Rome Notes
Rome Notes
The First Punic War, which started soon after the Roman victory over
Pyrrhus and the Western Greeks, lasted264 to 241 BC. At the end of this
war Carthage was forced to surrender Sicily to the Romans. Sicily became
the first 'province' of Rome. Roman provinces were specific
administrative units of the Roman empire After the First Punic War the
Phoenicians took steps to strengthen themselves militarily so as to
check Roman expansionism. The main architect of Carthaginian military
reorganization was a brilliant general named Hannibal. Hannibal
mobilized a large and well-trained army for waging a war against Rome.
In 218 BC {which marks the beginning of the Second Punic War) Hannibal
reached the Alps with an army of about 40,000 troops with the objective of
launching an offensive against the Romans from the north. This was
something that the Romans were totally unprepared for. Hannibal
successfully crossed the high altitude Alpine mountains with his large army
and entered northern Italy. Here he made an alliance with several
communities which had been subjugated by the Romans. Hannibal
marched southwards in the direction of Rome and in 216 BC he completely
routed the Roman army at Cannae in south Italy. However he was not
successful in capturing the city of Rome. When they had regrouped their
army the Romans launched a campaign against Hannibal. The leader of
this campaign was Scipio Africanus. Hannibal was compelled to retreat
from Italy.
While Rome had been busy with eastern Mediterranean affairs the
Carthaginians had been successful in reviving their trade. On the other hand
there was a very powerful lobby at Rome which had been demanding that the
state of Carthage should be completely destroyed. It was in this situation that
the Third Punic War broke out in 149 BC. By 146 BC Carthage had been defeated
and it ceased to exist. there were anti- Roman upheavals in the newly formed
republics, as well as in Greece, while the Third Punic War was going on. The
Romans crushed these upheavals and annexed the whole of Macedonia in 147
BC . The Greek rebellion was also suppressed and Corinth was destroyed in
146 BC. By this time Egypt had also been made a Roman protectorate, i. e. its
foreign policy was guided by the Romans. Western Anatolia had come under
Roman rule. Thus, by the middle of the second century BC Roman influence was
predominant in the entire Mediterranean.
II
When the Etruscan monarchy was ousted from Rome in 510 BC political power
passed into the hands of the aristocracy. The aristocracy initially set up an
oligarchical government. The oligarchy exercised its power through an
oligarchical council, called the senate. Throughout the Roman republic the
senate was the single most important centre of authority. However, as we shall
see, the senate was gradually forced to share some of its authority with other
institutions.
Much of our information is based on the work of Fabius Pictor. Pictor was a
Roman historian who participated in the Second Punic War. He produced a
history of Rome written in the Greek language and intended primarily for a
Greek audience.
that right from the beginning of the republic, there was an intense
struggle between the landed aristocracy and the common people of Rome.
Roman society was clearly divided along class lines and the less privileged
sections, particularly the ordinary peasants, resented the monopoly of
political power which the aristocracy enjoyed. This resulted in a prolonged
conflict. As in the case of the Greek states, the Roman aristocracy was not in a
position to completely suppress the struggle of the peasantry and this
struggle became a recurring feature of the republic throughout its
history.
when Rome was engaged in conquering the Italian peninsula, that the
peasantry extracted major political concessions. Through these concessions a
small section of the peasantry got some share in political power. After 510 BC the
aristocracy ruled over Rome through the senate. At the beginning of the
republic the senate was an oligarchical body from which the common people
were completely excluded. Here we must make a reference to a peculiar
feature of Roman society. Roman society was divided into two groups or
'orders': the patrician order and the plebeian order. The patricians
constituted a small close-knit elite while the plebeians were the common
people. To a large extent the struggle between the aristocracy and the
peasantry was a struggle between the patricians and the plebeians and is
often referred to as 'the conflict of the orders'. Patrician social
organization was based on kinship groups called gentes (singular, gens),
which may be regarded as the Roman equivalent of clans.
Besides the consuls there were several other magistrates who looked
after various aspects of administration. Mention may be made of two very
powerful magistrates who were called censors. Two censors were elected
once in every five years. They held office for eighteen months. During the
eighteen months that they held office the two censors were required to
conduct a census of Roman citizens. The censors recorded the names of
citizens and the amount of property possessed by each citizen (only the
names of males were registered). This census determined the eligibility
of a citizen, depending upon the value of his property, to hold various
elective offices of the Roman state. Later, just as in the case of the
consulship, plebeians also became eligible for this magistracy. In
addition to the consuls and censors there were junior magistrates, as for
instance aediles and quaestors. Four aediles were elected annually. They
were in charge of public works and had to maintain roads, drains, and market
places. The aediles had to make arrangements for public festivals as well.
Quaestors assisted the higher magistrates in the discharge of their duties.
One of their main responsibilities was to look after the state treasury and
maintain public accounts.
the government had a host of salaried minor officials for routine day-to-
day tasks. These officials were collectively called apparitores. They were
paid their salaries by the state. These public servants were recruited from
among the relatively poorer sections of the population. The apparitores
included scribes and lictors. Lictors were officials who escorted consuls (or
the even more superior magistrates called dictators
The patricians had worked out a system which totally excluded the
plebeians from governance. But, given the role which the plebeians played
in Roman military organization, they were able to successfully organize
themselves to press for their demands.
Each curia voted collectively so that only the opinion of the curiae (and
not of individual members) was sought. Using their kinship ties patricians
dominated the respective curiae. They would speak on behalf of the entire
curia. citizens were regrouped to form a new assembly. This assembly
was called comitia centuriata. The comitia curiata was not abolished but
the new assembly was created in addition to it. The comitia centuriata, like
the comitia curiata, was an assembly of all Roman citizens. The difference
between the two lay in the manner in which the citizens were grouped. For
the purpose of the comitia centuriata the citizens were grouped into
'centuries'. For most of the republican period the comitia centuriata was
the main assembly of citizens. This was the assembly which elected the
consuls and censors. Legislation had to be passed by the comitia
centuriata. War and peace were the prerogative of this assembly. All major
decisions of the state had to have the approval of the comitia centuriata.
The comitia curiata now only looked after a few matters of a social and
religious nature. It is believed that the comitia centuriata was formed
c. 450 BC. The working of the new assembly was such that ultimately it did
not solve the problem of giving a share of political power to the plebeians.
The comitia centuriata contained 193 centuries. Each century had one
vote. The centuries were grouped into five classes. The largest number
of centuries were placed in the first three classes, which were classes of
the aristocracy and the wealthy. In other words the first three classes
possessed the majority of votes.