
91 AND 93

CO. PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON,


FIFTH AVENUE,

LONGMANS, GREEN,
NEW
YORK, and
33

&

E.G.

HORNBY ROAD, BOMBAY

CONTENTS.
BADMINTON LIBRARY (THE)BIOGRAPHY,
MOIRS,
&c.
-

11

PERSONAL
-

ME-

CHILDREN'S BOOKS CLASSICAL LITERATURE, TRANS-

MENTAL, MORAL, AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY MISCELLANEOUS AND CRITICAL

I,

26
19

LATIONS, ETC.
-

COOKERY, DOMESTIC MANAGEMENT, &c. EVOLUTION, ANTHROPOLOGY,


. .
. .

WORKS POETRY AND THE DRAMA POLITICAL ECONOMY AND


-

ECO.

29
18

NOMICS POPULAR SCIENCE


RELIGION,

&c.

FICTION,

HUMOUR,

&c.

21
12

THE SCIENCE OF
-

FUR, FEATHER

AND FIN SERIES FINE ARTS {THE) AND MUSIC


-

30
3
j I

POLITICS, HISTORY, POLITICAL MEMOIRS,


-

POLITY,
&c.
-

LANGUAGE, HISTORY AND


SCIENCE OF LOGIC, RHETORIC, PSYCHOLOGY,
-

17 14

SILVER LIBRARY (THE) SPORT AND PASTIME STONYHURST PHILOSOPHICAL SERIES TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE, THE
-

COLONIES,
I

&c.

&c.

WORKS OF REFERENCE
Page
Buckland (Jas.) Buckle (H. T.) Bull (T.) Burke (U. R.)
-

INDEX OF AUTHORS AND EDITORS.


Page
Abbott (Evelyn)
(T. K.) (E. A.) Acland (A. H. D.) Acton (Eliza) -

Page
Balfour (A.
Ball (John)
J.)

3.19
14.15
15
3

ir, 18

26

(Lady Betty)

6 9

Crake (Rev. A. D.) Crawford (J. H.)


(R.)
-

.
-

z 2
I,

Banks (M. M.)


S.)-

Creed

(S.)

3
5, 8, i
i'

zg
8

Baring-Gould (Rev.
Barnett
(S.
18,27.31 A. and H.) 17 -

Adeane(J. H.)Adelborg (O.) jEschylus Ainger (A. C.) Albemarle (Earl Allen (Grant) -

Burns (C. L.) Burrows (Montagu)


Butler (E. A.)
-

Creierhton (Bishop) -4,

Crozier

(J.

B.)

26
19
of)

Z5
3

AUgood (G.) Angwin (M.


Aristotle
-

31 Beaconsfield (Earl of) 21 Beaufort (Duke of) - 11, la Becker (W. A.) 19 8 Beesly (A. H.) -

Baynes

(T. S.)

Ciistance (Col. H.) Cutts (Rev. E. L.)

C.)
-

Anstey (F.) Aristophanes

Arnold (Sir Edwin)


(Dr. T.)
-

29 21 19 14 9.20
3
3

Bell (Mrs.

Hugh)

Bent (J. Theodore) Besant (Sir Walter)Bickerdyke (J.)


Bird(G.) Blackburne
(J.

20 9
3 12, 13

13 Campbell(Rev.Lewis) 18,19 Camperdown (Earl of) 8 Cawthorne(Geo.Jas.) 13 Chesney (Sir G.) 3 Childe-PembertonCW.S.) 8

Cameron

of Lochiel

Dale

(T. F.)

i;

Dallinger (F; W.)

Dauglisb (M. G.) Davidson (W. L.) Davies (J. F.) -

15, 17,

ij

Cholmondeley-Pennell
(H.)
-

Dent
II

H.)

Ashbourne (Lord) Ashby (H.) Ashley (W. J.) Avebury (Lord) Ayre (Rev. J.) -

29
3.

Bland (Mrs. Hubert) Blount (Sir E.)

20 13 2r 7
5

Christie (R. C.)

31

De De

(C. T.) Balis (Mrs.)

Tocqueville
(C. S.)

(A.)
16,
i:

17 18 25
'5
3

Boase (Rev. C. W.)


Boedder (Rev. B.)

16

ChurchilK W. Spencer) 3, 21 Cicero 19 16 Clarke (Rev. R. F.) Clodd (Edward) 18,25 10 Clutterbuck (W. J.) -

Devas

Dickinson (G L.)

(W. H.)
Dougall

Dowden

(L.) (E.)

2
3

Bowen (W.
(Lord)

E.)

Brassey (Lady)

Colenso(R. J.) Conington (John)

Bacon

7. '4.

Conway

(Sir

W.

30 19

Baden-Powell Bagehot (W.) Bagwell (R.)


Bailey (H. C.) Baillie (A. F.)

(B. H.)
7, 17, 27,
-

Bray

(C.)

Conybeare (Rev. W. J.)


(Dean) Coolidge (W. A. B.)

Doyle (A. Conan) Du Bois (W. E. B.)Dufiferin (Marquis of) Dunbar (Mary F.) -

2
i:

2
2
i I

31
3

Bright (Rev. J. F.) Broadfoot (Major W.)

& Howson

Dyson

(E.)

21 3 15 31

Brown
(J.

(A. F.)

Corbin (M.)

Ebrington (Viscount)
Ellis (J. H.) R. L.)
-

Moray)
I.)
-

Bain (Alexander) Baker (J. H.) (Sir S.

Bruce Bryce

(R.
(J.)

Corbett (Julian S.) Coutts (W.)


-

I
8.3:
3^

Coventry

(A.)

W.)

Buck (H.

A.)

Cox (Harding)

Erasmus Evans (Sir John)

INDEX OF AUTHORS AND EDITORS(jonimwc


Pag,e

Page

Page
Millias
(J.

Falkiner (C. L.) - 17, Farrar (Dean) Fitzgibbon (M.) Fitzmaurice (Lord E.) Folkard (H. C.)

4
21 4 4 13 13 13

Hunt

(Rev. W.) Hunter (Sir W.) Hutchinson (Horace

5 5

G.)

14

Sheppard

(E.)

Milner

G.)

Monck

(G.) ("W.

II,

13.31 20
5

Montague

H. S.) (F. C.)


-

Ford

(H.)

Ingelow (Jean)

Moon
Moore

(G.

W.)

(W.J.) Fountain (P.) Fowler (Edith H.)

Ingram

(T. D.)

(T.)

(Rev. Edward)

Jackson (A. W.) James (W,) lefferies (Richard)

9 15

Morg:an (C. Lloyd) Morris (Mowbray)


_(W.)

32 16 6 20 25 14 17
11

Sinclair (A.) Skrine (F. H.)

(C. Fell) (R. Bosworth) (T. C.) (W. P. Haskett) Somerville (E.)

Smith

Sophocles

Francis (Francis) Francis (M. E.)

Jameson (Mrs. Anna)


-

Freeman (Edward A .)
Fremantle (T.
Fresnfield (D. Frost (G.)F.)

W.)

Jekyll (Gertrude) Jerome (Jerome K.) Johnson (J. & J. H.) Jones (H. Bence) -

30 31 31 22 31

19, 20, 23, 30, 32

Mulhall (M. G.)

Murray (Hilda) Myers (F. W. H.)

Soulsby(LucyH.) Southey (R.) Spahr(C. B.) Spedding (J.) Stanley (Bishop) Stebbing (W.) Steel (A. G.)
-

7,

Froude (lames A.) Fuller (F. W.) Furneaux (W.)

4,8,10,22
-

Joyce (P. W.)


Justinian
-

4 24 4
13 31 13 14

25 5, 22, 31 15
-

Nansen (F.) Nash (V.) Nesbit


(E.)
-

Nettleship (R. L.)

Gardiner (Samuel R.) Gathcrne-Hardy (Hon.


A. E.) Geikie (Rev. Cunning-

Kant Kaye

(I.)

15
5 15 5

Newman

(Cardinal)

15 23

(Sir J.

W.)

Nichols (F. M.)


Ogilvie (R.)
-

8,31
19
8

Stephen (Leslie) Stephens (H. Morse) Sternberg (Count


Adalbert)
-

ham) Gibbons (J, S.) Gibson (C. H.)-

Kelly (E.)Kent (C. B. R.) Kerr (Rev. J.) Killick (Rev. A. H.) Kingsley (Rose G.) Kitchin (Dr. G. W.)

