Olisipo


Municipium Cives Romanorum Felicitas Julia Olisipo was the ancient name of modern-day Lisbon while part of the Roman Empire.

Background

During the Punic wars, after the defeat of Hannibal the Romans decided to deprive Carthage of its most valuable possession, Hispania. After the defeat of the Carthaginians by Scipio Africanus in eastern Hispania, the pacification of western Hispania was led by Consul Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus. He obtained the alliance of Olisipo by integrating it into the Roman Republic in 138 BC.
Between 31 BC and 27 BC the city became a Municipium. Local authorities were granted self-rule over a territory that extended. Exempt from taxes, its citizens were given the privileges of Roman citizenship, and the city was integrated within the Roman province of Lusitania. Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus also fortified the city, building city walls as a defence against Lusitanian raids and rebellions.
Among the majority of Latin speakers lived a large minority of Greek traders and slaves.
Lisbon's name was written Ulyssippo in Latin by the geographer Pomponius Mela. The city population is estimated to have been around 30,000 at the time.
Earthquakes were documented in 60 BC, several between 47 and 44 BC, several in 33 AD, and a strong quake in 382 AD, but the exact amount of damage to the city is unknown.

The city

Buildings

During the time of Augustus the Romans built a large theatre.
The galleries underneath the current Rua da Prata date from 20–35 AD; they were rebuilt in 330 AD.
The Thermae Cassiorum were built in 44 AD. The building was renovated in 336 AD.
Several temples were built in the city, dedicated to Jupiter, Concordia, Livia, Diana or Minerva, Cybele, Tethys and Phrygiae, to the Imperial Cult and to Vestal Virgins.
A large necropolis from the 1st–4th centuries AD existed under Praça da Figueira and it is known that a large forum and an aqueduct were built.
A circus and hippodrome was built around the 3rd or 4th century AD.
Buildings such as insulae existed in the area between the modern Castle Hill and downtown.
The city wall was strengthened in the 4th to 5th century AD, and around the city there were also bridges and villae.

Economy

Economically, Olisipo was known for its garum, a sort of fish sauce highly prized by the elites of the Empire and exported in amphorae to Rome and other cities. Wine, salt and the city's famously fast horses were also exported.
The city came to be very prosperous through suppression of piracy and technological advances, which allowed a boom in the trade with the newly Roman Provinces of Britannia and the Rhine, and through the introduction of Roman culture to the tribes living by the river Tagus in the interior of Hispania.
The city was connected by a broad road to Western Hispania's two other large cities, Bracara Augusta in the province of Tarraconensis, and Emerita Augusta, the capital of Lusitania.

Government

The city was ruled by an oligarchical council dominated by two families, the Julii and the Cassiae. The Caecilli also held some power. Petitions are recorded addressed to the governor of the province in Emerita and to Emperor Tiberius, such as one requesting help dealing with "sea monsters" allegedly responsible for shipwrecks.
Around 80 BC, the Roman Quintus Sertorius led a rebellion against the dictator Sulla. During this period, he organized the tribes of Lusitania and was on the verge of forming an independent province in the Sertorian War when he died.
The city was administered by two duumviri and two aediles.
Between 140 and 150 Lucius Statius Quadratus, a governor, was in Olisipo. In 185 Sextus Tigidius Perennis, governor of Lusitania, visited the region. Between 200 and 209 Junius Celanius, a governor, also came to Olisipo.
Lucidius was the native Roman governor of the city in 468, having helped the Suebi under Remismund to take it.

Religion

Olisipo, like most great cities in the Western Empire, was a centre for the dissemination of Christianity. Its first attested Bishop was St. Potamius, and there were several martyrs killed during persecutions, such as the Diocletianic Persecution; Verissimus, Maxima, and Julia are the most significant names. According to legend the three were sons of a Roman senator, martyred in Lisbon in the 4th century, under the Roman governor Ageian or Tarquinius in the time of Emperor Diocletian. A temple was then built in the Campolide area, whose ruins still existed in the Middle Ages.
In the middle of the 4th century the Olisipo diocesis was formed.
There is also the legend of Saint Ginés, presented as one of the first martyr bishops of Lisbon and remembered in the Nossa Senhora do Monte chapel.
At the end of Roman rule, Olisipo was one of the first Christian cities.

Roman architectural remains in the region

The city was a caput viarium of the Roman road to Bracara Augusta and the three roads to Emerita Augusta.
Olisipo controlled a vast region, bordered by the Alcabrichel and Ota rivers in the north.
The territory includes the following Roman archaeological finds, known settlements or place names:

In the current Sintra municipality

Alans

Lisbon suffered invasions from the Sarmatian Alans and the Germanic Vandals, who controlled the region from 409 to 429.
The city was taken by the Visigoths under Wallia in 419.

Suebi

The Germanic Suebi, who established the Suebic Kingdom of Galicia, with capital in Bracara Augusta from 409 to 585, also controlled the region of Lisbon for long periods of time.
In 457, while Framta was still ruling, Maldras led a large raid on Lusitania. The raiders sacked Lisbon by pretending to come in peace and, once admitted by the citizens, plundering the city.
In 468 the city of Lisbon was occupied by the Suebi under Remismund with the help of a native Roman governor named Lucidius, but in effect
Roman dominion over the city had ended.