|
Small-scale Farmers
In the earlier part
of the Republican era, farm tracts were quite small; the 6
iugera given to each colonist at the port town of Cosa,
when it was founded in 273 B.C., was typical. Only a part
of that land could be committed to vines, so farmers then
most likely pooled their wine yields each year at local cellars
which in turn contracted with local pottery workshops for
storage and transport amphorae. These farmers were eligible
for military service, however, so over the centuries-long
period of Rome's territorial expansion, many land plots were
poorly tended and had to be sold. Thereafter the Italian landscape
was gradually transformed into a socially-divided patchwork
of estates at prime locations owned by just a few Roman families,
and a myriad of remote, less fertile plots where peasants
eeked out a retched life, always on the edge of starvation.
Many of those peasants eventually came cap-in-hand to an estate-owner,
there to labor alongside his slaves, in the vineyards and
hayfields.
|
|
 1 iugerum = 0.62 acres
|