The territory of Rome’s territory is greater …
Years: 300BCE - 300BCE
The territory of Rome’s territory is greater than that of the Etruscans by around 300, when the city emerges as the leader of the Latin League, although Carthaginian expansion has limited the two powers to mainland Italy.
Rome’s plebeians, having gradually succeeded in their lengthy fight for equality with the patricians, are by this time eligible to hold all major political and religious posts.
The early history of the legion, the basic combat unit of the ancient Roman army, is obscure, but by this date it has received its traditional form: a three thousand to six thousand-man division, consisting primarily of heavy infantry (hoplites), supported by light infantry (velites), and sometimes by cavalry.
The hoplites, drawn up in three lines, consist of the hastati (youngest men) in the first, the principes (seasoned troops) in the second, and the triarii (oldest men) behind them, reinforced by velites.
Each of these lines is divided into ten maniples, consisting of two centuries (sixty to eighty men per century) each.
The cohort is composed of one maniple from each line, plus the support forces.
