CHAP. XIII.: Of armed Slaves.
THE danger of arming slaves is not so great in monarchies as in republics. In the former, a warlike people and a body of nobility are a sufficient check upon these armed slaves; whereas, the pacific members of a republic would have a hard task to quell a set of men, who, having offensive weapons in their hands, would find themselves a match for the citizens.
The Goths, who conquered Spain, spread themselves over the country, and soon became very weak. They made three important regulations: they abolished an ancient custom which prohibited intermarriages with the†537 Romans; they enacted that all the freedmen†538, belonging to the fiscus, should serve in war, under penalty of being reduced to slavery; and they ordained that each Goth should arm, and bring into the field, the tenth part†539 of his slaves. This was but a small proportion: besides, these slaves, thus carried to the field, did not form a separate body;
they were in the army, and might be said to continue in the family.