12 15

Oldfield (Hon. Mrs.) Oliphant (N.) -

Stevens (R. W.) Stevenson (R, L.) 21,24


Storr (F.)
-

6
12

30
5 10, 12

Onslow (Earl of) Osbourne (L.) Paget


(Sir J.)
(B.)
-

Stuart-Wortley(A.J.) 12

24
9 14 32 32
12, 14

Stubbs

Gleig (Rev. G. R.)

Goethe Going (C. B.) Gore-Booth (Sir H. W.)

9 20
12

Knight (E.
Kbstlin G.)

F.)

Park(W.)
Parker

Kristeller (P.)

30
15

Graham

(A.) (P. A.)

4
13 17 13 14 8 15

Ladd (G. T.) Lang (Andrew) 5,

Passmore (T. H.) Payne-Gallwey (Sir


R.)
-

(G.F.)

11, 12, 14, r8, 20, 22, 23, 26, 32

Suffolk & Berkshire (Earl of) - II Sullivan (Sir E.) ^ Sully (James) Sutherland (A. and G.) - 16, (Alex.)
(G.)
-

(J.

W.)

Granby (Marquess Grant (Sir A.) Graves


(R. P.)
-

of)
-

Green (T. Hill) Greene (E. B.)Greville (C. C. F.) Grose (T. H.) 'Gross (C.) -

Lapsley (G. T.) Lascelles (Hon. G.) Laurie (S. S.) Lawley (Hon. F.) -

Pearson (C. H.) Peek (Hedley) -

9
12

Suttner (B. von)

11,

Pemberton
Childe-)

(W.
-

S.
-

Swan

(M.)
J.)
-

8
12 13

Swinburne (A.

4, 5

Lawrence (F. W.) 5 Lear (H. L. Sidney) 4 Lecky (W. E. H.) 5, 15 Lees (J. A.)
11

Pembroke (Earl Pennant (C. D.)


29, 16,

of)

Symes

(J,

E.)

Grove

(F. C.)

(Mrs. Lilly) 11 Gurdon (Lady Camilla) 22

Leslie (T. E. Cliffe) Levett- Yeats (S.)


Lillie <A.)

17
14 25 31 14
5

Gurnhill
'Gwilt

Lindley

(J.) (I.) -

15 25

(J.)

Loch

Haggard (H. Rider)

Hake

(O.)

10,22,31 12

(C. S.) Locock (C. D.) Lodge (H. C.) -

26 Phillipps-Wolley(C.) 11,23 Pitman (C. M.) 12 Pleydell-Bouverie (E. O.) 12 Pole (W.) 14 Pollock (W. H.) II, 32 Poole (W.H. and Mrs.) 29

Penrose (Mrs.)

Tallentyre (S. G.) Tappan (E. M.)

Tavlor (Col. Meadows) Tebbutt (C. G.) Terry (C. S.) -

Thomas
Todd

(J.

W.)
J.)
_

Thornhill (W.

Thornton
(A.)

(T. H.)
-

Loftie (Rev.

W.
-

Poore (G. V.) Pope (W. H.) Powell (E.)


Praeger Prevost

Halliwell-Phillipps(J.) Hamilton (Col. H. B.) Hamlin (A. D. F.) Harding (S. B.) Harmsworth (A. C.) Harte (Bret)

9
5

Longman
(F.

J.)

(C. J.)

5 II. 13

W.)

(S. Rosamond) (C.)


-

32 13 7 26
11 12

Toynbee

(A.)

30
5

(G. H.) (Mrs. C.

14 -II, II. 13
-

Pritchett (R. T.)

Proctor (R. A.)

14, 25, 28,


?,

29
5

J.)

30
5

Trevelyan (Sir G. O.) 6, (G. M.) TroUope (Anthony) Turner (ri. G.) Tyndall (J.) 8,
Tyrrell (R. Y.)
-

Harting(J.E.)-

Hartwig

(G.)

Hassall(A.) Haweis (H. R.)

8,

Head

Heath (D.

(Mrs.) D.)
(J.

Heathcote

M.)
-

(C. G.) (N.) -

12 22 13 25 7 30 30 14 12 12 10

Lowell (A. L.) Lubbock (Sir John)

_ -

Lucan Lynch

Lutoslawski (W.) Lyall (Edna)


(G.)

