The nundinae (, ), sometimes anglicized to nundines,. were the market days of the ancient Roman calendar, forming a kind of weekend including, for a certain period, rest from work for the ruling class (patricians).
The nundinal cycle, market week, or eight-day week (. or internundinum) was the cycle of days preceding and including each nundinae. These were marked on fasti using from A to H. The earliest form of the Roman calendar is sometimes said to have included exactly 38 such cycles, running for 304 days from March to December before an unorganized expanse of about 50 winter days. The lengths of the Republican and , however, were not evenly divisible by 8; under these systems, the nundinae fell on a different letter each year. These letters formed the basis of the later Christian dominical letters.
The form nundinum for the span between the nundinae seems to have been standard in early Latin, but only appears in compounds ( internundinum, trinundinum, &c.) and phrases ( inter nundinum) in the classical period.
The name of the 8-day cycle is based upon the Latin word for "nine" because the Romans tended to count dates inclusively. Each nundinae was thought to follow the next after a 9-day interval because the first day was included in the count.
All patrician business was originally suspended during the nundinae but it seems to have been fasti by the time of the Twelve Tables and, among its provisions, the Hortensian Law ( Lex Hortensia) of 287BC permitted their use for most legal and business purposes. Dates otherwise permitted for public assemblies ( dies comitialis) were still downgraded if a nundinae occurred on them.
The theoretical proscriptions concerning the nundinae were not always observed. The rebellion of M. Aemilius Lepidus in 78BC was later remembered as an example of the pernicious effects of having the nundinae occur on the January kalends; the New Year was allowed to coincide with a market again in 52BC.. Cicero complains in one of his letters about a contio being held in the Circus Flaminius despite the nundinae. Following the 46BC Julian reform of the calendar, the inalterable nature of its leap day intercalation meant that the nundinae began to fall upon the supposedly unlucky days of 1 January and the nones of each month. Early on in the Julian calendar, though, the strength of this superstition caused the priests to insert an extra day as under the former system; it was accommodated by removing another day sometime later in the year; this seems to have occurred in 40BC and AD44.
The nundinae of the late Republic and early Empire were possibly centered on the Circus Flaminius. Augustus supposedly avoided new undertakings on the days after nundinae ( postridie nundinas), owing either to superstitions concerning homophones of non ("no, not") or analogy with the treatment of the days following kalends, nones, and ides.
The week first came into use in Roman Italy during the early imperial period. For a time, both systems were used together, but the nundinae are seldom mentioned in extant sources after the Julio-Claudian period. The nundinal cycle had probably fallen out of use by the time Constantine adopted the Hebrew weeks for official use in AD321, altering the Shabbat by declaring the Lord's day the Sunday (dies Solis) a legal holiday. Different scholars have placed the end of 8-day markets at various dates from the late 1st to early 5th centuries.
Under its monarchy, Rome's nundinae were market days for the country plebeians and used as an occasion for the king to settle disputes among them. Supposedly, retail trading was long restricted to foreigners or slaves out of concern for its spiritual effects.
Under the Roman Republic, the gatherings on the nundinae were overseen by the . The days were originally diēs nefāstī upon which no patrician business could be conducted. Plebeians, however, seem to have continued to use them as a time to settle disputes among themselves and to convene their own institutions. This was emended somewhat by the Hortensian Law in the early , which made binding on the whole population. If plebeian assemblies had previously been permitted on market days, any public assemblies—including their informal sessions ( contiones)—were now positively banned. At the same time, these provisions meant that the nundinae now could be used for sessions of the Roman Senate. Trebatius noted that officials could manumission and render judgments on nundinae.
The nundinal cycles were an important pattern in the business of the Centuriate Assembly. All proposed legislation or official appointments were supposed to be publicly announced three weeks ( trinundinum) in advance. The tribunes of the plebs were obliged to conduct and conclude all of their business on the nundinae, such that if any motion was not carried by dusk it needed to be proposed and announced anew and discussed only after a further three-week period. This was occasionally exploited as a kind of filibuster by the patricians and their clients.
Although their religious nature was never very pronounced, the nundinae were allegedly dedicated to Saturn and Jupiter. The flaminica, the wife of flamen dialis, offered a Sheep to that god at each nundinae. Inscriptions have been discovered from cults to both Jupiter Nundinarius and Mercury Nundinator. Superstitions arose about the ill luck when a nundinae would fall upon January Kalends or the nones of any Roman months and the pontifex maximus who controlled the calendar's intercalation until the Julian reform took steps to avoid such coincidences, usually by making the year 354 instead of 355 days long by removing a day from February or the Mercedonius. Since the nones were definitionally eight days before each ides, this also had the unstated effect of avoiding nundinae on them as well. Macrobius's account of the origins of these superstitions is unsatisfying, however, and it is more likely that 1 January was avoided because its status as a general holiday was bad for business and the nones because of the ill luck attending their lack of a tutelary deity.
A pre-existing system of rural markets in North Africa's Maghreb was also glossed by the Romans as a system of nundinae, although it did not necessarily occur at eight-day intervals. In the 3rd and 4th century, the annual fairs in Mesopotamia were also known as nundinae.
Although nundinae are known to have been manipulated during the Roman Republic and Roman Empire, moved a day forward or backward to avoid interference with a religious festival or important public assembly, they are thought to have been absolutely fixed at eight days under the Roman Republic. Scholars therefore use them when trying to find Julian or Gregorian dates for events in Roman history.
History
Observance
Outside Rome
Legacy
See also
Notes
Bibliography
Modern sources
Ancient sources
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