COLONIA (ROMAN)
A Roman 'colonia' (plural ''coloniae'') was originally a Roman outpost established in conquered territory to secure it. Eventually, however, the term came to denote the highest status of Roman city.
Rome's first colonies were established at Ostia, Antium, and Tarracina in the late fourth century B.C. In this first period of colonization, which lasted down to the end of the Punic wars, colonies were primarily military in purpose, being intended to defend Roman territory. There were colonies of citizens and colonies of Latins, which differed in size, constitution, and region. Colonies of citizens were settled on coast and known as ''coloniae maritimae''. These were small (three hundred families), close to Rome, and enjoyed no civic life of their own. Sherwin-White suggested that they were similar to the Athenian cleruchy. [1]
Coloniae also included towns founded by Rome to house those who held Roman citizenship. In Britain this usually meant those who has completed their military service in the Legions and were thus owed a grant of land by the state; see Marian Reforms.
Some examples are:
★ Roman colonies in antiquity
★ Jona Lendering, “Coloniae”, Livius.org (2006)
★ L. Adkins and R.A. Adkins, “Coloniae”, in L. Adkins and R.A. Adkins, ''Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome'', New York, 1994.
★ M. Bunson, “colonies, Roman”, in M. Bunson, ''Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire'', New York, 1994.
| Contents |
| History |
| Examples |
| See also |
| Further reading |
History
Rome's first colonies were established at Ostia, Antium, and Tarracina in the late fourth century B.C. In this first period of colonization, which lasted down to the end of the Punic wars, colonies were primarily military in purpose, being intended to defend Roman territory. There were colonies of citizens and colonies of Latins, which differed in size, constitution, and region. Colonies of citizens were settled on coast and known as ''coloniae maritimae''. These were small (three hundred families), close to Rome, and enjoyed no civic life of their own. Sherwin-White suggested that they were similar to the Athenian cleruchy. [1]
Coloniae also included towns founded by Rome to house those who held Roman citizenship. In Britain this usually meant those who has completed their military service in the Legions and were thus owed a grant of land by the state; see Marian Reforms.
Examples
Some examples are:
| Modern name | Latin name | Modern country | Roman province | Foundation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arles | Iulia Paterna Sextanoum | France | Gallia Narbonensis | 45 BC by Caesar |
| Colchester | Colonia Claudia Victricensis | England | Britannia / Britannia Superior / Maxima Caesariensis | 49, by Claudius |
| Cologne | Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensis | Germany | Germania Inferior | 50 |
| Jerusalem (on the site of) | Colonia Aelia Capitolina | Israel | Judaea | After Bar Kokhba's revolt, by Hadrian |
| Lincoln | Lindum Colonia or Colonia Domitiana Lindensium | England | Britannia / Britannia Inferior / Flavia Caesariensis | 71, by Domitian |
| Narbo Martius | colonia Martia Iulia Paterna Decimanorum | France | Gallia / Gallia Narbonensis | 118 BC by Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus; refounded by Caesar in 45 BC |
| Patras | Colonia Augusta Achaica Patrensis | Greece | Achaia | After the battle of Actium by Augustus |
| Sétif | Sitifis Colonia | Algeria | Mauretania Sitifensis | 1st century |
| York | Eboracum | England | Britannia / Britannia Inferior / Britannia Secunda | ? Caracalla |
See also
★ Roman colonies in antiquity
Further reading
★ Jona Lendering, “Coloniae”, Livius.org (2006)
★ L. Adkins and R.A. Adkins, “Coloniae”, in L. Adkins and R.A. Adkins, ''Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome'', New York, 1994.
★ M. Bunson, “colonies, Roman”, in M. Bunson, ''Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire'', New York, 1994.
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