Malaria and Rome: A History of Malaria in Ancient Italy by Robert Sallares (beach read .TXT) π
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- Author: Robert Sallares
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Needless to say, this attempt, like all the others until Mussolini, was a failure in the long run. Doni made the following simple comment on the Via Appia in the seventeenth century: βWherever anyone rests, disease arises.ββ΅βΈ
β΅β· Cassiodorus, variae 2.32.3, ed. A. J. Fridh (1973), Corpus Christianorum Ser. Latina, xcvi: magnificus atque patricius Decius . . . paludem Decemnovii in hostis modum vicina vastantem fovearum ore patefacto promisit absorbere, illam famosam saeculi vastitatem, quam diuturnitate licentiae quoddam mare paludestre consedit cultisque locis inimicum superfundens unda diluvium terrenam gratiam silvestri pariter horrore confudit.
β΅βΈ Doni (1667: 115): ubi quis quieverit, morbus exsurgat.
7
Tuscany
The situation north of the Tiber in Etruria during the Late Republic was broadly similar to the situation south of the Tiber in Latium, which was considered in the previous chapter. A fragment of Cato provides the earliest definite evidence for endemic malaria in a specific place in western central Italy in antiquity. Of course this text simply yields a terminus ante quem, since there are no relevant earlier extant contemporary Latin sources for the Middle Republic:ΒΉ
From Pliny in the Natural History and Cato in the Origins we learn that Graviscae is unhealthy, pestilential, if unhealthy is taken to mean lacking a moderate climate, in other words a calm climate; for according to Cato Graviscae is so called because it supports bad air.Β²
Unfortunately the text of Pliny to which Servius also refers is not extant. The etymology that Cato offers for the name of Graviscae, the port of Tarquinia, may be worthless, like most ancient etymologies. Nevertheless the logic of Catoβs argument implies that by the time of his death in 149 ο’ο£ Graviscae was notorious for βbad airβ, (i.e. malaria), even though it was the location of a Roman colony which had been founded as recently as 181 ο’ο£. Doni noted in the ΒΉ Out of the sources which are usually discussed in relation to this problem, Plautus, Cur-culio 17, caruitne febris te heri vel nudiustertius (Were you free from fever yesterday or the day before?), and Terence, Hecyra 357, quid morbi est? febris. cottidiana? ita aiunt (Which disease is it?
A fever. A quotidian fever? So they say), the latter dating to 165 ο’ο£, may simply have been translating their Greek originals. Nevertheless these texts presuppose that a Roman audience would have understood these terms. Pliny, NH 7.49.166 states that the consul Q. Fabius Maximus lost a quartan fever in battle on 8 August 121 ο’ο£ in the south of France, Q. Fabius Maximus consul apud flumen Isaram . . . febri quartana liberatus est in acie (The consul Q. Fabius Maximus was liberated from quartan fever in the battle at the river Isara.). Festus, 343.
30β32, ed. Lindsay (1913), followed Paulus in quoting the lines of the second century ο’ο£ poet Lucilius, iactans me ut febris querquera (tossing me like a querquera fever) and querquera consequitur capitisque dolores (a querquera follows and headaches) , where querquera is a malarial fever accompanied by shivering.
Β² Cato, origines 2.17, ed. M. Chassignet (1986) [= 46 P] ap. Servius, ad Verg. Aen. 10.184: Intempestas ergo Graviscas accipimus pestilentes secundum Plinium in Naturali Historia et Catonem in Originibus, ut intempestas intellegas sine temperie, id est tranquillitate: nam ut ait Cato, ideo Graviscae dictae sunt, quod gravem aerem sustinent. Fraccaro (1928) discussed this text.
Tuscany
193
N
Arezzo
Volterra
VAL DI
Siena
CHIANA
COLLINE
Cortona
METALLIFERE
Cecina
Bibbona
T U S C A N Y Lago
MAREMMA
PISANA
Trasimeno
Massa Marittima
Chiusi
MAREMMA
Populonia
Vetulonia
LACUS
Roselle
PRILIUS
MONTI
Grosseto
VOLSINI
Scansano
Elba
MONTI
Lago di
DELLβ
Bolsena
UCCELLINA
Talamone
MAREMMA
MONTE
Orbetello
Vulci
Tuscania
ARGENTARIO
Cosa
(Ansedonia)
Montalto di Castro
Tarquinia
Graviscae
Civitavecchia
T y r r h e n i a n S e a
Map 5. The Maremma and Valdichiana
seventeenth century that Graviscae was located only two thousand paces from the left bank of the river Marta, one of the malarious river valleys of western central Italy. Moreover the site of the Greek trading settlement or emporion and the adjacent Roman colony is located only a few metres away from salt pans today. These saline were constructed out of a salt marsh in the nineteenth century.
Doubtless in antiquity this area of marshland provided a breeding habitat for the deadly anthropophilic species of mosquito A. labranchiae.Β³ In that context, the famous observations made by Tiberius Β³ Livy 40.29.1; Velleius Paterculus 1.15.3; Doni (1667: 77); Gianfrotta (1981) discussed [ cont. on p. 196]
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Tuscany
25. Some of the
ruins of the Roman
colony founded in
181 ο’ο£ at Graviscae,
the port of
Tarquinia. This
was the location of
the earliest endemic
malaria in mainland
Italy attested by a
contemporary
ancient source.
26. A few metres
beyond the remains
of the Roman colony
of Graviscae are the
modern saline, which
were created from
Tuscany
a salt marsh in the
nineteenth century.
This was the
breeding habitat
where A. labranchiae
flourished to create
the earliest endemic
malaria recorded for
mainland Italy in
antiquity by a
contemporary
source.
195
196
Tuscany
Gracchus in 137 ο’ο£ on his journey through Etruria to join the Roman army at Numantia in Spain are plausible:
His brother Gaius wrote in a book that Tiberius, travelling through Etruria on his way to Numantia, saw the desolation of the countryside and observed that the farmworkers and shepherds were imported slaves and barbarians, and it was at that moment that the policy which brought them countless misfortunes entered his mind.β΄
Tiberius Gracchusβ observations of the depopulated state of southern Etruria (depopulated apart from gangs of barbarian slaves) led him to believe that it was essential, for the sake of maintaining Roman military manpower (according to Appianβs account), to introduce a scheme for the redistribution of public land ( ager publicus) which had been taken over by the rich. This scheme had fateful consequences for the stability of the Roman Republic.β΅ His observations of the state of the countryside are hardly surprising given that malaria was already endemic at Graviscae, as has just been seen. Nevertheless it is arguable that Tiberius Gracchusβ analysis of the causes of the situation, blaming
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