Pay in the Roman army was defined by the annual stipendium received by a Roman soldier, of whatever rank he was, from the Republican era until the Later Roman Empire. It constituted the main part of the Roman soldier's income, who from the end of the Republic began to receive, in addition to the spoils of war, prize money called donativa. The latter grew to such an extent in the following centuries that by the 4th century, the ancient stipendium constituted only 10–15% of the Roman legionary's entire income.
During 407 BC, when the Roman army was divided into three parts and sent to plunder the enemies' territory under the command of three of the four military Tribunes (Lucius Valerius Potitus headed for Anzio, Gnaeus Cornelius Cossus headed for Ecetra, and Numerius Fabius Ambustus attacked and conquered Anxur, leaving the prey to the soldiers of all three armies), the stipend for the soldiers was established, perhaps at the direction of Furius Camillus himself. Below is how Livy tells it:
"The patricians then added a most opportune gift for the plebs: the Senate decreed, with no prior mention of it to plebs or tribunes, that soldiers should receive a stipend drawn from the State coffers. Until that time each person fulfilled military service at his own expense. (60) As far as we know, no measure was greeted with such joy by the plebs."
The consequences were obvious: acknowledgements from the plebeians, controversy from the Tribunes who saw some of their weapons blunted, protests from those who had to pay. The immediate benefit was that a law declaring war on Veius was passed, and the new Tribunes with military power led an army there consisting mostly of volunteers. And perhaps, also under this circumstance, the legion may have assumed the manipular system as its battle formation. [1]
At the time of the Punic Wars, pay was set at 2 obols per day, or one-third of a drachma (one denarius after 211 BC), for the period they were under arms. [2] In addition, each infantryman was entitled to a share of the spoils of war (prisoners were sold as slaves, as well as animals, treasure, weapons, and other goods), which were auctioned off and the proceeds distributed to officers and men according to various criteria. Centurions received twice the pay of their men, that is, four obols or two-thirds of a drachma a day. As for the food ration, infantrymen were distributed about two-thirds of an Attic medimnos of grain per month. [3]
It is also known from Polybius that if the pay distributed to Roman horsemen was one drachma a day, three times what an infantryman earned, [2] the monthly rations were seven medimnoi of barley and two of wheat. [3] Allies (socii), on the other hand, were given one medimnos and a third of wheat free of charge, as well as five of barley per month. [4] To the allies all this was given as a gift. In the case of the Romans, on the other hand, the quaestor deducted from the stipendium the price set for wheat, clothing, and any weapons that they might need. [5]
Toward the end of the 2nd century BC Rome had found itself embroiled in a war in Numidia, in which, because of the lack of appeal of any kind, it was almost impossible to find new recruits. From this premise the consul of that year, Gaius Marius, decided to open the legions to anyone, whether or not they were landowners, [6] as Sallust tells it:
Marius noticed that the spirits of the plebs were full of enthusiasm. Without wasting any time he loaded the ships with weapons, stipendium for the soldiers and anything else useful, ordering Manlius to embark. He, meanwhile, enlisted soldiers, not as was the custom at that time, by social classes, but rather by accepting all volunteers, for the most part destitute of ( capite censi ).
— Sallust, Bellum Iugurthinum, LXXXVI
Permanent active duty thus underwent a major change in 107 BC. The Roman Republic was forced to take on the burden of equipping and supplying legionary troops, allowing everyone, including have-nots, to enlist. The minimum age for volunteers (no longer forced to serve) was now set at 17, and the maximum at 46. [7] This was the first example of a professional army where conscription by census was abolished, while veteran soldiers, who drew daily sustenance (food and lodging, as well as equipment) from the army, received a pension in the form of land allotments in the colonies and, later on, of Roman citizenship as well. To them, Marius and then subsequent commanders also granted to share the spoils plundered during military campaigns. [8]
Caesar did not, in the course of the conquest of Gaul, deprive his soldiers of the opportunity to loot, but the mere legionary had to be clear about the ultimate goal of the campaign, and his actions were not to affect the commander's operational plans. Aware of the misery of his soldiers, Caesar, on his own initiative, doubled the pay in 51–50 BC from 5 to 10 aces per day (equal to 225 denarii per year), so that the legionary's pay remained unchanged until the period of Emperor Domitian (81-96). [9]
He, unlike many of his predecessors who provided troops with occasional donations, deemed it necessary to give continuity to the service the soldiers provided, instituting the right to a reward in land for discharge, in accordance with the custom that until then had been at the total discretion solely of the commander.
