not only looked on without preventing, but even promoted
this injurious division of the soil by particular
measures, especially by prohibiting the production
of wine and oil beyond the Alps with a view to favour
the great Italian landlords and merchants.(26) It
is true that both the opposition and the section of
the conservatives that entered into ideas of reform
worked energetically to counteract the evil; the two
Gracchi, by carrying out the distribution of almost
the whole domain land, gave to the state 80,000 new
Italian farmers; Sulla, by settling 120,000 colonists
in Italy, filled up at least in part the gaps which
the revolution and he himself had made in the ranks
of the Italian yeomen. But, when a vessel is
emptying itself by constant efflux, the evil is to
be remedied not by pouring in even considerable quantities,
but only by the establishment of a constant influx—
a remedy which was on various occasions attempted,
but not with success. In the provinces, not
even the smallest effort was made to save the farmer
class there from being bought out by the Roman speculators;
the provincials, forsooth, were merely men, and not
a party. The consequence was, that even the
rents of the soil beyond Italy flowed more and more
to Rome. Moreover the plantation-system, which
about the middle of this epoch had already gained
the ascendant even in particular districts of Italy,
such as Etruria, had, through the co-operation of
an energetic and methodical management and abundant
pecuniary resources, attained to a state of high prosperity
after its kind. The production of Italian wine
in particular, which was artificially promoted partly
by the opening of forced markets in a portion of the
provinces, partly by the prohibition of foreign wines
in Italy as expressed for instance in the sumptuary
law of 593, attained very considerable results:
the Aminean and Falernian wine began to be named by
the side of the Thasian and Chian, and the “Opimian
wine” of 633, the Roman vintage “Eleven,”
was long remembered after the last jar was exhausted.
Trades
Of trades and manufactur es there is nothing to be
said, except that the Italian nation in this respect
persevered in an inaction bordering on barbarism.
They destroyed the Corinthian factories, the depositories
of so many valuable industrial traditions—not
however that they might establish similar factories
for themselves, but that they might buy up at extravagant
prices such Corinthian vases of earthenware or copper
and similar “antique works” as were preserved
in Greek houses. The trades that were still somewhat
prosperous, such as those connected with building,
were productive of hardly any benefit for the commonwealth,
because here too the system of employing slaves in
every more considerable undertaking intervened:
in the construction of the Marcian aqueduct, for instance,
the government concluded contracts for building and
materials simultaneously with 3000 master-tradesmen,
each of whom then performed the work contracted for
with his band of slaves.