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1. 2. Internal Developments at Rome in the 300s and early 200s BC In looking at the Roman state’s interactions with its immediate neighbours in the 300s BC (after the Gallic occupation of the city) we noted the importance of the “settlement of 338 BC” which followed the war between Rome and the states of Latium and their allies in Campania. Its importance lay in the mechanisms Rome developed – mechanisms which it could carry forward and apply in its encounters with all the other states of the Italian peninsula until, by the early 260s BC, Rome controlled (albeit indirectly for the most part through treaties) all the170 or so other states and peoples south of the Apennines. As a result of the “Settlement of 338 BC” the map changed significantly – not least in terms of the growth of the territory of Roman state itself – as we have seen. After 338 BC, although the Roman state would continue to increase its own territory, it mostly made the other states and peoples of Italy allies of Rome (socii) – although almost always prohibiting them from having any relations with one another, ONLY with Rome. A. How the Roman state grew between 338 and 263 BC [GREY] B. “Latin Colonies” (new communities) founded after 338 BC a) GREEN 334 and 328 b) RED 314 – 312 BC c) BROWN 303 – 298 d) VERY PALE GREY Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 17, 24, 26, 27 were founded between 298 and 263 BC THE EMERGENCE OF THE NEW “PATRICIAN-PLEBEIAN” NOBILITY IN THE 300s AND 200s BC 1. We noted before how, in the face of pressure that the office of consul be opened to non-patricians, the two consulships were replaced in 444 BC (for 77 years) until 367 BC by the “mysterious” (to us) office of “military tribune with consular power” - initially comprising three positions each year, later comprising as many as seven. 2. Supposedly the new office was open to non-patricians, although the lists of names of office holders which have survived do not indicate many non-patricians being elected. The Office of DICTATOR 1. 2. 3. 4. Frequently in this period, whether there were “military tribunes with consular power” or consuls in a given year, the lists often show that a DICTATOR was appointed too. There are various theories about the origins of the office, but it seems to go back to at least the earliest days of ‘the Republic’. During the 300s and 200s in particular [down to 202 BC] “dictators” were common, the last being appointed in 202 BC. When the situation called for it, the Senate passed a motion recommending that the consuls appoint a dictator to hold power for six months or until the task was completed (whichever was the shorter). 5. Since he was appointed rather than elected, he was not technically answerable to “the Centuriate Assembly” (which elected the consuls, ‘military tribunes with consular power’, and praetors). 6. Although in practice most “dictators” seem to have been appointed to help with serious military crises, the most common ‘title’ of the “dictator” was rei gerundae causa (“to undertake the task”). 7. Whether the office was open to “patricians” only is unclear, but the first recorded non-patrician dictator was appointed in 356 BC. Politics generally in the 300s and into the 200s BC 1. The political picture is not always clear, but we can pick out the main developments. 2. Of greatest importance were, perhaps, “the issues”- now often economic rather than political ones: debt, debt-bondage, and the distribution of land. After the ‘Gallic attack’ and additional incursions by Gauls (with the devastation of the countryside), economic conditions seem to have deteriorated. B. This situation, particularly between about 385 and 340 BC, affected “the Struggle of the Orders” (the fight to force the “patricians” to make more and more concessions to nonpatricians). C. i) As Rome expanded its territory and new wealth from military successes became available, it is most unlikely that “the spoils” were shared equally. ii) And this is when we begin to hear more about economic demands. iii) In particular there were serious concerns about how newly acquired land was to be used and by whom. A. D. Those in “the plebeian movement” – especially the poorer members and leaders sympathetic to them – wanted two things to happen to captured land, which became “state land” (“common land”) – ager publicus. They demanded that: i) much of it should be divided up into allotments to be privately owned by the citizens of the state; and ii) restrictions should be placed on the use of the “common land” that was not divided up – particularly restrictions on how much of it any one ‘family head’ (pater familias) could use to his family’s advantage – including how many animals the family could graze on it. E. Those working the land seem to have experienced more and more difficulties in the mid-380s, things coming to a head in the 370s, as agricultural debt increased and those unable to repay what they had borrowed turned to ‘debt-bondage’ (nexum) as their only solution. F. i) The land had to be worked and agricultural slavery was still almost unknown [prisoners captured in war from the general area and made slaves would escape and go home!]