principal bases of administration—the proportions
of population and property in the different communities—
in other words an improved census. First the
census of Italy was reformed. According to Caesar’s
ordinance(101)—which probably, indeed,
only carried out the arrangements which were, at least
as to principle, adopted in consequence of the Social
war— in future, when a census took place
in the Roman community, there were to be simultaneously
registered by the highest authority in each Italian
community the name of every municipal burgess and
that of his father or manumitter, his district, his
age, and his property; and these lists were to be
furnished to the Roman censor early enough to enable
him to complete in proper time the general list of
Roman burgesses and of Roman property. That it
was Caesar’s intention to introduce similar institutions
also in the provinces is attested partly by the measurement
and survey of the whole empire ordered by him, partly
by the nature of the arrangement itself; for it in
fact furnished the general instrument appropriate
for procuring, as well in the Italian as in the non-Italian
communities of the state, the information requisite
for the central administration. Evidently here
too it was Caesar’s intention to revert to the
traditions of the earlier republican times, and to
reintroduce the census of the empire, which the earlier
republic had effected— essentially in the
same way as Caesar effected the Italian—
by analogous extension of the institution of the urban
censorship with its set terms and other essential
rules to all the subject communities of Italy and
Sicily.(102) This had been one of the first institutions
which the torpid aristocracy allowed to drop, and
in this way deprived the supreme administrative authority
of any view of the resources in men and taxation at
its disposal and consequently of all possibility of
an effective control.(103) The indications still extant,
and the very connection of things, show irrefragably
that Caesar made preparations to renew the general
census that had been obsolete for centuries.
Religion of the Empire
We need scarcely say that in religion and in jurisprudence
no thorough levelling could be thought of; yet with
all toleration towards local faiths and municipal
statutes the new state needed a common worship corresponding
to the Italo-Hellenic nationality and a general code
of law superior to the municipal statutes. It
needed them; for de facto both were already in existence.
In the field of religion men had for centuries been
busied in fusing together the Italian and Hellenic
worships partly by external adoption, partly by internal
adjustment of their respective conceptions of the
gods; and owing to the pliant formless character of
the Italian gods, there had been no great difficulty
in resolving Jupiter into Zeus, Venus into Aphrodite,
and so every essential idea of the Latin faith into
its Hellenic counterpart. The Italo-Hellenic
religion stood forth in its outlines ready-made; how
much in this very department men were conscious of
having gone beyond the specifically Roman point of
view and advanced towards an Italo-Hellenic quasi-nationality,
is shown by the distinction made in the already-mentioned
theology of Varro between the “common”
gods, that is, those acknowledged by Romans and Greeks,
and the special gods of the Roman community.