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Sicilia (Roman province)

Sicilia (/sɪˈsɪliə/; Classical Latin[sɪˈkɪ.li.a], Ancient Greek: Σικελία) was the first province acquired by the Roman Republic, encompassing the island of Sicily. The western part of the island was brought under Roman control in 241 BC at the conclusion of the First Punic War with Carthage.[1] A praetor was regularly assigned to the island from c.227 BC.[2] The Kingdom of Syracuse under Hieron II remained an independent ally of Rome until its defeat in 212 BC during the Second Punic War.[3] Thereafter the province included the whole of the island of Sicily, the island of Malta, and the smaller island groups (the Egadi islands, the Lipari islands, Ustica, and Pantelleria).

Sicilia
Σικελία
Province of the Roman Empire
241 BC–476 AD

The province of Sicilia within the Roman Empire, c. 125 AD
CapitalSyracusae
History
Historical eraAntiquity
• Established after the end of First Punic War
241 BC
• Fall of the Western Roman Empire
476 AD
Today part ofItaly
Malta

During the Roman Republic, the island was the main source of grain for the city of Rome. Extraction was heavy, provoking armed uprisings known as the First and Second Servile Wars in the second century BC. In the first century, the Roman governor, Verres, was famously prosecuted for his corruption by Cicero. In the civil wars which brought the Roman Republic to an end, Sicily was controlled by Sextus Pompey in opposition to the Second Triumvirate. When the island finally came under the control of Augustus in 36 BC, it was substantially reorganised, with large Roman colonies being established in several major cities.

For most of the Imperial period, the province was a peaceful, agrarian territory. As a result, it is rarely mentioned in literary sources, but archaeology and epigraphy reveals several thriving cities, such as Lilybaeum and Panormus in the west, and Syracuse and Catania in the east. These communities were organised in a similar way to other cities of the Roman Empire and were largely self-governing. Greek and Latin were the main languages of the island but Punic, Hebrew and probably other languages were also spoken. There were several Jewish communities on the island and from around AD 200 there is also evidence of substantial Christian communities.

The province briefly fell under the control of the Vandal kingdom of North Africa shortly before the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in 476, but was soon returned to the Kingdom of Italy and returned to Roman control under the eastern emperor at Constantinople to which it would remain until the 9th century.

History

First Punic War

 
Sicily during the first Punic War between Rome and Carthage (264–241 BC)

Agathocles, tyrant of Syracuse from 317 and King of Sicily from 307 or 304 BC, died in 289 BC. A group of his Campanian mercenaries, called the Mamertines, were offered compensation in exchange for leaving the city. They took control of Messina, killing and exiling the men, and holding the women in bondage.[4][5]

In response to this, the Syracusan general Hiero, who had reorganised the mercenaries and was able to bring banditry under control in 269 BC, began advancing on Messina. The Carthaginians, always eager to prevent the excessive empowerment of a single force and to keep Sicily divided, offered aid to the Mamertines. Hiero had to return to Syracuse, where he assumed the title of king.[6][7] Shortly thereafter, the Mamertines decided to expel the Carthaginian garrison and seek aid from the Romans instead.[8]

At Rome, there was a debate on the appropriateness of helping the Mamertines. Previously, Rome had intervened against Campanian mercenaries who had followed the Mamertines' example and taken control of Rhegium (modern Reggio Calabria). Moreover, it seemed clear that intervention in Sicily would lead to conflict with Carthage. According to the lost historian Philinus of Agrigentum, who was favourable to the Carthaginians, there was a treaty between Rome and Carthage which defined their respective spheres of influence and assigned Sicily to the Carthaginians. This "Philinus Treaty" is known to us from Polybius, who mentions it in order to deny its existence. Polybius also claims that the Romans were encouraged to intervene by economic motivations, on account of the wealth of Sicily in this period. The Senate gave the decision on whether or not to help the Mamertines to the popular assembly, which decided to send help. This was not a formal declaration of war against Carthage, but the intervention in Sicily sufficed as a casus belli and thus marked the beginning of the First Punic War (264–241 BC).[9]

This was the first time that Roman forces had campaigned outside the Italian peninsula. Hiero, allied with Carthage against the Mamertines, had to face the legions of Valerius Messalla. The Romans quickly expelled the Syracusans and Carthaginains from Messina. In 263 BC, Hiero changed sides, making a peace treaty with the Romans in exchange for an indemnity of 100 talents, thus ensuring the maintenance of his power. He proved a loyal ally of the Romans until his death in 215 BC, providing aid, specially grain and siege weapons, to the Romans. This assistance was essential for the conquest of the Carthaginian base at Agrigentum in 262 BC.[10] Hiero's loyalty is reflected in the peace treaty imposed on the Carthaginians at the end of the war, in which they were forbidden to attack Hiero or his allies. It seems, however, that pro-Roman sentiment was not universal at Syracuse and that there was a group opposed to Hiero which favoured the Carthaginians.[11]

At the end of the First Punic War, Rome had conquered the majority of the island, except for Syracuse, which retained a broad autonomy (although required to accept Roman supremacy in the region). In addition to Syracuse, the kingdom of Hiero was granted a number of centres in the eastern part of the island, such as Akrai, Leontini, Megara, Eloro, Netum and Tauromenium,[12] and probably also Morgantina and Camarina.

In addition to the aforementioned Philinus, there were other accounts of the First Punic War written by authors opposed to Rome, such as Sosilus of Sparta. The work of Philinus was analysed and criticised by Polybius, while that of Sosilus was entirely rejected by him as the "vulgar gossip of a barber's shop."[8] A pro-Roman account was written by the historian Fabius Pictor, which is criticised by Polybius as well. The resulting representation of the war in the ancient source material is very partial: the motivations of the Mamertines are left opaque and by the time of Polybius (about a hundred years after the war began) there were different opinions even at Rome. The ancient accounts' impression that a war between Carthage and Rome was inevitable also seems questionable. Even the traditional explanation that Carthage was threatening Rome at the Straits of Messina seems anachronistic according to Moses Finley, since Carthage had never shown any inclination to expand into Italy. Probably no one at Rome foresaw that intervention at Messina would lead to a conflict on such a scale. According to the account of Polybius, this changed only after the conquest of Agrigentum.[13] Finley says "this argument appears too simple and schematic, but it is correct in the sense that only then did Rome take the essential decision of creating a fleet, without which there was no hope of fighting the Carthaginians on equal terms.".[14] The reaction of the Carthaginians to Roman intervention, however, is easily explained: Sicily had always been fundamental for Carthaginian control of the seas.

In any case, the fact that the Romans ultimately conquered the island makes it difficult to produce a balance reconstruction of conditions on Sicily in this period.[15] What is certain is that the First Punic War had a disastrous effect on the territory. Both Rome and Carthage carried out atrocities: 250,000 inhabitants of Agrigentum (Philinus' homeland) were sold as slaves in 262 BC and seven years later the Carthaginians demolished the walls of the same city and set it on fire. In 258 BC, the Roman conquest of Camarina saw the majority of the inhabitants sold into slavery and 27,000 inhabitant of Panormus suffered the same fate (although 14,000 were redeemed). In 250 BC, Selinus was razed to the ground by the Romans and it was not inhabited again until Late Antiquity. Lilybaeum resisted a Roman siege for ten years, until the conclusion of the war after the Battle of the Aegates.[16]

The first Roman province

The Roman victory in the First Punic War placed the entire island of Sicily in Roman hands. Previous Roman conquests in Italy had resulted in direct annexation or asymmetric treaties with Rome as hegemonic power. These treaties guaranteed substantial internal autonomy to the socii: they were required to contribute troops when requested but not to pay any form of tribute.[17] Probably because of the island's complex mixture of ethnicities and perhaps also in order to recoup the expenses sustained during the war through a system of fiscal control, which excluded the concession of broad autonomy, Sicily came to be defined by a different institutional system.[18]

 
Philistis, wife of Hiero II, depicted on a tetradrachm minted between 218 and 214 BC

Eventually, the provincial structure would consist of a praetor, assisted in financial matters by two quaestores, one based at Lilybaeum and one based at Syracuse. But it is not clear how this system took form. It has been suggested that from 240 BC the government of western Sicily was entrusted to a quaestor sent annually to Lilybaeum.[19] Scholars like Filippo Coarelli and Michael Crawford consider it possible that the government of Sicily was entrusted to a privatus cum imperio, that is an aristocrat with no official post and with a military command conferred on a personal basis, sent annually with administrative and judicial competence. Extraordinary governors of this kind were seen already during the First Punic War and occur again during the Second Punic War.[18] Assuming that there was a quaestor at Lilybaeum, it is unclear whether this position was created immediately after the end of the war or sometime later, or if it was one of the quaestores which already existed, that is one of the quaestores classici (treasurers of the fleet), that had first been created in 267 BC,[20] when the number of quaestores was increased from four to eight.[21] Nor as it clear if there were two quaestores in the province from the beginning (one in Lilybaeum and one in Syracuse), since in all the provinces that were subsequently established, there was only one quaestor. According to Antonino Pinzone this difference is explained by the fact that Sicily "came under the control of Rome in two stages," so that "the position of the quaestor of Lilybaeum is to be considered a kind of fossil and his influence is to be imputed to the financial and military arrangements inherited from the quaestor (classicus?).".[11]

Subsequently, in 227 BC, two new praetores were created (praetores provinciales): one, Gaius Flaminius, was sent to Sicily; the other, Marcus Valerius Laevinus, to the new province of Corsica and Sardinia. Originally, the term provincia indicated the jurisdiction of a magistrate (especially the possession of imperium); eventually it came to indicate the territory under their control.[20] The change of 227 is reported by Gaius Julius Solinus:

The two islands under the control of Rome were made provinces in the same moment when in that year [227 BC] M. Valerius was assigned as praetor of Sardinia by lot and C. Flaminius of the other island.

— Collectanea rerum memorabilium, 5.1

It was in 227 BC that an annual grain tribute was imposed on the Sicilian communities by a lex frumentaria.[17] This is best known for the province of Sicily from the 1st century BC context (as a result of Cicero's Verrines).[22] At that time, the tribute consisted of a tenth of the harvest and it is possible that this system derived from the Syracusan kingdom (the lex Hieronica, derived in turn from the Ptolemaic grain tax).[11] The tithe decuma was contracted out to the highest bidder (whoever promised to collect the largest amount of modii).[23] These contractors were called decumani.[17] It seems that this lex frumentaria had results which were "not excessively grievous for the cities to pay ... and the small Italians proprietors livin on the island. It developed in the context of Gaius Flaminius' focus on the development of small proprietors and of their class.".[11]

Second Punic War

 
Hieronymus, King of Syracuse (215 BC), depicted on one of his coins.

The Second Punic War, which ran from 212 to 202 BC, was initiated by Hannibal, who was aware of the importance of the Italian socii to Rome and accordingly decided to attack the Romans on their own turf, passing through Gaul, over the Alps and into Italy. In a particularly difficult moment for Rome after the defeat at the Battle of Cannae (216 BC), Hiero II died (215 BC). His successor was his fifteen-year-old grandson Hieronymus, who decided to switch to the Carthaginian side.[24] This act arose from a period of intense conflict at Syracuse between the pro-Roman aristocratic faction and the pro-Carthaginian democratic faction. Hannibal himself had sent two brothers of Syracusan descent, Hippocrates and Epicydes, in order to rouse the people against the Romans.[11]

 
The burning glass allegedly used by Archimedes in the defense of Syracuse in 212 BC, depicted in the frontespiece of Opticae Thesaurus

The survivors from the Roman side of the Battle of Cannae were sent to Sicily and forbidden to leave until the end of hostilities.[25] Hieronymus' decision to change sides caused Roman troops to be dispatched to the gates of Syracuse. The Carthaginians also sent troops to the island and contended with the Romans for control of the island. The conquest of Syracuse in 212 BC by the forces of Marcellus was a decisive moment for the war, which resulted either from the betrayal of the city by members of the Syracusan aristocracy,[26] or by Moericus, a Spanish mercenary in the Carthaginian camp.[11] The conquest of Syracuse was costly for the Romans on account of the topography of the city, the defensive machines built by Archimedes, and the extensive fortifications, especially the Euryalus fortress, originally built by the tyrant Dionysius I (404–367 BC) to protect the western end of Epipolae.[11] The city was sacked and many inhabitants were killed, including Archimedes.[27][26]

Marcellus then dispatched a lot of booty to Rome, including works taken from temples and public buildings (and was criticised for this by Polybius): according to Livy,[28] it was the arrival of this booty that first gave rise to Roman enthusiasm for Greek art. The Romans considered it opportune to replace Marcellus, hated by the Syracusans, with Marcus Valerius Laevinus.[26] Following these events, Syracuse was incorporated into the province of Sicily, becoming its capital and the seat of its governor.[29]

