Equestrian (Roman)
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An equestrian (Latin eques, plural equites - also known as a vir egregius, lit. "excellent man" from the 2nd century AD onwards) was a member of one of the two upper social classes in the Roman Republic and early Roman Empire. This social class is often translated as "knight" or "chevalier" (French). However, this translation is not literal, since medieval knights relied on their martial skills, the physical power of their horse and armour to support their position, while the connection of Roman equestrians to horses had become more symbolic even in the early days of the Republic. The social position of medieval knights and Roman equestrians, however, was essentially the same. Roman equivalent to Medieval nobility, the Roman tax farming system shared many similarities with medieval feudalism without actually being identical, due to inherent differences in the social structure and the level of central government.
The equites were the Roman middle class between the upper class of patricians and the lower class of plebians. The distinguishing mark of the equestrian class was a gold ring (that of the patrician was of iron) and narrow black band on the tunic.
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[edit] Regional origins
Before the Middle Ages, most European armies were largely composed of infantry. Horsemen were used as advance scouts, raiding parties, troop escorts, and to outflank infantry lines. The majority of heavy fighting was done by infantry. Still, ancient armies required cavalry, and the horsemen usually belonged to the highest classes, as they were the only citizens able to afford horses. As a result, it was considered prestigious to own and ride a horse.
Ancient Rome was no exception to this rule, although the horsemen received financial compensation to buy a horse (the equus publicus, horse bought by the commonwealth). Thus, originally, the equestrians were a military as well as a political group. It is said that king Servius Tullius divided the Roman nation into centuries, which were not only units of soldiers on the battlefield but also voting units in the so-called Centuriate Assembly. The Roman historian Livy offers a description of a complex system with 18 centuries of cavalry, 170 centuries of infantry, and 2 centuries of engineers. When the centuries came together to vote, the equites centuries cast their 18 votes first, followed by the 172 remaining centuries, and one additional vote for those who were too poor to serve in the army but still had a political vote. (Although the fact that the people were divided belongs to the age of kings, it is likely that these specific numbers date back to the fourth century BC.)
[edit] Republican developments
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Beginning in the late third century BC and continuing into the second century BC, Rome increasingly relied upon its allies for its cavalry. As a result, the equestrian centuries slowly lost their military function. Elite soldiers of the Roman Republic retained the title Eques, but most knights did not typically fight on horseback. Over time the title simply became an indication of nobility.
At the same time, the definition of the Roman upper class was changing. The equestrians had always been wealthy citizens, but words like knight and senator slowly became synonymous. The Senate became a body of former magistrates, and although other rich citizens could still be invited to join political discussions, the families that had produced magistrates often intermarried and eventually created a senatorial elite within the old, equestrian elite.
It is probably to this period, the late third and early second century BC, that a distinction within the eighteen equestrian centuries belongs: six centuries were reserved for the senators and their sons, and they cast the first votes, while the other twelve centuries belonged to the equestrians. This must be a development from an age in which the military aspect of the centuries had become less important, because from a military point of view it makes no sense to concentrate the elite in six units. If they were destroyed, the state would lose its governing body.
Thus, in the second century BC, Rome evolved a dual elite. The senators, just as rich as the equestrians, came to monopolize the government by dominating the magistrate offices and started to act as if they were an "elite within the elite". Senators had to behave according to a strict code of conduct, and were forbidden commercial incomes. For the equestrian, this taboo was less rigid, and the equestrians often invested money in tax farming companies and marketing. Unlike Senators, equestrians were permitted to operate businesses. As a result, tensions arose between the elite of the magistrates and the elite of the bankers. After all, the equestrians wanted to make as much money as possible from their tax farming companies and were extorting the provinces, whereas the Senators governed the provinces and noticed that overtaxing caused rebellions.
In the late second century BC, a tribune named Gaius Sempronius Gracchus used the latent tensions within Rome's double elite in an effort to reform Roman society. Before Gracchus, the elite had always been able to overcome any opposition. Gracchus' strategy was to divide the elite by proposing to make the knights jurors in extortion trials. This would enable them to judge their own conduct in the provinces, much against the wishes of the Senators. From that point on, the Senators and equestrians existed as independent classes with different rights, obligations, and interests.
Still, in the age of the Roman civil wars, the senatorial and equestrian orders often collaborated. Control of the courts and financial management of the provinces were two fields in which they sometimes clashed, yet their interests often coincided. Equestrians and Senators were usually not proponents of social change or revolution. Besides, an equestrian who obtained a political office (e.g., the quaestorship) would become a Senator, whereas the son of a Senator who failed to obtain office remained an equestrian.
[edit] Reforms in the Empire
During the reign of the Emperor Augustus, the two orders were for the first time officially defined. One could become an equestrian when one had some 400,000 sesterces; a Senator needed a million. Of course one also needed to be registered in one of the six senatorial or twelve equestrian centuries, and the censor (usually the Emperor) wrote down the names of worthy people on a list to be added to each century.
The empire needed a bureaucracy, but no freeborn Roman would serve another man. As a result, freedmen became very important during the reigns of Claudius (41-54) and Nero (54-68). This was not an acceptable solution. These freedmen could become very influential and Senators did not appreciate it when a former slave had greater power than they had. From the reign of the Emperor Vespasian, who ruled in the year 69, on, equestrian procurators started to serve as heads of the great ministries of the Roman government. Though some primary sources credit the short reign of Vitellius, Vespasians predecessor, with the innovation, it was certainly under the auspices of the Flavian Dynasty that the practice flourished. The equestrians developed into a bureaucratic and practical elite. The Senators still occupied the representative offices and acted as governors in the major provinces, but the equestrians did the real work within the Empire.
Officially, the equestrians were the second tier of the elite. In the theaters and amphitheaters, they occupied ranks behind the Senators. This made the equestrians harmless and, consequently, suitable for important offices of state: a Senator who served as Praetorian Prefect or Prefect of Egypt might start to dream of making himself Emperor, so these offices were reserved for equestrians. In the late second century, the Emperor Commodus and his successor Septimius Severus increasingly relied upon the equestrian order. Legions, for example, received equestrians as commanders, and the newly conquered provinces of Mesopotamia were governed by equestrian prefects.
Senatorial authors like Cassius Dio did not appreciate it, but it was inevitable. Strong tribes threatened the Roman frontiers, and it would have been irresponsible to hand over the command of the armies to senators.
See also: Roman Senate.
[edit] See also
[edit] Primary Sources
[edit] Secondary sources
- Brunt, P.A. (1983). "Princeps and Equites". The Journal of Roman Studies 73: 42–75. doi: .
- Hill, H. (July 1938). "Equites and Celeres". Classical Philology 33 (3): 283–290. doi: .