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The First Great Warlords

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Title: The First Great Warlords


1
The First Great Warlords
  • C. Marius and L. Cornelius Sulla

2
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3
Keith Hopkins AnalysisConquerors and Slaves
  • Continuous Warfare
  • Influx of Booty
  • Investment in Land
  • Formation of Large Estates
  • Impoverishment of Peasantry
  • Emigration to Towns and Provinces
  • Growth of Urban Markets

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5
All land, ground, or buildings above mentioned,
excluding such land or ground specially excepted
as stated, shall be private land, and for all
such land, ground, or buildings there shall be
the same right of purchase and sale as for other
private lands, grounds, or buildings and the
incumbent censor shall see that such land,
ground, or building made private by this law
shall be entered in the census in the same way as
other land, grounds, or buildings
  • Abrogation of the Gracchan Land Laws, 111 BCE
  • Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, vol. 1, 2nd ed.,
    no. 585

6
The sword was never carried into the assembly and
there was no civil slaughter until Tiberius
Gracchus, tribune and law bringer, was the first
to fall a victim to internal commotion and with
him many others, who were crowded together at the
Capitol around the temple, were also slain.
Sedition did not end with that abominable deed.
Repeatedly the parties came into open conflictAs
the evil gained in magnitude, open insurrections
against the government and large warlike
expeditions against their country were undertaken
by exiles, criminals, or persons vying with one
another for some office or military
command.Appian, Civil Wars, 1, Introduction 2
7
Conservative Retrenchment in the Aftermath of the
Gracchi
  • Occupation of ager publicus
  • Thorian Law of 118 BCE
  • Agrarian Law of 111 BCE
  • Socio-Economic and Military Recruitment Crises
    Continue
  • Populares and Optimates

8
External Developments New Wars, New Conquests,
New Crises
  • North (Ligurnians, Allobroges, Arverni) and the
    Conquest of Gallia Narbonensis (southern France)
    in the 120s BCE
  • South Jugurtha of Numidia (war with Rome,
    112-106 BCE)
  • C. Marius and the Germanic Northmen (Cimbri and
    Teutones)

9
Marius and the Northmen
  • Cimbri and Teutones defeat Roman armies in 105
    BCE
  • Appointment of C. Marius to consulate (novus
    homo) 107, 104-100, 86 BCE
  • Marius defeats Cimbri and Teutones in 102/101
    BCE
  • Land Grants in Africa for Marius discharged
    veterans (tribune Saturninus)

10
Coin of C. Fundanius Ca. 100 BCE Commemorating
C. Marius Triumph
Over Cimbri and Teutones
11
Our generals always thought that those peoples
Gallic and Germanic tribesmen should be
repulsed rather than punished in war. The famous
Gaius Marius himself, whose divine and
extraordinary ability relieved the great
affliction and destruction visited upon the Roman
people, checked the enormous force of the Gauls
flowing into Italy but did not himself penetrate
to their cities and abodes.
  • Cicero, On the Consular Provinces, 13.32

12
Marius and the Jugurthine War
  • Early Roman Defeats in Africa
  • Charges of Corruption and Bribery at Home
  • Marius as New Man
  • Catonian Politics against Corrupted Aristocrats
  • Supported by the Equestrian Order
  • Appointed by Popular Assembly
  • Property Qualification Eliminated
  • Volunteer Army (Marius Mules)

13
The Italian Question and the Social War of 90-87
BCE
  • Tribunate of M. Livius Drusus, 91 BCE
  • Proposes Roman citizenship to all Italians (idea
    had been broached in 125 BCE)
  • Courts to be shared by equestrians and senators
  • Assassination of Drusus
  • Italian Rebellion
  • Establishment of Capital at Corfinium (Italia)
  • Italia mints separatist coinage (Italian bull
    gorging Roman wolf)
  • Aftermath
  • Romans grant citizenship in 89 BCE
  • War winds down by 87 BCE (Pyrrhic victory for
    Roman aristocracy?)

14
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15
Italian Bull Gorging Roman Wolf
16
The East Mithridates VI of Pontos
  • Competition for Bithynia as Client State
  • Mithridates invades Asia Minor and Greece
  • Slaughter of 80,000 Italian businessmen
  • Occupation of Athens, 88 BCE
  • Factional Struggle in Rome for Mithridatic
    Command
  • C. Marius and L. Cornelius Sulla?
  • Sulla awarded command (makes his name in the
    Social War)
  • Sulpicius Rufus proposes transfer of command to
    Marius
  • Sullas march on Rome in 88 BCE

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18
Green Roman Empire ca. 100 BCE Yellow/Orange
Verticals Areas under Mithridates Influence
Yellow Kingdom of Pontos Under Mithridates
VI
19
Revolutionary Violence in Roman Republican
Political LifeSullas March on Rome (88 BCE)
  • Sulpicius Rufus murdered
  • Flight of Marius
  • Sulla wins Mithridatic command
  • Marius and Cinna retake control of Rome in 87
    (proscriptions)
  • Sulla comes to agreement with Mithridates (85)
  • Disloyal cities of Asia Minor pay heavy
    reparations to Sulla

20
Sullas Return (83 BCE) and Dictatorship (81-79
BCE)
  • Battle at the Colline Gate, 82 BCE
  • Proscription and Confiscations (10,000 murdered)
  • Conservative Reforms (Turning Back the Clock)
  • Restoration of Senates Authority
  • Restrictions on tribunes (ineligible for higher
    offices)
  • Control of courts returned to Senate
  • Senate doubled to 600 members (admission and
    incorporation of wealthiest equestrians)
  • Minimum age requirements for offices enforced

21
After crushing Italy by war, fire, and murder,
Sullas generals visited the cities and
established garrisons at the suspected
places.Sulla himself called the Roman people
together in an assembly and made them a speech,
vaunting his own exploits and making other
menacing statements in order to inspire
terror.he immediately proscribed 40 senators and
1,600 knights. He seems to have been the first to
make such a formal list of those whom he
condemned to death, to offer prizes to assassins
and rewards to informers, and to threaten those
who concealed the proscribed.Appian, Civil Wars,
1.11.95-12.103 (excerpts)
22
A Deadly Formula
  • Unprecedented and Unconstitutional Measures
  • Marius consecutive consulships
  • Sullas extended dictatorship
  • Use of Armies for Political Ends (Sullas March
    on Rome)
  • Commanders Responsible for Land Grants to
    Veterans
  • Charismatic General Personal Army
  • Death of Senatorial Government
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