Military Diploma for a soldier from Syria Palaestina (CIL XVI, 87)
Typology: Military diploma
Original Location: Reportedly discovered at Aphek on the Golan heights above Lake Tiberias.
Current Location: Musée de Louvre, inventory number: BR4088
Date: 139 CE
Centuries: 2nd CE
Material: Bronze
Measurements: Length: 13.1 cm Width: 11.8 cm Letter heights: 0.05-0.1 cm
Languages: Latin
Category: Roman
Publications: CIL XVI, 87
Description: Military diploma formed of two rectangular bronze tablets, inscribed on the exterior and interior faces. Holes (for securing the tablets together) are visible in the bottom right hand corners and in the centre of the tablets.
Diplomatic:
Tablet 1: interior
IMP CAESAR DIVI HADRIANI F DIVI TRAIA[ ] PARTH
NEPOS T AELHADR ANTONIN AVG PIVS
PON MAX TRI POT II COS II DES III P P
EQ ET PED Q MIL IN AL III ET COH XII Q AP
GAL ET ANT GALL ET VII PHR ET I THR ET I SEB ET I
DAM ET I MON ET I FL C R ET I ET II GAL ET
III ET IIII BR ET IIII ET VI PET ET V GEM C R
ET SVNT IN SYRIA PALAEST SVB CALP
ATILIAN XXV STI EME DIM HON MIS
QVOR NOM SCR IPS CIV DED ET CON
CVM VX Q T HAB CVM EST CIV IS DAT
AVT SI Q CAE ESS CV IS Q POS DVX DVM
TAX SIN SINC
Tablet 1 exterior:
IMP CAESAR DIVI HADRIANI F DIVI TRAI[---]
PARTH NEPOS DIVI NERVAE PRONEP T AELI[--]
HADRIANVS ANTONINVS AVG PIVS PONT
MAX TRIB POT II COS II DESIG III P P
EQVIT ET PEDIT QVI MILIT IN ALIS III ET COH XII
QVAE APPELL GALL ET THR ET ANT GALL ET VII
PHR ET I THR ET I SEB ET I DAM ET I MONT
ET I FL CR ET I ET II GALA ET III ET IIII BRAC ET IIII
ET VI PETR ET V GEM CR ET SVNT IN SYRIA PALAE
STIN SVB CALPVRN ATILIANO QVINQ ET VI
GINT STIP EMER DIMIS HONEST MISSION
QVO NOMIN SVBSCRIP SVNT IPSIS LI
BERISPO STERISQ EORV CIVITAT DEDIT
ET CONVB CVM VXORIB QVAS TVNC HABVIS
CVM EST CIVITAS IIS DATA AVT SI Q CAELIBES
ESSENT CVM IS QVAS POST DVXISS DVMTA
XAT SINGVLI SINGVLAS A D X K DEC
M CECCIO IVSTINO C IVLIO BASSO COS
COH II VLPIAE GALATAR CVI PRAEST
Q FLAVIVS Q F PAL AMATIANVS CAPVA
EX PEDITE
GAIO LVCII F NICIA
DESCRIPT ET RECOGN EX TABVLA AEREA QVAE
FIXA EST ROM IN MVRO POST TEMPL DIVI
AVG AD MINERVAM
Tablet II interior:
A D X K DEC
IVSTINO ET BASSO COS
COH II VLP GALATAR CVI PRAEST
Q FL Q F PAL AMATIANVS CAPVA
EX PEDITE
GAIO LVCI F NICIA
Tablet II exterior:
TI CLAVDI [ ]
P ATTI [ ]
L PVLL DAPHNI
P ATTI FESTI
T FLAVI LAVRI
TI IVLI FELICIS
C IVLI SILVANI
Edition :
English translation:
Translation credit:
Translation by author of the database record
Commentary:
This inscription records the honourable discharge of an auxiliary soldier who served in the provincial garrison of Syria-Palestine. It is an important text as it is the earliest material evidence for the province’s change of name following the Bar Kokhba revolt, from Judea to Syria-Palaestina.
The diploma was issued to a soldier named Caius, the son of Lucius, who originated from Nicaea in the eastern province of Bithynia. He was a ‘footsoldier’ (ex pedite) and he had served in the second cohort of the Ulpia Galatarum, under the leadership of Quintus Flavius Amatianus, who is also named in the inscription. As is standard in Roman military diplomata, the text of the inscription awarded Caius an honourable discharge from the army (dimissis honesta) following twenty five years of service (quinque et vi/ginti stipendiis emeritis). As well as an honourable discharge, Caius also received Roman citizenship (civitatem dedit), which was extended to his children and their descendants (li/beris posterisque eorum). In line with other military diplomata, the right to a legal marriage (conubium) was also given, either with a wife to whom he was married when his Roman citizenship was awarded (cum uxoribus quas tunc habuissent / cum est civitas iis data) or to a future wife if he was still unmarried (aut siqui caelibes / essent cum is quas postea) (for marriage in the Roman military, see Phang, The Marriage of Roman Soldiers). Along with the imperial titles describing the emperor at the beginning of the text and the dating formulae at the end, which give a secure date of 139 CE for the diploma’s issue, the inscription follows all the expected conventions of military discharge notices: Caius’s service is acknowledged and rewarded, with the benefits and privileges of Roman citizenship extended to his family members through the generosity of the Roman state.
However, this particular diploma is of particular interest for our purposes due to the information it provides regarding the organisation of the Roman army in Judea following the Bar Kokhba revolt, as well as its reference to the province by its new name of Syria-Palaestina. The text recorded here is, in fact, a copy of a general constitutio that was issued to a large number of auxiliary soldiers who had recently been discharged from service in the province, where they had been based as part of the military garrison installed by the emperor Hadrian to secure the region following the outbreak of the revolt in 132 CE. Following Hadrian’s titles at the beginning of the text, the constitutio is applied to a number of cavalry units (alae) and cohorts (cohortes) that served under the governor of the province, Calpurnius Atilianus (sunt in Syria Palae/stina sub Calpurnio Atiliano). Three cavalry units are specified: the Gallorum et Thracum, the Antiana Gallorum and the VII Phrygum, the first two of which were composite units of Gauls and Thracians who had been based in the province as early as 54 CE (Russell, “Roman Military Diploma,” p. 80. The evidence for these units in Judea in 54 CE is given by CIL XVI, 3). Of the remaining twelve units listed in the diploma, several are known to have been based outside of the province of Judea before the outbreak of the Bar Kokhba revolt, such as the cohors I Sebastena, I Flavia civium Romanorum and the cohors I Damascenorum, which was stationed in Egypt until shortly before the outbreak of the war (Russell, “Roman Military Diploma”, p. 100). The regiments named after the emperor Trajan, the Cohortes I and II Ulpiae Galatarum and the Cohortes III and VI Ulpiae Petraeorum were originally raised in the east in preparation for the Parthian campaigns, and were assigned to the province of Judea to strengthen the Roman military presence there following the Jewish revolt of 116-117 CE, presumably as a precaution against further outbreaks of unrest (Russell, “Roman Military Diploma,” p. 100). The discovery of four auxiliary diplomata also from Syria-Palaestina since the publication of the text under discussion here has further clarified the composition of the Roman garrison of the province following its reorganisation at the end of the Bar Kokhba revolt, and indicate the extent of the military presence instituted there by Hadrian; the fourteen units attested in the diplomata are indicative both of Rome’s use of the army as a deterrent against further uprisings and also of the potential threat that the Jewish community was perceived to pose (for a full breakdown of the units based in Syria-Palaestina and their history, see Russell “Roman Military Diploma,” p. 111-133).
The key feature of this inscription, however, is that it is the earliest material evidence for the renaming of the province of Judea as Syria-Palaestina. This was a deliberate blow to the “Jewish national consciousness,” and was designed to permanently eradicate the region’s cultural and religious identity (Smallwood, Jews Under Roman Rule, p. 463). The name ‘Judea’ derived from the identity of the province’s original inhabitants, the Iudaei, and so by changing it to Syria-Palaestina Hadrian effected what amounted to the “damnatio memoriae of a whole nation” (Speller, Following Hadrian, p. 201). The abolition of the name of the province was an extra punishment of the Jews that remained in the region, and a clear statement of Rome’s power and control; although there is plenty of evidence which demonstrates the regularity with which Rome changed the name of provinces – Hispania Ulterior became provincia Baetica, and Dacia was reorganised as Dacia Superior, Dacia Porolissensis and Dacia Inferior, for example – none of the previous instances had been in response to revolt. As Werner Eck has noted, even those provinces in which civil unrest was not uncommon, such as in Germania, Pannonia and Britannia, were not penalised with the loss of their names (Eck, “The Bar Kokhba Revolt”, p. 87-89). The reconstitution of Judea as Syria Palaestina was a deliberate punishment not simply of the province that had rebelled, but of the Jewish people specifically; their name was removed from the geographical landscape and replaced with one that offered no trace of Jewish identity. The choice of ‘Syria-Palaestina’ signified that the province was now to be regarded as one whose origins were Syrian and Hellenistic, in an active attempt to transform the place’s cultural memory and ethnic character (Smallwood, Jews Under Roman Rule, p. 463-4).
Keywords in the Original Language:
Thematic Keywords:
Bibliographical References:
- Eck, Werner 1999 The Bar Kokhba Revolt: The Roman Point of View, Journal of Roman Studies 89, 76-89
- Millar, Fergus 2006 Rome, the Greek world, and the East. Vol. 3, The Greek world, the Jews, and the East, (Chapel Hill, N.C.; London : University of North Carolina Press)
- Mor, Menahem 2003 The Geographical Scope of the Bar Kokhba Revolt, The Bar Kokhba War Reconsidered: New Perspectives on the Second Jewish Revolt Against Rome (Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism eds. P. Schäfer ( Tübingen : Mohr Siebeck), 107-131
- Phang, Sara E. 2001 The Marriage of Roman Soldiers (13 B.C.-A.D. 235): Law and Family in the Imperial Army, (Leiden : Brill)
- Roxan, Margaret M. 1978 Roman military diplomas 1954-1977, (London : Institute of Archaeology)
- Russell, James 1995 A Roman military diploma from Rough Cilicia, Bonner Jahrbücher 195, p. 67-133
- Smallwood, E. Mary 1997 The Jews under Roman Rule: From Pompey to Diocletian: A Study in Political Relations, Studies in Judaism in Late Antiquity 20 (Leiden : Brill)
- Speller, Elizabeth 2003 Following Hadrian: a second-century journey through the Roman Empire, (Oxford : Oxford University Press)
- Eck, Werner 1999 Rom und die Provinz Iudaea/Syria Palaestina: Der Beitrag der Epigraphik, Jüdische Geschichte in hellenistisch-römischer Zeit. Weg der Forschung: Vom alten zum neuen Schürer. Herausgegeben von Aharon Oppenheimer unter Mitarbeit von Elisabeth Müller-Luckner (München : Oldenbourg), p. 237-263
Related sources:
Realised by:
How to quote this page
Military Diploma for a soldier from Syria Palaestina (CIL XVI, 87)
Author(s) of this publication: Caroline Barron
Publication date: 2024-12-24 11:38:38
URL: https://heurist.huma-num.fr/heurist/judaism_and_rome/web/7/171
Judaism and Rome
Re-thinking Judaism's Encounter with the Roman Empire