Western Civilization

(Sean Pound) #1
internal stability but also pacified bordering territories,
thus reducing the threat that bandits posed to traders.
As a result, merchants developed a network of trade
routes that brought these two great empires into com-
mercial contact. Most important was the overland Silk
Road, a regular caravan route between West and East.
The Silk Road was the route used to transport Chi-
nese exports of silk cloth to the West. Silk became a
craze among Roman elites, leading to a vast outpouring
of silver from Rome to China and provoking the Roman
emperor Tiberius to grumble that “the ladies and their
baubles are transferring our money to foreigners.” The
silk trade also stimulated a degree of mutual curiosity
between the two great civilizations but not much mutual
knowledge or understanding. So far as is known, no per-
sonal or diplomatic contacts between the two civiliza-
tions ever took place.
Increased trade helped stimulate manufacturing.
The cities of the East still produced the items made in
Hellenistic times. The first two centuries of the empire
also witnessed the high point of industrial develop-
ment in Italy. Some industries became concentrated in
certain areas, such as bronze work in Capua and pot-
tery in Arretium in Etruria. Other industries, such as
brickmaking, were pursued in rural areas on large
landed estates. Much production remained small-scale
and was done by individual craftsmen, usually freed-
men or slaves. In the course of the first century, Italian
centers of industry began to experience increasing com-
petition from the provinces.
Despite the extensive trade and commerce, agricul-
ture remained the chief occupation of most people and
the underlying basis of Roman prosperity. While the
large landed estates calledlatifundiastill dominated
agriculture, especially in southern and central Italy,
small peasant farms persisted, particularly in Etruria
and the Po Valley. Although large estates concentrating
on sheep and cattle raising used slaves, the lands of
some latifundia were worked by free tenant farmers
who paid rent in labor, produce, or sometimes cash.
In considering the prosperity of the Roman world, it
is important to remember the enormous gulf between
rich and poor (see the box on p. 130). The development
of towns and cities, so important to the creation of any
civilization, is based in large degree on the agricultural
surpluses of the countryside. In ancient times, the mar-
gin of surplus produced by each farmer was relatively
small. Therefore, the upper classes and urban popula-
tions had to be supported by the labor of a large num-
ber of farmers who never found it easy to produce
much more than enough for themselves. In lean years,

when there were no surpluses, the townspeople often
took what they wanted, leaving little for the peasants.

Roman Culture and Society in


the Early Empire


Q FOCUSQUESTION: What were the chief intellectual,
artistic, and social developments in the early
empire? How did these differ from the intellectual,
artistic, and social developments of the republic?

The shift from republic to empire not only transformed
the Roman political world but also affected its
cultural and social life. Intellectuals found ways to
accommodate the autocratic rule of emperors, while
Roman architects created massive buildings befitting
an empire. Gladiatorial games increased dramatically
in size and number in the early empire, and upper-
class women acquired greater independence.

The Golden Age of Latin Literature
The most distinguished poet of the Augustan Age was
Virgil (VUR-jul) (70–19B.C.E.). The son of a small land-
holder in northern Italy, he welcomed the rule of
Augustus and wrote his greatest work in the emperor’s
honor. Virgil’s masterpiece was the Aeneid, an epic
poem clearly meant to rival the work of Homer. The
connection between Troy and Rome is made explicitly.
Aeneas (i-NEE-uss), the son of Anchises of Troy, sur-
vives the destruction of Troy and eventually settles in
Latium; hence, Roman civilization is linked to Greek
history. The character of Aeneas is portrayed as the
ideal Roman—his virtues are duty, piety, and faithful-
ness. Virgil’s overall purpose was to show that Aeneas
had fulfilled his mission to establish the Romans in
Italy and thereby start Rome on its divine mission to
rule the world.

Let others fashion from bronze more lifelike, breathing
images—
For so they shall—and evoke living faces from marble;
Others excel as orators, others track with their instruments
The planets circling in heaven and predict when stars will
appear.
But, Romans, never forget that government is your medium!
Be this your art:—to practice men in the habit of peace,
Generosity to the conquered, and firmness against
aggressors.^6

As Virgil expressed it, ruling was Rome’s gift.

Roman Culture and Society in the Early Empire 129

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