A catalogue of the Roman legions

In the days of the Republic, a legion was recruited by an army commander after he had been given a task by the Senate, whether to conquer a new province or hold an old one. When the task was completed, the legion - a collection of volunteers, all who should be Roman citizens - should have disbanded.

During the last of the Civil Wars, the three Triumvirs each raised their own army, as did the pirate chief Sextus Pompeius. Augustus Caesar persuaded Lepidus's 14 legions (and the 8 that joined Lepidus after Pompeius had abandoned them) to desert to him, after which he engaged and defeated Marcus Antonius. The battle of Actium, in 31 B.C., left Augustus the undisputed master of Rome and her empire, but also left him with more than 50 legions, far too many for the peaceful era that was to come.

Augustus completely reorganised the Roman forces. Instead of temporary volunteers, there was to be a standing army. By disbanding some and merging others, he ended up with a new force of 28 legions. Most of these were to last for more than two centuries, more than half for four, and one - the V Macedonia - was still to be found in the sixth century A.D.

Augustus's original 28 legions were as follows:

I Germanica
II Augusta
III Augusta
III Gallicia
III Cyrenaica
IV Macedonia
IV Scythica
V Alaudae
V Macedonia
VI Victrix
VI Ferrata
VII Macedonia (became the Claudia Pia Fidelis)
VIII Augusta
IX Hispania
X Gemina
X Fretensis
XI Claudia Pia Fidelis
XII Fulminata
XIII Gemina
XIV Gemina Martia Victrix
XV Apollinaris
XVI Gallica
XVII
XVIII
XIX
XX Valeria Victrix
XXI Rapax
XXII Deiotariana

The 6 legions with duplicate numbers show that at least some numbers were retained from the original armies - all three 3rd legions were retained. Equally, it is clear that some numbers must have been allocated anew, otherwise the neat sequence to 22 would not have happened.

The legions' names have varying origins. The legions with duplicated numbers presumably bear names indicating which army they came from. The legions Augusta were presumably from his own army, and perhaps distinguished themselves in some way at some time, while the V Alaudae were recruited from Gallic provincials by Julius Caesar. The three legions Gemina were amalgamations of two or more of the pre-Actium legions. Suetonius mentions that Augustus once disbanded a Tenth legion, but perhaps they were actually amalgamated. It is clear that some of the legions were unnamed at their creation; the XVII, XVIII, and XIX never gained a name before they were lost in the Tuetoburg Wald in 9 A.D., and the VII and XI gained their names ("the Loyal Claudians") after they refused to rebel in 42 A.D., though the VII had a previous name. But some names are totally obscure.

The Julio-Claudian Emperors

The loss of three legions near the end of Augustus' reign brought the army down to 25 legions. Only two of the subsequent Julio-Claudian emperors were to do anything about this, but by the end of Nero's reign in 68 A.D., the strength was back to 28 legions again:

Claudius 43 A.D. XV Primigenia
Claudius 43 A.D. XXII Primigenia
Nero 67 A.D. I Italica

There is some dispute about whether Caligula or Claudius raised the first two, but the latter is more likely, as 4 legions were about to be taken to the invasion of Britain (II Augusta, IX Hispania, XIV Gemina, and XX Valeria Victrix), and some replacements would be necessary.

The Flavian reforms

In 68 A.D. the Senate declared Nero a public enemy, and appointed Galba to the Imperium, probably the last significant political action they were ever to take. Galba took his own legion from Spain, raised a second - the VII Galbiana - and marched on Rome. Various other commanders opposed him, and the resulting wars produced four emperors within the same year - 69 A.D. - with the eventual triumph of Vespasian, founder of the Flavian dynasty.

After such a great conflict, it was clear that some legions could no longer be trusted, and others needed to be raised to replace them. The Flavian reforms of 70 A.D. were probably the greatest changes to be made to the Roman army since the Augustan reorganisation.

One legion - the XV Primigenia - presumably was too closely identified with one of the losing emperors, and was disbanded. Two new legions were formed:

I Adiutrix
II Adiutrix

and two others

I Germanica
VII Galbiana

were merged to form the new VII Gemina.

