Politics of the Late Republic Terms

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35 Terms

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Amicitia
Literally translates to friendship. In Rome this was a system of family and individual alliances established to consolidate and further the success of influential Romans.
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Auctoritas
Literally translates to authority, but refers to the prestige, influence, or social power a Roman magistrate possessed. Different from imperium (see below)
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Boni
Men considered to be the ideal statesmen: well-educated, traditional, patriotic, and experienced enough in politics to accept responsibility for making good decisions for the moral and political health of the state (a term used by Cicero).
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Clients
Citizens who were bound by loyalty to a wealthy patron to support him in his public interests (e.g. voting and campaigning during elections) in return for support and resources.
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Cursus honorum
The political ladder of elected magistrates.
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Dignitas
Literally translates to dignity, but also refers to prestige. Dignitas is oftern associated with a Roman’s accumulated social, religious, and political standing.
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Dominatio
A form of autocracy and despotism, which Romans loyal to the res publica loathed.
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Equestrians (equites)
The wealthy business class of Rome, whose influence grew through commerce and finance. Their status was symbolised by a gold finger ring and a narrow purple stripe on their toga.
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Fasces
A bundle of rods and axes. These publicly symbolised the imperium of senior Roman magistrates, and the magistrate’s attendants (called lictors) carried them
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Freedmen/freedwomen
The ex-slaves who had been granted their freedom by their masters. The ritual of freeing the slave was termed manumission. Children born to freedmen were allowed to become Roman citizens. The freedmen symbolically received a cap of freedom during manumission.
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Hellenisation
The process by which Greek culture was absorbed and spread by another society. The Romans, for example, assimilated Greek rhetoric, literature, drama, architecture, and philosophy.
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Imperium
The official power invested in a consul (or praetor) giving him the military command of the state army. Imperium also enabled a consul to initiate legislation.
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Inimicitia
Literally translates to enmity. This is the opposite system to amicitia, where individual disagreements could extend into significant hostility between families and Roman leaders.
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Libertas
A term for liberty or the political freedom of citizens. A prominent term in the late Republic.
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Legions
The heavy infantry units of the Roman army, each made up of around 5000 men. Traditionally, they were recruited from Roman citizens in times of war and each legionary swore an oath to the SPQR. During the late Republic they became increasingly professional and more loyal to their commanders.
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Magistrates
Quaestor, aedile, praetor, consul, dictator, censor, and tribune of the plebs. Except for dictator and censor, these were the annually elected magistrates of the res publica and part of the cursus honorum.
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Mos maiorum
Literally translates to the custom of the ancestors. This was an unwritten code of social values that the Romans (especially conservatives) believed derived from the actions of their ancestors. They believed that these ancestral vales and models of behaviour should be followed within their private, political, and military lives.
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Nobiles
A select group of senatorial families distinguished by the inclusion of a consul in their ancestry.
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Novus homo
Literally translates to new man, one who had not only managed to break into the ranks of the senate but even become consul with no history of the consulship (or sometimes even senatorial rank) in his family lineage. Cicero was a novus homo.
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Optimates
A group of aristocratic politicians whose energies were channelled into the conservative preservation of the political and social status quo.
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Patricians
Aristocratic families who claimed to be able to trace their ancestors back to the early days of Rome when Romulus chose them as the first 100 senators. Patrii = fathers.
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Patron
A man of significant social standing who was able to offer various resources (e.g. financial or legal help, work, or simply food) to his clients in return for loyalty and other services (e.g. votes and intimidation of political opponents).
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Piety/pietas
A core Roman belief where one was dutiful and respectful to the gods, your family, and your country. Part of this piety was following the mos maiorum.
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Plebeians/plebs
Roman citizens who were not patricians. Originally a ‘lower’ order, the plebeians gained significant wealth and nobility as a result of the Conflict of the Orders from the 5th to the 3rd centuries BCE.
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Pontifex Maximus
The most influential religious office in Rome. The chief priest of the College of Pontiffs, whose members were the highest ranked priests within the res publica.
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Populares
Ambitious aristocratic politicians who amed to secure power through the support of the Roman people. They directly appealed to the people. especially the plebeians, with proposals and reforms aimed at improving their standards of living.
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Proscriptions
These were lists of Roman citizens (mostly senators and equestrians) who were officially declared as enemies of the state and so condemned to death. Sulla instigated proscriptions in 82/81 BCE and the Second Triumvirate instigated proscriptions in 43 BCE.
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Publicani
Private businessmen of the equestrian class who delivered public contracts for the res publica. Their most prominent task was to collect taxes in the provinces.
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Res publica
Literally translates to public affairs; this was the term the Romans used to refer to their constitution or the state that had replaced the monarchy.
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SPQR (Senatus Populusque Romanus)
The senate and people of Rome.
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Senators/senate
The highest and wealthiest citizen class in Rome, who descended from established aristocratic families. About 600 senators made up the senate in the late Republic, the key advisory of the Roman state. A senator wore a gold ring to indicate his status and a broad purple stripe on his toga.
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Slaves
Rome used a wide variety of slaves such as farm labourers, house slaves and gladiators. Slaves came from three primary sources; war, being sold into slavery due to poverty, and being born to a slave mother within a Roman household.
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Stoicism
A school of philosophy where one sought to be virtuous and moderate regardless of what the gods made you suffer. Stoics were known for their self-control in both public and private life and for enduring pain and suffering without complaint. Cato the Younger was a famous Roman stoic.
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Triumvirate
A political alliance of three leading men. In 60 BCE Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus formed a private alliance (the First Triumvirate). In 43 BCE Antony, Octavian, and Lepidus fromed an official alliance (the Second Triumvirate).
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Virtus
Virtue, courage, or excellence. A defining concept in the life of a Roman man.