A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean

(Steven Felgate) #1

440 Gary D. Farney


outside the city of Rome, Claudius asks and answers: “What then? Is an Italian senator
better than a provincial one?...No, I think that the provincials must not be excluded,
if they can in some way ornament the Senate” (ILS212.II.5–8; sc. Tacitus,Annales,
11.23–24; Griffin 1982). Giardina (1994) rightly marks this as one of the most impor-
tant moments in the reformulation of the ever “incomplete” identity of Roman Italy.
Still, one can envision this sort of debate happening in the Republican period whenever
the Senate considered the advantages of legislation incorporating the various Italic people
more fully into Rome. It is also not surprising that, on those occasions, aristocrats who
were most secure in their nobility and standing, as Claudius was here, would be among
the most ready to invoke an “open-door” policy for prospective senators.


Adriatic
Sea

Placentia

Verona
Patavium

Mutina

Pisae

Genoa

Populonia VetuloniaPerusia

Ancona

Ariminium

Arretium

Volsinii
Cosa

Spoletium
Narnia
Tarquirii

Ostia
Antium

Rome

Aleria
Ve i i

Terracina

Arpi
Luceria
Asculum
Venusia
Neapolis

Capua

Metapontum Tarentum
Heraclea
Thurii

Salemum

Beneventum

Paestum

Brundisium

Croton

Locri
Messana
Regium
Panormus

Lilybaeum
Agrigentum
Gela
Syracuse

Oblia

Carales

Carthage

Ligurian
Sea

Tyrrhenian Sea

HELVETII

INSUBRES

STATIELLI

ANARES

VENETI

FRINIATES

ETRURIANS

SENONI

PICENI

UMBRII

AEQUICULI

SABINI
VESTINI
MARRICINI

SAMNITES

LUCANI
MESAPPI

BRUTII

LIGURIANS

Finnum Picenum

Sentium

VOLSEI

FRENTANI
MARSI

APUANI

0 100
0 100

Miles

Kilometers

50
50

Cremona
TAURINI

Mediolanum

Parma

CENOMANI

BOII
ILLYRIANS

Territory of Rome and her allies
500
338 After the Latin war
298 Start of 3rd Samnite war
290 End of 3rd Samite war
272 End of the Pyrrhic war
264 Start of 1st Punic war
218 Start of 2nd Punic war war

Map 29.1 The Italian peninsula with Sicily.

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