During the High Empire, supply to the troops, stationed along the imperial borders, was ensured by a system of food collection, including through forced requisitions (against reimbursement), called annona militaris. Basically, from the pay of legionaries and auxiliaries all costs associated with their maintenance were, then, deducted. The stipendium was, therefore, composed of a pay in coin and one "in kind."
Augustus reorganized the entire system of the imperial border defenses, permanently quartering legions and auxilia in fortresses and forts along the limes. He brought order to the financial administration of the Roman state, awarding a salary and leave bonus to all soldiers in the imperial army (both legionaries and auxiliaries) with the creation of an aerarium militare .
With reference to the auxiliary troops Augustus offered them a four-monthly pay and uniform equipment, equal to about 1/3 of what a legionary (who received 225 denarii annually) received, that is, around 75 denarii annually. The stipendium of an Ala knight, however, was higher than that of a Roman legionary, hovering around 250 denarii, while that of a knight of cohors equitata ranged around 200 denarii. [10] In essence, the equites alares (Ala knights) were the highest paid: after them were the infantrymen of a cohors equitata with 150 denarii and finally those of a cohors peditata . [11] [12] [13] According to some recent calculations, the annual outlay that the aerarium militare had to spend to maintain this massive army was between 31,000,000 denarii according to some [14] and 65,000,000 denarii according to others. [15]
Here is how the historian Tacitus describes military service and soldier pay in the time of Augustus (in the year 14):
"Military service is, in its essence, strenuous and yields nothing: one's soul and body are valued at ten assēs a day, and with these one must pay for clothing, weapons, tents, as well as to save oneself from the abuse of the centurions or to buy some exemption from some toil."
The final reward upon discharge, almost as if it were a form of modern severance package, was 3,000 denarii for legionaries, while praetorians were given as much as 5,000 denarii. [16]
The first increase in a soldier's pay in imperial times was in the time of Domitian, who increased it by a quarter not only the stipendium of legionaries, but also that of auxiliary units, thus bringing the annual compensation to 333 denarii for an Ala knight, 266 denarii for a knight of cohors equitata, and 200 denarii for a foot soldier of cohors equitata. [10] [17]
Septimius Severus favored legionaries in several ways, increasing their pay and granting them the right to marry while in service, [18] as well as allowing them to live with their families outside the camp (canabae). This reform entailed a "regionalization" of the legions, which in this way became tied not only to their commander but also to a specific territory.
With the introduction of the Constitutio Antoniniana by Emperor Caracalla, Roman citizenship was granted to all inhabitants of the empire except the dediticii . The aim was to increase tax revenues in the treasury's coffers to attempt to meet the rising costs of military salaries needed to maintain armies along the frontiers.
According to Herodian's version, the revolt of the soldiers that led to the death of Alexander Severus was mainly due to the fact that many of the soldiers of Pannonian origin, who were very devoted to Maximinus, [19] felt that Alexander was depending too much on his mother's power and was behaving cowardly in conducting the Germanic war against the Alemanni. They recalled the recent disasters in the East caused by the Emperor's continued hesitation. [19] Thus they planned the killing of Alexander and the elevation to the imperial purple of Maximinus, [20] to whom they apparently threw the purple mantle as he passed for inspection. [21] While at first he refused, he later decided to accept, although he felt that such acclamation should be followed by the immediate killing of Alexander before he organized his legions. [22] And so after promising to double their stipendium, new donativa , and cancel all punishments, he marched decisively against Alexander's camp (which was located at Mogontiacum). [23]
Below is a table that attempts to summarize, based on calculations made by some modern scholars and the little literary evidence of the time, as well as limited archaeological-epigraphic documentation that has come down to us, the annual pay of Roman soldiers: [24] [25]
Roman legion | Augustus(in denarii) | Domitian(in denarii) | Septimius Severus(in denarii) | Caracalla(in denarii) | Maximinus Thrax(in denarii) [23] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
legionary (miles) | 225 | 300 | 450 | 675 | 1350 |
immunis | 225 | 300 | 450 | 675 | 1.350 |