The whole of Sicily was now in Roman hands, except for Agrigentum, which held out until 210 BC, when it was betrayed by Numidian mercenaries led by Mutines.[26] In the summer, the time came to hold the comitia centuriata at Rome, in order to elect the consuls. The task of organising the elections was expected to fall to Marcellus as senior consul, but he sent a letter to the Senate when it recalled him, declaring that it would be harmful to the Republic to leave Hannibal to his own devices. When the Senate received this, there was debate as to whether it was better to recall the consul from campaign even though he was unwilling or to cancel the elections of consuls for 209 BC.[30] In the end it was decided to recall Valerius Laevinus from Sicily, even though he was outside Italy. The senate ordered the Urban praetor, Lucius Manlius Acidinus to take a letter to Valerius, along with that sent to the Senate by Marcellus, and to explain to him why they had decided to recall him.[31]

Valerius Laevinus set out from Rome with ten ships and arrived in Sicily safely, entrusted control of the province and command of the army to the praetor Lucius Cincius Alimentus, then sent the commander of the fleet, Marcus Valerius Messalla to Africa with part of the fleet to investigate the preparations of the Carthaginians and to raid their territory.[32] When he returned to Rome, he informed the Senate that no Carthaginian forces remained on the island, that all the exiles had returned home and work had resumed in the fields.[33][34] This was an exaggeration, insofar as Laevinius spent almost all of 209 BC trying to revive Sicilian agriculture. Not only was all independence of Sicily brought to an end, but the majority of the islands commercial activities were redirected toward Italy.[35] However, in 210 BC, the Senate decided to restore autonomy to Syracuse, which retained a large hinterland.[11]

Late Republic

Thereafter, Sicily became one of the most prosperous and peaceful Roman provinces, although it was disturbed by two serious rebellions. The first of these is known as the First Servile War (c.138–132 BC), was led by King Antiochus Eunus who established a capital at Enna and conquered Tauromenium as well. Eunus defeated the Roman army several times, but in 133 BC he was vanquished by Consul Publius Rupilius near Messina; the war ended with the capture of Tauromenium and Enna in 132 BC, and about 20,000 of the unfortunate slaves were crucified.[36] The Second Servile War (104–101) was led by Athenio in the western part of the island and by Salvius Tryphon in the east. This war was terminated by Manius Aquillius.[37] Both wars are described by Diodorus Siculus in terms which suggest that there were massive numbers of slaves from the eastern Mediterranean in Sicily (c.200,000), with significant economic and social implications for the island.

At the end of Sulla's civil war, in 82 BC, the young general Pompey was sent to Sicily by the dictator, Sulla, to recover the island from the supporters of Marius and thereby secure the grain supply to Rome. Pompey crushed the opposition and, when the cities complained he responded with one of his most famous statements, reported by Plutarch as "why do you keep praising the laws before me when I am wearing a sword?" He expelled his enemies in Sicily, putting to death the consul Papirius Carbo.[38]

The government of the island in this period was controlled by a praetor, who was assisted by two quaestores (who focussed on financial matters), one based at Syracuse and one at Lilybaeum. Some communities continued to possess a popular assembly, but there was an increasing concentration of power in the hands of local elites.

Praetorship of Gaius Verres

From 73 to 71 BC, the praetor of the province was Gaius Verres who was denounced by the Sicilians for extortion, theft, and robbery and was prosecuted in Rome by Cicero whose speeches against him, known as the Verrines, still survive. Since these speeches are the main evidence for Verres' actions, it is hard to get an objective idea of the impact of his activities on Sicily. Cicero emphasised Verres' very harsh implementation of the grain tax (for his personal profit rather than that of the Republic) and the theft of artworks, including sacred votive offerings. Verres had expected the power of his friends and the deft manipulation of legal procedure to ensure his acquittal, but after Cicero's blisteringly effective first speech, he fled into exile.

War on Pirates

In 70 BC, the praetor Caecilius Metellus fought successfully against the pirates which infested the seas around Sicily[39][40] and Campania,[41] who went on to plunder Gaeta and Ostia (69–68 BC)[42] and captured the daughter of Marcus Antonius Orator at Misenum. In the course of the subsequent war against the pirates in 67 BC, the sea around Sicily was assigned to Plotius Varus.[43][44] In 61 BC, Clodius was sent to the island as quaestor.[45]

Internal organisation

In the Roman Republican period Marcus Valerius Laevinus introduced the lex provinciae in 210 BC, the law regulating cities in provinces. The specific version of this law for Sicily, the Lex Rupilia, was completed after the First Servile War by the consul Publius Rupilius in 132 BC. All the Sicilian cities enjoyed a certain autonomy and issued small coins, but were divided into four legal and administrative classes:[46][47]

1. foederatae civitates (allied communities)

This first order, which could also be called the "first class", included the cities that had remained loyal to Rome during the Punic wars of the 3rd century BC. They enjoyed a much greater freedom than non-federated cities. Rome had conceded to them, as a reward for their demonstrated friendship, a bilateral treaty that recognised the precise duties and rights of citizens and very rarely were they liable to pay the decumena (or tenth), or the tax on their harvest. They could also retain ownership of their lands, could govern themselves and therefore they were very similar to the allied cities of the Italian peninsula, except that the right of Roman citizenship was not granted to the islanders. There were three foederatae civitates: Messina, Tauromenium and Notum

2. civitates sine foedere immunes ac liberae (exempt and free communities without an alliance)

In the second order were the cities that had not entered into a bilateral treaty with Rome, but a unilateral one, in which Rome dictated their rights and duties. However these rights were very favourable compared to the subsequent classes. Although they were not allied, they were exempt from the payment of the decuma and could freely administer their internal affairs, without having to follow Roman law (ius romanus). They could elect their own magistrates, senate and, more significantly, they were free from the jurisdiction of provincial magistrates and their territory could not be legally administered by the praetor . These cities were: Halaesa Archonidea, Alicia, Centuripae, Segesta and Panormus

3. civitates decumanae (communities liable to the decuma tax)

In the third order were the cities that had to pay Rome the tax of one tenth, called the decuma. This was regulated by the lex Hieronica, named for King Hiero II, which established the amount to be taxed on each crop of the territory. These cities did not enjoy the rights of the two previous classes as they had been conquered after offering resistance. Most of the Sicilian population centres were civitates decumanae

4. civitates censoriae (communities subject to the censor)

The last category was for cities that had been conquered in war and for this reason they enjoyed neither rights nor privileges. Cicero reports that there were very few cities that fell into this category. Their land was given to the Romans as an ager publicus, that is it no longer belonged to the citizens but to the Roman conquerors of the city. The names of all the civitates censoriae are not known; some say they were only six and some say they were many. Syracuse and Drepanum were civitates censoriae.

Sicilian Revolt

After Verres, Sicily recovered rapidly, although not reimbursed for the robberies of the former praetor. Nor did Caesar's Civil War (49–45 BC) interrupt business as usual. Caesar's opponents had grasped the strategic importance of the island of Sicily as a base for attacking North Africa or for defending against an attack from Africa. However, after Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon and began the civil war he took control of the island; Asinius Pollio was sent as Caesar's emissary, to remove the governor of the island at the time, Cato. The Caesarians were therefore able to embark from Lilybaeum to attack the supporters of Pompey in North Africa.[48]

The situation changed with the assassination of Caesar (44 BC). In 42 BC, Sextus Pompey, son of Pompey Magnus, was appointed commander of the Roman fleet gathered at Massalia by the Senate. He came into conflict with the Second Triumvirate, consisting of Octavian, Mark Antony, and Lepidus and was proscribed under the lex Pedia for collecting other proscribed individuals and slaves from Epirus and carrying out various acts of piracy. He therefore took control Mylae, Tyndaris and then Messana. After this, all of Sicily had to submit to him.[49] First he killed the praetor, Aulus Pompeius Bithynicus and then he defeated Octavian's legatus, Quintus Salvidienus Rufus in a naval battle off Rhegium (40 BC).[49] Sextus Pompey was able to prevent the supply of grain to Rome from Sicily. Initially, Octavian could do little about this, but then the people at Rome forced a compromise. Thus in 39 BC, Sextus Pompey and the Second Triumvirate signed the Pact of Misenum, which recognised Sextus Pompey's control of Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica and granted freedom to the slaves in his custody. In exchange, Sextus Pompey promised to end the blockade of Rome, resume the Sicilian grain supply to Rome and not to gather any more slaves.[50] The agreement did not hold and triumvirs turned their attention on Sicily. The conflict involved perhaps 200,000 men and 1,000 warships and wrecked great devastation on Sicily. The territory of Tyndaris and Messina was the most damaged.

Octavian was defeated at sea in the Battle of Messina (37 BC) and again in August 36 BC.[51] But Octavian's lieutenant, Agrippa, a commander of great talent was able to destroy Sextus' fleet a month later at the Battle of Naulochus in September 36 BC.[52] Octavian imposed a heavy indemnity on Sicily of 1,600 talents and the cities that had resisted him were harshly punished. Thirty thousand slaves in Sextus Pompey's service were captured; the majority were returned to their masters, but about 6,000, who had no masters, were impaled.

After the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, Octavian had sole power over the Roman Republic. In 27 BC, the Senate formalised this situation and he assumed the title of Augustus.[53]

Augustan reorganisation

 
The regiones of Augustan Italy (around AD 7)

At the end of the conflict between the triumvirs and Sextus Pompey, Sicily was devastated: cities and countryside had been damaged by warfare and a lot of land remained uncultivated because the proprietors were dead or had fled, or their land had been confiscated by Octavian as punishment. A portion of Sicily remained imperial property, while large areas, probably in the Plain of Catania, were given to Agrippa. When he died, the majority of his property passed to Augustus and it is possible that other Sicilian land came into Augustus' possession in a similar way. Other farmland, especially on the eastern and northern coasts, was given to Italian veterans who had served in Augustus' legions.[54]

Augustus carried out an administrative reorganisation of the empire as a whole and of the province of Sicily in particular. A number of coloniae – cities composed of veterans – were established by Augustus on Sicily, but the exact chronology is unclear. We know for certain that the first measures were taken in 36 BC, when Tauromenium was made into a colonia.[55] Subsequently, Augustus visited Sicily in 22 or 21 BC, the first stop on a journey through the empire, and other reforms were carried out. At the end of the process, six Sicilian cities had become coloniae: Syracuse, Tauromenium, Panormus, Catania, Tyndaris, and Thermae Himerenses. The influx of population represented by these foundations may have been intended to compensate for a demographic slump resulting from the war with Sextus Pompey, or from Augustus' excoriation of the island after his victory.[56] It is not clear what happened to the pre-existing Greek inhabitants of these cities: this fact is interesting because normally the citizens of coloniae had Roman citizenship and could therefore participate in the highest levels of the Roman state. It may be that these privileges were restricted to the aristocracy.[57] In any case, the influx of Italian veterans played a decisive role in the diffusion of Latin language in Sicily.[55]

Messina, Lipara, and perhaps Lilybaeum, Agregentum, and Halaesa were made into municipia – a status significantly lower than that of colonia. No veterans were settled in these settlements; they were simply compensated for their loyalty by Augustus.[57]

Centuripa, Notum, and Segesta were converted into "Latin" cities, while the remaining cities retained the same status that they had had since the creation of the province in the third century BC – foreign communities under the control of Rome.[57]

None of the privileges conceded to the various centres automatically implied exemption from paying tribute to Rome. It is reasonable to presume that, like other coloniae outside Italy, the Sicilian coloniae paid tribute. The grain tithe was replaced by the stipendium, a property tax, and there may also have been a poll tax. It is possible that Augustus made this reform as a result of the new role played by Egypt as the source of the grain supply, although the produce of the Emperor's Sicilian farms continued to be sent to Rome.[58]

Imperial province

There is little documentation on the history of Sicily between Augustus and Diocletian. In AD 68, there was disorder on the island, probably linked to the revolt of Lucius Clodius Macer in North Africa. Emperor Vespasian (69–79) settled veterans and freedmen at Panormos and Segesta.

During the first two centuries AD Sicily underwent economic depression and urban life declined, the countryside was deserted and the wealthy owners were not resident, as indicated by the lack of dwellings at various levels. In addition, the Roman government neglected the territory and it became a place of exile and refuge for slaves and brigands.

According to the Historia Augusta (a notoriously unreliable fourth century text), there was a slave revolt in Sicily under the Emperor Gallienus (253–268).

The latifundia, or great private estates, specialising in agriculture destined for export (grain, olive oil, wine) played a large role in society and in the economy in the imperial period.

Rural Sicily entered a new period of prosperity at the beginning of the 4th century, with commercial settlements and farm villages that seem to reach the pinnacle of their expansion and activity.

The reasons seem to be twofold: first of all, renewed commercial links with North Africa expanded for the supplies of grain to Italy,[59] while the Egyptian production, which had so far satisfied the needs of Rome, was sent to the new capital of Constantinople in 330 AD;[60] Sicily consequently assumed a central role in the new commercial routes between the two continents. Secondly, the most prosperous equestrian and senatorial ranks began to abandon urban life by retreating to their country estates, due to the growing tax burden and the expenses they were obliged to sustain the poor masses. Their lands were cultivated no longer by slaves, but by colonists. Considerable sums of money were spent to enlarge, embellish, and make their villas more comfortable.

