advantages of Roman citizenship, were ever deriving
very considerable benefit from their equality of rights
with the Romans, limited though it was. A portion
of the Roman domain, for instance, was usually assigned
to them for their separate use, and participation in
the state leases and contracts was open to them as
to the Roman burgess. Certainly in their case
also the consequences of the self-subsistence granted
to them did not wholly fail to appear. Venusian
inscriptions of the time of the Roman republic, and
Beneventane inscriptions recently brought to light,(33)
show that Venusia as well as Rome had its plebs and
its tribunes of the people, and that the chief magistrates
of Beneventum bore the title of consul at least about
the time of the Hannibalic war. Both communities
are among the most recent of the Latin colonies with
older rights: we perceive what pretensions were
stirring in them about the middle of the fifth century.
These so-called Latins, issuing from the Roman burgess-body
and feeling themselves in every respect on a level
with it, already began to view with displeasure their
subordinate federal rights and to strive after full
equalization. Accordingly the senate had exerted
itself to curtail these Latin communities—however
important they were for Rome—as far as
possible, in their rights and privileges, and to convert
their position from that of allies to that of subjects,
so far as this could be done without removing the
wall of partition between them and the non-Latin communities
of Italy. We have already described the abolition
of the league of the Latin communities itself as well
as of their former complete equality of rights, and
the loss of the most important political privileges
belonging to them. On the complete subjugation
of Italy a further step was taken, and a beginning
was made towards the restriction of the personal rights—that
had not hitherto been touched—of the individual
Latin, especially the important right of freedom of
settlement. In the case of Ariminum founded
in 486 and of all the autonomous communities constituted
afterwards, the advantage enjoyed by them, as compared
with other subjects, was restricted to their equalization
with burgesses of the Roman community so far as regarded
private rights —those of traffic and barter
as well as those of inheritance.(34) Presumably about
the same time the full right of free migration allowed
to the Latin communities hitherto established—the
title of every one of their burgesses to gain by transmigration
to Rome full burgess-rights there—was,
for the Latin colonies of later erection, restricted
to those persons who had attained to the highest office
of the community in their native home; these alone
were allowed to exchange their colonial burgess-rights
for the Roman. This clearly shows the complete
revolution in the position of Rome. So long as
Rome was still but one among the many urban communities
of Italy, although that one might be the first, admission


