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BIG CITY/BIG PROBLEMS

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Title: BIG CITY/BIG PROBLEMS


1
BIG CITY/BIG PROBLEMS
  • Rome had a population of close to one million
    people and no police force or army garrison to
    keep the peace
  • Majority of these people were Head Count, freed
    slaves, and slaves
  • Frequently formed mobs and rioted

2
PRIVATE ARMIES
  • Mobs were generally unarmed and relied on sticks
    and stones as weapons
  • Wealthy could obtain permission from Senate to
    issue weapons to their clients in an emergency
  • Wealthy also had knowledge of strategy, tactics
    and logistics
  • Kept poor down with private armies
  • Only a small step from using private armies to
    keep the peace to using them to weaken or
    eliminate a rival or advance a program

3
CROWDED CITY
  • Rome had a huge population crammed together in a
    high density in a small geographic area
  • Streets were narrow and winding
  • Rich lived in mansions on Palatine Hill or in
    suburbs
  • Most other Romans lived in small flats in rickety
    wooden apartment buildings
  • In lower part of city
  • Subject to periodic floods, collapsing buildings,
    and almost daily fires

4
SLUMS
  • Apartment buildings were poorly constructed and
    designed
  • Flats were poorly lit, poorly ventilated, and
    unheated
  • Water had to be carried in from public fountains
  • Not connected to the sewer system
  • Most of Rome was an appalling slum
  • But landlords like Cicero made good incomes from
    their property
  • Rents were 100-150 sesterces a month
  • Some reformers proposed suspending rents for a
    time to help the poor
  • Always blocked by wealthy landlords

5
LABOR FORCE
  • Most economic activity in Rome revolved around
    supplying its population with food and other
    necessities and construction
  • Many workers were slaves or men from slave
    origins
  • Advantages of slaves
  • Slaves were cheap
  • Most came from the East and had highly-developed
    skills
  • They provided a stable labor force

6
HARD LIVES
  • Freeborn Romans of the Head Count were mostly
    displaced small farmers
  • Generally performed unskilled labor on irregular
    basis
  • Most Romans only worked periodically at unskilled
    jobs for low pay
  • Yet they continued to pour into Rome because it
    was even worse out in the countryside
  • Lived hard lives, dependent on the voluntary
    generosity of the wealthy and occasional
    part-time employment

7
SUMMARY
  • Preconditions for political violence in
    Republican Rome
  • Governmental structure
  • Rigged in favor of the wealthy
  • Large population and lack of official police
    force
  • Caused the wealthy to form private armies to
    protect themselves and their interests
  • Misery and squalor of the majority of the Roman
    population
  • Multiplied their grievances against the wealthy
    and the government
  • Also fostered their dependence on the rich and
    powerful
  • Left them open to ruthless politicians who
    promised them satisfaction of their complaints in
    exchange for support

8
TIBERIUS GRACCHUS
  • In 133 BC, the tribune Tiberius Gracchus proposed
    to the Tribal Assembly that state-owned land be
    distributed among the poor of Rome
  • Tribal Assembly passed it but it was vetoed by
    another tribune in the pay of the Senate
  • Gracchus then had the tribune impeached and had
    his proposal passed again
  • Senate then charged Gracchus with aspiring to
    tyranny and lynched him

9
GAIUS GRACCHUS
  • Gaius Gracchus became tribune ten years later
  • Passed several pieces of legislation that helped
    the poor
  • But he knew new tribunes would revoke it all once
    his term of office was over
  • Armed his clients and planned to use his private
    army to make sure his laws remained on the books
  • Senate raised its own private army to oppose him
  • Gaius and his clients killed in ensuing battle

10
SATURNIUS
  • Another tribune, Saturnius, revived the Gracchus
    proposals between 103 and 100 BC
  • Free public land to poor and free,
    government-subsidized grain to urban populus
  • Murdered anyone who stood in his way with private
    army of armed clients
  • Senate once again raised its own private army and
    eventually defeated Saturnius
  • Saturnius and supporters killed by senators while
    awaiting trial

11
NEAR CIVIL WAR
  • Tribune Sulpicius proposed to Tribal Assembly
    that freed slaves by given citizenship and be
    allowed to join voting tribes
  • 88 BC
  • Raised army and drove Senate and opposing
    tribunes out of city
  • One of the ousted consuls, Lucius Cornelius
    Sulla, invaded Rome with an army and killed
    Sulpicius and his supporters

Sulpicius
Sulla
12
CINNA AND MARIUS
  • Sulla received a military commission and went to
    Asia Minor to fight some rebellious kings
  • Another tribune, Cinna, revived Sulpicius
    proposal
  • Supported by Gaius Marius
  • 7-time consul and military legend
  • Opposed by another tribune, Octavius, and his
    private army
  • Cinna finally driven from city but he called on
    the regular army, returned, and slaughtered
    Octavius and his supporters

Cinna
Gaius Marius
13
SULLA SUPREME
  • Marius died of a stroke shortly after helping
    Cinna regain control of Rome
  • Sulla returns with army, massacres Cinna and
    supporters, and sets himself up as dictator
  • Also murders everyone who had ever crossed him in
    the past
  • Retires in 79 BC and violence erupts immediately