principalis sesquiplicarius (= pay equal to 1.5 times) ( Cornicen , Tesserarius e Beneficiarius ) | 337 | 450 | 675 | 1.012 | 2.025 |
principalis duplicarius (= pay equal to 2 times) ( Optio , Aquilifer , Signifer , Imaginifer , Vexillarius equitum , Cornicularius , Campidoctor) | 450 | 600 | 900 | 1.350 | 2.700 |
principalis triplicarius (= pay equal to 3 times) [26] | 675 | 900 | 1350 | 2025 | 4050 |
Legionary knight | 262 | 350 | 525 | 787 | 1.575 |
Centurion / decurion | 3.375 | 4.500 | 6.750 | 10.125 | 20.250 |
Centurion primo ordo | 6.750 | 9.000 | 13.500 | 20.250 | 40.500 |
Centurion primus pilus | 13.500 | 18.000 | 27.000 | 40.500 | 81.000 |
Praefectus castrorum | 15.000 | 20.000 | 30.000 | 45.000 | 90.000 |
Tribunus angusticlavius | 18.750 | 25.000 | 37.500 | 56.250 | 112.500 |
Tribunus laticlavius | 30.000 | 40.000 | 60.000 | 90.000 | 180.000 |
Auxiliary troops | Augustus(in denarii) | Domitian(in denarii) | Septimius Severus(in denarii) | Caracalla(in denarii) | Maximinus Thrax(in denarii) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Infantryman of cohors peditata | 75 | 100 | 150 | 225 | 450 |
Infantryman of cohors equitata | 150 | 200 | 300 | 450 | 900 |
Knight of cohors equitata | 200 | 267 | 400 | 600 | 1.200 |
Knight of Ala | 250 | 333 | 500 | 750 | 1.500 |
Praefectus cohortis | 3.375 | 4.500 | 6.750 | 10.125 | 20.250 |
Praefectus alae | 11.250 | 15.000 | 22.500 | 33.750 | 67.500 |
Garrisons of Rome | Augustus(in denarii) | Domitian(in denarii) | Septimius Severus(in denarii) | Caracalla(in denarii) | Maximinus Thrax(in denarii) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
praetorianus | 750 [27] | 1.000 | 1.500 | 2.250 | 4.500 |
urbanicianus | 375 [27] | 500 | 750 | 1.125 | 2.250 |
vigil | 150 [27] | 200 | 300 | 450 | 900 |
Navy | Augustus(in denarii) | Domitian(in denarii) | Septimius Severus(in denarii) | Caracalla(in denarii) | Maximinus Thrax(in denarii) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
classiarius ( Classis Misenensis ) | 150 | 200 | 300 | 450 | 900 |
classiarius ( Classis Ravennatis ) | 150 | 200 | 300 | 450 | 900 |
classiarius ( Classis provincialis ) | 75 | 100 | 150 | 225 | 450 |
The impact of the costs of such a large army (from Augustus to the Severans) on the economy of the Roman Empire can be measured, albeit roughly, as follows:
Date | Empire population | Empire GDP (millions of denarii) [note 1] | Cost of the military (millions of denarii) [note 1] | Cost of the military (% of GDP) |
---|---|---|---|---|
14 AD. | 46 million [28] | 5.000 [29] | 123 [30] | 2.5% |
150 AD. | 61 million [31] | 6.800 [note 2] | 194 [note 3] | 2.9% |
215 AD. | 50 million [note 4] [32] | 5.435 [note 2] | 223 [note 3] | 4.1% |
The cost of the entire army grew moderately as a % of GDP between AD 14 and 150, despite an increase in manpower of about 50%, from about 255,000 armed men [33] in AD 23 to 383,000 [34] under Hadrian, to about 442,000 [35] by the death of Septimius Severus in 211.
This was because the population of the empire, and thus the total GDP, increased significantly (+35 percent approx.). Subsequently, the percentage of army spending toward GDP increased by almost half, although the increase in army personnel was only about 15% (from 150 to 215). This was mainly due to the Antonine plague, which epidemiological historians have estimated to have reduced the empire's population by 15% to 30%. However, even in 215, the Romans were spending a similar percentage on GDP as the defense of the only global superpower, the United States of America, spends today (amounting to 3.5 percent of GDP in 2003). However, the actual burden on taxpayers, in a quasi-agricultural economy with truly limited surplus production (80 percent of the imperial population depended on subsistence agriculture and an additional 10 percent on subsistence income), was certainly much heavier. Indeed, a study of imperial taxes in Egypt, by far the best-documented province, established that the burden was relatively heavy. [36]
Military expenditures thus constituted about 75 percent of the total state budget, since "social" spending was little, whereas all the rest was spent on prestigious building projects in Rome and the provinces; this was supplemented by a grain subsidy for those found to be unemployed, as well as aid to the proletariat of Rome (congiaria) and subsidies to Italic families (similar to modern family allowances), to encourage them to beget more children. Augustus instituted this policy, distributing 250 denarii for every child born. [37] Further subsidies were later introduced for Italic families (Institutio Alimentaria), by Emperor Trajan. [38]
The Roman legion, the largest military unit of the Roman army, comprised 4,200 infantry and 300 equites (cavalry) in the period of the Roman Republic and 5,600 infantry and 200 auxilia in the period of the Roman Empire.