Traces of renewed construction are found in Filosofiana, Sciacca, Punta Secca, Naxos and elsewhere. An obvious sign of transformation is the new title assigned to the governor of the island, from a corrector to consularis.

In the 4th century therefore, Sicily was not merely the “granary of Rome”, but also became a favourite residence for families of the high Roman aristocracy, like the Symmachi,[61] Nichomachi and the Caeionii, who brought with them the luxury and taste of the capital of the empire.

The most famous archaeological remains of this period are the Villa Romana del Casale. Others include the Villa Romana del Tellaro and Villa Romana di Patti.

Latifundia

The origin of the latifundia in Sicily, as elsewhere, was the ager publicus from the spoils of war, confiscated from conquered peoples from the early 2nd century BC. Latifundia could be used for livestock (sheep and cattle) or cultivation of olive oil, grain, and wine. They distressed Pliny the Elder (died AD 79) as he travelled, seeing only slaves working the land, not the sturdy Roman farmers who had been the backbone of the Republic's army.[62] He argued that the latifundia had ruined Italy and would ruin the Roman provinces as well.

The latifundia quickly started economic consolidation as larger estates achieved greater economies of scale and senators did not pay land taxes. Owners re-invested their profits by purchasing smaller neighbouring farms, since smaller farms had a lower productivity and could not compete, in an ancient precursor of agribusiness. By the 2nd century AD, latifundia had displaced small farms as the agricultural foundation of the Roman Empire. This effect contributed to the destabilising of Roman society; as the small farms of the Roman peasantry were bought up by the wealthy and with their vast supply of slaves, the landless peasantry were forced into idleness, relying greatly on handouts.

Arrival of Christianity in Sicily

 
The martyrdom of Saint Agatha (Cod. Bodmer 127, fol. 39v, end of the 12th century)
 
Saint Lucy depicted in the Breviarium of Martin of Aragon
 
The Roman amphitheatre of Catania [it] (perhaps 2nd century AD) and in the background the Church of San Biagio [it], built in the 18th century after the massive earthquake of 1693 on the location where tradition claims St Agatha was martyred in a furnace

The first reference to a Christian presence on the island appears in Acts (28.12–13): "We landed in Syracuse, where we remained for three days and then we travelled along the coast and arrived at Rhegion." In this way, Paul of Tarsus, on his voyage from the Levant to Rome, which is described at the end of Acts, travelled through Sicily. He stopped in Syracuse after having been shipwrecked and forced to disembark on Malta. From Malta, according to the account in Acts, Paul travelled to Syracuse, but it is not clear why he stopped there. It is clear that Syracuse was still used in this period as a stop on the way to Rome on commercial trade routes. Perhaps Paul was hosted by a Jewish community, such as existed in many ports of the Mediterranean – the Jewish community at Catania is well-attested epigraphically. After Paul, there are no sources before the 3rd century AD which expressly mention a Christian presence on the island.[63]

There are various legends which link the arrival of Christianity in Sicily with Paul's brief sojourn on the island, while other traditions report that Paulmet Christians who had already arrived before him and that this was the reason why he stopped on the island. But Acts doesn't mention any of this and these traditions may respond to the desire to make the arrival of Christianity in Sicily as early as possible (60 or even 40 AD), in order to reinforce the authority of the Sicilian church.[64]

The first certain reference to a Sicilian church is found in an official letter (Epist. 30.5.2), sent from Rome to Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage. This document dates between 250 and 251 during the Decian persecution and discusses the lapsi – Christians who had performed acts of worship to pagan deities in the face of Roman persecutions.[65] The letter mentions a similar letter sent to Sicily, which suggests that apostasy was considered a problem on the island as well and that the Christian presence on Sicily was already significant enough to have a hierarchical relationship with Rome. It is possible that this community developed at the end of the 2nd century AD or at the beginning of the 3rd century – the period in which the first archaeological evidence appears.[66]

The Decian (AD 250) and Diocletianic Persecutions (304) are the setting for the stories of two important Sicilian martyrs, Saint Agatha and Saint Lucy. These saints are known only from hagiographies written about two hundred years after the events, which represent them as young and beautiful virgins, victims of two persecutors called Quintianus and Pascasius.[67] It is likely that these sources respond to a desire to link the two most important cities of eastern Sicily: Catania, home of Saint Agatha, and Syracuse, home of Saint Lucy. Significantly, all the principal saints of the island are women – in addition to Agatha and Lucy, there are the Palermitan saints, Nympha [it] (4th century martyr), Olivia (5th century martyr), and Christina (martyred in 304), who was introduced into the cult of Saint Rosalia by the Palermitans. Perhaps this emphasis on female figures in Sicilian Christianity reflects the emphasis on female deities in pre-Christian Sicilian religion (e.g. Venus of Eryx, Isis, Demeter and Kore).[68]

Two important Christian inscriptions have been discovered from the period. One is the Epitaph of Julia Florentina [it], discovered at Catania in 1730 (in the necropolis on the site of the modern via Dottor Consoli) and now in the Louvre in Paris. It is a funerary inscription, dating to the end of the 3rd century AD at the earliest, which records in Latin the death of a child of little more than a year in age, buried next to the "Christian martyrs" (but it is not clear whether this refers to Agatha and Euplius). The inscription is the first direct evidence for Christianity on the island. The other inscription, also sepulchral, is the so-called Inscription of Euskia in Greek, which was discovered at the end of the 19th century in the Catacombs of San Giovanni in Syracuse and dates to the beginning of the 5th century. The document indicates a local cult of Lucy. At the time of the inscription's creation, the cult of Agatha is already attested at Rome and Carthage.[69]

With the end of the period of the persecutions, the church entered a phase of expansion, even as fierce debates arose within the church on doctrinal point, leading to the convocation of synods. Eusebius includes a letter of Constantine to Crestus, Bishop of Syracuse, in his Church History (10.5.21), which invites him to participate in the Council of Arles of AD 314. Cresto was assigned an important organisational role at Arles, which indicates the relevance of the Sicilian church at the time.[70]

The beginning of monasticism in Sicily came in the 4th century. The hagiographic tradition reports that the ascetic Hilarion travelled from Egypt to Pachino and then spent three years in Sicily (perhaps near modern Ispica), where he sought a retreat in which to practice the life of an anchorite. He subsequently departed as a result of his growing fame in the region.[71] More significant for Sicily was the arrival of cenobitic monasticism: there are many reports of different kinds of ascetics gathering together to share a religious life, especially under the Basilian rule (there were no monasteries in Sicily organised under the Benedictine rule until the Norman period).[72] Some monks followed the Byzantine Rite, others the Latin rite.[73] The growth of monasticism in Sicily was probably due to its insularity, as well as the fact that the region, excepting a few slave revolts, was one of the most peaceful in the west – at least until the Vandal conquest of 439, and then again until the 9th century Arab conquest.[74]

The fall of the Western Empire and Sicily

The 5th century Migration Period was a period of serious crisis for the Roman Empire. In 410, the Visigoths under Alaric sacked Rome. In 476, the general Odoacer deposed Romulus Augustulus traditionally considered the last Western Roman Emperor. The relative tranquility of Sicily in this period attracted many people. Just as in earlier periods, many senatorial families had been spurred to acquire vast estates of fertile land. High functionaries and religious officials (both Christian and pagan) travelled to Sicily to dedicate themselves to study, hunting and entertainment. We know that Nicomachus Flavianus the Younger, praefectus urbi between 361 and 362, had an estate near Enna, where he produced a revised edition of the first ten books of Livy in 408.[75][76] Others came as refugees, such as Melania the Younger, who fled Alaric's sack of Rome and took refuge at Messina with her husband and friends in 410.[77]

Alaric attempted to attack Sicily itself and got as far as Rhegium, but the Gothic fleet was destroyed in the Straits of Messina by a storm and Alaric therefore abandoned the plan.[78]

Genseric, King of the Vandals, occupied the province of Africa in the 430s and began to practice piracy, first raiding the Sicilian coast in 437. Then, after seizing part of the Western Roman fleet berthed at Carthage after taking the city in October 439, the Vandals organised attacks throughout the Mediterranean, especially in Sicily and Sardinia (the main sources of grain for the western empire), Corsica, and the Balearic islands. In 441, since the western Roman fleet had proven incapable of defeating the Vandals, Theodosius II sent an expedition in 442 but it accomplished nothing and was recalled because of attacks by Persians and Huns along the northern and eastern borders. The Western Roman empire continued to defend Sicily, with the general Ricimer active there in 456 and then Marcellinus and his Dalmatian legions in 461. The Vandal presence in Sicily was limited to piratical raids, similar to those undertaken in southern Italy. A panegyric of 468 by Sidonius Apollinaris indicates that in this period, Sicily was still part of the Western Roman Empire. In 468 the island fell to the Vandal King Geiseric but was reunited with Italy in 476 under Odoacer with a toe-hold allowed the Vandals in the port of Lilybaeum.[79] This was ceded to Theodoric in 493.

Culture

 
The Landolina Venus [it] is a 2nd-century AD Roman copy of a Hellenistic original. It is named after archaeologist Saverio Landolina [it], who discovered it in 1804. (Museo archeologico regionale Paolo Orsi)

In the Republican period, the main language was still Greek, since the Romans had no policy of enforcing their language on communities.[80][81][82] Even in the period of Cicero, Greek was the main language used by the elite and almost all the Sicilians mentioned by Cicero in the Verrine Orations have Greek names.[83] Cicero also refers to the Greek calendar (in use throughout Sicily in this period), Greek festivals, relations between the Sicilian cities and panhellenic sanctuaries like Delphi, Sicilian victors of the Olympic Games, and Greek civic architecture.[81] Literature remained almost exclusively Greek, with authors like Diodorus Siculus and Caecilius of Calacte.

The non-Greek languages of Sicily (Sican, Sicel, Elymian, and Punic) probably continued to be spoken in the countryside and employed in traditional religious cults, but were absent from elite and written contexts.[84] There is direct testimony only for Punic (a brief inscription of the 2nd or 1st century BC from Aegusa). Some Mamertines probably retained their Italic dialect.[81]

With the establishment of six Roman coloniae at the beginning of the Imperial period, Sicily received a large influx of Latin speakers for the first time and a Latin-Greek bilingualism developed which continued until the Byzantine period. Generally, in the Imperial period, Latin replaced Greek in an ever-increasing number of areas, while Greek was confined to lower registers, although it retained its historic prestige and was widely used by the population.[85] Latin became firmly established as the elite language, with Calpurnius Siculus, Flavius Vopiscus [it], and Julius Firmicus Maternus producing literary works in Latin, although there are also examples of Sicilian authors who wrote in Greek during the Imperial period, such as Pantaenus, Aristocles of Messene, Probus of Lilybaeum, and Citharius.[86] In this period the non-Greek languages must have definitively disappeared, although Punic may still have been spoken at the end of the Imperial period based on the testimony of Apuleius.[87] Numerous Jewish and Samaritan communities are attested on the island in the Imperial period, although they usually appear in the record using Greek or Latin.[88] From the 5th century the Greek language appears to have experienced a recovery that lasted into the period of Muslim domination.

Major centres

Catania

Catana or Catina (Catania) was conquered at the beginning of the First Punic War, in 263 BC, by the Consul Manius Valerius Maximus Corvinus Messalla.[89] Part of the booty from the conquest was a sundial which was set up in the Comitium in Rome.[90] Additionally the city was required to pay tribute to Rome (civitas decumana). The conqueror of Syracuse, Marcus Claudius Marcellus built a gymnasium in the city.[91] Around 135 BC, in the course of the First Servile War, the city was conquered by the rebel slaves.[92] Another revolt in the area, led by the gladiator Seleurus in 35 BC, was probably suppressed after the death of its leader.[92] In 122 BC, following volcanic activity on Etna, there was heavy damage from the volcanic ash raining down on the roofs of the city which collapsed under the weight.[93] The territory of Catina was further impacted by eruptions in 50, 44, 36 BC and finally by the disastrous lava flow of 32 BC, which ruined the countryside and the city of Aitna, as well as the disastrous war between Augustus and Sextus Pompey, but with the beginning of the Augustan period, a long and difficult socio-economic recovery began. At the end of the war, all Sicily is described as heavily damaged, impoverished, and depopulated in a wide range of areas. In book 6 of Strabo in particular there is reference to the deleterious state of Syracuse, Catania, and Centuripe. After the war against Sextus Pompey, Augustus established a colonia in Catania. Pliny the Elder lists the city, which the Romans called Catina among the cities which Augustus promoted to the rank of Colonia Romana in 21 BC, along with Syracuse and Thermae (Sciacca). Groups of veterans of the Roman army were settled in the cities which had received this new status. The new demographic situation certainly contributed to change the style of municipal life in favour of the new "Middle Class." Catania retained a notable importance and wealth in the course of the late Republic and the Empire: Cicero calls it the "richest" of the cities[94] and it must have remained thus in the later Imperial period and Byzantine times, as the literary sources and numerous contemporary monuments suggest, which makes the city almost unique among those of Roman Sicily. In order to pay the stipendium, the large coastal cities like Catania, extended their control in the course of the High Empire, over a vast swath of the interior of the island which had become depopulated as a result of the large estates which dominated agriculture in the period. Christianity spread rapidly; among the martyrs during the persecutions of Decius and Diocletian, were Saint Agatha, patron saint of the city, and Euplius. The Diocese of Catania was established at the end of the 6th century.

Centuripe

Centuripe, surrendered spontaneously to the Roman consuls Lucius Valerius Flaccus and Titus Otacilius Crassus in 262 BC. As a result, the city was declared free and exempted from taxation, as Cicero mentions in his Verrine Orations. After this a spectacular pace of development is detectable which led it to become one of the most important cities in Roman Sicily. This is attested both by the statements of Cicero and archaeologically by the great quantity of pottery and the imposing funerary monuments. A Greek inscription from the 2nd century BC recounts a Centuripan diplomatic mission to Rome and Lanuvium and part of a treaty with Lanuvium by which the two communities were declared twins. In 39 BC, Sextus Pompey took the city by siege and destroyed it for its loyalty to Octavian, but the latter rebuilt it and gave the inhabitants Roman citizenship as well. In the Imperial period, Centuripe produced imposing monuments whose remains still survive today. These include the Temple of the Augustales of the first or second century AD, of which columns and two monumental tower tombs can be seen on one side; the Dogana, of which only a raised flat area can now be seen; and Castle of Conradin. In the northwest of the town, in contrada Bagni, a paved street leads to the remains of a nymphaeum, suspended over a torrent of water, of which a brick wall with five niches survives, as well as remains of a pool for collecting the water and part of the aqueduct. Notable also is the continued production of coinage by the city in the Roman Republican period.

Tauromenium

Tauromenium (Taormina) remained under the control of Syracuse until 212 BC when all of Sicily became a Roman province. Its inhabitants were considered foederati of the Romans and Cicero says in the Verrine Orations that it was one of three civitates foederatae (allied cities) and calls it a civis notabilis. As a result of this, the community did not have to pay the grain tax or provide ships and sailors in emergencies. In the course of the First Servile War (c.135–132 BC), Tauromenium was occupied by the rebel slaves who used it as a stronghold. Besieged by the consul Pompilius, the starving garrison surrendered only when one of the leaders, Serapion, betrayed his companions and admitted the Romans to the city. In 36 BC, during the war between Sextus Pompey and Octavian, the latter's troops disembarked at Naxos and reoccupied the city. Later, in 21 BC, Augustus founded a Roman colonia in the city for his supporters, expelling those inhabitants who had opposed him. Strabo speaks of Tauromenium as a smaller city than Messana and Catana. Pliny and Claudius Ptolemy mention it as a Roman colonia.

Messana

Messana (Messina) surrendered by the Mamertines to the Romans in 264 BC, received the status of civitas libera et foederata (free and allied community) after the First Punic War, along with Tauromenium. During the Republican period, it suffered attacks during the Servile Wars (102 BC). Cicero mentions the city in the Verrine Orations as civitas maxima et locupletissima (a very large and wealthy community). In 49 BC, Pompey attacked the fleet of Julius Caesar and drove it into Messana's port. Subsequently, the city became one of the many bases of Sextus Pompey and it was sacked by the troops of Lepidus. Afterwards, it probably became a municipium.

Of the fate of the city during the Roman Empire, we know almost nothing. There is a tradition that St Paul visited the city on his way to Rome and preached the Gospel there. After the division of the Roman Empire it became part of the Eastern empire. In 407, under the Emperor Arcadius, Messana was made the protometropolis of Sicily and Magna Graecia.

Tyndaris

Tyndaris (Tindari) was the control of Hieron II during the First Punic War and became a Carthaginian naval base early in the war. The Battle of Tyndaris was fought nearby in 257 BC, in which the Roman fleet commanded by Gaius Atilius Regulus defeated the Carthaginians. Later, it was a naval base for Sextus Pompey, captured by Octavian in 36 BC. He founded a Roman colonia, Colonia Augusta Tyndaritanorum, on the site, one of five coloniae founded in Sicily. Cicero calls the city a nobilissima civitas. In the first century AD it suffered a major landslide, while in the fourth century AD it was damaged by two destructive earthquakes. It became the seat of a bishopric, was conquered by the Byzantines in 535 and fell to the Arabs in 836, who destroyed the city.

Thermae Himerae

Thermae Himerae (Termini Imerese) was the site of a serious Roman defeat by Hamilcar Barca in 260 BC, during the First Punic War, but was subsequently conquered by them in 253 BC. Thereafter it remained loyal to Rome and was among the cities subject to tribute. After the destruction of Carthage in 146 BC Scipio Aemilianus returned works of art which had been taken by the Carthaginians to Thermae, including a statue of Stesichorus, who had spent time in the city. The base of one of these statues is preserved, with part of the inscription. After defeating Sextus Pompey, Octavian established a colonia on the site; this was probably a punishment of the city for having links with the Pompeian party. The impact of this action is clear from the numerous Latin inscriptions which survive at the site and from the extraordinary number of Roman and Italian names attested on the site. The former Greek inhabitants of the city practically disappear from record at the beginning of the Imperial period.

Panormus

Panormus (Palermo) remained under Carthaginian control until the First Punic War and was site of one of the main conflicts between the Carthaginians and the Romans, until the Roman fleet attacked the city in 254 BC and made the city a tributary. Hasdrubal attempted to recapture the city but was defeated by the Roman consul, Metellus. Another attempt at reconquest was made by Hamilcar Barca in 247 BC, but the city remained loyal to the Romans, for which it received the title of praetura, the eagle of gold, and the right to mint coinage, remaining one of the five free cities of the island.

Drepanum

Drepanum (Trapani), conquered along with Eryx at the end of the First Punic War, became a flourishing commercial city, owing primarily to the port, its geographic location on Mediterranean sea routes, its active sea salt industry, which had been developed already in Phoenician times, and the extraction of coral.

Lilybaeum

Lilybaeum (Marsala), already prosperous under the Carthaginians, was the seat of one of the quaestores which Rome sent to Sicily annually. It was enriched by splendid mansions and public buildings. Among others, one of the quaestores at Lilybaeum was Cicero in the year 75 BC, who referred to Lilybaeum as splendidissima civitas (the most splendid community). Under Emperor Pertinax, the city became a large Roman colonia, called Helvia Augusta Lilybaitanorum.[95]

Syracuse

Syracusae became the capital of the new Roman province after 212 BC. Despite the misgovernment and systematic despoliation of its artistic heritage by Gaius Verres, Syracuse remained the capital of the province and seat of its praetor. It continued to be a key port for commercial interaction between east and west. St Paul and Marcian of Syracuse (the first Bishop of Syracuse) spent time in the city proselytising. As a result of the Roman persecution of the Christians before the Edict of Constantine in AD 313, a deep network of catacombs were built under the city, second only to those of Rome. Successive attacks, starting with those of the Vandals in 440, impoverished the city until it was conquered by the Byzantine general Belisarius in 535. From 663 to 668, the city was the residence of Emperor Constans II and the metropolis of all churches in Sicily.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Appian, Sicily and the Other Islands, Fragments, section 2". data.perseus.org. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  2. ^ Brennan, T. Corey (2000). The praetorship in the Roman Republic. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 91–93. ISBN 0195114590. OCLC 41503761.
  3. ^ Cartwright, Mark. "Syracuse", World History Encyclopedia, 28 April 2011
  4. ^ Polybius 1.7.3–4
  5. ^ Finley 2009, p. 27.
  6. ^ Geraci & Marcone 2004, p. 86.
  7. ^ Finley 2009, pp. 129–130.
  8. ^ a b Finley 2009, p. 132.
  9. ^ Geraci & Marcone 2004, pp. 86–87.
  10. ^ Geraci & Marcone 2004, p. 87.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Guidetti 2004, p. 323.
  12. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999a, vol. I, p. 59.
  13. ^ Polyb.1.20.1–2
  14. ^ Finley 2009, p. 133.
  15. ^ Finley 2009, pp. 132–133.
  16. ^ Finley 2009, p. 134.
  17. ^ a b c Geraci & Marcone 2004, p. 89.
  18. ^ a b Guidetti 2004, p. 322.
  19. ^ Michael Crawford, Coinage and Money Under the Roman Republic: Italy and the Mediterranean Economy, University of California Press, 1985, p. 104.
  20. ^ a b Geraci & Marcone 2004, p. 90.
  21. ^ See "Questore" on treccani.it.
  22. ^ Finley 2009, p. 141.
  23. ^ Thomas D. Frazel (2009). The Rhetoric of Cicero's "In Verrem". Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. p. 197. ISBN 978-3-525-25289-5.
  24. ^ Geraci & Marcone 2004, pp. 92–93.
  25. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 23.10.
  26. ^ a b c d Finley 2009, p. 137.
  27. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 24.3.
  28. ^ Livy, 25.40.2
  29. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999a, vol. I, p. 60.
  30. ^ Livy, 27.4.1–2
  31. ^ Livy, 27.4.3–4.
  32. ^ Livy, 27.5.1–2
  33. ^ Livy 27.5.2–4.
  34. ^ Finley 2009, pp. 137–138.
  35. ^ Finley 2009, p. 138.
  36. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 56.9, 58.8, 59.2.
  37. ^ Umberto Benigni (1912). "Sicily". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  38. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 89.2.
  39. ^ Appian, Mithridatic Wars, 93.
  40. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 98.3.
  41. ^ Florus, Compendium of Livy, 1.41.6.
  42. ^ Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.22.2.
  43. ^ Florus, Compendium of Livy, 1.41.9–10.
  44. ^ Appian, Mithridatic Wars, 95.
  45. ^ Fezzi, Il tribuno Clodio, p. 44.
  46. ^ Francesco Cristiano. "Il comportamento di Roma nei confronti delle civitates di Sicilia: Le civitates immunae ac liberae".
  47. ^ M. Tullius Cicero. Orationes in Verrem, III 6
  48. ^ Finley 2009, p. 169.
  49. ^ a b Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 123.1.
  50. ^ Finley 2009, p. 170.
  51. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 128.1.
  52. ^ Livy, Periochae ab Urbe condita libri, 127.5, 128.1 & 129.1–4.
  53. ^ Finley 2009, p. 171.
  54. ^ Finley 2009, p. 172.
  55. ^ a b Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999a, vol. I, p. 64.
  56. ^ Finley 2009, p. 173.
  57. ^ a b c Finley 2009, p. 174.
  58. ^ Finley 2009, p. 175.
  59. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999a, vol. I, pp. 63–65.
  60. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999a, vol. I, p. 68.
  61. ^ Symmachus, Ep. iii. 12, 88, vii. 18
  62. ^ Pliny's Natural History, 13.92, 17.192, 18.17, 18.35, 18.261 and 18.296
  63. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, pp. 1–2.
  64. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 2.
  65. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 7.
  66. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 6.
  67. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, pp. 7–8.
  68. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 8.
  69. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, pp. 9–10.
  70. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 10.
  71. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, pp. 10–11.
  72. ^ Finley 2009, p. 201.
  73. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 11.
  74. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, pp. 11 & 13.
  75. ^ Symmachus, Epistulae, ii.30, vi.57,66.
  76. ^ Codex Mediceus; Charles W. Hedrick, History and Silence: Purge and Rehabilitation of Memory in Late Antiquity, University of Texas Press, 2000, ISBN 0-292-73121-3, p. 181-182).
  77. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, pp. 12–13.
  78. ^ Benigno & Giarrizzo 1999b, vol. II, p. 18.
  79. ^ J. B. Bury, The History of the Later Roman Empire, pp. 254, 327, 333, 336 and 410; John Moorhead, Theodoric in Italy (Oxford University Press, 1992), p. 9.
  80. ^ Varvaro 1981, p. 33
  81. ^ a b c Finley 2009, p. 155.
  82. ^ Rohlfs 1984, p. 22
  83. ^ Varvaro 1981, p. 35.
  84. ^ Varvaro 1981, p. 38.
  85. ^ Finley 2009, p. 189.
  86. ^ Varvaro 1981, pp. 45–46.
  87. ^ Apuleius, Metamorphoses 11.5.2: Siculi trilingues, which might be Latin, Greek and Punic
  88. ^ Varvaro 1981, p. 50.
  89. ^ Eutropius, II 19.
  90. ^ Pliny the Elder, Naturalis historia, VII 214.
  91. ^ Plutarch, Life of Marcellus, 30.
  92. ^ a b Strabo, 6.2.6
  93. ^ Orosius, V 13, 3.
  94. ^ Verrine, 2.3.10.
  95. ^ Treccani. "Lilibeo in Treccani".