Finally, two other legions, supporters of Vespasian from the start, gained new names.

was became
IV Macedonia Flavia Felix
XVI Gallica Flavia Firma

The middle empire

Over the next 140 years, 4 legions were to be lost in wars, and 8 raised to replace them or otherwise strengthen the army for specific campaigns.

A.D. by
raised 83 Domitian I Minervia
lost 87 [Domitian] V Alaudae
lost 92 [Domitian] XXI Rapax
raised 102 Trajan II Trajana
raised 102 Trajan XXX Ulpia Victrix
lost in Judea 132 [Hadrian] IX Hispania
lost 135 [Hadrian] XXII Deiotariana
raised 165 Marcus Aurelius II Pia Italica
raised 165 Marcus Aurelius III Concors Italica
raised 197 Septimus Severus I Parthica
raised 197 Septimus Severus II Parthica
raised 197 Septimus Severus III Parthica

Including the three raised for the Parthian wars, Rome had 33 legions defending its territories. In 215 A.D., these were occupying postings around the various provinces as follows (the date of posting is shown where known).

I Adiutrix Lower Pannonia
I Italica Lower Moesia
I Minervia Lower Germany
I Parthica Mesopotamia
II Adiutrix Lower Pannonia 90
II Augusta Upper Britain (Caerleon) 43
II Parthica Italy 197
II Pia Italica Noricum 176
II Trajana Egypt
III Augusta Numidia by Augustus
III Concors Italica Raetia
III Cyrenaica Arabia
III Gallicia Syria Phoenice
III Parthica Mesopotamia
IV Flavia Felix Upper Moesia
IV Scythica Syria Coele
V Macedonia Upper Dacia
VI Ferrata Syria Palaestina
VI Victrix Lower Britain (York) 122
VII Claudia Pia Fidelis Upper Moesia
VII Gemina Nearer Spain
VIII Augusta Upper Germany
X Fretensis Syria Palaestina
X Gemina Upper Pannonia before 130
XI Claudia Pia Fidelis Lower Moesia
XII Fulminata Cappadocia
XIII Gemina Upper Dacia
XIV Gemina Martia Victrix Upper Pannonia
XV Apollinaris Cappadocia 114
XVI Flavia Firma Syria Coele
XX Valeria Victrix Upper Britain (Chester) 43
XXII Primigenia Upper Germany before 130
XXX Ulpia Victrix Lower Germany

Note that "Upper" and "Lower" were political designations, so Upper Britain, for example, was the southern half of the island and Lower Britain the northern half.

The Notitia Dignitatem

The situation in 215 was probably the heyday of the classical legion. Over the next 200 years, many more were to be lost in battle, or just to be disbanded or fade away. The tide of warfare was turning away from the classical infantry battle, and towards cavalry warfare between bands of mercenaries fighting for Rome - so long as she paid - on the one hand, and rebels and barbarians on the other. The traditional legions became the garrison troops, settled in a province, with retired legionaries marrying local women and their sons and grandsons enlisting in their turn.

In such a situation, it would be rare for a legion to move posting, and indeed the record shows none doing so. In 395 A.D., the Notitia Dignitatem (a record of all the appointments in the empire) shows only 24 legions remaining, all unmoved for 180 years.

I Adiutrix Lower Pannonia
I Italica Lower Moesia
I Parthica Mesopotamia
II Adiutrix Lower Pannonia
II Parthica Italy
II Pia Italica Noricum
II Trajana Egypt
III Concors Italica Raetia
III Cyrenaica Arabia
III Gallicia Syria Phoenice
IV Flavia Felix Upper Moesia
IV Scythica Syria Coele
V Macedonia Upper Dacia
VI Victrix Lower Britain (withdrawn in 406)
VII Claudia Pia Fidelis Upper Moesia
VII Gemina Nearer Spain
X Fretensis Syria Palaestina
X Gemina Upper Pannonia
XI Claudia Pia Fidelis Lower Moesia
XII Fulminata Cappadocia
XIII Gemina Upper Dacia
XIV Gemina Martia Victrix Upper Pannonia
XV Apollinaris Cappadocia
XVI Flavia Firma Syria Coele

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