. ii) Larger landowners used ‘debt-bondage’ as their main mechanism to ensure a sufficient agricultural labour force. G. a) In this period, because of “the Gallic Occupation”, the state constructed a great defensive wall (wrongly attributed in ‘the tradition’ to King Servius Tullius) around the city of Rome. b) The construction of the wall may have provided employment for many for a time unless they built it as “debt-bondsmen” and their labour was required of them. The “Servian Wall” is shown in blue The Movement for Economic Reform 1. We begin to hear of demands for economic reform in the 380s BC. 2. a) In 376 BC two “Tribunes of the Plebs” tried to put forward actual proposals to formalize these ‘demands’ in the Plebeian Assembly. b) Their proposals dealt with i) land, ii) debt, and 3. iii) the consulship. a) The “tradition” has it that it took ten years of struggle to make any headway - because other “tribunes of the plebs” kept vetoing what was proposed. b) Clearly not all “plebeian” leaders favoured reform to assist those who were experiencing difficulties! FINALLY, in 367 BC, “the patricians” allowed the proposals to pass into law as the Leges Liciniae Sextiae (“the LicinianSextian Laws”). With their passage: 1. a) Restrictions were put on how much “public” (‘stateowned’) land any one family could make use of – with limits too on the number of animals that could be put out to graze. b) Fines were prescribed for those who broke the rules; but c) nothing was done to reclaim “common” land which was already being used illegally. 2. The interest on what had been borrowed by debtors was now to be deducted from the principal amount owed – in an attempt to ameliorate the problem of debt. 4. a) But debt-bondage (nexum) was not tackled in the legislation and was not finally abolished until 326 BC, probably because it wasn’t until then that there were enough war captives from far enough away (as a result of the “Samnite Wars”) to guarantee a sufficient agricultural labour force. b) Nor did debt, of course, go away. 4. At the constitutional level (under the laws): A. i) the office of “military tribune with consular authority” was abolished and the two consulships were revived and once again became the two top political positions. ii) And the two revived consulships were opened to “non-patricians”. 3. B. A new annual office was created – that of praetor – to relieve the consuls of work which involved the administration of justice. C. On the model of the plebeian aediles who had always assisted the “tribunes of the plebs” in the “Plebeian Assembly”, the state now got two state aediles to oversee public works. D. At the level of the state’s religion the “college” of two ‘for the performance of sacred rites’ (that of the duumviri sacris faciundis) was expanded to a “college” of ten (becoming the decemviri sacris faciundis), five of whom were to be ‘plebeian’ (that is, “non-patrician”). Summary of Results So what do we have? 1. It looks as if a small group of rich and aspiring nonpatricians, over time, used “the plebeian movement” (which had been formed by the great mass of dissatisfied people with no privileges back in the 490s BC to promote their interests) to break the monopoly held by “the patricians” over state-positions (in their own interest) and to gain entry to the top offices in the Roman state for themselves. 2. In doing so, they could not avoid supporting at least some economic reforms in the interests of the poorer ‘plebeians’ – since they needed the backing of the “Plebeian Assembly” to bring pressure to bear and to get the constitutional reforms pushed through. 3. After an intermittent “struggle” over 150 years, the “patrician” monopoly over office-holding in the state was broken. 4. “Plebeians” (in practice only the very wealthy) could now hold the top offices in the state, some of those top offices now having to be held by “plebeians”. 5. Over a relatively short period of time (30 or 40 years or so) after the constitutional reforms were in place, a new “nobility” began to emerge – a mixed “patricianplebeian” nobility – which would dominate the political life of the Roman state for centuries to come. [Note: “Nobility” derived from holding the high state-offices] 6. This new “patrician-plebeian” nobility favoured oligarchic government (rule by the few) and, after their “victory”, any moves towards a more “democratic” system in the state were frustrated (largely because of the structure of the “People’s Assemblies” and because of the prevailing “patron-client system”). 7. a) Poorer citizens and those at all sympathetic to their interests still had “the Plebeian Assembly” as an instrument to promote reform, BUT the new ‘joint’ nobility seems to have been able to control its activities for the most part; and b) it was not really until about 150 BC that serious attempts at reform made any headway – and success even then was very short-lived. 8. Until then, the Roman state ‘settled down’ in the mid-300s BC under the rule (for two centuries) of the new “nobility” whose ‘institution’ was THE SENATE. 