The
Roman Navy ( , lit. "fleet") comprised the
naval forces of the Roman state.
Although the navy was instrumental in the
Roman conquest of the Mediterranean Sea
basin, it never enjoyed the prestige of the
Roman legions. Throughout their
history, the Romans remained a primarily land-based people, and
relied on their more nautically inclined subjects, such as the
Greeks and the
Egyptians, to build and man their ships. Partly
because of this, the navy was never wholly embraced by the Roman
state, and deemed somewhat "un-Roman". Unlike modern naval forces
therefore, the Roman navy even at its height never existed as an
autonomous service, but operated as an adjunct to the
Roman army.
Founded in ca. 311 BC, the Roman navy was originally insignificant.
Only fifty
years later, when faced with a conflict with the maritime empire of
Carthage
, did Rome
construct a large navy of its own. During the course of the
First Punic War, the Roman navy was
massively expanded and played a vital role in the Roman victory and
the
Roman Republic's eventual
ascension to hegemony in the Mediterranean Sea. In the course of
the first half of the 2nd century BC, Rome went on to destroy
Carthage and subdue the
Hellenistic
kingdoms of the eastern Mediterranean, achieving complete mastery
of the inland sea, that they called
Mare Nostrum. The Roman fleets were again
prominent in wars against pirates, and in the civil wars that
brought down the Republic, whose campaigns ranged across the
Mediterranean.
In 31 BC, the great naval Battle of
Actium
ended the civil wars culminating in
the final victory of Augustus and the
establishment of the Roman
Empire.
During the Imperial period, the Mediterranean became a peaceful
"Roman lake"; in the absence of a maritime enemy, the navy was
reduced mostly to patrol and transport duties. On the fringes of
the Empire however, in new conquests or, increasingly, in defense
against barbarian invasions, the Roman fleets were still engaged in
warfare. The decline of the Empire in the 3rd century took a heavy
toll on the navy, which was reduced to a shadow of its former self,
both in size and in combat ability. As successive waves of the
Völkerwanderung
crashed on the land frontiers of the battered Empire, the navy
could only play a secondary role. In the early 5th century, the
Roman frontiers were breached, and barbarian kingdoms appeared on
the shores of the western Mediterranean. One of them, the
Vandal Kingdom, raised a navy of its own and
raided the shores of the Mediterranean, even
sacking Rome, while the diminished Roman
fleets were incapable of offering any resistance. The Western
Empire ended in 476, but in the East, the Greco-Roman naval
tradition survived as the
Byzantine
Navy.
History
Early Republic
The exact origins of the Roman fleet are obscure.
A traditionally
agricultural and land-based society, the Romans rarely ventured out
to sea, unlike their Etruscan
neighbours. There is evidence of Roman warships in the
early 4th century BC, such as mention of a warship that carried an
embassy to Delphi
in 394 BC,
but at any rate, the Roman fleet, if it existed, was
negligible. The traditional birth date of the Roman navy is
set at ca. 311 BC, when, after the conquest of
Campania, two new officials, the
duumviri navales classis ornandae reficiendaeque
causa, were tasked with the maintenance of a fleet. As a
result, the Republic acquired its first fleet, consisting of 20
ships, most likely
triremes, with each
duumvir commanding a squadron of 10 ships.
However, the Republic
continued to rely mostly on her legions for expansion in Italy; the
navy was most likely geared towards combating piracy and lacked
experience in naval warfare, being easily defeated in 282 BC by the
Tarentines
.
This situation continued until the
First
Punic War: the main task of the Roman fleet was patrolling
along the Italian coast and rivers, protecting seaborne trade from
piracy. Whenever larger tasks had to be undertaken, such as the
naval blockade of a besieged city, the Romans called on the allied
Greek cities of southern Italy, the
socii navales, to
provide ships and crews. It is possible that the supervision of
these maritime allies was one of the duties of the four new
praetores classici, who were
established in 267 BC.
First Punic War
The first Roman expedition outside mainland Italy was against the
island of
Sicily in 265 BC.
This led to the
outbreak of hostilities with Carthage
, which would
last until 241 BC. At the time, the
Punic city was the unchallenged master of the western
Mediterranean, possessing a long maritime and naval experience and
a large fleet. Although Rome had relied on her legions for the
conquest of Italy, operations in Sicily had to be supported by a
fleet, and the ships available by Rome's allies were clearly
insufficient. Thus in 261 BC, the Roman Senate set out to construct
a fleet of 100
quinquiremes and 20
triremes. According to
Polybius, the Romans
seized a shipwrecked Carthaginian quinquireme, and used it as a
blueprint for their own ships. The new fleets were commanded by the
annually elected Roman
magistrates, but
naval expertise was provided by the lower officers, who continued
to be provided by the
socii, mostly Greeks. This practice
was continued until well into the Empire, something also attested
by the direct adoption of numerous Greek naval terms.
Despite the massive buildup, the Roman crews remained inferior in
naval experience to the Carthaginians, and could not hope to match
them in
naval
tactics, which required great maneuverability and experience.
They therefore employed a novel weapon which transformed sea
warfare to their advantage.
They equipped their ships with the
corvus, possibly developed
earlier by the Syracusians against the
Athenians
. This was a long plank with a spike for
hooking onto enemy ships. Using it as a boarding bridge, marines
were able to
board an enemy ship,
transforming sea combat into a version of land combat, where the
Roman legionaries had the upper hand. However, it is believed that
the
corvus' weight made the ships unstable, and could
capsize a ship in rough seas.
Although the first sea engagement of the war, the
Battle of the Lipari Islands in
260 BC, was a defeat for Rome, the forces involved were relatively
small. Through the use of the
corvus, the fledgling Roman
navy under
Gaius Duilius won its first
major engagement later that year at the
Battle of Mylae. During the course of the
war, Rome continued to be victorious at sea: victories at
Sulci (258 BC),
Tyndaris (257 BC) were followed by the
massive Battle of Cape Ecnomus, where the
Roman fleet under the consuls
Marcus Atilius Regulus and
Lucius Manlius inflicted a
severe defeat on the Carthaginians. This string of successes
allowed Rome to push the war further across the sea to Africa and
Carthage itself. Continued Roman success also meant that their navy
gained significant experience, although it also suffered a number
of catastrophic losses due to storms, while conversely, the
Carthaginian navy suffered from attrition.