14
POMPEY MAGNUS
  • Price of grain skyrockets in Rome due to pirates
    in eastern Mediterranean
  • Tribal Assembly votes to give Pompey Magnus
    extraordinary military powers to eliminate pirate
    threat
  • Opposed by Senate but poor chase senators out of
    the city
  • Also physically several tribunes who threatened
    to veto appointment
  • Clear that common people would not stand any
    opposition to Pompeys appointment
  • Pompey wipes pirates out in 3 months
  • Price of grain falls

15
MORE POLITICAL VIOLENCE
  • Political violence continued
  • Cataline Conspiracy
  • Milo/Clodius affair
  • War between Pompey and Julius Caesar
  • Establishment of dictatorship by Caesar and his
    subsequent assassination
  • All ate away at the core of the Republic

16
END OF THE REPUBLIC
  • Victory of Caesars grandnephew, Octavian, over
    Marc Antony and Cleopatra in 31 BC brings end of
    the Roman Republic
  • Last civil war of the period
  • Octavian (now calling himself Augustus) creates
    an imperial monarchy to take place of the Republic

17
MAIN POINTS
  • Political violence did not proceed from any
    single source in Rome
  • Sometimes it was private army some tribune
  • Sometimes it was private army of senators
  • Sometimes it was a spontaneous uprising by the
    poor themselves
  • And sometimes it came from the senators
    themselves
  • The common thread which connects all of these
    sources (except the last one) was that all mob
    actions involved the poor
  • They made up the private armies of both tribunes
    and the Senate as well as the unorganized mobs

18
WHO MADE UP THE MOBS?
  • Cicero claimed the supporters of Clodius were
    assassins freed from jail, runaway slaves,
    bandits, and foreigners
  • But was this accurate?
  • Best evidence indicates no
  • Based on similar studies of crowds during the
    French Revolution by George Rudé and some
    contemporary evidence, there is no solid reason
    to believe that Roman mobs were dominated by
    criminals and outsiders
  • But they were poor and frequently desperate

Cicero, supreme bullshit artist
19
WHY DID THE POOR RIOT?
  • Some historians have interpreted motivations of
    mobs in class terms
  • As a struggle between rich and poor
  • Class consciousness was not a motivating factor,
    or at least not a crucial one
  • Main motivations lay elsewhere
  • Sometimes poor were following orders of patrons
  • At other times, the mobs were motivated by grain
    shortages or high grain prices
  • Unifying motivational factor was hunger
  • Mobs were not out to overthrow their economic and
    social superiors nor where they a bunch of heroic
    democrats out to change the rigged structure of
    Roman government
  • They were poor, hungry people who wanted food,
    who wanted to survive

20
IMPERIAL MONARCHY
  • From the standpoint of the poor, the destruction
    of the Republic and the installation of an
    imperial monarchy by Augustus was not such a bad
    thing
  • Wealthy lost control of government under the
    monarchy
  • Emperors provided free grain (and later free
    olive oil and free wine)
  • They also improved the water supply, provided
    better fire protection, launched a rebuilding
    program that provided more jobs, and put on
    lavish public entertainments
  • And mob violence correspondingly declined

21
SUMMARY I
  • Emperors did more to alleviate the misery of the
    poor of Rome than the Republic had ever done in
    order to protect themselves
  • Political violence of the Republic begins to make
    some sense from this point of view
  • Suffocating under a governmental structure
    designed to only benefit the rich and powerful,
    those who wanted to help the poor had to go
    outside the system to accomplish their goals
  • And since Roman republican politics was based on
    the development of large networks of clients and
    the maintenance of private armies to keep the
    peace, it was inevitable that this would lead to
    the frequent use of violence

22
SUMMARY II
  • Nor were the poor adverse averse to violence
  • Desperately poor, underemployed, pressed by the
    high cost of living in Rome, and often hungry,
    they were more than willing to follow men who
    promised to solve their problems
  • And sometimes even took matters into their own
    hands
  • The destruction of the Republic was, in a way,
    their victory
  • For with the destruction of the oligarchy which
    had controlled the Republic and establishment of
    imperial monarchy, living conditions for the poor
    did improve
  • And that was the only thing they had wanted in
    the first place

23
PRINCEPS
  • Augustus did not immediately establish a blatant
    imperial monarchy after he emerged victorious
    over Marc Antony
  • Institutions of the Republic still appeared to
    operate
  • But no longer possessed any real political power
  • All real power was now in the hands of Augustus
  • With the honorary title of princeps
  • Controlled army and provinces, had the poor in
    his pocket, selected candidates for public office
    and made sure they were elected, determined
    Senate membership, had total control of the
    treasury

24
THE AUGUSTAN SYSTEM
  • Augustus exercised his vast powers quietly,
    behind the scenes
  • Because he was fearful that his open use of his
    powers might arouse republican sympathies of
    Roman people
  • On the other hand, he had no intention of
    voluntarily giving his powers up
  • Since this might re-ignite civil war
  • Augustus thus stayed in power and established a
    dynasty
  • Emperors who would follow him would become less
    and less careful in the quiet exercise of their
    power and the fiction of the Republic would fall
    to the wayside
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