Western Civilization

(Sean Pound) #1
hills and the valleys in between, the Servian Wall was
built to surround the city in the fourth centuryB.C.E.
The Etruscans had an impact on Roman civilization
in numerous ways, both large and small. The Romans
adopted Etruscan dress—the toga and short cloak. The
insignia of the Etruscan kings became the insignia of
Roman magistrates. The Romans were also indebted to
the Etruscans for the alphabet. The Latin alphabet was
a modification of the Etruscan one derived from the
Greeks.

The Roman Republic


(ca. 509–264B.C.E.)


Q FOCUSQUESTION: What were the major political
institutions of the Roman republic, and what policies
and institutions help explain the Romans’ success in
conquering Italy?

The transition from a monarchy to a republican
government was not easy. Rome felt threatened by
enemies from every direction and, in the process of
meeting these threats, embarked on a course of mili-
tary expansion that led to the conquest of the entire
Italian peninsula. During this period of expansion in
Italy, the Roman republic developed political institu-
tions that were in many ways determined by the social
divisions that existed within the community.

The Roman State
In politics and law, as in conquest, the Romans took
a practical approach and fashioned political institu-
tions in response to problems as they arose. Hence,
it is important to remember that the political insti-
tutions we will discuss evolved over a period of
centuries.

POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS The chief executive officers of
the Roman republic were theconsuls(KAHN-sulls) and
praetors(PREE-turs). Two consuls, chosen annually,
administered the government and led the Roman army
into battle. They possessedimperium(im-PEE-ree-um),
“the right to command.” The office of the praetor was
created in 366B.C.E. The praetor also possessed impe-
rium; he could govern Rome when the consuls were
away from the city and could also lead armies. His pri-
mary function, however, was the execution of justice.
He was in charge of the civil law as it applied to Roman
citizens. In 242 B.C.E., reflecting Rome’s growth,

another praetor was added to judge cases in which one
or both parties were noncitizens.
As Rome expanded into the Mediterranean, addi-
tional praetors were established to govern the newly
conquered provinces (two in 227B.C.E.,twomorein197
B.C.E.). But as the number of provinces continued to
grow, the Romans devised a new system in which ex-
consuls and ex-praetors who had served their one-year
terms were given the titles ofproconsulandpropraetor
and sent out as provincial governors, demonstrating
once again the Romans’ practical solution to an immedi-
ate problem. It was reasonable to assume that officials
with governmental experience would make good provin-
cial administrators, although this was not always true in
practice because of the opportunities for financial cor-
ruption in the provinces.
The Roman state also had administrative officials
with specialized duties.Quaestors(QUES-turs)were
assigned to assist the consuls and praetors in the
administration of financial affairs.Aediles(EE-dylz)
supervised the public games and watched over the
city’s grain supply, a major task for a rapidly growing
urban community that relied on imported grain to
feed its population.
The Romansenate, or council of elders, held an
especially important position in the Roman republic.
This select group of about three hundred men, who
served for life, was not a legislative body and could
only advise the magistrates. Its advice was not taken
lightly, however, and by the third centuryB.C.E., it had
virtually the force of law. No doubt the prestige of the
senate’s members furthered this development. But it
also helped that the senate met continuously, whereas
the chief magistrates changed annually and the popular
assemblies operated slowly and met only periodically.
The Roman republic possessed a number of popular
assemblies. The most important was thecenturiate
assembly, essentially the Roman army functioning in
its political role. Organized by classes based on wealth,
it was structured in such a way that the wealthiest citi-
zens always had a majority. The centuriate assembly
elected the chief magistrates and passed laws. Another
assembly, the council of the plebs, came into being in
471 B.C.E. as a result of the struggle of the orders (see
the next section).
The government of the Roman republic, then, con-
sisted of three major elements. Two consuls and later
other elected officials served as magistrates and ran the
state. An assembly of adult males (the centuriate as-
sembly), controlled by the wealthiest citizens, elected
these officials, while the senate, a small group of large

98 Chapter 5 The Roman Republic

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