Rome, were invested with the supreme authority in war
and peace. The Latin language, which was even
then the prevailing language among the Marsians and
Picentes, continued in official use, but the Samnite
language which predominated in Southern Italy was placed
side by side with it on a footing of equality; and
the two were made use of alternately on the silver
pieces which the new Italian state began to coin in
its own name after Roman models and after the Roman
standard, thus appropriating likewise the monopoly
of coinage which Rome had exercised for two centuries.
It is evident from these arrangements—
and was, indeed a matter of course-that the Italians
now no longer thought of wresting equality of rights
from the Romans, but purposed to annihilate or subdue
them and to form a new state. But it is also
obvious that their constitution was nothing but a pure
copy of that of Rome or, in other words, was the ancient
polity handed down by tradition among the Italian
nations from time immemorial:—the organization
of a city instead of the constitution of a state, with
primary assemblies as unwieldy and useless as the Roman
comitia, with a governing corporation which contained
within it the same elements of oligarchy as the Roman
senate, with an executive administered in like manner
by a plurality of coordinate supreme magistrates.
This imitation descended to the minutest details;
for instance, the title of consul or praetor held
by the magistrate in chief command was after a victory
exchanged by the general of the Italians also for
the title of Imperator. Nothing in fact was changed
but the name; on the coins of the insurgents the same
image of the gods appears, the inscription only being
changed from Roma to Italia. This Rome of the
insurgents was distinguished—not to its
advantage—from the original Rome merely
by the circumstance, that, while the latter had at
any rate an urban development, and its unnatural position
intermediate between a city and a state had formed
itself at least in a natural way, the new Italia was
nothing at all but a place of congress for the insurgents,
and it was by a pure fiction of law that the inhabitants
of the peninsula were stamped as burgesses of this
new capital. But it is significant that in this
case, where the sudden amalgamation of a number of
isolated cantons into a new political unity might
have so naturally suggested the idea of a representative
constitution in the modern sense, no trace of any such
idea occurs; in fact the very opposite course was
followed,(12) and the communal organization was simply
reproduced in a far more absurd manner than before.
Nowhere perhaps is it so clearly apparent as in this
instance, that in the view of antiquity a free constitution
was inseparable from the appearance of the sovereign
people in person in the primary assemblies, or from
a city; and that the great fundamental idea of the
modern republican-constitutional state, viz. the
expression of the sovereignty of the people by a representative
assembly—an idea without which a free state
would be a chaos—is wholly modern.
Even the Italian polity, although in its somewhat
representative senates and in the diminished importance
of the comitia it approximated to a free state, never
was able in the case either of Rome or of Italia to
cross the boundary-line.