The History of Rome - 004- The Public Thing
Episode Date: February 25, 2010The monarchy had been overthrown and the Roman Republic was now established. Despite the appearance of a free democratic republic, the Romans were beset with economic and political divisions that thre...atened the unity of the young State.
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And welcome to the history of Rome.
It had been 200 years since the founding of Rome,
and since that time, the Romans had undergone a massive transformation.
In the beginning, they were a collection of pastoral herdsmen and unsavory cast-offs,
making their way in the world by flock and trade,
and since that time, they had learned to become settled farmers,
tilling the land and raising crops.
They had gone from being a collection of armed rabble
to a society of laws with a well-equipped, well-disciplined army.
They had gone from upstart village to regional capital
and now stood ready to challenge a wider pool of neighbors
for control of all Italy.
The Etruscans lay to the north and the Greeks to the south,
and having conquered the central lowlands during the reign of the kings,
the Romans now turned to the hills and mountains of East Italy for fresh conquest
and, as always, were forced to parry the thrust of the Etruscan cities to the north.
This is the whirl into which the republic was born.
According to the legendary chronology,
the kings were overthrown in 509 BC, though the date is highly suspect.
Most likely later, patriotic Roman historians changed the timing of the event
to slightly predate the establishment of democracy in Athens by Kleistinese in 508 BC.
The Romans had a hard time believing they were not first and best in everything,
especially in the democracy they took so much pride in,
so they altered their history to outdo the Greeks.
However, without any concrete data, it is hard to know exactly when the kings were driven out,
so we are forced to mark our own histories of the city with the 509 date.
As I said in part one, the sack of Rome by the Gauls in 389 BC destroyed all primary documentation,
so we are left with a mixture of legend and historical fiction.
Before we get into the story of the early republic,
I want to pause for a moment and establish who exactly we are talking about here.
I often say that Rome did this and that the Romans did that,
but except for a few passing disambiguations,
I have not done much to describe the varying nature,
of the population. Were they some homogeneous hive mind who agreed on everything and acted with a
single will? No, quite the opposite. There were rich Romans and poor Romans and middle class Romans.
There were men and women and children. There were slaves and freed slaves and immigrants and
criminals and honest men who worked hard every day and lazy men who did not. There were prostitutes
and vestal virgins and intellectuals and illiterates. Just like any society, the city of Rome was
inhabited by a vast array of individuals, each with their own worldview, motivation, and dream.
And just like in any society, the Romans did not always get along with one another, and, in fact,
often fought bitterly with one another for control and freedom from control.
When the Republic was founded, the population of Rome was around 130,000. This population was divided
into two basic groups, the patricians and the plebs. Put simply, the patricians came from those
families who could trace their roots back to the original 100 senators chosen by Romulus,
and the plebes came from those that could not.
Generally speaking, the distinction between patrician and plebe also followed economic class
divisions, though, as we will see, it was never that simple.
In the early days, the political weight of the classes was inversely related to their numerical
size.
The smaller set of patricians held power over the larger set of plebs.
As I noted last week, the two richest classes in Rome held between them enough votes to
snuff out any possible opposition, and those classes were, for the most part, made up of
patricians, so the patricians made the rules. In the beginning then, the Democratic Republic was
really an oligarchy of wealthy, aristocratic families who shaped policy to serve their interests
and who had no intention of ever letting anyone else into the decision-making process.
I don't want to get too far ahead of myself, but let me just say that it did not make long
for the plebs, especially those plebs who were wealthy, to demand a greater voice in government.
This tension between the patricians and the plebs would dominate Roman politics for the duration of the empire.
Outside the basic patrician plebe dichotomy, there were those without even nominal political standing, namely women, slaves, and immigrants.
These groups formed a majority in sheer numerical terms, but were denied almost all political rights.
Even the plebeian males, who howled righteously at the injustice of being denied a say in government,
would have cried just as loud if someone had suggested suffrage being extended
to women or slaves or immigrants.
The idea would have been beyond comprehension.
The contradictions of the early republic
bear a striking resemblance to the contradictions
of the early United States.
When you picture the burgeoning Roman Republic,
picture what you know of the burgeoning American Republic.
The United States, though rhetorically cloaked
in the language of freedom and equality,
allowed only white land-owning males to vote.
Eventually, the property-less men agitated
against the injustice of an oligarchical elite
trampling on their freedoms and earned the same right, but women and blacks and Indians and the new
immigrants were left out in the cold, present but unheard. This was Rome, a republic in which the
disenfranchised majority were ruled by a disproportionately powerful elite. This then was the basic
political breakdown of the population. Economically speaking, whether patrician or plebe, the majority of
Romans were, by this time, settled farmers. But this was no utopia of land-owning citizen-farmes.
farmers. The land was owned by an elite minority and worked by the rest of the population.
Economics and politics coincided just as they two today, and the tension between owner and
operator mirrored the tension between patrician and plead. Pleads were constantly agitating
for land redistribution, and patricians blocked reform whenever they could. In this early
stage of the empire, the actual work of the farms was still done by the lower-class citizens,
slaves being an important part of the Roman economic model, but not yet the keystone upon which
the entire system was based. The farms produced two basic products, food for internal consumption,
usually grain and cereals, and crops for external trade, usually olives and grapes, and the refined
offspring, oil and wine. The Romans, building on the roots already established by the Etruscans,
used savvy trade policies to enrich themselves with all manner of foreign goods, establishing a truly
international flavor in the city. But as in so many other aspects of Roman society, it was the
wealthy patricians who controlled the import export boards, and it was they who benefited the most
from foreign trade. Needless to say, the landless plebe who worked in the fields did not dress
an African finery and eat off of Greek silverware. Divisions were many within the population,
economically and politically, and hatred abounded between the classes, but in the end, they were
all Romans and set aside their differences any time the city was threatened, though picking up
their rivalries right where they left off when danger had passed.
That all being said, it's time to continue with our story.
And the tyranny of the monarchy had been banished forever.
It was decided, and again, when you picture this, feel free to picture the patrician, senators, and equites hammering out the details,
because it was really them making all the early decisions.
The lower classes and pleaves had nothing to do with it.
The two men should rule annually to avoid any single man accumulating too much power.
Originally, these men were called praetors, though the title would be changed in the early 300 BC to the more familiar consul.
For clarity's sake, I will use the latter designation even for the early executives who were technically praetors,
because the office itself did not change, just the name, and, well, most translations of early Roman history refer to them as consuls anyway,
so there is no reason to confuse an already confusing situation with a lot of semantic nitpicking.
Anyway, to the Roman mind, ensuring freedom was not so much a matter of scaling back or limiting the power of the executive,
as the founding father sought to do with their system of checks and balances,
as it was a matter of limiting the length of time within which absolute rule could be wielded.
The consuls had all the same power as a king had, near absolute power over war and peace, life and death.
They just had to give it up after a year.
The second consul was the one check the Romans did add into the system.
One consul could veto the actions of the other, and that was that.
Any consul who tried to run away with power could be stopped at a word from his colleague.
If the two conspired to oppress the people, their terms of office expired after a year,
and they were back to being mere citizens, with all the legal weight that would be brought down upon two men who sought to make themselves king.
In the end, it was the expiring term of office that really let the Romans sleep well at night.
The executive power sharing was merely a useful novelty.
In that year, 509 BC, this was as far as the republic had gone constitutionally.
Rather than the comitus and shuriata getting together and electing a king who served for life,
They got together and elected two men who served for one year.
As I said last week, the first two consuls were Lucius Junius Brutus and Lucius Tarkinus callatnis.
The former led the revolt against the king, and the latter's raped wife had sparked the event.
Brutus's first act was to make all men swear an oath that they should never again allow a king to rule Rome.
As you can see, the legacy of Numa remained a potent force.
Brutus felt that a sacred oath before Jupiter would be enough to bind men to oppose monarchy,
and, barring a few exceptions, it did.
The Romans did not mess around with their oaths.
There was, however, an immediate problem.
Calatinus, you will note, bore the hated moniker Tarquinius,
being a relative of the overthrown king.
