- Alpinorum auxiliary cohorts
This article concerns the Roman auxiliary regiments of the
Principate period originally recruited in the western Alpine regions of the empire (for the central/eastern Alps, seeRaetorum auxiliary cohorts ). The cohortes Alpinorum ("cohorts of Alpini") came from "Tres Alpes", the three small Roman provinces of the western Alps,Alpes Maritimae ,Alpes Cottiae andAlpes Graiae . The cohortes Ligurum were originally raised from theLigures people ofAlpes Maritimae andLiguria "regio" of NW Italia.Introduction
Auxiliary unit nomenclature
Most regiments carried a number and a name (normally a "peregrini" tribal name) e.g. "I Raetorum". A few regiments had no number. A confusing aspect of auxiliary unit nomenclature is that in some cases, more than one regiment can appear in the record with the same number and name e.g. there are two "I Raetorum" units attested in the 2nd century. In a few cases there is dispute as to whether it really is two distinct regiments, as opposed to the same regiment moving from one province to another or two detachments of the same regiment in different provinces at the same time. But in most cases, there is no doubt two separate regiments are involved. They can usually be distinguished by whether one is "equitata" or not, or has a c.R. title or not e.g. "I Raetorum" and "I Raetorum c.R."
The explanation for duplicated names is that where more than one series of cohorts was raised from the same original tribe, numbering would start from 1 again, especially if the second series was raised by a different emperor. (The same factor affected the numbering of
legions .Auxiliary unit types
There were three basic types of auxiliary regiment. (1) an "ala" (literally "wing") was a purely cavalry regiment of 480 horse. (2) a "
cohors " ("cohort") was a purely infantry regiment of 480 foot. (3) a "cohors equitata " was a mixed infantry/cavalry regiment of 600 men (480 infantry, 120 cavalry). A minority of regiments were denoted "milliaria" which meant they were nominally double-strength: in practice 720 men for an "ala milliaria", 800 for a "cohors milliaria" and 1,040 (800 inf/240 cav) for a "cohors equitata milliaria". In addition, some regiments were denoted "sagittaria" (from "sagitta", "arrow") meaning they were composed of archers.The c.R. title
The honorific title "civium Romanorum" ("c.R." for short) was normally awarded by the emperor for valour to an auxiliary regiment as a whole. The award would include the grant of
Roman citizenship to all the regiment's men, but not to subsequent recruits to the regiment. The regiment, however, would retain the prestigious title in perpetuity. [Goldsworthy (2005) 97] Until 212, only a minority of the empire's inhabitants (inc. all Italians) held fullRoman citizenship . The rest were denoted "peregrini", a second-class status. Since thelegions admitted only citizens, "peregrini" could only enlist in the auxilia. Citizenship carried a number of tax and other privileges and was highly sought-after. It could also be earned by serving the minimum 25-year term in the auxilia. In 212, all the inhabitants of the empire were granted full Roman citienship and so the title became redundant.Records
The literary evidence for auxiliary regiments is almost non-existent. Unlike for the
legions , ancient Roman historians only rarely mention theauxilia at all, and never denote a specific unit. Knowledge of the auxilia is therefore dependent on inscriptions found bearing the regiment's name. Many of these are not datable (even roughly) and so are of limited value.The epigraphic record includes: (1) inscriptions from Roman military diplomas, which were bronze certficates of
Roman citizenship awarded to peregrini soldiers who completed the minimum 25 years' service in theauxilia : these are very useful as, if complete, they contain a precise date and the province in which the regiment was serving at the time (as well the name, origin and rank of the recipient). (2) tiles or bricks, used in building work onRoman forts , stamped with the regiment's name. These show the forts where a regiment may have been based, but are rarely datable. (3) votive stone altars or tablets, and tombstones. These can indicate the addressee's origin if they are found in provinces away from the regiment's base. A minority are datable.The datable epigraphic record is very incomplete. Most of the regiments attested in the 2nd century are believed by inference to have been established in the early
Julio-Claudian period, i.e. before 37 AD, but very few have left records dating to before 75.Provinces deployed
Auxiliary regiments were mostly stationed in one province long-term. The Flavian (69-96) saw a lot of changes in auxiliary deployment in what appears a deliberate policy of deploying regiments away from their original home province. After that, deployments generally became much more settled, with most units remaining in the same province throughout the 2nd and 3rd centuries. Regiments, or detachments of regiments, could be summoned to participate in a major campaign elsewhere, but this would usually be just a short-term deployment.
