<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P174"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXXXI"></SPAN>XXXI<br/> ROME COMES INTO HISTORY</h2>
<p>The reader will note a general similarity in the history of all these
civilizations in spite of the effectual separation caused by the great barriers
of the Indian north-west frontier and of the mountain masses of Central Asia
and further India. First for thousands of years the heliolithic culture spread
over all the warm and fertile river valleys of the old world and developed a
temple system and priest rulers about its sacrificial traditions. Apparently
its first makers were always those brunette peoples we have spoken of as the
central race of mankind. Then the nomads came in from the regions of seasonal
grass and seasonal migrations and superposed their own characteristics and
often their own language on the primitive civilization. They subjugated and
stimulated it, and were stimulated to fresh developments and made it here one
thing and here another. In Mesopotamia it was the Elamite and then the Semite,
and at last the Nordic Medes and Persians and the Greeks who supplied the
ferment; over the region of the Ægean peoples it was the Greeks; in India it
was the Aryan-speakers; in Egypt there was a thinner infusion of conquerors
into a more intensely saturated priestly civilization; in China, the Hun
conquered and was absorbed and was followed by fresh Huns. China was Mongolized
just as Greece and North India were Aryanized and Mesopotamia Semitized and
Aryanized. Everywhere the nomads destroyed much, but everywhere they brought in
a new spirit of free enquiry and moral innovation. They questioned the beliefs
of immemorial ages. They let daylight into the temples. They set up kings who
were neither priests nor gods but mere leaders among their captains and
companions.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-175"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-175.jpg" alt="THE DYING GAUL" width-obs="600" height-obs="777" /> <p class="caption">
THE DYING GAUL
<br/><small>The statue in the National Museum, Rome, depicting a Gaul
stabbing himself, after killing his wife, in the presence of his
enemies
<br/>
<i>Photo: Anderson</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P175"></SPAN></span>
In the centuries following the sixth century <small>B.C.</small>
we find everywhere a great breaking down of
ancient traditions and a new spirit <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P176"></SPAN></span>of moral and intellectual enquiry
awake, a spirit never more to be altogether stilled in the
great progressive movement of mankind. We find reading and
writing becoming common and accessible accomplishments among
the ruling and prosperous minority; they were no longer the
jealously guarded secret of the priests. Travel is
increasing and transport growing easier by reason of horses
and roads. A new and easy device to facilitate trade has
been found in coined money.</p>
<p>Let us now transfer our attention back from China in the
extreme east of the old world to the western half of the
Mediterranean. Here we have to note the appearance of a city
which was destined to play at last a very great part indeed
in human affairs, Rome.</p>
<p>Hitherto we have told very little about Italy in our story.
It was before 1000 <small>B.C.</small> a land of
mountain and forest and thinly populated. Aryan-speaking
tribes had pressed down this peninsula and formed little
towns and cities, and the southern extremity was studded with
Greek settlements. The noble ruins of Pæstum preserve
for us to this day something of the dignity and splendour of
these early Greek establishments. A non-Aryan people,
probably akin to the Ægean peoples, the Etruscans, had
established themselves in the central part of the peninsula.
They had reversed the usual process by subjugating various
Aryan tribes. Rome, when it comes into the light of history,
is a little trading city at a ford on the Tiber, with a
Latin-speaking population ruled over by Etruscan kings. The
old chronologies gave 753 <small>B.C.</small> as the
date of the founding of Rome, half a century later than the
founding of the great Phœnician city of Carthage and
twenty-three years after the first Olympiad. Etruscan tombs
of a much earlier date than 753 <small>B.C.</small>
have, however, been excavated in the Roman Forum.</p>
<p>In that red-letter century, the sixth century
<small>B.C.</small>, the Etruscan kings were expelled (510
<small>B.C.</small>) and Rome became an aristocratic
republic with a lordly class of “patrician”
families dominating a commonalty of “plebeians.”