The
Battle of Drepana in 249 BC
resulted in the only major Carthaginian sea victory, forcing the
Romans to equip a new fleet from donations by private citizens. In
the last battle of the war, at
Aegates Islands in 241 BC, the
Romans under
Gaius Lutatius
Catulus displayed superior seamanship to the Carthaginians,
notably using their rams rather than the now-abandoned
corvus to achieve victory.
Illyria and the Second Punic War
After the Roman victory, the balance of naval power in the Western
Mediterranean had shifted from Carthage to Rome.
This ensured
Carthaginian acquiescence to the conquest of Sardinia and Corsica,
and also enabled Rome to deal decisively with the threat posed by
the Illyrian pirates in the Adriatic
. The
Illyrian Wars marked Rome's first
involvement with the affairs of the Balkan peninsula.
Initially, in 229 BC,
a fleet of 200 warships was sent against Queen Teuta, and swiftly expelled the Illyrian garrisons
from the Greek coastal cities of modern-day Albania
. Ten
years later, the Romans sent another expedition in the area against
Demetrius of Pharos, who had
rebuilt the Illyrian navy and engaged in piracy up into the Aegean.
Demetrius was supported by
Philip V
of Macedon, who had grown anxious at the expansion of Roman
power in Illyria. The Romans were again quickly victorious and
expanded their Illyrian protectorate, but the beginning of the
Second Punic War (218–201 BC)
forced them to divert their resources westwards for the next
decades.
Due to Rome's command of the seas,
Hannibal, Carthage's great general, was forced to
eschew a sea-borne invasion, instead choosing to bring the war over
land to the Italian peninsula. Unlike the first war, the navy
played little role on either side in this war. The only naval
encounters occurred in the first years of the war, at
Lilybaeum (218 BC) and the
Ebro River (217 BC), both resulting
Roman victories. Despite an overall numerical parity, for the
remainder of the war the Carthaginians did not seriously challenge
Roman supremacy. The Roman fleet was hence engaged primarily with
raiding the shores of Africa and guarding Italy, a task which
included the interception of Carthaginian convoys of supplies and
reinforcements for Hannibal's army, as well as keeping an eye on a
potential intervention by Carthage's ally, Philip V. The only major
action in which the Roman fleet was involved was the
siege of Syracuse in
214-212 BC with 130 ships under
Marcus Claudius Marcellus. The
siege is remembered for the ingenious inventions of
Archimedes, such as mirrors that burned ships or
the so-called "
Claw of
Archimedes", which kept the besieging army at bay for two
years. A fleet of 160 vessels was assembled to support
Scipio Africanus' army in Africa in 202 BC,
and, should his expedition fail, evacuate his men. In the event,
Scipio achieved a decisive victory at
Zama, and the subsequent peace stripped
Carthage of its fleet.
Operations in the East
Rome was now the undisputed mistress of the Western Mediterranean,
and turned her gaze from defeated Carthage to the
Hellenistic world. Small Roman forces had
already been engaged in the
First
Macedonian War, when, in 214 BC, a fleet under
Marcus Valerius Laevinus had
successfully thwarted Philip V from invading Illyria with his
newly-built fleet. The rest of the war was carried out mostly by
Rome's allies, the
Aetolian League
and later the
Kingdom of
Pergamon, but a combined Roman-Pergamene fleet of ca. 60 ships
patrolled the Aegean until the war's end in 205 BC. In this
conflict, Rome, still embroiled in the Punic War, was not
interested in expanding her possessions, but rather in thwarting
the growth of Philip's power in Greece.
The war ended in an
effective stalemate, and was renewed in 201 BC, when Philip V
invaded Asia
Minor
. A naval
battle off Chios
ended in a
costly victory for the Pergamene-Rhodian
alliance, but the Macedonian fleet lost many
warships, including its flagship, a deceres. Soon
after, Pergamon and Rhodes appealed to Rome for help, and the
Republic was drawn into the
Second
Macedonian War. In view of the massive Roman naval superiority,
the war was fought on land, with the Macedonian fleet, already
weakened at Chios, not daring to venture out of its anchorage at
Demetrias. After the crushing Roman
victory at
Cynoscephalae,
the terms imposed on Macedon were harsh, and included the complete
disbandment of her navy.
Almost immediately following the defeat of
Macedon, Rome became embroiled in a
war with the
Seleucid Empire. This war too was decided
mainly on land, although the combined Roman-Rhodian navy also
achieved victories over the Seleucids at
Myonessus and
Eurymedon. These victories,
which were invariably concluded with the imposition of peace
treaties that prohibited the maintenance of anything but token
naval forces, spelled the disappearance of the Hellenistic royal
navies, leaving Rome and her allies unchallenged at sea. Coupled
with the final
destruction of
Carthage, and the end of
Macedon's independence, by the latter
half of the 2nd century BC, Roman control over all of what was
later to be dubbed
mare
nostrum ("our sea") had been established. Subsequently,
the Roman navy was drastically reduced, depending on its Greek
allies to supply ships and crews as needed.
Late Republic
Mithridates and the pirate threat

Pompey the Great.
His swift and decisive campaign against the pirates
re-established Rome's control over the Mediterranean sea
lanes.
In the
absence of a strong naval presence however, piracy flourished throughout the Mediterranean,
especially in Cilicia, but also in Crete
and other
places, further reinforced by money and warships supplied by King
Mithridates VI of Pontus,
who hoped to enlist their aid in his wars against Rome. In the
First Mithridatic War (89–85 BC),
Sulla had to requisition ships wherever he
could find them to counter Mithridates' fleet. Despite the
makeshift nature of the Roman fleet, however, in 86 BC
Lucullus defeated the Pontic navy at
Tenedos.
Immediately after the end of the war, a permanent force of ca. 100
vessels was established in the Aegean from the contributions of
Rome's allied maritime states. Although sufficient to guard against
Mithridates, this force was totally inadequate against the pirates,
whose power grew rapidly. Over the next decade, the pirates
defeated several Roman commanders, and raided unhindered even to
the shores of Italy, reaching Rome's harbor,
Ostia. According to the account of
Plutarch, "the ships of the pirates numbered more
than a thousand, and the cities captured by them four hundred."
Their activity posed a growing threat for the Roman economy, and a
challenge to Roman power: several prominent Romans, including two
praetors with their retinue and the young
Julius Caesar, were captured and held
for
ransom. Perhaps most important of all,
the pirates disrupted Rome's vital lifeline: the massive shipments
of grain and other produce from Africa and Egypt that were needed
to sustain the city's population.
The grain shortages were a major political issue, as popular
discontent threatened to become explosive. In 74 BC, with the
outbreak of the
Third Mithridatic
War,
Marcus Antonius
(the father of
Mark Antony) was
appointed
praetor with extraordinary
imperium, but signally failed to defeat the
pirates; rather, he was defeated off Crete in 72 BC, and died
shortly after. Finally, in 67 BC the
Lex
Gabinia was passed in the
Plebeian Council, vesting
Pompey with unprecedented powers and authorizing him
to move against them. In a
massive and concerted
campaign, Pompey cleared the seas from the pirates. Afterwards,
the fleet was reduced again to policing duties against intermittent
piracy.
Caesar and the Civil Wars
In 56 BC, for the first time a Roman fleet engaged in battle
outside the Mediterranean. This occurred during
Julius Caesar's
Gallic
Wars, when the maritime tribe of the
Veneti rebelled against Rome. Against the
Veneti, the Romans were at a disadvantage, since they did not know
the coast, and were inexperienced in fighting in the open sea with
its tides and currents. Furthermore, the Veneti ships were superior
to the light Roman galleys. They were built of
oak and had no oars, being thus more resistant to
ramming. In addition, their greater height
gave them an advantage in both missile exchanges and boarding
actions.
In the event, when the two fleets
encountered each other in Quiberon Bay
, Caesar's men resorted to the use of hooks on long
poles, which cut the halyards supporting the
Veneti sails. Immobile, the Veneti ships were easy prey for
the legionaries who boarded them.
Having thus established his control of
the English
Channel
, in the next years Caesar used this newly-built
fleet to carry out two
invasions of Britain.
The last major campaigns of the Roman navy in the Mediterranean
until the late 3rd century AD would be in the
civil wars that ended the Republic.
In the
East, the Republican faction quickly established its control, and
Rhodes, the last independent maritime power in the Aegean, was
subdued by Gaius Cassius
Longinus in 43 BC, after its fleet was defeated off Kos
. In
the West, against the
triumvirs
stood
Sextus Pompeius, who had been
given command of the Italian fleet by the Senate in 43 BC. He
took control of Sicily and made it
his base, blockading Italy and stopping the politically crucial
supply of grain from Africa to Rome.
After suffering a
defeat from Sextus in 42 BC, Octavian initiated massive naval
armaments, aided by his closest associate, Marcus Agrippa: ships were built at Ravenna
and Ostia, the new artificial harbor of Portus Julius
built at Cumae
, and
soldiers and rowers levied, including over 20,000 manumitted
slaves. Finally, Octavian and Agrippa defeated Sextus in the
Battle of Naulochus in 36 BC,
putting an end to all Pompeian resistance.

The Battle of Actium, by Lorenzo
A.
Octavian's power was further enhanced after
his victory against the combined fleets of Mark Antony and Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt, in the Battle of Actium
in 31 BC, where Antony had assembled 500 ships
against Octavian's 400 ships. This last naval battle of the
Roman Republic definitively established Octavian as the sole ruler
over Rome and the Mediterranean world. In the aftermath of his
victory, he formalized the Fleet's structure, establishing several
key harbors in the Mediterranean (see below). The now fully
professional navy had its main duties consist of protecting against
piracy, escorting troops and patrolling the river frontiers of
Europe. It remained however engaged in active warfare in the
periphery of the Empire.
Principate
Operations under Augustus
Under
Augustus and after the conquest of Egypt
there were
increasing demands from the Roman economy to extend the trade lanes
to India
. The
Arabian control of all sea routes to India was an obstacle. One of
the first naval operations under
princeps Augustus was
therefore the preparation for a campaign on the Arabian peninsula.
Aelius Gallus, the prefect of Egypt
ordered the construction of 130 transports and subsequently carried
10,000 soldiers to Arabia.
But the following march through the desert
towards Yemen
failed and
the plans for control of the Arabian
peninsula had to be abandoned.
At the other end of the Empire, in
Germania, the navy played an important role in the
supply and transport of the
legion.
In 15 BC
an independent fleet was installed at the Lake Constance
. Later, the generals
Drusus and
Tiberius used the Navy extensively, when they tried
to extend the Roman frontier to the
Elbe.
In 12 BC
Drusus ordered the construction
of a fleet of 1,000 ships and sailed them along the Rhine
into the
North
Sea
. The
Frisians and
Chauci had nothing to oppose the superior
numbers, tactics and technology of the Romans. When these entered
the river mouths of
Weser and
Ems, the local tribes had to surrender.
In 5 BC
the Roman knowledge concerning the North and Baltic Sea was fairly
extended during a campaign by Tiberius,
reaching as far as the Elbe: Plinius describes
how Roman naval formations came past Heligoland
and set sail to the north-eastern coast of Denmark
, and Augustus himself boasts in his Res Gestae: "My fleet sailed
from the mouth of the Rhine eastward as far as the lands of the
Cimbri to which, up to that time, no Roman had ever penetrated
either by land or by sea...". The multiple naval
operations north of Germania had to be abandoned after the battle of
the Teutoburg Forest
in the year 9 AD.
Julio-Claudian dynasty
In the years 15 and 16,
Germanicus
carried out several fleet operations along the rivers Rhine and
Ems, without permanent results due to grim Germanic resistance and
a disastrous storm. By 28, the Romans lost further control of the
Rhine mouth in a succession of Frisian insurgencies. From 43 to 85,
the Roman navy played an important role in the
Roman conquest of Britain.
Especially the
classis Germanica rendered outstanding
services in multitudinous landing operations.
In 46 a naval
expedition made a push deep into the Black Sea
region and even travelled on the Tanais. In 47 a revolt by the
Chauci, who took to piratical activities
along the Gallic coast, was subdued by
Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo. By 57 an
expeditionary corps reached
Chersonesos
(see
Charax, Crimea).
It seems
that under Nero the navy obtained strategically
important positions for trading with India; but there was no known
fleet in the Red
Sea
. Possibly, parts of the Alexandrian
fleet were operating as escorts for the Indian
trade. In the Jewish revolt, from 66 to 70, the
Romans were forced to fight Jewish ships, operating from a harbour
in the area of modern Tel
Aviv
, on Israel
's Mediterranean
coast. In the meantime several flotilla engagements
on the Sea of
Galilee
took place.
In 68, as his reign became increasingly insecure, Nero raised
legio I Adiutrix
from sailors of the praetorian fleets. After Nero's overthrow, in
69, the "
Year of the four
emperors", the praetorian fleets supported Emperor
Otho against the usurper
Vitellius, and after his eventual victory,
Vespasian formed another legion,
legio II Adiutrix, from
their ranks. Only in the
Pontus did
Anicetus, the commander of the
Classis
Pontica, support Vitellius. He burned the fleet, and sought
refuge with the
Iberian tribes,
engaging in piracy. After a new fleet was built, this revolt was
subdued.
Flavian, Antonine and Severan dynasties

Mosaic of a Roman galley, Tunisia, 2nd
century AD.
During the
Batavian rebellion of
Gaius Julius Civilis (69-70),
the rebels got hold of a squadron of the Rhine fleet by treachery,
and the conflict featured frequent use of the Roman Rhine flotilla.
In the last phase of the war, the British fleet and
legio XIV were brought in from
Britain to attack the Batavian coast, but the
Cananefates, allies of the Batavians, were able
to destroy or capture a large part of the fleet. In the meantime,
the new Roman commander,
Quintus Petillius Cerialis,
advanced north and constructed a new fleet. Civilis attempted only
a short encounter with his own fleet, but could not hinder the
superior Roman force from landing and ravaging the
island of the Batavians, leading to the negotiation
of a peace soon after.
In the
years 82 to 85, the Romans under Gnaeus Julius Agricola launched a
campaign against the Caledonians in
modern Scotland
. In this context the Roman navy
significantly escalated activities on the eastern Scottish coast.
Simultaneously multiple expeditions and reconnaissance trips were
launched.
During these the Romans would capture the
Orkney
Islands
(Orcades) for a short period of time and
obtained information about the Shetland Islands
. There is some speculation about a Roman
landing in Ireland
, based on Tacitus reports about Agricola
contemplating the island's conquest, but no conclusive evidence to
support this theory has been found.
Under the
Five Good Emperors the navy
operated mainly on the rivers; so it played an important role
during Trajan's conquest of Dacia and temporarily an independent fleet for the
Euphrates and Tigris
rivers was
founded. Also during the
wars
against the Marcomanni confederation under
Marcus Aurelius several combats took place
on the
Danube and the
Tisza.
Under the
aegis of the Severan dynasty, the
only known military operations of the navy were carried out under
Septimius Severus, using naval
assistance on his campaigns along the Euphrates and Tigris
, as well as
in Scotland
. Thereby Roman ships reached inter
alia the Persian
Gulf
and the top of the British Isles
.
Third century crisis
As the 3rd century dawned, the Roman Empire was at its peak. In the
Mediterranean, peace had reigned for over two centuries, as piracy
had been wiped out and no outside naval threats occurred. As a
result, complacency had set in: naval tactics and technology were
neglected, and the Roman naval system had become moribund. After
230 however and for fifty years, the situation changed
dramatically. The so-called "
Crisis of the Third Century"
ushered a period of internal turmoil, and the same period saw a
renewed series of seaborne assaults, which the imperial fleets
proved unable to stem. In the West,
Picts and
Irish ships raided Britain, while the
Saxons
raided the North Sea, forcing the Romans to abandon
Frisia. In the East, the Goths and other tribes from
modern Ukraine raided in great numbers over the Black Sea. These
invasions began during the rule of
Trebonianus Gallus, when for the first
time
Germanic tribes built up their
own powerful fleet in the Black Sea.
Via two surprise
attacks (256) on Roman naval bases in the Caucasus and near the Danube,
numerous ships fell into the hands of the Germans, whereupon the
raids were extended as far as the Aegean Sea
; Byzantium, Athens
, Sparta
and other
towns were plundered and the responsible provincial fleets were
heavily debilitated. It was not until the attackers made a
tactical error, that their onrush could be stopped.
In 267–270 another, much fiercer series of attacks took place. A
fleet composed of
Heruli and other tribes
raided the coasts of
Thrace and the
Pontus.
Defeated off Byzantium by general Venerianus, the barbarians
fled into the Aegean, and ravaged many islands and coastal cities,
including Athens
and Corinth
. As they retreated northwards over land, they
were defeated by Emperor Gallienus at
Nestos
.
However,
this was merely the prelude to an even larger invasion that was
launched in 268/269: several tribes banded together (the
Historia Augusta mentions
Scythians, Greuthungi, Tervingi, Gepids, Peucini,
Celts and Heruli) and allegedly 2,000 ships
and 325,000 men strong, raided the Thracian shore, attacked
Byzantium and continued raiding the Aegean as far as Crete
, while the
main force approached Thessalonica
. Emperor Claudius
II however was able to defeat them at the Battle of
Naissus
, ending the Gothic threat for the time
being.
Barbarian
raids also increased along the Rhine frontier and in the North Sea
. Eutropius mentions
that during the 280s, the sea along the coasts of the provinces of
Belgica and Armorica was "infested with Franks and Saxons". To
counter them,
Maximian appointed
Carausius as commander of the
British Fleet. However, Carausius rose up
in late 286 and
seceded from the
Empire with Britannia and parts of the northern Gallic coast.
With a single blow Roman control of the channel and the North Sea
was lost, and emperor
Maximinus was forced
to create a completely new Northern Fleet, but in lack of training
it was almost immediately destroyed in a storm. Only in 293, under
Caesar Constantius Chlorus did Rome regain the
Gallic coast.
A new fleet was constructed in order to
cross the Channel, and in 296, with a concentric attack on Londinium
the insurgent province was retaken.
Late Antiquity
By the end of the 3rd century, the Roman navy had declined
dramatically. Although Emperor
Diocletian
is held to have strengthened the navy, and increased its manpower
from 46,000 to 64,000 men, the old standing fleets had all but
vanished, and in the civil wars that ended the
Tetrarchy, the opposing sides had to mobilize the
resources and commandeered the ships of the Eastern Mediterranean
port cities. These conflicts thus brought about a renewal of naval
activity, culminating in the
Battle of the Hellespont in 324
between the forces of
Constantine I
under Caesar
Crispus and the fleet of
Licinius, which was the only major naval
confrontation of the 4th century.
Vegetius, writing at the end of the 4th
century, testifies to the disappearance of the old praetorian
fleets in Italy, but comments on the continued activity of the
Danube fleet. In the 5th century, only the eastern half of the
Empire could field an effective fleet, as it could draw upon the
maritime resources of Greece and the Levant. Although the
Notitia Dignitatum still
mentions several naval units for the
Western Empire, these were apparently
too depleted to be able to carry out much more than patrol duties.
At any rate, the rise of the naval power of the
Vandal Kingdom under
Geiseric in North Africa, and its raids in the
Western Mediterranean, were practically uncontested. Although there
is some evidence of West Roman naval activity in the first half of
the 5th century, this is mostly confined to troop transports and
minor landing operations. The historian
Priscus and
Sidonius
Apollinaris affirm in their writings that by the mid-5th
century, the Western Empire essentially lacked a war navy. Matters
became even worse after the disastrous failure of the fleets
mobilized against the Vandals in 460 and 468, under the emperors
Majorian and
Anthemius.
For the West, there would be no recovery, as the last Western
Emperor,
Romulus Augustulus, was
deposed in 476. In the East however, the classical naval tradition
survived, and in the 6th century, a standing navy was reformed. The
East Roman navy would remain a
formidable force in the Mediterranean until the 11th century.
Organization
Crews
The bulk of a ship's crew was formed by the rowers, the
remiges (sing.
remex) or
eretai (sing.
eretēs) in Greek. Despite popular perceptions, the Roman
fleet, and ancient fleets in general, relied throughout its
existence on rowers of free status.
Galley
slaves were usually not put at the oars, except in times of
pressing manpower demands or extreme emergency. Even then, they
were employed after they had been freed. In Imperial times,
non-citizen freeborn provincials (
peregrini), chiefly from nations
with a maritime background such as Greeks, Phoenicians, Syrians and
Egyptians formed the bulk of the fleets' crews.
During the early Principate, a ship's crew, regardless of its size,
was organized as a
centuria.
Crewmen could sign on as
marines,
rowers/seamen, craftsmen and various other jobs, though all
personnel serving in the imperial fleet were classed as
milites ("soldiers"), regardless of their function; only
when differentiation with the army was required, were the
adjectives
classiarius or
classicus added. Along
with several other instances of prevalence of army terminology,
this testifies to the lower social status of the naval personnel,
considered inferior to that of the
auxiliaries and the
legionaries. Emperor
Claudius first gave
legal privileges to the navy's crewmen, enabling them to receive
Roman citizenship after their
period of service. This period was initially set at a minimum of 26
years (one year more than the legions), and was later expanded to
28. Upon honorable discharge (
honesta missio), the sailors
received a sizable cash payment as well.
As in the army, the ship's
centuria was headed by a
centurion with an
optio as his deputy, while a
beneficiarius supervised a small administrative staff.
Among the crew were also a number of
principales (junior
officers) and
immunes (specialists
exempt from certain duties). Some of these positions, mostly
administrative, were identical to those of the army
auxiliaries, while some (mostly
of Greek provenance) were peculiar to the fleet. An inscription
from the island of
Cos, dated to the
First Mithridatic War, provides us
with a list of a ship's officers, the
nautae: the
gubernator (
kybernētēs in Greek) was the helmsman
or pilot, the
celeusta (
keleustēs in Greek)
supervised the rowers, a
proreta (
prōreus in
Greek) was the look-out stationed at the bow, a
pentacontarchos was apparently a junior officer, and an
iatros (Lat.
medicus), the ship's doctor.
Each ship was commanded by a
trierarchus, whose exact relationship with
the ship's centurion is unclear. Squadrons, most likely of ten
ships each, were put under a
nauarchus, who often appears to have risen from
the ranks of the
trierarchi. The post of
nauarchus
archigubernes or
nauarchus princeps appeared later in
the Imperial period, and functioned either as a commander of
several squadrons or as an executive officer under a civilian
admiral, equivalent to the legionary
primus pilus. All these were professional
officers, usually
peregrini who had a status equal to an
auxiliary
centurion (and were thus
increasingly called
centuriones [classiarii] after ca. 70
AD). Until the reign of
Antoninus
Pius, their careers were restricted to the fleet. Only in the
3rd century were these officers equated to the legionary centurions
in status and pay, and could henceforth be transferred to a similar
position in the legions.
High Command
During the Republic, command of a fleet was given to a serving
magistrate or
promagistrate, usually of consular or
praetorian rank. In the Punic Wars for instance, one consul would
usually command the fleet, and another the army. In the subsequent
wars in the Eastern Mediterranean, praetors would assume the
command of the fleet. However, since these men were political
appointees, the actual handling of the fleets and of separate
squadrons was entrusted to their more experienced legates and
subordinates. It was therefore during the Punic Wars that the
separate position of
praefectus classis ("fleet prefect")
first appeared.
Initially subordinate to the magistrate in command, after the
fleet's reorganization by Augustus, the
praefectus classis
became
procurator positions in
charge of the permanent fleets. They were initially filled either
from among the
equestrian class,
or, especially under
Claudius, from the
Emperor's
freedmen, thus securing the
Emperor's control over the fleets. From the period of the
Flavian emperors, the status of the
praefectura was raised, and only equestrians with military
experience who had gone through the
militia equestri were
appointed. Nevertheless, the prefects remained largely political
appointees, and despite their military experience, usually in
command of army auxiliary units, their knowledge of naval matters
was minimal, forcing them to rely on their professional
subordinates. The difference in importance of the fleets they
commanded was also reflected by the rank and the corresponding pay
of the commanders. The prefects of the two praetorian fleets were
ranked
procuratores ducenarii, meaning they earned 200,000
sesterces annually, the prefects of the
Classis Germanica, the
Classis Britannica and
later the
Classis Pontica were
centenarii (i.e.
earning 100,000 sesterces), while the other fleet prefects were
sexagenarii (i.e. they received 60,000 sesterces).
Ship types

Model of a Roman
bireme
The generic Roman term for an oar-driven galley warship was "long
ship" (Latin:
navis longa, Greek:
naus makra), as
opposed to the sail-driven
navis oneraria, a merchant
vessel, or the minor craft (
navigia minora) like the
scapha.
The navy consisted of a wide variety of different classes of
warships, from heavy polyremes to light raiding and scouting
vessels. Unlike the rich Hellenistic
Successor
kingdoms in the East however, the Romans did not rely on heavy
warships, with
quinqueremes (Gk.
pentērēs), and to a lesser extent
quadriremes (Gk.
tetrērēs) and
triremes (Gk.
triērēs) providing the
mainstay of the Roman fleets from the Punic Wars to the end of the
Civil Wars. The heaviest vessel mentioned in Roman fleets during
this period was the
hexareme, of which a
few were used as flagships. Lighter vessels such as the
liburnians and the
hemiolia, both swift types invented by pirates,
were also adopted as scouts and light transport vessels.
During the final confrontation between Octavian and Mark Antony,
Octavian's fleet was composed of quinqueremes, together with some
"sixes" and many triremes and liburnians, while Antony, who had the
resources of
Ptolemaic Egypt to draw
upon, fielded a fleet also mostly composed of quinquiremes, but
with a sizeable complement of heavier warships, ranging from
"sixes" to "tens" (Gk.
dekērēs).Later historical tradition
made much of the prevalence of lighter and swifter vessels in
Octavian's fleet, with
Vegetius even
explicitly ascribing Octavian's victory to the liburnians.
This prominence of lighter craft in the historical narrative is
perhaps best explained in light of subsequent developments. After
Actium, the operational landscape had changed: for the remainder of
the Principate, no opponent existed to challenge Roman naval
hegemony, and no massed naval confrontation was likely. The tasks
at hand for the Roman navy were now the policing of the
Mediterranean waterways and the border rivers, suppression of
piracy, and escort duties for the grain shipments to Rome and for
imperial army expeditions. Lighter ships were far better suited to
these tasks, and after the reorganization of the fleet following
Actium, the largest ship kept in service was a hexareme, the
flagship of the
Classis
Misenensis. The bulk of the fleets was composed of the
lighter triremes and
liburnians
(Latin:
liburna, Greek:
libyrnis), with the
latter apparently providing the majority of the provincial fleets.
In time, the term "liburnian" came to mean "warship" in a generic
sense.
In addition, there were smaller oared vessels, such as the
navis actuaria, with 30 oars (15 on each bank), a ship
primarily used for transport in coastal and fluvial operations, for
which its shallow draught and flat keel were ideal. In late
Antiquity, it was succeeded in this role by the
navis lusoria ("playful ship"), which was
extensively used for patrols and raids by the legionary flotillas
in the Rhine and Danube frontiers.
Roman
ships were commonly named after gods (Mars, Iuppiter, Minerva, Isis),
mythological heroes (Hercules),
geographical maritime features such as Rhenus
or
Oceanus, concepts such as Harmony,
Peace, Loyalty, Victory (Concordia, Pax,
Fides, Victoria) or after important events
(Dacicus for the Trajan's
Dacian Wars or Salamina for the Battle of Salamis). They were
distinguished by their
figurehead
(
insigne or
parasemum), and, during the Civil
Wars at least, by the paint schemes on their turrets, which varied
according to each fleet.
Armament and tactics
In Classical Antiquity, a ship's main weapon was the
ram (
rostra, hence the name
navis
rostrata for a warship), which was used to sink or immobilize
an enemy ship by holing its hull. Its use however required a
skilled and experienced crew and a fast and agile ship like a
trireme or quinquireme. In the Hellenistic period, the larger
navies came instead to rely on greater vessels. This had several
advantages: the heavier and sturdier construction lessened the
effects of ramming, and the greater space and stability of the
vessels allowed the transport not only of more marines, but also
the placement of deck-mounted
ballistae and
catapults. Although the ram continued to be
a standard feature of all warships and ramming the standard mode of
attack, these developments transformed the role of a warship: from
the old "manned missile", designed to sink enemy ships, they became
mobile artillery platforms, which engaged in missile exchange and
boarding actions. The Romans in
particular, being initially inexperienced at sea combat, relied
upon boarding actions through the use of the
corvus.
Although it brought them some decisive victories, it was
discontinued because it tended to unbalance the quinqueremes in
high seas; two Roman fleets are recorded to have been lost during
storms in the
First Punic War.
During the Civil Wars, a number of technical innovations, which are
attributed to Agrippa, took place: the
harpago, a catapult-fired
grappling hook, which was used to clamp onto
an enemy ship, reel it in and board it, in a much more efficient
way than with the old
corvus, and the use of collapsible
fighting towers placed one apiece bow and stern, which were used to
provide the boarders with supporting fire.
Fleets
Principate period
After the end of the civil wars, Augustus reduced and reorganized
the Roman armed forces, including the navy.
A large part of the
fleet of Mark Antony was burned, and the rest was withdrawn to a
new base at Forum Iulii (modern Fréjus
), which
remained operative until the reign of Claudius. However, the bulk of
the fleet was soon subdivided into two praetorian fleets at
Misenum
and Ravenna
, supplemented by a growing number of minor ones in
the provinces, which were often created on an ad hoc basis
for specific campaigns. This organizational structure was
maintained almost unchanged until the 4th century.
Praetorian fleets
The two major fleets were stationed in Italy and acted as a central
naval reserve, directly available to the Emperor (hence the
designation "praetorian"). In the absence of any naval threat,
their duties mostly involved patrolling and transport duties. These
were not confined to the waters around Italy, but throughout the
Mediterranean. There is epigraphic evidence for the presence of
sailors of the two praetorian fleets at Piraeus and Syria. These
two fleets were:
Provincial fleets
The various provincial fleets were smaller than the praetorian
fleets and composed mostly of lighter vessels. Nevertheless, it was
these fleets that saw action, in full campaigns or raids on the
periphery of the Empire.
- The Classis Africana Commodiana Herculea, established
by Commodus in 186 to secure the grain
shipments (annona) from North
Africa to Italy, after the model of the Classis
Alexandrina.
- The
Classis Alexandrina, based in Alexandria
, it controlled the eastern part of the
Mediterranean sea. It was founded by Caesar Augustus around 30 BC, probably from
ships that fought at the battle of Actium
and manned mostly by Greeks of the Nile Delta
. Having supported emperor Vespasian in the civil war of 69, it was awarded of
the cognomen Augusta. The
fleet was responsible chiefly for the escort of the grain shipments
to Rome (and later Constantinople), and also apparently operated
the Nile river patrol.
- The
Classis Britannica,
established in 40 or 43 AD at Gesoriacum (Boulogne-sur-Mer
). It participated in the Roman invasion of Britain and the
subsequent campaigns in the island. The fleet was probably based at Rutupiae
(Richborough
) until 85 AD, when it was transferred to Dubris
(Dover
).
Other
bases were Portus
Lemanis
(Lympne
) and
Anderitum
(Pevensey
), while Gesoriacum on the Gallic coast likely
remained active. During the 2nd-3rd centuries, the fleet was
chiefly employed in transport of supplies and men across the
English Channel. The Classis Britannica disappears (at
least under that name) from the mid-3rd century, and the sites
occupied by it were soon incorporated into the Saxon Shore system.
- The Classis Germanica was established in 12 BC by
Drusus at Castra
Vetera. It controlled the Rhine river
, and was mainly a fluvial fleet, although it also
operated in the North
Sea
. It is noteworthy that the Romans' initial
lack of experience with the tides of the ocean left Drusus' fleet
stranded on the Zuyder Zee. After ca. 30 AD, the fleet moved its
main base to the castrum of
Alteburg, some 4 km south of Colonia
Agrippinensis (modern Cologne). Later granted the
honorifics Augusta Pia Fidelis Domitiana following the
suppresssion of the Revolt of
Saturninus.
- The Classis nova Libyca, first mentioned in 180, based
most likely at Ptolemais on the Cyrenaica.
- The Classis Mauretanica, based at Caesarea Mauretaniae
(modern Cherchell), it controlled the
African coasts of the western Mediterranean sea. Established on a
permanent basis after the raids by the Moors in the early
170s.
- The Classis Moesica was established sometime between
20 BC and 10 AD. It was based in Noviodunum
and controlled the Lower Danube from the Iron Gates
to the northwestern Black Sea
as far as the Crimea
.
The honorific Flavia, awarded to it and to the Classis
pannonica, may indicate its reorganization by Vespasian.
- The
Classis Pannonica, a fluvial fleet controlling the Upper
Danube from Castra Regina in Raetia (modern
Regensburg
) to Singidunum
in Moesia (modern Belgrade
). Its exact date of establishment is
unknown. Some trace it to Augustus' campaigns in Pannonia in ca. 35
BC, but it was certainly in existence by 45 AD. Its main base was
probably Taurunum (modern Zemun
) at the
confluence of the river Sava with the
Danube. Under the Flavian
dynasty, it received the cognomen
Flavia.
- The
Classis Perinthia, established after the annexation of
Thrace in 46 AD and based in Perinthus
. Probably based on the indigenous navy, it
operated in the Propontis
and the Thracian
coast. Probably united with the Classis Pontica at
a later stage.
- The Classis Pontica, founded in 64 AD from the
Pontic royal fleet, and based in Trapezus, although on occasion it was moved to
Byzantium (in ca. 70), and in 170, to
Cyzicus. This fleet was used to guard the southern
and eastern Black
Sea
, and the entrance of the Bosporus
. According to the historian Josephus, in the latter half of the 1st century, it
numbered 40 warships and 3,000 men.
- The Classis Syriaca, established probably under
Vespasian, and based in Seleucia Pieria (hence the alternative name
Classis Seleucena) in Syria. This fleet controlled
the Eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean sea
.
In
addition, there is significant archaeological evidence for naval
activity by certain legions, which in all likelihood operated their
own squadrons: legio XXII
Primigenia in the Upper Rhine
and Main
rivers,
legio X
Fretensis in the Jordan River
and the Sea of Galilee
, and several legionary squadrons in the Danube
frontier.
Dominate period
Our main source for the structure of the
late Roman military is the
Notitia Dignitatum, which
corresponds to the situation of the 390s for the Eastern Empire and
the 420s for the Western Empire. Notable in the
Notitia is
the large number of smaller squadrons that have been created, most
of these fluvial and of a local operational role.
Fleets of the Danube frontier
The
Classis Histrica, the successor of the Classis
Pannonica and the Classis Moesica was active in the
Upper Danube, with bases at Mursa
in
Pannonia II, Florentia in Pannonia Valeria, Arruntum in Pannonia I, Viminacium
in Moesia I and Aegetae in
Dacia ripensis. Smaller fleets are
also attested on the tributaries of the Danube: the Classis
Arlapensis et Maginensis (based at Arelape
and Comagena
) and the Classis Lauriacensis (based at
Lauriacum
) in Pannonia I, the Classis Stradensis et
Germensis, based at Margo in Moesia I, and the Classis
Ratianensis, in Dacia ripensis. The naval units were
complemented by port garrisons and marine units, drawn from the
army. In the Danube frontier these were:
- In
Pannonia II, the I Flavia Augusta (at Sirmium
) and the II Flavia are listed under their
prefects.
- In Moesia II, two units of sailors
(milites nauclarii) at Appiaria and Altinum.
Fleets in Western Europe
In the West, and in particular in
Gaul,
several fluvial fleets had been established. These came under the
command of the
magister peditum of the West, and
were:
- The
Classis Anderetianorum, based at Parisii (Paris
) and
operating in the Seine
and
Oise
rivers.