Bibliography

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  • Rohlfs, Gerhard (1984). La Sicilia nei secoli. Profilo storico, etnico e linguistico. Palermo: Sellerio.
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External links

  • R. Wilson; R. Talbert; T. Elliott; S. Gillies (31 January 2020). "Places: 462492 (Sicilia)". Pleiades. Retrieved March 8, 2012.

sicilia, roman, province, sicilia, classical, latin, sɪˈkɪ, ancient, greek, Σικελία, first, province, acquired, roman, republic, encompassing, island, sicily, western, part, island, brought, under, roman, control, conclusion, first, punic, with, carthage, prae. Sicilia s ɪ ˈ s ɪ l i e Classical Latin sɪˈkɪ li a Ancient Greek Sikelia was the first province acquired by the Roman Republic encompassing the island of Sicily The western part of the island was brought under Roman control in 241 BC at the conclusion of the First Punic War with Carthage 1 A praetor was regularly assigned to the island from c 227 BC 2 The Kingdom of Syracuse under Hieron II remained an independent ally of Rome until its defeat in 212 BC during the Second Punic War 3 Thereafter the province included the whole of the island of Sicily the island of Malta and the smaller island groups the Egadi islands the Lipari islands Ustica and Pantelleria SiciliaSikeliaProvince of the Roman Empire241 BC 476 ADThe province of Sicilia within the Roman Empire c 125 ADCapitalSyracusaeHistoryHistorical eraAntiquity Established after the end of First Punic War241 BC Fall of the Western Roman Empire476 ADPreceded by Succeeded byAncient CarthageKingdom of Syracuse Theme of SicilyToday part ofItalyMaltaDuring the Roman Republic the island was the main source of grain for the city of Rome Extraction was heavy provoking armed uprisings known as the First and Second Servile Wars in the second century BC In the first century the Roman governor Verres was famously prosecuted for his corruption by Cicero In the civil wars which brought the Roman Republic to an end Sicily was controlled by Sextus Pompey in opposition to the Second Triumvirate When the island finally came under the control of Augustus in 36 BC it was substantially reorganised with large Roman colonies being established in several major cities For most of the Imperial period the province was a peaceful agrarian territory As a result it is rarely mentioned in literary sources but archaeology and epigraphy reveals several thriving cities such as Lilybaeum and Panormus in the west and Syracuse and Catania in the east These communities were organised in a similar way to other cities of the Roman Empire and were largely self governing Greek and Latin were the main languages of the island but Punic Hebrew and probably other languages were also spoken There were several Jewish communities on the island and from around AD 200 there is also evidence of substantial Christian communities The province briefly fell under the control of the Vandal kingdom of North Africa shortly before the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in 476 but was soon returned to the Kingdom of Italy and returned to Roman control under the eastern emperor at Constantinople to which it would remain until the 9th century Contents 1 History 1 1 First Punic War 1 2 The first Roman province 1 3 Second Punic War 1 4 Late Republic 1 4 1 Praetorship of Gaius Verres 1 4 2 War on Pirates 1 4 3 Internal organisation 1 5 Sicilian Revolt 1 6 Augustan reorganisation 1 7 Imperial province 1 7 1 Latifundia 1 8 Arrival of Christianity in Sicily 1 9 The fall of the Western Empire and Sicily 2 Culture 3 Major centres 3 1 Catania 3 2 Centuripe 3 3 Tauromenium 3 4 Messana 3 5 Tyndaris 3 6 Thermae Himerae 3 7 Panormus 3 8 Drepanum 3 9 Lilybaeum 3 10 Syracuse 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory EditFirst Punic War Edit Main article First Punic War Sicily during the first Punic War between Rome and Carthage 264 241 BC Agathocles tyrant of Syracuse from 317 and King of Sicily from 307 or 304 BC died in 289 BC A group of his Campanian mercenaries called the Mamertines were offered compensation in exchange for leaving the city They took control of Messina killing and exiling the men and holding the women in bondage 4 5 In response to this the Syracusan general Hiero who had reorganised the mercenaries and was able to bring banditry under control in 269 BC began advancing on Messina The Carthaginians always eager to prevent the excessive empowerment of a single force and to keep Sicily divided offered aid to the Mamertines Hiero had to return to Syracuse where he assumed the title of king 6 7 Shortly thereafter the Mamertines decided to expel the Carthaginian garrison and seek aid from the Romans instead 8 At Rome there was a debate on the appropriateness of helping the Mamertines Previously Rome had intervened against Campanian mercenaries who had followed the Mamertines example and taken control of Rhegium modern Reggio Calabria Moreover it seemed clear that intervention in Sicily would lead to conflict with Carthage According to the lost historian Philinus of Agrigentum who was favourable to the Carthaginians there was a treaty between Rome and Carthage which defined their respective spheres of influence and assigned Sicily to the Carthaginians This Philinus Treaty is known to us from Polybius who mentions it in order to deny its existence Polybius also claims that the Romans were encouraged to intervene by economic motivations on account of the wealth of Sicily in this period The Senate gave the decision on whether or not to help the Mamertines to the popular assembly which decided to send help This was not a formal declaration of war against Carthage but the intervention in Sicily sufficed as a casus belli and thus marked the beginning of the First Punic War 264 241 BC 9 This was the first time that Roman forces had campaigned outside the Italian peninsula Hiero allied with Carthage against the Mamertines had to face the legions of Valerius Messalla The Romans quickly expelled the Syracusans and Carthaginains from Messina In 263 BC Hiero changed sides making a peace treaty with the Romans in exchange for an indemnity of 100 talents thus ensuring the maintenance of his power He proved a loyal ally of the Romans until his death in 215 BC providing aid specially grain and siege weapons to the Romans This assistance was essential for the conquest of the Carthaginian base at Agrigentum in 262 BC 10 Hiero s loyalty is reflected in the peace treaty imposed on the Carthaginians at the end of the war in which they were forbidden to attack Hiero or his allies It seems however that pro Roman sentiment was not universal at Syracuse and that there was a group opposed to Hiero which favoured the Carthaginians 11 At the end of the First Punic War Rome had conquered the majority of the island except for Syracuse which retained a broad autonomy although required to accept Roman supremacy in the region In addition to Syracuse the kingdom of Hiero was granted a number of centres in the eastern part of the island such as Akrai Leontini Megara Eloro Netum and Tauromenium 12 and probably also Morgantina and Camarina In addition to the aforementioned Philinus there were other accounts of the First Punic War written by authors opposed to Rome such as Sosilus of Sparta The work of Philinus was analysed and criticised by Polybius while that of Sosilus was entirely rejected by him as the vulgar gossip of a barber s shop 8 A pro Roman account was written by the historian Fabius Pictor which is criticised by Polybius as well The resulting representation of the war in the ancient source material is very partial the motivations of the Mamertines are left opaque and by the time of Polybius about a hundred years after the war began there were different opinions even at Rome The ancient accounts impression that a war between Carthage and Rome was inevitable also seems questionable Even the traditional explanation that Carthage was threatening Rome at the Straits of Messina seems anachronistic according to Moses Finley since Carthage had never shown any inclination to expand into Italy Probably no one at Rome foresaw that intervention at Messina would lead to a conflict on such a scale According to the account of Polybius this changed only after the conquest of Agrigentum 13 Finley says this argument appears too simple and schematic but it is correct in the sense that only then did Rome take the essential decision of creating a fleet without which there was no hope of fighting the Carthaginians on equal terms 14 The reaction of the Carthaginians to Roman intervention however is easily explained Sicily had always been fundamental for Carthaginian control of the seas In any case the fact that the Romans ultimately conquered the island makes it difficult to produce a balance reconstruction of conditions on Sicily in this period 15 What is certain is that the First Punic War had a disastrous effect on the territory Both Rome and Carthage carried out atrocities 250 000 inhabitants of Agrigentum Philinus homeland were sold as slaves in 262 BC and seven years later the Carthaginians demolished the walls of the same city and set it on fire In 258 BC the Roman conquest of Camarina saw the majority of the inhabitants sold into slavery and 27 000 inhabitant of Panormus suffered the same fate although 14 000 were redeemed In 250 BC Selinus was razed to the ground by the Romans and it was not inhabited again until Late Antiquity Lilybaeum resisted a Roman siege for ten years until the conclusion of the war after the Battle of the Aegates 16 The first Roman province Edit The Roman victory in the First Punic War placed the entire island of Sicily in Roman hands Previous Roman conquests in Italy had resulted in direct annexation or asymmetric treaties with Rome as hegemonic power These treaties guaranteed substantial internal autonomy to the socii they were required to contribute troops when requested but not to pay any form of tribute 17 Probably because of the island s complex mixture of ethnicities and perhaps also in order to recoup the expenses sustained during the war through a system of fiscal control which excluded the concession of broad autonomy Sicily came to be defined by a different institutional system 18 Philistis wife of Hiero II depicted on a tetradrachm minted between 218 and 214 BC Eventually the provincial structure would consist of a praetor assisted in financial matters by two quaestores one based at Lilybaeum and one based at Syracuse But it is not clear how this system took form It has been suggested that from 240 BC the government of western Sicily was entrusted to a quaestor sent annually to Lilybaeum 19 Scholars like Filippo Coarelli and Michael Crawford consider it possible that the government of Sicily was entrusted to a privatus cum imperio that is an aristocrat with no official post and with a military command conferred on a personal basis sent annually with administrative and judicial competence Extraordinary governors of this kind were seen already during the First Punic War and occur again during the Second Punic War 18 Assuming that there was a quaestor at Lilybaeum it is unclear whether this position was created immediately after the end of the war or sometime later or if it was one of the quaestores which already existed that is one of the quaestores classici treasurers of the fleet that had first been created in 267 BC 20 when the number of quaestores was increased from four to eight 21 Nor as it clear if there were two quaestores in the province from the beginning one in Lilybaeum and one in Syracuse since in all the provinces that were subsequently established there was only one quaestor According to Antonino Pinzone this difference is explained by the fact that Sicily came under the control of Rome in two stages so that the position of the quaestor of Lilybaeum is to be considered a kind of fossil and his influence is to be imputed to the financial and military arrangements inherited from the quaestor classicus 11 Subsequently in 227 BC two new praetores were created praetores provinciales one Gaius Flaminius was sent to Sicily the other Marcus Valerius Laevinus to the new province of Corsica and Sardinia Originally the term provincia indicated the jurisdiction of a magistrate especially the possession of imperium eventually it came to indicate the territory under their control 20 The change of 227 is reported by Gaius Julius Solinus The two islands under the control of Rome were made provinces in the same moment when in that year 227 BC M Valerius was assigned as praetor of Sardinia by lot and C Flaminius of the other island Collectanea rerum memorabilium 5 1 It was in 227 BC that an annual grain tribute was imposed on the Sicilian communities by a lex frumentaria 17 This is best known for the province of Sicily from the 1st century BC context as a result of Cicero s Verrines 22 At that time the tribute consisted of a tenth of the harvest and it is possible that this system derived from the Syracusan kingdom the lex Hieronica derived in turn from the Ptolemaic grain tax 11 The tithe decuma was contracted out to the highest bidder whoever promised to collect the largest amount of modii 23 These contractors were called decumani 17 It seems that this lex frumentaria had results which were not excessively grievous for the cities to pay and the small Italians proprietors livin on the island It developed in the context of Gaius Flaminius focus on the development of small proprietors and of their class 11 Second Punic War Edit Main article Second Punic War Hieronymus King of Syracuse 215 BC depicted on one of his coins The Second Punic War which ran from 212 to 202 BC was initiated by Hannibal who was aware of the importance of the Italian socii to Rome and accordingly decided to attack the Romans on their own turf passing through Gaul over the Alps and into Italy In a particularly difficult moment for Rome after the defeat at the Battle of Cannae 216 BC Hiero II died 215 BC His successor was his fifteen year old grandson Hieronymus who decided to switch to the Carthaginian side 24 This act arose from a period of intense conflict at Syracuse between the pro Roman aristocratic faction and the pro Carthaginian democratic faction Hannibal himself had sent two brothers of Syracusan descent Hippocrates and Epicydes in order to rouse the people against the Romans 11 The burning glass allegedly used by Archimedes in the defense of Syracuse in 212 BC depicted in the frontespiece of Opticae Thesaurus The survivors from the Roman side of the Battle of Cannae were sent to Sicily and forbidden to leave until the end of hostilities 25 Hieronymus decision to change sides caused Roman troops to be dispatched to the gates of Syracuse The Carthaginians also sent troops to the island and contended with the Romans for control of the island The conquest of Syracuse in 212 BC by the forces of Marcellus was a decisive moment for the war which resulted either from the betrayal of the city by members of the Syracusan aristocracy 26 or by Moericus a Spanish mercenary in the Carthaginian camp 11 The conquest of Syracuse was costly for the Romans on account of the topography of the city the defensive machines built by Archimedes and the extensive fortifications especially the Euryalus fortress originally built by the tyrant