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- The Romans have had almost every type of government there is.
- They've had a kingdom, a republic, a dictatorship, and an empire.
- Their democracy would be the basis for most modern democracies. The
- people have always been involved with and loved their government, no
- matter what kind it was. They loved being involved in the government,
- and making decisions concerning everyone. In general, the Romans were
- very power-hungry. This might be explained by the myth that they are
- descended from Romulus, who's father was Mars, the god of war. Their
- government loving tendencies have caused many, many civil wars. After
- any type of government, the change has been made with a civil war.
- There have also been many civil wars between rulers. But it all boils
- down to wanting to be involved in government.
- When the Greeks finally entered Troy after ten long years of
- siege, a man named Aeneas escaped the city with his father, Anchises,
- and his son, Ascanius. They went to Mt. Ida, where they were to meet
- Aeneas' wife, Creusa, but she never showed up. Saddened, Aeneas
- acquired a boat and sailed around the Mediterranean. He bounced around
- from Asia Minor to Greece to Crete looking for a place to found a new
- Troy, but he couldn't find a satisfactory place. As told by Homer in
- the Aeneid, Aeneas was cared for by the gods. Venus, in particular,
- was very worried about him. She asked Jupiter, king of the gods about
- him, and he said this:
- Since you are so consumed with anxiety for Aeneas,
- I shall turn forward far
- The hidden pages of fate and speak of the future.
- He shall conduct a great campaign for you
- And conquer all Italy and its haughty peoples.
- He shall impose laws on his own people
- And build walled cities for them; the third summer
- Shall see him rule in Latium, the third winter
- Of warfare see the Rutulians [an Italian tribe] subdued.
- But his son Ascanius...
- It is he who shall consolidate your power-
- For thirty years with all their turning months;
- Then shall he move his capital from Lavinium
- To Alba Longa, which he shall fortify
- To the uttermost; and there a line of kings...
- Shall reign and reign till Ilia [Rhea Silvia], a priestess
- Of royal blood, bear twins begotten by Mars;
- And one of these, Romulus, fostered by a she-wolf,
- And joyfully wearing her tawny hide, shall rule
- And found a city for Mars, a new city,
- And call his people Romans, after his name.
- For them I see no measure nor date, I grant them
- Dominion without end. Yes, even Juno...
- Even she will mend her ways and vie with me
- In cherishing the Romans, the master-race,
- The wearers of the Toga. So it is willed.(Nardo 13)
- Finally, he wound up at the mouth of the Tiber River in Italy.
- He went inland up the river, which was a miracle in itself, because
- the river is very swift. He found Latium, ruled by King Latinus, and
- married his daughter, Lavinia. With King Latinus' permission, Aeneas
- and Lavinia founded a city called Lavinium, where they ruled side by
- side for many years. When Aeneas died, his son Ascanius took over.
- Ascanius founded a new city, which he called Alba Longa, and made it
- his capital.
- Now we advance four centuries. The king of Alba Longa is
- Numitor. He had a jealous brother named Amulius, who seized the throne
- and drove out Numitor. To prevent Numitor's daughter, Rhea Silvia,
- from having children who could claim the throne, Amulius made her a
- celibate priestess. While she was a priestess, Mars, the god of war,
- came and visited her and she had twin boys named Remus and Romulus
- (Burrell 7). When Amulius found out about the twins, he was furious.
- He ordered Rhea imprisoned and the boys drowned on the Tiber. The
- slave who was ordered to drown them felt pity for them, and instead
- sent them down the river in a basket. When they landed, a she-wolf
- found them and nursed them because her cubs had just been killed and
- she was still fertile. Romulus and Remus were found by a shepherd
- named Faustulus, who took them home to his wife to raise them. As they
- grew up, being sons of Mars, they turned out to be very athletic and
- natural leaders, especially of the local boys. When the boys grew up,
- they heard the story of Numitor and Amulius. With their local friends,
- they attacked Alba Longa, killed Amulius, restored their grandfather
- to the throne, and freed their mother.
