[The History of Rome, Book II by Theodor Mommsen]@TWC D-Link book
The History of Rome, Book II

CHAPTER VII
62/92

The communities of inferior rights such as Caere( 32) were deprived even of self-administration, and this was doubtless the most oppressive among the different forms of subjection.

However, as was above remarked, there is already apparent at the close of this period an effort to incorporate these communities, at least so far as they were -de facto- Latinized, among the full burgesses.
Latins Among the subject communities the most privileged and most important class was that of the Latin towns, which obtained accessions equally numerous and important in the autonomous communities founded by Rome within and even beyond Italy--the Latin colonies, as they were called -- and was always increasing in consequence of new settlements of the same nature.

These new urban communities of Roman origin, but with Latin rights, became more and more the real buttresses of the Roman rule over Italy.

These Latins, however, were by no means those with whom the battles of the lake Regillus and Trifanum had been fought.
They were not those old members of the Alban league, who reckoned themselves originally equal to, if not better than, the community of Rome, and who felt the dominion of Rome to be an oppressive yoke, as the fearfully rigorous measures of security taken against Praeneste at the beginning of the war with Pyrrhus, and the collisions that evidently long continued to occur with the Praenestines in particular, show.

This old Latium had essentially either perished or become merged in Rome, and it now numbered but few communities politically self-subsisting, and these, with the exception of Tibur and Praeneste, throughout insignificant.


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