Dionysius I 404 367 BC to protect the western end of Epipolae 11 The city was sacked and many inhabitants were killed including Archimedes 27 26 Marcellus then dispatched a lot of booty to Rome including works taken from temples and public buildings and was criticised for this by Polybius according to Livy 28 it was the arrival of this booty that first gave rise to Roman enthusiasm for Greek art The Romans considered it opportune to replace Marcellus hated by the Syracusans with Marcus Valerius Laevinus 26 Following these events Syracuse was incorporated into the province of Sicily becoming its capital and the seat of its governor 29 The whole of Sicily was now in Roman hands except for Agrigentum which held out until 210 BC when it was betrayed by Numidian mercenaries led by Mutines 26 In the summer the time came to hold the comitia centuriata at Rome in order to elect the consuls The task of organising the elections was expected to fall to Marcellus as senior consul but he sent a letter to the Senate when it recalled him declaring that it would be harmful to the Republic to leave Hannibal to his own devices When the Senate received this there was debate as to whether it was better to recall the consul from campaign even though he was unwilling or to cancel the elections of consuls for 209 BC 30 In the end it was decided to recall Valerius Laevinus from Sicily even though he was outside Italy The senate ordered the Urban praetor Lucius Manlius Acidinus to take a letter to Valerius along with that sent to the Senate by Marcellus and to explain to him why they had decided to recall him 31 Valerius Laevinus set out from Rome with ten ships and arrived in Sicily safely entrusted control of the province and command of the army to the praetor Lucius Cincius Alimentus then sent the commander of the fleet Marcus Valerius Messalla to Africa with part of the fleet to investigate the preparations of the Carthaginians and to raid their territory 32 When he returned to Rome he informed the Senate that no Carthaginian forces remained on the island that all the exiles had returned home and work had resumed in the fields 33 34 This was an exaggeration insofar as Laevinius spent almost all of 209 BC trying to revive Sicilian agriculture Not only was all independence of Sicily brought to an end but the majority of the islands commercial activities were redirected toward Italy 35 However in 210 BC the Senate decided to restore autonomy to Syracuse which retained a large hinterland 11 Late Republic Edit See also First Servile War and Second Servile War Thereafter Sicily became one of the most prosperous and peaceful Roman provinces although it was disturbed by two serious rebellions The first of these is known as the First Servile War c 138 132 BC was led by King Antiochus Eunus who established a capital at Enna and conquered Tauromenium as well Eunus defeated the Roman army several times but in 133 BC he was vanquished by Consul Publius Rupilius near Messina the war ended with the capture of Tauromenium and Enna in 132 BC and about 20 000 of the unfortunate slaves were crucified 36 The Second Servile War 104 101 was led by Athenio in the western part of the island and by Salvius Tryphon in the east This war was terminated by Manius Aquillius 37 Both wars are described by Diodorus Siculus in terms which suggest that there were massive numbers of slaves from the eastern Mediterranean in Sicily c 200 000 with significant economic and social implications for the island At the end of Sulla s civil war in 82 BC the young general Pompey was sent to Sicily by the dictator Sulla to recover the island from the supporters of Marius and thereby secure the grain supply to Rome Pompey crushed the opposition and when the cities complained he responded with one of his most famous statements reported by Plutarch as why do you keep praising the laws before me when I am wearing a sword He expelled his enemies in Sicily putting to death the consul Papirius Carbo 38 The government of the island in this period was controlled by a praetor who was assisted by two quaestores who focussed on financial matters one based at Syracuse and one at Lilybaeum Some communities continued to possess a popular assembly but there was an increasing concentration of power in the hands of local elites Praetorship of Gaius Verres Edit From 73 to 71 BC the praetor of the province was Gaius Verres who was denounced by the Sicilians for extortion theft and robbery and was prosecuted in Rome by Cicero whose speeches against him known as the Verrines still survive Since these speeches are the main evidence for Verres actions it is hard to get an objective idea of the impact of his activities on Sicily Cicero emphasised Verres very harsh implementation of the grain tax for his personal profit rather than that of the Republic and the theft of artworks including sacred votive offerings Verres had expected the power of his friends and the deft manipulation of legal procedure to ensure his acquittal but after Cicero s blisteringly effective first speech he fled into exile War on Pirates Edit In 70 BC the praetor Caecilius Metellus fought successfully against the pirates which infested the seas around Sicily 39 40 and Campania 41 who went on to plunder Gaeta and Ostia 69 68 BC 42 and captured the daughter of Marcus Antonius Orator at Misenum In the course of the subsequent war against the pirates in 67 BC the sea around Sicily was assigned to Plotius Varus 43 44 In 61 BC Clodius was sent to the island as quaestor 45 Internal organisation Edit In the Roman Republican period Marcus Valerius Laevinus introduced the lex provinciae in 210 BC the law regulating cities in provinces The specific version of this law for Sicily the Lex Rupilia was completed after the First Servile War by the consul Publius Rupilius in 132 BC All the Sicilian cities enjoyed a certain autonomy and issued small coins but were divided into four legal and administrative classes 46 47 1 foederatae civitates allied communities This first order which could also be called the first class included the cities that had remained loyal to Rome during the Punic wars of the 3rd century BC They enjoyed a much greater freedom than non federated cities Rome had conceded to them as a reward for their demonstrated friendship a bilateral treaty that recognised the precise duties and rights of citizens and very rarely were they liable to pay the decumena or tenth or the tax on their harvest They could also retain ownership of their lands could govern themselves and therefore they were very similar to the allied cities of the Italian peninsula except that the right of Roman citizenship was not granted to the islanders There were three foederatae civitates Messina Tauromenium and Notum2 civitates sine foedere immunes ac liberae exempt and free communities without an alliance In the second order were the cities that had not entered into a bilateral treaty with Rome but a unilateral one in which Rome dictated their rights and duties However these rights were very favourable compared to the subsequent classes Although they were not allied they were exempt from the payment of the decuma and could freely administer their internal affairs without having to follow Roman law ius romanus They could elect their own magistrates senate and more significantly they were free from the jurisdiction of provincial magistrates and their territory could not be legally administered by the praetor These cities were Halaesa Archonidea Alicia Centuripae Segesta and Panormus3 civitates decumanae communities liable to the decuma tax In the third order were the cities that had to pay Rome the tax of one tenth called the decuma This was regulated by the lex Hieronica named for King Hiero II which established the amount to be taxed on each crop of the territory These cities did not enjoy the rights of the two previous classes as they had been conquered after offering resistance Most of the Sicilian population centres were civitates decumanae4 civitates censoriae communities subject to the censor The last category was for cities that had been conquered in war and for this reason they enjoyed neither rights nor privileges Cicero reports that there were very few cities that fell into this category Their land was given to the Romans as an ager publicus that is it no longer belonged to the citizens but to the Roman conquerors of the city The names of all the civitates censoriae are not known some say they were only six and some say they were many Syracuse and Drepanum were civitates censoriae Sicilian Revolt Edit Main article War between Sextus Pompey and the Second Triumvirate After Verres Sicily recovered rapidly although not reimbursed for the robberies of the former praetor Nor did Caesar s Civil War 49 45 BC interrupt business as usual Caesar s opponents had grasped the strategic importance of the island of Sicily as a base for attacking North Africa or for defending against an attack from Africa However after Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon and began the civil war he took control of the island Asinius Pollio was sent as Caesar s emissary to remove the governor of the island at the time Cato The Caesarians were therefore able to embark from Lilybaeum to attack the supporters of Pompey in North Africa 48 The situation changed with the assassination of Caesar 44 BC In 42 BC Sextus Pompey son of Pompey Magnus was appointed commander of the Roman fleet gathered at Massalia by the Senate He came into conflict with the Second Triumvirate consisting of Octavian Mark Antony and Lepidus and was proscribed under the lex Pedia for collecting other proscribed individuals and slaves from Epirus and carrying out various acts of piracy He therefore took control Mylae Tyndaris and then Messana After this all of Sicily had to submit to him 49 First he killed the praetor Aulus Pompeius Bithynicus and then he defeated Octavian s legatus Quintus Salvidienus Rufus in a naval battle off Rhegium 40 BC 49 Sextus Pompey was able to prevent the supply of grain to Rome from Sicily Initially Octavian could do little about this but then the people at Rome forced a compromise Thus in 39 BC Sextus Pompey and the Second Triumvirate signed the Pact of Misenum which recognised Sextus Pompey s control of Sicily Sardinia and Corsica and granted freedom to the slaves in his custody In exchange Sextus Pompey promised to end the blockade of Rome resume the Sicilian grain supply to Rome and not to gather any more slaves 50 The agreement did not hold and triumvirs turned their attention on Sicily The conflict involved perhaps 200 000 men and 1 000 warships and wrecked great devastation on Sicily The territory of Tyndaris and Messina was the most damaged Octavian was defeated at sea in the Battle of Messina 37 BC and again in August 36 BC 51 But Octavian s lieutenant Agrippa a commander of great talent was able to destroy Sextus fleet a month later at the Battle of Naulochus in September 36 BC 52 Octavian imposed a heavy indemnity on Sicily of 1 600 talents and the cities that had resisted him were harshly punished Thirty thousand slaves in Sextus Pompey s service were captured the majority were returned to their masters but about 6 000 who had no masters were impaled After the Battle of Actium in 31 BC Octavian had sole power over the Roman Republic In 27 BC the Senate formalised this situation and he assumed the title of Augustus 53 Augustan reorganisation Edit The regiones of Augustan Italy around AD 7 At the end of the conflict between the triumvirs and Sextus Pompey Sicily was devastated cities and countryside had been damaged by warfare and a lot of land remained uncultivated because the proprietors were dead or had fled or their land had been confiscated by Octavian as punishment A portion of Sicily remained imperial property while large areas probably in the Plain of Catania were given to Agrippa When he died the majority of his property passed to Augustus and it is possible that other Sicilian land came into Augustus possession in a similar way Other farmland especially on the eastern and northern coasts was given to Italian veterans who had served in Augustus legions 54 Augustus carried out an administrative reorganisation of the empire as a whole and of the province of Sicily in particular A number of coloniae cities composed of veterans were established by Augustus on Sicily but the exact chronology is unclear We know for certain that the first measures were taken in 36 BC when Tauromenium was made into a colonia 55 Subsequently Augustus visited Sicily in 22 or 21 BC the first stop on a journey through the empire and other reforms were carried out At the end of the process six Sicilian cities had become coloniae Syracuse Tauromenium Panormus Catania Tyndaris and Thermae Himerenses The influx of population represented by these foundations may have been intended to compensate for a demographic slump resulting from the war with Sextus Pompey or from Augustus excoriation of the island after his victory 56 It is not clear what happened to the pre existing Greek inhabitants of these cities this fact is interesting because normally the citizens of coloniae had Roman citizenship and could therefore participate in the highest levels of the Roman state It may be that these privileges were restricted to the aristocracy 57 In any case the influx of Italian veterans played a decisive role in the diffusion of Latin language in Sicily 55 Messina Lipara and perhaps Lilybaeum Agregentum and Halaesa were made into municipia a status significantly lower than that of colonia No veterans were settled in these settlements they were simply compensated for their loyalty by Augustus 57 Centuripa Notum and Segesta were converted into Latin cities while the remaining cities retained the same status that they had had since the creation of the province in the third century BC foreign communities under the control of Rome 57 None of the privileges conceded to the various centres automatically implied exemption from paying tribute to Rome It is reasonable to presume that like other coloniae outside Italy the Sicilian coloniae paid tribute The grain tithe was replaced by the stipendium a property tax and there may also have been a poll tax It is possible that Augustus made this reform as a result of the new role played by Egypt as the source of the grain supply although the produce of the Emperor s Sicilian farms continued to be sent to Rome 58 Imperial province Edit There is little documentation on the history of Sicily between Augustus and Diocletian In AD 68 there was disorder on the island probably linked to the revolt of Lucius Clodius Macer in North Africa Emperor Vespasian 69 79 settled veterans and freedmen at Panormos and Segesta During the first two centuries AD Sicily underwent economic depression and urban life declined the countryside was deserted and the wealthy owners were not resident as indicated by the lack of dwellings at various levels In addition the Roman government neglected the territory and it became a place of exile and refuge for slaves and brigands According to the Historia Augusta a notoriously unreliable fourth century text there was a slave revolt in Sicily under the Emperor Gallienus 253 268 The latifundia or great private estates specialising in agriculture destined for export grain olive oil