- After restoring Numitor to the throne, the boys decided to
- found a city on one of the seven hills near where their basket was
- found by the wolf. This was a natural spot for a city. Accounts Livy,
- Not without good reason did gods and men choose this spot as the site
- of a city, with its bracing hills, its [spacious] river by means of
- which the produce of inland countries may be brought down and inland
- supplies obtained; a sea near enough for all useful purposes, but not
- so near as to be exposed to danger from foreign fleets; a district in
- the very center of Italy, in a word, a position singularly adapted by
- a nature for the growth of a city. (Nardo, 12)
- The two boys couldn't decide between themselves which hill to start
- on, so they decided that whoever saw a vulture first could pick. Remus
- saw the first vulture and five others, and Romulus saw twelve. Remus
- had rightfully won, but Romulus claimed he should pick since he saw
- more vultures. He borrowed a plow and team, and plowed a furrow around
- the Palatine hill. He told his brother that was where the city would
- be, and if Remus crossed the line, he would be killed. Contemptuous
- Remus immediately crossed the line, and Romulus killed him. Romulus
- later said he regretted killing his brother, but life goes on. He
- built his city on the Palatine Hill, and called it Rome.
- When Romulus founded Rome in 753 BC, he made himself the king.
- Being a brand new city, it had very few people. Romulus built up the
- population by allowing anybody who wanted to live there, including
- criminals who flocked to the city. This caused a shortage of women. To
- get some, the Romans hosted athletic games and invited their
- neighbors, the Sabines. While they were at the games, some of the
- Romans sneaked off and stole the Sabine women (Burrell 14-15).
- Realizing what had happened, the Sabines prepared their army.
- Expecting this, the Romans were ready and the two forces lined up
- preparing to fight. Surprisingly, some of the women ran into the
- no-man's-land in between the armies. This is what their leader said:
- We were just daughters a short while ago, now we are both wives and
- daughters. We did not choose our husbands - they chose us. We want
- this fighting to stop. If it goes ahead, many will be slain. When our
- fathers are dead, we shall be orphans, but if our husbands die, we
- shall be widows. We lose either way. (Burrell, 14-15)
- Surprisingly, the two armies listened and put down their weapons.
- Since anyone was allowed to reside, Rome had great diversity
- in its people. There were three main ethnic groups: the Romans, who
- were first generation, the Sabines, and the Latins, who Romulus is
- descended from. The Sabines lived in the mountains east of the Tiber
- and north of the Latins. Later on, another group of people called the
- Etruscans started moving in. They were unique in that their language
- had no relation to any other known language, the only one like that.
- Romulus established a government with a king, who was
- imperium, Over all persons and in all causes supreme (Adcock 6).
- Romulus chose one hundred fathers to form the Senate. These people and
- their descendants are known as Patricians, from the Latin word pater,
- meaning father. He divided the people into three tribes, mentioned
- above, and each tribe was divided into smaller curiae. The succession
- of kings wasn't hereditary. The previous king appointed someone, and
- that person had to show the good will of heaven. Once king he had to
- keep the pax deorum, Latin for peace of the gods. Romulus created an
- army that was to have three thousand infantry and three hundred
- horsemen, one-third from each tribe. This was a national guard, with
- people keeping their day jobs.
- When Romulus died in 717 BC, the two main tribes, the Romans
- and the Sabines, couldn't decide how to pick a king. Finally it was
- decided that the Romans would pick a Sabine king. They picked Numa
- Pompilius. This is what Plutarch had to say about him:
- He banished all luxury and softness from his own home, and... in
- private he devoted himself not to amusement... but to the worship of
- the immortal gods. (Nardo 19)
- One of Pompilius' notable achievements was rearranging the calendar so
- it had twelve months instead of ten.
- The third king, Tullus Hostilius, was a war monger. He
- believed his subjects would grow soft if they weren't engaged in a
- war. Conquering neighboring people, including Alba Longa, he extended
- Rome's rule out to twelve miles. Supposedly the gods got angry with
- him and killed him with a lightning bolt (Burrell, 12).
- The fourth king, Ancus Martius, was a Sabine. He extended
- Rome's boundary to the sea and built the Pons Sublicus, the first
- bridge across the Tiber. He also captured the Janiculum hill on the
- far bank.