Forts garrisoned
Auxiliary regiments were normally attached, for operational purposes, to a particular legion. The "praefectus" (commander) of the regiment would report to the "legatus legionis" (legion commander). Auxiliary regiments were mostly housed in
Roman forts in frontier provinces or even beyond the empire's settled borders, to keep watch on barbarian activity. A regiment would usually garrison a fort alone, but sometimes shared with another regiment if it was a larger fort. More rarely, regiments appear to have been housed in the "castra legionaria" (legionary fortress) of the legion they were attached to. Although inscriptions, especially the regiment's tile- and brick-stamps, can attest which forts the regiment occupied, most are not datable and so it is rarely possible to reconstruct a precise sequence or chronology of forts occupied.Personnel origins
Auxiliary personnel left traces in inverse proportion to their numbers, for the obvious reason that memorials such as votive altars or tombstones were expensive and could be better afforded the higher the rank. Thus the names of more "praefecti" (commanders) and "principales" (officers) are attested than of "caligati" (common soldiers, literally "booted" from "caliga", the Roman marching sandal), even though "caligati" constituted over 80% of personnel. The origin of the dedicator/deceased person is often impossible to establish. Sometimes the origin is recorded in the inscription. More commonly, it can be inferred from the location of the inscription if it is away from the province in which the regiment was based.
The Alpini people
Several Celtic-speaking tribes inhabited the western Alps, most notably the
Salassi of the "Alpes Graiae" (Val d'Aosta ). They were finally subdued by Rome and their territory annexed in 15 BC.The
Ligures occupied the coastal western Alps and the eponymous region ofLiguria in NW Italy. Their language may have been either Celtic, related to Gaulish, or a non Indo-European tongue related to the Iberian languages spoken in pre-Roman Spain.Alpinorum cohorts
As mountain people, the Alpini et al. supplied mainly infantry: all the regiments in this article are "cohortes" save for one "ala Noricorum". According to Holder, a total of 7 "cohortes Alpinorum" were raised, in two series, in the early 1st century. Of the first series, "II Alpina" is attested only in the early 1st century (in a single inscription) and was therefore evidently disbanded or destroyed in action. The other 6 survived into the 2nd century.
However, Holder's analysis requires 4 regiments called "I Alpinorum": "I Alpinorum", "I Alpinorum eq" (1), "I Alpinorum eq (2)" and "I Alpinorum peditata". [Holder (1980) 223] Spaul disputes this, claiming there were just two: "I Alpinorum eq" and "I Alpinorum ped." [Spaul (2000) 259-61] Spaul's view seems more likely. The "II Alpina" mentioned above was, according to Holder, in the first series. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that the first of the series was named "I Alpina" (unattested) and not "I Alpinorum". The reason for assuming 2 "I Alpinorum equitata" that a unit of that name is attested both in Dacia Sup and Pannonia Inf. But it could well be the same unit shuttling between the two provinces, which were in the same region.
Two "cohortes Ligurum" were raised under Augustus, "Ligurum equitata" (no number, attested) and "II Ligurum" (unattested but inferred). After 70 AD they were merged with a Spanish and Corsican unit respectively, to form "I Ligurum et Hispanorum c.R." and "II gemina Ligurum et Corsorum". Both survived into the 2nd century. [Holder (1980) 111]
In conclusion, a total of 7 "Alpinorum", "Ligurum", "Montanorum" and "Noricorum" regiments appear to have been raised in the Julio-Claudian era. Of these 6 survived in the 2nd century, although 2 of these amalgamated with other units. The following table displays the available evidence for each "cohors". However, new information, in the form of diplomas or other inscriptions, continues to be discovered each year.
Citations
References
* Goldsworthy, Adrian "The Complete Roman Army" (2005)
* Holder, Paul "Studies in the Auxilia of the Roman Army" (1980)
* Holder, Paul "Auxiliary Deployment in the Reign of Hadrian" (2003)
* Spaul, John "COHORS 2" (2000)See also
*
Roman auxiliaries
*List of Roman auxiliary regiments
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