Lucius Cornelius's Journals
|
History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid!
General Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Welcome to my Outpost!
I am the Praefectus Praetorio Orientis, Praefectus Praetorio Illyrici, Legatus of Cohortes and Assessor for the Tetrarchy of the East
He which hath no stomach to this fight,
Let him depart; his passport shall be made,
And crowns for convoy put into his purse;
We would not die in that man's company
That fears his fellowship to die with us.
Henry V.
No combat ready unit has ever passed inspection.
No inspection ready unit has ever passed combat.
Tribute
Major Bruce P. Crandall Medal of Honor Winner.
Company A, 229th Assault Helicopter Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile).
A REAL American Hero!
Read Citation here.
1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile)
9th Cavalry Regiment - Decorations
"Combat Infantryman Badge"
Only Bad Asses can wear the CIB!
Prussian Army
LEGION ORGANIZATION and OFFICERS
The Roman Army Page
Romanarmy.com
Roma Victrix
VRoma.
Military History
US Army Center of Military History
History of the U.S. Army Time Table
MilitaryHistoryOnline
British Army - Links to Army Regiments, Corps and all Army Units
All Empires: History Forum
HISTORICAL ATLAS
Prussia's Emergence as a Military Power
Armed Forces (Israel)
Foreign Military Links
britishbattles.com
UNIFORMS OF THE ARMY OF THE GERMAN EMPIRE FROM 1870 TO 1914
Battlefield Anomalies
Austro-Hungarian Land Forces 1848-1918
Organization of Prussian Army ~ 1815 ~ The Waterloo Campaign
The Roman Army
"The treatment of this subject will be confined to (I) a brief
description of the organization of the army, and (II) a consideration
of the allusions to the Roman military establishment in the New
Testament.
I. Organization.-- There were originally no standing forces, but the
citizens performed military service like any other civic duty when
summoned by the magistrates. The gradual development of a military
profession and standing army culminated in the admission of the poorest
class to the ranks by Marius (about 107 BC). Henceforth the Roman army
was made up of a body of men whose character was essentially that of
mercenaries, and whose term of continuous service varied in different
divisions from 16 to 26 years.
The forces which composed the Roman army under the Empire may be
divided into the following five groups: (1) the imperial guard and
garrison of the capital, (2) the legions, (3) the auxilia, (4) the
numeri, (5) the fleet. We shall discuss their organization in the order
mentioned.
1. The Imperial Guard: The imperial guard consisted of the cohortes
praetoriae, which together with the cohortes urbanae and vigiles made
up the garrison of Rome. In the military system as established by
Augustus there were nine cohorts of the praetorian guard, three of the
urban troops, and seven of the vigiles. Each cohort numbered 1,000 men,
and was commanded by a tribune of equestrian rank. The praetorian
prefects (praefecti praetorii), of whom there were usually two, were
commanders of the entire garrison of the capital, and stood at the
highest point of distinction and authority in the equestrian career.
2. The Legions: There were 25 legions in 23 AD (Tacitus Annals 4, 5),
which had been increased to 30 at the time of the reign of Marcus
Aurelius, 160-180 AD (CIL, VI, 3492 a-b) and to 33 under Septimius
Severus (Dio Cassius, iv. 23-24). Each legion was made up, ordinarily,
of 6,000 men, who were divided into 10 cohorts, each cohort containing
3 maniples, and each maniple in turn 2 centuries.
The legatus Augustus pro praetore, or governor of each imperial
province, was chief commander of all the troops within the province. An
officer of senatorial rank known as legatus Augusti legionis was
intrusted with the command of each legion, together with the bodies of
auxilia which were associated with it. Besides, there were six tribuni
militum, officers of equestrian rank (usually sons of senators who had
not yet held the quaestorship) in each legion. The centurions who
commanded the centuries belonged to the plebeian class. Between the
rank of common soldier and centurion there were a large number of
subalterns, called principales, who correspond roughly to the
non-commissioned officers and men detailed from the ranks for special
duties in modern armies.
3. The "Auxilia": The auxilia were organized as infantry in cohortes,
as cavalry in alae, or as mixed bodies, cohortes equitatae. Some of
these divisions contained approximately 1,000 men (cohortes or alae
miliariae), but the greater number about 500 (cohortes or alae
quingenariae). They were commanded by tribuni and praefecti of
equestrian rank. The importance of the auxilia consisted originally in
the diversity of their equipment and manner of fighting, since each
group adhered to the customs of the nation in whose midst it had been
recruited. But with the gradual Romanization of the Empire they were
assimilated more and more to the character of the legionaries.
4. The "Numeri": The numeri developed out of the provincial militia and
began to appear in the 2nd century AD. They maintained their local
manner of warfare. Some were bodies of infantry, others of cavalry, and
they varied in strength from 300 to 90 (Mommsen, Hermes, XIX, 219 f,
and XXII, 547 f). Their commanders were praepositi, praefecti or
tribuni, all men of equestrian rank.
5. The Fleet: The fleet was under the command of prefects (praefecti
classis), who took rank among the highest officials of the equestrian
class. The principal naval stations were at Misenum and Ravenna.
6. Defensive Arrangements: Augustus established the northern boundary
of the Empire at the Rhine and at the Danube, throughout the greater
part of its course, and bequeathed to his successors the advice that
they should not extend their sovereignty beyond the limits which he had
set (Tacitus Annals i. 11; Agricola 13); and although this policy was
departed from in many instances, such as the annexation of Thrace,
Cappadocia, Mauretania, Britain, and Dacia, not to mention the more
ephemeral acquisitions of Trajan, yet the military system of the Empire
was arranged primarily with the view of providing for the defense of
the provinces and not for carrying on aggressive warfare on a large
scale.