wine played a large role in society and in the economy in the imperial period Rural Sicily entered a new period of prosperity at the beginning of the 4th century with commercial settlements and farm villages that seem to reach the pinnacle of their expansion and activity The reasons seem to be twofold first of all renewed commercial links with North Africa expanded for the supplies of grain to Italy 59 while the Egyptian production which had so far satisfied the needs of Rome was sent to the new capital of Constantinople in 330 AD 60 Sicily consequently assumed a central role in the new commercial routes between the two continents Secondly the most prosperous equestrian and senatorial ranks began to abandon urban life by retreating to their country estates due to the growing tax burden and the expenses they were obliged to sustain the poor masses Their lands were cultivated no longer by slaves but by colonists Considerable sums of money were spent to enlarge embellish and make their villas more comfortable Traces of renewed construction are found in Filosofiana Sciacca Punta Secca Naxos and elsewhere An obvious sign of transformation is the new title assigned to the governor of the island from a corrector to consularis In the 4th century therefore Sicily was not merely the granary of Rome but also became a favourite residence for families of the high Roman aristocracy like the Symmachi 61 Nichomachi and the Caeionii who brought with them the luxury and taste of the capital of the empire The most famous archaeological remains of this period are the Villa Romana del Casale Others include the Villa Romana del Tellaro and Villa Romana di Patti Latifundia Edit The origin of the latifundia in Sicily as elsewhere was the ager publicus from the spoils of war confiscated from conquered peoples from the early 2nd century BC Latifundia could be used for livestock sheep and cattle or cultivation of olive oil grain and wine They distressed Pliny the Elder died AD 79 as he travelled seeing only slaves working the land not the sturdy Roman farmers who had been the backbone of the Republic s army 62 He argued that the latifundia had ruined Italy and would ruin the Roman provinces as well The latifundia quickly started economic consolidation as larger estates achieved greater economies of scale and senators did not pay land taxes Owners re invested their profits by purchasing smaller neighbouring farms since smaller farms had a lower productivity and could not compete in an ancient precursor of agribusiness By the 2nd century AD latifundia had displaced small farms as the agricultural foundation of the Roman Empire This effect contributed to the destabilising of Roman society as the small farms of the Roman peasantry were bought up by the wealthy and with their vast supply of slaves the landless peasantry were forced into idleness relying greatly on handouts Arrival of Christianity in Sicily Edit The martyrdom of Saint Agatha Cod Bodmer 127 fol 39v end of the 12th century Saint Lucy depicted in the Breviarium of Martin of Aragon The Roman amphitheatre of Catania it perhaps 2nd century AD and in the background the Church of San Biagio it built in the 18th century after the massive earthquake of 1693 on the location where tradition claims St Agatha was martyred in a furnace The first reference to a Christian presence on the island appears in Acts 28 12 13 We landed in Syracuse where we remained for three days and then we travelled along the coast and arrived at Rhegion In this way Paul of Tarsus on his voyage from the Levant to Rome which is described at the end of Acts travelled through Sicily He stopped in Syracuse after having been shipwrecked and forced to disembark on Malta From Malta according to the account in Acts Paul travelled to Syracuse but it is not clear why he stopped there It is clear that Syracuse was still used in this period as a stop on the way to Rome on commercial trade routes Perhaps Paul was hosted by a Jewish community such as existed in many ports of the Mediterranean the Jewish community at Catania is well attested epigraphically After Paul there are no sources before the 3rd century AD which expressly mention a Christian presence on the island 63 There are various legends which link the arrival of Christianity in Sicily with Paul s brief sojourn on the island while other traditions report that Paulmet Christians who had already arrived before him and that this was the reason why he stopped on the island But Acts doesn t mention any of this and these traditions may respond to the desire to make the arrival of Christianity in Sicily as early as possible 60 or even 40 AD in order to reinforce the authority of the Sicilian church 64 The first certain reference to a Sicilian church is found in an official letter Epist 30 5 2 sent from Rome to Cyprian Bishop of Carthage This document dates between 250 and 251 during the Decian persecution and discusses the lapsi Christians who had performed acts of worship to pagan deities in the face of Roman persecutions 65 The letter mentions a similar letter sent to Sicily which suggests that apostasy was considered a problem on the island as well and that the Christian presence on Sicily was already significant enough to have a hierarchical relationship with Rome It is possible that this community developed at the end of the 2nd century AD or at the beginning of the 3rd century the period in which the first archaeological evidence appears 66 The Decian AD 250 and Diocletianic Persecutions 304 are the setting for the stories of two important Sicilian martyrs Saint Agatha and Saint Lucy These saints are known only from hagiographies written about two hundred years after the events which represent them as young and beautiful virgins victims of two persecutors called Quintianus and Pascasius 67 It is likely that these sources respond to a desire to link the two most important cities of eastern Sicily Catania home of Saint Agatha and Syracuse home of Saint Lucy Significantly all the principal saints of the island are women in addition to Agatha and Lucy there are the Palermitan saints Nympha it 4th century martyr Olivia 5th century martyr and Christina martyred in 304 who was introduced into the cult of Saint Rosalia by the Palermitans Perhaps this emphasis on female figures in Sicilian Christianity reflects the emphasis on female deities in pre Christian Sicilian religion e g Venus of Eryx Isis Demeter and Kore 68 Two important Christian inscriptions have been discovered from the period One is the Epitaph of Julia Florentina it discovered at Catania in 1730 in the necropolis on the site of the modern via Dottor Consoli and now in the Louvre in Paris It is a funerary inscription dating to the end of the 3rd century AD at the earliest which records in Latin the death of a child of little more than a year in age buried next to the Christian martyrs but it is not clear whether this refers to Agatha and Euplius The inscription is the first direct evidence for Christianity on the island The other inscription also sepulchral is the so called Inscription of Euskia in Greek which was discovered at the end of the 19th century in the Catacombs of San Giovanni in Syracuse and dates to the beginning of the 5th century The document indicates a local cult of Lucy At the time of the inscription s creation the cult of Agatha is already attested at Rome and Carthage 69 With the end of the period of the persecutions the church entered a phase of expansion even as fierce debates arose within the church on doctrinal point leading to the convocation of synods Eusebius includes a letter of Constantine to Crestus Bishop of Syracuse in his Church History 10 5 21 which invites him to participate in the Council of Arles of AD 314 Cresto was assigned an important organisational role at Arles which indicates the relevance of the Sicilian church at the time 70 The beginning of monasticism in Sicily came in the 4th century The hagiographic tradition reports that the ascetic Hilarion travelled from Egypt to Pachino and then spent three years in Sicily perhaps near modern Ispica where he sought a retreat in which to practice the life of an anchorite He subsequently departed as a result of his growing fame in the region 71 More significant for Sicily was the arrival of cenobitic monasticism there are many reports of different kinds of ascetics gathering together to share a religious life especially under the Basilian rule there were no monasteries in Sicily organised under the Benedictine rule until the Norman period 72 Some monks followed the Byzantine Rite others the Latin rite 73 The growth of monasticism in Sicily was probably due to its insularity as well as the fact that the region excepting a few slave revolts was one of the most peaceful in the west at least until the Vandal conquest of 439 and then again until the 9th century Arab conquest 74 The fall of the Western Empire and Sicily Edit The 5th century Migration Period was a period of serious crisis for the Roman Empire In 410 the Visigoths under Alaric sacked Rome In 476 the general Odoacer deposed Romulus Augustulus traditionally considered the last Western Roman Emperor The relative tranquility of Sicily in this period attracted many people Just as in earlier periods many senatorial families had been spurred to acquire vast estates of fertile land High functionaries and religious officials both Christian and pagan travelled to Sicily to dedicate themselves to study hunting and entertainment We know that Nicomachus Flavianus the Younger praefectus urbi between 361 and 362 had an estate near Enna where he produced a revised edition of the first ten books of Livy in 408 75 76 Others came as refugees such as Melania the Younger who fled Alaric s sack of Rome and took refuge at Messina with her husband and friends in 410 77 Alaric attempted to attack Sicily itself and got as far as Rhegium but the Gothic fleet was destroyed in the Straits of Messina by a storm and Alaric therefore abandoned the plan 78 Genseric King of the Vandals occupied the province of Africa in the 430s and began to practice piracy first raiding the Sicilian coast in 437 Then after seizing part of the Western Roman fleet berthed at Carthage after taking the city in October 439 the Vandals organised attacks throughout the Mediterranean especially in Sicily and Sardinia the main sources of grain for the western empire Corsica and the Balearic islands In 441 since the western Roman fleet had proven incapable of defeating the Vandals Theodosius II sent an expedition in 442 but it accomplished nothing and was recalled because of attacks by Persians and Huns along the northern and eastern borders The Western Roman empire continued to defend Sicily with the general Ricimer active there in 456 and then Marcellinus and his Dalmatian legions in 461 The Vandal presence in Sicily was limited to piratical raids similar to those undertaken in southern Italy A panegyric of 468 by Sidonius Apollinaris indicates that in this period Sicily was still part of the Western Roman Empire In 468 the island fell to the Vandal King Geiseric but was reunited with Italy in 476 under Odoacer with a toe hold allowed the Vandals in the port of Lilybaeum 79 This was ceded to Theodoric in 493 Culture Edit The Landolina Venus it is a 2nd century AD Roman copy of a Hellenistic original It is named after archaeologist Saverio Landolina it who discovered it in 1804 Museo archeologico regionale Paolo Orsi In the Republican period the main language was still Greek since the Romans had no policy of enforcing their language on communities 80 81 82 Even in the period of Cicero Greek was the main language used by the elite and almost all the Sicilians mentioned by Cicero in the Verrine Orations have Greek names 83 Cicero also refers to the Greek calendar in use throughout Sicily in this period Greek festivals relations between the Sicilian cities and panhellenic sanctuaries like Delphi Sicilian victors of the Olympic Games and Greek civic architecture 81 Literature remained almost exclusively Greek with authors like Diodorus Siculus and Caecilius of Calacte The non Greek languages of Sicily Sican Sicel Elymian and Punic probably continued to be spoken in the countryside and employed in traditional religious cults but were absent from elite and written contexts 84 There is direct testimony only for Punic a brief inscription of the 2nd or 1st century BC from Aegusa Some Mamertines probably retained their Italic dialect 81 With the establishment of six Roman coloniae at the beginning of the Imperial period Sicily received a large influx of Latin speakers for the first time and a Latin Greek bilingualism developed which continued until the Byzantine period Generally in the Imperial period Latin replaced Greek in an ever increasing number of areas while Greek was confined to lower registers although it retained its historic prestige and was widely used by the population 85 Latin became firmly established as the elite language with Calpurnius Siculus Flavius Vopiscus it and Julius Firmicus Maternus producing literary works in Latin although there are also examples of Sicilian authors who wrote in Greek during the Imperial period such as Pantaenus Aristocles of Messene Probus of Lilybaeum and Citharius 86 In this period the non Greek languages must have definitively disappeared although Punic may still have been spoken at the end of the Imperial period based on the testimony of Apuleius 87 Numerous Jewish and Samaritan communities are attested on the island in the Imperial period although they usually appear in the record using Greek or Latin 88 From the 5th century the Greek language appears to have experienced a recovery that lasted into the period of Muslim domination Major centres EditCatania Edit Catana or Catina Catania was conquered at the beginning of the First Punic War in 263 BC by the Consul Manius Valerius Maximus Corvinus Messalla 89 Part of the booty from the conquest was a sundial which was set up in the Comitium in Rome 90 Additionally the city was required to pay tribute to Rome civitas decumana The conqueror of Syracuse Marcus Claudius Marcellus built a gymnasium in the city 91 Around 135 BC in the course of the First Servile War the city was conquered by the rebel slaves 92 Another revolt in the area led by the gladiator Seleurus in 35 BC was probably suppressed after the death of its leader 92 In 122 BC following volcanic activity on Etna there was heavy damage from the volcanic ash raining down on the roofs of the city which collapsed under the weight 93 The territory of Catina was further impacted by eruptions in 50 44 36 BC and finally by the disastrous lava flow of 32 BC which ruined the countryside and the city of Aitna as well as the disastrous war between Augustus and Sextus Pompey but with the beginning of the Augustan period a long and difficult socio economic recovery began At the end of the war all Sicily is described as heavily damaged impoverished and depopulated in a wide range of areas In book 6 of Strabo in particular there is reference to the deleterious state of Syracuse Catania and Centuripe After the war against Sextus Pompey Augustus established a colonia in Catania Pliny the Elder lists the city which the Romans called Catina among the cities which Augustus promoted to the rank of Colonia Romana in 21 BC along