probably escaped the conflagration of the Gauls; and
such was the alliance which king Servius Tullius concluded
with Latium, and which Dionysius saw on a copper tablet
in the temple of Diana on the Aventine. What
he saw, however, was probably a copy restored after
the fire with the help of a Latin exemplar, for it
was not likely that engraving on metal was practised
as early as the time of the kings. The charters
of foundation of the imperial period still refer to
the charter founding this temple as the oldest document
of the kind in Rome and the common model for all.
But even then they scratched (-exarare-, -scribere-,
akin to -scrobes- (19)) or painted (-linere-, thence
-littera-) on leaves (-folium-), inner bark (-liber-),
or wooden tablets (-tabula-, -album-), afterwards
also on leather and linen. The sacred records
of the Samnites as well as of the priesthood of Anagnia
were inscribed on linen rolls, and so were the oldest
lists of the Roman magistrates preserved in the temple
of the goddess of recollection (-Iuno moneta-) on
the Capitol. It is scarcely necessary to recall
further proofs in the primitive marking of the pastured
cattle (-scriptura-), in the mode of addressing the
senate, “fathers and enrolled” (-patres
conscripti-), and in the great antiquity of the books
of oracles, the clan-registers, and the Alban and Roman
calendars. When Roman tradition speaks of halls
in the Forum, where the boys and girls of quality
were taught to read and write, already in the earliest
times of the republic, the statement may be, but is
not necessarily to be deemed, an invention. We
have been deprived of information as to the early
Roman history, not in consequence of the want of a
knowledge of writing, or even perhaps of the lack
of documents, but in consequence of the incapacity
of the historians of the succeeding age, which was
called to investigate the history, to work out the
materials furnished by the archives, and of the perversity
which led them to desire for the earliest epoch a
delineation of motives and of characters, accounts
of battles and narratives of revolutions, and while
engaged in inventing these, to neglect what the extant
written tradition would not have refused to yield
to the serious and self-denying inquirer.
Results
The history of Italian writing thus furnishes in the first place a confirmation of the weak and indirect influence exercised by the Hellenic character over the Sabellians as compared with the more western peoples. The fact that the former received their alphabet from the Etruscans and not from the Romans is probably to be explained by supposing that they already possessed it before they entered upon their migration along the ridge of the Apennines, and that therefore the Sabines as well as Samnites carried it along with them from the mother-land to their new abodes. On the other hand this history of writing contains a salutary warning against the adoption of the hypothesis,