Nearly all the forces, with the exception of the imperial guard, were
distributed among the provinces on the border of the Empire, and the
essential feature of the disposition of the troops in these provinces
was the permanent fortress in which each unit was stationed. The
combination of large camps for the legions with a series of smaller
forts for the alae, cohorts, and numeri is the characteristic
arrangement on all the frontiers. The immediate protection of the
frontier was regularly instrusted to the auxiliary troops, while the
legions were usually stationed some distance to the rear of the actual
boundary.
Thus the army as a whole was so scattered that it was a difficult
undertaking to assemble sufficient forces for carrying out any
considerable project of foreign conquest, or even to cope at once with
a serious invasion, yet the system was generally satisfactory in view
of the conditions which prevailed, and secured for the millions of
subjects of the Roman Empire the longest period of undisturbed
tranquillity known to European history.
7. Recruiting System: In accordance with the arrangements of Augustus,
the cohortes praetoriae and cohortes urbanae were recruited from
Latium, Etruria, Umbria, and the older Roman colonies (Tacitus Annals
4, 5), the legions from the remaining portions of Italy, and the
auxilia from the subject communities of the Empire (Seeck, Rheinisches
Museum, XLVIII, 616).
But in course of time the natives of Italy disappeared, first from the
legions, and later from the garrison of the capital. Antoninus Plus
established the rule that each body of troops should draw its recruits
from the district where it was stationed. Henceforth the previous
possession of Roman citizenship was no longer required for enlistment
in the legions. The legionary was granted the privilege of citizenship
upon entering the service, the auxiliary soldier upon being discharged
(Seeck, Untergang der antiken Welt, I, 250).
II. Allusions in the New Testament to the Roman Military
Establishment.-- Such references relate chiefly to the bodies of troops
which were stationed in Judaea. Agrippa I left a military establishment
of one ala and five cohorts at his death in 44 AD which he had doubtless received from the earlier
Roman administration. These divisions were composed of local recruits,
chiefly Samaritans.
The Ala I gemina Sebastenorum was stationed at Caesarea.
1. Augustan Band: Julius, the centurion to whom Paul and other
prisoners were delivered to be escorted to Rome belonged
to one of the five cohorts which was stationed at or near Caesarea.
This Speira Sebaste (Westcott-Hort), "Augustus' Band" (the Revised
Version (British and American) "Augustan band"; the Revised Version,
margin "cohort"), was probably the same body of troops which is
mentioned in inscriptions as Cohors I Augusta (CIL, Supp, 6687) and
Speira Augouste (Lebas-Waddington 2112). Its official title may have
been Cohors Augusta Sebastenorum (GVN). It will be observed that all
divisions of the Roman army were divided into companies of about 100
men, each of which, in the infantry, was commanded by a centurion, in
the cavalry, by a decurion.
2. Italian Band: There was another cohort in Caesarea, the "Italian
band" (Cohors Italica, Vulgate) of which Cornelius was centurion. The cohortes Italicae
(civium Romanorum) were made up of Roman citizens (Marquardt, Romische
Staatsverwaltung, II, 467).
3. Praetorian Guard: One of the five cohorts was stationed in Jerusalem
the "chief captain" of which was Claudius Lysias.
His title, chiliarchos in the Greek meaning "leader of a thousand men" (tribunus,
Vulgate), indicates that this body of soldiers was a cohors miliaria.
Claudius Lysias sent Paul to Felix at Caesarea under escort of 200
soldiers, 70 horsemen, and 200 spearmen. The latter
(dexiolaboi, Westcott and Hort, The New Testament in Greek) are thought
to have been a party of provincial militia.
Several centurions of the cohort at Jerusalem appear during the riot
and subsequent rescue and arrest of Paul The cohortes miliariae (of 1,000 men) contained ten centurions. A centurion, doubtless of the same cohort, was in charge of
the execution of the condemned. It
was customary for centurions to be intrusted with the execution of
capital penalties.
The the King James Version contains the passage in : "The
centurion delivered the prisoners to the captain of the guard"
(stratopedarches), which the Revised Version (British and American)
omits. It has commonly been held that the expression stratopedarches
was equivalent to praetorian prefect (praefectus praetorius), and that
the employment of the word in the singular was proof that Paul arrived
in Rome within the period 51-62 AD when Sex. Afranius Burrus was sole
praetorian prefect.
Mommsen (Sitzungsberichte der Berliner Akademie (1895), 491-503)
believes that the sentence in question embodies an ancient tradition,
but that the term stratopedarches could not mean praefectus praetorius,
which is never rendered in this way in Greek He suggests that it stands
for princeps castrorum peregrinorum, who was a centurion in command of
the frumentarii at Rome.
These were detachments of legionary soldiers who took rank as
principales. They served as military couriers between the capital and
provinces, political spies, and an imperial police. It was probably
customary, at least when the tradition under discussion arose, for the
frumentarii to take charge of persons who were sent to Rome for trial
(Marquardt, Romische Staatsverwaltung, II, 491-94).
GEORGE H. ALLEN, Contributor "International Standard Bible
Encylopaedia" (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans 1939)
|
|
|
|
|
All Posts (8) Messages posted by Lucius Cornelius
|
Lucius Cornelius's 28 Properties
Lucius Cornelius's 1 Group
Complete List of Lucius Cornelius's 1 Groups
|