with Syracuse and Thermae Sciacca Groups of veterans of the Roman army were settled in the cities which had received this new status The new demographic situation certainly contributed to change the style of municipal life in favour of the new Middle Class Catania retained a notable importance and wealth in the course of the late Republic and the Empire Cicero calls it the richest of the cities 94 and it must have remained thus in the later Imperial period and Byzantine times as the literary sources and numerous contemporary monuments suggest which makes the city almost unique among those of Roman Sicily In order to pay the stipendium the large coastal cities like Catania extended their control in the course of the High Empire over a vast swath of the interior of the island which had become depopulated as a result of the large estates which dominated agriculture in the period Christianity spread rapidly among the martyrs during the persecutions of Decius and Diocletian were Saint Agatha patron saint of the city and Euplius The Diocese of Catania was established at the end of the 6th century Roman Odeon it Roman Theatre it Plan of the Thermae Achillianae it Plan of the Thermae of the Rotunda it Thermae of Indirizzo it View of the Aqueduct at Valcorrente it Centuripe Edit Centuripe surrendered spontaneously to the Roman consuls Lucius Valerius Flaccus and Titus Otacilius Crassus in 262 BC As a result the city was declared free and exempted from taxation as Cicero mentions in his Verrine Orations After this a spectacular pace of development is detectable which led it to become one of the most important cities in Roman Sicily This is attested both by the statements of Cicero and archaeologically by the great quantity of pottery and the imposing funerary monuments A Greek inscription from the 2nd century BC recounts a Centuripan diplomatic mission to Rome and Lanuvium and part of a treaty with Lanuvium by which the two communities were declared twins In 39 BC Sextus Pompey took the city by siege and destroyed it for its loyalty to Octavian but the latter rebuilt it and gave the inhabitants Roman citizenship as well In the Imperial period Centuripe produced imposing monuments whose remains still survive today These include the Temple of the Augustales of the first or second century AD of which columns and two monumental tower tombs can be seen on one side the Dogana of which only a raised flat area can now be seen and Castle of Conradin In the northwest of the town in contrada Bagni a paved street leads to the remains of a nymphaeum suspended over a torrent of water of which a brick wall with five niches survives as well as remains of a pool for collecting the water and part of the aqueduct Notable also is the continued production of coinage by the city in the Roman Republican period The Roman mausoleum near the Villa Comunale di Corradino Centuripe Coin of Centuripe depicting Zeus dating to 240 BCTauromenium Edit Tauromenium Taormina remained under the control of Syracuse until 212 BC when all of Sicily became a Roman province Its inhabitants were considered foederati of the Romans and Cicero says in the Verrine Orations that it was one of three civitates foederatae allied cities and calls it a civis notabilis As a result of this the community did not have to pay the grain tax or provide ships and sailors in emergencies In the course of the First Servile War c 135 132 BC Tauromenium was occupied by the rebel slaves who used it as a stronghold Besieged by the consul Pompilius the starving garrison surrendered only when one of the leaders Serapion betrayed his companions and admitted the Romans to the city In 36 BC during the war between Sextus Pompey and Octavian the latter s troops disembarked at Naxos and reoccupied the city Later in 21 BC Augustus founded a Roman colonia in the city for his supporters expelling those inhabitants who had opposed him Strabo speaks of Tauromenium as a smaller city than Messana and Catana Pliny and Claudius Ptolemy mention it as a Roman colonia Roman Gate leading to Messina Greco Roman theatre Roman odeon NaumachieMessana Edit Messana Messina surrendered by the Mamertines to the Romans in 264 BC received the status of civitas libera et foederata free and allied community after the First Punic War along with Tauromenium During the Republican period it suffered attacks during the Servile Wars 102 BC Cicero mentions the city in the Verrine Orations as civitas maxima et locupletissima a very large and wealthy community In 49 BC Pompey attacked the fleet of Julius Caesar and drove it into Messana s port Subsequently the city became one of the many bases of Sextus Pompey and it was sacked by the troops of Lepidus Afterwards it probably became a municipium Of the fate of the city during the Roman Empire we know almost nothing There is a tradition that St Paul visited the city on his way to Rome and preached the Gospel there After the division of the Roman Empire it became part of the Eastern empire In 407 under the Emperor Arcadius Messana was made the protometropolis of Sicily and Magna Graecia Tyndaris Edit Tyndaris Tindari was the control of Hieron II during the First Punic War and became a Carthaginian naval base early in the war The Battle of Tyndaris was fought nearby in 257 BC in which the Roman fleet commanded by Gaius Atilius Regulus defeated the Carthaginians Later it was a naval base for Sextus Pompey captured by Octavian in 36 BC He founded a Roman colonia Colonia Augusta Tyndaritanorum on the site one of five coloniae founded in Sicily Cicero calls the city a nobilissima civitas In the first century AD it suffered a major landslide while in the fourth century AD it was damaged by two destructive earthquakes It became the seat of a bishopric was conquered by the Byzantines in 535 and fell to the Arabs in 836 who destroyed the city City wall Greek theatre it Roman basilica Male statue in a cuirass reign of Trajan Museo Archeologico Regionale Antonio Salinas Statue of Claudius Jupiter from TindariThermae Himerae Edit Thermae Himerae Termini Imerese was the site of a serious Roman defeat by Hamilcar Barca in 260 BC during the First Punic War but was subsequently conquered by them in 253 BC Thereafter it remained loyal to Rome and was among the cities subject to tribute After the destruction of Carthage in 146 BC Scipio Aemilianus returned works of art which had been taken by the Carthaginians to Thermae including a statue of Stesichorus who had spent time in the city The base of one of these statues is preserved with part of the inscription After defeating Sextus Pompey Octavian established a colonia on the site this was probably a punishment of the city for having links with the Pompeian party The impact of this action is clear from the numerous Latin inscriptions which survive at the site and from the extraordinary number of Roman and Italian names attested on the site The former Greek inhabitants of the city practically disappear from record at the beginning of the Imperial period Panormus Edit Panormus Palermo remained under Carthaginian control until the First Punic War and was site of one of the main conflicts between the Carthaginians and the Romans until the Roman fleet attacked the city in 254 BC and made the city a tributary Hasdrubal attempted to recapture the city but was defeated by the Roman consul Metellus Another attempt at reconquest was made by Hamilcar Barca in 247 BC but the city remained loyal to the Romans for which it received the title of praetura the eagle of gold and the right to mint coinage remaining one of the five free cities of the island Drepanum Edit Drepanum Trapani conquered along with Eryx at the end of the First Punic War became a flourishing commercial city owing primarily to the port its geographic location on Mediterranean sea routes its active sea salt industry which had been developed already in Phoenician times and the extraction of coral Lilybaeum Edit Lilybaeum Marsala already prosperous under the Carthaginians was the seat of one of the quaestores which Rome sent to Sicily annually It was enriched by splendid mansions and public buildings Among others one of the quaestores at Lilybaeum was Cicero in the year 75 BC who referred to Lilybaeum as splendidissima civitas the most splendid community Under Emperor Pertinax the city became a large Roman colonia called Helvia Augusta Lilybaitanorum 95 Syracuse Edit Syracusae became the capital of the new Roman province after 212 BC Despite the misgovernment and systematic despoliation of its artistic heritage by Gaius Verres Syracuse remained the capital of the province and seat of its praetor It continued to be a key port for commercial interaction between east and west St Paul and Marcian of Syracuse the first Bishop of Syracuse spent time in the city proselytising As a result of the Roman persecution of the Christians before the Edict of Constantine in AD 313 a deep network of catacombs were built under the city second only to those of Rome Successive attacks starting with those of the Vandals in 440 impoverished the city until it was conquered by the Byzantine general Belisarius in 535 From 663 to 668 the city was the residence of Emperor Constans II and the metropolis of all churches in Sicily Roman amphitheatre of Syracuse Catacombs of Syracuse it Catacombs of Syracuse Map of the catacombs of Syracuse Roman baths Map of ancient SyracuseSee also EditHistory of Sicily List of Roman governors of SiciliaNotes Edit Appian Sicily and the Other Islands Fragments section 2 data perseus org Retrieved 2017 03 03 Brennan T Corey 2000 The praetorship in the Roman Republic Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 91 93 ISBN 0195114590 OCLC 41503761 Cartwright Mark Syracuse World History Encyclopedia 28 April 2011 Polybius 1 7 3 4 Finley 2009 p 27 Geraci amp Marcone 2004 p 86 Finley 2009 pp 129 130 a b Finley 2009 p 132 Geraci amp Marcone 2004 pp 86 87 Geraci amp Marcone 2004 p 87 a b c d e f g h Guidetti 2004 p 323 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999a vol I p 59 Polyb 1 20 1 2 Finley 2009 p 133 Finley 2009 pp 132 133 Finley 2009 p 134 a b c Geraci amp Marcone 2004 p 89 a b Guidetti 2004 p 322 Michael Crawford Coinage and Money Under the Roman Republic Italy and the Mediterranean Economy University of California Press 1985 p 104 a b Geraci amp Marcone 2004 p 90 See Questore on treccani it Finley 2009 p 141 Thomas D Frazel 2009 The Rhetoric of Cicero s In Verrem Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 197 ISBN 978 3 525 25289 5 Geraci amp Marcone 2004 pp 92 93 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 23 10 a b c d Finley 2009 p 137 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 24 3 Livy 25 40 2 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999a vol I p 60 Livy 27 4 1 2 Livy 27 4 3 4 Livy 27 5 1 2 Livy 27 5 2 4 Finley 2009 pp 137 138 Finley 2009 p 138 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 56 9 58 8 59 2 Umberto Benigni 1912 Sicily The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 13 New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 30 May 2014 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 89 2 Appian Mithridatic Wars 93 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 98 3 Florus Compendium of Livy 1 41 6 Cassius Dio Roman History 36 22 2 Florus Compendium of Livy 1 41 9 10 Appian Mithridatic Wars 95 Fezzi Il tribuno Clodio p 44 Francesco Cristiano Il comportamento di Roma nei confronti delle civitates di Sicilia Le civitates immunae ac liberae M Tullius Cicero Orationes in Verrem III 6 Finley 2009 p 169 a b Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 123 1 Finley 2009 p 170 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 128 1 Livy Periochae ab Urbe condita libri 127 5 128 1 amp 129 1 4 Finley 2009 p 171 Finley 2009 p 172 a b Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999a vol I p 64 Finley 2009 p 173 a b c Finley 2009 p 174 Finley 2009 p 175 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999a vol I pp 63 65 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999a vol I p 68 Symmachus Ep iii 12 88 vii 18 Pliny s Natural History 13 92 17 192 18 17 18 35 18 261 and 18 296 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II pp 1 2 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 2 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 7 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 6 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II pp 7 8 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 8 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II pp 9 10 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 10 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II pp 10 11 Finley 2009 p 201 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 11 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II pp 11 amp 13 Symmachus Epistulae ii 30 vi 57 66 Codex Mediceus Charles W Hedrick History and Silence Purge and Rehabilitation of Memory in Late Antiquity University of Texas Press 2000 ISBN 0 292 73121 3 p 181 182 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II pp 12 13 Benigno amp Giarrizzo 1999b vol II p 18 J B Bury The History of the Later Roman Empire pp 254 327 333 336 and 410 John Moorhead Theodoric in Italy Oxford University Press 1992 p 9 Varvaro 1981 p 33 a b c Finley 2009 p 155 Rohlfs 1984 p 22 Varvaro 1981 p 35 Varvaro 1981 p 38 Finley 2009 p 189 Varvaro 1981 pp 45 46 Apuleius Metamorphoses 11 5 2 Siculi trilingues which might be Latin Greek and Punic Varvaro 1981 p 50 Eutropius II 19 Pliny the Elder Naturalis historia VII 214 Plutarch Life of Marcellus 30 a b Strabo 6 2 6 Orosius V 13 3 Verrine 2 3 10 Treccani Lilibeo in Treccani Bibliography EditBenigno Francesco Giarrizzo Giuseppe 1999a Storia della Sicilia Vol 1 Roma Bari Laterza Editore ISBN 88 421 0533 3 Benigno Francesco Giarrizzo Giuseppe 1999b Storia della Sicilia Vol 2 Roma Bari Laterza Editore ISBN 88 421 0534 1 Dreher Martin 2010 La Sicilia antica Bologna il Mulino ISBN 978 88 15 13824 8 Finley Moses Israel 2009 1970 Storia della Sicilia antica 8 ed Roma Bari Editori Laterza ISBN 978 88 420 2532 0 Geraci Giovanni Marcone Arnaldo 2004 Storia romana Firenze Le Monnier ISBN 88 00 86082 6 Guidetti Massimo ed 2004 Storia del Mediterraneo nell antichita Editoriale Jaca Book ISBN 9788816406605 Lyons Claire L Bennett Michael Marconi Clemente eds 2013 Sicily Art and Invention between Greece and Rome Getty Publications ISBN 978 1 60606 133 6 Manganaro Giacomo 1997 1979 La provincia romana In Romeo Rosario ed Storia della Sicilia La Sicilia antica Vol 2 2nd ed Roma Editalia pp 309 363 Momigliano Arnaldo Woodhead Arthur Geoffrey 1995 Sicilia In Hammond Nicholas Scullard Howard eds Dizionario di antichita classiche Milano Edizioni San Paolo ISBN 88 215 3024 8 Rohlfs Gerhard 1984 La Sicilia nei secoli Profilo storico etnico e linguistico Palermo Sellerio Varvaro Alberto 1981 Lingua e storia in Sicilia Palermo Sellerio Ziolkowski Adam 2006 Storia di Roma Mondadori ISBN 9788842497011 External links EditR Wilson R Talbert T Elliott S Gillies 31 January 2020 Places 462492 Sicilia Pleiades Retrieved March 8 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sicilia Roman province amp oldid 1135387333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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