THE LATE REPUBLIC   (146-44 B.C.) 
 
 
  
THE GRACCHI.		(133-123 B.C.)
Two brothers,  relatives of the Scipio family,  one a brother-in-law of the Scipio who destroyed  
  Carthage  in 146.  They wanted to sponsor a conservative reform plan which would reestablish 
  the strength of the peasant citizen-soldier-farmer in Italy; but this was to be done by the 
  reclaiming of state land which was on long term lease to the rich  (both Senators and 
  Equestrians).  The rich considered this an economic threat of course, and also knew that the 
  beneficiaries of the Gracchan Plan would become loyal supporters of the  Gracchi in politics. 
  
  
  The elder brother,  TIBERIUS GRACCHUS,  was assassinated by a group of senators  
  (led by his cousin, who was Pontifex Maximus)  when he tried to implement his plan as Tribune 
  of the People  (133 B.C.)
  
The younger brother,  GAIUS GRACCHUS,  tried again  (123, 122),  by offering 
various `benefits'  to pressure groups in exchange for their support:
	
- 	-to the EQUESTRIANS:		control of the JURIES in extortion court
- 	-to the URBAN PLEBS:		grain at subsidized prices
- 	-to TAX CONTRACTORS:		chance to bid on taxes for new province in Asia 
Minor under good conditions
- 	-to ALL CITIZENS:		guarantee of real right of APPEAL to the  popular assembly 
(Comitiae)
- 	-to NON-PROPERTIED:		COLONIES  (e.g. at Carthage) and land allotments
This threatened traditional SENATORIAL CONTROL over politics, and the younger 
  Gracchus too was assassinated before he could complete his work Such senatorial tactics 
  were justified by the new concept of martial law,  the  SENATUS CONSULTUM 
  ULTIMUM,  in which the Senate voted to  advise the  magistrates to  "see to it that the 
  state should come to no harm". 
  
  
WAR IN AFRICA:   JUGURTHINE  WAR   (112-107)
  
The war  brought to prominence the non-aristocratic GAIUS 
  MARIUS,  whose friends used the plebeian assembly to  attack the 
  senate and magistrates and overturn their decisions. 
  
  [A monograph about this war survives,  written by the Historian Sallust, ca. 42 
  B.C.]
  
  
  
  
  
GAIUS MARIUS
  
  
  CONSUL  in   107, 104, 103, 102, 101, 100, and 86  (unprecedented!!)  
  
 
    Due to the 
    military emergency  he authorized, for the first time, the  recruiting of new  citizen-soldiers who 
    did NOT have property  (This was the beginning of the professional soldier, which became a 
    pressure group  of its own, demanding from its generals pay, bonuses, and discharge  
    arrangements; since (ex-)soldiers voted, they were very influential).   When Marius died (and his 
    son committed suicide in a civil war against  Sulla in 81)  the influence of Marius and his friends 
    passed to his  wife's nephew,  JULIUS CAESAR (100-44 B.C.);  Caesar therefore inherited  a big 
    block of voters and an anti-senatorial viewpoint (even though he  was one of the most aristocratic 
    of all the aristocrats). 
  
  
  
  WARS AGAINST  MITHRIDATES OF PONTUS  
  
  
- 	I 	(88-85)	SULLA
- 	II 	(74-68)	LUCULLUS
- 	III 	(66-63)	The  THIRD WAR  brought to power  the successful ex-protege of Sulla,  
POMPEY THE GREAT.  In this war he  conquered some 12.2 million 
new subjects of Rome, and ended the Greek  Seleucid Empire of Syria.  
On his return to Rome, he and Julius Caesar  were on a collision 
course. 
- 	CAESAR		(who was ambitious to have a consulship; his finances were in terrible shape), 
- 	POMPEY		(who needed the  ratification of his political arrangements in the East 
and some sort of  discharge settlement for his soldiers), and
- 	CRASSUS		(who had financial  interests, political proteges to support, and an 
ambition to outstrip Pompey by holding a great military command) 
combined to form the
 
 
FIRST  TRIUMVIRATE   (2nd half of 60 B.C., to 53)
  
    Using money and soldiers  to vote, and 
    mobilizing the urban plebs, the three managed to get Caesar  elected; Caesar 
    passed laws (over vigorous objections and violence to  settle the Triumvirs' 
    claims for the next five years.  This electoral  conspiracy was highly illegal) 
    When Crassus died on campaign in Mesopotamia (Battle of Carrhae, 53,against 
    the Parthians)  the Senate helped to steer Pompey onto a collisioncourse with 
    Caesar.  The death of Pompey's wife, Caesar's daughter JULIA,ended their 
    family connection.
    
    
    
    
    The clash came when CAESAR crossed the RUBICON on the night of 7 January 49 B.C.,  leading to a civil 
    war. Pompey died at Pharsalus (48),  Cato the Younger at Utica (46) and one of 
    Pompey's sons at  MUNDA (45).  Caesar was assassinated for what he was 
    (DICTATOR FOR LIFE, CONSUL  every year) and what he might become when he 
    returned from aplanned War against Parthia (KING) on March 15, 44 B.C. (the 
    Ides of March)
    
  
  
This led to another round of wars, as  Marcus ANTONIUS,  OCTAVIAN (Young  Caesar, the adopted 
grand-nephew of the dead Dictator) and LEPIDUS worked together (as the 
SECOND TRIUMVIRATE, 43-33 B.C.) and then against one  another, to 
claim the Caesarian inheritance.
 At the  Battle of Actium,  on  2  September  31 B.C.,  ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA  were defeated by 
Octavian;  when  they committed suicide in Alexandria in the first week of 
August, 30 B.C.  Young  CAESAR  was left as sole possessor of the entire 
Roman world.  He  finally returned to Rome and held three triumphs in August 
of 29.
On  JANUARY 13,  27  B.C.  Young Caesar  announced in the Senate that he was  renouncing all his 
extraordinary powers  and  `RESTORING THE REPUBLIC'.  In gratitude (the fix 
was in)  he was given the unique name  Augustus,  and a memorial gold shield 
was hung in the  Senate House  commemorating  his  VALOR,  CLEMENCY,  
JUSTICE, AND  PIETY.   THE ROMAN REPUBLIC  was,  of course,  dead.
  
INTEREST GROUPS OF THE II AND I CENT. B.C.
- 
  	I.	The ARMIES:  serving overseas in provinces for long periods and demanding pay, 
    discharge bonuses, and land; they could be voters;  they could vote for good 
    men as generals and upset senatorial arrangements.  Sometimes they practiced 
    extortion on the State.
 
 
 
- 
  	II.	The GENERALS  (Marius,  Sulla,  Pompey,  Crassus,  Caesar,  Antony) needed political 
    settlements for friends and armies, and new wars to fight to continue their 
    reputations.  Foreign affairs became a narrow field where self-interest 
    predominated.
 
 
 
- 
  	III.	The Urban PLEBS:   masses of citizens left homeless by Hannibal,  by having been 
    forced to neglect their farms for service in the army overseas, and by land 
    buying by wealthy senators and equestrians who were building large 
    estates/ranches (LATIFUNDIA)
 
 
 
- 
  	IV.	The ITALIANS:  partial citizens of Rome, who bore the same military risks as full 
    citizens, but under harsher discipline, smaller rewards, and neglect afterwards.  
    They wanted the vote.
 
 
 
- 
   V.	FREEDMEN:   more than 1.5 million foreigners brought to Italy between 200 and 150 
    B.C., and many thereafter;  they needed legal protection when freed (as the 
    majority were)  and a place in society.  (cf. slaves & freedmen in Catiline's 
    Conspiracy)
 
 
 
- 	VI.	ALLIES & SUBJECTS:    educated and sophisticated,  but exploited.
 
 
    
BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Alan Astin,  Scipio Aemilianus (Oxford 1971).
- Adrian Goldsworthy,  The Roman Army at War., 100 BC–AD 200 (Oxford: Clarendon 1996).
- H. H. Scullard,  From the Gracchi to Nero 
- H. H. Scullard, Roman Politics 220-150 B.C.   2nd ed.  (Oxford 1973).
- Erich Gruen, The Last Generation of the Roman Republic  (Berkeley-Los Angeles: U Cal  1994 paper)
- David Stockton,  The Gracchi (Oxford: Clarendon 1979).
- T.A. Carney, Gaius Marius
- Arthur Keaveny, Sulla: The Last Republican   (London  1982).
- P. Greenhalgh,  Pompey, The Roman Alexander  (1981).
- P. Greenhalgh,  Pompey, The Republican Prince (1982).
- John Leach,  Pompey the Great (1978).
- Elizabeth Rawson,  Cicero  (London 1975).
- Manfred Fuhrmann, Cicero and the Roman Republic  (Oxford: Blackwell 1992).
- Lily Ross Taylor, Party Politics in the Age of Caesar (Berkeley 1949).
- Matthias Gelzer, Caesar, Politician and Statesman (Harvard 1968).
- Christian Meier,  Caesar.  A Biography (NY: Basic Books 1982).
- Ernst Badian,  Foreign Clientelae  (Oxford 1958).
- A. W. Lintott,  Violence in Republican Rome  (Oxford 1968).
- Peter Brunt,  Italian Manpower, 225 B.C.-A.D. 14  (Oxford  1971).
- Robin Seager (ed.) The Crisis of the Roman Republic  (Cambridge 1969). [collection of articles]