Page:The history of Rome. Translated with the author's sanction and additions.djvu/63

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Chap. III.]
SETTLEMENTS OF THE LATINS.
43

political hegemony over Latium, and that possibly, nay probably, it had no more significance in Latium than the honorary presidency of Elis had in Greece.[1] On the whole it is probable that the extent of this Latin league, and the amount of its jurisdiction, were somewhat unsettled and fluctuating; yet it was and remained not an accidental aggregate of various communities more or less alien to each other, but the just and necessary expression of the relationship of the Latin stock. The Latin league may not have at all times included all Latin communities, but it never at any rate granted the privilege of membership to any that were not Latin. Its counterpart in Greece was not the Delphic amphictyony, but the Bœotian or Ætolian confederacy.

These very general outlines must suffice: any attempt to draw the lines more sharply would only falsify the picture. The manifold play of mutual attraction and repulsion among those earliest political atoms, the cantons, passed away in Latium without witnesses competent to tell the tale. We must now be content to hold by the one great abiding fact, that they possessed a common centre, to which they did not sacrifice their individual independence, but by means of which they cherished and increased the feeling of their belonging collectively to the same nation. By such a common possession the way was prepared for their advance from that cantonal individuality, with which the history of every people must and does begin, to the national union with which the history of every people ends or at any rate ought to end.

  1. The assertion often made, in ancient and modern times, that Alba once ruled over Latium under the forms of a symmachy nowhere finds on closer investigation sufficient support. All history begins not with the union, but with the disunion of a nation; and it is very improbable that the problem of the union of Latium, which Rome finally solved after the struggles of many a century, should have been already solved at an earlier period by Alba. It deserves to be remarked too, that Rome never asserted in the capacity of heiress of Alba any claims of sovereignty proper over the Latin communities, but contented herself with an honorary presidency; which no doubt, when it became combined with material power, afforded a handle for her pretensions of hegemony. Testimonies, strictly so called, can scarcely be adduced on such a question; and least of all do such passages as Festus v. prætor, p. 241, and Dionys. iii. 10, suffice to stamp Alba as a Latin Athens.