18 19 16 23

Raine (Rev. James) Randolph (C. F.) Rankin (R.)

7
21

Unwin
Virgil

(R.)

Upton(F.K.and Bertha)

Ransome (Cyril) Raymond (W.)

3.7

(H. F. B.)Lyttelton (Hon. R. H.)

(Hon. A.) Lytton (Earl of)

6,

Helmholtz (Hermann
von)
-

25

Macaulay (Lord) Macdonald (Dr. G.)

Henderson

(LieutCol. G. E. R.) -

Henry (W.) Henty (G. A.)

Macfarren (Sir G. A.) 8 Mackail (J. W.) 12 Mackenzie (C. G.) 26


13 13 8
5 11

30
9.

19 14

Herbert (Col. Kenney) Herod (Richard S.) Hiley (R. W.) Hill (Mabel) Hillier (G. Lacy)

Mackinnon (J.) Macleod (H. D.) Macpherson (Rev. H. A.)

6 17
12, 13

23 Reid(S. J.) 7 Rhoades (J.) 19 Rice (S. P.) 10 Rich (A.) 19 - 11. Richardson (C.) 13 Richmond (Ennis) 16 Rickaby (Rev. John) 16 (Rev. Joseph) 16 Ridley (Sir E.)19 (Lady Alice) 23 Riley (J. W.) 21 - 17, 25 Roget (Peter M.) Romanes (G.J.) 9,16,18,21 (Mrs. G. J.) 9

Van Dyke Wagner

(J.

C.)

(R.)

Wakeman

(H. O.)

Walford (L. B.) Wallas (Graham) (Mrs. Graham) Walpole (Sir Spencer)

Walrond (Col. H.) Walsingham (Lord) Ward (Mrs. W.) Warwick (Countess of) Watson (A. E. T.) - 11, Weathers (J.) -

Webb

Ronalds

(A.)

14
5

(Mr. and Mrs. Sidney)


(T. E.)
-

Madden

(D. H.)
(E.)

Magniisson

Hime

(H.

W.

L.)

19

Hodgson (Shadworth)i5, 31 Hoenig (F.) 31 Hogan (J. F.) 8 Holmes (R. R.) 9
Holroyd (M.
-

Maher (Rev. M.) Malleson(Col. G.B.)

14 22 16
5

Roosevelt (T.) Ross (Martin) Rossetti (Maria Francesca)


-

16,

24 32 29
12

Weber (A.) Weir (Capt.


West

R.)
of)

Wellington (Duchess

Homer Hope (Anthony)


-

J.)

Horace Houston (D. F.) Howard (Lady Mabel) Howitt (W.) Hudson (W. H.) Huish (M. B.) -

8 ig 22 19
5

Marchment (A. W.) Marshman (J. C.) Maryon (M.) Mason (A. E. W.) Maskelyne (J. N.) Matthews (B.)
-

Maunder

(S.)

23 8 32 23 14 32 25

Rotheram (M.

Rowe

A.) (R. P. P.)


-

Weyman

(B. B.) (Stanley)


(R.)
-

Russell (Lady)

Whately(Archbishop)

14

Saintsbury (G.) 12 Sandars (T. C.) 15 Sanders (E. K.) 8 Savage- Armstrong(G.F.)2i

Whitelaw
Wilkins

Whittall(SirJ. W.)(G.)
-

(W. H.)

Max

Muller

(F.)

Seebohm

(F.)

7.

22 10
25

9, 16, 17, 18, 23, 32

May (Sir
Meade

T. Erskine)
-

(L. T.)
J.

Hullah

Hume

(J.)
-

30 30
15
3

Melville (G.

Whyte)
;

- IJ, Selous (F. C.) Senior (W.) 12, Sewell (Elizabeth M.) Shakespeare -

Merivale (Dean)

(David) (M. A. S.)

Merriman (H.

S.)
-

Mill (John Stuart)

16,

17

Shand (A Shaw (W. Shearman

1.)

A.) (M.)

7,

14 13 23 21 13 31 11

Willard (A. R.) Willich (C. M.) Witham (T. M.)

Wood

Wood-Martin (W. Wyatt (A. J.) Wylie (J. H.) Zeller (E.)

(Rev. J. G.)

G.)

MESSRS.

LONGMANS &

CO.'S

STANDARD AND GENERAL WORKS.


,

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