- The fifth king, Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, was the first
- Etruscan king. He got the throne when he persuaded Martius to send his
- sons away. He was an architect king. He built the capitol temple,
- drained the marsh between the Paletine and Aventine Hills, built the
- Cloaca Maxima, or great sewer, and designed the Circus Maximus.
- The sixth king was Servius Tullius, another Etruscan. He
- divided the citizens into five social classes, from richest to
- poorest. All but the poorest had to provide soldiers.
- The seventh, and final, king was Tarquinius Superbus. He was a
- bad king. He got the throne by marrying Tullius' daughter, Tullia. He
- then pushed Tullius down a flight of stairs. He sent men to finish him
- off, but Tullia ran over her father with a cisium, Latin for a light,
- two-wheeled carriage. As king, he paid absolutely no attention to what
- the people wanted. According to Asimov, when he was off at war with
- the Volscians, the Senate voted to exile him, and he wasn't let back
- into the city. After his reign, the people vowed never to have a king
- again, and a law was made where anybody who even talked about having a
- king back was executed. A senator named Brutus said,
- I swear, and you, o gods, I call to witness that I will drive
- [away]... Tarquinius Superbus, together with his wicked wife and his
- whole family, with fire and sword and every means in my power, and I
- will not [allow] them or anyone else to reign in Rome.
- (Nardo 25)
- Republic is English for the Latin Res Publica, meaning the public
- thing. A republic is a country governed by the elected
- representatives of the people (Encarta Republic). Instead of a
- president or king, the Republic has two praetors, later known as
- consuls, who were elected annually. The one exception was emergency
- dictators, who served for six months and six months only. The Senators
- served for life. The object of the Republic was to give the people a
- voice in the government, and to keep just one person from having all
- the power. Noting the Greek government, the Romans created the
- Centuriate Assembly of citizens. This was an assembly where citizens
- discussed and voted on important issues. Many of the members were
- Patricians, but there were a few Plebs, or commoners too poor to own
- land. Only free Roman adult men who owned weapons were citizens. Not
- long after the Republic was formed, the Patricians closed off
- immigration of new patriarchal families.
- In the early years of the Republic, the Patricians often made
- laws unfair to the Plebs. Only Patricians could become consul, the
- senate was almost all Patricians, and the Patricians controlled the
- Plebs in the Assembly by giving the Plebs financial aid, who in turn
- voted the way they were told. Public Officials weren't paid, so only
- wealthy people could afford to serve on a regular basis. One time, the
- Plebs refused to serve in the army until they got their way. As Livy
- said,
- The Patricians dreaded the Plebians [who were striking].... How long
- could it be supposed that the multitude which had seceded would remain
- inactive? And what would be the consequence if in the meantime a
- foreign war should break out? No glimpse of hope could they see left
- except in concord between the citizens, which must be re-established
- in the state on any terms. (Nardo 28)
- In 494 BC, the Patricians gave up and allowed the striking Plebs their
- own council, called the Popular Assembly, which excluded Patricians.
- This assembly couldn't make laws, but they elected ten tribunes each
- year who had the power of veto. The Patricians pronounced the validity
- of decisions made by the assembly. As the Republic grew older, it
- became more complicated. The Assembly had to elect officials to help.
- They elected eight praetors, or court judges, four aediles, who
- managed public streets and buildings, two censores, who took censuses,
- admitted new senators and collected taxes, and twenty five quaestores,
- or financial officers. In 450 BC, the Plebs demanded that the laws of
- Rome be written down so that the praetors couldn't twist the law in
- their favor. They were written down on the Twelve Tables. An example
- of a law from the Twelve Tables was,
- If plaintiff summons defendant to court, he shall go. If he does not
- go, plaintiff shall call witness [to this]. Then only shall he take
- the defendant [to court] by force. (Nardo 28-29)
- The Tribunes of the Plebs protected the Plebs from unjustness, and the
- Plebs protected them by threatening to strike. As time went on,
- Patrician control over Plebians gradually decreased, until in 366 BC,
- the Plebs were allowed to become consul. Soon it became a custom to
- elect one Pleb and one Patrician (Nardo 28). In 287 BC, the Popular
- Assembly gained the right to make laws.
