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Roman people

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An ancient Roman fresco from Pompeii showing a family feast or ceremony, offering a glimpse into daily life in ancient times.

The Roman people were the citizens of Rome during the Roman Kingdom, the Roman Republic, and the Roman Empire. At first, only people from the city of Rome and nearby areas were considered Roman. Over time, more people were given the right to be Roman citizens, until almost everyone living in the Roman Empire was included. At its height, the Roman Empire covered large parts of Europe, the Near East, and North Africa.

Border changes of the Roman state from 6th century BC to 15th century AD

Being a Roman citizen was very important. It gave people a sense of belonging together, even though they came from many different places. The Romans were good at mixing their culture with the cultures of the people they met, especially from Greece. This helped the empire grow strong.

Even after the Western Roman Empire ended in the 5th century, the idea of being Roman stayed alive in some places. In Italy, people from Rome are still called Romans today. In other parts of Europe, like Switzerland, some names and words still come from the Romans. The Roman way of life and ideas continued to influence many parts of the world long after the empire itself disappeared.

Romanness

See also: Culture of ancient Rome, Demography of the Roman Empire, and Social class in ancient Rome

Meaning of "Roman"

The word "Roman" can mean many things. It can refer to a time period, a style of art, a place, or a way of thinking. These ideas are connected, but they are not exactly the same. What it meant to be Roman changed over time and depended on who you asked. Some Romans thought it was about where you lived or what language you spoke. Others believed it was more about having Roman rights and following Roman customs.

At the height of the Roman Empire, being Roman meant belonging to a large group of people who lived under the same rulers. Many famous Romans, like the speaker Cicero, thought being Roman was about following traditions and serving the government. Rome was good at welcoming people from other places. This idea started from stories about how Rome was founded, including the mixing of different groups.

Frescoes from the Villa of the Mysteries in Pompeii, Italy, Roman artwork dated to the mid-1st century BC

Some Roman writers worried about Rome changing as more people from outside Italy became citizens. They wanted to slow down the process of freeing slaves and giving citizenship. These worries were not about race. In Rome, people of different looks were treated the same. The big differences in Roman society were about class, not appearance. Rome used slavery, but slaves came from many different groups.

Non-Romans

Coin of Emperor Constantine II (r. 337–340), depicting the emperor on horseback, trampling two barbarians

Even though Ancient Rome is often called a society that did not judge people by race, Romans had strong opinions about cultures outside their world, called "barbarians". Over time, Roman writers thought that anyone outside Roman borders was not truly Roman. But being a "barbarian" was not about language or family background. It was about customs and behavior. Romans thought their way of life was better because of their culture.

One group that Romans often did not like was the Jews. Many ordinary Romans did not like Jewish practices, though opinions among the Roman elite varied. The Roman government did not fully oppose the Jews, as many Jewish people lived in Rome. Roman dislike of Jews was not based on race but on the belief that Jews refused to fit into Roman ways. The Jews followed their own rules and religion, which Romans found strange.

Antiquity

Classical antiquity

See also: Roman citizenship, Latins (Italic tribe), Rise of Rome, and Roman tribe

Fresco of Roman banquet scene from Herculaneum, Italy, c. 50 BC

The story of how Rome began is filled with myths and legends. The city’s traditional founding date is 753 BC, and the start of the Roman Republic is said to be 509 BC, though these dates are not exact. Myths about Rome’s beginning include tales of a king named Latinus, a hero named Evander of Pallantium who brought Greek culture to Italy, and a Trojan hero named Aeneas. The city’s legendary founder, Romulus, is part of these stories. These myths helped later Romans accept people from many places.

The first Romans were mainly Latin-speaking people from the Latins, an Italic people group living in an area called Latium. By the 6th century, Rome had taken over other Latin towns like Antemnae and Collatia, and defeated Alba Longa, which had led the Latins before.

Rome grew stronger through many victories. By 270 BC, Rome ruled all of Italy south of the Po river. They then defeated big powers like Carthage and the Hellenistic kingdoms. By the middle of the second century BC, Rome was the master of the Mediterranean. Around this time, many people in Italy south of the Po river became Roman citizens. Later, after a war called the Social War, all people south of the Po river became citizens. In 49 BC, Julius Caesar gave citizenship to the people of Cisalpine Gaul. Over time, many more people became Roman citizens in different ways.