9. a) We should take note, before concluding that from now onwards the new nobility COLLECTIVELY dominated the state through THE SENATE without controversy, that additional legislation had had to be passed (supported by those who advocated ‘oligarchic government’) to rein in the annually elected officeholders to at least a certain degree and to prevent particularly prominent individuals from wielding too much power on an on-going basis. b) It would be contrary to the interests of collective rule by a group of leading families to allow any single family, let alone any single member of a ‘noble’ family, to exercise power too often or for too long. 10. a) To this end, in 342 BC, “the Genucian Law” (the Lex Genucia) had been passed - in itself controversial because it seems not to have been a “law” at all but a series of “plebiscites” (passed in the Plebeian Assembly). b) And if it was not a law, then it remains unclear whether it really was binding. 11. Be that as it may, this piece of legislation ruled: i) that the same man could not hold the same office for a second time until ten years had passed; ii) that the same man could not hold more than one secular state office at any one time; and iii) that it was not forbidden for both consuls in a given year to be “plebeian”. The reason why the binding nature of these measures is questioned is that, although the two measures imposing restrictions were observed for the most part over the next few decades, there were a few notable exceptions [as seen in the surviving lists of office-holders] which make it clear that some prominent individuals were able to ignore “the rules” and get themselves elected by the electorate to, for example, a string of consulships without waiting ten years. REAL HISTORICAL FIGURES In the last decades of the 300s BC we begin to get a stronger and stronger sense that some of the leading political figures in the surviving accounts were real flesh and blood people, although we often still know little about them. It would also be simplistic to assume that those belonging to the new “patrician-plebeian nobility” necessarily EITHER a) adhered rigorously, as individuals, to a particular outlook depending on whether their families were “patrician” or “plebeian”; OR b) supported wholeheartedly ‘oligarchic’ rule [government by the limited few] through the Senate or (alternatively) were more sympathetic to a more ‘populist’ programme. But we do have examples of a few prominent men who seem to have been REAL and who were quite controversial in their day. Let us take just one historical figure - not necessarily “typical” and very much an ‘enigma’ but most definitely real - APPIUS CLAUDIUS CAECUS. Alternative figures whom we might consider would be A. Quintus Publilius PHILO – a prominent ‘plebeian’ between 339 and 326 BC, who held the consulship and the dictatorship [at the same time] in 339; who became the first ‘plebeian’ praetor in 336; who held the censorship in 332-331, and a second, a third, and a fourth consulship in 327, 320 and 315 BC (very much contrary to the recently passed “Genucian Law”); or B. Quintus FABIUS MAXIMUS Rullianus – a prominent ‘patrician’ between 331 and 295 BC; or C. Publius DECIUS MUS - a leading ‘plebeian’ between 312 (when he held his first consulship) and 295 (when he held his third consulship) who ended his career by serving, between 300 and 295, as the state’s chief priest when he held the high office of Pontifex Maximus. But let us concentrate on APPIUS CLAUDIUS CAECUS - a ‘patrician’ who went blind late in his career in 280 BC (hence his name “Caecus”). He didn’t hold as many offices as some of his immediate predecessors but he was very active, especially as one of the two censors in 312 BC. In fact he made his mark as censor in 312 BC – his first major office and one he held without holding a consulship first (contrary to what became the norm in the later Republic once a standard order of office-holding had become established). Only later did he go on to his first consulship in 307 and his second in 296 (keeping, but only just, to the 10-year rule) following these offices with the lesser ‘praetorship’ in 295. On 12th March 2008 the Times Literary Supplement (under the title “First Blind Politico”) described him as “the first personality in all of Roman history”. And we know just about enough about him for us to realize what a puzzle he is. A memorial inscription of Appius Claudius Caecus’ career HIS CAREER 1. As “censor” in 312 BC a) he is said to have created new senators of questionable background, allegedly promoting the sons of freedmen (that is, of former slaves) to the Senate, with the result that the consuls of 311 BC refused to recognize his list of senate-members; b) without the Senate’s approval (that is, without the approval of the bulk of the new “patrician-plebeian nobility”), he used public funds to construct the Via Appia (the Appian Way) from Rome to Capua in Campania – which was to be always a very important road; APPIUS CLAUDIUS WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE FIRST SECTION OF THE ROAD FROM ROME TO CAPUA c) without the Senate’s approval he used public funds to provide the city of Rome with a major aqueduct – the Aqua Appia; d) he allegedly also refused to step down as censor (remaining in office until he was elected in 308 to a consulship for 307). 2. He later oversaw, through a protégé who was an aedile in 304 BC, the publication of a handbook of legal procedures and a list of dies fasti (days when legitimate business could be transacted) – information which had previously been known only to the “pontifices” (priests) – all of them “nobles”. 