SeveralaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA fru m e n ta rii tombstones show the subject in a four-wheeled COMMISSARY carriage with a driver. The lance indicates he travels on offical business. By Duncan B. OFFICERS OR ROMAN ARMY SPIES? am p bel RE FRUMl'rARLI There is a category of promoted soldiers known as itumenuuii, but scholars are divided over their precise duties. Some describe them as 'corn collectors' involved in the military commis- ru m e n tu m F is the Latin word the Mediterranean world. The Ro- man army on supplies relied fru m e n tu m . of Caesar, for example, refers to a schedule by which fru m e n tu m distributed to the army, and the continuator sariat, while others would interpret his C o m m e n ta rie s , them as imperial agents who were as- soldiers engaged in transporting fru m e n ta rii, for 'corn' or 'grain', the staple food of was of Aulus Hirtius, refers to the the grain as 'grain men' (G a llic W a r 8.35). This signed clandestine tasks. So what ex- is only logical. In previous instalments of "The actly do we know about these men? Roman Army military in Detail", we have seen how titles are often formed by adding the suffix -a riu s to a given term, in order to denote a soldier's particular responsibility W a rfa re XI1.6). 52 Ancient Warfare X III-4 (see A n c ie n t Although the historian Tacitus uses the his successor, Claudius (11or Gothicus; L ife o f slightly different word aZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA fru m e n ta to r to refer to th e d e ifie d C la u d iu s 1 7.1 ). soldiers engaged in the collection and transport In his book on P o lic in g th e R o m a n Em- of grain (H is to rie s 4.35), a handful of inscrip- p ire (2011), Christopher tions demonstrate that the soldiers themselves the fru m e n ta rii used the title fru m e n ta riu s . This term appears, Domitian for example, on the grave slab of Aurelius Lu- such as execution, cianus, nage". There is no specific link with Domitian, in the "fru m e n ta riu s Second Italica Legion for the care of the grain supply" VI.3340), which is unique in explicitly (c /L men- Fuhrmann tells us that were created by the emperor to perform "special policing tasks, arrest, and domestic espio- but a century ago, Otto Fiebiger, writing aforementioned R e a le n c y c lo p a d ie , in the made the tioning the man's duties in this role. The dedi- suggestion that it might have been the emperor cation by a c e n tu rio Trajan who first employed (presuma- fr(u m e n ta riu s ) blya centurion in charge of trumentsrih to Titus Messius Extricatus, prefect of the grain supply However, the them passage allegedly "in order to be acquainted connection the affairs of state that occurred fred von Domaszewski However, as Al- commented, "how the supporting this view doesn't actually mention fru m e n ta rii: at Ostia (A E 1977.171), further underlines the with provisioning. in this role. more swiftly with anywhere, the state postal system was employed [by Tra- Dating from the first century AD, jan], but this reasonably useful service turned this relief shows a soldier (identi- was one of the scholars into the curse of the Roman world through the fiable by his sword) transporting whose researches have placed the study of the greed and arrogance of later generations" (Au- provisioning was organized is unclear". Domaszewski Roman army on firm foundations. However, he relius Victor, B o o k o n th e C a e s a rs 1 3 .5 -6 ). In fact, probably did not work in isolation. The turn of the twentieth century saw several scholars working on the earliest epigraphic attestation of a fru m e n ta riu s papyrus archive articles for the ongoing German-language covered at Karanis in Egypt in the 1920s and e le n c v c to p iid ie der c la s s is c h e n A lte rtu m s w is - Museum, Strasbourg. © Karwansaray Publishers comes from the Roman military topics, many of them providing Re- of Claudius baggage in a wagon drawn by two mules. Now in the Archaeological Tiberianus, dis- 1930s. The letters in the archive date broadly A modern copy of a commemorative arch, "which Dativius Victor promised to the people of Mainz", the D ic - from the reigns ofTrajan and Hadrian. In one of C re c q u e s e t R o m a in e s . them, Tiberianus writes that he has sent a letter imperial house and dedicated to Writing the entry on the fru m e n ta riu s for the lat- "which Jupiter Best and Greatest Protec- ter publication will s e n s c h a ft and its French counterpart, tio n n a ire d e s Antiquites in 1896, the French epigrapher Rene Cagnat concluded that provisioning "was Sempronius Clemens the fru m e n ta riu s deliver" (P . M ic h . VII1.472). Since Egypt was very much the breadbasket of Rome, it is the least of the functions entrusted to them; of not surprising to find a 'grain man' operating all the texts we possess, it seems to follow that there, but whether he delivered Tiberianus' let- the fru m e n ta rii ter as a special favour or as part of his official were, above all, police agents in Rome, just as much as in Italy and the prov- duties cannot be said with any certainty. erected in honour of the Severan tor "by Ursus the irumeniarius and lupus, sons and heirs of Victor" (e lL LKJIHGFEDCBA 1 3 . 1 1 8 1 0 ) . Dismantled and its stones reused in antiquity, the original arch can be found in the Landesmuseum in Mainz, Germany. © Livius.org inces". But where had he got such an idea? Imperial agents Cagnat was struck by the curious duties of fru m e n ta rii mentioned ~ in a number of passages in ("" "~ the H is to ria A u g u s ta . For example, Hadrian, we are told, "submitted -:.,;~ not only his own house- well, to the extent that he discovered all their hold~~rutin~b~tho~clhis~en~~ secrets by means of the fru m e n ta rii; '.' ~: \ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~'l~ nor were his friends aware that their private lives were 1 known to the emperor until the emperor himself revealed it" (L ife o f H a d ria n 11 A ). Similar- ly, the emperor Macrinus seems to have used the fru m e n ta rii to investigate the behaviour of his soldiers (L ife o f M a c rin u s 1 2 0 4 ), while it was the fru m e n ta rii who suppl ied the emperor Gallienus with confidential information about ~""--=e::: .~: ~,-~,~ -: ,;:/ e »> j,o-~--.,,",,~ Couriers? ers"), gave their commanding ~ DID YOU KNOW?nmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA Frumentarii are found elsewhere acting as fru m e n ta riu s named Gaius juA aZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA a title that struck 0 0 - p e re g rin o ru m , maszewski as very similar to Dio's description lius Pudens was placed in charge couriers. of building work at Delphi during ed Pupienus and Balbinus as emperors in op- of Oclatinius position to Maximinus gremmetophoron ("head of the letter-carriers"). the reign of Hadrian (IL S 9 4 7 3 ). In AD 238, when the senate elevat- p rin c e p s officer his title of Thrax, "a letter, sent to Adventus' role as p ro k rito n to n all the provinces by means of the frumentarii, (TOp)Tombstone of T. Flavius Fruof the Eighth endus, [ru m e n to rtu s Augusta Legion, erected in Rome ordered that whoever gave assistance to Max- Assassins? iminus would So far, these activities could be numbered amongst the en- emy" (H is to ria A u g u s ta , L ife o f M a x im u s by his three heirs, who were all 8 a lb in u s and 10.3). It is surely this aspect of the of the Twenty-second fru m e n ta riu s 's duties that the tombstone ofTiPrimigenia Legion. (e lL 6 .3 3 5 1 ). LKJIHGFEDCBA tus Varron i us Maro (C l L 111.2063)hints at, with © Dan Diffendale fru m e n ta rii (sortorn) Dedication to M.Aquilius Felix by the people of Antium (modern Anzio), on account of his role its claim of the fru m e n ta rii". (m 10.66547) © Dan Diffendale "hurried implying for 40 constant For this reason, any mention of couriers it is worth exercis- ing caution, as these were not the only type of Marcus Oclatinius promoted, Septimius during Severus, Cassius Adventus the reign from the before (g ra m - advancing (R o m a n to H is to ry P A T R IJv 1 P R J V A 'P R o r O P l:~ ,p V B )RAEPVFXILIATPPltG'XI (I R:I' J R O N r O l:O B M F R E I V \· TIA~fPVBL: W a rfa re xiu -« epigrapher Dessau, famous for his five-volume dium of /n s c rip tio n e s (see Hermann compen- L a tin a e S e le c ta e (1 8 9 2 - Aquilius, "a centurion employed a certain well known for assassi- nating generals" (L ife o f P e s c e n n iu s N ig e r 2 .6 ), while a high-ranking equestrian named Marcus the fru m e n ta rii. Aquilius of Felix was known career with a promotion to have begun his to the post of c e n tu - (C lL 10.6657). It seems too these couriers and messengers was rio fr(u m e n ta riu s ) concerned, this was evidently Rome. much of a coincidence For, although were been two centurions named Aquilius who were drawn from the legions, as several assigned the kind of clandestine tasks that are the fru m e n ta rii make clear, they were quar- fru m e n ta rio ru m ) at Rome, records that he was "a veteran of the unit of fru m e n ta rii l pp R AVFNN/\ T' P R O C P l\T R I'M 'B IS P J OCHL!?n the 3 .5 .4 -5 ) as fru m e n ta rii 78.14.1) surely hints at a career in found - P lM h Interestingly, H is to ry (de- head of the "letter-carriers" ple, the tombstone of Gaius Annius Valens, O M f\ Rom an Albinus 1916), noticed that, during the reign of Severus, tered on the Caelian Hill. For exam- FE f 1 scribed by Herodian, Clodius the emperor's opponents seconded to a "unit of fru m e n ta rii" III sassinate the pretender "spies and scouts" to become the (n u m e ru s A n c ie n t him, as he 4.5). For this rea- (L ife o f C o m m o d u s ing to the Greek historian inscriptions 54 m e n ta rii" also A n c ie n t W a rfa re XII1.3). As far as the destination I ence over the emperor, "murdered have often been