or at any rate irrelevant complaints as to all sorts
of injuries which they alleged that the Carthaginians
had inflicted on the Roman traders, and hastened to
declare war;(2) the principle, that in politics power
is the measure of right, appeared in its naked effrontery.
Just resentment urged the Carthaginians to accept
that offer of war; had Catulus insisted upon the cession
of Sardinia five years before, the war would probably
have pursued its course. But now, when both
islands were lost, when Libya was in a ferment, and
when the state was weakened to the utmost by its twenty-four
years’ struggle with Rome and the dreadful civil
war that had raged for nearly five years more, they
were obliged to submit It was only after repeated entreaties,
and after the Phoenicians had bound themselves to pay
to Rome a compensation of 1200 talents (292,000 pounds)
for the warlike preparations which had been wantonly
occasioned, that the Romans reluctantly desisted from
war. Thus the Romans acquired Sardinia almost
without a struggle; to which they added Corsica, the
ancient possession of the Etruscans, where perhaps
some detached Roman garrisons still remained over
from the last war.(3) In Sardinia, however, and still
more in the rugged Corsica, the Romans restricted
themselves, just as the Phoenicians had done, to an
occupation of the coasts. With the natives in
the interior they were continually engaged in war
or, to speak more correctly, in hunting them like wild
beasts; they baited them with dogs, and carried what
they captured to the slave market; but they undertook
no real conquest. They had occupied the islands
not on their own account, but for the security of
Italy. Now that the confederacy possessed the
three large islands, it might call the Tyrrhene Sea
its own.
Method of Administration in the Transmarine Possessions
Provincial Praetors
The acquisition of the islands in the western sea
of Italy introduced into the state administration
of Rome a distinction, which to all appearance originated
in mere considerations of convenience and almost accidentally,
but nevertheless came to be of the deepest importance
for all time following—the distinction between
the continental and transmarine forms of administration,
or to use the appellations afterwards current, the
distinction between Italy and the provinces.
Hitherto the two chief magistrates of the community,
the consuls, had not had any legally defined sphere
of action; on the contrary their official field extended
as far as the Roman government itself. Of course,
however, in practice they made a division of functions
between them, and of course also they were bound in
every particular department of their duties by the
enactments existing in regard to it; the jurisdiction,
for instance, over Roman citizens had in every case
to be left to the praetor, and in the Latin and other
autonomous communities the existing treaties had to
be respected. The four quaestors who had been