involved a very considerable financial saving.
It is true, however, that this principle of a previous
better age came from the very first to be infringed
and mutilated by the numerous exceptions which were
allowed to prevail. The ground-tenth levied
by Hiero and Carthage in Sicily went far beyond the
amount of an annual war-contributioa With justice moreover
Scipio Aemilianus says in Cicero, that it was unbecoming
for the Roman burgess-body to be at the same time
the ruler and the tax-gatherer of the nations.
The appropriation of the customs-dues was not compatible
with the principle of disinterested hegemony, and the
high rates of the customs as well as the vexatious
mode of levying them were not fitted to allay the
sense of the injustice thereby inflicted. Even
as early probably as this period the name of publican
became synonymous among the eastern peoples with that
of rogue and robber: no burden contributed so
much as this to make the Roman name offensive and
odious especially in the east. But when Gaius
Gracchus and those who called themselves the “popular
party” in Rome came to the helm, political sovereignty
was declared in plain terms to be a right which entitled
every one who shared in it to a number of bushels
of corn, the hegemony was converted into a direct
ownership of the soil, and the most complete system
of making the most of that ownership was not only
introduced but with shameless candour legally justified
and proclaimed. It was certainly not a mere
accident, that the hardest lot in this respect fell
precisely to the two least warlike provinces, Sicily
and Asia.
The Finances and Public Buildings
An approximate measure of the condition of Roman finance
at this period is furnished, in the absence of definite
statements, first of all by the public buildings.
In the first decades of this epoch these were prosecuted
on the greatest scale, and the construction of roads
in particular had at no time been so energetically
pursued. In Italy the great southern highway
of presumably earlier origin, which as a prolongation
of the Appian road ran from Rome by way of Capua,
Beneventum, and Venusia to the ports of Tarentum and
Brundisium, had attached to it a branch-road from Capua
to the Sicilian straits, a work of Publius Popillius,
consul in 622. On the east coast, where hitherto
only the section from Fanum to Ariminum had been constructed
as part of the Flaminian highway (ii. 229), the coast
road was prolonged southward as far as Brundisium,
northward by way of Atria on the Po as far as Aquileia,
and the portion at least from Ariminum to Atria was
formed by the Popillius just mentioned in the same
year. The two great Etruscan highways—
the coast or Aurelian road from Rome to Pisa and Luna,
which was in course of formation in 631, and the Cassian
road leading by way of Sutrium and Clusium to Arretium
and Florentia, which seems not to have been constructed
before 583—may as Roman public highways
belong only to this age. About Rome itself new