
Page from a medieval copy of the
Notitia Dignitatum, depicting shields of
Magister
Militum Praesentalis II, a late Roman register of military
commands.
The
Notitia Dignitatum is a unique
document of the
Roman imperial
chanceries. One of the very few surviving documents of Roman
government, it details the administrative organisation of the
eastern and western
empire, listing
several thousand offices from the imperial court down to the
provincial level. It is usually considered to be up to date for the
Western empire in the 420s, and
for the
Eastern empire in 400s.
However, no absolute date can be given, and there are omissions and
problems.
There are several extant fifteenth and sixteenth-century copies
(plus a colour-illuminated 1542 version).
All the known and
extant copies of this late Roman document are derived, either
directly or indirectly, from a codex
(Codex Spirensis) that is known to have
existed in the library of the cathedral chapter at Speyer
in 1542 but
which was lost before 1672 and cannot now be located. That
book contained a collection of documents, of which the
Notitia was the last and largest document, occupying 164
pages that brought together several previous documents of which one
was of the 9th century. The
heraldry in
illuminated manuscripts of
Notitiae is thought to copy or
imitate no other examples than those from the lost
Codex
Spirensis. The most important copy of the
Codex is
that made for
Pietro Donato (1436),
illuminated by
Peronet Lamy.
Contents
For each half of the empire, the Notitia enumerates all major
'dignities' (i.e offices) in its gift, often with their location
and even their exact
officium (staff,
enumerated except for the most junior). These are organised
by:
The most recent editor of
Notitia Dignitatum is Robert
Ireland, in
British Archaeological Reports, International
Series
63.2.
Interpretation
The
Notitia presents four main problems, as regards the
study of the Empire's military establishment:
- The Notitia depicts the Roman army at the end of the 4th
century. Therefore its development over the 4th century from the
Principate structure is largely conjectural, due to the lack of
other evidence.
- It was compiled at two different times. The Eastern section
apparently dates from c395 AD; the Western from considerably later,
c420. Furthermore, each section is probably not a contemporaneous
"snapshot", but relies on data stretching back as far as twenty
years. The Eastern section may contain data from as early as 379,
the start of the rule of Theodosius I.
The Western section contains data from as early as c400: for
example, it shows units deployed in Britain, which must date from
before 410, when Roman troops were evacuated from the island. In
consequence, there is substantial duplication, with the same unit
often listed under different commands. It is impossible to
ascertain whether these were detachments of the same unit in
different places at the same time, or the same whole unit at
different times. Also, it is likely that some units only existed on
paper or contained just a skeleton personnel.
- The Notitia has many sections missing and
lacunae (gaps) within sections. This is doubtless due to
accumulated text losses and copying errors as it was repeatedly
copied over the centuries: the earliest manuscript we possess today
dates from the 15th century. The Notitia cannot therefore
provide a comprehensive listing of all units in existence.
- The Notitia does not contain any personnel figures.
Therefore, the size of individual units, and of the various
commands, cannot be ascertained, as we have little other evidence
of unit sizes at this time. In turn, this makes it impossible to
assess accurately the overall size of the army. Depending on the
strength of units, the late 4th century army may, at one extreme,
have equalled the size of the 2nd century force (i.e. over 400,000
men); at the other extreme, it may have been far smaller. For
example, the forces deployed in Britain c400 may have been just
18,000 against c55,000 in the 2nd century.
Depictions
The
Notitia contains the earliest known depictions of the
diagram which later came to be known as
yin and yang symbol.
Citations
- Helmut Nickel (1991), The Dragon and the Pearl, Journal of the
Metroplotian Museum of Art, 146, 5
- A. Goldsworthy Roman Warfare (2000) 198
- P. Heather, Fall of the Roman Empire (2005) 63
- D. Mattingly An imperial Possession: Britain in the Roman
Empire (2006) 239
- Giovanni Monastra: The "Yin-Yang" among the Insignia of the Roman
Empire?, Sophia, Bd. 6, Nr. 2 (2000)
- Late Roman Shield Patterns. Notitia Dignitatum:
Magister Peditum
Sources and references
- Westermann Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte contains
many precise maps
- Pauly-Wissowa (German-language
encyclopaedia on all classical Antiquity) provides articles and
further bibliography on almost every term or name one might wish to
know more about
- Notitia dignitatum: accedunt Notitia urbis
Constantinopolitanae et Laterculi provinciarum, edidit
Otto Seeck, Berolini: Weidmann,
1876.
- A.H.M. Jones, The Later Roman Empire, 284-602. A
Social, Economic and Administrative Survey, The Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1986, ISBN 0-8018-3285-3
External links