- Rome was ever expanding. In 496 BC, Rome conquered Latium. In
- 449 BC, the Sabines fell, and in 396 BC, the Etruscans. Instead of
- trying to oppress conquered tribes and peoples, Rome absorbed them,
- integrating them into their culture. This made them much easier to
- control, because they felt like they belonged to Rome. This is what
- Cicero had to say about it:
- Every citizen of a corporate town [one annexed by Rome] has, I take
- it, two fatherlands, that of which he is a native, and that of which
- he is a citizen. I will never deny my allegiance to my native town,
- only I will never forget that Rome is my greater fatherland, and that
- my native town is but a portion of Rome. (Nardo 31)
- The Senators of Rome also felt great loyalty towards the city. In 390
- BC, raiders from Gaul invaded the city. Some of the Senators stayed in
- the city. Livy tells what happened:
- [The Senators sat]...without fear or concern.... The Gauls, for a
- great while, stood wondering at the strangeness of the sight, not
- daring to approach of touch them, taking them for an assembly of
- superior beings. But then one [Gaul], bolder than the rest, drew near
- to one elderly senator, and... gently stroked [the Senator's] chin and
- touched his long beard; the Senator with his staff struck him a severe
- blow on the head; upon which the barbarian drew his sword and slew
- him. This was the introduction to the slaughter. (Nardo 32)
- The Romans didn't look kindly upon failures. After the consul Varro
- lost fifty thousand soldiers in battle with Hannibal's army, he was
- ejected from office. According to Nardo, the only reason he wasn't
- executed was that he fought along side the army, and didn't desert
- (45).
- In the Punic wars against Carthage, Rome had to develop naval
- technology. After Carthage was defeated, Roman merchants adopted ships
- to do their trading, making them more and more wealthy. Eventually,
- these wealthy merchants formed a new class, called the 'equestrian
- order'. This new class competed with the patricians for power in the
- government. The citizens began splitting into two parties. The
- Imperialists, led by General Scipio Africanus, wanted to continue
- expanding eastward. The Conservatives, led by Senator Cato the Elder,
- wanted to settle down and stop expanding. As time went on, the
- Imperialists increasingly prevailed. By the second century BC, the
- government became more and more imperialistic, to the point that they
- would attack anything with the smallest excuse. In 192 BC, the
- Seleucid king Antiochus III took over a few freed Greek cities. Rome
- invaded, conquered everything, and drove Antiochus III to Asia Minor.
- The Roman army chased him, and conquered the territories he had in
- Asia Minor.
- Gaius Julius Caesar was born on July 13, 100 BC to a
- prestigious Roman family. His uncle was Gaius Marius, the consul and
- leader of the agrarian reform movement. In 82 BC, Lucius Cornelius
- Sulla attacked the city and made himself dictator. Because Sulla was
- an enemy of Marius, he ordered Caesar to divorce his wife, Cornelia.
- Caesar refused, and fled the city until Sulla resigned in 78 BC.
- Caesar started his reign in a triumvirate, with himself, Pompey the
- Great, and Marcus Licinius Crassus. According to Nardo, this was just
- a dictatorship of three. They ruled the Republic with terror, using
- the army and their henchmen as muscle.(77-78) The only person who
- continually voiced his opposition to the triumvirate was the famous
- orator, Cicero. The triumvirate chased him into hiding. In 58 BC,
- Caesar et al.'s term ended, but they kept power. Caesar boosted his
- popularity by conquering Gaul and Britain. In 53 BC, Crassus died in
- battle in Asia, leaving a triumvirate of two. While Caesar was away in
- Britain, the senators tried to pit him against Pompey by naming Caesar
- a public enemy and Pompey protector of the state. The senators were
- hoping that the two would get rid of each other. Caesar was ordered to
- disband his army, but he instead marched on Rome. He was just bringing
- his soldiers home, but it was taken as an invasion (Nardo 83-84). In
- 48 BC, Caesar crossed to Greece, where Pompey had escaped to. Pompey
- escaped to Egypt, where he sought shelter with King Ptolemy XIII.
