Was this an accident, the sort of thing that happens to
ancient cities which were often jerry-built and overcrowded? Or was there a
public intent?
The area destroyed was the district of Pallacinae, which
underlies the Forum of Trajan. Once it had been an elite district on the edge
of the city. A chunk of it had once been the suburban villa of Sextus Roscius,
who many will remember was the client of Cicero in the famous murder trial Pro
Roscio Amerino in 80BC. Roscius was accused of murdering his father (who had
the same name), but the case was trumped up so that the dictator Sulla could
seize his estate. Although Cicero won his case, which made his reputation, the
Roman government never returned Roscius’ land. The estate of Roscius was close
to an ancient set of baths, the Balneal Pallacinae, a place which prostitutes
often gathered, according to the very much later Liber Pontificalis.
In 38BC, the ally of Augustus, Asininus Pollio, acquired the
authority to rebuild the district of Pallacinae. He use the proceeds of looting
Illyria in the civil wars to demonstrate his power and authority. He built
houses, flats, shops, two libraries, one Latin, one Greek, and most importantly
of all the Atrium Libertatis, the hall of liberty.
This was where the Censor’s office moved to, probably
because the previous offices had been damaged in the civil wars. Besides the
official census, the lustrum, the Censor was responsible for two important
functions of the state. The first was the registration of the manumission of
slaves. Official diplomas were issued to manumitted slaves, not least to enrol
them as citizens, and prevent any attempt to enslave them by prior owners. As
citizens, of course, they were liable for taxes.
The other function of the Censor was to issue tickets which
entered the holder into the annona, the dole, originally of corn, which would
then be collected from an office in the Forum Boarium, which is close to the
Aventine Hill, which had the temple of Ceres, close to the location of large
grain stores (horrea) and the mills which produced much of Rome’s flour,
themselves close to the wharves where imported grain was unloaded.
Augustus abolished the ancient post of Censor and took the
administration of the annona in house. This doesn’t mean of course that the
Atrium Libertatis ceased to run things; the dole was handled by a praefectus
annonae and his deputy. Since the prefect was a largely honorific position and indeed
a political one, the regular staff would have been left to their own devices,
and probably used the existing offices. The marble pan of Rome shows an Atrium
Libertatis as the southern wing of
Trajan’s Basilica Ulpia.
Plan of Basilica Ulpia with Atrium Libertatis marked |
In AD104, the area seems to have been consumed by fire. Was
this an accident? Trajan may have had a role in this. It was his custom to
change his consuls very frequently, and in every year apart from 104, there
were about five holders of the consul prior and four or five consules
posterior. Not in 104, when one man held each consulship for the entire year.
In that year, one of the consuls was Marcus Asininus Marcellus, the great
grandson of the same man who had rebuilt
Pallacinae in 38BC.
Historians don’t like coincidences, and it’s too much of a
coincidence that a Pollio built the quarter of Pallacinae and his descendent
happened to be consul when it burnt down. I think that Trajan wanted the old
quarter razed, and had Pollio made consul posterior, the first Pollio in 150
years to be raised to the consulship, to buy his approval.
Why did Trajan arrange for the vicus of Pallacinae to be
destroyed? It was nearly 150 years old and had survived the Neronian fire and
the urbanisation of the entire city area. The Domus Aurea had already
encroached on the district, and needed to be expunged. My speculation is that
Trajan and his architect Apollodorus of Damascus wanted an ambitious new
district to emerge, one fired by the admiration that Trajan clearly had for all
things Syrian. He had largely grown up there as his father was the governor of
Syria, and as a young man Trajan had commanded troops as a military tribune
there.
My guess is that while the fire was severe and may have been
more widespread than intended, it was set by the imperial authorities with
intent to remove it and permit for the last time an emperor to make his mark on
the city’s infrastructure.
Apollodorus was an experienced architect, and had worked for
Domitian, but had continued under Nerva and Trajan, including his bridge across
the Danube to further Trajan’s Dacian campaign. He seems to have designed the
entire precinct, including the Baths of Trajan, the Forum of Trajan, the Market
of Trajan, the Column of Trajan, the two
libraries and the Basilica Ulpia.
The Markets of Trajan |
Royal Pavilion Brighton, built for the Prince Regent, Later King George IV |
Tomb of the Haterii, Rome's master builders, now in the Vatican Museum |
The Column of Trajan, now topped with a renaissance statue of St Michael |
Apollodorus fell out of favour with Hadrian soon after the
death of Trajan. He was exiled and then executed. While Dio put this down to
the revenge of Hadrian to an earlier slight, as mentioned above, there is a
possibility of fraud. After Apollodorus, all bricks used in the construction of
public works at Rome in Hadrian’s reign carried a stamp with the names of the
current consuls, so that they could be dated. The suspicion could therefore be
that the imperial treasury was being billed for the same goods on multiple
occasions, and someone – Apollodorus perhaps – was pocketing the proceeds of
it.
Many will remember the Third Satire of Juvenal, in which
Umbricius, the shadow man, speaks to Romans listening in the street around his
house why he’s leaving the city. You’ll probably remember that ‘I cannot abide,
Quirites, a Greek-struck Rome (Graecam urbem, in the Accusative). Juvenal makes
it clear that it’s not classical Greece he hates, but one dominated by Syrians.
For Umbricius, it’s the Orontes, the river which flows from
Apollodorus’ home city of Damascus to Trajan’s favoured city of Antioch. which
is dropping its dregs into the Tiber. The poem is dated to Trajan’s reign.
Syria had been associated with popular culture already, with the aphorist
Publius Syrus leading the way.
In fact, there had been a rising influence from Syria upon
the Roman World. From the Roman invasion of 168BC to support the revolt of the
Jews against their Hellenised Syrian overlords, who wanted to turn the Temple
at Jerusalem into one dedicated to Zeus. This revolt, famously led by the Maccabee
brothers and reported in the Hebrew Book of Maccabees, was an excellent pretext
for Rome to engage with a weaker state within the Hellenistic east. The battles
against Mithridates of Pontus would later show Rome was potentially weaker. The
conquest of Syria led to the annexation of the Kingdom of Pergamum in 133BC
(creating instability, the murder of Tiberius Gracchus and ultimately the
collapse of the Republic).
By contrast, the second century AD is one is rising Syrian
influence in the Empire, which is why it had upset Juvenal through his
mouthpiece Umbricius, as he lists a catalogue of Syrian things he objects to.
However, this was the century in which Apuleius, the Syrian
writer Lucan and other Hellenistic writers of the Second Sophistic thrived, in
which the Syrian Empress Julia Domna ran a dazzling literary salon, and ended, with
a bang in the first quarter of the third century with the emperor Elagabalus.