The population, jittery in their newfound freedom,
worried that lust for power was an inborn trait of the Tarquins
and immediately regretted their election of Calatius,
despite the fact that he had helped lead the revolution
and vocally denounced his cousins.
When press, though, Calatnis agreed for the sake of the stability and viability of the new Republic to resign the consulship,
even though everyone agreed it was completely ridiculous to ask him to do so.
In his place, another one of the ringleaders of the revolt was elected, Publius Valerius,
who will, in a moment, earn the Honorary in Publicola or a friend of the people for his service to Rome.
Students of American history will immediately recognize Publius's name.
The Federalist papers, written by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay, in defense of the newly written Constitution, appeared in print under the pseudonym Publius in honor of this consul's role in securing Rome's New Republic.
Publius is often cited as being one of the original consuls of Rome, but we should not forget Calatinus and his selfless resignation in the face of baseless and superficial fears for the sake of his country's freedom.
The first threat the New Republic faced was the first threat all successful revolutions face, namely counter-revolution.
There were more than a few Romans who had lived just fine under the kings, and were in no mood to lose their privileged place in society.
A collection of young nobles, including two sons of the consul Brutus, conspired with envoys of the exile of King Tarquin to betray the city to him and reinstate the monarchy.
The plot was revealed by one of the noble slaves and the entire group was arrested.
Brutus was shocked to see his own sons involved in the affair, but incontrovertible evidence was produced, confirming their guilt.
The penalty for treason was severe, and despite his tortured misgivings, Brutus would not stop the sentence from being carried out.
The young conspirators were tied to a post, scourged, and then beheaded.
Brutus's decision was long-lauded by the Romans as a patriotic sacrifice, teaching a moral lesson about putting the welfare of the state before even one's own family,
but the ruthlessness of the decision often makes it difficult for us to see the nobility of the act.
The second threat the new republic faced was the second threat all successful revolution's face,
namely invasion by an opportunistic enemy trying to take advantage of a neophyte central government.
Tarkwin had by this time taken refuge in VA and pleaded with the nobility there to aid him in reconquering Rome.
He argued that the virus of republicanism might infect Truria and wipe out all the royal families in the region.
The nobles of VA were indeed worried about their subjects catching the freedom bug, and
believing that Rome's leadership would be shaky and disjointed without a strong king in charge,
agreed to aid Tarquin and attacked.
However, to the surprise and consternation of Tarquin and the Vites,
Brutus and Publius proved to be extremely capable commanders, routing the army from VA easily.
The battle was not without tragedy for the Romans, though.
In the middle of the fight, Brutus, Liberator of Rome, was killed.
His body was born back to the city.
and Rome went into mourning for a full year.
Publius now stood alone, and, like Calatinus before him,
soon fell under suspicion by the fickle and paranoid masses.
After the battle with the V8s,
Publius began construction on a home atop the Valiah,
a ridge jutting from the north side of the Palatine Hill.
The people suspected him of making a fortress
from which he could safely enslave them all.
Publius caught wind of the sentiment and called a mass meeting,
shaming the populace for their irrational fears,
and announcing that if it worried them so much, he would move his home to the bottom of the hill,
where they could all keep watch on him.
He further used the opportunity provided by the meeting to propose two new laws,
which made him a hero to the now assuaged masses, and earned him the aforementioned title, Puplico.
The two laws are famous even to this day.
The first stated that any man who tried to make himself king could be killed at any time
by any other man without fear of reprisal.
and the second stated that any decision by the magistrates could be appealed to the people's assemblies.
Publius, content with the single credit he received for these democratic initiatives,
then called for an election to fill the open consulship.
Marcus Horatius Polvius was eventually elected after a short detour
through a consul who was elected but then died from old age a few days later.
This closed the first year of the Republic.
Leadership settled, the people mollified, and Rome secure.
In the coming years, the tension between patrician and plebe would dominate public life in Rome.
The patricians wary always of runaway mob rule, and the plebs seeing no practical difference
between the overthrown king and the newly empowered Senate.
Next week, we will jump headlong into this so-called conflict of the orders
and witness the plebs voting with their feet and demanding a real voice in the allegedly
Democratic Republic they had all fought so hard to establish and keep.
