Transcript Chapter Six

Chapter 6
A New Social Order
A New Social Order
When war was declared on neighboring tribes, each man
dutifully put down his plow and took up arms. But the
Punic Wars were long fought, and when soldiers returned
home, they were unable to return to their previous lives.
☺
The first war was 23 years long
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As a result many farms fell in disuse and disrepair
☺
Wealthy landowners took advantage of the
opportunity to expand their land
☺
They took farm land and flat land for homes
A New Social Order,
continued
☺ Over
the years, the number of small farms
shrank drastically while the size of the estates
of the wealthy grew and grew.
☺ Conquered
people were supposed to pay gold
and other objects as tribute.
☺ The
government got such enormous
quantities of treasure that the Senate
abolished all taxes in Italy for a time.
The Struggling Poor
☺ Roman
society was divided into two divisions
☺ Patricians
- Small class of wealthy
landowners
☺ Plebeians
- Large class of homeless and
unemployed people
Slaves had an impact on
the economy…
More slaves meant less jobs for
poor Roman farmers. Slaves
became the backbone of Roman
society, doing all of the menial
work.
The Gracchi
☺
To brothers, Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus were
moved by the desperate state of the plebeians
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The Gracchus’s came from a wealthy family
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Father, consul twice
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Grandfather was Scipio who defeated
Hannibal at Zama.
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Brothers became spokesmen
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Both became tribunes
The Gracchi
☺
Tiberius was tribune from 133 B.C.E to 123 B.C.E.
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He sought to break up the huge estates
accumulated by wealthy patricians and
redistribute the land so that the ordinary people
could have some too.
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A senator clubbed him to death with a footstool
when he stood for re-election.
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All of his supporters were also clubbed to death
and thrown into the Tiber River
The Gracchi
When Gaius became tribune in 123 B.C.E he demanded
many things.
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Allowance to the poor
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Grain to poor
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New employment
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Granting citizenship to all Italians
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He, too, aroused the wrath of the Senate, and got
kicked out of the office
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He was about to be captured when he ordered his
slaves to slit his throat
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After the deaths of the Gracchi’s the Senate itself
split in two
☺
The Optimates were conservative men who wished
to keep the government at the status quo (as it
was)
☺
The Populares on the other hand, were more liberal
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At the same time, another social class emerged that
would influence the economy as well as the government
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They were known as the equestrians or equites
(“the knights”), they were successful Roman
businessmen who were not members of the
exclusive patrician class
The Reforms of Marius
☺ Gaius
Marius, a member of the Populares,
was consul from 107 to 100 B.C.E
☺ He
was not only consul, he was a
plebeian and then became a great
was hero who is now supported by
many
Reforms of Marius,
continued
☺ He
strengthened the army by recruiting
unemployed men to be soldiers and
promising them a reward after 20 years
of service. They would get a piece of
land and a pension.
☺ He
transformed the army into
professional fighters who served their
general.
The Dole
☺
The poor did not starve thanks to a social
arrangement known as the client system
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The patricians set themselves up as patrons.
☺
☺
Unemployed plebeians, as well as worker
who came to Rome from different parts of
Italy, were known as clients.
Patrons provided food and legal support
☺ The
government responded to the
need for housing in the
overpopulated cities by building
low-cost apartments
☺ The
city of Rome was divided in to
blocks called insulae (also known as
island).
The Tenements
The Tenements,
continued
☺
Houses were made out of timber and mud
brick
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Flimsy walls often collapsed and fire was a
big danger
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One who started a fire that killed at least
one person was sentenced to life in prison or
even death
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Bottom Floor: Running water and shops
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Top Floor: no plumbing, public lavatory, threw
garbage out window, little furniture
Homes of the Wealthy
☺
Homes of the wealthy were next to
apartments
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Houses called domus might take up half a
block or even a whole block
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Large rooms, one floor, roof made of clay,
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Atrium served as a reception area where
rain collected in pool
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Kitchen, living room, library
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Statues in courtyard in back
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Patterns on tile are called mosaics on floor;
frescos on walls