explained m a to p h o ro i) ro v rr indi- vidual who was felt to exert a negative influ- Nevertheless, the fact that, accord- a procuratorship V to remove a particular Severus to Britain in AD 195 with orders to as- of lfN prefects, wishing son, the 'agents' sent by the emperor Septimius although was I der the emperor Commodus, whose Praetorian the frumentarii, Dio, [-A [~ J A of a sort. But the fru m e n - had far more sinister duties un- or messengers is often seen as a reference to soldier to be assigned such duties. MA intelligence ta rii apparently as was returning to his estate, by means of the fru - travel backwards and forwards. as "patron of the colony". His career begins with the post of "c[enturion] that the deceased years as a fru m e n ta riu s ", military be construed that there should have elsewhere associated with the fru m e n ta rii. So it was surely Aquilius Felix, in his role of c e n tu rio fru m e n ta riu s , who "was sent, being notorious as the assassin of senators, to murder Severus" (L ife o f O id iu s }u lia n u s 5.8). He evidently decid- ed not to carry out his mission, for not only did Severus survive, butAquilius was promoted, via from the Fourth Flavia Legion" (C lL a succession of lucrative procuratorships, to the V1.3341), while command of the imperial fleet at Ravenna. two different erected altars at Sirmium day Sremska Mitrovica commemorating (presentin Serbia) a promotion the rank of b e n e fic ia riu s to c o n s u la ris "from the unit of fru m e n ta rii" 1994,1443, men (A E and 1446). The name of their camp at Rome, the c a s tra p e re g rin a ("camp of the foreign- A developing role Some researchers have played down the role of the fru m e n ta rii as spies and assassins. For ex- ample, the recent E n c y c lo p e d ia o f th e R o m a n A rm y (2015) defines the fru m e n ta riu s a "soldier with and distribution; responsibility simply as for grain supply later a messenger and scout". However, duties it may be the case that their evolved their initial over time, connection and their tendency forwards developing with the grain supply to travel backwards ta riu s appears to have belonged central Their freedom a in the c a s tra p e re g rin a . of movement no doubt to their employment throughout century and as couriers led the second messengers. And, they may have acted as assassins on occasion, they may more often have repre- fru m e n ta riu s which of Cornelius of the Tenth was found Gemina Turkey, suggests such a connection enforcement, of his dearest legion, with tent-companion by in charge of the prison" Neither legion was stationed by the fru m e n ta rii. (Cll Elpinius who claimed upon they the fru m e n ta rii One edict from Agabey were records 2 4 4 -2 4 9 ), "arrested world is a common dealings with such establishments, in which he was perhaps assisted had in chains, and sent again suggested by several edicts from e g rln a c a s tra p e r- in Rome. © Sailko / Wikimedia Commons Certainly, theme, but it seems that IV Y Upper section of a b e n e fic ia riu s Dr. Duncan B. Campbell is a regular contributor to Ancient W arfare magazine. lance, now in the Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, the Netherlands. Similar lances were used by fru m e n ta rii, FURTHER • READING were travelling © Officia", fu r P a p y ro lo g ie und on ot- ficial business. the Castra Peregri na and the Provincial perhaps to indicate that they N.B. Rankov, "Frumentarii, Livius.org Z e its c h rift E p ig ra p h ik Vol. 8 0 ( 1 9 9 0 ) , pp. 1 7 6 - 1 8 2 . • The edicts from Asia can be found role is Pius. The Prefect of the Grain Supply no doubt had regular the abuse of power by soldiers in the Roman travelled and prisons. a law-enforcement Antoninus to in- that the fru m e n ta rii nine, put them at Koyu, per- them to the equestrian procurator". near Nor is there a clear link C /L 1 4 . 4 7 0 9 ) Ostia, which dates from the reign of by fru m e n ta rii from the the reign of Phi lip the Arab (AD LKJIHGFEDCBA haps from 111.433). anywhere to the distances between grain procurement Nevertheless, and called tervene. of the First Adiutrix legion, Ephesus, attesting rural communities of law for it was erected "in memory Festianus, fru m e n ta riu s e t E p a p h ra d itia n a , preserve the complaints Florinius, at Ephesus in present-day The store-house of Epagathus and These inscriptions the 'grain men' were seldom the culprits. sented the forces of law and order. The tombstone of Asia (broadly present-day Turkey) Epaphroditus C H a rre a E p a g a th ia n a tion to a particu- they seem to have liaised with bureaucracy while and province dating from the first half of the third century. being harassed by soldiers of some descripeach aZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA fru m e n - to Rome. Although lar legion, from in T. Hauken, R esponse P e titio n and (Bergen 1 9 9 8 ) . the A n c ie n t W a rfa re X III-4 55