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Patricii
(1,183 words)
[German version] The name
patricii was given to the descendents of the
patres, who were the heads of the great Roman families represented in the
senatus ; the patriciate then formed the hereditary estate of the nobility in Rome. The historiographic tradition traces the origins of the patriciate back to Rome's foundation: Romulus himself is said to have formed the Senate (Cic. Rep. 2,23), with the original number of senators given as 100 (Liv. 1,8,7; Dion. Hal. Ant. Rom. 2,8,3; Plut. Romulus 13,2). At f…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Catilina
(958 words)
[German version] L. Sergius C. came from a patrician gens that had been politically unsuccessful for a relatively long time. Born in 108 at the latest, he appears on 17. Nov. 89 BC in the
consilium of the consul Pompeius Strabo as L. Sergi(us) L. f. Tro(mentina) [1. 160ff.]. At the end of the 80s he was legate to Sulla (Sall. Hist. 1,46) [2. 110ff.]. He probably did not murder his brother [3. 1688], but he probably killed M. Marius Gratidianus (Q. Cic. comm. pet. 10; Ascon. 84; 90C), the brother of his wife Gratidia (Schol. Bern.…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Hostis
(626 words)
[German version] Hostis originally referred to the foreigner (
peregrinus), i.e. the enemy (
perduellis) as well as the guest (
hospes), as Cicero (Off. 1,37) correctly concludes from the provisions in the XII Tables (
tabulae duodecim ) (
aut status dies cum hoste: 2,2;
adversus hostem aeterna auctoritas: 6,4). At the same time they show that even a foreigner without
commercium could bring a lawsuit before the Roman magistrate. In the same way, with regard to the sphere of international relations, the older view that a ‘permanent stat…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Grain laws
(1,372 words)
[German version] (
leges frumentariae). Laws for the handing out of grain at a reduced price or free of charge in the city of Rome. Supply crises and attempts to eliminate these are recorded already for the first century of the Republic although these are based only on vague recollection [16. 25f.]. A
praefectus annonae in 440 BC (Liv. 4,12,8) is anachronistic, and even the grain purchase by the
aediles in 299 BC (Liv. 10,11,9) is very doubtful [3. 31ff.]. For the 2nd cent. BC an increase of the state's interference with matters concerning the supply sector is a…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Populares
(1,535 words)
[German version] I. Meaning of the term The Latin term denoted politicians of the late Roman Republic who declared themselves to act with the assistance, and in the interests of, the people (
populus ); however, terminological and not infrequently factual blurring arose from the fact that the root adjective
popularis at first meant 'belonging to the people', 'concerning the people', then concurrently 'popular' and 'in the interests of the people'. By definition, agitation by
populares before the multitude in opposition to the established elite (
pauci; 'the few') was almost
de rigueur,…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Plebs
(1,435 words)
[German version] I. Meaning of the word The word
plebs initially simply meant 'multitude' (from the root
ple; cf.
plenus, 'full' and Greek πλῆθος/
plȇthos, 'multitude'). As a collective term for all Roman citizens, excluding the Patricians (
patricii ), it can be conceived (disparagingly) only by the latter and in both its meaning and its historical development can be understood only as a correlate of the concept of patriciate. When this had been transformed by the elevation of leading plebeian families to the nobility (
nobiles ) and the
ordo equester (
equites Romani …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Emergency, state of
(674 words)
[German version] is the extreme form of an internal crisis, to which state authorities respond with extraordinary, i.e. unlawful measures. A similar response to internal crises by state authorities did not arise in the Greek city states. As responses to crisis-like situations there, we find trials against individual citizens, instigated by other individual citizens (see Herms, mutilation of the); or on occasion groups sought to resolve a crisis by means of a
putsch (see Oligarchy), or conditions developed similar to a civil war (
Stasis ). In Rome the state…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Adsiduus
(306 words)
[German version] (
assiduus, from
adsideo) meaning ‘settled’. As a technical term in legal language it was considered a synonym of
locuples, the opposite term was
proletarius (Varro in Non. p. 67 M.). Therefore, it described ‘someone who was settled on his property’. The XII Tables decreed:
Adsiduo vindex adsiduus esto. Proletario iam civi (or
civis)
qui volet vindex esto (Gell. NA 16,10,5).
Adsiduus and
proletarius are one of the pairs of opposites so frequently encountered in the archaic legal language of Rome [4.182]. As their etymological discussion suffi…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Secessio
(588 words)
[German version] Roman tradition terms as
secessio (from Latin
secedere, 'to go away, to withdraw') the remonstrative exodus of the Roman plebeians from the urban area delimited by the
pomerium on to a neighbouring hill. This action was on a number of occasions the culmination of confrontation between the patricians (
patricii ) and the
plebs . The first
secessio in particular may have been instrumental in the formation of a self-conscious plebeian community under the leadership of at first two, later apparently five people's tribunes (
tribunus plebis ), to whose…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Senatus consultum ultimum
(295 words)
[German version] This modern term derives from Caesar (B Civ. 1,5,3) and Livy (3,4,9), and means the 'final' or 'highest' decree of the Senate, by which the Senate declared a state of emergency at Rome and charged the senior magistrate(s) present in the city at the time to act against the emergency. The commission was usually given to one or both of the consuls, and occasionally to other officials (
interrex; praetores; magister equitum). The crux of the decree, the wording of which probably varied, was the formula (
consules)
dent operam or
videant, ne quid detrimenti res publica capiat. The…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Proletarii
(336 words)
[German version] The Latin word
proletarii, derived from
proles ('descendant'), describes people without property, who mattered only for their progeny (Cic. Rep. 2,40), i.e. were liable neither to military service nor to taxation. Cato [1] Censorius says clearly:
expedito pauperem plebeium atque proletarium (fr. 152 Orf). The contrast between
proletarius and
adsiduus is encountered as early as in the Twelve Tables (Gell. NA 16,10,5); the word
proletarii is still attested in some 2nd-cent. BC authors and finally in Varro (De vita Populi Romani, fr.9), and was t…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Seditio
(618 words)
[German version] Cicero defines
seditio, perhaps by analogy with the Greek term
stásis, as “dissensio civium, quod seorsum eunt alii ad alios” ("discord among citizens who separate and go different ways": Cic. Rep. 6,1). Normally, however,
seditio designates a serious disturbance of public order, in other words 'rebellion', in the military domain also 'mutiny' (Frontin. Str. 1,9). Attempts at a legal precaution against
seditio can be traced back to the Twelve Tables, which forbade
coetus (
nocturni) ('night-time gatherings') (Lex XII tab. 8,26-27 Bruns = 14 f. Crawford)…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly