Introduction
This special issue of the European Journal of Archaeology discusses aspects of animal husbandry in a number of provinces of the Western Roman Empire. It aims to provide a synthesis of animal production before, during, and after the Roman conquest in order to evaluate to what extent the Roman socio-political system caused parallel changes across the Empire. This review is today possible thanks to a combination of factors: over the last twenty years, there has been a significant increase in the number of excavations across Europe and, for many of them, animal remains have been recovered, studied, and published. This now includes south-western Europe, which previously suffered from a dearth of excavations and published zooarchaeological studies of Iron Age and Roman date (e.g. King, Reference King1999). In addition, current technological opportunities have facilitated the creation of an International Council of Archaeozoology working group on the zooarchaeology of the Roman Empire (ICAZ-RPWG), now counting nearly one hundred members from around the world.
The first meeting of the working group was held at the University of Sheffield in November 2014 and the articles included in this issue are a selection of the papers delivered at that meeting.
Other than a useful resource for specialists, we want this collection to highlight the importance of zooarchaeology for the understanding of the human past, and Roman life in particular. This will be a valuable way to combine zooarchaeology with other lines of archaeological evidence, an integrated approach that has often been neglected. In the past fifteen years, some syntheses of Roman archaeology have paid greater attention to the animal bone evidence than in the past (e.g. Ward-Perkins, Reference Ward-Perkins2005; Cool, Reference Cool2006; Todd, Reference Todd2007). There is, however, still much ground to cover and this journal issue aims to help such endeavour.
Beyond ‘Romanization’: How Economy and Culture Shape Production
There has been extensive debate about the implications of the Roman conquest across the Empire, in different provinces, and from different perspectives (e.g. Millett, Reference Millett1990; Pearce, Reference Pearce, Pearce, Millett and Struck2000; Keay & Terrenato, Reference Keay and Terrenato2001; Purcell, Reference Purcell2003; Revell, Reference Revell2005; Ward-Perkins, Reference Ward-Perkins2005; Cool, Reference Cool2006; Todd, Reference Todd2007). The term often used to indicate such cultural diffusion is ‘Romanization’. The appropriateness of such an expression has been discussed intensively (e.g. Webster & Cooper, Reference Webster and Cooper1996; Woolf, Reference Woolf2014 with references), but here we are not going to pursue such debate further. We will rather focus on the actual evidence for change and continuity and the reasons behind them. We shall therefore first describe the general characteristics of animal husbandry in pre-Roman times in different territories in order to assess whether any change occurred after the Roman conquest.
Changes in animal production may occur at different levels and can affect the type of animals that were exploited, the size of the livestock, and the products used (e.g. traction, wool, meat). Traditionally, these factors have been linked to the ecological conditions of different provinces as well as to their cultural preferences (e.g. Barker, Reference Barker and Higgs1975; Crabtree, Reference Crabtree, Crabtree and Ryan1991; King, Reference King1999). There is a clear connection between the two, as cultural traditions are not generated by chance, but developed in conjunction with the need to interact with the environment efficiently and in a sustainable way.
Animal Production in Roman Times: Changes and Continuities
Multiple works demonstrate that cattle frequencies decreased during the first millennium bc in various territories across western Europe. From north to south, this is the case in Denmark and northern Germany (e.g. Randsborg, Reference Randsborg, Barker and Gamble1985), Britain (e.g. Hambleton, Reference Hambleton1999; Albarella, Reference Albarella, Haselgrove and Moore2007), northern France (e.g. Méniel, Reference Méniel1984), southern France (e.g. Columeau, Reference Columeau2002), and north-eastern Spain (e.g. Albizuri et al., Reference Albizuri, Nieto and Valenzuela2010). In central Italy, a decrease in cattle frequencies is attested between the Middle to Recent Bronze Age and the Final Bronze Age (de Grossi Mazzorin, Reference de Grossi Mazzorin and Fritzell2002; see Figure 1). In most cases, this coincides in time with the spread of fortifications and territoriality.
In contrast, there was a general increase in cattle and pig frequencies in the conquered territories across the Western Roman Empire and some adjacent territories (e.g. King, Reference King, Blagg and King1984; Randsborg, Reference Randsborg, Barker and Gamble1985; Lauwerier, Reference Lauwerier1988; Lepetz, Reference Lepetz, Bayard and Collart1996; Peters, Reference Peters1998; Forest, Reference Forest, Raynaud, Sablayrolles and Trément2007; Valenzuela-Oliver et al., Reference Valenzuela-Oliver, Alcover, Cau, Groot, Lentjes and Zeiler2013; Pigière, Reference Pigière, Demanet and Vilvorder2015; see also articles in this issue). For Roman times, it may be claimed that these differences were related to the cultural tradition and socio-political system that came with the Roman conquest, which could have led to different requirements for animal production and preferences in meat diet (e.g. Peters, Reference Peters1998; King, Reference King1999; Albarella, Reference Albarella, Haselgrove and Moore2007). A global analysis of livestock proportions across the Roman Empire (King, Reference King1999), however, revealed that the picture was not homogeneous. In particular, Italy had an unusually high percentage of pig remains, which was not found in any other region of the Empire. Therefore, multiple cultural traditions co-existed in the Empire, and various influences—not all originating in Italy—spread at different times. An example for this could be the spread of the ‘cattle pattern’ (characteristic of northern Gaul and Germany; King, Reference King, Blagg and King1984) to Britain.
The situation for the territories conquered in Republican times in Mediterranean Europe (e.g. southern Gaul and the Iberian Peninsula) is more uncertain, as the available data are still scarce. In these regions, Roman troops would mainly be represented by people coming from Italy. A higher frequency of pig remains in the diet of the Roman soldiers may therefore be expected, although a certain adaptation to available resources should be factored in (King, Reference King, Blagg and King1984). Roman Italy saw an increase in pig consumption in the Republican period, though the phenomenon is far more pronounced in later Imperial times (Figure 1).
The frequency of cattle and pig remains generally increased in both Spain and southern France in Roman times (e.g. Renaud, Reference Renaud2012; Colominas, Reference Colominas2013), but this was not a direct consequence of the Roman conquest. The increase in pig remains is already attested in faunal assemblages dated from the third century bc (before the conquest started) in contexts corresponding to the Iberian and Ligurian cultures (Colomer & Gardeisen, Reference Colomer and Gardeisen1992; Gardeisen, Reference Gardeisen2003; Iborra, Reference Iborra2004; Valenzuela-Lamas, Reference Valenzuela-Lamas2008; Albizuri et al., Reference Albizuri, Nieto and Valenzuela2010; Nieto, Reference Nieto2012; see Figure 1). Was this an early Italic influence, parallel to the spread of Campanian A pottery in these regions during the fourth and, especially, the third century bc? Or could it be related to the developing urbanization of the Late Iron Age in these areas? Pigs are better suited to urban contexts than herbivores, which require more open land. The current body of data makes it difficult to identify the exact causes, but it is likely that different factors contributed to the currently observed pattern.
In the case of Roman Spain, the faunal record of Republican Valentia and Baetulo—two colonies of veterans built ex-novo in Hispania Citerior—may reflect the fact that Roman soldiers from Italy introduced their high pork diet. The faunal studies of these cities (Colominas, Reference Colominas2013; Iborra, Reference Iborra2017) revealed that pigs outnumbered the other domestic species, which clearly contrasts with indigenous Iberian sites. This, however, did not become a general pattern across the Iberian Peninsula, where sheep and goats (and cattle in the North) continued to be the main livestock (Figure 1; see also Colominas et al., this issue). Consequently, and as attested in other provinces, pigs are found to predominate only in some villae and some urban centres or military sites (e.g. Deschler-Erb et al., Reference Deschler-Erb, Schibler, Hüster Plogmann, Flutsch, Niffeler and Rossi2002; Grant, Reference Grant and Todd2007; Bernigaud et al., Reference Bernigaud, Ouzoulias, Lepetz, Wiethold, Zech-Matterne, Séguier, Reddé and Reddé2016). The suitability of pigs for urban contexts could have been an influence in some cases, but the predominance of pig remains in villae is likely to be related to Roman influence and taste.
Along with changes, we also see notable examples of continuity across the Empire, especially in rural sites and secondary cities. Cattle continued to be the main species in many sites of the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and Switzerland (e.g. Lauwerier, Reference Lauwerier1988; Peters, Reference Peters1998; Groot & Deschler-Erb, Reference Groot and Deschler-Erb2015; see also Trixl et al., Pigière, Groot, and Deschler-Erb, this issue), and caprines maintained their predominance on rural sites in Britain, southern France, and north-eastern Spain (e.g. Albarella et al., Reference Albarella, Johnstone and Vickers2008; Rizzetto et al., and Colominas et al., this issue). In the westernmost part of the Empire (present-day Portugal) no major changes in animal husbandry and meat diet have been documented (e.g. Davis, Reference Davis2006; Valenzuela-Lamas & Fabião, Reference Valenzuela-Lamas, Fabião and de Deus2012).
Consequently, a mixture of Italic influences and assimilation to pre-Roman traditions occurred across the Western Roman Empire. We may relate the increase in pig husbandry to the developing urbanization that took place in the Late Iron Age and the consolidation of urban centres in Roman times, but the influence of Roman culture from Italy should not be neglected, and it is particularly marked in villae across the Empire (e.g. Fishbourne palace in Britain (Grant, Reference Grant and Todd2007), and the examples in Spain mentioned above). There are other examples that illustrate how meat diet was diverse across the Empire and travelled with people as part of their cultural identity. These include the case of the ‘cattle pattern’ in Britain mentioned earlier (King, Reference King, Blagg and King1984) and a number of military sites across the Empire (e.g. Kaiseraugst camp in Switzerland, probably with soldiers coming from Spain; see Deschler-Erb, this issue).
Cultural transmission, however, did not occur only according to a core-periphery model (i.e. Rome versus the rest of the Empire), and different areas of the Empire certainly influenced each other. The increase of cattle frequencies in early-conquered territories like Iberia and southern France after the Roman conquest probably reflects changes linked with production, as cattle represent a small proportion of Italian Republican faunal assemblages (Figure 1).
Ecology has also been claimed as one of the key factors influencing animal husbandry regimes (e.g. Barker, Reference Barker1985; Davis, Reference Davis1987; among many others). Indeed, as previous works demonstrate, cattle frequencies were generally higher in areas with higher annual rainfall and better pastures (e.g. King, Reference King1999; see also articles in this issue). The existence of common husbandry patterns in the Iron Age, in areas that were significantly different from a cultural and ecological point of view, however, raises the question of the extent to which culture, society, and diet are interrelated, perhaps beyond ecology. As an example of this, southern Britain and north-eastern Spain have different ecological conditions, but experienced similar changes in animal husbandry before and after the Roman conquest (Figure 1). Cattle frequency decreased in the course of the first millennium bc but went up again after the Roman conquest (e.g. King, Reference King, Blagg and King1984; Hambleton, Reference Hambleton1999; Albarella, Reference Albarella, Haselgrove and Moore2007; Albizuri et al., Reference Albizuri, Nieto and Valenzuela2010; Colominas, Reference Colominas2013). In contrast, some regions with fairly similar climatic conditions, such as north-eastern Spain and central Italy, had very different animal production systems both in the Iron Age and in Roman times (Figure 1; de Grossi Mazzorin, Reference de Grossi Mazzorin and Fritzell2002; Trentacoste, Reference Trentacoste2016). The main point Iron Age Britain and north-eastern Spain have in common is the development of chiefdoms and early states during the first millennium bc, in which fortified settlements and an elite of warriors clearly emerged in the archaeological record (e.g. Cunliffe, Reference Cunliffe, Cunliffe and Rowley1976; Sanmartí, Reference Sanmartí2004). The main difference between north-eastern Spain and northern-central Italy was the degree of urbanization and social complexity, which was more highly developed in Italy (e.g. Barker & Gamble, Reference Barker, Gamble, Barker and Gamble1985; Christie, Reference Christie1995; Cifani, Reference Cifani2002). The evidence therefore suggests that socio-political systems contributed to shape animal husbandry production.
Large Roman Cattle: Where and Why?
Traditionally, large size has been used as a key criterion for assessing productivity in animal husbandry (e.g. Varro's de Re Rustica; Columella's de Re Rustica; Markham, Reference Markham1648). Larger size means that more labour force and more meat (also more milk and other products) can be obtained per animal. Therefore, large size is seen as a desirable characteristic that farmers may want to achieve and maintain. Husbandry books from the nineteenth century (Loudon, Reference Loudon1839), however, also inform us that large animals were more demanding of fodder and water, and therefore more difficult to maintain. They advise that small animals can be better suited in harsher environments and when available labour is scarce. Consequently, a reduction in the size of the animals could indicate that conditions for large animals were unsuitable.
Many zooarchaeological studies demonstrate that animal size, particularly in cattle, decreased across Europe from the Neolithic to the Iron Age (e.g. Matolcsi, Reference Matolcsi1970; Bökönyi, Reference Bökönyi1974; Altuna, Reference Altuna1980; Ijzereef et al., Reference Ijzereef, van Regteren Altena and Kuijper1981; Méniel, Reference Méniel1984; Vigne, Reference Vigne1988; Valenzuela-Oliver et al., Reference Valenzuela-Oliver, Alcover, Cau, Groot, Lentjes and Zeiler2013). In Roman times, animal size (most notably cattle) increased only in the conquered territories (e.g. Teichert, Reference Teichert, Grigson and Clutton-Brock1984; Lauwerier, Reference Lauwerier1988; Audoin-Rouzeau, Reference Audoin-Rouzeau1991; Lepetz, Reference Lepetz, Bayard and Collart1996; Peters, Reference Peters1998; Breuer et al., Reference Breuer, Rehazek and Stopp1999; Forest & Rodet-Belarbi, Reference Forest and Rodet-Belarbi2002; see also Colominas et al., Frémondeau et al., Groot, Pigière, Rizzetto et al., this issue). Yet, this tendency was not ubiquitous, and cattle size did not change in some areas of Raetia (Trixl et al., this issue) and southern Portugal (Davis, Reference Davis2006).
Northern and central Italy do, however, show a different trend (Figure 2). In these areas, cattle size decreased from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age, but it increased in the Iron Age, coinciding with the beginning of the Etruscan culture and the installation of some Greek colonies in Latium and Campania (e.g. Riedel, Reference Riedel1994; de Grossi Mazzorin, Reference de Grossi Mazzorin and Christie1995; de Grossi Mazzorin & Riedel, Reference de Grossi Mazzorin, Riedel, Bernabò Brea, Cardarelli and Cremaschi1997; Riedel et al., Reference Riedel, Tasca, Tecchiati, Malerba and Visentini2006).
The questions that arise are: Why did these changes in size occur in areas that were so different in climate, environment, and culture? Why did cattle increase in size in Italy in the early first millennium bc, when it was decreasing in other regions?
For the first millennium bc, this decrease in size contrasts with the significant improvements in agriculture and food processing that occurred in this period (e.g. spread of rotation of crops and spring cereals, iron ploughs, rotary querns; e.g. Jäger & Lozek, Reference Jäger, Lozek and Harding1982; Sherratt, Reference Sherratt1993; Van der Veen & O'Connor, Reference Van der Veen, O'Connor and Bayley1998; Alonso, Reference Alonso1999; López et al., Reference López, Valenzuela, Sanmartí, Valenzuela-Lamas, Padrós, Belarte and Sanmartí2011). Hypotheses to explain this phenomenon include that small animals would be better suited and more manageable for ploughing (e.g. Clutton-Brock, Reference Clutton-Brock1981) and that there was an increase in the proportion of reproductive sub-adults in the population (Manning et al., Reference Manning, Timpson, Shennan and Crema2015). It is difficult to explain the constant decrease of cattle size up to the Bronze and the Iron Age in many regions across western Europe based on these hypotheses. After an initial size decrease, a suitable size for ploughing would probably have been achieved, and it is difficult to justify, on the basis of this premise, why Roman cattle were as large as Neolithic cattle and still perfectly suited for ploughing (Figure 2). Regarding mortality profiles, a number of studies indicate that a higher emphasis was placed on ‘secondary products’ in the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age and, even more, in the Iron Age. This resulted in cattle being slaughtered at an older age (e.g. Bogucki, Reference Bogucki, Crabtree, Campana and Ryan1989; Albizuri et al., Reference Albizuri, Alonso, Cachero, Valenzuela-Lamas, Padrós, Belarte and Sanmartí2011; Sykes, Reference Sykes2014; Valenzuela-Lamas, Reference Valenzuela-Lamas, Kallala, Sanmartí and Belarte2016). Therefore, the mortality profiles do not support an increase in the proportion of reproductive sub-adults in cattle populations, as more adults would be alive for a longer period to reproduce.
Several studies suggest that animal size is highly related to nourishment regimes (e.g. Hammond, Reference Hammond1960; Widdowson & Lister, Reference Widdowson, Lister, Pearson and Dutson1991). Other factors that may lead to size change include genetic diversity and flow: interbreeding and increased homozygosity leads to significant decreases in size in captive cattle (e.g. Baker et al., Reference Baker, Mead and Regan1945; Sutherland & Lush, Reference Sutherland and Lush1962) and it also happens in humans (McQuillan et al., Reference McQuillan, Eklund and Pirastu2012; Joshi et al., Reference Joshi, Esko and Mattsson2015). More critically, interbreeding also entails a decrease in milk, fat, and protein yields in cattle, as well as decreased fertility (Pryce et al., Reference Pryce, Haile-Mariam, Goddard and Hayes2014).
In the Iron Age, either the improvements in agriculture did not result in better nourishment of livestock in many regions, and/or there was a significant reduction in the genetic diversity at a local level, perhaps as a consequence of the territorialization that characterizes this period. The Roman Empire—with the huge volume of trade that developed between regions—changed this picture completely. The larger scale economic structure entailed a higher degree of specialization, thus allowing the farmers to adapt their production to the crops and animals better suited to the local conditions, rely on trade for other supplies, and re-invest the revenues from the trade of their own products (Ward-Perkins, Reference Ward-Perkins2005). In addition, the political superstructure of the Empire made it possible to build and maintain substantial public facilities, such as aqueducts, roads, and ports, which enhanced productivity and connectivity even further.
Strontium isotope analysis from cattle teeth demonstrates that not only soldiers, amphorae, and crops travelled within the Roman network of roads and maritime trade, but also animals (Minniti et al., Reference Minniti, Valenzuela-Lamas, Evans and Albarella2014). Consequently, enhanced genetic flow and better nourishment became possible in Roman times, in contrast with previous and later periods. Yet, not all animals in every province experienced growth at the same time and to the same extent (see Frémondeau et al., this issue), and some livestock within the Empire remained small (e.g. in the Roman-Mediterranean milieu in Raetia, see Trixl et al., this issue). Further investigations are needed to establish to what extent small animals and local breeds could have been elements of cultural identity and resistance (as suggested by Classical sources, such as Tacitus, Germania, V). Alternatively, or additionally, these small animals may have been better suited to the harsh environmental conditions and the kind of small-scale exploitation that persisted in some of the conquered territories.
Culture and Politics: The Roman Empire and Changes in Economy, Territories, and Mobility
As mentioned earlier, the Bronze and the Iron Ages are periods characterized by increased social differentiation and progressive territoriality. This is perceivable in the archaeological record by the expansion of fortifications across Europe (e.g. Johnson & Earle, Reference Johnson and Earle1987; Py, Reference Py1993; Brun, Reference Brun, Arnold and Gibson1995; Collis, Reference Collis2003; Sanmartí, Reference Sanmartí2004). Likewise, the spread of warrior equipment and weapons suggests that this process entailed a significant increase of warfare and probably involved the protection of boundaries between territories.
In the Iron Age, ploughing with iron ploughshares made it possible to cultivate new fields. The expansion of agriculture resulted in a reduction of the surface devoted to pasture. The archaeological record also suggests a notable demographic increase, after the introduction of iron technologies (e.g. Van der Veen & O'Connor, Reference Van der Veen, O'Connor and Bayley1998; Alonso, Reference Alonso1999; López et al., Reference López, Valenzuela, Sanmartí, Valenzuela-Lamas, Padrós, Belarte and Sanmartí2011). In this context of increased territoriality and expansion of agriculture, it is reasonable to think that cattle were the most difficult animals to herd, as they are the most demanding in water and fresh pasture, and require the best soils, where tall grass can grow. Additionally, land exploitation probably took place on a small scale, therefore reducing the need for large animals. Interbreeding would have significantly increased, leading to a decrease in animal size and productivity.
Consequently, we may explain cattle frequency and size decreases in the first millennium bc through a combination of factors:
-
• Expansion of agriculture and demographic growth, with subsequent reduction of the areas of pasture in the hinterland of villages and emerging urban centres;
-
• Restriction of movement, consequent to the creation of military-protected boundaries;
-
• Reduced mobility of livestock, which entailed higher ratios of interbreeding.
This reduced mobility dramatically changed in Roman times. The creation of roads and the expansion of maritime trade promoted mobility within the Empire and made long-distance travelling easier and safer. In addition, larger animals, especially cattle, were better suited to the Roman economy. Commerce helped farmers to focus on crops for which local conditions were appropriate and to invest the profit obtained through trade in technical improvements.
Yet, regional differences persisted, and animal husbandry and meat diet changed to various degrees in different regions. Most contributors to this special issue highlight that changes were not homogeneous within named provinciae or neighbouring regions, and that changes did not affect all sites in the same way. Urban sites, villae, and military sites across the Empire display a higher degree of change, whereas rural sites more often retained forms of production that were closer to those of the Iron Age.
Significant variation exists between sites located in the same region and, more clearly, between regions. Despite substantial changes, some Iron Age traditions survived in the Roman period. This indicates that it was not Roman policy to obliterate the underlying local economies; rather, the Roman regime tried to integrate them, making allowances for the economic, environmental, and social needs of each region. Individuals and communities travelling across the Empire maintained some of their dietary preferences and, in some cases, they are recognizable in the archaeological record (e.g. in the colonies of veteran soldiers in Valentia and Baetulo in Hispania, the Kaiseraugst camp in Germany, or Fishbourne palace in Britain, all mentioned earlier).
The general questions discussed here and the more detailed analyses that form this special issue show that zooarchaeology represents a valuable tool to recognize cultural preferences and assess the impact of socio-political and economic systems on animal husbandry. The territoriality that characterizes the first millennium bc had a significant effect on production, resulting in a decrease in cattle size and frequencies. Nevertheless, not all the regions reacted in the same way. Regional communities that focused their animal production on pigs rather than herbivores—i.e. northern Gaul and northern-central Italy—implemented more sustainable husbandry practices over time, as they reduced the competition between animals and cultivated land. In all conquered territories, the Romans built on the existing production systems and brought new dietary traditions and some exogenous species. Overall, the Romans expanded the market economy to unprecedented levels. After the collapse of long-distance trade at the end of the Western Roman Empire, most regions developed again an un-specialized animal husbandry style, bearing some similarities with that of the Iron Age (see, e.g., Grau-Sologestoa, Reference Grau-Sologestoa2015; Rizzetto et al., this issue). By bringing together studies carried out in different regions, this special issue highlights cases of both change and continuity across the Empire, and the (uneven) impact of the market economy on animal husbandry and dietary practices in climatically different regions.
Acknowledgements
The articles published in this issue originate, with changes, from the inaugural meeting of the ICAZ working group on the zooarchaeology of the Roman period, which we organized in Sheffield (UK) in November 2014 with the support of the Institut Européen d'Histoire et des Cultures de l'Alimentation (IEHCA). We would like to thank all contributors to this issue as well as those who delivered papers at the conference. We also thank the European Commission for financial support with the IEF-Marie Curie Fellowship IEF2010/130428, as part of which some of the research and the organization of the conference was undertaken. Finally, we are grateful to the editorial board of the European Journal of Archaeology for accepting our publication proposal and to the editor, Robin Skeates, for guidance through the process and for his patience.