The Praetorian Guard was an elite unit of the Imperial Roman army that served as personal bodyguards and intelligence agents for the Roman emperors.
The Roman legionary was a professional heavy infantryman of the Roman army. These soldiers would conquer and defend the territories of ancient Rome during the late Republic and Principate eras, alongside auxiliary and cavalry detachments. At its height, Roman legionaries were viewed as the foremost fighting force in the Roman world, with commentators such as Vegetius praising their fighting effectiveness centuries after the classical Roman legionary disappeared.
Legio IV Macedonica, was a legion of the Imperial Roman army founded in 48 BC by Gaius Julius Caesar with Italian legionaries. The legion was disbanded in AD 70 by Emperor Vespasian. The legion symbols were a bull and a capricorn.
A cohort was a standard tactical military unit of a Roman legion. Although the standard size changed with time and situation, it was generally composed of 480 soldiers. A cohort is considered to be the equivalent of a modern military battalion. The cohort replaced the maniple. From the late second century BC and until the middle of the third century AD, ten cohorts made up a legion. Cohorts were named "first cohort,” "second cohort," etc. The first cohort consisted of experienced legionaries, while the legionaries in the tenth cohort were less experienced.
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In the military of ancient Rome, decimation was a form of military discipline in which every tenth man in a group was executed by members of his cohort. The discipline was used by senior commanders in the Roman army to punish units or large groups guilty of capital offences, such as cowardice, mutiny, desertion, and insubordination, and for pacification of rebellious legions. The procedure was an attempt to balance the need to punish serious offences with the realities of managing a large group of offenders.
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A turma, was a cavalry unit in the Roman army of the Republic and Empire. In the Byzantine Empire, it became applied to the larger, regiment-sized military-administrative divisions of a thema. The word is often translated as "squadron" but so is the term ala, a unit that was made up of several turmae.
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Silke Scheuermann is a German poet and novelist. She was educated in Frankfurt, Leipzig, and Paris. She is best known for her debut novel Die Stunde zwischen Hund und Wolf, which has been translated into ten languages including English. She has won numerous German and European literary prizes and fellowships, including the Georg-Christoph-Lichtenberg-Preis, the Leonce-und-Lena-Preis, the Hölty Prize, the Bertolt-Brecht-Literaturpreis, and a Villa Massimo fellowship.
The German and Sarmatian campaigns of Constantine were fought by the Roman Emperor Constantine I against the neighbouring Germanic peoples, including the Franks, Alemanni and Goths, as well as the Sarmatian Iazyges, along the whole Roman northern defensive system to protect the empire's borders, between 306 and 336.
By the size of the Roman army is meant the changes in the number of its contingents: legions, auxiliaries, Praetorian cohorts, Urban cohorts, vigiles, and naval forces over the course of twelve centuries – from 753 BC to AD 476.
The Sassanid campaign of Alexander Severus was an episode of the Roman–Sasanian Wars (224-363) that saw the Roman Empire ruled by Emperor Alexander Severus (222-235) confront the dominance of the Sasanids, led by Ardashir I (224-241): the war was fought between 230 and 232, originating from an attempted Sasanian expansion into the eastern Roman provinces, and resolved with a return to the status quo ante.
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Siege in ancient Rome was one of the techniques used by the Roman army to achieve ultimate victory, although pitched battles were considered the only true form of warfare. Nevertheless, the importance that siege action could have in the warfare framework of that era cannot be underestimated. Hannibal was unable to defeat the might of Rome because, although he had defeated the Roman armies in the open field, he had proved unable to assault the city of Rome. As time went on, the armies of the late Roman and Imperial Republics also became particularly adept at siege warfare: Gaius Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul was the combination of a whole series of pitched battles and long sieges, culminating in that of Alesia in 52 BCE. To seize the main center of an enemy people seemed to be the best way to bring a conflict to an end, as also happened in the time of Trajan, during the conquest of Dacia, when the enemy capital, Sarmizegetusa Regia, was besieged and occupied. For this purpose, numerous works and siege machines were, therefore, required for variety and functionality, engaging soldiers in the execution of important military engineering works.
Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo used to say that the enemy was won with the hoe, that is, with construction works.
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