Except that it spoke Latin it was not unlike many
aristocratic Greek republics.</p>
<p>For some centuries the internal history of Rome was the story
of a long and obstinate struggle for freedom and a share in
the government on the part of the plebeians. It would not be
difficult to find <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P177"></SPAN></span>Greek parallels to this conflict,
which the Greeks would have called a conflict of aristocracy
with democracy. In the end the plebeians broke down most of
the exclusive barriers of the old families and established a
working equality with them. They destroyed the old
exclusiveness, and made it possible and acceptable for Rome
to extend her citizenship by the inclusion of more and more
“outsiders.” For while she still struggled at
home, she was extending her power abroad.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-177"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-177.jpg" alt="REMAINS OF THE ANCIENT ROMAN CISTERNS AT CARTHAGE" width-obs="600" height-obs="480" /> <p class="caption">
REMAINS OF THE ANCIENT ROMAN CISTERNS AT CARTHAGE
<br/><small>
<i>Photo: Underwood & Underwood</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>The extension of Roman power began in the fifth century
<small>B.C.</small> Until that time they had waged war,
and generally unsuccessful war, with the Etruscans. There
was an Etruscan fort, Veii, only a few miles from Rome which
the Romans had never been able to capture. In 474
<small>B.C.</small>, however, a great misfortune came to the
Etruscans. Their fleet was destroyed by the Greeks of
Syracuse in Sicily. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P178"></SPAN></span>At the same time a wave of Nordic
invaders came down upon them from the north, the Gauls.
Caught between Roman and Gaul, the Etruscans fell—and
disappear from history. Veii was captured by the Romans, The
Gauls came through to Rome and sacked the city (390
<small>B.C.</small><small>A.D.</small>) but could not capture the
Capitol.
An attempted night surprise was betrayed by the cackling of
some geese, and finally the invaders were bought off and
retired to the north of Italy again.</p>
<p>The Gaulish raid seems to have invigorated rather than
weakened Rome. The Romans conquered and assimilated the
Etruscans, and extended their power over all central Italy
from the Arno to Naples. To this they had reached within a
few years of 300 <small>B.C.</small> Their
conquests in Italy were going on simultaneously with the
growth of Philip’s power in Macedonia and Greece, and
the tremendous raid of Alexander to Egypt and the Indus. The
Romans had become notable people in the civilized world to
the east of them by the break-up of Alexander’s empire.</p>
<p>To the north of the Roman power were the Gauls; to the south
of them were the Greek settlements of Magna Græcia, that
is to say of Sicily and of the toe and heel of Italy. The
Gauls were a hardy, warlike people and the Romans held that
boundary by a line of forts and fortified settlements. The
Greek cities in the south headed by Tarentum (now Taranto)
and by Syracuse in Sicily, did not so much threaten as fear
the Romans. They looked about for some help against these
new conquerors.</p>
<p>We have already told how the empire of Alexander fell to
pieces and was divided among his generals and companions.
Among these adventurers was a kinsman of Alexander’s
named Pyrrhus, who established himself in Epirus, which is
across the Adriatic Sea over against the heel of Italy. It
was his ambition to play the part of Philip of Macedonia to
Magna Græcia, and to become protector and master-general
of Tarentum, Syracuse and the rest of that part of the world.
He had what was then it very efficient modern army; he had an
infantry phalanx, cavalry from Thessaly—which was now
quite as good as the original Macedonian cavalry—and
twenty fighting elephants; he invaded Italy and routed the
Romans in two considerable battles, Heraclea (280
<small>B.C.</small>) and Ausculum (279
<small>B.C.</small>), and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P179"></SPAN></span>having driven them north, he
turned his attention to the subjugation of Sicily.</p>
<p>But this brought against him a more formidable enemy than
were the Romans at that time, the Phœnician trading city
of Carthage, which was probably then the greatest city in the
world. Sicily was too near Carthage for a new Alexander to
be welcome there, and Carthage was mindful of the fate that
had befallen her mother city Tyre half a century before. So
she sent a fleet to encourage or compel Rome to continue the
struggle, and she cut the overseas communications of Pyrrhus.
Pyrrhus found himself freshly assailed by the Romans, and
suffered a disastrous repulse in an attack he had made upon
their camp at Beneventum between Naples and Rome.</p>
<p>And suddenly came news that recalled him to Epirus. The
Gauls were raiding south. But this time they were not
raiding down into Italy; the Roman frontier, fortified and
guarded, had become too formidable for them. They were
raiding down through Illyria (which is now Serbia and
Albania) to Macedonia and Epirus. Repulsed by the Romans,
endangered at sea by the Carthaginians, and threatened at
home by the Gauls, Pyrrhus abandoned his dream of conquest
and went home (275 <small>B.C.</small>), and the
power of Rome was extended to the Straits of Messina.</p>
<p>On the Sicilian side of the Straits was the Greek city of
Messina, and this presently fell into the hands of a gang of
pirates. The Carthaginians, who were already practically
overlords of Sicily and allies of Syracuse, suppressed these
pirates (270 <small>B.C.</small>) and put in a
Carthaginian garrison there. The pirates appealed to Rome
and Rome listened to their complaint. And so across the
Straits of Messina the great trading power of Carthage and
this new conquering people, the Romans, found themselves in
antagonism, face to face.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />