Rome in Smiths Bible Dictionary
the famous capital of the ancient world, is situated on the
Tiber at a distance of about 15 miles from its mouth. The
"seven hills," Re 17:9 which formed the nucleus of the
ancient city stand on the left bank. On the opposite side of
the river rises the far higher side of the Janiculum. Here
from very early times was a fortress with a suburb beneath
it extending to the river. Modern Rome lies to the north of
the ancient city, covering with its principal portion the
plain to the north of the seven hills, once known as the
Campus Martius, and on the opposite bank extending over the
low ground beneath the Vatican to the north of the ancient
Janiculum. Rome is not mentioned in the Bible except in the
books of Maccabees and in three books of the New Testament,
viz., the Acts, the Epistle to the Romans and the Second
Epistle to Timothy.
1. Jewish inhabitants. the conquests of Pompey seem
to have given rise to the first settlement of Jews at Rome.
The Jewish king Aristobulus and his son formed part of
Pompey's triumph, and many Jewish captives and immigrants
were brought to Rome at that time. A special district was
assigned to them, not on the site of the modern Ghetto,
between the Capitol and the island of the Tiber, but across
the Tiber. Many of these Jews were made freedmen. Julius
Caesar showed them some kindness; they were favored also by
Augustus, and by Tiberius during the latter part of his
reign. It is chiefly in connection with St. Paul's history
that Rome comes before us in the Bible. In illustration of
that history it may be useful to give some account of Rome
in the time of Nero, the "Caesar" to whom St. Paul appealed,
and in whose reign he suffered martyrdom.
2. The city in Paul's time. --The city at that time
must be imagined as a large and irregular mass of buildings
unprotected by an outer wall. It had long outgrown the old
Servian wall; but the limits of the suburbs cannot be
exactly defined. Neither the nature of the buildings nor the
configuration of the ground was such as to give a striking
appearance to the city viewed from without. "Ancient Rome
had neither cupola nor camyanile," and the hills, never
lofty or imposing, would present, when covered with the
buildings and streets of a huge city, a confused appearance
like the hills of modern London, to which they have
sometimes been compared. The visit of St. Paul lies between
two famous epochs in the history of the city, viz, its
restoration by Augustus and its restoration by Nero. The
boast of Augustus is well known, "that he found the city of
brick, and left it of marble." Some parts of the city,
especially the Forum and Campus Martius, must have presented
a magnificent appearance, of which Niebur's "Lectures on
Roman History," ii. 177, will give a general idea; but many
of the principal buildings which attract the attention of
modern travellers in ancient Rome were not yet built. The
streets were generally narrow and winding, flanked by
densely crowded lodging-houses (insulae) of enormous height.
Augustus found it necessary to limit their height to 70
feet. St, Paul's first visit to Rome took place before the
Neronian conflagration but even after the restoration of the
city which followed upon that event, many of the old evils
continued. The population of the city has been variously
estimated. Probably Gibbon's estimate of 1,200,000 is
nearest to the truth. One half of the population consisted,
in all probability, of slaves. The larger part of the
remainder consisted of pauper citizens supported in idleness
by the miserable system of public gratuities. There appears
to have been no middle class, and no free industrial
population. Side by side with the wretched classes just
mentioned...
Read More about Rome in Smiths Bible Dictionary