Lectures for A Medieval Survey
Lynn H. Nelson
THE LATER ROMAN EMPIRE
The reforms of Diocletian and Constantine "preserved" the empire, but changed
it radically.
DIOCLETIAN'S REFORMS:
1. Political
a. Divided the empire into two independent halves, leaving an impoverished and
vulnerable western empire. Note that the Western empire had by far the longer
frontier to defend, and a much smaller tax base with which to pay for its
defense.
b. Established the Augustus-Caesar policy of succession. Under this system,
there were two emperors (Augusti), each of whom appointed a
Caesar to defend the frontiers. When an emperor died, his Caesar was
supposed to suceed him, take over his administration, and appoint a Caesar to
defend the frontiers and eventually succeed to the emperorship. This was an
attempt to create a stable form of succession -- which had been the weakness of
the original empire -- but it failed.
c. Made the provinces smaller and appointed both a civil and military governor
over each. This generally increased government interference at local level and
took affairs out of the hands of the middle classes of the provinces. Once they
no longer had an important role in the governing of the empire, the imperial
administration was able to tax the urban middle classes to the point of
destroying them, at least in the western empire.
d. Adopted Persian court ceremony to make the emperor sacrosanct
and removed from the people. This greatly changed the sense of public spirit
within the empire. In the first empire, the emperor had been extremely powerful
and -- after his death -- sometimes worshipped as a god. During his lifetime,
however, his status -- in theory at least -- was that of the foremost of the
citizens of Rome. After Diocletian's reforms, the emperor became the "lord" of
the empire. The later emperors rarely governed in person, but acted through
appointed officials. They were thus isolated from the actual state of affairs
in their realms and were often controlled or at least greatly influenced by
palace officials.
2. Economic
a. Ended debasement and re-established a gold standard. Unfortunately,
there was not enough gold in circulation to produce enough coins to support the
economy of the empire, and the monetary reform caused an economic depression.
Consider this basic economic formula: prices= [(credit+money) x velocity of
exchange] / supply. This means that, all other things being equal, if you
decrease the amount of money in circulation, the price of goods goes down.
Looked at in another way, the value of the money in circulation increases.
b. Reformed taxation
1. Reduced taxes to two: a property and a head (poll) tax. This simplified
matters, and was a combination of a progressive tax on the wealthy (the
property tax) and a flat tax upon all (the head tax). Unfortunately, both taxes
had to be quite heavy.
2. Ended practice of tax farming. Tax farming is a practice in which a
government auctions off the right to collect the taxes from a given district to
a collection company that pays cash for the concession. The tax collection
companies pay less than they expect to be able to collect, of course, and they
try to collect as much as possible. This leads to abuses. The collectors are
not responsible to the people but are trying to make as great a profit as
possible, and the government generally ignores their abuses. The more profit
the tax collectors make, the higher price they are willing to pay for the right
to collect taxes.
3. Exempted senatorial class from taxation. The descendants of anyone who had
served in the Roman Senate (a body that was restricted to the noble and
wealthy) continued to hold hereditary senatorial status. Immune from taxation
and many other expenses, the senatorial class held vast estates and were the
richest class in Roman society. This meant that the full weight of the property
tax fell on the small farmers and middle-class busienssmen and artisans. The
farmers who could not pay their taxes could be enslaved (along with their wives
and children) and so gave their lands and their persons to local members
of the senatorial class. In this way, they avoided taxes but lost their
freedom, becoming tenant-farmers (coloni).
4. Made the urban middle class (curiales) responsible for collecting
taxes. If their collections fell short of the government assessment, they were
required to pay the difference lout of their own pocket, or face sale of their
property and possible personal enslavement. Many curiales tried to flee to the
coutnryside and become coloni, but this was forbidden by law. The provincial
middle class, particularly in the western empire, was financially ruined, and
the center of economic and administrative life shifted from the cities to the
villas of the countryside.
3. Military
a. Abandoned frontier defense in favor of a defense in depth in which the
troops stationed along the frontier were expected only to slow down an
invader's advance until the field army could be brought up to oppose it. This
meant, of course, that the security of the lands near the Roman frontiers was
abandoned in the name of economy.
b. Downgraded the frontier legions, once the first-line troops of the Roman
army to the status of militia and garrison soldiers. Their armaments and
training were neglected, and their discipline and spirit decreased.
c. Hired "barbarian" mercenaries to man a mobile field army and
stationed them in the interior. This was a short-range economy. The role of the
army in building and maintaining the transportation system and in
spreading the roman ideal among both provincials and "barbarians" was ended,
and the transportation and communications systems of the empire began to
decay.
4. Social
a. Combatted flight of curiales by making their status hereditary. Each person
was required to remain in his trade and to secure someone to replace him in
that trade when he died. This ended social mobility and opportunity within the
empire, and a good deal of the initiative of the people disappeared.
b. These reforms caused a loss of morale and public spirit. Diocletian attacked
that problem by blaming the empire's problems on the Christians and launched a
violent program of persecution against them.
CONSTANTINE'S REFORMS
Constantine generally continued Diocletian's policies, with
the exception of:
1. In the period 313-330, he made Christianity an accepted and even favored
religion. By 396, it had become the state religion of the Roman empire,
both eastern and western.
2. Restored prosperity in the East
a. Increased gold currency by seizing the endowments of pagan temples and
turning them into coinage.
b. Ended policy of balancing the eastern and western economies by unequal
taxation. This ensured the recovery and survival of the eastern empire, which
endured until the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 1453
The corollary of this is that the West was left to its own inadequate
resources and began to decline in power.
3. Shifted the center of the empire to the East, building the city of
Constantinople, the "New Rome." This caused the best talent and wealthiest
families to leave Rome for the East. By 400, the capital had been moved out of
Rome and, by 404, it was located in Ravenna, a town in northern Italy,
protected by a great marsh and with a fortified harbor that allowed the arrival
of reinforcements by sea in case the city was attacked. When Rome was sacked by
Alaric and the Visigoths in 410, it was no longer an imperial capital. The
highest-ranking government official in the city was the bishop. In 455, Attila
threatened to plunder the city, and the bishop negotiated with him, arranging
to pay him a large sum in return for his sparing the city. By this time, then,
the bishop of Rome -- the pope -- was the actual ruler of the city and the
lands surrounding it.
The reforms of the 3rd and 4th centuries left the empire --
particularly its western portion -- looking much like a medieval
society.
1. The Christian church was the official religion and no others were
permitted
2. The church was an agency of the imperial government, administering all social
services and under the control of the government
3. The emperor was semi-divine and claimed that his power was
granted to him by God
4. Military power was in the hands of Germans.
5. Town life had decayed, and commerce was dwindling because of
the lack of a middle class.
6. With the decay of cities, formal education, particularly a
knowledge of the Greek language, vanished in the western empire
except among clerics and wealthy aristocrats
7. Roads and bridges were decaying, sea traffic was endangered by
pirates, and communications were ever more difficult.
8. Power in the countryside was in the hands of great landowners
living in fortified villas and surrounded by a peasantry
dependent upon them for protection, law and order, and economic
aid.
9. The state was no longer able to protect its frontiers or
maintain civil order, and the Pax Romana had vanished.
CONCLUSION
Nevertheless, taxes were collected to maintain an imperial government that no
longer served the needs of the people. The Roman government in the West had
become superfluous. In addition, the western empire no longer had the money or
manufactured goods to trade with the German kingdoms that had grown up along
its frontiers. The Germans had become accustomed to the use of Roman goods and
the profits of trade with the Romans. When those goods ceased to be available
and their profits disappeared, the Germans crossed the imperial frontiers in
search of them.
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