Municipium

Municipium

Municipium (pl. municipia), the prototype of English municipality, was the Latin term for a town or city. Etymologically the municipium was a social contract between municipes, the "duty holders," or citizens of the town. The duties, or munera, were a communal obligation assumed by the municipes in exchange for the privileges and protections of citizenship. Every citizen was a municeps.[1]

The distinction of municipia was not made in the Roman kingdom; instead, the immediate neighbors of the city were invited or compelled to transfer their populations to the urban structure of Rome, where they took up residence in neighborhoods and became Romans per se. Under the Roman Republic the practical considerations of incorporating communities into the city-state of Rome forced the Roman to devise the concept of municipium, a distinct state under the jurisdiction of Rome. It was necessary to distinguish various types of municipia and other settlements, such as the colony. In the early Roman Empire these distinctions began to disappear; for example, when Pliny the Elder served in the Roman army, the distinctions were only nominal. In the final stage of development, all citizens of all cities and towns throughout the empire were equally citizens of Rome. The municipium then simply meant municipality, the lowest level of local government.

Contents

Creation of a municipium

The munera and the citizenship and its rights and protections were specific to the community. No matter where a person lived, at home or abroad, or what his status or class, he was a citizen of the locality in which he was born. The distinguishing characteristic of the municipium was self-governance. Like any ancient city-state, the municipium was created by an official act of synoecism, or founding. This act removed the sovereignity and independence from the signatory local communities, replacing them with the jurisdiction of a common government. This government was then called the respublica, "public affair" or in the Greek world the koinon, "common affair."

The term municipium began to be used with reference to the city-states of Italy brought into the city-state of Rome but not incorporated into the city. The city of Romulus synoecized the nearby settlements of Latium, transfering their populations to the seven hills, where they resided in typically distinct neighborhoods. And yet, Sabines continued to live in the Sabine Hills and Alba Longa continued even though synoecized. The exact sequence of events is not known, whether the populace was given a choice or the synoecized sites were reoccupied. As it is unlikely that all the Sabines were invited to Rome, where facilites to feed and house them did not yet exist, it seems clear that population transfer was only offered to some. The rest continued on as independent localites under the ultimate governance of Rome. Under the Roman Republic the impracticality of transfering numerous large city-states to Rome was manifest. The answer to the problem was the municipium. The town would be partially synoecized. The local government would remain but to its munera would be added munera due to the city of Rome. The partial synoecism took the form of a charter granting incorporation into the city of Rome and defining the rights and responsibilities of the citizens. The first municipium was Tusculum.

Two orders of the municipia

The citizens of municipia of the first order held full Roman citizenship and their rights (civitas optimo iure) included the right to vote, which was the ultimate right in Rome, and a sure sign of full rights.

The second order of municipia comprised important tribal centres which had come under Roman control. Residents of these did not become full Roman citizens (although their magistrates could become so after retirement). They were given the duties of full citizens in terms of liability to taxes and military service, but not all of the rights: most significantly, they had no right to vote.

Executive power in municipium was held by four annually elected officials, composed of two duumvirs and two aediles, all under the thumb of Roman rule. Advisory powers were held by the decurions, appointed members of the local equivalent to the senate. In later years, these became hereditary.

Grants of Municipia

  1. Volubilis in the province of Mauretania (modern day Morocco) was promoted to a municipium by the Emperor Claudius as a reward for its help in a revolt in AD 40-41
  2. The Emperor Vespasian granted 'Latin-rights' to the provinces of Hispania (Tarraconensis, Baetica, Lusitania) in AD 73/4
  3. One Marcus Servilius Draco Albucianus, from Tripolitania successfully petitioned Rome to grant the status of municipium on his town[2]

Municipia in Britain

According to the forgery De Situ Britanniae by Charles Bertram, forged under the name of Richard of Cirencester, there were two municipia in Brittania: Verulamium (now St. Albans) and Eboracum (now York), with the latter having become a municipium under Antoninus Pius. An assertion was made in the 19th century that York was changed to a colonia by Severus, based upon a coin, supposedly inscribed "COL. EBORACVM LEGIO vi. VICTRIX". However, many antiquarians at the time doubted the existence of this coin, the evidence for whose existence came solely from the testimony of Goltzius, which they regarded as suspect. Several, such as Ruding and Akerman, doubted that any coinage had been minted in Britain. However, similar doubts were raised about De Situ Britanniae, and its assertions about York being anything other than a colonia. For example: The Reverend J. Kenrick, writing in the proceedings of the Yorkshire philosophical society in 1849, said "I must declare my adherence to the opinion of those critics, who hold that Richard's Description of Britain is no genuine work.", noting that "the latinity of the Description appears to me to be to be the same as that of the preface which Bertram has prefixed to it".[3][4][5][6][7][8]

Kenrick further went on to note that the distinction between colonia and municipium "are hardly applicable to Britain", observing that "I am not aware that any inscription exists, in which the name of municipium is given to a town in Roman Britain". In fact, the evidence for Verulamium being a municpium comes not from an inscription but from book 14 of the Annals of Tacitus.[8]

Quotes

The difference between Colonia and Municipium is that the latter was a town of which the inhabitants, being friendly to Rome, were left in undisturbed possession of their property and their local laws and political rights, and obtained moreover the Roman citizenship, either with or without the right of suffrage... The colonies, on the contrary, were all governed according to the Roman laws. The Municipia were foreign limbs engrafted on the Roman stock, while the colonies were branches of that stock transported, to a foreign soil.

Penny cyclopaedia of the Society for the diffusion of useful knowledge, Volume 7, Charles Knight , 1837

References

  1. ^ Frank Frost Abbott, Municipal Administration in the Roman Empire (1926), Read Books, 2007, p.8
  2. ^ Edmundson, J., 2006, “Cities and urban life in the Western provinces of the Roman Empire, 30BC- 250AD”, in Potter, D.S, A Companion to the Roman Empire, Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell, p250-280
  3. ^ Alexander Graham (1971). "Africa under the Cæsars". Roman Africa. Ayer Publishing. p. 37. ISBN 0836988078. 
  4. ^ Henry Francis Lockwood and Adolphus H. Cates (1834). The History and Antiquities of the Fortifications to the City of York. London: J. Weale. p. 5. 
  5. ^ Charles Wellbeloved (1842). Eburacum, or York under the Romans. York: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. p. 103. 
  6. ^ Thomas Allen (1851). A New and Complete History of the County of York. I.T. Hinton. p. 22. 
  7. ^ Rogers Ruding and John Yonge Akerman (1840). Annals of the Coinage of Great Britain and Its Dependencies. London: John Hearne. p. 231. 
  8. ^ a b J. Kenrick (1849). "On the Sarcophagus of M. Vecundus Diogenes, and the Civil Administration of Roman York". In Yorkshire philosophical society. Proceedings. York: Henry Sotheran. 

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