3. He also reorganized the voting “tribes” (the territorial voting districts) in some way, giving enhanced rights to the landless - a reform reversed by the censors of 304 BC. 4. In some way he interfered with the state religion further, by transferring, for example, oversight of the cult of Hercules from the gens (“clan”) of the Potitii to public slaves. In everything he did he appears to have attracted controversy - but it is difficult to know how to assess his outlook – hence references to him as an enigma. A. It has been claimed that he was a “radical populist”. B. It has also been claimed that he was an upholder of traditional patrician privileges against the more recent trends (and so very ‘conservative’). Assessment 1. 2. His programme suggests he was a radical reformer with the interests of ordinary citizens on his agenda. BUT those who see him as a “conservative” fighting a rearguard action against the changes creating an “oligarchic state” point out that, allegedly: a) he opposed the “Ogulnian Law” of 300 BC which opened the priestly colleges to plebeians; and b) on two occasions he tried to exclude plebeians from the office of consul. These two positions do not have to be contradictory since they could be seen as those of a “radical” who did not wish to see the electorate restricted in any way on the question of who they wanted to elect to official office – which would be the case if they had to choose “plebeians” when sometimes “patrician” candidates might appear more desirable. The jury is still out on Appius Claudius Caecus! The Final Stages of “the Struggle of the Orders” The emergence of a strong “patrician-plebeian” nobility did not see “the Struggle of the Orders” completely over. Although there were a few other measures which introduced some small constitutional adjustments, the FINAL act came in 287 BC. 1. During worsening economic conditions, the plebeians engaged in their last secessio (withdrawal) when the Senate refused to address the question of debt. 2. To deal with the impasse, a dictator, Quintus Hortensius, - a ‘plebeian’ - was appointed. 3. He introduced the “Hortensian Law” (the lex Hortensia) which does not seem to have introduced any economic changes (despite what seems to have been the background to his appointment) but (whatever the situation earlier – and the record is confused) which made it clear once and for all that the decisions of the “Plebeian Assembly” (plebiscita) were binding on the whole state (that is, all citizens, including “patricians”). 4. A victory for the principle of popular sovereignty? No! 5. The aftermath of his law demonstrated the determination of “plebeian” state office-holders and, in particular, the ten annually elected “tribunes of the Plebs” themselves (with very few exceptions) to be part of the new nobility and to promote oligarchic government. 6. 7. And those who served as “tribunes of the Plebs” did not have to concern themselves much with economic demands from the ordinary people - since relief from the worst economic problems came now not from reform legislation but from the fruits of warfare and the massive expansion of Roman territory in Italy in the 280s, 270s, and 260s, which made great tracts of agricultural land available to citizens. a) With “plebiscites” passed by the “Plebeian Assembly” now binding on everyone (including patricians) and becoming the equivalent of laws, there was virtually no difference between “the Plebeian Assembly” (presided over by the ‘tribunes of the plebs’) and the state “Tribal Assembly” (usually presided over by the consuls). 7. b) They were structured in exactly the same way - based on the “tribes” (the voting districts to which all citizens belonged depending on their place of residence) – and the same system of voting. c) The absence of “patricians” from the “Plebeian Assembly” did not really affect the outcome of the vote either: there were so few “patricians” and, as patrons, they could in any case control, through the “patron-client system”, the way many plebeians (their clients) cast their votes without being present. 8. New laws, then, were now passed in either assembly, although 9. i) the “Plebeian Assembly” elected the ten “tribunes of the plebs” each year; and ii) the “Tribal Assembly” elected the state’s aediles and quaestors. 10. The state’s “Centuriate Assembly” (based on wealth) elected the consuls and the praetors, but ceased to pass new laws. AFTER 287 BC 1. Somewhat surprisingly perhaps, the entire period from the 280s to the 150s BC proved to be one of fairly stable “oligarchic government” under the strong leadership of the noble families in the Senate. 2. The main emphasis was one of military activity in the wider Mediterranean and the acquisition of “empire - either as a matter of policy or by default. 3. For well over 120/130 years there were no further major political changes. By 263 BC the Roman state had grown SIGNIFICANTLY in terms of territory [the darker GREY] and now reached the east coast of the peninsula, acquiring rich agricultural land as it expanded. By the same date, Rome “controlled” all other states and peoples in Italy through treaties of alliance.