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Encyclopedia Britannica



GROMATICI (from groma or gruma, a surveyor's pole)

This article appears in Volume V12, Page 612 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GRA-GUI
GROMATICI (from groma or gruma, a surveyor's pole) , or Agrimensores, the name for land-surveyors amongst the Romans. The art of surveying was probably at first in the hands of the augurs, by whom it was exercised in all cases where the demarcation of a templum (any consecrated space) was necessary. Thus, the boundaries of Rome itself, of colonies and camps, were all marked out in accordance with the rules of augural procedure. The first professional surveyor mentioned is L. Decidius Saxa, who was employed by Antony in the measurement of camps (Cicero, Philippics, xi. 12, xiv. 10). During the empire their number and reputation increased. The distribution of land amongst the veterans, the increase, in the number of military colonies, the settlement of Italian peasants in the provinces, the general survey of the empire under
Augustus
 , the separation of private and state domains, led to the
establishment
  of a recognized professional
corporation
  of surveyors. During later times they were in receipt of large salaries, and in some cases were even honoured with the title clarissimus. Their duties were not merely geometrical or mathematical, but required legal knowledge for consultations or the settlement of disputes. This led to the institution of
special
  schools for the training of surveyors and a
special
  literature, which lasted from the 1st to the 6th century A.D. The earliest of the gromatic writers was Frontinus (q.v.), whose De agrorum qualitate, dealing with the legal aspect of the art, was the subject of a commentary by Aggenus Urbicus, a Christian schoolmaster. Under Trajan a certain Balbus, who had accompanied the emperor on his
Dacian campaign, wrote a still extant
manual
  of geometry for land surveyors (Expositio et ratio omnium formarum or mensurarum, probably after a Greek
original
  by Hero), dedicated to a certain Celsus who had invented an improvement in a gromatic instrument (perhaps the dioptra, resembling the modern theodolite); for the treatises of Hyginus see that name. Somewhat later than Trajan was Siculus Flaccus (De condicionibus agrorum, extant), while the most curious treatise on the subject, written in barbarous Latin and entitled Casae litterarum (long a school textbook) is the work of a certain Innocentius (4th5th century). It is doubtful whether Boetius is the author of the treatises attributed to him. The Gromatici veteres also contains extracts from official registers (probably belonging to the 5th century) of colonial and other land surveys, lists and descriptions of boundary stones, and extracts from the Theodosian Codex. According to Mommsen, the collection had its origin during the 5th century in the office of a vicarius (diocesan
governor
 ) of Rome, who had a number of surveyors under him. The surveyors were known by various names: decempedator (with reference to the instrument used); finitor, metator or mensor castrorum in republican times; togati Augustorum as imperial civil officials; professor, auctor as professional instructors.
The best edition of the Gromatici is by C. Lachmann and others (1848) with supplementary volume, Die Schriften der romischen Feldmesser (1852); see also B. G. Niebuhr, Roman History, ii., appendix (Eng. trans.), who first revived
interest
  in the subject; M. Cantor, Die romischen Agrimensoren (
Leipzig
 , 1875) ; P. de Tissot, La Condition des Agrimensores clans l'ancienne Rome (1879); G. Rossi, Groma e squadro (Turin, 1877) ; articles by F. Hultsch in Ersch and Gruber's Allgem. Encyklopadie, and by G.
Humbert
  in Daremberg and Saglio's Dictionnaire des antiquites; Teuffel-Schwabe, Hist. of Roman Literature, 58.


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