Romans of the early empire

In the early Roman Empire, people had different legal statuses, including Roman citizens, people from provinces, foreigners, freed slaves, and slaves. Over time, more and more people became Roman citizens. The empire was good at including people from other places, which helped it succeed. Even some emperors talked about how easy it was for foreigners to become Romans.

From 27 BC to AD 284, known as the Principate, people from other places settled in the Roman world and were given rights. They could become soldiers called auxilia, which led to full citizenship. In 212 AD, Emperor Caracalla granted citizenship to all free people in the empire through the Antonine Constitution. This greatly increased the number of Romans. By this time, many people in the provinces already thought of themselves as Romans.

Late antiquity

See also: Later Roman Empire, Late Roman army, and Rise of Christianity

Over time, the city of Rome lost some of its special status in the empire. By the end of the third century, its importance was mostly symbolic. Many emperors ruled from other cities closer to the empire’s borders. People in late antiquity often thought of Rome differently, and many Romans came from faraway places with different customs and languages.

As Christianity became the main religion in the Roman Empire, Roman identity changed. Some leaders who followed old Roman traditions felt that true Romans needed to keep those traditions. But many others, especially Christians, saw Rome’s importance in a new way. Over time, being Roman became more tied to being Christian. This change helped shape how people thought about Roman identity in the later years of the empire.

Later history

The Roman Empire grew and helped spread Roman identity to many lands that were very different before. This Roman identity lasted long after the empire ended.

Western Europe

From the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the late 400s to the wars of Emperor Justinian I in the 500s, many western societies kept some Roman ways of governing and leadership. New rulers often tried to act like Roman leaders, especially in Italy. Roman culture and law stayed important for centuries, even after the empire ended. People could still become Roman citizens in the 600s and 700s, though Roman identity faded by the 700s and 800s.

The wars of Justinian I tried to take back lost lands, which caused Roman identity to fade in places like Gaul, Spain, and Britain. Local identities grew stronger, and Roman law and culture mixed with new traditions. In Britain, people in cities held onto Roman ways, but in rural areas, they blended with Germanic groups.

North Africa

In North Africa, the Vandal Kingdom did not support Rome. The people there did not often call themselves Romans, but kept some Roman traditions like names and Christianity. After the empire took back North Africa, the local people were seen as different from Romans, and this separation stayed even after new rulers came.

Eastern Mediterranean

In the eastern parts of the old empire, people kept calling themselves Romans for many centuries. They saw themselves as part of the Roman Empire, even as it changed over time. After the Muslim conquests, the term "Roman" began to mean more like the Greek-speaking people of the remaining empire. After the fall of Constantinople in 1453, the Greek people still called themselves Romans, and some Ottoman Turks also used the term for a time.

Modern identity

See also: Legacy of the Roman Empire

Today, people in Rome still call themselves "Roman." Rome is the biggest city in Italy, with millions of people living there. After the western Roman Empire ended, Rome had new governments inspired by ancient Rome.

Greeks also kept the Roman identity for a long time. Travelers in the 1700s noted that people in Athens thought of their language as "Roman." This Roman identity faded when Greece fought for independence.

Many people whose ancestors mixed with Romans no longer call themselves Roman. However, in some areas, the Roman identity stayed strong. In Switzerland, the Romansh people are descendants of Romans. They call themselves rumantsch or romontsch, words that come from the Latin word for "Roman." Similarly, in France’s part of Switzerland called Romandy, people also keep this Roman connection.

In some places, the word for "Roman" turned into names for other groups. For example, the word walhaz became the basis for the names "Welsh" and "Vlach." But some Eastern European groups, like the Romanians, still call themselves români. Other groups, such as the Aromanians, Istro-Romanians, and Megleno-Romanians, also have names that come from the Latin word for "Roman."

Images

A historical relief showing the treasures from the ancient Jerusalem temple, displayed on a Roman arch.
Historical Roman artifact displayed in the Vatican Museum's Museo Chiaramonti gallery.
Ancient Roman sculpture displayed in the Vatican Museum's Gallery - Compartment 11.
Historical Egyptian relief depicting ancient art and architecture from Luxor, Aswan, and Qena.
An ancient portrait of a woman from Egypt, painted over 1800 years ago.
An ancient carving on the Obelisk of Theodosius in Istanbul, showing a scene from history with an emperor and his family.
An ancient Roman marble relief showing a Christian monogram from the 4th century, displayed in an exhibition at the Colosseum in Rome.
Historical map showing how Christianity spread across Europe, Southwest Asia, and North Africa by the year AD 600.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Roman people, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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