Streets Of Ancient Rome Were Very Dangerous
MessageToEagle.com – Going out on the streets of ancient Rome after dark was a very dangerous thing.
By the first century BC, the time of Julius Caesar, ancient Rome was a city of a million inhabitants. This was a city inhabited by people of all classes and a number of different nations. Here, live the rich and poor, slaves and ex-slaves, free and foreign. It was the world’s first multicultural metropolis, complete with slums, multiple-occupancy tenements and sink estates. As glorious as some of the ancient Roman palaces and other buildings might have been, there was a different side of Rome.
Outside the splendid center, Rome was a place of narrow alleyways, a labyrinth of lanes and passageways. There was no street lighting, nowhere to throw your excrement and no police force.
The real city was the backstreets and they should be avoided after the lights went out or you risked being mugged and robbed by any group of thugs that came along.
Most rich people avoided going out after dark unless they were accompanied by private security team of slaves or their “long retinue of attendants”. The only public protection you could hope for was the paramilitary force of the night watch, the vigiles.
Exactly what these watchmen did and how effective they were is unclear. They were split into battalions across the city and their main duty was to look out for fires breaking out.
If you were a crime victim, you had no other option than to defend yourself. One particularly tricky case discussed in an ancient handbook on Roman law proves the line between crime and self-defense was very thim.. The case concerns a shop-keeper who kept his business open at night and left a lamp on the counter, which faced onto the street. A man came down the street and pinched the lamp, and the man in the shop went after him, and a brawl ensued. The thief was carrying a weapon – a piece of rope with a lump of metal at the end – and he coshed the shop-keeper, who retaliated and knocked out the eye of the thief.
This presented Roman lawyers with a tricky question: was the shopkeeper liable for the injury?
Still, night-time Rome wasn’t just dangerous. There was also fun to be had in the clubs, taverns and bars late at night if you dared to go out that is.
Copyright © MessageToeagle.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of MessageToeagle.com
Expand for referencesSource:
Related Posts
-
Researchers Study Human Mobility At The Bronze Age City Of Alalakh, Turkey
No Comments | Jul 1, 2021 -
Rhetorica ad Herennium: Ancient Book That Improves Your Memory Using Method Of Loci – You Can Test It Easily
No Comments | Dec 21, 2023 -
1,800-Year-Old Buddhist Stupa And Relics Discovered Near Bazira, The Ancient City Of Alexander The Great
No Comments | Feb 11, 2022 -
Shining Ones And Magic In Ireland – Secret Wisdom Of The Gods
No Comments | May 9, 2014 -
1,500-Year-Old Joint Burial Offers A Look Into Attitudes Toward Love And The Afterlife
No Comments | Sep 14, 2021 -
Secret Ancient World Buried Under The Vast Takla Makan Desert
No Comments | May 21, 2014 -
Ancient Tools Found In Maryland Re-Write The History Of First Humans In America
No Comments | Jun 5, 2024 -
Statue Of Goddess Cybele Looted In The 1960s Returned To Turkey
No Comments | Dec 22, 2020 -
6,500-Year-Old Copper Workshop Unearthed In Negev Desert
No Comments | Oct 6, 2020 -
Timeless Mythical Beings Of Nordic Folklore: Sinister Dark Elves And Light Elves And Their Magical Ship ‘Skidbladnir’
No Comments | Oct 3, 2016