- Ptolemy's advisors warned him against the wrath of Caesar, so he
- killed Pompey and sent Caesar his head. In 46 BC, Caesar was named the
- ten year dictator of the state. He promptly renamed himself dictator
- for life. On March 15, 44 BC, a group of senators who decided that
- Caesar was a danger to the Republic. Led by Brutus and Cassius, they
- attacked Caesar in the senate chambers. Ironically, his body fell at
- the feet of the statue of Pompey, after suffering twenty three knife
- wounds. Immediately after Caesar's death, the senate outlawed the
- dictatorship.
- After Caesar's death, his adopted grandson, Octavian, formed
- the second triumvirate with Mark Antony and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus.
- Antony ruled the east, Octavian the west and Italy, and Lepidus ruled
- Africa. The second triumvirate was constituted by an act of state to
- reconstitute the state. They were given five years, but this was later
- extended. The three crushed all of their opponents, including Brutus,
- Cassius, and Cicero. Battling against Sextus Pompeius, Octavian
- summoned Lepidus to Italy to help him. Upon arriving, Lepidus tried to
- seize Sicily, and was subsequently kicked out of the triumvirate.
- Mark Antony fell in love with Queen Cleopatra of Egypt, who
- was rumored to be a former lover of Caesar. Together they ruled the
- eastern Empire for many years. With the growing support of the Roman
- people, Octavian declared war on Antony, to secure power for himself.
- The two forces, Octavian's navy commanded by Marcus Agrippa, and
- Antony and Cleopatra's navy, met at the battle of Actium on September
- 2, 31 BC. Agrippa, a very capable general and a good friend of
- Octavian, commanded 260 light ships, while Antony commanded 220 heavy
- ships (Encarta Actium). The battle raged on for a very long time,
- and was beginning to look like a stalemate, when the Egyptian fleet
- withdrew. Agrippa's fleet crushed the remnants of Antony's fleet, who
- survived and escaped back to Egypt with Cleopatra. Antony received a
- false rumor and killed himself by falling on his sword. Upon hearing
- of his suicide, Cleopatra killed herself with an asp, which was a
- symbol of the eye of Ra, the Egyptian sun god (Gibson). After the war
- was over, Octavian closed the Roman temple to Janus, the Roman god of
- beginnings of wars. This showed that the world was at peace.
- In 28 BC, Octavian and Agrippa became consuls. After one year,
- they turned the state over to the free decision of the Senate and
- People of Rome (Adcock 74). The Senate and people of Rome gave
- Octavian ten years of complete control. Octavian named himself the
- princeps, which is Latin for emperor. He ran the Empire as a monarchy,
- although it was disguised as a Republic. They still had a senate, but
- senators only made it into office with Octavian's approval. Those
- citizens who weren't fooled kept quiet, because Octavian kept things
- peaceful and governed fairly. Octavian ended the Roman tradition of
- conquest, cutting the army from seventy five to twenty eight legions.
- In 23 BC, Octavian gave up the consulate, but the senate forced him
- to keep power over the provinces. In effect, he ran the Empire from
- the background, while others were elected consul. These consuls had
- power, but always did what Octavian said. On his death bed, Octavian
- was advised to forgive his enemies. He responded with, Yes father,
- but how can I? I have [killed] them all (Adcock 75). Octavian was
- almost eighty when he died in 14 AD.
- After Octavian came the Emperor Tiberius. His reign was
- non-eventful, and he retired after plots against him were turned up.
- After Tiberius came Gaius, who was better known as Caligula. During
- his reign, Caligula went crazy. According to Burrell, anyone
- disagreeing with him was thrown to the lions in the Arena. He also got
- the Senate to name his horse consul.(49) Everyone was thankful when he
- was assassinated in 41 AD. Caligula was succeeded by several emperors
- who did nothing governmentally, including Claudius and Nero.
- Around the second century AD, the Empire began to crumble.
- Wave after wave of barbarian invaders, especially the Huns, chipped
- away at the state. Eventually some of the provinces had to be
- abandoned. At the end of the third century, Emperor Diocletian decided
- the empire was two big, and split it in two. He ruled the east from
- Turkey, and commissioned Maximian to rule the west from Milan. He
- called this form of government the Dominate, from Latin dominus,
- meaning master. There were two Augusti, who ruled the east and west,
- and under them there were two Caesars, who were like vice-presidents.
- The two Caesars of the east and west were Constantine and Galerius,
- respectively. Diocletian turned his empire into something like a
- feudal system, where peasants were deprived of personal freedom and
- tied to the soil. He renamed citizens to subjects. In 305, Diocletian
- and Maximian stepped down as Augusti, resulting in civil wars between
- the old Caesars and new Augusti. Eventually, Constantine the Great
- came out on top in 312. Constantine's troops made him emperor, and he
- ruled the entire Empire from Byzantium, which he renamed
- Constantinople. Constantine was the first Christian ruler of the
- Empire.
- Alaric of the Visgoths helped the emperor Theodosius crush a
- rebellion. Unfortunately, Theodosius died before he could reward
- Alaric. The new emperor, Honorius, cut Alaric off from Rome, which he
- resented deeply. Alaric took his army to Constantinople, but found it
- too well guarded. He then led his army to the city of Rome, where, in
- the fifth century, sacked it.
- The Empire continued to fall to barbarians. The east and west
- sides of the Empire were in a virtual state of war. In 429, Vandals
- conquered Africa. In 410, Britain fell. In 451, the Huns took most of
- Europe. When Atilla the Hun came to Rome, Pope Leo was able to
- convince him to spare the city. In 455, Vandals came and sacked Rome.
- In the year 476 AD, the last emperor died, marking the fall of the
- Roman Empire, one of the greatest ever. That last emperor's name was,
- ironically, Romulus.
- The Roman Kingdom, Republic, Empire, Dictatorship, and others
- have affected all of us. The United States government in commonly
- known as a democracy, but it's actually a Republic, almost identical
- to the Roman one. The Roman government was one of the most powerful
- ever, at one point ruling most of the civilized world. It is almost
- certainly the best known. Ask anyone about Romulus and Remus, Gaius
- Julius Caesar, Augustus, Caligula, Nero, Constantine; they'll know who
- you're talking about. The term Caesar was used to mean ruler for
- thousands of years after his death. Both the German word Kaiser as
- well as the Russian word Czar are from the name Caesar and mean ruler.
- Today some three-fourths of the countries are Republic, styled after
- the Romans. The Romans are probably the most influential people of
- all-time.
- ---
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- Actium, Battle of. Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1996 ed.
- Adcock, F. E. Roman Political Ideas and Practice. Ann Arbor:
- University of Michigan, 1959.
- Asimov, Isaac. The Roman Republic. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1966.
- Burrell, Roy. The Romans. Oxford: Oxford University, 1991.
- Caesar. Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1996 ed.
- Caesar, Gaius Julius. Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1996
- ed.
- Gibson, Elke. Personal Interview. 19 March 1997.
- Nardo, Don. The Roman Republic. San Diego: Lucent, 1994.
- The Reforms of Diocletian and Constantine. CIS: Research and
- Education (16 March 1997).
- Republic. Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1996 ed.
- Rise of Rome (753-44 BC). Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia,
- 1996 ed.
- Rome, Ancient - the Empire. CIS: http://isdup/menu/133.html;
- Research and Education, Academic American Encyclopedia; Grolier's (16
- March 1997) .
- Rome, History of. Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1996 ed.
- Sabines. Computer Software. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1996 ed.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- The Romans have had almost every type of government there is.
- They've had a kingdom, a republic, a dictatorship, and an empire.
- Their democracy would be the basis for most modern democracies. The
- people have always been involved with and loved their government, no
- matter what kind it was. They loved being involved in the government,
- and making decisions concerning everyone. In general, the Romans were
- very power-hungry. This might be explained by the myth that they are
- descended from Romulus, who's father was Mars, the god of war. Their
- government loving tendencies have caused many, many civil wars. After
- any type of government, the change has been made with a civil war.
- There have also been many civil wars between rulers. But it all boils
- down to wanting to be involved in government.
- <br><br>
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