their new rulers, the abandonment of the equally wise
and magnanimous principle of Roman statesmanship—viz.,
that Rome should accept from her subjects simply military
aid, and never pecuniary compensation in lieu of it—was
of a fatal importance, in comparison with which all
alleviations in the rates and the mode of levying
them, as well as all exceptions in detail, were as
nothing. Such exceptions were, no doubt, made
in various cases. Messana was directly admitted
to the confederacy of the -togati-, and, like the
Greek cities in Italy, furnished its contingent to
the Roman fleet. A number of other cities, while
not admitted to the Italian military confederacy,
yet received in addition to other favours immunity
from tribute and tenths, so that their position in
a financial point of view was even more favourable
than that of the Italian communities. These
were Segesta and Halicyae, which were the first towns
of Carthaginian Sicily that joined the Roman alliance;
Centuripa, an inland town in the east of the island,
which was destined to keep a watch over the Syracusan
territory in its neighbourhood;(9) Halaesa on the
northern coast, which was the first of the free Greek
towns to join the Romans, and above all Panormus,
hitherto the capital of Carthaginian, and now destined
to become that of Roman, Sicily. The Romans
thus applied to Sicily the ancient principle of their
policy, that of subdividing the dependent communities
into carefully graduated classes with different privileges;
but, on the average, the Sardinian and Sicilian communities
were not in the position of allies but in the manifest
relation of tributary subjection.
Italy and the Provinces
It is true that this thorough distinction between
the communities that furnished contingents and those
that paid tribute, or at least did not furnish contingents,
was not in law necessarily coincident with the distinction
between Italy and the provinces. Transmarine
communities might belong to the Italian confederacy;
the Mamertines for example were substantially on a
level with the Italian Sabellians, and there existed
no legal obstacle to the establishment even of new
communities with Latin rights in Sicily and Sardinia
any more than in the country beyond the Apennines.
Communities on the mainland might be deprived of
the right of bearing arms and become tributary; this
arrangement was already the case with certain Celtic
districts on the Po, and was introduced to a considerable
extent in after times. But, in reality, the
communities that furnished contingents just as decidedly
preponderated on the mainland as the tributary communities
in the islands; and while Italian settlements were
not contemplated on the part of the Romans either
in Sicily with its Hellenic civilization or in Sardinia,
the Roman government had beyond doubt already determined
not only to subdue the barbarian land between the Apennines
and the Alps, but also, as their conquests advanced,
to establish in it new communities of Italic origin