- The old praetorian fleets, the Classis Misenatis and
the Classis Ravennatis are still listed, albeit with no
distinction indicating any higher importance than the other
fleets.
- The Classis fluminis Rhodani, based at Arelate and operating in the Rhône River. It was complemented
with a marine detachment (milites muscularii) based at
Marseilles
.
- The
Classis Sambrica, based at Locus Quartensis (unknown
location) and operating in the Somme River
and the Channel. It came under the command
of the dux Beligae Secundae.
- The
Classis Venetum, based at Aquileia
and operating in the northern Adriatic Sea.
This
fleet may have been established to ensure communications with the
imperial capitals in the Po Valley
(Ravenna
and Milan
) and with
Dalmatia.
It is notable that, with the exception of the praetorian fleets
(whose retention in the list does not necessarily signify an active
status), the old fleets of the Principate are missing. The
Classis Britannica vanishes under that name after the
mid-3rd century; its remnants were later subsumed in the
Saxon Shore system. The Mauretanian and African
fleets had been disbanded or taken over by the
Vandals, while the absence of the
Classis
Germanica is most probably due to the collapse of the
Rhine frontier after the
Crossing of the Rhine by the
barbarians in winter 405-406.
Fleets in the Eastern Mediterranean
As far as
the East is concerned, we know from legal sources that the
Classis Alexandrina and the Classis Seleucena
continued to operate, and that in ca. 400 a Classis
Carpathia was detached from the Syrian fleet and based at the
Aegean island of Karpathos
. A fleet is known to have been stationed at
Constantinople itself, but no further details are known about
it.
Ports
Major Roman ports were:
See also
Notes
- Livy, AUC IX.30; XL.18,26; XLI.1
- Goldsworthy (2003), p. 34
- Goldsworthy (2000), p. 97
- Goldsworthy (2003), p. 34
- Polybius, The Histories, I.20-21
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 166
- Goldsworthy (2003), p. 38
- Goldsworthy (2003), p. 38
- Gruen (1984), p. 359.
- Connolly (1998), p. 273
- Appian, The
Mithridatic Wars, §92
- Starr (1989), p. 62
- Cassius Dio,
Historia Romana, XXXVI.22
- Plutarch, Life of Pompey, §24
- Appian, The
Mithridatic Wars, §93
- Goldsworthy (2007), p. 186
- Appian, The
Mithridatic Wars, §94
- Connolly (1998), p. 273
- Appian, The
Mithridatic Wars, §95- §96
- Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic Wars,
III.9
- Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic Wars,
III.13
- Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic Wars,
III.14
- Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic Wars,
III.15
- Tacitus, The Annals II.6
- Res Gestae, 26.4
- Webster & Elton (1998), pp. 160-161
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 161
- Tacitus, The Histories, II.12
- Tacitus, The Histories, II.67
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 164
- Tacitus, The Histories, IV.16
- Tacitus, The Histories, IV.79
- Tacitus, The Histories, V.23-25
- Tacitus, Agricola, 25; 29
- Tacitus, Agricola, 10
- Tacitus, Agricola, 24
- Lewis & Runyan (1985), p. 3
- Lewis & Runyan (1985), p. 4
- Casson (1991), p. 213
- Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Vita Gallienii, 13.6-7
- Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Vita Gallienii, 13.8-9
- Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Vita Divi
Claudii, 6.2-4; 8.1
- Zosimus,
Historia Nova, I.42-45
- Eutropius,
Breviarium, IX.21
- Panegyrici Latini, 8.6
- Panegyrici Latini, 8.12
- Panegyrici Latini, 6.5; 8.6-8
- Eutropius,
Breviarium 9.22; Aurelius Victor, Book of Caesars
39.42
- Treadgold (1997), p. 145
- MacGeorge (2002), pp. 306-307
- Lewis & Runyan (1985), pp. 4-8
- MacGeorge (2002), p. 307
- Casson (1991), p. 188
- Starr (1960), p. 75 Table 1
- Starr (1960), p. 39
- Webster & Elton (1998), pp. 165-166
- Starr (1960), pp. 42-43
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 166
- Wesch-Klein (1998), p. 25
- Rodgers (1976), p. 60
- Livy, AUC XXVI.48; XXXVI.42
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 165
- A Companion to the Roman Army, p. 210
- Pflaum, H.G. (1950). Les procurateurs équestres sous
le Haut-Empire romain, pp. 50-53
- Cassius Dio,
Historia Romana, L.23.2
- Plutarch,
Antony, 62
- Vegetius,
De Re
Militari, IV.33
- Casson (1995), p. 141
- Connolly (1998), p. 273
- Casson (1995), pp. 357-358; Casson (1991), pp. 190-191
- Warry (2004), p. 183
- Warry (2004), p. 98
- Warry (2004), p. 118
- Appian, The Civil
Wars, V.106 & V.118
- Warry (2004), pp. 182-183
- Tacitus, The Annals, IV.5; Strabo, Geography, IV.1.9
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 158
- Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Vita Commodi, 17.7
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 159
- Cleere (1977), pp. 16; 18-19
- Cleere (1977), p. 19
- Cleere (1977), p. 16
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 160
- Köln-Alteburg at livius.org
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 162
- Webster & Elton (1998), pp. 162-165
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 163
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 164
- Starr (1989), p. 76
- Tacitus, The Histories, II.83; III.47
- Starr (1989), p. 77
- Webster & Elton (1998), p. 165
- Josephus, The Jewish War, II.16.4
- Codex Theodosianus, X.23.1
- Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum Mainz:
The Fleets and Roman Border Policy
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Occ., XXXII.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Occ., XXXIII.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Occ., XXXIV.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Orient., XLI.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Orient., XLII.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Orient., XL.
- musculus (meaning "small mouse") was a kind of small
ship
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Orient., XXXIX.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Occ., XLII.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Pars Occ., XXXVIII.
- Lewis & Runyan (1985), p. 6
- Classis Britannica at
RomanBritain.org
- Codex Justinianus, XI.2.4
- Codex Justinianus, XI.13.1
- Codex Theodosianus, XIII.5.32
- Casson (1991), p. 213
References
External links