RISE
OF ROME
- Latins,
an Indo-European people who were the ancestors of the Romans, settled at
Alba Longa on the mouth of the Tiber River in the Italian peninsula some
time between 1500 and 1000 BC.
- Moved
up river to Roma in 753 BC (threatened by Greeks
seeking new colonies and the Etruscans, a non-Indo-European people probably
from Asia Minor)
- Roma
built on seven hills surrounded by fertile plain of Latium (superb defensive
position and good land for agriculture)
- Government
i.
Tribal monarchs elected by noble warriors
ii.
Council of noble warriors or patricians known as the Senatus
- 509
BC patricians overthrew monarch; established a republic
(res publica or public thing)
- Abuse
of Tarquins or patrician power play?
- Executive:
two magistrates or consuls
i.
Elected for one year
ii.
Could veto (I forbid) each other
iii.
Commanded the army, convened the assembly and supervised finances
- Senate:
ex-consuls and ex-military officers
i.
Chief advisory body
ii.
Held office for life unless ejected by the censor
- Centuriate
Assembly (comitia centuriata)
i.
Elected consuls
ii.
Determined political policies
- No
role for common people or plebs
- The
Struggle of the Orders
(plebeian efforts to obtain political voice)
- 494
BC general strike
- Tribunes
who could veto acts of the magistrates and bring plebeian concerns to
the senate
- 471
tribunal assembly (concilium plebis)
- 450
BC ancient legal customs codified: Twelve Tables
- 421
quaestorship (office in charge of the treasury and criminal prosecution)
open to plebs
- 367
BC the Licinius-Sextus Laws one plebeian
consul
- 287
BC acts of Tribunal Assembly (concilium plebis) binding on all
- Foreign
Policy was Imperialist (see
map)
- 500-275
BC conquered Italy;
Roman Confederacy gave local self-government but required service in Roman
army
- By
30 BC controlled Mediterranean (Mare
Nostrum)
- Affected
domestic policies
i.
From 3rd c. BC on, influx of slaves, loot and tribute undermined
traditional Roman economy
ii.
Senators acquired huge estates (latifunda) and turned fields into pasture
for cattle
iii.
Displaced agricultural workers became urban proletariat
iv.
40 percent of Rome’s
one million people were slaves
v.
Increased disparity between rich and poor
- Roman
Revolutions (133-27
BC)
- Marked
by political assassinations, gang warfare, and civil war
- Destroyed
the institutions of the republic
- Reformers
such as the Gracchi brothers, Tiberius Gracchus in 133 BC and his brother
Gaius Gracchus in 123 BC, murdered
- Julius
Caesar (100 –
44 BC)
- 60
BC part of a triumvirate of three rulers with general Pompey and banker
and general Crassus
- Used
political connections to get military command in Gaul
- Used
army’s triumphs to increase political power in Rome
- Defied
Pompey and crossed the Rubicon
River in 49 BC
- Defeated
Pompey and declared dictator for life
- Embarked
on a series of government reforms
i.
Instituted program of public works
ii.
Founded colonies
iii.
Extended citizenship to provincials
iv.
Redid the calendar
- Defender
of democratic forces or potential tyrant?
i.
Murdered on Ides of March, 44 BC
ii.
Deified by populace
- Gaius
Julius Caesar Octavian
(ruled 31 BC – 14 AD)
- Caesar’s
18-year-old nephew and adopted son
- Defeated
the forces of Antony and Cleopatra at Alexandria in 30 BC
and assumed sole leadership of the Empire
- Claimed
to restore the republic
i.
Senate packed
ii.
Proclaimed Princeps or First Citizen
iii.
Made imperator “emperor” (commander) of the army, supreme priest
iv.
Titled Augustus (Revered)
- Roman Empire
- Maintained
fiction of republic
i.
27 BC offered to give up power but Senate resisted
ii.
Claimed to rule with advice and consent of the people
- Instituted
reforms
i.
Restored law and order (creating the Roman police force, the Praetorian Guard)
ii.
Created professional civil service and professional standing army
iii.
Passed a series of laws to reform family life and to increase the birthrate
- Pax
Romana (27 BC
– 180 AD)
- 200
years of relative peace and prosperity for Mediterranean World
i.
Although problem with Augustus’ successors -- 7 of first 10 caesars met violent
ends (Caligula stabbed by own guard; Claudius fed poisoned mushrooms by wife;
Nero committed suicide)
ii.
No law regulating succession; most named successors
- Until
the death of Marcus Aurelius in 180 AD, Roman rule was generally efficient,
not terribly burdensome, and relatively tolerant
i.
Usually respected traditions of peoples they ruled, e.g. religion
ii.
Granted all freemen in the empire Roman citizenship by 212 AD
- Limitations
of Pax Romana
i.
Jews refused to worship Roman gods or emperors; led to diaspora in 2nd
c. AD
ii.
Many achievements due to widespread use of slave labor
iii.
Debate over decadence; Bread and Circuses
1.
Roman citizens devoted afternoons to entertaining
2.
175 festivals by the 4th c.
3.
Indulged in public baths – 800 in Rome
4.
Attended theatre and chariot races (Circus Maximus seated 200,000+)
5.
Sponsored gladiatorial and animal games at Colosseum (neuter of the Latin
word for gigantic) which seated 45,000+
6.
Provided outlet for aggressions
7.
Distributed free grain to poor in Rome
“The
bath, wine, and love ruin one’s health but make life worth living.”